Demon from the Dark (Immortals After Dark #10)(102)



Malkom spied a mountaintop in the distance, tracing there out of the oncoming rush of Wendigos.

He needed to buy himself time—to remember a place he’d never been.



By the time the vampire transported Carrow and Ruby to Andoain and dropped them unceremoniously, his skin was fully aflame.

While she and Ruby coughed from the smoke, he merely took the pain as his red eyes scanned a crowd of immortals.

“Néomi!” he bellowed. The phantom gave a cry and ran for him, batting at the flames, extinguishing them.

Clearly uncaring of the damage he’d sustained, he rasped, “Koeri, I need you.”

Néomi swallowed, looking part apprehensive, part excited. “Of course, mon coeur.” He yanked her into his arms, planting his fangs into her neck. Then they disappeared.

“Wait, no,” Carrow cried. “Where’d he go? I need him to get back!”

“Get back?” Mari said. “What are you talking about? I barely got you out.”

“Crow, he’s in trouble!” Tears streamed down Ruby’s face. “We need to help Malkom!”

“Who’s Malkom, Ruby?” Mari asked. “And what’s on your necks? Carrow, what’s on your sword?”

Brown Wendigo blood covered it. “There’s no time to explain! Where will the vampire go? We have to find him.”

Mari shook her head. “Conrad’s a special kind of loopy. He won’t be right from that for days.” To Ruby, she said, “Hey, kiddo, why don’t you go with Elianna and get washed up?”

Elianna hurried over, but Ruby flung herself away. “I want to g-go after Malkom!” Her breaths were shallowing.

The girl was hysterical; Carrow was nearly there. She dropped her sword, crouching to grab Ruby’s shoulders. “You know how I came back for you twice? I will find Malkom. I swear to you, I’ll bring him home.”

“Come, sweet,” Elianna said, reaching for her.

Ruby’s face had gone red, her chest heaving, eyes shimmering. She was about to pass out again. “I want him back NOW!” Her shriek was earsplitting. “Now, now, now!”

“There, child,” Elianna murmured, laying her hand on Ruby’s forehead. At once, the girl fell unconscious, and the old witch swooped her up into her arms. “A little mystical Benadryl never hurt anyone,” she said, heading upstairs. Over her shoulder, she added, “Ruby will wake in a couple of hours. I suggest you retrieve whoever it is that she wants by then.”

Carrow surveyed the faces in the room, seeing more witches, nymphs, some of the noble fey, Valkyrie, Lykae, and more. Then she spotted King Rydstrom and his fellow demons. He could trace! “Rydstrom, I need you to trace me back to the island. Right back to where I was!”

Mari said, “Carrow, I can only direct Rydstrom to the island—and that’s if he can follow some really vague directions. I can’t get him exactly back to your location. Apparently, it took Conrad more than three hours to reach you from where I’d sent him.”

Even with Carrow’s limited knowledge of the island, she couldn’t outpace a tracing vampire. More than three hours to get to Malkom . . .

Have to get started now! “Mari, pull up the directions—Rydstrom is tracing me. And get this thing off my neck!”

Rydstrom’s sorceress queen, Sabine, demanded, “Is Lanthe there?”

“Yes!” Carrow answered. “Somewhere.” At Rydstrom’s quizzical look, she hastily explained, “We got separated. I’m sure we can find her within a day or so. If we leave right now!” Turning to Mariketa, she snapped, “Mari, my collar—I need it gone. It’s binding my powers.”

“I’m on it!” Mari said, rubbing her thumb over a pocket mirror while studiously gazing away. “Damn, Carrow, that is some serious mojo.”

Rydstrom crossed his brawny arms over his chest. “So if you weren’t just with Lanthe, then you can’t say for certain that she’s even still on this island.”

No time to convince him, to explain Thronos . . . Carrow couldn’t catch her breath, feeling as if she were about to hyperventilate like Ruby.

“We’ll go in when Mariketa scries for her specifically,” Rydstrom decided. “It will ultimately save us time.”

Typical logical Rydstrom. “No, damn you! Now!” If anything happened to Malkom . . . She clutched at her chest, thinking about Malkom in the midst of all those creatures. “We’re leaving this f*cking minute!”

Sabine shot to her feet, her anger making the room appear to rock. “You didn’t just talk to my husband like that.”

“I did. And you’ll get him to cooperate if you ever want to see your sister again!”

“Now you’re threatening me?” Sabine narrowed her eyes behind her mask. “I’ll turn your mind inside out.” She held up her glowing palms, poised to strike.

“You think Mari didn’t bind any mystical offensives within our coven?” A quick glance at Mari. “You did, right, Glitch?”

Wide-eyed, Mari nodded. “Between that and your new collar, the best you two can do is catfight.”



In his arrogance, Malkom had thought he could protect them from anything.

Now a vampire, one of Malkom’s most reviled enemies, had stolen his family right in front of his eyes.

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