For Heaven's Eyes Only

For Heaven's Eyes Only by Simon R. Green Page A

Book: For Heaven's Eyes Only by Simon R. Green Read Free Book Online
Authors: Simon R. Green
out even a hardened field agent.
    But while I was preoccupied with that, the demon dog swung its wounded head against me, lifting me up off my feet and pinning me against the corridor wall. I hung there, feet dangling helplessly in midair, my arms trapped at my sides by the great weight of its bulk. The corridor wall cracked beneath me, ruptured by so many tons of pressure. My armour still protected me, but I couldn’t break free. All the demon dog had to do was hold me there until the Satanists got out of the locked room, and then . . .
    Molly and Isabella popped up out of nowhere, glowing blades in their hands, and hit the demon dog from both sides at once. Their witch knives sank deep into the dog’s throat. Blood spurted thickly, steaming on the air, and Molly and Isabella moved quickly back to avoid it, without removing their knives. They forced the blades deeper in, and then jerked them across the dog’s throat until they met in the middle. The dog tried to howl, but they’d cut its voice out. Dark blood gushed across the floor, and the pressure on me began to weaken. Suddenly all the strength went out of it, and the demon dog collapsed. Molly and Isabella stepped back, regarding the dog warily. I pushed the body away from me. It didn’t react. It was panting harshly now, and the flames had gone out in its eye. It took one last snap at me, for spite’s sake, and then it stopped breathing.
    Right on the edge of my hearing I heard a despairing scream as the possessing demon was forced out of the dead dog and sent plummeting back into Hell to face its punishment for having dared fail.
    The dog lay still, nothing but a great slab of muscle now, dead and empty. Molly glared at it.
    “Bad dog.”
    I armoured down and stretched tiredly. Fighting the dog had taken a lot out of me. The armour has the strength, but I still have to operate it. Isabella scowled at me.
    “Typical Drood. Had to armour up, didn’t you? That much strange matter has set off every alarm in the place!”
    “Big dog,” I said a bit plaintively. “What was I supposed to do, let it use me as a chew toy? Hit it on the nose with a rolled-up newspaper? And I don’t hear any alarms.”
    Molly snapped her fingers, and I could hear all of Lightbringer House’s secret alarms going off at once. Bells, sirens, flashing lights, the works. And in the background, an endless inhuman howl that had nothing to do with any alarm system.
    “I think we woke something up,” said Molly. “And I don’t think we should stick around to find out what.”
    “Yeah,” Isabella said reluctantly. “I can always come back again.”
    “Curiosity killed the cat,” I said.
    “And satisfaction brought her back!” snapped Isabella. “Now how are we going to get out of here before that boardroom door finally gives way and lets loose a whole crowd of angry Satanists?”
    “No problem,” said Molly. “Eddie has the Merlin Glass. We can step through it, out of this building and into Drood Hall, and then shut the Glass down before anyone can follow us. They won’t even know where we’ve gone.”
    I already had the Merlin Glass out, and was shaking it up to full size. Isabella glowered at it jealously.
    “The Merlin Glass? How the hell did you get your hands on that, Drood? I’ve been looking for the Glass for years. . . . Trust the Droods to keep all the best toys for themselves. You have to let me examine it!”
    “Maybe later,” I said. “If you’re good.”
    “You want a slap?” said Isabella.
    “Hands off the boyfriend, Iz,” said Molly.
    But I was concerned over a new problem. No matter what I tried, the Merlin Glass stubbornly refused to show me anything other than my own reflection. I tried shaking it back to its original size, and then shaking it hard, on general principle, but it remained just a looking glass. I finally said something harsh but justified, and put the Glass away again.
    “Houston, we have a problem,” I said heavily. “It would

Similar Books

The Bride Box

Michael Pearce

The Watcher in the Wall

Owen Laukkanen

Outback Sunset

Lynne Wilding

Maelstrom

Paul Preuss

One Kiss More

Mandy Baxter

Icespell

C.J. Busby

SOS the Rope

Piers Anthony

Royal Date

Sariah Wilson