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Demon Bound

Demon Bound

Titel: Demon Bound Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Caitlin Kittredge
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watched, pointed, marked him as the death they’d come to claim.
    “Jack!” He became aware of Pete shouting, in a harsh whisper to avoid passersby noticing her panic. Still tight against him, like they were twins sharing a heart. “Shield hex?” she mouthed.
    The sluagh were close enough to touch now, if he’d been a madman with a death wish. “No,” Jack said tightly. “No bloody good.” The dead were not tempered or repelled by living magic. Unwanted, the memory of Algernon Treadwell and his overweening hunger came to Jack, borne on the cold air ruffled by the passage of the sluagh.
    Don’t just stand there like a knob.
Not the fix, now. A little of Seth, a little of Pete, a little of his own survival instinct, battered and bloodied as it was.
    Only blood could sate a spirit, and only dead blood could sate the sluagh.
    Jack snatched Pete’s hand, and the jolt of her magic, the sight, and his own talent nearly unbalanced him again. “Run,” he ordered. “Run and don’t look back.”
    With his free hand, he fumbled in his pocket and pulled forth his flick knife. The blade popped, a gleam of quicksilver obscured by crimson as Jack turned the knife to slice through the back of his opposite hand.
    Blood fell to the dirty, mud-crusted floor of the station. One drop, two, three.
    “
Go dtáthaí mé tú
,” Jack muttered, and the gray tendrils of the spell feebly sought out the sluagh. It wasn’t enough, wasn’t nearly enough. Jack needed more blood and more time to keep the dead away.
    But it was
his
spell, the ghost box, his strongest magic. As the blood fell, Jack wove the cage of power and sight, holding the spirits back, keeping the dead at bay for just a little longer. The ghost box was the first spell he’d learned, the first, desperate magic that he’d tried when he wasn’t sure that he wasn’t simply succumbing to the same kind of delusion that made his mother talk to her plaster figurine of the Virgin Mary. Jack had first felt the Black enter him alone on the floor of a filthy, leaking squat on the outskirts of Manchester. He’d poxed it up, and was lucky he hadn’t died then and there, but the ghost box, straight from a mouldering “ye olde chaos magicke” tome at the library, had held.
    Jack hoped fervently, with a jump of nerves in his chest that hadn’t happened in years, that it held now.
    The sluagh drew back from the entanglement of blood magic, their silent mouths growing long, ghostly white teeth.
    Jack ducked through a gap in their ranks and ran, towing Pete behind him. She hadn’t obeyed his order to run, but he hadn’t expected her to. Pete was too stubborn to run even for her own bloody good.
    Jack took the stairs to the Underground lines two at a time, shoving passengers out of the way. He let go of Pete and vaulted the fare gates, a transit worker shouting at him,just a blur of blue and life next to the overwhelming, encroaching flock of sluagh.
    Jack veered into the tunnel for the Bakerloo Line, his heart pulsating like to break his ribs. He had a moment of
This is it, you’ve blown your wad
as his vision blacked, and then he was on the platform and a train was roaring into the tunnel and Pete snatched his arm and kept him from going over the edge onto the tracks.
    The doors sprang open, disgorging their human load, and Jack shoved his way inside.
    “
Please stand clear of the doors,
” the robot announced. “
This is a Bakerloo Line train to Elephant and Castle.

    Jack slumped against the train window as the car pulled out of the station. The sluagh stood on the platform in a cluster of nightmares, hollowed-out eyes following him until the train rounded a corner and they were lost to blackness and reflection.
    “Too much iron,” Jack rasped. The need for a fag was vicious, and had claws. “Even for them.”
    “What did they want with you?” Pete said. She rubbed her hands up and down her arms, palms making a soft hiss against the leather.
    “Me dead, I suppose,” Jack said. “’S the only thing sluagh ever want.”
    “Because they’re restless?” Pete stepped to the door as the train pulled into the next station, at Edgeware Road. “Unfinished business or some bollocks?”
    “Not likely,” Jack said. “The restless dead are them too full of malice and hunger even for the Land of the Dead.” Sluagh were wild spirits, feral dogs feeding on the souls and deaths of the living. Picking spectral bones, until there was nothing left.
    They came

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