Lucifer Reborn Dante King (books that read to you txt) š
- Author: Dante King
Book online Ā«Lucifer Reborn Dante King (books that read to you txt) šĀ». Author Dante King
āI could use some Earthly riches,ā I grunted, reaching for the correct button. āNot to mention some pleasures of the fleshā¦ā
It had been a while since Iād had either. I wasnāt a virgin or anything like that: Iād had my share of girlfriends. It had just...well. I was going through a rough patch, alright?
āHe is real!ā The preacherās spiel reached a crescendo. āHis name is Satan, Beelzebub, the greatāā
Click.
ā-Deceiver!ā Better audio quality told me Iād gotten the right station this time. āThat was āThe Great Deceiverā by King Crimson, part of K106ās No-Commercials Rawk Block! Next up, weāve got Van Halenās Running With the Devilā¦ā
Even my shitty vanās speakers could rumble from that bassline. āThatās more like it,ā I said, giving the dashboard a little slap.
By the time David Lee Roth got finished warning me about living at a āpace that killsā, Iād pulled up in front of the clientās house. The homes on this end had an air of age and grandeur that the McMansions in the rest of it couldnāt matchābuilt of bricks and stones instead of drywall. Six Sixty Seven was only two stories tall instead of the usual three, but it made the most of it. High, narrow windows on the second story stared down at me like interested eyes.
The engine shuddered and died as I put the van into park. Fuck. Not a good sign.
āHope you start back up, little buddy,ā I growled, stepping out of the van. I walked to the back, passing the big painted āBell Computer Repairsā sign pasted to the vehicleās side door, and threw open the trunk.
Normally you wouldnāt have thought that an IT guy needed a lot of gear. The image people usually had of us involved being behind a keyboard, maybe sticking a USB drive full of hacker tools into a clientās desktop or laptop. But for house calls, Iād learned that I was just as much a cable guy as I was a computer fixer. The first time Iād had to dismantle part of a houseās plumbing to get to a router in a crawlspace, I learned the value of a good wrench.
Is anybody home? I wondered as I walked up the driveway. No car in front of the house, though there was a small, detached garage it could be hiding in. Windows dark, except for a couple on the second floor that shined with...red light? Huh. Whatever. I just needed to get paid.
I rang the doorbell, praying this wasnāt some kind of no-show. Otherwise, Iād just burned a bunch of gas and maybe killed my engine getting out here. There was still no telling until I put the key back in the ignition whether my van would start at all.
It took so long to get a response that I began to wonder if I hadnāt been pranked. Eventually, the sounds of someone coming downstairs reached my ears. āHold on a second,ā a voice yelled curtly. My ears pricked upāthat voice was female. I felt like I recognized it.
The door opened and my jaw hit the floor. The woman on the side made a similar expression.
āLuke?ā The womanās eyes widened as she looked me up and down, her eyes filling with interest at the sight of my uniform. āWhat are you doing here?ā
āUm, you called me?ā Suddenly conscious of my appearance, I tucked a stray lock of hair behind my ear. āI think, anyway. This is 667 Morningstar, right? Computer trouble?ā
I hadnāt known the client was female. And I damn sure hadnāt known it was Christina Herbert. Otherwise I might have showered. Not to mention borrowed a nicer carā¦
Christina and I knew each other, though not well. Iād admired her from afar since high school, where sheād been one of the super-popular girls on the cheerleading squad. Sheād even made it to the local college on a cheer scholarship, while Iād worked part-time to pay for books and try to put a dent in my student loans. Weād had a couple of classes togetherāmostly math, a prerequisite for both of our majorsābut sheād never really looked my way.
God, she was gorgeous. It had been maybe five years since the last time I saw her, and sheād just gotten more beautiful. Sheād never gone pro with the cheerleading, but parlayed it into a gig managing the CrossFit gym all the bored, rich soccer moms in this side of town went to. She looked like sheād come from there not long ago, in form-fitting exercise clothes that hugged her sleek curves and made her look even hotter. The long blonde hair I remembered in sexy cheerleader pigtails had been wrapped into a long braid that went all the way down to her ass, and her clear blue eyes still sparkled like sapphires.
Suddenly I realized I was staring. Hell.
āI didnāt realize āBellā Computer Repair meant Luke Bell,ā Christina said, a faint smile tugging at the corner of her mouth. āYou look good, Luke. Like, really good.ā
The compliment went right to my dick. I had been working out quite a bit lately, though not at Christinaās gym. I wasnāt into CrossFitāmore of a weightlifting guy. One of my friends gifted me a twelve-month membership for Christmas, and Iād fallen face-first into it as a way to relieve stress after a long day of being complained at by office drones. Iād been kind of surprised at just how much I enjoyed it; and I had the figure to match.
āThanks,ā I said. āYou too.ā
There was a hell of a lot more I could have said, like holy shit youāre a goddess and how do you look even better than you did at twenty, but I wasnāt an idiot. Trying to play things that way was what had kept Christina out of my reach in
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