After that, it never was quite the same at work again. A peace had been established, knowing smiles and something more... a sense of balance. As the weeks lengthened into months, and winter transformed into spring, I noticed that Colin had become more confident. Gone was his boyish shyness, replaced with a sense of purpose and inner strength. Often as the last customer left the building and I shut up for the night, I would see shadows in Miss Johnson's office and hear muffled moans. Caroline too had a smile on her face. I often caught her humming softly to herself at the photocopier and when I confronted her about it, she would just smile and be on her way.
That spring was amongst my happiest days too. Luka would always be with me -- on my walks and in my dreams. We would spend our time together in her crystal house and whenever she was frightened she would rush into my arms where I would cradle her like a little girl, cooing soft words of reassurance into her ears.
"I will never let anyone hurt you, Luka," I would say, softly stroking her coal black hair.
"I know," would be her reply, as she buried her head into my chest.
She would never elaborate on her fears, and when pressed, she would transform into that little girl and stare up with me with panic in her eyes. I had my suspicions though and it wasn't long before they were confirmed.
One spring morning I was walking along the riverbank that ran past the back of my house when I noticed a flock of rooks milling overhead. This wasn't particularly unusual at this time of year -- they often roosted in great numbers in the woods that ran alongside the river, taking to the air at dawn in a great fanfare of sound and motion, but this time it was different. They weren't dispersing as was their norm, splitting into smaller groups to search for breakfast, but whirled about fixated with something on the ground. I climbed over the barbed wire fence that separated me from the birds and into the farmer's field. I immediately knew that something wasn't quite right. Something unnatural -- preternatural even - and a shiver crawled down my spine. The birds didn't flee when I approached, instead, they whipped around me, in a flurry of feathers and beaks. Their boldness surprised me, so much so that I thought that they might attack. In my distraction, I almost stumbled over a sheep lying motionless on its side. Was this what had excited them? It was stiff and stared back with lifeless black eyes. The freshness of the rigor mortis told me that it had died just a few hours ago yet nature had already come to claim it. The grass had grown up almost covering it, and toadstools grew out of its orifices. How could this be?
A moment later the birds took to the skies and quietness descended as if they had never existed.
The silence also brought a chill.
In my peripheral vision there was a flicker -- a darker shade of grey where no grey should have been. My stomach turned because some primitive instinct descended from our monkey forebears knew that the shadow meant me harm.
"It's a shade," Luka said.
It was the tremulous voice of the young girl. "An agent of Anubis, a demon lord, and it knows that I'm here."
How long had the shade been watching me? Two dark coals smouldered in its head, and beneath its cowl, I saw the skeletal death mask of death himself.
"We cannot possibly hope to fight him," Luka said. "Can you make it to the church?"
The church? Was that demonology stuff true?
"It cannot take you in a church," Luka said, "not on holy ground. The old stories are true, Luke. Now run."
I set off at a frantic pace but with the presence following behind keeping to the shadows. Fear welled in my stomach -- fear for myself and fear for Luka. I knew the demon wanted her and it would possess me to get to her.
I knew also that I could not get to the church. The being had no difficulty in keeping pace. In fact, it had been joined by two more of the presences, each weaving and flowing into each other like ghastly coiling snakes.