Skeleton Crew. Cameron Haley

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Skeleton Crew - Cameron Haley

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I started spinning spontaneous combat spells as fast as I could pull the juice, and they flowed around the demon like water around a stone. I hit the thing with malevolent glamours and it didn’t even notice.

      By this time, the other survivors had recovered, too, and the air around the demon had become a storm of arcane energy. It just kept killing, and it finally dawned on me that there might have been a reason Oberon had attacked it with a sword.

      “Physical attacks!” I shouted, and my words were followed shortly by the deafening sound of gunfire as all the gangsters who were still alive unloaded on the demon. I’d left my forty-five at home on account of my minimalist costume. I could have hidden it with glamour, but it would have ruined the experience. I snatched a semiautomatic from the waistband of a fallen soldier and emptied the magazine at the demon.

      Bullets didn’t seem to have much effect, either.

      I turned and ran back the way I’d come, diving behind the couch I’d been lying on. “I have harnessed the shadows that stride from world to world to sow death and madness,” I said, and I crossed into the Between.

      In the spirit world, the demon was all special effects and no nasty body. It was a massive black shadow of shifting darkness marked only by the fire in its eyes and mouth. I got up and ran for the door. When I got outside, I kept running and plunged into the mist. I retrieved Ned from the front closet of my condo and made it back to the club in no more time than it would take the demon to kill a couple dozen revelers.

      I eased inside and pressed my back against the wall, the Peacemaker gripped in both hands in front of me.

      “I know you’re cursed, Ned,” I whispered. “I know this would be a really great time for the curse to show up, for you to earn your nickname. But the guy who sold you to me said you were an artifact, and I really, really need you right now.”

      I brought the gun to my lips and kissed the barrel.

      “So please, Ned, I’m begging you, just this once. Get hostile with this ugly motherfucker.” Then I extended my arms, aimed as steadily as I could, thumbed back the hammer and squeezed the trigger.

      I squeezed it a lot, as fast as I could work the action. Ned danced gaily in my hands and burning sapphire holes opened in the demonic shadow. It threw back its head and screamed as the holes widened, the blue fire feeding eagerly on the darkness.

      Then it turned and came for me. I closed my eyes and kept firing.

      I’m not sure how long I kept at it after the demon was dead. When I finally opened my eyes, the thing was a smoking puddle of black tar on the floor, the ephemeral fire still flickering on the surface. Adan stood on the other side of the evil pool, the king’s greatsword in his hands. Black tar oozed along the blade and spattered against the floor.

      I sank to the floor and struggled for air with huge gasping breaths. “Domino, you silly bitch, you don’t even really breathe here,” I whispered, and then I started giggling.

      “It’s okay, Domino,” Adan said. “You killed it.”

      “I did or you did?” Adan grinned. “We did.”

      “How did you get here?”

      “The same way I got to Arcadia—through that first gate you built for Oberon.”

      “You’re really here. You’re not spirit-walking, like me—you’re physical.”

      “I don’t know why I’m able to do it. Maybe it’s a gift I was born with.”

      “Or maybe it’s something Oberon did to you when he took you.”

      “Maybe,” he said. “And still, you got here first.”

      I looked at the spreading, toxic sludge. I reached out and dabbed my fingers in the tar, and tasted them. The taste was foul, putrescence and fresh blood, with enough acidity to burn my tongue. There were a couple familiar notes, too. One of them I couldn’t quite put my finger on; the other one pissed me off.

      I stood up and holstered Ned. “See you on the other side,” I said. I didn’t want to leave the weapon in the club, so I had to make another round-trip to my condo. When I returned, I stepped back into the mortal world and into the slaughterhouse.

      The dead were everywhere, but only the fey were staying down. The humans were nursing wounds they couldn’t possibly have survived and some of them were already starting to look a little crazy.

      Oberon was stretched out on the floor, his head cradled in Titania’s lap. He’d returned to his youthful, sidhe form. He was bleeding but at least he was conscious. The queen wouldn’t let anyone else get close, but she didn’t object when Oberon waved me over.

      “You slew the Fomoiri,” the king said.

      “We did,” I said, nodding at Adan. I looked but there was no corpse in this world, not even a puddle of tar.

      “I’m in your debt, Domino.”

      “Nah. Really it was just self-defense.”

      “This was my party. I’m the host.” He paused and looked up at Titania, and smiled. “You defended my queen.”

      I shrugged. “You want to return the favor someday, I’m not going to argue much.”

      Oberon nodded and then his face hardened. “I’m sorry, but you’re going to have to clean this up.”

      I looked around the room at the carnage. Most of the living dead were my soldiers. I saw Honey. She was sitting on the couch again with Jack, though I remembered hearing her battle cry during the fight.

      I also saw Anton. He sagged against the wall with his legs stretched out in front of him. His torso had been torn open and he was trying to shovel his guts back into the cavity.

      I shook my head. “No way, King. I’m not putting them down.” Then I walked over to Anton. He looked up as I approached and I saw he was crying.

      “I was dancing, Domino,” he said. “Did you see me?”

      “I missed it, Anton. I bet you danced real good.”

      “I was dancing with the pretty fairy.” He looked toward the dance floor, and then tucked his chin into his chest and bawled. I turned and saw a bloody tangle of meat that might once have been a female sidhe.

      I tightened my jaw, bit down on my lip and turned away. Honey and Jack flew over to me and Adan followed.

      “What are you going to do, Domino?” Honey whispered.

      I stared at her, blinked and ground my teeth. “I will not put that fat son of a bitch down.”

      “We don’t have a choice, Domino,” Adan said. “You know what will happen if we don’t.” He tried to put his arm around me but I jerked away.

      “Honey, you and the other fey see what you can do. Save the ones that are still alive, then patch up the dead the best you can.” I pointed to Anton. “Start with him.”

      I walked to the center of the dance floor and looked around. “Listen up,” I said.

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