Daimon by DANIELLE BOLGER (my miracle luna book free read txt) ๐

Jane Kirra has long sought to eradicate the city's crime and bring its criminals to justice. Through journalism she plans to expose the gang's dealings along with the city's corruption, whilst attaining her long-sought justice for the murders of her parents.
Alone, she sets out this desperate mission but soon realises the foolishness of it as she is ensnared by her very enemies. From there they give her into the hands of the notorious serial killer, Valentine, to do with her as he pleases and when he is done she is not the same.
Jane wakes up transformed. She is strong, she regenerates and acquires heightened senses, but there is something else different about her, something very wrong.
She learns that she has been given the thing that she has always wanted, the power to bring justice, or in this case, vengeance, for her parents' deaths. But this comes at a high cost and it is not Jane who must pay for it, but others and this with their lives.
With no family, she considers herself alone, a lost little girl in her heart, but outside she has friends, a romance, and all of these people are threatened by her very existence. Jane has achieved the power to avenge her family but in exchange she has become a monster. No longer human, she is cold and aching heavily inside from her past scars, but she is also hungry, very hungry, and with it has developed a new cruel appetite.
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- Author: DANIELLE BOLGER
Read book online ยซDaimon by DANIELLE BOLGER (my miracle luna book free read txt) ๐ยป. Author - DANIELLE BOLGER
As I looked upon more pictures displaying cartoons of happy, fuzzy, animated creatures, I smiled. They appeared so likable, so harmless. A blue one of these was depicted guzzling cookies with great mirth. There was quite a mess about him as he satisfied his urges.
A demon, hey? I disagree, Mack. What I am is, undoubtedly, a monster. Then, what kind of monster and why did this have to happen to me? I wondered whether it would have been better if I simply died in that forest; surely, I could not remain playing sheep for long. People would find out who I was, sooner or later, and then I could no longer pretend to be the heroine. Soon, my secret would come out and the whole city would know Iโm a murderer.
What would I do then? Would I do what would be necessary to defend myself? Would I harm innocent people? Would I remove a threat even if it was from one I cared about most? I did not want to die, not again - not ever!
I looked up from my desk across to the other side of the room where Sandra was pounding away at her laptop. We both came in at the same time that morning, just slightly after nine and moving so quickly that we brushed against one another as we passed through the office's entrance. She glared at me, haughtily, apparently still unforgiving of my latest tabloid. Whereas, I felt such a powerful desire to tear my teeth into her flesh that I had to scuttle away even quicker than she had attempted.
My hold on this beast was so weak. I thought I felt a little calmer, a little more in control than yesterday, but it was still tenuous at best. I wanted to feed, desperately. After learning how succulent the flesh of a human could be, my stomach groaned all day and my mouth watered at the thought of itโbut I couldn't. I was still adamant that I would not attack anyone else. That was, of course, no one unless they deserved it.
Another thing that could not be quelled easily was my anger. The more I learned about the โnewโ me, the more my desires consumed my mind; rage flooded through me thick and hot. I hated who I had become; I hated envisioning myself ripping my friends' bodies apart; I hated the Foxes, Valentine, and I hated how much I was loving my new power. They wanted to initiate me into their clan, but all I wanted to do was rip out their own hearts and feed on them.
โMonster? What are you searching, your mother?โ It was Zach, smirking impertinently as he read the titles on my computer screen.
โSimply not in the mood for it,โ I replied curtly.
He leaned over my desk so that his frame partly obscured my monitor, forcing my attention. I glared coldly up at him and read the caption on his shirt: There are only 10 people in the world: those who understand binary and those who don't. He was the embodiment of scruffiness, teeing his outfit off with jeans, runners, and unkempt mousy-brown hair. Normally, I enjoyed his laid-back attitude and quirky shirts, but just then I could see him as no more than a sloth that had somehow brought its languid form to my desk. I did not care how good his photographs wereโno one had the right to interrupt my current soul searching.
โC'mon, shorty,โ he coaxed. โDon't be like that.โ
โI'm not short and you're not black.โ
โYeah, I guess if I were you never would have gone back, hey?โ He laughed.
Okay, so I slept with him - once. It was after a Christmas party and we were both ridiculously drunk. Fortunately, we knew that it was a mistake from the moment we woke the next morning, which thankfully never interfered with our professional or personal relationships. Zach was a great photographer, a nice guy, and one of the few friends I had besides Sandra. However, at that moment, where hatred was festering hotly inside me, he was starting to feel like dinner.
His laughter quickly sobered as he changed to pictures. โSo, how you been going anyhow, Jane? I've got a few new pictures from the depths of Devil's Eden you might be interested in.โ He was doing his best to be enticing. โWe could do a stake-out around there sometime if you like, or just hit the piss. Shit, being Friday, I think I feel like a drink straight after I leave this stinky office. You wanna join me?โ
โI'm sorry, Zach, not tonight. I have a lot of researching to do still, and besides, I'm kinda off the liquor lately.โ
****
โWine?โ Ryan questioned with surprise from his apartment doorway. The look on his face betrayed his stifled smile.
โYeah.โ I waved the bottle around. โI've had this sitting around in my parentsโ cellar for years. Trouble is, Iโve never been able to muster up the nerve to drink it and throwing it out is not an option. My childhood shrink would say that my hoarding was โunhealthy behavior.โ I mocked her voice, annunciating with perfect diction as she used to. โI bet you, she would have added that this sort of thing could lead to an โexplosion of emotions.โ
Ryan chuckled. โLike, screaming like a banshee in the middle of a crime scene?โ
โYou could have said a damsel in distress,โ I replied, abashed.
โThat's funny, my shrink would say that would have been healthy behavior.โ
My jaw dropped in surprise.
โYou're not the only one damaged, Jane,โ he explained. โThis whole city is full of psychopaths like us who pretend to be normal. I might only be faking that I have my shit together, but at least I still do the right thing.โ
I was so preoccupied with my own agenda; it was not until then that I realized how sad and defeated Ryan appeared. His cheeks and chin displayed stubble that was, at last sighting, clean-shaven. His hair was spiked up at odd angles as if he had been gripping onto it fiercely, ready to rip it from his skull. His shirt had the top few buttons undone, with a light brown spot about midway on the fabric where a tie would normally obscure. I then detected the alcohol on his breath. Rum, I surmised.
โWanna talk about it?โ I pressed. โIโd love to deal with someone elseโs crap instead of my own for a change.โ
โI really, really want to, but...โ
โYou're a cop and I'm a reporter,โ I finished for him.
He gave me a weak smile.
โWhat if I wasn't a reporter and you...could be whoever you wanted to be. You could say anything you wanted without consequences and I would just be here to listen. I would simply be your friend, nothing else.โ
โWe were never friends. Your brother was my friend, not you.โ
I recoiled a step backward into the apartment hallway.
There was a darkness in Ryan's eyes that suddenly softened as they met my own. โI'm sorry, I'm an ass. You know, we're more than friends. You're the little sister I never had. Here, come in.โ He disappeared inside, leaving the door open for me to let myself in.
As I followed, I was not sure which part hurt more: the dejecting comment that I was his little sister, or the part that we were never friends. I knew one thing, thoughโ both stung more than I could have anticipated.
He wasn't your friend then, and he isn't now. The sly voice crept into my mind. He is a homicide detective who is hunting you down for murder. He is your enemy and your next meal.
It did not matter what he was to me. I reminded myself that it was his connections, his findings that I needed. I was there for two simple reasons: to track the progress he made on the woods killing, and to gain more information on the Foxes. Whatever I thought or felt for him before was obsolete now. I had a new agenda, and that involved self-preservation and the undiminished desire for revenge. Old, childish relations would have to take a back seat to that.
Following him through the door, I observed the apartment. The minimal furnishings consisted of a dilapidated lounge, a small plasma television, and a solid black rug covering up obvious stains on the carpet. The place was so void of human touch Ryan could have been confused for a squatter.
Ryan was already on the sofa sculling down a brown-colored drink. I was surprised to see two wine glasses and a bottle opener already placed on the coffee table before him. In conjunction, there was a bottle of rum with barely more than an inch of fluid remaining.
I sat by him and placed the wine bottle on the table. He grimaced. โYou know, I was thinking about going over to the bottle shop and getting more booze, but it looks like you saved me the hassle.โ
โGlad I can be of use,โ I smirked. โHope you like it, it's twenty-four-year-old red.โ
Ryan picked up the bottle opener, about to lean across to the wine, but froze. โThatโs how old you are.โ
โYeah. Bought on the day I was born, in fact.โ
Ryan shot me a sympathetic look, already knowing the rest of the story. I continued anyway, โWe were supposed to drink it six years agoโ my parents, my brother and I.โ
โFor your eighteenth birthday.โ
I nodded. โI remember that, on Jackโs birthday, I was allowed a glass. I didnโt much like the taste then, but being treated like a grown up made it seem like the most divine thing I ever had to drink.โ
After a silence, Ryan toned in, โYou should save it then, instead of wasting it on a pathetic loser whoโs already drunk.โ He went to place the bottle opener on the table but I clasped my hands over his hold, halting him. As we made contact, I detected a slight coolness to his touch that mirrored the blue in his eyes. These stared deeply into mine, glazed and lost.
โThatโs exactly the problem. I have been saving this bottle for years, looking for a reason to empty it, whether in my stomach or in the kitchen sink, but no reason ever justified it. At first, I told myself that I would share it with Jack on my eighteenth, but he left two weeks before. So, I kept waiting. As the years passed, I thought I would never drink it because the scenario would never be complete without my family by my side. Then we bumped into each other a couple of days ago during...strange circumstances.โ I smiled. โI knew it was time; time to reunite with that almost-brother from my youthโ even if he is already drunkโ because, I just can't let another chance like this pass me by.โ
Since our contact, Ryan had been staring at me deeply. โI never realized how dark your eyes were before. I know it's dark in here, but they look like they're completely black.โ
I turned away, breaking all forms of contact.
After a sigh, he uncorked the wine and poured the glasses so that they were filled almost to the rim. We sipped in awkward silence.
Ryan lowered his glass and gazed into it, thoughtfully. โWe have to take our moments when we get them because before we know it some terrible crime will happen and we'll be mourning again. I used to believe that this city could change, but your brother was the smart one. He knew the fight was useless. He left a bit over six years ago, but even before then, I could tell he had given up.โ
I had a sip, too, and tasted the sweet oak as I responded. โIt was nine years ago when he really gave up on the Blue Coast, when our parents died. He just couldnโt leave until his dependent sister turned eighteen. He didnโt wait, though, for my birthday. He left me, and this city, to spiral further into darkness.โ
โYouโre right, this city is dark, so damned dark no one can see the filth. I believed though; the fact that itโs messy was even more of a reason to clean it up. There was just too much to fight for; too many people that you just can't bear to see hurt again.โ
His blue eyes drew my gaze back to him and locked me within the depths of his deep ocean. So peaceful on the surface but I knew once they approached shore that they would be turbulent. Somehow I caught myself thinking that maybe that powerful water could wash away my sins.
โIt sounds like you've given up, too.โ My voice barely cracked above a whisper.
โSome days I have, but then others I'm reminded of why I fight for peace so hard in this corrupt city.โ His heart thumped proudly. It was strong, powerful and passionate. It was a heart that was capable of so much: love, despair, rage and possibly even killing. I wondered if he did find out about me, whether that heart would be capable
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