The Wrong Goodbye

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The Wrong Goodbye Page 26

by Chris F. Holm


  When we reached the fence, I saw the building was of a peculiar structure. Something about it set my Spidey-sense a-tingling, though at first, I couldn't put my finger on why. Then I spotted it: a sign, graffiti-spattered and bolted to the chain link fence, proclaimed the site as the future home of Asphodel Meadows Condominiums, with a projected completion date of three years back. The sign was illustrated, showing an artist's rendering of the completed building – six stories tall and complete with landscaping, rooftop pool, and smiling, happy tenants. And from the angle of the illustration, it was clear the footprint of the building was a five-pointed star – also known as a pentagram.

  A pentagram is a common focal object for all manner of mystical rights. Upright, it's said to represent the wounds of Christ. Inverted, the pentagram is the sigil of the demon Baphomet, long rumored to be but one aspect of the Morning Star himself, also known as Lucifer.

  No telling from where I stood which way this pentagram faced. But it was fucking big. Which meant it was capable of channeling some serious power.

  And lest I think it was a coincidence I stumbled upon a giant fucking pentagram in the middle of this Dia de los Muertos celebration, the name of the place had Danny's fingerprints all over it. He always was a cheeky motherfucker.

  According to Greek myth, Asphodel Meadows is the land in the afterlife dedicated to the dead whose lives straddled the boundary of good and evil without ever tipping to either side. Guess that classics education of his was finally paying off. But this building, if it were his, represented years of planning, investing, careful construction – maybe decades. The Danny I knew couldn't be counted on to plan lunch.

  I was beginning to think I'd never really known Danny at all.

  Something else about the building troubled me, but it took me a sec to figure out what it was. The buildings across the street were covered in crows. Ditto the ones on either side, and the three barbed wires that topped the fence surrounding it. But despite the fact this place – with all its nooks, crannies, and exposed girders – should have been a perfect roost, its every perch was bare.

  Then I noticed the birds perched atop the fence weren't watching Gio, Theresa, and me like the others. To a one, they faced away from us.

  They were looking at the building.

  At Danny's mammoth pentagram.

  I couldn't help but feel they were waiting for me to do something. I wished to hell they'd tell me what. Because if the red and blue that spilled across the crowd on either side of us was any indication, I didn't have much time.

  The music cut out to the angry protests of the deathly crowd nearest the stage, who were not yet wise to the crazed gunman in their ranks. Over the PA, one of the boys in blue insisted they disperse. He said they were in danger. That there was a killer in their midst. Both those things were true enough, I suppose – they were in danger, and God knows I'd killed plenty – but tonight, at least, the killer they should be worried about wasn't among them, but hidden somewhere within the skeletal frame of the building before me.

  The crowd reacted, some with jeers, and others with blind panic. A mob of cartoon skeletons, threatening to bubble over into chaos. Police cruisers dotted every intersection in sight – parked at harsh diagonals in the centers of the intersections, their lights and sirens a vulgar parody of the festivities they'd interrupted.

  Officers, ten feet apart, had formed a line along Cesar Chavez Avenue to the north, and pushed southward into the crowd – no doubt hoping to drive me out. Some of the drunker celebrants taunted them or refused to move, while others fled – by reflex or necessity, I wasn't sure. But though the cops' progress was slow, it was unrelenting; they knew full well the freeway blocked any chance of egress to the south, and no doubt the routes to the east and west were covered. They had me cornered, and it was just a matter of time before they found me.

  "Gio, listen – you and Theresa need to get out of here while you can. They're not looking for you. You can use the crowd for cover. Just leave, and don't look back."

  "Fat fucking chance, dude."

  "Gio, don't be an idiot – there's nothing more you can do for me. And remember, if you can sense Danny, Danny can sense you. If you encounter him, he won't hesitate to collect you."

  "I ain't leaving you."

  "Damn it, Gio, don't you get it? I've been using you. No matter what happens tonight, things aren't going to end well for you. Stopping Danny won't change that. The best you can hope to do is extend the time you've got. Because once it's done, there'll be hell to pay."

  "You think I don't know you've been using me? Shit, Sam, that's all anybody ever does. We use each other to get ahead. To pass the time. To cure the boredom, kill the pain. Half the time, ain't even nothing wrong with that. Shit, you see this lady here? A daily dose of her, and I feel like a better man than I got any right to. I done my share of nasty shit, Sam; you know it as well as I do. You think I don't know how this'll end for me? Some part of me's suspected all my life. Truth is, I don't mind." He took Theresa's hand in his own and smiled, his eyes wet with tears that wouldn't fall. "Just knowing there's a heaven's good enough. But if you think I've come this far to give up now, you're fucking nuts."

  Theresa laughed. "Baby, if you ain't noticed, fucking nuts is our boy Sam's specialty." Then, to me: "But he's right. We see this through."

  "You don't have to," I said, but she raised a hand to stop me.

  "I go where my man goes."

  Great, I thought. The cops are closing in, and I'm off to stop a modern Deluge with a blind chick and a dude who needs a breather when he climbs a flight of stairs.

  This should go well.

  "OK, first we've got to find a way in."

  Turns out, there wasn't one. Sure, the fence had a gate and all – one of those slidey deals with rollers and a track, big enough to drive a dump truck through, but it was fastened with a chain as thick as my arm, from which dangled a stainless steel padlock the size and shape of a child's lunchbox. Disc tumblers, not pins, which meant I'd need an hour and a decent set of tools to pop the fucking thing.

  "Hold this," I said, handing Gio the sawed-off. "I'm going over."

  "The hell you are," he said. "That barbed wire's gonna tear you all to shit – and no way the two of us're gonna be able to follow."

  "Speak for yourself, Tons of Fun," said Theresa.

  "Oh, excuse me," Gio shot back. "I'm sure you'd scale the fence just fine once I point you at it."

  I eyed the barbed wire, the crows wing-to-wing atop it. "Give me your shirt to toss over it, and I'll be fine."

  "You kidding me? I ain't giving you my shirt. Then I'm standing here half-naked with a fucking shotgun when the fuzz shows up. Ain't you ever seen an episode of Cops? It's always the shirtless dude who gets arrested."

  "Oh, for fuck's sake, boys – quit arguing!"

  Theresa, who'd been feeling around the fence while we two bickered, grabbed the shotgun from Gio and made for the gate. Before I could shout at her to stop – that lock'd stop a load of buckshot without so much as getting scratched – she unloaded two quick blasts. They pierced the night like thunder, and set the crowd screaming. I only hoped the echoes were enough to mask its origin. Somehow, though, I doubted it.

  But she hadn't shot the lock. She'd shot the metal track the gate's rollers were seated on. Ripped a hole clean through it. Then she grabbed the corner of the gate and pulled. Freed of its track, the gate swung outward until the chain halted it, leaving a triangle three feet wide at its base to squeeze through.

  "You boys wanna hurry this along? We don't have much time until the cops get wise."

  We crawled through the narrow aperture. Theresa first, then me. Gio was last, and it's a damn good thing – the opening was so narrow, we had to grab his arms and pull. Once he was through, we yanked the gate back into place. Maybe it'd take our pursuers a couple minutes to realize where we'd gone.

  Unfortunately, it didn't take Danny that long to figure it out.

  "Sam?" he c
alled down from somewhere high above – the voice unfamiliar but the accent unmistakable. "Sam, is that you? So nice of you to stop by, mate! Of course, if you hoped to get the drop on me, you'd have done better to leave the Giordano soul at home – I can sense his presence, after all. You may as well have draped yourself in Christmas lights – but then, subtlety never was your strongest suit. I'd suggest you both turn your arses around and bugger off while you can. As I understand it, this ritual can get a little… unpleasant for those nearby."

  Son of a bitch. I was hoping to approach the place unnoticed – to get the jump on Danny before he ever knew what hit him – but thanks to the fucking coppers' interference, it looked like subterfuge was off the table. I guess the lesson is, if you plan on sneaking up on somebody, don't leave a trail of mayhem half a continent wide in your wake. That, or never stop for breakfast at Rosita's.

  Once we'd cleared the gate, we'd taken refuge between a pile of cinderblocks and a heap of warped, discarded lumber, which served to shield us from the building and the street both. From our hidey-hole, I shouted back, "Don't do this, Danny! It's not too late!"

  "Would that that were true, old friend. But I fear it's been too late for quite some time."

  "I'm coming up!" I said.

  "I wouldn't, if I were you. You'll find the path is not without protection."

  I took the shotgun back from Theresa, popped the floodlight nearest us. Night engulfed our quarter of the building's lot.

  "Come on," I said.

  We ran toward the building at a crouch. I kept my eyes on the ground ahead of me, scanning the uneven, sun-baked dirt for obstacles that might trip up Theresa, who ran with one hand on Gio's back. Halfway to the unfinished, plastic-clad first floor, a line of pale gray dust cut across the earth. It stretched out to either side of us, and wended its way around the building in a ragged circle.

  Alder ash, I assumed. Part of an ancient Celtic rite intended to shield those inside from the underworld's reach. Explained why the crows were keeping their distance. I scuffed my feet along the dirt to break the circle as we crossed the threshold.

  When the circle was broken, the crows atop the fence took flight as one, and lighted on the skeletal building frame.

  "A-a-ah! It's impolite to crash a bloke's party, Sam, and doubly so for bringing unwelcome guests with you. And in your case, I fear, the penalties are steep."

  The floodlights surrounding the building cut out just as we pushed aside the opaque plastic sheeting and ducked into the building. The sudden darkness was stifling. A hand out to halt Gio and Theresa, I crouched low against a concrete support, waiting for my eyes to adjust.

  The structure was scarcely more than a shell. Steel girders and molded concrete provided a sketch of the building the architect had intended – the building it would likely never become – but it was absent any touch of warmth or light. The floor was a vast slab of concrete, broken here and there with squares of black both large and small – no doubt to run conduits for plumbing, wiring, air conditioning and the like through. In our case, they were simply pitfalls to be avoided, lest this mission of ours end with us bleeding out in a basement courtesy of a compound fracture.

  The elevator shaft was empty – a square column of concrete stretching from floor to ceiling in the center of the massive lobby, its doorless passageway a deeper dark among the shadows. There wasn't even so much as a cable running up it one could climb – not that Gio could have, anyway. That left no way up but the stairs.

  There were two sets of them, to the left and right of the elevator, set along the lobby's outside walls. Gio jerked his head to indicate the nearest of them, and I nodded my assent. Taking Theresa by the hand, he inched along the wall toward it, and I followed close behind.

  Turned out, the first stairwell was a bust. A good six feet of construction detritus clogged the stretch from ground floor to first landing – scraps of two-byfours, twisted lengths of copper pipe, jagged hunks of concrete run through with rebar – making any attempt to scale the stairs impossible.

  Gio indicated the second set of stairs. But this time, I shook my head. If that's where Danny wanted us, it was the last place I planned on being. I was through underestimating him.

  I scanned the room, spotted what I was looking for: a ladder. Then I braced it against the edge of a goodly patch of darkness on the ceiling – an aperture intended, I suspect, for an air duct – and began to climb, the sawed-off clanking dully against the rungs as I ascended.

  When I reached the top, I paused, scanning the second floor for any sign of danger before I climbed off the ladder. Then I whispered for Gio and Theresa to follow. For about the thousandth time today, I questioned the logic of bringing a blind woman into this. And for about the thousandth time today, I decided it didn't much matter; if we failed, she was as good as dead anyways – washed away with the rest of humanity in the next Great Flood.

  It wasn't a comforting thought.

  Whatever her handicap, Theresa was lithe and silent as a cat scaling the ladder. Gio was another story altogether. By the time he reached the top, he was huffing and puffing like he had a bone to pick with some little pigs, and he didn't so much climb off the ladder as collapse beside it.

  "Jesus, dude," he whispered. "Your buddy couldn't finish the goddamn elevator? And did you bother to look down when you climbed up here? There's a hole just like this one right below it, and I'm pretty sure it don't stop there – if the ladder'd slipped, we woulda wound up in the second subbasement or some shit."

  "I told you, neither of you have to come."

  "And I told you, you ain't getting rid of us that easy. Now, let's go kick some bad-guy ass."

  He rolled over and scrabbled to his feet, and then muttered, "The fuck?"

  "What's wrong?"

  "Dunno." He leaned down, groped at his leg a sec. "No big," he said, waving his hand at me like I could see for a damn by the faint light filtering through the plastic sheeting from outside. "Just got tangled in some wire, is all."

  "Gio, don't move."

  But it was too late. From somewhere in the darkness, I heard a tinkle of shattered glass. And then, the room began to shake.

  "Gio," Theresa whispered, "what the hell did you do?"

  I grabbed the wire from his hands and followed it. It terminated in the center of the room, its end tied around the jagged neck of a wine bottle, which had until recently been perched precariously atop a folding chair. But it hadn't contained wine. The black stain that spread across the floor beneath the chair smelled of iron. Of death. Of blood.

  I noticed something else, then, too. A pattern on the floor, encircling the chair and the growing stain. It glowed a sickly green, intensifying as the blood soaked into the concrete. At first, my mind could make no sense of its elaborate symbology, but as the glow intensified, it resolved itself before me. It was less a language than a sort of stylized image, one that conveyed greed, temptation, seduction, absorption – followed by a hollow eternity of oneness, of torment, of relentless hunger.

  I might not've recognized the language in which it had been written, but I realized at once what these symbols said.

  Abyzou.

  "Guys," I shouted, all pretense of stealth abandoned, "we need to move!"

  I ran back the way I came. From behind me came a horrible rending sound, as if the very fabric of reality had torn apart.

  And then a sickly wet slithering of tentacles against concrete.

  And then the chitinous clicking of the demon's beak.

  "Don't look at it!" I shouted.

  "Don't look at what?" Gio replied in alarm.

  "No problem on my end," Theresa said, though the bravado in her voice rang false.

  I came upon the conduit so fast, I damn near fell in. Then Gio and I hoisted the ladder up through the hole, and tried to brace it against the one above.

  But we were too late. A tentacle lashed out from the darkness, glistening in the watery light filtering through the plastic sheeting from the stre
et, and swatted the ladder. It clattered across the room and skittered off the unprotected edge, tearing loose a sheet of plastic and toppling to the dirt lot a floor below. When it hit, it loosed a flurry of surprised shouts, and a pop-pop of startled gunfire. The police were closing in.

  I aimed the sawed-off at the darkness, and it thundered in my hand. Then another tentacle wrapped itself around its barrel and yanked it from my grasp.

  A wet dragging sound filled the air as Abyzou approached. I caught a glimpse of glistening gray skin, and felt a sudden pressure in my mind. Join us, it said. Join us and never be alone again. Luxuriate in ecstatic, excruciating want for all eternity.

  I clutched my hands to my head, and tried to shake the thoughts. Only when I pressed tight my eyes did they ease, but even then I couldn't banish them. Beside me, I heard Gio whimper and hit the ground.

  "So hungry," he muttered. "It's so goddamned hungry…"

  But there was no fear in his voice. Instead, he sounded full of sorrow. Sorrow and longing.

  I fell to my knees. I knew if I didn't do something soon, Gio would succumb, and he'd forever be one with this queen bitch of the underworld. But for the life of me, I couldn't muster the will to stop her.

 

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