was probably an animal.”
“What kind of animal? Oh!” She shivered and looked back to the house. “I shouldn’t be doing this. If Mr. Ross found out he could—he knows some scary stuff.”
“So do I. Now, you were saying?”
Her fingers wrapped around my forearm, tugging me farther into the jungle. When I hesitated, her lower lip wobbled and her eyes filled, as if she might cry from sheer terror. Obviously she wasn’t talking until she felt safe, so I let her lead me. After a few steps, she mumbled something.
“Hmm?” I said.
She kept muttering, her face forward as she pulled me into the forest. I caught a couple words of Latin and knew she wasn’t talking to herself. She was casting.
I yanked my arm back. Her grip only tightened.
“Hey!” I said.
I tried to shake her off, but she just looked over her shoulder, fixing me with eyes that had lost every trace of girlish innocence. Her lips kept moving in their cast. Once more I tried to fling her off, unable to believe this sudden show of bionic strength. She yanked back, and I flipped forward, nearly falling.
As I twisted up again, I snarled my own cast. A binding spell. I finished it…and she only smiled, her own incantation still flowing. I started a knock-back spell, but the first words had barely left my mouth when the air around me started to shimmer. The unmistakable first sign of an opening portal. Shit! Again I struggled to pull my arm from her grasp, but couldn’t budge. Demonic strength. Only thing with demonic strength was a demon. Or a demi-demon.
I mentally shouted for Trsiel. While I’d have loved to hog-tie the Nix myself and present her to the Fates, I knew better. A demi-demon was too strong, and immune to spells and demonic shows of power. This was a job for an angel.
The portal split open, a black hole to nowhere.
I threw myself in the other direction, but the Nix jerked me back, and I flew off my feet. I saw the portal. Saw it yawning before me, knew I was about to fly into it…and there wasn’t a damned thing I could do about it.
Then something hit the Nix from behind and her grip went slack. I sailed across the clearing, hit the ground rolling, and sprang up. I wheeled to face the Nix. She was charging Kristof. I threw myself at her, but Kris dove out of her way in time. As she wheeled, she snarled at him, lips curling, teeth bared. Something in that snarl sent ice water through my veins and I froze, just long enough for her to lunge at Kristof again. He feinted. I cast an energy bolt. It passed right through her. She spun on Kris and flew at him. He ducked, but this time she managed to snag his arm. She swung him off his feet, and whipped him toward the portal.
My gut went cold. I pitched forward and hit Kristof in the side just as his feet passed into the portal. The Nix lost her grip, and Kris and I tumbled to the ground. As I hit, I remembered a spell that might work, an incantation to protect the unwary spell-caster who summoned something she couldn’t handle.
As I ran through the spell, I braced myself. The moment the final words left my lips, a thousand-watt jolt ripped through me and I collapsed, writhing and convulsing. Had the Nix attacked me in that moment, I’d be helpless to fight back. But as my body jerked and shuddered, I caught sight of her on the ground across the clearing, racked by a seizure double the strength of what I was feeling. Then Kristof’s arms went around me, lifting me up, his face ashen.
“S’okay,” I managed as the last twitches rippled through me. “Anti-demon spell. Nasty side effect. Damned demon blood.”
As he lifted me, the Nix struggled to her feet, still unsteady.
“A demon witch.” She spit the words with a sneer, but made no move to come closer. “Half-demon, I should say. A substandard demon from a substandard race of spell-casters. I suppose the Fates grew weary of wasting their angels on me. Perhaps they’ve given up trying to catch me and now seek only to annoy me. Go away, little gnat. This isn’t a game for you.”
“No? But I’m doing so well. Found you faster than those angels ever did, I’ll bet.”
She laughed. “Found me? I found you. And almost sent you into the great beyond.”
“Yeah,