Read The Fall of the House of Cabal Online
Authors: Jonathan L. Howard
She considered this. âNo,' she said. âYou haven't turned into a fish.'
At her first sight of the insane sky, she had instinctively drawn her head down, shying from the wrath of a cantankerous Lucifer. Now she straightened and looked at him and then the sky with full confidence.
âYou're not a fish, so it isn't the Abyss.'
âI feel no chaotic effects upon me, and for that I am grateful and relieved. The fish business is not something I care to repeat.'
âYou made an adorable hake.'
âMadam,' Cabal said with great dignity, âI was a halibut.'
*
Matters of piscine nomenclature satisfied, the subject moved onto where exactly they had found themselves.
âI understand your concerns, madam. The sky certainly has a certain
abyssal
quality to it, but the rest of the environment is a very different thing.' He looked around the blasted wasteland, a frown forming. âVery different indeed.'
âThat's your “I'm having a clever thought” voice,' observed Zarenyia. âI know that voice anywhere. What is your clever thought, darling?'
â“Clever” is a very subjective thingâ'
âBut you think you're terrifically clever, so we'll just take that for read, shall we? What's the thought?'
Cabal gave her a sour look. For an inhuman entity, she was sometimes disconcertingly human in her views and insights. Mind you, they do say that you are what you eat.
âI have seen somewhere like this before.'
âWell, it
is
a graveyard. That's like a social club to a necromancer, surely?'
âMatter of the unsociable natures of necromancers aside, yes, but no. When I say I have seen somewhereâ
been
somewhere like this beforeâI do not speak of generalities. There is a distinct sense ofâ'
He broke off, staring down the ragged vale. Zarenyia allowed her practised disinterest a pause long enough to say, âWhatever is the matter, Johannes? You look like you've seen a ghost. Oh!' She matched the direction of his gaze with excitement. âIs it haunted? Tell me it's haunted!'
Cabal said nothing in reply, however. He started to walk in the direction of whatever had caught his attention, first in a distracted manner, then with determination, and then he started to run, leaving a baffled but increasingly enthused Zarenyia in his wake.
âIs there danger?' she called after him. âIs it dangerous? Should we make ready? Or something?' He did not reply. âGood enough for me,' she said to herself, and erupted into legs, and knees, and angora, her previous outfit flittering away into the gaps between realities where she kept her spare clothes. If you should be walking and, suddenly and unaccountably, smell lavender and mothballs, you may just have passed a corner of Zarenyia's intra-dimensional closet.
Resplendent in her natural form and exultant to no longer have to totter around in that ridiculous manner, Zarenyia rose to her not inconsiderable greatest height, shouted, âI'll save you!' despite there being no obvious threat, and galloped in pursuit of her friend, the funny human Johannes.
She reached him as he stood before a small funereal building of the sort that leads down to a family crypt. Its door swung open. Cabal stood before it as if it were the most horrible thing he had ever seen.
âStand back!' she cried. âLet me protect you from this ⦠buildingâ¦' She pursed her lips, and added conversationally, âI'm not sure you're in peril at all.'
Cabal seemed not to hear. He reached out and lifted the door's padlock from where it dangled open on the frame's hasp. It was in far better condition than the mouldering stone it had once been set to protect, a very practical artefact in stainless steel. He looked at it aghast, as if he held his own heart in his hand.
âPadlock,' Zarenyia said informatively.
âIt pays'âCabal spoke in a low, dreadful voice, his thoughts materialising on his lipsââto invest in quality.' He looked up at the lintel above the door. Engraved in the stone was the name
DRUIN.
âOh, gods. What place is this? What have I done in coming here?'
âOooh.' Zarenyia found the change in Cabal's mood unengaging. âAngsty. I didn't think you were one of
those
necromancers.'
âYou don't understand.' Cabal walked a little way to lean against a table tomb, from where he regarded the crypt building with a strange mixture of disbelief and, just perhaps, fear.
âBingo! I don't understand. As a word to the wise, I recommend you tell me why this ragged little stone box has put your knickers in a twist.
Please
don't be enigmatic. I've killed people for saying “I'll explain later”. Delayed gratification and I are not the best of chums.'
âIt's the Druin crypt.'
âI can read.'
âI've been to it twice in my life. The first time Iâ¦'
He looked unhappily at Zarenyia. She wagged her finger at him, then used the same finger to draw across her throat while she made a horrible cutting noise. âThat's what being enigmatic will do for you. Fess up. What happened?'
âYou said you wouldn't harm me.'
âTrue. But, you know, I'm a devil. We're good at the whole loopholes palaver. I hate doing that usually, but who knows what awful things I may stoop to if provoked by my little pal Johannes being enigmatic and abstruse at me?' She lowered her voice, and the smile vanished. âPretty bloody awful things, that's what.'
âI inadvertently abandoned my brother in there.'
âAnd inadvertently locked the door? This is your brother the vampire, yes?' A thought occurred to her. âWait a moment ⦠is this
why
he's a vampire?' Cabal did not answer, which was answer enough. She laughed. âWell, aren't you the loving brother?'
âI had no choice.'
âI'm sure. And the second time was to let him out again? How long did you leave him to stew?'
Cabal muttered something, but Zarenyia's hearing was as supernatural as the rest of her.
âEight
years
?'
âYes. I'm not proud of it.'
Zarenyia shrugged. âI don't care if you are or not. My moral compass isâ¦' She considered. âI'm not at all sure I have one. I'm sure you had your reasons for abandoning your brother to eight years of frustrated vampirism in somebody else's tomb. My main bone of contention is ⦠what the Lucifer's cribbage board is it doing here? I thought this wasn't a real place.'
âIt isn't.'
âI thought you said these places had been created donkey's years ago as a way of hiding the Fountain of Grails, or whatever it is you think you're going to find.'
âIt was.'
âWell, kindly explain to my poor womanly brain why it has a sky like the Abyss and a landscape scattered with
aide-mémoirs
to your family squabbles.' She squatted back on the loom of her legs so their knees rose like the tusks around the throne of Prester John himself. âHave you the faintest idea what you have got yourself andâI remind youâyour poor ill-done-to brother, Horst, the delightful Miss Leonie, and my very own lovely self into? Honestly, Johannes, you're supposed to be the clever one. I'm very disappointed.'
Few things could snap Johannes Cabal back to acerbity with greater rapidity than personal criticism. âI do not know,' he said slowly and deliberately. âYet. This is not how the book presented matters. Yet it was so accurate in other particulars. Therefore, I must conclude that the book's author simply never travelled through into these placesâ'
âOr deliberately lied?' Zarenyia's eyes went wide at this revelation. Then she smiled broadly, a big, childish grin of delight. âOh, I hope the latter! Don't you see what that would mean, darling?'
She looked around the bitter wasteland, the tumbled tombs, the festering sky as if it were the first sight of an empty beach on a summer's bank holiday morning. âIt's a trap!' She clapped her hands, all agog and gleeful. âSo exciting!'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Cabal opined that it could only be a trap if it was impossible to leave the place using the route by which they had entered. This hypothesis, once mooted, was easily tested. They could not leave the place using the route by which they had entered.
Cabal swore volubly at this discovery, which served for a QED under the circumstances.
âThis is Ninuka's doing. Possibly.' He glared at the land of graves. Here was the one when he'd been interrupted by a nightwatchman. There was the one where the coffin had been full of bricks, resulting in a complicated few days subsequently. There was the ⦠no, he wasn't sure he had ever been in that tomb. Still, it looked familiar. âAlthough it seems overly complicated by her lights. How could she have known I would find the book and recognise it for its importance?' He ruminated on this for a moment, disliked the answer that Ninuka was a great deal cleverer than he had given her credit, and ran that train of thought into a siding where it wouldn't put his self-esteem at quite so much risk.
âSo, what to do?' said Zarenyia. She was still delighted about the whole state of affairs, on the understanding that presently a horde of hirelings of their shadowy nemesis (i.e., Lady Ninuka) would turn up and she could kill them all, eventually.
âThere is little else we can do, except press on.' Cabal lifted his bag from the unhealthy turf. He was unsure in which direction they should press on to, exactly. Graves, crypts, and tombs scattered the land in every direction, and all looked just as uninviting as one another. As for
that
tomb ⦠he looked at it again. He never forgot a tomb, but there was something ineffably evasive about it as it refused to present itself even as he mentally combed the memories of every graveyard, cemetery, burying ground, potter's field, bone orchard, and boot hill he had ever had cause to drive a spade into. It wasn't even that it was a commonplace design: an ancient and weather-aged pagoda some six yards in height, its surfaces plated in slabs of jade. Less a sombre place of rest than a folly or outré statement of the occupant or occupants' worth, a last resting place for somebody of great importâat least in the mind of their estateâto dream away eternity, even as â¦
There must have been some subtle message in the way Cabal stumbled backwards, gazing eye-widened at the pagoda that tipped off Zarenyia to the possibility that all was not well with her comrade.
âIs everything all right?' she asked perspicaciously as Cabal fell over.
Cabal raised a quivering finger to point at the pagoda. âThat â¦
that
 ⦠I know where I have seen it beforeâ¦'
âIt's not yours, is it? Have you had some thrilling foresight of the future and seen yourself carried in state within its emerald walls? Is that it? It is, isn't it?' She considered the building with a critic's eye. âIt's very nice, isn't it? I must confess, Johannes, it's not the sort of place I expected you to end up interred. I was thinking something more along the lines of a ditch.'
âNo.' Cabal recovered his feet and a few lamentable fragments of his dignity. âIt isn't mine. But I remember where I've seen it before, and it's impossible that it should be here. Everything else'âhe gestured broadly at the tumbling necropolisââhas some personal resonance. This ⦠shouldn't even exist. Not here.'
Zarenyia rolled her eyes with impolite incomprehension. âSorry, poppet, but I don't have the first and foggiest idea what you are talking about. Why shouldn't it be here if you've seen it in the real world? I say “real world” to be polite, of course. I mean that pit of a world you humans swarm about.'
âIt wasn't in the real world.'
Zarenyia showed a modicum of increased interest. âHell, then? You've seen it in Hell?'
âI've seen it in the Dreamlands, in the great necropolis of Hlanith. But the stuff of the Dreamlands and of the mundane world are entirely different. This place
cannot
possess both.'
âCopies, perhaps?'
âNot content with taking landmarks from my life, this place contents itself to copy them, too? No. It is the original, impossible though that is. Truly, this is an awful place.'
âJohannesâ¦' Zarenyia spoke slowly and suspiciously. âAre you
frightened
?'
âNo,' said Cabal, but he lied.
He had been sarcastic to demons, dismissive to Satan's face, and called Nyarlathotep a little bastard. He had been impolite to cultists, behaved indecorously towards his fellow necromancers, and had once triedâunsuccessfullyâto upset a vicar. He had not wavered in any of these endeavours. He was quite capable of feeling fear, he knew, but it was a rare circumstance and rarelyâno, neverâhad he been so existentially threatened as he felt now.
There were rules, laws, principles that governed everything, rules, laws, and principles that controlled every falling raindrop, every whirl of an electron, every frolicking ghost. These laws he understood better than most, and those laws said this place could not be. A pocket universe containing material aspects of the mundane, mortal world was one thing, but it was the presence of an artefact of the Dreamlands in the same place that put it all awry. It was tantamount to an electrical cell having two positives, or a planet failing to generate any gravitational pull; it simply could not happen.
There were, then, principles to which he was not privy, and to which he had never guessed at, and which he did not begin even to understand how he might understand. Not only had he built his house of science upon shifting sands, so had everybody else.
Yes, he was frightened.
âNo,' he said. âWhere do you get these absurd ideas?'
âOh.' She looked at the pagoda and added conversationally, âOh, look, the door's opening.'