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Hell You Say

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by Josh Lanyon




  The Hell You Say

  The Adrien English Mysteries

  Smashwords edition, November 2011

  Copyright (c) 2011 by Josh Lanyon

  Cover by Kanaxa

  All rights reserved

  No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from Just Joshin' Publications

  ISBN: 978-1-937909-00-0

  Printed in the United States of America

  Just Joshin

  3053 Rancho Blvd.

  Suite 116

  Palmdale, CA 93551

  www.joshlanyon.com

  This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty One

  Chapter Twenty Two

  Chapter Twenty Three

  Chapter Twenty Four

  Chapter Twenty Five

  Chapter Twenty Six

  Chapter Twenty Seven

  THE HELL YOU SAY

  Adrien English Mystery 3

  Josh Lanyon

  Acknowledgements

  To Nick (the other one), who keeps me on the straight and narrow. Well, on the narrow, anyway. Sincere thanks also to B.W.B. and Drewey Wayne Gunn. And finally, special thanks to the readers who kept pushing and pleading for a new Adrien English novel. This one’s for you.

  Chapter One

  There is nothing new under the sun but there are lots of old things we don’t know.

  Ambrose Bierce, The Devil’s Dictionary

  The voice on the phone rasped, “Bones of anger, bones of dust, full of fury, revenge is just. I scatter these bones, these bones of rage, enemy mine, I bring you pain. Torment, fire, death the toll, with this hex I curse your soul. So mote it be.”

  I handed the receiver to Angus, who was facing out the “We Recommend” stand by the counter. “It’s for you.”

  He took the receiver and put his ear against it as though expecting an electric shock. He listened, then, hand shaking, he replaced the receiver and stared at me. Behind the blue lenses of the John Lennon specs his eyes were terrified. He licked his pale lips.

  “Look, Angus,” I said. “Why don’t you talk to Jake? He’s a cop. Maybe he can help.”

  “He’s a homicide detective,” Angus muttered. “Plus he doesn’t like me.”

  True on both counts, but I tried anyway.

  “He doesn’t dislike you, really. Besides, you’ve got to talk to someone. This is harassment.”

  “Harassment?” His voice shot up a notch. “I wish it was harassment! They’re going to kill me.”

  A customer lurking in the Dell Mapbacks coughed. I realized we were not alone in the bookstore.

  I gestured to Angus. He followed me back to the storeroom that served as my office. So far we’d had a grand total of three customers browsing the shelves on this gloomy November day. I half shut the door to the office, turned to Angus.

  “Okay, what the hell is going on?” I sort of knew what the hell was going on, so I added, “Exactly.”

  I thought my tone was pretty calm, but he put his hands out as though to ward me off. “I can’t talk about it,” he gabbled. “I mean, if I talk about it, if I reveal the secrets of the —” He swallowed The Word. “They’ll kill me.”

  “I thought they were already trying to kill you?”

  “I mean physically kill me.”

  “Uh-huh,” I said. I sounded like Jake.

  Angus caught the skeptical note in my voice. “Adrien, you don’t understand. You’ve never — they know where I live. They know where I work. They know where Wanda lives. They know where Wanda works. They —”

  “Why don’t you leave town for a while?” I interrupted. “It’s nearly Christmas. Why don’t you…take a vacation?”

  “It’s November.”

  “It’s after Thanksgiving.”

  Angus had worked at Cloak and Dagger Books for the past year, but I knew little about him beyond the fact that he was finishing up an undisclosed undergrad program at UCLA which seemed to entail an awful lot of courses in folklore, mythology, and the occult. He was twenty-something, lived alone, and was a decent, if irregular employee. Lisa, my mother, insisted that he was on drugs. Jake, my sometimes lover, was convinced that he was a nutcase, but I tended to believe he was just…young. I studied him as he stood there in his baggy black clothes, like an émigré from the dark side. He was shaking his head in a hopeless kind of way, as though I still didn’t get it.

  “Yeah,” I said, warming to the idea. “Why don’t you take Wanda and split for a week or two? Let this all blow over.” I dug through the desk drawer for my checkbook.

  Not that I believe throwing money at a problem solves the problem — unless the problem is lack of money. And not that I ordinarily recommend trying to run away from your problems, but this particular problem rang a few bells for me. Or so I thought at the time.

  Angus stood silent while I wrote out the draft. I tore it off. When I handed it to him, he stared at it. He didn’t say a word. Then, as I watched, a tear slid down his face and dropped on the check. He gave a great shuddering sigh, started to speak.

  I cut him off. “Listen, kiddo, do us both a favor. Crank calls from the crypt are bad for business.” I headed for the door.

  * * * * *

  “You did what?” said Jake.

  I had been about ten minutes late meeting him at the car dealership on East Colorado Boulevard. My ten-year-old Bronco was on its last legs, and Jake seemed to believe that I was incapable of making an informed buying decision unless he was my informant.

  “Gave him eight hundred bucks. Told him to take Wanda Witch away for the holidays.” I gazed at the rows of sleek sports cars and rugged-looking SUVs gleaming in the tequila sunset. Palm trees rustled overhead. Tinny Christmas carols issued from the loudspeakers in not-so-subliminal messaging.

  I watched Jake’s blond and buff reflection materialize behind me in the windshield. “Eight hundred bucks? You have eight hundred bucks to throw around?”

  I shrugged. “I’ll write it off as his Christmas bonus.”

  “Uh-huh.” I felt him study my face. “Well, Mr. Trump, is there any point in our going inside?”

  “Did you never hear of the great American tradition of financing?”

  He snorted. I met his tawny gaze. “How the hell is running away supposed to solve anything?” he asked, and for a second, I thought we were talking about something else entirely.

  “I wasn’t looking for a long-term solution.” Before Jake could answer, I added, “I doubt if I need one. They’re kids. They have the attention span of…what is it? One minute for each year of life. We’re looking at twenty minutes of terror. Tops.”

  Jake’s lips twitched, but he said, “These kids are all part of a witches’ coven based out of Westwood?”

  I stroked the hood of a silver Subaru Forester. “New meaning to the words ‘Teen Spirit,’ huh?” I studied the sticker price on the window. “From what I’ve picked up, they all took part in a clas
s on demonology or witchcraft about a year ago. I guess somebody inhaled too much incense during the lab.”

  “They went off and started a coven?”

  “I’m guessing. It’s not like Angus has been forthcoming on the subject. Revealing Count Chocula’s secrets carries a stiff penalty.”

  Red and green Christmas lights strung across the lot flashed on. They reminded me of glowing chili peppers, but maybe I was subconsciously influenced by the Mexican restaurant across the street. I remembered I hadn’t stopped for lunch. My stomach growled. I wondered if Jake could take time for dinner.

  If I whined about being hungry, he’d make time. He was appalled by my eating habits, being one of these fitness fanatics who believes the rule about three balanced meals a day is engraved on a stone tablet. We hadn’t seen much of each other lately. I was willing to risk another lecture on the benefits of complex carbs.

  “You shop around, you compare prices, you get the vehicle right for you,” he observed, watching me linger over the Forester.

  “Sure.”

  “You don’t need another gas guzzler. How about a coupe? How about pre-owned?”

  “Used?”

  At my tone, a muscle tugged at the corner of his mouth. Reluctantly I moved down the aisle of cars to a blue two-door. Tinted windows, power sun roof, Bose speakers. The price was right, too. Climate controlled. What did that mean? Air conditioning?

  Jake said suddenly, grimly, “Believe it or not, this kind of shit can get way out of hand. Hollywood PD turned up a Jane Doe in the Hollywood Hills about a month ago. Word is she was the victim of a ritual killing.”

  “You mean, like, devil worshipers?”

  I was mostly kidding, but Jake said thoughtfully, “I kind of wish you hadn’t sent the kid out of town. I’d have liked to talk to him.”

  “You can’t think Angus is involved in that,” I protested. “He’s a bit odd, granted, but he’s a decent kid.”

  “You have no idea what he is, Adrien.” Jake, a ten-year veteran of LAPD, used that cop tone when I exhibited signs of civilian naïveté. “You’ve employed him for a few months, that’s all. You hired him through a temp agency. You think they ran a serious security check?”

  “You think it’s necessary for working in a mystery bookstore?”

  He wasn’t listening. “There’s this whole satanic underground we’ve been hearing about since the ’80s. There might not be evidence of an organized movement like certain religious groups claim, but we’ve seen plenty of injuries and deaths resulting from people taking this stuff seriously. And plenty of people turning up in psych wards. It’s ugly and violent, but a lot of kids are attracted to it.”

  “So hopefully this scares the hell out of Angus, and he gets it out of his system.” I tried to picture myself behind the wheel of the coupe, gave it up, headed back to the silver Forester.

  * * * * *

  When I finished signing the loan docs, Jake and I went across the street to grab dinner at the cantina. I had traded in the Bronco, and since the dealership was going to install a stereo system in the new vehicle, I needed a ride back to my place. Jake let himself be coerced.

  While we waited for our meal, I watched him put away two baskets of tortilla strips. He munched steadily, as though he were being paid by the chip, gaze fastened on a wall planter bristling with plastic bougainvillea.

  “Everything okay?”

  Still crunching, he paused mid-reach for his Dos Equis. “Sure. Why?”

  “I don’t know. You seem preoccupied.”

  “Nope.” He swallowed a mouthful of beer, eyes on mine. “Everything’s cool.”

  Our relationship was not an easy one. Jake was deeply closeted. He claimed it was because he was a cop — that the job was tough enough without having to go to war with the guys who were supposed to be on your side — but I’d come to believe that it was more complicated. Jake despised himself for being sexually attracted to men. Though he had been a good friend to me and was a physically satisfying lover — when he was around — there was a certain tension between us that I sometimes feared could never completely be resolved.

  Which was a damn shame, because I cared for him. A lot.

  When we’d first met, he’d been active in the S/M scene. I thought — hoped — maybe he was less active in the clubs these days.

  What I did know for sure was that he was dating a woman, a female cop named Kate Keegan. He’d been seeing her longer than he’d known me; I didn’t think it was just a cover relationship. But he didn’t discuss it much with me.

  “So I hear Chan’s writing a book.”

  A few months earlier Jake’s partner, Detective Paul Chan, had joined Partners in Crime, the weekly writing group I hosted at the bookstore.

  “Yeah, a police procedural.”

  “Is it any good?”

  “Uh, well…”

  Jake laughed, shoved the basket of chips my way.

  * * * * *

  The next day, Friday, I had to prepare for a book signing with bestselling author Gabriel Savant. Savant wrote the Sam Haynes occult detective series, sort of an update on the old Jules de Grandin and John Thunstone pulps. I’m not a big fan of horror, but I had skimmed Savant’s latest in an effort to facilitate discussion should the question-and-answer session peter out too fast. Not that I expected a problem. After an initially lackluster career in the ’80s, Savant had reinvented himself and his work and was now a media darling. Hustling around in anticipation of a significant turnout that evening, I wished ungenerously that I had delayed rescuing Angus till after the weekend.

  I was arranging the front display of Savant’s latest, The Rosicrucian Codex, wondering if I had enough bottles of four-dollar champagne, when I received another call from the dark side.

  “Smitten, battered, beaten, torn. I prick at thee as if a thorn —”

  “Speaking of pricks,” I interrupted, “You’re wasting your time. Angus doesn’t work here anymore.”

  “Wh —?” He — the voice was male — caught himself. There was a pause, then a click as the receiver slammed down.

  I tried *69, but the number was blocked. Not a surprise, I guess. I knew, of course, that it wouldn’t end there.

  Sure enough, later that afternoon I got another caller requesting “Gus.” This time the voice was feminine, dulcet-toned. In all the time Angus has worked for me, I’ve only known one female to call him, and that was his girl friend, Wanda. Wanda is not dulcet-toned. She sounds like she was weaned on unfiltered Marlboros.

  “Sorry,” I said in answer to the query. “He’s not here.”

  “Oh, gosh,” she fretted. “I’ve got to talk to Gus. It’s, like, an emergency.”

  “Like an emergency, but not?”

  “What?”

  “Forget it.” I said, “Look, he’s gone. For real. Spread the word.”

  A pause. Then she faltered, “I’m not sure…?”

  I decided to try a different approach. “Can I get your name? Maybe he’ll phone me once he gets settled. You’re a friend of Angus’s?”

  She laughed a tinkling laugh, a party-girl laugh. “Well, ye-aah! Of course! And I’ve got to talk to him. He wants to talk to me, believe me.”

  “Oh, I do,” I said with equal sincerity. “But he’s gone. Skipped. I’d like to help, but…hey, why don’t you leave your name and number, and if he gets in touch with me, I’ll let him know you called.”

  Another hesitation. Then she said coolly, “Sure. Tell him Sarah Good called. He knows the number.”

  666?

  She replaced the phone gently. I followed suit. I caught a glimpse of my rueful expression in the mirror across from the counter. Sarah Good. One of the first of the Salem witches to be hanged. Cute.

  Well, on the bright side, at least the kids were getting some history at school.

  * * * * *

  By six-thirty, it was standing room only in the store. I realized I had seriously miscalculated both the champagne and how much help I would need.
I’d never seen so many teenagers in black lipstick — boys and girls — or chainmail jewelry on middle-aged men who didn’t ride Harleys.

  Not that it wasn’t great to see people reading. Especially people who looked as though a book would be their last choice of entertainment. I just hoped the evening wouldn’t end with broken furniture or the building struck by a lightning bolt.

  Running next door, I bribed the girls closing the travel agency to lend a hand with the crowd control.

  By seven-fifteen, our illustrious author was officially late, and the natives were getting restless. There was a line of women waiting to use the washroom and a nasty argument about the origins of the swastika brewing near the “cozy corner.” A local reporter tried to interview me about my involvement in a murder case the previous year. I resisted the impulse to finish off the last of the drugstore champagne and hide in the stockroom.

  At seven-thirty, there was commotion at the front door. Several people, clearly part of an entourage, entered the store. Three leggy ladies dressed more like succubae than minions of a reputable publishing house entered. A plump, bespectacled man drew me aside and introduced himself as Bob Friedlander, Gabe’s handler.

  Handler? Nice work if you could get it, I guess.

  I didn’t catch most of what Friedlander said, because the next instant, the Prince of Sales had appeared. Gabriel Savant stood over six feet tall and was built like a male model — in fact, he looked like the male half of the illustration on a historical romance: unruly raven hair falling over his tanned forehead, piercing blue eyes, flashing white smile. Were there rhinestones in his teeth? Certainly something shone in his right earlobe. He wore leather jeans and a black cape. Amazingly, nobody laughed.

  “But this is charming,” Gabriel assured me, as Friedlander navigated his star in my direction. “Of course, it’s not Vroman’s, but it’s nice.”

  “Ambiance,” Friedlander said quickly. “Wonderful ambiance.”

 

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