The Man in the Moss (74 page)

Read The Man in the Moss Online

Authors: Phil Rickman

           
And Chris, an elder of the Church of the Angels of the
New Advent, was asking himself: is this man, this figure of almost prophet-like
glamour, this embodiment of the biblically angelic, is this man
entirely sane?

           
'Joel.' Chris shambled over to the lectern, a lean,
bearded man in a lumberjack shirt. 'Er, how many hours has it been exactly ?'

           
'Are you counting, Chris?'

           
'No, but ... I know the heat's on in here, but it's still
pretty cold. Bit of an ordeal for some of these kids.'

           
'You're saying their faith isn't strong enough?'

           
Like the PE teacher he used to be, Chris thought. Loftily
disdainful of youngsters shivering on a wintry playing field.

           
'Of course not,' Chris said. 'But don't you think ...
don't you think this church is
clean
now?'

           
'This thing is deep-seated, Chris.' Joel clutched at the
lectern for strength, the muscles tautening in his face. 'You think you can
eradicate centuries of evil in a few hours?'

           
He looked down at the wooden pedestal lectern, as if
seeing it for the first time, and then sprang back. 'Look! Look at this!'

           
The lectern was supporting a black-bound Bible, open
across spread wings of carved oak.

           
'It's an eagle,' Chris said. 'Lots of them are eagles.'

           
'This is not an eagle.' Joel's hands retracted as if the
lectern were coated with acid. 'Look.'
           
Chris didn't understand.

           
'An owl is a pagan bird,' Joel intoned calmly, like a
bomb-disposal expert identifying a device. 'Step away from it. Go down and open
the door.' He closed his eyes, breathed a brief, intense prayer for protection,
gently detached the Bible, carried it to a choir stall.

           
And then hefted the lectern in both arms, as though
uprooting a young tree.

           
'Door!'Joel gasped.

           
Feeling less than certain about this, Chris preceded him
down the aisle. Hesitantly, he held open the church door and then the porch
door until Joel had staggered out and, with an animal grunt, hurled the lectern
far into the rainy tumult of the night.

           
They heard it crash against a tombstone.

           
'Filthy conditions.' Joel stumbled back into the church
slapping at his surplice, a strange, fixed look on his face. 'Is this natural,
all this rain? Is it
natural,
Chris?'

           
'It's only rain, Joel.'

           
'You're not seeing this, Chris, are you? You're not
seeing it at all.'

           
All heads were turned towards him as he walked back up
the aisle. Chris sensed an element of uncertainty among their devotion. Perhaps
Joel was slightly aware of it too, for he raised his eyes to the altar. 'Oh
Lord, give them a sign. Give them proof!'

           
He stood where the lectern had been, his coronet of curls
looking dull, as if tarnished by the rain. Chris found himself praying silently
for deliverance from what was becoming a nightmare.

           
'It was ...' Joel spread his big hands helplessly the
width of the aisle... evil. Don't you see? It wasn't an eagle, it was an
owl.
A symbol of what
they
would call "ancient
wisdom". It was a
satanic artefact
.
Can't you understand? It had to be removed.'

           
'Praise God,' someone called out, but only once and
rather feebly.

 

A man in a white T-shirt
drifted up to Joel as if to congratulate him, shake him by the hand. When Joel
opened his arms to embrace his brother, he felt a blast of cold air against his
chest.

           
Puzzled, he looked down and saw that his pectoral cross
was missing. Must have become hooked around the lectern, and he'd thrown it out
of the door as well. He felt angry with himself. Now he had to
visualize
the cross. But he saw his
brother Angel's open arms and he smiled.

           
His brother was smiling back. His brother's eyes were brown
and swirling like beer-dregs in a glass.

           
'Thank you,' Joel said. 'Thank you for your support.
Thank you for your faith.'

           
Couldn't recall the name. But he knew the face, although
he d seen it only once before.

           
'Joel,' Chris said, 'you OK?'

           
Seen the face by lamplight and edged with lace in a
violated coffin.

           
Joel's eyes bulged. He felt his jaw tightening, his lips
shrinking back over his teeth, his throat expanding under pressure of a scream.

           
But he didn't scream. He would
not
scream. Instead, he stretched out his arms and grasped his
terror to his bosom.

           
'Joel!' A voice behind him, Chris? But so far away, too
far away, a dimension away from death's cold capsule in which Joel embraced a
column of writhing darkness comprised of a thousand wriggling, frigid worms.

           
'Begone.' But it came out breathless, thin and whingeing,
from between his clenched teeth.

           
He tried to project the missing pectoral cross in front
of him, a cross of white fire.

           
Gasping, 'In the name ... name of God.' As the cold worms
began to glide inside his vestments and to feed upon him, to devour his faith.
'In God's name ...
begone!'

           
'Joel, stop it.' Hands either side of him, clutching at
his arms.

           
The cross of fire had become a cross of ice.
           
Joel roared like a bull.

           
They were pinioning his arms while the cold worms sucked
at his soul. His own brothers in God offering him as sustenance for the
voracious dead.

           
'Aaaaargh.'

           
A boiling strength erupted in his chest.

 

In the centre of the
silence, the black bag was brought to the woman.

           
From the bag, a thick, dark stole uncoiling. A slender
vein of silver or white.

           
Winding it around her hands like flax and holding it up
and showing it to the corpse, twisting it in the candlelight.

           
Hair. Human hair, two feet of it, three, bound together,
with a strip of grey-white hair rippling through it.

           
The woman's hands moving inside the tent of hair with a
certain rhythmical fluidity, as the pipes moaned, an aching lament. The
watchers mumbling and, out of this, a single voice rising, a pale ribbon of a
voice singing out,
'I conjure thee.'

           
And winding back into the mumbling with the winding of
the hair.

           
'He's coming.

           
He's coming and he's strong.'

 

Up against the vestry wall,
four of the men around him so he couldn't break away, he wailed in despair,
'Whose side are you
on?'

           
Blood in the aisle. One man sitting up on the flags, head
in his hands, semi-concussed.

           
Chris pressing a tissue to a burst lip. 'Joel, it's all
gone wrong. You're seriously scaring people. Some of the women want to leave,
get out of here.'

           
'They can't. They can't go out there now. Not safe, do
you not see?'

           
'Joel, I'm sorry, they're saying it's probably safer out
there than it is here with ... with you.'

           
'Lock and bar the doors. Go on. Do it now. LOCK AND BAR
THE DOORS!'

           
'Joel, please, they're saying
you
... All that screaming and wrestling with ...'

           
'With evil! The infested dead!'

           
'... with yourself, Joel! Oh, my God, this is awful.
Somebody wipe his mouth.'
           
'Where
is
he?'

           
Joel flailed, but they held him.

           
'Where
is
he?
The spirit. Was he expelled?
Tell
me.'

           
'Let's go back to the Rectory, shall we? Have a cup of
coffee? Come back later. When we've all, you know, calmed down.'

           
'What's happened to your face?'

           
'You hit me, Joel.'

           
'No.'

           
'Yes! You were like a man poss ... We couldn't hold you.
Please, Joel. You've been under a lot of stress.'

           
'... fighting it ... fighting for our souls. Stinking of
the grave. . , filthy womancunt. .. let me . ..'

           
'Come on. You're scaring people. Let's get some air.
Please.'

           
'Matt Castle. Spirit of Matt Castle. Soiled.
Soiled spirit.'
           
'Joel, Matt Castle's dead ...'
           
'And was
here!'

           
'Look, Declan's hurt. I think he hit his head. He needs a
doctor. Please.'

           
'Illusion. Temptation. They
want
you to open the doors and let them in. If you don't do it of
your own free will, they'll get inside you, fill you up with worms, make you
think things that aren't true. Let me go, I command you to let me go.'

           
'Let him go.'

           
'Chris?'

           
'Just let him go. We can't hold him all night.'

           
'Matt Castle. Its face was Matt Castle's. But I looked
into its eyes and its eyes were the eyes of Satan.'

           
'Yes. Yes, but it's gone now, Joel. I swear to you it's
gone. You ... you defeated it. You were more powerful. You ... you threw it to
the ground and it... sort of disintegrated.'

           
'Ah.'

           
'Yes, we saw it. We did. Didn't we, Richard? So, Joel,
come back to the Rectory, OK? You need a coffee. And a lie down. After your
exertions. After your ... Oh God, help me ...'

           
'... was it wearing?'
           
'… your struggle.'

           
'What was it wearing?

           
'I ... Well, it wasn't ... I mean, too clear. Not from
where we were standing. A ... a shroud, was it? And glowing. Sort of glowing?'

           
Joel felt his face explode.
'Liars!'

           
His chest swelled, arms thrashed. One man was thrown
across the vestry like a doll, spinning dizzily around until the stone wall
slapped into his nose; they heard him squeak and a quick crack of bone, and
then Joel's white surplice was blotting up bullets of blood.

           
'Come on! Let's get out now. Don't go near him.'

           
'What about Martin?'

           
'Pick him up, come
on.
Oh, my God. It's all right. It's all
right
.
Somebody stop them
screaming.'

 

Joel heard scrambling and
scuffling, stifled shouts and squawks and screams, bolts being thrown, the
soulless slashing of the rain and a shrilling from inside of him, something
squealing to be free.

           
At first he wouldn't move, paralysed with dread. Then he
began to laugh. It was only the mobile phone at the leather belt around his
cassock.

           
He pulled it out and inspected it. A deep fissure ran
from the earpiece to the push-buttons. He had difficulty dragging out the
aerial because its housing was bent. The phone went on bleeping at him.

           
He tried to push the 'send' button, but it wouldn't go
in. Joel became irrationally enraged with the phone and began to beat it
against the wall. Went on beating it when the bleeps stopped and a tinny little
faraway voice was calling out, 'Mr Beard.'

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