Nightwise (3 page)

Read Nightwise Online

Authors: R. S. Belcher

Boj, black-hearted, grinning, mean as a snake, smooth as gun oil, eager to die—happy to kill. Alexander the Great of the occult underworld, the Life. Boj.

I couldn't give this up, not now. And not for any noble reason you might attribute, not out of loyalty, or friendship, or debt. No. It was the small, cowardly, skittering part of me that had kept me alive for so long. It said that the Illuminati were now in this and they would find me, after my visit to Berman's office. No, I couldn't just drop this. The only way out was going to be through. So I needed time. Time to figure out the link between Berman and Slorzack, to find out what Berman's handcuff keys were all about, time to work some angle with the Illuminati that kept me from getting disappeared.

I drank my coffee and admired Danni's ass in her tight uniform and listened to my inner bastard tell me exactly what I needed to do.

I tipped Danni fifty dollars and walked out into the growling late Manhattan morning.

I stopped at a newsstand on Water Street. The guy running it had a Rasputin-style beard and was wearing a ratty Primus T-shirt over his enormous beer gut.

“Give me a pack of American Spirits,” I said, handing him some crumpled cash, “and a white Bic lighter.”

He handed me the cigarettes and a purple lighter out of the display behind his counter.

“No,” I said to Rasputin, “I asked for a white lighter.”

“What's the fuckin' diff, man?” Rasputin rumbled. “'Sides, white lighters are bad luck, everyone knows that.”

“Yeah,” I said, “I know. Now give me the damned white lighter.”

*   *   *

I went back to the hotel and was saddened that there wasn't a hot Greek waitress waiting for me. I got my working bag out—an old, frayed canvas bag with two worn handles and a zipper that often stuck. The bag was the color of desert sand. It was covered with various symbols and runes drawn in black Sharpie. It had a few dark, ominous stains. It also bore the logos of numerous bands I had been enamored of in my youth: Kiss, Led Zeppelin, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Alice Cooper, AC/DC, Pink Floyd, the DKs, and, of course, the Stones.

Pop quiz: What do Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Kurt Cobain all have in common? Answer: They were all awesome. They were all left-handed, they all died at the age of twenty-seven, and all the police reports said that a white plastic lighter was found in their possession at the time of death.

I stripped in the stale, silent air of my hotel room. My body was still in pretty good shape for my age. Not bragging, but I was rocking the Iggy Pop look, without the heroin diet plan. Still a little muscle, still a little cut, still a little rock star in me. My skin was covered with tattoos and scars. A lot of my ink was work related, you might say. Symbols, formulas, pacts, and wards. My scars, ah, my scars. They came from motorcycle accidents, knives, bullets, claws, broken bottles, bites, whips, self-mutilation, and a bunch of other stuff, not the least of which was the wound in my back from being impaled by a giant mosquito woman. That one still itched most nights, and sometimes, when the moon was new and far away, her wound sang horrible, beautiful songs to me.

I closed the drapes to hide from the light and to muffle the never-ending scream of the city. I wanted to make sure I didn't lose any of Berman's psychic “scent” off the cuff keys, so I put them in a safe place—the glove. I took it out of my canvas bag and unrolled it. It was the skin of a powerful
santero
down in Miami, tanned and treated with all the fingers still intact, taken from his hand, severed at the wrist. Anything put in the glove was preserved and hidden from the view of the world and those with the Art. In short, it was gruesome mystic Tupperware. I dropped the keys in the glove, folded it up, and set it on the nightstand.

I took my working bag and entered the bathroom. I set up candles of black and red around the tile floor and on the sink counter. I took a handful of ritual Klonopin pills, called benzos on the street by the nice young man I had purchased them from, and washed them down with cold champagne ordered from room service. Then I sat down on the floor, lotus style, and closed my eyes. I centered the energies of my chakras. I felt the loci of forces align and then dipped into the power building in my Rasatala chakra, a minor point of energy in my ankles. I let the forces of selfish energy build and channel up my legs. I mixed it with the fear in my Atala chakra in my hips; I began to feel the power swirl in me, like the first smoky, heady rush of heat from a sip of good whiskey. I rolled the power around in me and felt the high envelop me. The candle flames all flared, burning bright blue, illuminating the dark bathroom. Goddamn … Why the hell would anyone be fucking normal if they didn't have to be?

The universe was roaring through me like an open door, and I told it what to do. Yeeeeesssss. I stood, took the white lighter out of my bag, and placed it in the sink. I looked at myself in the mirror, lit up by acetylene blue light. My eyes were wide and dark, pupils dilated. I smashed the mirror with my left fist. An explosion of silver-blue fire supernova, jagged teardrops falling down into the sink. A distant, muted echo of pain, screaming from my nerves. The power welling up in my chest, in my throat.

Shape the words, carve the energy, vomit it up into the sink, into the lighter.

Ego sum mea parasitus

Nil opus hostiam vivam

pascimus off de invicem

Possumus nostrum endorphins

Doll CARNIS! Test cibum!

The words carried the power with such force, they felt like they were loosening my teeth. Even through the chemical shroud of the benzos, I felt like shit. This was dangerous magic for an old bastard like me to be trying.

Non opus est mihi molestus varius novum amicus

Non opus novum amicus tribulant me titio

Et non indiget aliquo egere me

Video balneo patet

Puto autem quod alicuius prope

Scio quod aliquis post me, O yeah.

I clutched the counter and growled the words into the sink. With each syllable, the shards of mirror snapped and fragmented.

Habitabant in speculis me auferre, cum viderem me omnes. Crepitus ego me spiritum meum et specula, nunc adest mundo videre. Etiam Castella fecit de arena, cadunt in mare …

Blue smoke drifted from the sink. I looked at my bleeding left hand as if it was some alien thing, unattached to me. I let the blood drip into the sink, onto the broken glass of the hotel mirror, onto the pure white lighter.
Drip, drip, drip.
Suddenly, I was in Berman's office again. His pale, blood-streaked face looked up, and his eyes opened. They were Granny's eyes, milky white, soulless.

Nosti opinor penitus infantem et non in corde recto,

Numquam numquam numquam Numquam exaudiet me cum clamavero nocte

Infantem et clamavi tota die;

Sed quotiens me, inquam, bene ferre possum dolor

Sed in armis tuis me dicis, ego iterum psallere.

Dicam age, age, agite, et sequere eam?

Power, any power, has a price. I was preparing to damn someone to a painful death, to an eternity of suffering. To save my sorry ass, to buy me a few extra days. I reached into the sink and my cut, bloody fingers wrapped around the white lighter. I was damned too. Damned again.

Tolle it!

It was done. The candles' guttering flames were no longer blue. I staggered out of the bathroom, feeling the cosmic hangover of the power departing me. Like a junkie coming down. No longer a god, only emptiness and remorse. A hollow man.

I carried the champagne bottle, taking deep, thirsty gulps, pausing long enough to pour some over the wounds on my hand, and then taking a nice long draw off the bottle. I set the lighter on the nightstand beside the glove. It was pristine, clean, and perfect.

I fell into the bed, the bottle still in my hand, and I slept, the only sleep my kind ever truly enjoys—drugged and dreamless.

I slept for about a day. I awoke to the predatory sounds of night in the city. For a moment there was a thrill of terror, that I had waited too long, that the faceless crucifiers would be crashing through the hotel room door any second.

I got up, stood in a hot shower for a long time, and wrapped my busted-up hand with duct tape. I put on clean clothes, a Bauhaus T-shirt and jeans, and I began to feel human again. I gathered all my things and finally, as I prepared to leave, I put the lighter in my pocket. The hotel room looked trashed. I left the lights on and shut the door.

The Port Authority Bus Terminal is on 8th Avenue, near the
New York Times
building. I walked there. It was cold, but the fresh air helped me. I entered the terminal and made my way to the men's room. There was a rancid lake of piss on the floor. In the gang tags and graffiti smeared across the walls and stalls, I saw the names of twenty-six minor lords of Hell, hidden.

I placed the lighter on the counter by the sink, looked at it for a second, and then walked out, kept walking.

Someone would pick it up. I didn't know who exactly, but I did know the person would be twenty-seven years old and left-handed, and would be inheriting all my troubles with the Illuminati. Whoever it was would be tracked, disappeared, questioned, tortured, and then would finally die, if he was lucky.

The sounds of the street and the cold air slapped me as I walked out of the terminal and down the street, looking like just another asshole.

I couldn't see the face of the person who claimed the lighter. And I could see them all.

 

THREE

The sun choked on the concrete mountains of Manhattan and died. The night was ascendant, swollen with victory, the shrill howl of sirens, the dull murmur of human misery, and the spoor of blood, sex, and garbage soaked the air. One of the reasons the night is so full of hungry things is that it is born of death and rapacity.

I took the subway out of the city. The Keep had been operating out of “the Gates of Hell”—the abandoned Glenwood Power plant in Yonkers—for the last few months. The building was impressive in its dark sprawl. It squatted like an old whore pissing in the Hudson River, its lower levels already flooded and eaten by rust. The club moved on a regular basis, trying to stay one step ahead of New York's finest. I got the address from a Haitian cabbie for a hundred bucks and a bag of weed.

The building was huge, its crumbling, filthy walls thrummed from the bass of the sound system inside. At one hundred yards my guts were vibrating. A crowd of club kids practiced looking bored as they waited to be chosen to go inside. Their breath and cigarette smoke swirled about them like warring ghosts. Two muscled myrmidons wrapped in Kevlar, armed with steel batons, stood watch over the dented fire door that was the only way into the Keep. Their faces were bland masks with cold, laconic violence leaking out the eyeholes.

I walked up to the bigger one, a black guy with a shaved head. I noticed a sheet of paper taped to the fire door. It had a symbol on it: a circle that held the yin-yang teardrops, but this symbol included a third teardrop, the trio eternally circling, like little Zen sperm.

I looked at Baldy and knew immediately he was the man to be talking to. His companion, like me, wore his hair long, for fun, not business. This man shaved his head, so that when he was kicking your ass, you didn't have anything to grab on to. No hair, no piercings, no bullshit. Business.

“Grinner here tonight?” I asked.

“I'm not his fuckin' appointment secretary, motherfucker,” Baldy replied in a quiet, even voice. No anger. “You in or out?”

“In,” I said, and handed him a hundred. I started to walk past him to the door, flicking away my dying cigarette.

“No fucking trouble tonight or you be pissing blood tomorrow,” Baldy said.

“I look like trouble to you?” I said.

“Shit, you stink of it,” he said.

I pushed open the fire door, which stuck slightly and creaked. The furnace blast of heat, music, and smoke roared over me. I stepped into the belly of the beast.

The last thing I heard before the Keep swallowed me whole was one of the club kids whining. “Hey! How come he gets to go in?” the droning, drugged voice asked.

“Because he's the real motherfuckin' deal,” Baldy replied.

The Keep writhed and sweltered. Lasers strobed and burned across a sea of swirling, milky smoke—fog machines, clove, tobacco, and pot. The sky was a thousand HD monitors shifting and fading between images: Klimt paintings, a slaughterhouse, Kenneth Anger's
Lucifer Rising,
sadism-themed porn, nebulae and northern lights, napalm runs in Cambodia,
Nosferatu,
X-rays of tumors, terrorist beheadings, and Dalí's
Andalusian Dog.
The music thundered: DyE's “Fantasy.” Below the video sky, hundreds of glow sticks held in sweaty hands or twirled on strings made ever-shifting constellations as the dancers surged and receded to the ethereal strains. Some dancers wore glowing, burning LED glasses, others wore lighted gloves with firefly fingertips. A few had bottles of bubble soap that had been dosed with the chemicals in the glow sticks and glowing green bubbles drifted like will-o'-the-wisps.

I drifted through this realm. The energy throbbed, swelled, and pulsed like the dark ocean at high tide. There were alcoves, ledges, and tables everywhere. A young woman, nude except for a feathered Mardi Gras mask, hung, moaning, at a ninety-degree angle with hooks, small and large, attached to chains, piercing her skin. Her bloodred lips were parted in ecstasy while fat, shirtless men in leather pants and zippered masks pulled on the chains that tore through her.

I paused at a table covered with a mosaic of colored pills, amyl nitrate poppers, ether aerosol cans, blotter acid, coke, and weed. I snorted a few lines off a black glass mirror, felt the freight train crash of my head and chest exploding in bright, sharp, white pressure. The rush made me remember everything for a diamond-edged second, and I suddenly recalled, for the thousandth time, why I stopped doing coke.

Other books

Genesis: The Story of Apollo 8 by Robert Zimmerman
Arisen : Genesis by Fuchs, Michael Stephen
A Bleeding of Innocents by Jo Bannister
Lisette by Gayle Eden
Copyright Unbalanced: From Incentive to Excess by Mulligan, Christina, Post, David G., Ruffini , Patrick, Salam, Reihan, Bell, Tom W., Dourado, Eli, Lee, Timothy B.
A Life Less Ordinary by Christopher Nuttall
Picking the Ballad's Bones by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough