by J. R. Rain
I tried the name without the quotes, including other possible related keywords:
Archibald Maximus, vampire. Although a ton of sites popped up, very few were even close to what I was looking for. And the few that were turned out to be either porn or dead ends.
Archibald Maximus, medallion. Same thing. Nothing.
Archibald Maximus, alchemist. Nothing.
Archibald Maximus, wizard. Nothing. Wait! Something. No, never mind. Just another porn site.
I really hadn’t expected an obscure alchemist to have a web page or even a Twitter account, although that would have certainly made my job easier.
I next tried the name in my various industry databases, sites that only private investigators have access to. Nothing. Not even an unlikely hit. Whoever Archibald Maximus was, he didn’t own property, have a criminal record in the United States, nor had he applied for credit.
I next called my ex-partner at HUD, Chad Helling. He answered on the second ring, which made me feel good.
“Good morning, Sunshine.”
“Never gets old does it?” I was referring to his nickname for me. Sunshine. In Chad Helling’s simple world, the nickname was supposed to be ironic. And funny.
“Not yet,” he said, chuckling.
“You need to get a life.”
“I’m working on it,” he said. “I’m going to ask her, Sam.”
“Ask her what? And who?”
“Monica. I’m going to ask her to marry me.”
I shook my head. The poor dope. “Isn’t it a little too soon?”
“For love? Never!”
Oh, brother. “Listen, Romeo, I’ve got a job for you.”
“Paying work?”
“Sure,” I said. “A coffee and a scone.”
“The coffee I’ll take. I’m still not sure what the hell a scone is.”
I gave him the name and asked him to use the agency’s database.
“Archibald Maximus?” he asked, confirming.
“Yes.”
“What is he, a wrestler or something?”
“Maybe.”
“Really?”
“No.”
Chad grumbled something about doing my work for me and told me he would get back to me as soon as he had something.
I was still in the hospital parking lot, parked under a pathetic-looking tree, whose branches only provided me with partial shade. The minivan was heating up and by all rights I should crack the windows and let in some fresh air. Except, I didn’t need fresh air, and so I didn’t bother. Cracked windows let in sunlight, and sunlight was far more detrimental to me than stale air. Also, there wasn’t a car on earth that could heat up hot enough to remove the eternal cold from my bones. In fact, I craved the heat, and so I sat in the minivan, baking, breathing stale air, and thinking hard.
I had only one answer.
I reached into my purse and removed the small legal pad I now kept tucked in a side pocket. I also removed a favorite pen with flowing, liquid black ink. I love flowing, liquid black ink.
As a small wind rushed over the van, swishing the tree above and scattering a few precious leaves from its sparse branches, I spent the next few minutes going through a meditation exercise that both grounded me to the earth and opened me to the spirit world.
Once grounded and open, I sat quietly with pen in hand, waiting. Shorty, I felt the familiar tingle in my right arm. The tingle turned into something more than a tingle. In fact, it turned into an electrical impulse and my right arm involuntarily spasmed. It spasmed again and again, lightly, and soon the pen in my hand was moving, seemingly on its own. Writing. Two words appeared on the mini-sheet of legal paper before me.
Hello, Samantha.
“Hello,” I said within the empty minivan, feeling slightly silly.
In the past, two different entities had come through in this form of communication, what many call “automatic writing.” I asked now who I was speaking with. My hand twitched once, twice, and the name Sephora appeared before me. Sephora, I knew, was my personal spirit guide.
Whatever the hell that was.
“I might have done a bad thing,” I said.
My hand jerked and spasmed and more words appeared on the notepad on my lap.
You are only as bad as you feel, Samantha.
“Well, I feel like shit and I’m scared to death.”
My hand flinched rapidly.
Did you act out of love or fear when you saved your son?
I thought hard about that. Sweat was now breaking out on my brow. It took a lot for sweat to break out on my brow. The car was heating up rapidly. “I acted out of instinct,” I said. “For me, it was the only answer. I had a means to save my son, and I took it. Some would call that love, others would call it selfishness.”
The electrical impulse crackled through my arm.
What would you call it, Samantha?
“Love. It has to be. I love my kids more than anything.”
Then so be it.
Interestingly, had I not possessed the medallion, I don’t think I would have done it. In fact, I know I wouldn’t have done it. I would not have sentenced my son to...this...if there was no way to turn him back.
“Does my son know what’s happened to him?” I asked.
Your son sleeps deeply while the change comes over him. In the physical, outer world, no. But, yes, his greater self, his soul self, knows exactly what you have done.
“Does he forgive me?”
My child, he loves you with all his heart. He understands this was a difficult decision for you, and that you made the best choice you could.
I stared down at the words on the pad, wondering again if I was making them up or if they were really flowing through me from the spirit world.
“You make it seem like there’s two of him,” I said.
There is his higher, spiritual self, Samantha, and his lower, physical self. The higher self resides in the spirit world, and the lower self in the physical world, your world.
I thought about that, then got to why I was here. “I have a name of a man who might be able to help me,” I said.
There was no response. No weird electrical impulse. My arm rested lightly on the center console.
“Is there a way you can help me find him?”
Precious child, there is always a way. To find what is missing, lost or hidden, requires great faith, patience and perseverance.
I waited, but apparently that’s all I was going to be given.
“Is that it?” I asked.
It is enough, Samantha.
I slammed the pen down and tore out the sheet of paper. A few seconds later, the paper was nothing more than confetti. I knew I was acting like a baby. Losing control was exactly what I shouldn’t be doing. But I didn’t need riddles and spiritual platitudes. I needed Archibald Maximus.
And I needed him now.
Chapter Eighteen
The only other vampire I knew—outside of my newly anointed son—had led me to the world’s creepiest man, which cost my son two years of his life. As shitty as that sounded, a name had been gleaned, which was more than I started with.
The only other immortal that I knew was Kingsley Fulcrum, a beast of a man in more ways than one. He had an office a block or two from the hospital, across the street from the opulent Main Place Mall, which I was driving past now. The mall gleamed and sparkled and apparently emitted a siren call to Orange County housewives everywhere.
I somehow managed to ignore the call, and soon I was turning into the parking lot of Kingsley’s plush, red-brick office building, which brought to mind the last time I was here.
Last week, I had stormed into Kingsley’s office, scaring off a wife killer that Kingsley had been set to represent. Exactly. I’d never been more proud. Anyway, the last I heard Kingsley had dropped the piece of shit. Unfortunately for the killer, I had gotten a very strong psychic hit from him. I knew, without a doubt, that he had killed his wife. Now he was on my radar, and I intended
to follow through with my threat to make sure that he spent a lifetime in prison.
But that was for another time. For now, I had a son to save.
From what? I asked myself. From an eternity of life? From an eternity of not experiencing death?
No, I answered. From an eternity of childhood. From an eternity of consuming blood. From an eternity of questioning his sanity.
It was mid-day and I was at my weakest and frailest. I also felt vulnerable and clumsy. As I stood there on the bottom floor, inside the glass doors, blinking and waiting for my eyes to adjust to the gloom within, I realized something else. I had condemned my son to a lifetime of shunning the sun.
My son would never again go to the beach, never again go on a field trip with his class, never again play Frisbee in the park. Granted, he never played Frisbee in the park, anyway, but that possibility had been removed.
For now, I thought. Only for now. There is an answer. There has to be an answer.
I moved heavily through the building, all too aware that my legs felt unusually heavy, that each step was an effort, that I did not belong with the day dwellers.
A tall man wearing an outdated blue blazer smiled at me sadly as I boarded the elevator. He asked what floor and I noticed we were going to the same floor, Kingsley’s floor. As we rode up together, I touched my brow and winced. Despite my wide-brimmed hat, some of the sun had made it through. There might have been a small area near my hairline where I had missed some sunblock because the skin there was burning. I ignored the pain, knowing it would go away in a few hours.
We rode the elevator in silence. I was aware of the man in the old business suit watching me. I hated to be watched and self-consciously moved away, ducking my head, wishing like hell he would look away, but too weak to do anything other than shrink away like a frightened puppy.
“Pardon me,” he said in a thick French accent, leaning in front of me and pushing the button to the floor just beneath Kingsley’s offices. “Wrong floor.”
The elevator doors opened immediately, and he stepped out. As he did so, he turned and looked at me again. He was a tall man wearing a bow tie. I hadn’t noticed the bow tie before. His age was indeterminate, anything from 48 to 78. Then he did something that shocked the hell out of me.
He smiled.
The elevator doors closed and I headed up to see Kingsley.
Chapter Nineteen
Like I said, the last time I was here, I stormed Kingsley’s office like a mad woman.
Or a desperate mom.
This time I waited patiently in the lobby while Kingsley finished up with a client. Oh, I was still desperate. I was still driven. It’s just that I had eased up on the panic button. A few days ago, when I had stormed in here, my son was close to death. Now he was very much alive, although I was faced with a whole new dilemma.
Had I been anything less than what I am now, my son, I knew, would be dead. He would have fulfilled his life mission, a mission that included checking out early, apparently, and the rest of us would have been left to pick up the pieces of our own lives, if that was even possible.
There were a lot of unanswered questions. The use of the medallion was so vague, so strange, and just so damn weird. That I was pinning my son’s eternity on a golden coin hanging from a leather strap was mind-boggling and disturbing, at best.
And what was I working so hard for? To ensure that my son would someday die? Where things stood, he would survive and keep surviving forever. Wasn’t that a good thing? And how did I know that he would stop growing? Maybe he would continue to grow. Maybe he would reach adulthood. Maybe he would thank me every day for the rest of his life, for all eternity, for sparing him from death, and for giving him great physical gifts, too. Knowing my son, in the least, he would thank me for getting him out of school.
This line of thinking had me confused. Jesus, maybe I should let him be. Maybe with proper guidance, I could walk him through the eternal experience, help him, teach him, guide him. Something no one had done for me. Maybe he would indeed grow into his adult body.
Maybe.
Or maybe not.
I didn’t know; I knew so little.
Shit.
A few minutes later, Kingsley’s office door opened and out came a familiar client. The same client I had seen just days earlier. The same client who had prompted a powerful vision of him strangling his wife to death in her sleep. The same coward. The same piece of shit. The same asshole I had threatened to bring down.
It was no threat.
And here he was. Coming out of Kingsley’s office.
Again.
We locked eyes and I think we both gasped. My stomach heaved at the sight of the bastard. He made a small, whimpering sound and took a step back...into Kingsley, who was standing behind him. Kingsley looked surprised, too. He also looked a little sheepish and embarrassed. I was too stunned to speak.
Kingsley quickly stepped between us, and actually escorted the bastard out of his office. A moment later, my werewolf friend returned, all six foot, six inches of him, and gestured toward his office.
“Let’s talk,” he said.
Numb and sick, I silently stood and headed through his open door.
He followed behind, shutting the door.
“Have a seat,” he said.
Chapter Twenty
I did as I was told, still too stunned to speak.
Kingsley moved around his office with an ease and speed uncommon for a man his size. He sat in his executive chair and studied me for a long moment before speaking. I could not look into his eyes.
“Well, I suppose I should thank you for not playing Whack-A-Mole with my client’s head,” he finally said, and I could hear the gentle humor in his voice. He was referring to an inadvertent joke he’d made the other day.
I didn’t smile. Not now.
He took in a lot of air. Unlike me, Kingsley seemed to need normal amounts of oxygen. I know this because I had listened to him snore once or twice. Listened, of course, was putting it mildly. Experienced, perhaps? His snoring was unlike anything I had ever heard before. It sounded like the bombing of a small village.
He filled his massive chest to capacity, which put a lot of pressure on his nice dress shirt, especially the buttons. I was prepared to duck should buttons start flying like so many bullets from a Gatling gun.
He studied me like that for a moment, his chest filled, button threads hanging on for dear life, and then finally expelled. He leaned back and crossed his legs, adjusting the drape of his hem.
“Don’t judge me, Sam,” he said. I noticed he looked away when he spoke.
“Who’s judging?” I said. “I’m just admiring the fine handiwork of your shirt.”
“Every man deserves a fair trial, Sam.”
“And every defense attorney deserves a hefty payday.”
“This has nothing to do with money, Sam.”
“Say that to your mansion in Yorba Linda.”
“My home is the result of a lot of hard work.”
“And a lot of freed killers.”
Perhaps in frustration, he closed both hands into boulder-like fists, and as he did so, his knuckles cracked mightily. Jesus, he was an intimidating son-of-a-bitch, but I was not easily intimidated.
“What do you want, Sam?” he asked.
I found myself wanting to lash out, too. I found myself wanting to storm out and flip him the bird. How...how could a man represent such scum? And how could I ever respect such a man?
The answer was easy: I couldn’t.
I continued saying nothing. I just sat there, battling my emotions, knowing that Kingsley might be the only person I knew who could help me find Archibald Maximus, but hating that I needed his help.
And in my silence, Kingsley must have spotted something. His thick eyebrows knitted and he sat forward a little. “Unbelievable,” he said.
“What?”
“You did it, didn’t you?”
“Did what?” But I knew what he was
talking about. Kingsley was closed to me, as were all immortals, apparently, but we both were experts in reading body language.
“You turned him, Sam, didn’t you?”
“I saved him.”
He looked away, shaking his great head. “And you have the nerve to come in here and accuse me of being selfish. You, who condemned your own son to an eternity of childhood.”
“What was I supposed to do, goddammit? Watch him die?”
“There’s a natural order to things, Sam.”
“And we’re not natural?”
“No, we’re not.”
“And part of that natural order is to let my son die?”
He said nothing, but I saw his brain working. The great attorney was looking for a counter-argument, but I would be damned if I was going to listen to an argument for my son’s death.
“Look,” I said. “I don’t know much about much, but I know one thing: I’m a mother first. I am a mother and that is my baby in the hospital. He was sick and I had an answer. It might not have been the best answer, and I sure as hell don’t expect to win any ‘Mother of the Year’ awards. I also don’t understand what the hell happened to me, or what the hell even happened to you. I have no clue the power and magicks behind what keeps us alive. But if this fucking curse, this disease, that I live with every day can somehow save my son, somehow keep my life from spinning completely and totally out of fucking control, you damn well better believe I’m going to utilize it, because it sure as hell has taken a lot from me, Kingsley.”
He was nodding. “Okay, now that you’ve justified turning your son into a blood-sucking fiend, what are you going to do now?”
“I’m going to find someone who can help me.”
“Help you how? With the medallion?”
“Yes. I have a name.”
“Where did you get the name?”
“It doesn’t matter,” I said, and debated storming out of the office. Instead, I kept my ego in check for my son. “Have you ever heard of someone named Archibald Maximus?”
There was no recognition on his face. “No,” he said. “You don’t forget a name like that.”