“Could be because it’s hell’s bond he’s trying to break. Could be it doesn’t have to be at all. Probably Danny’s just going by what he’s read —which ain’t the worst plan, since the Brethren seemed to pull it off.”
“So you’re saying this could
“Maybe. Maybe not. Seems to me it doesn’t matter —what matters is Danny
“But it can’t be that easy to destroy a soul, can it? I mean, it’s not like he can just whack it with a hammer, or every time some yahoo thrill-seeker’s parachute failed to open,
“True enough,” Dumas conceded. “Only a demonforged instrument would be capable of inflicting the kind of damage Danny’s after. And I’ll admit, they’re hard to come by. But the boy’s already gotten this far —you think we ought to leave it up to chance he falters now?”
It was a fair point. Actually, from where I was sitting, it was a seriously
Too fucking right, I thought.
“So the Brethren are real, and Danny’s obsessed with them, and he stole Varela’s soul to recreate an ancient mystical rite that, if he’s successful, would bring about a second Great Flood and wipe out civilization as we know it?”
“That’s about the size of it, yeah.”
“Shit,” I said.
“Yeah,” Dumas replied. “Shit.”
“So —what now?” I asked.
“What’re you asking me for? You know what I know. You wanna stop the guy, you’re gonna hafta figure out the rest all by yourself.”
“I thought we
“Yeah, and I just gave you all the help I can.”
“Says the guy who knew about Danny’s caveman ramblings from the get-go and did fuck-all to stop him going rogue.”
“You gotta understand, Sammy, coming down off a skim, you tap into something. Something greater than yourself. Something greater than the soul you’re skimming off of. It’s like, for a little while, you’re tapped into the whole of human experience or some shit. Past, present, future —who knows what the fuck you’re gonna see or why? Call it chance, call it the hand of God —from where I’m sitting, they’re the same damn thing. But whatever you call it, I just figured that’s where Danny got all this —and hell, maybe it was. I didn’t think for a second he understood a word of it. Yeah, maybe I fucked up, but if I start poking around now and then the shit goes down, it only increases the odds it all leads back to me —which is precisely what I’m trying to avoid. So sorry, champ, but you’re on your own. But hey —there’s a chance you’ll come through and save the world. A very, very narrow chance.”
“Thanks.”
“Don’t mention it,” he said, and then he smiled. “Hey, I think you and me, we just had a breakthrough in our relationship. Hashing things out all civil-like —me not killing you, you not killing me. Feels good. Feels
He spread his arms. I shook my head.
“Suit yourself. How ’bout a word of advice instead, on account of how we’re such good friends now.”
Friends my ass, I thought, but what I said instead was: “I’m listening.”
“If it were me tracking Danny down, I’d be trying my damndest to figure out where worlds draw thin.”
“Yeah. That’d be more helpful if I had the tiniest idea what the fuck it even meant.”
Dumas shrugged like
But before he finished his thought, there was a muffled boom from somewhere overhead, and the very cave around us shifted, raining dust upon us both and forcing me to steady myself with one hand against the wall. The movement was unthinking, reflexive, and of course it was my bum arm I reached out with; when my palm connected with the chamber wall, a jolt of queasy, white-hot pain shot up my arm, settling in my shoulder and throbbing like an impacted molar.
Another boom, right on the heels of the first. This one loosed more than dust —the darkness above rattled as small rocks bounced off the walls on the way down, and then a not-so-small rock whizzed past my head in the darkness, parting my hair and damn near doing the same to my skull before burying its pointy self six inches into the dirt at my feet.
“The hell?” I said. “Did Psoglav–”
“No,” Dumas replied, his face set in a frown. “If Psoglav had cracked a soul, he’da brought the whole damn cave down. And whatever that was, it came from outside.”
“It couldn’t have been the storm,” I said, thinking aloud, “lightning doesn’t make the fucking ground shake. Besides, it sounded like a goddamn bomb went off. It sounded like…”
Dumas watched me talk myself out. Then he supplied the same words my brain had. “An angel’s wrath? That what you were gonna say?”
I said nothing, my mouth moving for a second like that of a dying fish before I took notice and closed it. Dumas was glaring at me now, and the frown that graced his face deepened into something harsher, angrier, more sinister. His squat, round frame seemed to swell until he dominated the narrow room, and his eyes raged with black fire. “
“What? No! Why the hell would you think–”
“Why? Gee, Sam, I don’t know —maybe because when you came marching in here, you were pretty sure stealing Varela from you was
Dumas, a full head shorter than me when we crawled in here, dropped the torch he’d been carrying and grabbed me by my lapels, lifting me until I was a good foot off the ground and we were nose to nose. The room seemed to elongate as the torch lit it from below. Dumas’s face had elongated as well —to twice its normal size, it seemed —and when he spoke, I saw his mouth was now filled with row upon row of blackened, jagged teeth. “Tell me, Sammy,” he said, his striated, spiked tongue lashing at his front teeth with every word, and rasping out the sibilant in my name, “did you ring up one of your angel-friends before you sauntered over here, maybe let ’em know where you were going? Did you promise to deliver me if they’d make your missing-soul problem go bye-bye?”
My feet cast wild shadows as they scrabbled for purchase, but it wasn’t any use. “I didn’t —I swear!”
He slammed me into the rock wall behind me. My head hit so hard I thought I’d puke. Then I did puke, so, you know, yay for being right.
“I think you’re lying to me, Sammy,” he said, and slammed me into the wall again, so hard my vision swam. Not that I minded much. In the best of times, Dumas wasn’t much to look at, and these weren’t the best of times. From what little I could see through the darkness and the circling cartoon birds, Dumas’s current visage put Psoglav