C. Harris - What Darkness Brings

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“That is the most preposterous thing I have ever heard. I know nothing about guns. I’ve received no military training. I’m not even a sporting man!”

“You don’t need to be an expert shot to hit someone who is standing right in front of you.”

The rain had started up again, pounding on the gallery roof and rapidly clearing the yard of men and horses. Perlman squinted up at the lowering sky. “Enough of this nonsense. I’m not going to stand here and listen to this drivel.” He nodded curtly to the mare’s handler and started to turn away.

Sebastian stopped him by saying, “Tell me about the blue diamond.”

Perlman pivoted slowly toward him again. If his face had been red before, it was now white. “I beg your pardon?”

“The big, brilliant-cut blue diamond your uncle was selling. You do know about it, don’t you? I would imagine it’s worth a tidy sum.”

“My uncle had no blue diamond.”

“Oh, but I’m afraid he did. At least, he had it in his possession while he arranged a sale for its proper owner. You’re not telling me it’s been lost, are you?”

The tip of Perlman’s tongue flicked out to wet his lips. “I’m afraid you’ve been misinformed, or perhaps you have simply misunderstood something that was said to you.”

“Perhaps.” Sebastian smiled. “I hope for your sake that’s true. Otherwise, things might become. . awkward, hmm? I mean, when the diamond’s original owner attempts to reclaim his property from the estate?”

Still vaguely smiling, Sebastian walked away, leaving Perlman standing in the open yard, oblivious to the driving rain that splattered mud on his pale yellow pantaloons and melted the high starched points of his ridiculous collar.

Chapter 26

“It’s an interesting copy,” said Abigail McBean, carefully turning the manuscript’s worn, browned pages.

They had settled in a crowded room on the first floor overlooking the wet garden. Hero suspected the chamber had probably been designed as a morning room. But Abigail had turned it into a combination morning room / library, with most of the walls covered by towering bookcases stuffed with old books and a curious assortment of objects. She had The Key of Solomon open on the table and apologized to Hero for failing to offer her refreshment by saying, “I make it a practice never to have food or drink around while viewing a valuable old manuscript.”

“I quite understand,” said Hero, watching her friend. “ Is it valuable?”

“From a scholarly standpoint, yes. Monetarily? I’m not the one to judge. Going by the writing style, I’d say this copy probably dates to the middle of the sixteenth century.”

“Which is a century after the invention of the printing press. So why is it handwritten?”

Miss McBean turned the next page and frowned down at an illustration of strange geometric design. “ The Key of Solomon has been translated into Greek, Latin, Italian, French, and to a lesser extent into English. But to my knowledge it has never been published. Even grimoires that have been printed are frequently also found as manuscripts. There is a belief that handwritten texts contain inherent magical forces of their own, so they’re considered more powerful than the printed versions.”

“So it’s-what? Basically a magic textbook?”

“Yes. It tells you how to make talismans and amulets, how to cast magical spells, how to invoke angels or demons-that sort of thing.”

“For what purpose?”

“The usual: sex, money, and power.”

“What about revenge?”

“That too.”

“All the typical motives for murder,” Hero said softly.

“I hadn’t thought about it that way, but I suppose you’re right.” Miss McBean’s hand stilled on the pages. “Where did you get this?”

“It was smuggled into England for a man who was murdered last Sunday.”

“You mean Daniel Eisler?”

“You knew him?”

Miss McBean carefully closed the manuscript’s worn leather cover and set it aside. “I did, actually. He was obsessed with the occult. And I don’t mean in a scholarly sense-although he did try at first to convince me that that was his motive.”

“You mean he believed in it?”

“I eventually came to realize that he did, yes. He was continually approaching me for assistance in translating some difficult passage or tracking down obscure references.”

“You’re saying you helped him?” Hero asked, not quite managing to keep the surprise out of her voice.

Miss McBean went off into one of her hearty gales of laughter. “If you’re asking did I assist him in summoning demons and casting spells of ruination and destruction, the answer is no. What I was doing up there”-she nodded toward the attic room above-“was just my way of wrapping my head around what the writers of these texts were up to.”

She was silent for a moment, her gaze on the scene outside the window, where her towheaded niece and nephew, umbrellas in hand, could be seen splashing gleefully through rain puddles under the watchful eye of a nursemaid. The girl looked to be about eight, the boy perhaps three or four years younger. The boy squealed with delight, the girl shouting something Hero couldn’t quite catch.

Abigail smiled; then her smile faded. “I suppose in a sense I did help him at first, inadvertently. When he told me his interest was scholarly, I naturally believed him. I mean, why wouldn’t I? It was only gradually I began to realize he was deadly serious about what he was doing. He actually believed in the power of the old rituals and incantations. He had an extensive collection of grimoires.”

Hero nodded to The Key of Solomon on the table between them. “What can you tell me about this one?”

“Well. . it’s generally considered one of the most-if not the most-important of all the grimoires. It purports to date from the time of Solomon, although in reality it was probably written during the Renaissance. Most of them were.”

“For some reason I always tend to associate magic with medieval times, not the Renaissance.”

Miss McBean nodded. “Folk magic was widespread during the Middle Ages. But by the Renaissance there was a growing sense that magic had degenerated since the days of the Egyptians and Romans. Then, with the fall of Constantinople and the expulsion of the Jews and Moors from Spain, places like France, Germany, and England saw a huge influx of some of the truly ancient magic texts that had been lost to Europe. As a result, in the fifteenth century there was a veritable explosion in the writing of new grimoires. You’ll find a lot of Jewish kabbalistic magic, Arab alchemy, and Greco-Roman-Egyptian influence in these works.”

She ran her fingertips over the edge of the battered old manuscript, then sat staring at it thoughtfully.

“What is it?” Hero asked, watching her.

“I was just thinking. . The newspapers said Daniel Eisler was shot. Is that right?”

“Yes. Why?”

“It doesn’t sound to me as if his interest in the occult had anything to do with what happened to him. I mean, it’s not as if he were found spread-eagled on a pentacle with a Hand of Glory burning on his chest.”

“A hand of what?”

Abigail McBean’s eyes crinkled in quiet amusement. “You don’t want to know.” The amusement faded. “Do you really think this”-she indicated the old grimoire-“has something to do with his death?”

“Probably not. But there might be something here we’re missing. Something important.”

Hero was aware of Abigail fixing her with a steady stare. “I gather Lord Devlin has taken an interest in Daniel Eisler’s death?”

Hero nodded. “He doesn’t believe that Russell Yates-the man who has been arrested for the crime-is guilty.”

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