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The Hell Yo
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Текст книги "The Hell Yo "


Автор книги: Josh lanyon


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enjoying the dramatic green bluffs, sunlight sparkling on blue water dotted with sail boats.

Guy had tied his hair back. I studied his lean, brown face. It was a youthful face despite

the time he’d spent in the sun. I thought he was in his forties, but he could have been a well–

preserved fifty. Sixty was pushing it, unless he really had sold his soul to the Devil.

“You know, there are no photographs of Garibaldi,” I said. “I was reading The Devil’s

Disciple last night. There’s not even an author photo.”

Guy, eyes on the road, inquired, “What did you make of The Devil’s Disciple?”

“Interesting. A more rational approach than I expected. Not that I’m planning to

convert anytime soon.”

He smiled that superior smile. “Are you…as they say…religious?”

“Not particularly. I dig Jesus. I hope that bit’s true.”

His laugh was ironic. “Satanism has a lot to offer people like us. People of our sexual

persuasion, that is.”

“That would confirm a conservative stereotype or two.”

“Think about it. Think about the Nine Satanic Sins. Stupidity, for example. Our society

embraces ignorance, we celebrate and reward it – and we call those who challenge the

accepted doctrine unpatriotic or ungodly.”

“I personally like the ninth sin. Lack of Aesthetics. That’s guaranteed to appeal to the

gay community.”

He glanced my way, his eyes serpent green. “Try to keep an open mind, Adrien. It’s the

only way you’ll discover the truth.”

Guy turned off the main drag. We drove another mile or two before coming to a pair of

tall, ornate gates. He spoke into the speaker box. The gates swung open. We drove through,

following a long, circular drive shaded by ancient cypress trees.

“Wow,” I said, as what appeared to be a Mediterranean estate on the bluffs swung into

view.

“It was built back in the 1930s for Elias Creighton. He was a big silent film star. When

talkies came in, he was reduced to doing a lot of character parts in cheesy horror films. They

called him the poor man’s Lon Chaney.”

“I don’t think I’ve heard of him.”

“Probably not, but you’d recognize him if you saw his picture.”

We parked and got out, crossing the immaculate green with a panoramic view from

Palos Verdes to Point Dume. The house had that Old Hollywood vibe. It was built of mellow

butter-colored stone contrasting warmly with the red-tiled roof. There were many large,

elegant windows reflecting the drifting clouds overhead.

An elderly manservant, who might have been a relic from Elias Creighton’s day,

opened the door and informed us that the “master” was out by the pool.

We followed him through giant, airy rooms filled with eighteenth-century French

antiques to a flagstone terrace – which led down to another terrace where the pool

overlooked the ocean.

The pool was tiled in aqua, green, and indigo. Between palm trees, Grecian-style

statues were strategically positioned down its length. Two red-haired women – twins –

sunned themselves beside the water’s edge. In the pool, a man did laps, his powerful brown

arms cutting through the water.

The manservant excused himself. We sat at a table a few feet away from the girls,

waiting for our host to complete his morning constitutional. One of the girls sat up and

removed her top without any apparent self-consciousness, lying back to soak up the fitful

seacoast sun.

Garibaldi finished his laps and climbed the pool steps, picking up the monogrammed

towel lying over a chair. He dried himself leisurely, as though unaware of us. I’m not sure

what I had expected: maybe a dry, desiccated stick of an academic or the puffy savoir faire of

the professional hedonist.

Garibaldi was tall, olive-skinned, and hard-bodied, with a shock of white hair. His

features were severe, but rough-hewn, as though his creator hadn’t had time to finish

sculpting him. He moved with deliberation, giving an illusion of power rather than grace.

I glanced Guy’s way. His mouth curved cynically, watching me.

When Garibaldi had finished drying himself, he wrapped a purple silk dressing gown

around his compact body, and on cue, Guy rose. I followed suit.

“Guy, my dear,” Garibaldi greeted him. His voice was unexpectedly light. They bussed

each other on their cheeks in French fashion.

“This is Adrien English,” Guy introduced me.

“Hello, Adrien English.” Garibaldi offered his hand. He had a strong grip, but his

fingers were uncallused, his skin as soft as a woman’s. His eyes were black and intense, his

mouth flesh-colored and sensual in line. It was a face of great character – what kind of

character, I had no idea. “Guy tells me you have a small problem. Small, but interesting.”

I glanced at Guy, wondering exactly how much he had told Garibaldi. Everything – or

at least everything that Guy knew – I bet.

“I hope you’ll find it interesting. I appreciate your agreeing to see me.”

He shrugged, a Gallic gesture. His eyes followed one of the girls – the topless one – as

she rose from her lounge and dove neatly into the sparkling water. As though recalling

himself, he beckoned us to follow him inside.

We found ourselves in a long, elegant room with a black and red Chinese screen and a

marble statue of a noticeably excited satyr. The cause of the satyr’s excitement was not

visible, but the results were pretty impressive.

Garibaldi went to the carved cherrywood paneling. He swiveled one of the brass

sconces. The panel slid back, revealing a hidden bar well stocked with an inviting selection

of expensive bottles and crystal stemware.

“It was built during Prohibition,” Guy informed me as Garibaldi poured green shots

into three parfait glasses. I deduced that Guy had spent a fair amount of time visiting Oliver

Garibaldi in his mansion on the hill.

I watched Garibaldi dip a perforated spoon into a jar, then pour water from a carafe

over the white powder so that it drained into the glasses.

“Are you familiar with the green fairy, Mr. English?” Garibaldi inquired. His eyes met

mine in the etched mirror above the bar.

“The green fairy?” I felt sure this was someone I should know.

“Absinthe,” Guy informed me.

The toast of La Belle Epoque? I didn’t think that stuff was legal. Not that I wasn’t

curious to try it. I felt certain that Oliver Garibaldi drank only the best.

“Hemingway was a fan, wasn’t he?”

“Hemingway, Poe, Wilde – Aleister Crowley. You’re heard of Aleister Crowley?”

Writer, painter, mountain climber, occultist, and sexual revolutionary? The tabloids

had labeled him “The Wickedest Man in the World.” He had modestly referred to himself as

“The Great Beast 666.”

“Sort of the father of modern Satanism, wasn’t he?”

Garibaldi permitted himself a curve of his lips at this. He brought Guy and me our

drinks.

I could imagine what Jake would have to say about this, I reflected, sipping the milky

potion. It tasted a bit like licorice, but with an herbal or floral undertone. It was like nothing

I’d tried before.

I glanced up. Garibaldi was watching me with those coal black eyes. He had incredible

presence, close to animal magnetism. It was hard to take my eyes off him.

“Cheers,” I said.

He fetched his own glass, taking one of the elegant chairs across from us. I reminded

myself that he was sitting in a pair of damp swim trunks, however magnetic his personality.

“So?” His eyes held mine. “Tell me about this small problem of yours, Adrien English.”

I pulled the photo of the pentagram out of my Day Planner, handed it across to

Garibaldi. He took it, made an expression of distaste.

“Paint.”

“Yes.” I wondered how he knew that at a glance, but perhaps he assumed the obvious.

“This is a childish prank. There is no mystery here.” He seemed disappointed. I found

that I didn’t wish to disappoint him.

“There may not be mystery, but there is murder. That symbol has turned up at the

scene of three ritual slayings.”

The black eyes raised, met mine. Moved to Guy for confirmation. Guy nodded

imperceptibly.

“Ah.”

That was it. Ah. He made it sound profound.

I said, “That symbol. It’s a sigil, isn’t it, representing the name of a demon?”

He nodded, pondering the photograph.

“Would you happen to know which demon?”

He answered without hesitation. “The fifty-sixth spirit. Gremory. Also called Gamori,

Gemory, or Gomory.”“What does it do?”

“What do you know of demons?”

More than I had two weeks earlier.

“Well, I know that before Christianity, demons were considered either good or evil.

Post Christianity, they seem to be primarily viewed as malevolent. Like junior league devils.

Apparently a lot of earlier pagan deities have been dumped into the pantheon along with

fallen angels and political figures.”

Garibaldi considered this gravely. “It is better not to judge demons by human standards

of good and evil. Let us think of them as useful or not useful.”

“I actually don’t think of them as real,” I felt obliged to point out.

He fastened those jet eyes on mine. “No?”

One simple word that seemed to contain unspoken volumes.

I said, to fill the silence, “So what does Gremory do?”

“Do?”

Like, did I think he had a day job? Maybe he lounged around the pool drinking

absinthe and fooling with red-haired nymphs.

“Would he be considered useful or not?”

Garibaldi replied, “He’s a powerful Duke of Hell who commands twenty-six legions. He

appears as a beautiful noblewoman riding a great camel. It is his office to tell of all things

past, present, and future.”

My demon was a camel-riding transvestite? The Devil Wears Prada, indeed.

“That’s it? He can tell the future?”

For the first time a glimmer of humor crossed Garibaldi’s austere features. “But you see,

because the Duke knows all that has been, is, and will be, he has the ability to deliver all the

lost treasure of the material world – as well as the sexual favors of the most desirable

women.”

In other words, useless.

“So this demon’s seal at a grave site would indicate what? Human sacrifice in exchange

for treasure and sexual favors?” It sounded like a frat boy’s dream come true.

Garibaldi shook his head. “You’re attempting to attribute logical motivations to an

aberrant psyche. To the true Satanist, all life is sacred.”

We seemed to have moved away from the idea of useful and non-useful demons. Was I

being fed the party line, or was this Garibaldi’s personal opinion?

“So it’s your opinion that these crimes were committed by a person with a warped view

of Satanism?”

“I imagine this is the view of the media and the police, is it not?”

“That these killings are the work of Satanists? Yes.” But interesting that Garibaldi had

leaped to the same conclusion. I remembered something from my reading. “I thought

Aleister Crowley advocated blood sacrifice. Didn’t he actually boast about carrying out the

ritual killing of children?”

“Crowley was a showman. He delighted in his reputation as the Wickedest Man in the

World. Nor was he a true Satanist, although many of his ideas and writings were used as a

foundation for traditional – theistic – Satanism.”

Guy said, “Anton LaVey is generally regarded as the real father of Modern Satanism.

He borrowed from everyone from Crowley to Gardener to Ragnar RedBeard and formed the

Church of Satan.”

“If these murders are the work of renegade Satanists, would you know of such a

group?” I inquired of Garibaldi.

He handed me back the photos, saying lazily, “But they’ve caught the madman who

committed these atrocities. The madman and his accomplice.”

At my expression, he said, “I read the papers, Mr. English. Indeed, I read several

publications each morning. It is important to remain informed.”

“Have you ever heard of a group called Blade Sable?”

Lifting his glass, Garibaldi seemed to pause for the tiniest fraction of a second. He

finished the motion, sipping and swallowing with great deliberation.

“No,” he said. He met my eyes.

He’s lying, I thought. But he expects me to recognize that. I took out the photos of

Angus and handed them across.

“This is the man they arrested. He worked for me – and for Guy.”

“The boy was my teaching assistant, Oliver,” Guy said. “The police are trying to draw a

connection between him and my own teachings.”

“That is awkward, but hardly unexpected. Witch hunts are a national pastime here, are

they not?” Garibaldi’s olive face was impassive as a basilisk’s as he studied the pictures. He

handed them back. “Are you asking whether I know this man? I don’t.”

“I don’t believe Angus committed these murders,” I said. “But I think he knows about

them. I think he was involved with a group called Blade Sable.”

“A group?”

“A cult.”

His lips twitched as though he found this funny, but was too polite to laugh in my face.

“Where did you learn of this Blade Sable?”

“From a writer who disappeared about a week ago.”

Garibaldi permitted himself a colorless smile. “You believe that this sect is guilty of

abduction and murder, but that the police would have no inkling that such an entity exists?”

“The police don’t have a lot of imagination.”

“Whereas you have a great deal.” Yep, he was distinctly amused. “Well, perhaps I shall

make inquiries for you. It is an interesting problem. I make no promises, but if such an order

exists, I’ll soon know.”

He drained his glass. Guy and I hastily did the same as he rose. The royal audience was

clearly concluded.

“May I offer you luncheon?”

Guy said quickly, “Unfortunately, we’ve plans. However, I think Adrien would enjoy

seeing your library, if you’ve the time.”

“But of course, my dear. It would be a pleasure.”

We followed him downstairs to a long, oddly shaped room papered in blood red

brocade, lined with glass-fronted bookshelves. In the center of the room were several library

tables and a couple of glass chests. A magnificent mummy case stood at the far end.

“Originally this was the screening room of Elias Creighton. I don’t suppose you would

know of him, as he was long before your time. He killed himself in this room one night

while watching one of his final films.”

I guessed that the room had begun its existence as a basement; it was chilly. There were

no windows.

Garibaldi added with caustic humor, “No one knows whether this was a critical

commentary of his own work or despair over the knowledge that his career was finished.

Now the room serves as my library and personal museum.”

The books alone in that room had to be worth a fortune. I moved slowly from shelf to

shelf, absorbing the titles with a combination of shock and lust. Magick in Theory and

Practice by the Master Therion (Aleister Crowley), Moonchild by Aleister Crowley, Spirit

Slate Writing and Kindred Phenomena by William Robinson, the Qabalah, The Golden

Bough …shelf after shelf of occult classics.

The glass cases contained old and fragile grimoires as well as gem-studded ritual

artifacts such as athames, chalices, wands, ceremonial masks, mortars and pestles. I noted a

belt made of faded blue silk strands intertwined with beads. Not a belt. A scourge.

Strange exotic artwork hung above the bookshelves. I thought I recognized the efforts

of Austin Spare and Rosaleen Norton from my recent reading. Demons and devils smirked

and spread their wings – as well as other body parts – for the viewer’s pleasure.

“Would it be impertinent to ask whether you’re a Traditional or Modern Satanist?” I

inquired of Garibaldi as he stood to the side conversing quietly with Guy.

He looked faintly amused. “Neither, I’m afraid. Like the true philosophers I’ve come to

believe that religion is an illusion of childhood, outgrown after proper education.”

Chapter Eighteen

We stopped for lunch at Gli Amici off Sunset Boulevard, eating soup and French-style

sandwiches at an uncomfortable wrought-iron table on a crowded patio. Overhead, seagulls

swooped and sailed, their cries mingling with the crash of the surf a few yards away.

Surprisingly, there was plenty to talk about without once veering off into murder or

demonology, but eventually we circled back to what was on both our minds.

“What did you think of Oliver?” Guy asked. He drew his pipe out, then put it away

again. Apparently he was still adjusting to the fact that California was not a smoker-friendly

state.

“He’s an interesting guy. But I think he knows more than he’s letting on. He avoided

answering what significance the sign of Gremory might have at a crime scene.”

“He didn’t avoid it,” Guy objected. “He pointed out that it’s impossible to follow the

reasoning of a disturbed intellect.”

“Not so. Profilers do that very thing. If the sigil has symbolic or ritual significance, then

that’s an important clue to the killer.”

“Oliver doesn’t believe that’s the case.”

“Maybe he’s wrong. He dismissed the idea of group involvement, and I know that’s

wrong. I didn’t imagine my run-in with Betty and Veronica.”

“Who?”

“Sorry. Betty and the Perone girl. Someone painted an inverted pentagram on my

threshold. It wasn’t Angus, ipso facto, other people are involved.”

He didn’t reply. I studied his brown profile as he stared out at the beach. The sea

breeze stirred the long silver tendrils on his forehead back from his face. His silence, his

stillness seemed to shut me out – and I realized I didn’t like that.

“You said you spoke to this former student. Whatever he told you led you to infer that

others were involved.” Casually, I added, “Granted, whatever he said also led you to believe

that the problem had been resolved.”

Once again, I had Guy’s full attention. His face mirrored exasperation. “The point of

visiting Oliver was that he’s the expert in this field. If he says there’s no cult involved, there’s

no cult.”

I noticed Guy seemed touchy every time I brought up the subject of this mysterious

former student. “Garibaldi didn’t say that. He said he had never heard of Blade Sable. I think

he was lying.”

“Lying? Why should he lie?”

“Maybe he wanted to know a bit more about me before he revealed trade secrets.” I

paused. “Or maybe he’s involved.”

“Oh, come on!”

“Well, you’ve got to admit that for one who professes to be above any form of religion,

he’s got an awful lot of expensive religious artifacts lying around.”

Testily, he answered, “The fact that he’s reached a point in his own intellectual and

spiritual development where he no longer requires the opiate of religion doesn’t nullify a

lifetime spent in exploring and studying these mythologies.”

What was with me? I couldn’t seem to resist needling Guy. By his expression he was

thinking the same thing. I said, trying to appease, “I agree. I’m not seriously suggesting he’s

involved, just that I think he didn’t spill all he knows.”

The waitress arrived with the bill, forestalling an answer. I reached for it, but Guy was

faster.

“Hey, this one’s on me,” I protested.

“I’ve got it.” When I opened my mouth to argue, he repeated, “I’ve got it .”

“Well…thanks, then.”

He nodded curtly, our earlier rapport gone.

Too bad, because I liked Guy, even if I didn’t totally trust him – although apparently I

trusted him enough to coerce him into helping me help Angus.

I sensed he had allegiances to people who might not be as sympathetic to my aims.

Garibaldi was one such person; another was this former student whom Guy had originally

suspected of being involved in harassing Angus. Apparently Guy didn’t entirely trust me

either, since he wasn’t sharing that person’s name – or maybe he was demonstrating loyalty

to an old friend. Loyalty wasn’t a bad trait in a friend or a lover.

The problem was, I had made a bad mistake once – a nearly fatal mistake – and not

that long ago. I didn’t intend to repeat history.

We walked back to the parking lot, folded ourselves into the red Miata, still without

speaking. Guy started to pull out of the parking lot, then braked.

“D’you want to take a walk on the beach before we head back?”


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