Crunch. Crack. Bones split.
She knew the sound of bones snapping under the pressure of a predator’s jaws. She froze. Her nightly run forgotten. She stopped in the shadows of the building next to her, tilted her head, and listened.
She paused as silence descended.
Her stomach tightened.
Human, animal, or other?
She remained still, hiding, listening, as she’d always done and been trained to do.
Her breathing steadied. She fought the sounds, willing them to not be what she’d thought she’d heard. This was not her battle.
She’d wanted to get in her nightly run without a demon sighting. The long days at the morgue shredded her stamina. A medical examiner’s daily routine fatigued her enough without adding in this. She’d been working days on end and welcomed the brief respite. She’d started her run to get rid of the stress, not add more.
No, thank you, Universe, for whatever planetary alignment that was causing such upheaval.
She wrinkled her nose. The rusty, metallic smell of blood reached her as she passed by an alleyway. She sniffed, shaking her head, adjusting to the scent. She suppressed the involuntary urge to sneeze by pressing the tips of her index fingers and thumbs together. The minute gesture gave her something to focus on. She took in a deep breath and exhaled. She’d deal. She’d been made for this. It was her calling.
Technically, she wasn’t on duty. Shellie was on tap for this. North America was her domain, her responsibility.
Crack.
Growl.
Wet lips smacked together in satisfaction and repulsion rolled through her entire body. She bit back a physical response and focused on her breathing.
This was work, nothing more.
Her stomach tightened. She listened and then crept forward toward the sounds. She stopped and stilled in the shadows of the building, and her hearing expanded. Her hands curled to her sides. Her spine tightened. A plastic bottle clattered down the alleyway, blown by the wind. Tires splashed through puddles several blocks over. The endless rhythm of go-go music playing in Adams Morgan a mile away pulsed in her ears. The city never rested.
Crunch.
Lick.
Slurp.
Purr.
Growl.
She hesitated, every cell in her demanding a response. Pinpricks raced over her skin. She forced her heart rate to slow as she began to take stock. The local samurai wasn’t responding. Shellie was late.
Shellie was never late.
Every bit of her being tuned into the sounds. Shellie either was either ignoring her mission or she’d been called elsewhere. She hoped it was the latter. She heard it all, bad sign.
And then, the scent hit her.
She sniffed again, and odd combination of smells — ashes, bones and baby powder—whiffed across her nose. Demon. Rissu, recently born at that.
She shuddered. She wished no one a run in with a mature Rissu. Baby killers. She’d slain several before. A newborn meant an adult had to be nearby.
Who was calling demons into the Nation’s Capital? Did they have a vendetta against the current administration?
Stupid, stupid, stupid.
She would never understand those she’d been sent to protect. They did the dumbest things in the name of power, and calling a demon into being was very, very dumb. Although, D.C. provided a daily dose of all levels of stupidity. She’d chronicled them through the years. Someday, she’d post them up to some website. Or, maybe she’d send an anonymous article. Her sister Samurai wouldn’t kill her then.
Focus, Shia, focus.
The sound of another crack reached her ears, and her body began to hum. She couldn’t ignore a demon. As tired as she was, duty called…demanded. Shia cast aside the desire to turn the other cheek and move on because this wasn’t her domain. The tenets of the Samurai prevailed. Their code was simple: Loyalty, honor, obedience, duty, filial piety, and, when necessary, self-sacrifice.
Cold energy rippled over her, pulsed in her veins, growing with each heartbeat. Her eyelids fluttered. The static from within caressed her skin, escaping through every pore and every hair on her head. The familiar satisfaction of upcoming battle crept into her psyche. The feeling of perfect harmony with her body granted a heightened consciousness only true Samurai achieved. Her swords hummed against her back. Her hands reached back without a second thought. The sound of metal against leather whispered as she pulled the hidden blades from their sheaths.
What other woman ran the streets at night with swords strapped to her back? Thankfully, she’d never had to explain it.
Swords in hand, she rounded the corner, and the alleyway opened up before her. Bricks, trash, shadows. Nothing ever changed in the alleyways, unless you counted the probable appearance of hungry homeless, hungrier rats, or a prostitute turning a quick trick, darkness and night.
She moved forward, inch-by-inch. She should have taken up needlepoint or some other mindless, home based activity. There were thousands of things to occupy her body and mind, yet somehow, she still had to be out moving and engaging.
Demon junkie.
That had to be it. All her years spent tracking, teaching, it was a drug in her system. She was taking a vacation once this latest infestation died down or when she found Shellie.
She moved further into the alley and saw him. Male, not that she’d ever seen a female Rissu outside a portal shimmer. The spines always showed on the males, deep, dark, spiky, through the clothes, if they happened to wear any. No matter how hard they tried to pass off as human, Rissu never quite managed to keep the spines from protruding from their backs.
“No sir, we don’t eat the resident beings on the planet we were just called to.” She tsk’d him as she stepped out of the darkness.
The creature before her stopped, hunched over in the shadows of the alley. His head turned at the sound of her voice. Shia couldn’t make out the demon’s victim from this angle, but she was certain it was dead. The Rissu’s claws stilled. Chunks of flesh stuck between its fangs. Blood dripped from its long razor like nails and covered the brick wall before him, sprayed forward like the work of an avant garde artist.
Messy kill.
She wrinkled her nose as the scent of wet dog overwhelmed her.
Oh, thank the stars, he’d started with the four-legged beings rather than the humans. She sent a silent prayer for the lost canine soul and focused on the Rissu before her. He was large for a newborn. Her best guess put him over 6’4″, though his weight was impossible to estimate, given the anatomy of his race, top-heavy, a brawler, well muscled and powerful. His claws easily tore through the carcass of his prey, a Rottweiler. His teeth had severed its neck and bones. The thing was famished, and she had interrupted its first meal.
Shia weighed her odds. She’d hunted Rissu before. This one outsized her by at least a couple hundred pounds and over a foot in height. She’d bet he wasn’t going to like her much after this.
Oh well, the bigger they are, the harder they fall. Right?
When he turned his massive head to look at her, she struck. Her katana whispered through the night air, intent on taking his head from his shoulders. She cursed under her breath as he moved, the tip of the blade grazing his shoulder rather than severing his head from his neck.
“No sir, be a good demon. This is not your realm.” She shook her head at him and sing-songed as she followed his movements. She twirled the longer blade in her right hand, her wrist rotating the long metal blade as an extension of herself. Her motions were almost musical as she stepped closer, separating the beast from his snack.
The Rissu remained hunched over like a cat, back bowed, teeth bared, eyes lit up, studying her every move from the center of the alley.
He growled.
She smirked. “Bring it, fledgling.”
She stepped to the side, preparing for his attack. They never learned. When he launched into her, she switched the grip on her sword. He drove against her, and Shia fell backward under the force. She jabbed into his upper ribs; the hilt of her katana in one hand, a hardened strike with the wakizashi in the other. Each blow found the soft space between ribs, and she allowed herself a brief feeling of success. The Rissu’s momentum carried them both deeper into the alley. His weight shifted again, and she shoved hard. He slammed into the wall behind them.
The demon howled in pain as the spines on his back struck cold stone. Shia grinned and rolled out of his grasp. Her foot lashed out, kicking his jaw sideways.
His claws slashed out, nails elongated, sharp and spiky, reaching to her. She bit back a cry of pain as his hand knifed down, catching her across her abdomen.
She clamped a hand over her mid-section. Blood rushed to her center. She frowned as she rolled, coming to her feet in a crouch. She chided herself for the premature assumption of victory.
Rookie Rissu, 1, centuries old Samurai, 0.
“Oh no, demon boy, it’s not gonna be that easy.”
Ohh, come closer demon…ashes to ashes and dust to dust.
She’d send him back into the alternate dimensions, multiple realities, in pain, and definitely in several pieces. Shia satisfied herself with the memory of sending an enemy into a dimension portal once without his limbs. She wondered if she’d have time for such a ritual before the pre-dawn traffic interrupted her.
She blocked out the pain and switched hands with her katana, watching as the blood red eyes tracked her movements. Back and forth. Back and forth, she played.
She waited.
In the pause between shifting of hands, he leapt.
She darted aside, grasping his neck. She pushed down into the pavement as he tried to overtake her. Her body shifted and flowed, one sword swept out and around in the other, intent on taking his head and ending this fight. He darted to the side and slid past her blade. Her sword tip hit the ground, metal ringing on asphalt. She almost bit her tongue in frustration. Her hand let go, claws retracted as the demon tumbled over and away from her. She didn’t need him taking her with him. She watched as the Rissu rolled to his feet.
She crouched, ready, waiting as he stared down at her. When he dashed towards her, her arm lifted in a block to his shoulder, pushing him past her, she ducked, taking her swords with her as his tail sailed over her, ducking under the deadly spikes. They both rolled, standing off.
The Rissu threw a haymaker at her.
She blocked, arm on arm, the impact resonating through her as the wakizashi blade barely touched him. Her other arm and katana arced out and over. She sliced down, severing his shoulder from his body and then lifted the blade, turning to slash across his neck.
Slice.
A lock of her hair drifted in the air.
She missed.
The blade swirled around her in a defensive posture on instinct. Losing sight of such a beast for a second could be fatal. She drew the katana back, her eyes shifting through the shadows to catch the Rissu before its next strike. After several breaths, she stood upright, cursing her luck and her performance. The Rissu had executed the only move with worse consequences than blindsiding her.
The demon turned tail and ran.
Shia groaned under her breath. She’d get her run in yet. Rissu weren’t the fastest demons in the realms, but they left a good trail. She slid both swords back into place on her back and palmed several throwing stars while forcibly ignoring the pain in her abdomen as her body began to stitch itself back together. The metal stars offered comfort and familiarity as they slipped into her hands. Metal vibrated against her skin.
Her vision shifted and red lights danced across the ground in the darkness.
Demon trail.
He’d darted out of the alleyway. He had made an escape attempt, but she could still catch him. Shia sprinted down the alley, nearing full speed in a few steps. She raced forward, intent on the unholy light along the street.
Her focus split between human reality and the otherworld. She reached the end of the passage and turned the corner. She collided with something solid. The air left her lungs. Stars danced in her vision, and she struggled to draw in a breath. This wasn’t Rissu, far too physical and of this realm.
She forced her need to fight deep down, focusing on the night.
The figure staggered backward, spinning before stabilizing against a parked truck. A beam of light darted over the ground, over the car, into the sky and then stopped. A flashlight.
A demon wouldn’t have a flashlight.
Human.
She struggled to right herself and dropped the throwing stars down her sleeve.
Breathe, Shia, breathe.
She didn’t attack humans without cause. She shifted, and she took another deep breath, stabilizing.
The man stood upright, leveling the flashlight at her face. Standing, yet still craving air in her lungs, Shia lifted her hands in self-defense. She blinked, willing her eyes to adjust to the sudden glare in the dark.
“You okay, lady? Someone chasing you?” He asked.
It was bright.
“No, no one chasing me.” She answered.
It took seconds for her vision to right itself. When it did, she could make out his silhouette against the grey night air, but nothing more. She frowned. As if hearing her thoughts, the man moved the light from her to his own form. He focused the light on a piece of paper in his hand. Centered on the paper was a black and white picture of a Rottweiler.
He turned the light beneath his face, illuminating him in campfire ghost story fashion.
“Have you seen this dog?” He asked.
She bit her tongue. Hard. If she hadn’t already locked her knees, they might have buckled in embarrassment. Oh, gods. Ryan. She took a deep breath, forcing her heart rate to decelerate, demanding her body come back into her control.
“Good evening, Detective Calder.” She watched as his eyes widened.
He switched the light from himself back to her, studying her as she winced from the pain of the sudden brightness.
“Dr. Ronin, out for an evening run?” He asked.
Shia dropped her gaze, taking in her black sweats. Not something she wanted to be seen in, but there you had it. Thank the Universe the dark fabric hid the cuts it suffered and any blood loss she’d suffered.
“Yes.”
She darted a glance over his shoulder, the red lights still hovered over the street. Had the demon sprinted right past him? Her gaze swept over him, making sure he held no hint of red light. She shifted her shoulders, settling her swords in lower. Protected by the same magic protecting her, he shouldn’t be able to see them, but she didn’t need to take the chance with the eagle eyed homicide detective. As odd as he seemed sometimes, he appeared very aware in the human realm. She wouldn’t put it beyond him to notice the otherworldly going-ons.
Ryan tilted his head and followed her gaze for a moment over his shoulder before focusing on her again. “Well, I figured you weren’t grocery shopping. Looks like you worked up a good sweat.” He flashed the light at her feet and along the entrance to the alleyway. “You drop anything?” The light crisscrossed over the demon trail, which glowed like fire in Shia’s eyes.
She wished he’d kill the light, but knew he wouldn’t. The glare amplified in her head a hundred times over. She squinted. “Thought I heard something in the alley, but no one’s there. Decided I better make up my time.” She shifted, torn between letting her eyes drink in his dark form and chasing after the Rissu.
Wait a minute.
Rottweiler?
A shiver raced through her. “You’re out looking for a Rottie?”
Please tell her this wasn’t his dog she’d failed to rescue.
Ryan nodded, “Yeah, Mrs. Bradbury in Apartment 4-G is missing her dog. She’s pretty broken up about it. I figured it was the least I could do to help. Especially because Mrs. Bradbury listens to Joe Cocker when she’s upset…and her hearing aide isn’t always up to par.” He moved the light from one side of the street to the other, checking for any uninvited guests. “Nothing inspires a man to community service like Joe Cocker at a hundred and twenty decibels.”
Despite her duty, her lips twitched. Decorated homicide detective way laid by an elderly neighbor and 70’s soul-singing icon. Priceless. She sobered. She didn’t want either of them finding out how the dog died. The crack of bone in teeth still echoed through her head. She wished she’d found the Rissu minutes before. The four-legged little beast should have lived.
“You live nearby? Rottie’s stay pretty close to home. I can keep an eye out for him while I run.” Over Ryan’s shoulder the trail began to dim.
“That would be great. You can’t miss him. He’s got a collar with rhinestones…something about his resemblance to Elvis. I don’t know.” Ryan handed her the flier. “Two blocks south of here. Trust me. You’ll hear ‘I Get by with a Little Help from my Friends’ before you ever get in the door. My number’s on the flier if you find anything, but I think you have it from the Felder case.”
Shia nodded. She knew more about Ryan than she cared to admit even before their cold case, the Felder homicide. She bit her lip as the Rissu’s trail dimmed and faded. She shouldn’t have let him side track her. She was faster than him. He never would have realized it was her if she’d kept moving. Her entire body warmed.
“What’s his name?” She’d replace the dog. She couldn’t in good conscience let an old lady mourn the loss of her beloved family member because a demon decided to make him dinner.
This job sucked.
Ryan shrugged. “What else? Joe.” He gave her a quick once-over. “You mind me asking something personal?”
“You can ask. I may or may not answer.” She’d already delayed too long. She rocked from foot to foot, ready to be on the move again.
“The nation’s capitol isn’t always the friendliest place, especially in the dead of night, for a good looking girl. You have some pepper spray or something handy?” He half-grinned. “Professional courtesy and all…”
Shia smiled. “Don’t you know, Detective, I am a weapon. I run the nights. It’s the best time. No one out to stop me.”
She wasn’t about to reveal the swords, throwing stars, or baton hidden on her body. He didn’t need the influence. The worst she encountered was a stray homeless or a demon. The demons, well, they were hers to handle anyway. The homeless wandered on their way, thinking she was an illusion. She preferred it that way.
“I’d like to share your confidence, Dr. Ronin. I’d feel better hearing you had some tools to help you stay safe.” He unbuckled a small container of pepper spray from his belt. “This is compact. It shouldn’t affect your running stride, but it could help in case you bump into the wrong night creature.”
Her hand lifted. He didn’t know about the other creatures of the night. The pepper spray dropped into her palm. The one detective who she thought would do well in her realm had never questioned her findings. Sometimes, she’d had to reach to explain a death. He worked the cases, focused on the facts. She wondered what he’d do if she presented him with a demon, the Rissu?
She sighed. He’d never even see it. Few did.
“Thank you, Detective. I’ll be sure to return this to you tomorrow, if you stop by the morgue.”
He nodded. “Thanks. I have the Huang results to pick up. I’ll adjust my schedule. Enjoy your run, Dr. Ronin.”
Shia shifted, unsure. Ryan never spoke more than a few words, directed at work to her. He was quiet, but he was out looking for a Rottie who belonged to a neighbor. The Rissu was long gone. She’d have to hunt it down tomorrow. And Ryan? He wasn’t of her realm, but one of those to protect who now had a demon in his neighborhood. She’d be sure to keep her running route close by. She didn’t want some Rissu munching on him or his elderly neighbor.
“Good luck with your fliers and finding the Rot. I hope she eventually turns the music down, for your sanity,” she murmured.
She pulled her hood up over her hair and took a step forward.
She stopped and turned, casting a glance back at him. “Detective Calder?”
“Yes, Dr. Ronin?”
“Be careful of the shadows.”
It was the only warning she could give him. She wished she could have given him more. She turned and set out at a sprint on her regular path. She didn’t need him asking for clarification. He was one to do so. She sprinted away from him faster than she should have.