Killing Pretty (28 page)

Read Killing Pretty Online

Authors: Richard Kadrey

“I am not powerless. I'm not much of an angel these days, but I have an angel on my side.”

He holds out a hand indicating me.

“He, I believe, can finish what I couldn't.”

She flashes me a look.

“You wouldn't dare. Not on my own territory. You'd start a war.”

I take out a Malediction, light it. Take a long drag and tap ash onto her million-­dollar floor.

“Right now,
Tee-­ko,
all I want is a story. We know you were part of the ritual that bound Death to this body. How are you connected to a bunch of supernatural skinheads and what do they want?”

Tykho looks off into space. She doesn't want to answer the question, so Candy jumps in.

“Why disguise yourself, Sigrun?” says Candy.

“Sure—­you can start with that.”

“Back in the day, a lot of us in the
vö
lkisch
groups used noms de plume.”

I say, “What does your nom mean?”

“It's the name of a Valkyrie.”

“So you were a Nazi.”

She shakes her head.

“I never cared about politics. I only cared about the real world that lay behind the veil we call the ordinary world.”

“How did you cheat me? What did you do?” says Vincent.

She looks through him like he's not there.

“I'm a medium. I was. I lost most of my power when I gave up a mortal life. There were several of us in the groups with the gift back then.”

“What groups?” says Candy.

“The two in which I was involved were the Thule-­Gesellschaft and the Vril Society. There were two main mediums in those days. Myself and Maria. Maria Orsic. We worked with other women who claimed to have the gift. I don't know if they were telling the truth, but what I do know is that one day I saw Death coming for me. So I did something about it.”

“You went out and found yourself a vampire,” I say.

She pours herself more wine.

“We knew many vampires in Munich. All the occult groups did. When I saw Death's shadow, I wasn't ready to go, so it was a simple matter to offer myself to a willing
vampir
.”

Vincent stands up.

“You unbalanced the universe by what you did. The whole line of life and death was disrupted. Innocent ­people died before their time because of you.”

“I don't care,” she says. “I just knew that
I
wasn't ready to go.”

“Tell us about the groups,” says Candy. “What did Thule and Vril do?”

“They were merely occult study groups. Very esoteric stuff. You wouldn't be interested.”

“I am if it has to do with the Murphy Ranch ritual,” I say.

“What if I say no?”

“Then I'll kill you. And you'll be gone and this little empire you've built will fall apart because—­you're right—­there will be a war. But not between shroud eaters and civilians. The bloodsucker factions will all want to take your place and all the world will have to do is sit back and let you rip each other apart. There won't be enough left of your kind to knock over a taco stand.”

“You're more right than you probably know,” she says. “All right—­I joined the Thule-­Gesellschaft in 1919, the Vril Society a year or two later.”

“Tell us about Thule,” says Candy.

“The Thule Society was simply an occult study group, looking into the origins of the Aryan race. The name Thule comes from a region far to the north. The top of the world. The capital of ancient Hyperborea. Many in the society believed that this was the origin of the Aryan ­people.”

Candy types furiously on her phone.

I say, “Bullshit. Thule was into all kinds of baleful magic. Demonology. Murder hexes. Possessions.”

Candy studies her phone.

“The Thule Society had a lot of connections to the early Nazi Party. How does that square with an innocent study group?”

“Baleful magic never interested me. I was curious about history. When I joined the group it was believed that the Hyperborean race was a peaceful, enlightened ­people of advanced philosophy and technology. As for the other point, sadly some in the group became involved in right-­wing politics. Like baleful magic, I found it all a bore.”

“Let me get this straight,” I say. “You weren't into magic. You weren't into politics. All you wanted to do was exercise your library card. Those must have been some short fucking meetings.”

Tykho sips her wine, ignoring the comment.

“What is Vril?” says Candy.

Tykho sets down her glass.

“Members of Thule and Vril had known each other for some time. When a handful of Vril members joined Thule, we formed an inner circle for more serious and intense study.”

“Studying what?”

Tykho takes her time getting a cigarette from a drawer, tapping it on the desk. I lean across and spark the smoke with Mason's lighter.

“Studying what?”

Tykho takes a puff and blows smoke my way. I'm used to Maledictions, so her puny smog barely registers.

“There was a theory that some catastrophe destroyed Hyperborea and that the ancient Aryans took refuge underground. They lost most of their culture and technology in the disaster, but in their caverns they developed tremendous mental powers.”

“Like a ‘May the Force be with you' kind of thing?”

“That's how an idiot would describe it. Vril was and is believed to be a kind of mental energy that can be directed to create or destroy, sicken or heal, with a thought.”

“What does that have to do with the ritual that bound me to this body?” says Vincent.

“Let her talk,” I say. “I want to hear the whole tall tale. So, you're trying to find a Nazi Obi-­Wan Kenobi at the center of the earth. What next? How does this hook you up with the White Light Legion?”

“When the more insufferably right-­wing members of the society turned our work increasingly into propaganda for the National Socialist German Workers' Party, some of us broke away and formed a smaller study group. But things became harder for organizations like ours to function as the Nazis came to power. Hitler was always paranoid about the influence of the occult and all so-­called secret societies and began dissolving them.”

“Wait,” says Candy. “Did the ­people in your group know you're a vampire?”

“Of course,” says Tykho. “That's why it was easy to form our own study group. Many believed that my vampiric powers were a crude example of Vril energy.”

“What happened next?”

“Even before Hitler became chancellor, it was clear that the group could no longer function. Several high-­ranking members were arrested and thrown in prison. By 1934, many of us were emigrating to France and Switzerland.”

“Get to the White Lights,” I say.

“The White Light Legion wouldn't exist for many years. Have you heard of William Dudley?”

“Yes,” Candy says. “Julie gave me some background on him. He was a California fascist back in the twenties. He had some kind of supernatural experience that convinced him he had super mental powers.”

“That sounds kind of like Vril,” I say.

Tykho smiles, puffs her smoke.

“And that's why in 1935, when members of the society came to the States using forged French passports, they eventually came into contact with like-­minded members of the Pelley's Silver Legion in New York. One of the Legion members they met was Edison Elijah McCarthy, the man who would go on to found the White Light Legion, based on the occult principles he learned at the feet of William Pelley.”

“How did you end up in California?” says Candy.

“The group wanted to meet Pelley and to get as far away from Europe and the stink of the continent as possible. So they went west.”

I say, “But you weren't with them, were you?”

“No. They didn't know that I'd made it to America. When the SA began attacking Lurkers right along with Jews and communists, I left the group and eventually Germany, wanting nothing to do with either ever again.”

“Where were you?”

“I was already in L.A. I ran all the way across America for the same reason they did. I'd been taking elocution lessons, trying to lose my accent and erase my past. I kept my distance from the local German expatriate community, but when I heard about a powerful occult group coming west, I knew who it was.”

“When did you meet them again?” I say.

She taps her cigarette ash into her wineglass. I keep dropping mine on the floor.

“It was in the summer of 1935. Shuna, another medium from back in the Thule-­Gesellschaft days, came with them. She sensed me nearby in the city. Back then, I had enough of my gift left that I sensed it when she found me, so I came out of hiding and contacted her.”

“What happened to them? Are they how you brought the vampire groups together?”

Tykho laughs.

“Hell no. I was done with their fascist nonsense. No, I met Shuna and the rest at the home of one of the Silver Legion's inner circle.”

“Was it in Laurel Canyon?” I say.

She cocks her head.

“How did you guess? It's a hell of a power spot. Of course, none of the other members of the group knew I was coming. I was to be a great surprise. A present from Shuna to the group. I suppose I
was
a surprise in the end. I came through an upstairs window instead of the door and slaughtered every single one of them.”

I crush out my cigarette on the bottom of my boot and drop it with the ashes, pull out Vincent's knife, and bury it deep in the top of Tykho's desk.

“Did you use this?”

She looks at it like she's checking out an antique butter dish.

“Not that one in particular, but there was a knife. I mostly used my hands and teeth. That's always more fun, isn't it, dear?”

She looks at Candy. Candy doesn't take the bait.

“What kind of knife is that?” Candy says.

“You haven't figured it out?” Tykho says. “I'm disappointed.”

She plucks the knife from her desktop and removes a smaller one from her boot. Setting the big knife on its side, she scrapes away some of the tarry grit on the grip. Underneath is an eagle and an SS thunderbolt.

“It's an SS officer's dagger,” she says, “fitted with a witch's athame blade, to create a National Socialist sacred object. Himmler loved these things. You could get a hell of a price for it on eBay.”

I snatch the knife out of her hand and point it at her.

“You cut up Vincent with this one and I bet you had another for the second body. Who the hell was it and why did you do it?”

Tykho pushes off from the desk and spins around in her office chair like a kid.

“Isn't it clear by now? Who was the one man still alive with even more will and occult desire than William Pelley?”

She stops the chair and looks at us.

“And who now was old enough to fear death just like I did years ago in Munich? It was the head of the White Lights, Edison Elijah McCarthy. That's who I killed at Murphy Ranch. McCarthy is the new Death.”

Vincent stares at her. I can't read his expression. Is it shock and anger, wonder and loss, maybe a mix of all of them? What I know is if I don't say something, he'll go on staring at Tykho forever.

So I say, “Here's what I don't understand. You say you don't like these Nazi fucks, or the White Lights, or any other occult bullshit artists, and yet there you were. Out in the sticks with a knife in your hand helping with the ceremony like Suzie Sauerkraut. Why would you do that?”

She looks straight at Vincent.

“What lady doesn't want Death to owe her a favor?”

Vincent slumps in his chair, his hands clasped together, letting his hands drop between his knees.

“The fascist movement had some power in L.A. in the thirties and early forties, but we're long past that,” says Candy. “How does the White Light Legion keep going?”

But I know the answer. “Like any other crooks, right, Tykho? Protection. Loans. Easy cash crimes. We know from Wonderland Avenue that they shake down ­people and kill the ones who can't pay. But with this occult angle there has to be more to it than that.”

“There is,” she says. “A lot more.”

“Want to let us in on some of it?”

“Why should I? You bring me this husk and call him Death? Yes, he was a powerful angel, but look at him now. Why should I say anything more than I've already said?”

“Because I'm going to kill the new Death, and when I do, Vincent is getting his old job back. Maybe Edison Elijah McFuckall owes you, but Vincent doesn't. You might be a vampire now, but even vampires die, and Vincent can wait a long time. Plan all kinds of special surprises for you.”

Tykho spins around once in her chair.

“Fine. Why not? If it will get you out of here for good.”

“No promises. Tell us something charming.”

“How about wild-­blue-­yonder contracts?”

“I know all about those. I've been offered one more than once.”

“But do you know where they come from?”

“Where?”

“Right here.”

She throws out her arms.

“Sunny California. You see, a group of necromancers developed the original method after World War One, when death was on everyone's mind. They sold a few, just enough to finance their own studies and research into deeper, darker arts. Later, other, more ambitious magicians, seeing the potential of the contracts, began working with the necromancers as brokers. This being L.A., they went to where the money and power lay. Hollywood. They started selling them to celebrities, who brought in other celebrities. And the money rolled in. Who do you think runs the blue-­yonder racket now?”

“The White Light Legion,” says Candy.

Tykho nods.

“Through some of the more open-­minded talent agencies around town.”

“Like Evermore Creatives?” I say.

Other books

In the Rearview by Maria Ann Green
The Boss Vol. 2 (The Boss #2) by Cari Quinn, Taryn Elliott
Candlemoth by R. J. Ellory
The Eagle's Vengeance by Anthony Riches
Dream of Legends by Stephen Zimmer
Clouds without Rain by P. L. Gaus