Read The Fall of the House of Cabal Online
Authors: Jonathan L. Howard
Miss Barrow held up a bent hairpin. âI see what you meant about bears, though.' She looked at the growing gap betwixt door and frame and withdrew a little. âUsually I'm all for ladies before gentlemen.'
âBut not tonight,' said Cabal, sliding past her, his gaze never leaving the door. âVery wise. Horst, come with me.'
âRight behind you, Johannes.'
âI was rather thinking of you going in first.'
âAge before beauty? Although I have a claim on both of those, now I think of it.'
âSupernaturally fast, strong, and resilient before mortal was my thinking.'
Horst was preserving his resources and so did not blur into action. Instead, he went through the door cautiously and slow, the only supernatural ability in play being his senses, brought to a high keenness. To those behind him, he was swallowed into a murky gloom of strange shadows and faltering luminescence. A moment later, they heard him call quietly back to them.
âThis is the rummest plate factory I've ever seen.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Horst's experience of plate factories was probably slight, but despite that, there is an expectation within the mind of anyone entering a plate factory that there should be certain elements present. For example, plates. As Cabal and then Leonie joined him beyond the strange door and its inconstant lock, it became obvious that plates were in short supply there.
âThis really isn't the factory.' Miss Barrow's voice was a breath of wonder.
Cabal's brow betrayed fleeting irritation. âI believe I said that. Repeatedly.'
âYes, and I didn't believe you, obviously.'
Whereas the exterior of the factory was of a practical brick build, its walls painted white and the specific section that the door let into low-roofed and topped with red tiles, the interior was a wide dome, the walls constructed of exquisitely shaped blocks of basalt, not one of which could have weighed less than a ton, and whose apex was perhaps three times higher than the single storey in which it was supposed to exist.
The dome was supported by five thick columns of black marble, veined with a curious material that was sharp yellow in places but that seemed golden in others. The columns' bases were connected by a great circle of brass inlaid into the floor and, within the circle, the columns were connected to their alternating neighbours by similar lines of metal to form a pentagram. Just visible in the dim light was a low archway behind the column furthest from the door.
âWhere does that go?' asked Horst.
âHell,' replied Cabal. âI believe I said that, too.
Also
repeatedly.'
Leonie stopped dead in her tracks. This, she could believe down to the very roots of her soul. The thought that one could simply walk through that archway and ultimately end up within the kingdom of Satan filled her with a horror that was as profound as it was existential.
âWhy exactly are we here, Cabal?'
âAh.' Cabal was pacing around the circle, examining it by the light of his torch. âSo you finally take an interest.'
âI thought you were talking figuratively! I kept asking and you kept saying, “An entrance to Hell,” so I thought,
Very well, Cabal, have your moment of melodrama now and bathos later when it turns out you're talking about Ipswich or somewhere,
but you meant it. You actually meant it literally. So, I'm sorry for not taking you at your word, but now we're here I have a pressing desire to know
why are we here
?'
âWe're not actually going to go to Hell, are we?' Horst had his hands in his pockets and was looking around the chamber like a schoolboy showing polite interest during an educational visit to an antimacassar museum. âFor one thing, it's probably quite a long way. I'd have suggested bringing bicycles if I'd known.'
âWe are not. You may calm yourselves on that point.' Cabal had found a small and clearly deliberate break in the circle. He took a piece of chalk from his pocket, knelt by the break, and filled the gap with a drawn line. He rose to continue his survey. Any arcanist creating such a circle would only put a single break in it for convenience's sake. But the circle may not have been laid by such an arcanist, or even a human. There might well be a second, far subtler break in the circle elsewhere, rendering the pentagram deliberately useless and a trap for the unwary. Cabal tried to avoid being amongst the unwary; it was a demographic with a poor life expectancy.
âWe are here because it puts us on the other side of the veil between the prosaic world and the Inferno. It has been my experience that crossing that divide by'âhe nodded at the door, still ajarââeven a few metres can make all the difference.'
âDifference to what?' Leonie was glad the door was ajar and had positioned herself within easy running distance of it, should needs be.
âTo the ease of certain procedures.' Cabal completed his circuit of the pentagram and returned to the chalked link. If there was another break in the circle, it was a microscopic crack, and he really didn't have time to go over every millimetre with a microscope.
âWhat sort of procedures?' asked Horst. He had unconsciously gravitated closer to Leonie, perhaps because he sensed the ease of the escape route she had adopted and might wish to use it, too, but more likely because, undead or not, he clove to the principle that being close to a pretty girl was infinitely better than not being close to a pretty girl.
âWhat sort ofâ¦? Really, neither of you recognise a summoning circle when you see it?'
âNo,' said Horst. âA summoning? I've read about those. Don't they take ages and you need goats and a knife with a wavy blade and a virginâ¦' Here, he unwisely glanced at Leonie and discovered that it was not only the gaze of the sun that could wither him where he stood.
Cabal was removing his jacket and rolling up his sleeves. âIn the usual run of things, yes, except for the virgin. Never found a use for one yet.'
Horst had learned enough wisdom in the previous ten seconds not to offer any suggestions.
Cabal squared himself towards the centre of the pentagram, took a deep breath, and said, âZarenyia!'
His clear tone rang around the chamber for longer than perhaps it should have, and the echo diminished towards the very centre of the great five-pointed star.
âBefore you really get started,' said Horst
sotto voce,
âhow long is this likely to drag on? If it's hours, well, you know I have to be mindful of dawn and everything, so just a roughâ¦'
Abruptly, the summoning was over. Leonie gasped, Horst said, âBlimey!' and only Johannes Cabal did not take a step back. He only crossed his arms and, most strangely, smiled.
Strangely for the circle was filled by a monster, a great beast of eight legs and the abdomen of a spider. Where the forebody of an arachnid might have been expected, however, a human torso extended, the upper body of a woman, her skin pale, her hair short and fiery red, her expression warlike. She wore nothing but, slightly unexpectedly, an angora sweater.
âWho dares?' roared the abomination. âWho dares summon Zarenyia the Merciless from her infernal lair, the webbed caves of many deaths? Which puny mortalâ¦'
âHello,' said Cabal, his smile becoming unnervingly fond.
âWho?' The monster looked upon Cabal.
And then it squealed excitedly, clapped its hands, and capered on the spot, making a noise like a clan of stilt-walkers taking up tap dancing.
âJohannes! Darling! I am
so
sorry about all that “Who dares?” business. I had no idea it was you!' She moved quickly towards Cabal, and Horst was caught between bafflement and the feeling that perhaps he should save his brother from the monster.
He need not have worried. The spider creature apparently became aware of something none of them could perceive, and slowed as she reached the edge of the pentagram. She eyed the air with disappointment.
âA binding circle? Really, sweetheart? I thought we were past that stage.'
âMadam Zarenyia.' Cabal bowed to the creature, andâits smile returningâit curtseyed gracefully back. âThe summoning circle is a mere technicality. I must, however, ask a favour of you before breaking it.'
The monster steepled its fingers before it like an indulgent teacher. âFire away, you charmer. You always did know how to get around me.'
Leonie looked at Horst. Horst looked at Leonie. Those looks communicated that they had no words. They looked back at Cabal and the spider monster.
âYou have guaranteed my safety already, yes?'
âOf course, and in perpetuity as far as I'm concerned. Unless you betray me or something frightful, in which case I
shall
kill you, but that's not going to happen, is it? We're best pals! No, you're safe with me, darling. Cross my heart.' And here she crossed a point midway up her sternum with a couple of transversal flicks of her fingers. She smiled, and the smile wavered as a thought occurred. âWell, I
would
cross my heart, but it's back there somewhere,' she indicated the great abdomen, âand I think it's more of a mass of peristaltic pipes than what you'd call a heart, but the principle's the same.' Her smile returned. â“Cross my dispersed cardiovascular system and hope to die” doesn't have quite the same ring, does it?'
âThat's perfectly acceptable, madam,' said Cabal, âbut on this occasion I am not alone.' He turned and pointed out Horst and Leonie. Somehow both managed smiles, although any list of adjectives used to describe those smiles must needs include âwan,' âweak,' and âinsincere.'
âOh, you brought friends!' The monster leaned her upper body to see them better. âWell, any friends of Johannes are friends of mine, I would say.' Her gaze settled upon Leonie. âI say,' she asked of Cabal, âare you and she lovers?'
âNo!' said Leonie sharply, outrage outweighing caution. âWe are not!'
âOoh, feisty. I like her,' said the monster, talking to Cabal as if discussing a pony. âHow about him, then?' She nodded at Horst. âAre you and he lovers?'
Even Cabal was taken aback by this. âHardly, madam. That's my brother.'
The creature looked at Cabal for some seconds as if expecting further clarification. âAnd?' she said when it was not forthcoming.
âI draw the line at incest, quite putting the vexed subject of homosexuality to one side.'
This revelation was greeted by a peal of happy, honest laughter. âThis is why I adore you, Johannes. You're so funny!' She looked at Horst more closely before leaning down towards Cabal to say in a low voice, âBy the way, your brother's a deader. You know that, don't you?'
In doing so, her angora sweater hung loosely before her, and the V-shaped neck loomed open. Horst found himself momentarily transfixed by the sight although for reasons he could not quite remember. The monster glanced upwards and caught his eye. Her smile became coquettish and somewhat predatory. âAlthough not nearly as dead as he thinks he is,' she said with the hint of a singsong behind the words.
âMadame Zarenyia,' said Cabal, both unaware of and injurious to the slight mental fugue in which Horst had found himself. Horst blinked; what
had
he been thinking about just then? But Cabal was still speaking. Horst focussed enough to listen.
âMadam Zarenyia, this is my brother, Horst, whoâas you so perspicaciously notedâis a deader. A dead man, that is. Specifically, a vampire.'
âSuch an interesting family you have, Johannes. Hello, Horst. I hope we can be friends.'
âMadam,' said Horst, and bowed awkwardly.
âAnd this is Miss Leonie Barrow, criminologist and, for this endeavour at any rate, colleague.'
âHello, darling.' Zarenyia spent far too long looking at Leonie. It felt to Leonie that she was being undressed and redressed in a variety of inappropriate outfits in the creature's imagination. âAnd how did you happen to meet Johannes?'
âHe tried to steal my soul,' said Leonie with more force than she had intended.
âReally?' Zarenyia glanced at Cabal and then back at Leonie. âAnd they say romance is dead.'
âI'm afraid I shall require the same guarantees of safety that you so graciously extended to me to also apply to Horst and Miss Barrow,' said Cabal, blissfully unaware of the undercurrents travelling around the other occupants of the chamber.
âOf course. With the proviso that I may naturally defend myself and that any betrayal will be met with lovely amounts of retaliation, I hereby promise that I shall not kill, injure, maim, or otherwise cause physical or psychic or magical hurt to Horst Cabal and Leonie Barrow.' Then the monster raised its right hand, index and middle finger raised together, thumb across the ring and middle fingers. She smiled brightly. âI here so swear. Dib, dib, dib!'
Cabal moved to scrub out the chalk line with his foot.
â
Dib, dib, dib
?' echoed Leonie. âAre you serious? Cabal, what sort of guarantee?'
Cabal looked back at her, and his expression was severe. âMadam Zarenyia's dibs are more than good enough for me,' he said, and broke the circle.
âFree!' screamed the monster, drawing itself up to its not inconsiderable full height and raising its arms. Cabal staggered back, stunned. Zarenyia smiled down at him. âMade you jump! So,' she relaxed down again and rambled out of the circle, clapping her hands together once in satisfaction, âwhat's the plan, Johannes? Will there be murder? I do hope so. I
love
murder.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The chamber was as good a place as anywhere to discuss plans. Further, Cabal had a misgiving that Zarenyiaâwho occupied a space some five yards across from the tip of one arachnoid foot to the tip of its diametric cousinâmight perhaps have a few problems getting out of the very humanly sized door. He vaguely hoped that she might have some sort of trick for managing the door, but that enquiring might force attention upon such a dull matter when he was very much enthused by talking about what he had planned for them all.