Angie Fox - The Last of the Demon Slayers

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Lizzie Brown would like to have one normal date. Instead, she gets a towering inferno with a message: her long-lost dad is a fallen angel in danger of becoming a demon. Not good. Especially since she’s a demon slayer.
Her grandma advises her to stay out of it. Her sexy-as-sin shape-shifter boyfriend would much rather she devote her attention to more carnal pursuits. And her dog’s one demand is for more bacon. After all, he can’t train his pet dragon on an empty stomach.
But Lizzie knows there’s no other choice but to hop on her Harley and help her dad—even if the search for the truth brings a bad-boy slayer back into her life and leads her into the middle of a war to end all wars.

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“No,” she grumbled. “Lizzie broke my arm.”

“Come here,” I said, “I’ll fix it.” I had another crystal. Although I wasn’t sure where the happy thoughts would come from.

“Don’t touch me,” she said, backing away.

Fine. “I was aiming for the cushions,” I said, resisting the urge to apologize. I’d done my best. And it had worked. She was free of the dreg. She could try to be grateful, especially after what had happened to Dimitri.

I didn’t know how he was going to defeat the multiple dregs that Zatar was sure to be carrying. Even if we could banish the demon to another dimension, were we doing the dark earl a favor, releasing all of his dregs at once?

“Help me up,” Dimitri ordered, trying to stand.

“Sure,” I said, taking one side, Grandma on the other. He was at least two-hundred-and-fifty-pounds of pure muscle. I knew. I’d made it my mission to explore as much of it as possible – as often as I could.

We helped Dimitri over to a picnic table by the main cabin. He slumped down onto a bench, not looking like anyone who could face a bunch of dregs in – oh, about an hour.

What were we going to do when Zatar got here?

“Huddle up,” Grandma said, as she and the witches took seats and gathered in around us. She slammed the jar on the table, the dreg still battling with the glass sides. “I see one big problem.”

“That this thing almost killed Dimitri?” I asked.

“No,” she answered, torch light deepening the lines and shadows of her face, “you didn’t get your fake Zatar to hell.”

Sweat trickled down the back of my neck. “I focused on the target area. I know I did.” The only time my mind had wandered even slightly was to think of Dimitri and I certainly hadn’t flung Roxie on top of him so I was pretty sure that was a moot point.

“Then why didn’t I go far enough?” Roxie called from the end of the table as Frieda worked to splint her arm with a wooden board and several lengths of gauze.

“I don’t know,” I snapped. “What were you thinking?”

“About killing you,” she spat.

“Perfect!” Neal clapped. “That’s exactly what a demon would be thinking.”

“Who invited him?” I demanded.

“Pipe down,” Grandma ordered. “Everybody. Now listen. We know Lizzie didn’t get enough power on her throw. It’s probably because she throws like a girl.”

“Hey -” I began. Oh frick. What was I saying? It was true. “You think that’s the problem?” If so, I didn’t know what we could do about it.

Grandma planted her elbows on the picnic table. “Evie’s portal notes don’t say you have to do the throwing by hand, so,” she said, like a sergeant rallying the troops, “we build you a sling shot.”

“You think I’d be better with a sling shot?” This is what I got for spending my childhood throwing tea parties for my stuffed animals. I had absolutely no outside skills.

I turned to Creely, the engineering witch. “Can you build a sling shot? One that I can use?”

She opened her mouth and closed it, nostrils flaring. “Goodbye,” she said, rushing out of the circle.

“If you need help, the dragon can haul wood for you!” I called after her.

Heavens to Betsy. I was getting a sling shot.

Rachmort burst into the circle. “I’ve been testing the demon dust you and your father acquired in purgatory.”

“And?” He was talking too slow.

“It’s fake, laced with fillers. It won’t hold a demon. The best it will do is slow him down.”

“Okay, well then we’ll sprinkle it around the target area.” I needed all the help I could get. “Now what do we do about Dimitri?”

“Stop talking about me like I’m not here,” he grunted through the pain. “I told you I’d do this.”

Yes, well, wanting to do it and having the physical strength were two different things. I’d just demonstrated that myself.

But Dimitri was our only option. None of us could handle a dreg. Now he was going to get hit bad. I didn’t know what to do about that.

“Come on,” Grandma said, breaking up the meeting. “Zatar will likely be here within the hour. Frieda, go see if you can help Creely, even if that means keeping the rest of us out of her hair. Everybody else – we need more jars.”

“Let’s get you back to the bus,” I said to Dimitri. At least he could rest up and recover there. “No need to be the hero right now.” He’d be one soon enough.

“No,” he said, wrapping his arms around his chest as if he were cold. A chill – or something worse – passed through his body and he cringed. “I have to stay close in case something happens.”

I wanted to argue, but he was right. We needed him. “Okay, well sit tight. I’m going to double check the portal charms.” Plus I could tell Dimitri didn’t want to be babied, which was hard because there was nothing more I wanted to do than hold him close.

Men.

Out near the field, Bettina opened her cooler of portal charms and I inserted soul flowers into the center of each. We had six shots, which would be more than enough.

There would only be time for one.

Creely hunched in the middle of a circle of witches holding torches. She hammered a length of wood, barking orders to at least three more witches who were doing the same. It didn’t look like a sling shot. It looked like a weapon.

More witches added torches at the edge of the field and sprinkled salt from large burlap bags. Normally, salt is used by witches to ward off evil. I didn’t have the heart to tell them that those things wouldn’t make a whit of difference to a demon like Zatar.

He was an Earl of Hades, demonic royalty for heaven’s sake. I remembered the sheer power and evil he’d thrown at me – and that was before he knew I could toss it back.

I watched as Neal helped my father past the cabin. It seemed Dad didn’t want to miss this. Well, maybe it was for the best. This could very well be my final battle.

Chapter Twenty-two

Neal deposited Dad at an empty picnic table before beating a hasty retreat. He’d found Dad a pair of baggy jeans and a green Bob Marley T-shirt.

I slipped onto the bench next to him, our backs to the table. “How are you doing?”

It was a loaded question. Anyone who took one look at him would know he was fading fast. His eyes were red and his body hunched. Shadows formed under his hollowed out cheeks and blood trickled from his nose. He clutched the wooden bench like he was about to fall off.

He was even worse than when I’d found him half-dead by the altar to Zatar.

Dad motioned me closer. “The demon is coming,” he said in a garbled voice. The bench under him began to shudder.

“I know, Dad.” I reached down and touched his bony shoulder. “Try not to talk.”

The last thing we needed was a zombie picnic table.

I took his hands in mine. They were cold and shaking. “I will save you.” He had to believe that. I needed to as well. “We will beat Zatar. We have a plan.”

It was a shaky plan at best, but we’d do what we had to do. We didn’t have a choice.

This was the dark time before the dawn, but the sun would rise. It must.

Dad nodded, tears in his eyes.

“It’s time,” he mouthed.

He was right. I could tell from the expression on Frieda’s face as she jogged straight for us. “Break time’s over, girlie,” she said. “Creely needs you at the machine. Battina is unloading the portal charms and Roxie looks like she’s the last pea on the plate.”

I squinted at her. “I don’t even know what that means.”

She shrugged, white plastic earrings swaying. “Then follow me.”

This was it. “Bye, Dad.” I kissed him on the head before following Frieda out to the field.

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