Thomas Sniegoski - In the House of the Wicked

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Methuselah had been right about the large man’s magickal background.

“See, this is why I decided to hang around,” Francis said as he stepped from the shadows. He lit up his own smoke, casually puffing away as the cigarette dangled from the corner of his mouth. “That reaction to the golem skull tells me you do know something about it.”

Angus unleashed a blast of supernatural energy that arced through the air like lightning. Francis ducked, and the destructive magick struck an overflowing Dumpster, flipping it over and sending foul-smelling refuse across the alley.

The cook was gearing up to let loose another volley, but Francis was already on the move, darting across the alley to place the blade of the divine scalpel beneath the fat man’s throat.

“I don’t think we need any more spells. Do you?”

“What do you want from me?” Angus asked, eyes wide as the blade dimpled the flabby flesh beneath his chin.

“I want to know the truth about that skull,” Francis said.

Angus squeezed his eyes shut. “I told you I don’t know anything about-”

“And I’m telling you that you’re lying,” Francis interrupted coolly, pushing ever so slightly on the scalpel so that its tip entered the flesh no more than a millimeter.

Angus hissed, pulling away, but Francis and his blade followed.

“Look, I used to be an angel of the Heavenly host Guardian, and we can totally tell when somebody is lying, which you are.”

Some of the insect busboys had come outside for another round of their game. They caught sight of Francis and Angus and immediately crouched lower to the ground, clicking and buzzing, watching with their segmented eyes.

“Everything’s fine here,” Francis announced. “Go on and play your game. And watch out for that one.” He nodded toward the bug standing closest to the building. “I think he’s cheating.”

The insects reacted, as the accused bug attempted to defend himself.

“Let’s go someplace less crowded and talk,” Francis said quietly to Angus. He withdrew the blade and placed it inside the pocket of his suit coat.

Angus stumbled back with a gasp, the fat fingers of his right hand wiping at the bead of blood that seeped from the wound in his chin, while the left started to radiate with excess magickal energy.

Francis just stood there, staring at the man with unblinking eyes.

“You’re…you’re not going to kill me?” Angus wheezed.

What remained of his cigarette still dangled at the corner of his mouth, and Francis let it drop to the ground. “No, as long as you take that glowing hand you’re sporting and stick it in your pocket.”

Angus seemed to think about that for a moment, then brought the hand shining with destructive potential to his mouth and blew on it, snuffing out the power.

Francis nodded.

“I didn’t know that about Guardians,” Angus said.

Francis wasn’t sure what the man was talking about, and his confusion must have shown on his face.

“That you could tell when somebody is lying,” Angus elaborated.

Francis laughed.

“We can’t,” he said, turning to leave Methuselah’s back lot. “I lied.”

Francis marched Angus into Methuselah’s, taking a table in the far back of the tavern, the single candle in the table’s center barely keeping the encroaching shadows at bay.

A waitress with skin so pale that Francis could actually see her entire circulatory system brought them drinks. Both were having Scotch, neat. No surprise there. What else would a guy named Angus drink?

“So tell me about it,” Francis said, puffing on another cigarette.

Angus was holding the skull in his chubby, nicotine-stained fingers, staring into the dark recesses of its eye sockets.

“There’s no doubting the craftsmanship,” he replied, turning the skull around. “I didn’t want it to be so, but it all makes a twisted kind of sense now.”

He set the skull on the table and grabbed his drink, pouring it down his gullet in one gulp. Then he smacked his lips and breathed heavily, his massive chest heaving up and down.

Francis caught the translucent waitress’s eye and motioned for another round.

“So I’m guessing you do know who made this,” Francis said, finishing his own libation.

Angus nodded, his round face glistening with perspiration in the feeble light of the candle. “Knew him, and believed myself partially responsible for his death.” He picked up his empty glass and tipped it back, as if hoping for one last drop. “Myself and the cabal.

“But this,” he said, eyeing the golem skull again, “tells me that he still lives.”

“Let’s start with who,” Francis prodded. “Who’s still alive?”

“Konrad Deacon,” Angus answered. “He was a member of a sorcerous cabal that included me and four others.”

See-through Sally returned to the table with their drinks, and Angus eagerly grabbed at his.

“Why don’t you drink that one a little slower,” Francis suggested. “I don’t want you forgetting anything important.”

The sorcerer glared, but did sip at his drink.

“There ya go,” Francis said. “Lasts longer that way, anyhow. So, tell me about this Deacon.”

“He was the youngest, and the last to be accepted into our exclusive club,” Angus recalled. “He had a gift for creating artificial life… Golems were his specialty. In fact, he gave us the knowledge to create our own. We all used them. They were great for walking the dog, doing yard work, taking out nosy reporters doing a tell-all story on one’s family.”

Francis placed his hand atop the clay skull and turned it to face him. “And you can tell that this is one of his?”

Angus nodded. “He had quite a knack. Nobody I’ve encountered since has been able to make them so realistic…so human.”

“And this somehow led to his supposed death?”

Angus paused for a moment, his drink partway to his mouth again. “In a way, perhaps,” he finally stated. “He showed great promise as a leader…until Stearns decided that he was too dangerous to live.”

“Stearns?”

“Algernon Stearns. Newspaper family. Very influential politically; has branched off into electronic media, television, and Internet. He’s extremely reclusive.”

“Oh yeah,” Francis said, vaguely familiar with the name. He remembered that one of Boston’s newer skyscrapers was owned by the family.

“At that point, Stearns was the leader of the cabal.”

“Ah,” Francis said. “Should have figured that one out.”

“Stearns convinced us that Deacon was dangerous, that he would try to usurp our power, so we did to him what we believed he would do to us: We attacked first, taking his magickal knowledge to split up among us.”

“But Deacon didn’t die.”

“We thought he had. In fact, the rest of us barely escaped with our lives that night.” Angus was staring wide-eyed into the darkness, reliving the moment. “Deacon unleashed a terrible spell. His entire home seemed to collapse in on itself and was sucked into the unholy abyss of nothingness.”

“This Deacon sounds like one powerful magick user,” Francis commented.

“We all were…and we owed it to Deacon. He showed us how to tap into the power of life…how we could use the universal force of existence to make us the most powerful magick wielders upon the planet.”

“And you tried to kill him for it,” Francis said.

“We thought we’d succeeded, but now…” Angus gazed at the skull. “The cabal eventually disbanded; petty squabbling caused us to go our separate ways…and we lost track of one another.”

Angus’ eyes shifted uneasily to Francis.

“But then I heard murmurings in the magickal community that members of the old cabal…our cabal…were turning up dead. I decided to make myself scarce, just in case.”

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