but the view in her rearview mirror was bright and blue. Lightning danced under the clouds and Frank ceded, 'All right. Very impressive. You can quit with the special effects. Just help me do my job, okay? You do yours and I'll do mine. Give me something to hang this little old lady with and we'll make this fucked up world of yours a better place. Deal?'

Frank felt stupid talking to an empty car, but when Frank had asked Gail how to pray, Gail had said just talk. Say whatever came to mind. What came to Frank's mind was that this was ridiculous. Her bones impelled her to Mother Love's while her head insisted she had no business at the bembe.

The old slaughterhouse grew against the skyline. Rain streaked down its bricks, darkening them the color of dried blood. Frank parked on the Slauson side, bolting for the door through the pelting rain. She didn't bother knocking and the handle turned in her good hand. She stepped into what looked like a reception area. A young woman came from behind a counter.

'You must be Lieutenant Franco,' she smiled.

'I am,' Frank said, shaking water off. She heard muffled drumming. It was similar to her dream drumming, and she thought she was going to have another deja vu. The absolute worst time or place for that to happen. Frank willed herself to stay focused.

Opening a door, the woman told Frank, 'Mother Love said you might come. I'll take you to her.'

Alice in Wonderland, Frank thought, following the girl through a maze of brick walls. She missed Lewis behind her this time, and with a tiny hitch of panic she regretted not telling anyone where she was going. Frank steadied herself. They were getting closer to the drumming. It was slower and not as loud, but Frank was sure it was the same beat she'd heard in her dream. Her mouth went dry and she promised herself as many beers as she wanted when this was over.

The drumming grew louder and louder. The girl stopped in front of a red door, her hand resting on an old brass handle. She smiled again, calling over the tempo, 'Here we are.'

Frank realized she didn't like the girl's smile. It was too bright. Too false. An alarm tripped in Frank's gut. Thunderous drumming overwhelmed it as the girl pushed the door open. Frank had no choice but to follow. Marguerite spoke clearly in her head, you always have a choice.

Irrationally, Frank snapped back, not this time.

The room was lit like a scene from hell. Shadows spawned from torches and candles clambered over the walls. Against them, a half-dozen men sat blindfolded, naked to the waist. They pounded on the drums, their skin glistening in the coppery light.

Frank sensed rather than saw the twins standing on either side of the door. Near the center of the room, the Mother waited to meet Frank's eyes. Frank wouldn't look there, suddenly very afraid of what she would see.

The drummers increased their tempo. Frank's heartbeat kept time. Behind her, the twins blocked the door. Hot sweat rolled down her ribs. The incessant rhythm made it hard to think, but one thing was obvious. There was no bembe. Frank was the one they'd been waiting for.

Cold fury rippled through her. Frank raged that she had so profoundly fallen for the set-up. Like a punk-ass civilian, straight off the plane from Podunk, Iowa.

But that was all part of the plan, warn't it?

Before she could stop it, another memory swamped her. The certainty that she was meant to be here staggered her. She knew the rhythm the drummers were beating out. Her bones cherished it. The twisting shadows and blinded men, the Mother's foreboding patience and the twins behind her, Azazel and Belial, each detail perfectly fitted Frank's memory. In a different world, this moment had already happened and been preserved. Frank was only revisiting it. It was inevitable that she face the Mother. Always fighting, always the soldier. Forever and ever, amen. Father Merrin confronting his monstrous desert gods. Tripping in the desiccated ruins. Dogs snarling and snapping.

She felt herself falling. Instinct made her reach for her weapon. The twins lunged for either arm. Her bad hand closed awkwardly on the grip. She lifted the 9mm, but the wasted milliseconds cost her. The twins pinned her, one of them taking the Beretta.

Lifting Frank with minimal effort, they carried her to the Mother. Frank still hadn't looked at her. Now she concentrated on a line dangling from the ceiling. It looked like a rope, one of those thick ones they used on ships. There was another behind it, looped through a pulley. Only Frank realized they were chains.

Jesus Christ.

The chains that had kept Danny Duncan immobilized. Terror reared like a stricken horse, but again Frank reined it in.

Get mad, she heard her father say. She dredged up the slap of his palms on her face. Get mad and stay mad.

Frank slammed her eyes into the Mother's, too angry to even be pleased that for an instant the Mother's hubris wavered.

Words, even if they had been necessary, would have been useless against the crescendo of the drums. The adversaries glared, neither cognizant of defeat. With a crisp nod from their mother, the twins hustled Frank to the waiting chains. One pinioned her while the other knelt to secure her ankles. Frank thought to kick him in the face, break his nose, and try to manhandle the other brother. Even if she did break free she'd still have to deal with the Mother and her six drummers drumming. Her odds were slim to nil and Frank couldn't accept the possibility of failing in front of the Mother.

The twin jerked the metal tight around her ankle bones. Frank tried to think that the pain was probably a pleasure compared to what was coming. She held the same thought while he chained her wrists, wincing where he touched her fresh scars. The other brother hauled the ankle chain through the pulley. She couldn't hear it, but the vibrations rattled through her ankles. He stopped pulling just as the metal dug into her skin. Then he worked the hand chain until Frank's arms were horizontal behind her back. Muscles and tendons pulled. Frank reflexively stretched onto her toes, trying for some slack but it wasn't enough. She'd only held the position for seconds and already it was excruciating.

Get mad! Frank screamed into the pain.

The Mother whirled and bent to one of the drummers. She said something in his ear and his timing changed. The other drummers, all old men, responded intimately. Frank wondered how many times they'd played this pin- the-tail-on-the-donkey game. One of the twins went out the red door. The other watched Frank with his arms folded over his massive chest.

You fucking stupid magilla, Frank glowered at him. Like I could actually do anything. You got me trussed up like that fucking gimp in Pulp Fiction. I’ma get medieval on yo' ass.

How long would they keep her like this? The Mother was swigging from a bottle and spraying the contents over her drummers. When she was done with them she sprayed the twin, then chugged and turned to Frank. Frank closed her eyes as the mist blasted her face. She recognized the smell of rum and licked her lips before shaking the rest off her face.

The Mother walked back to her elaborate altar. She held a gourd up to each corner of the room and sprinkled something from it. Then she took a sip and held it to the lips of each drummer.

The twin returned with the girl. They were both carrying boxes. The Mother paused to hold the gourd up for them. Frank watched them sip. Then the twin guarding her took a drink. When the Mother approached Frank, her eyes screamed, Don't even fucking try it!

The Mother smiled.

'Proud to the end,' she purred in a deep voice. 'It's pride that makes the angels fall.'

She dipped three fingers into the mix and smeared them against Frank's lips. Frank snapped, biting only air. The Mother started, recoiling her clawed fingers. Anger flashed from the ravening eyes and Frank grinned. The Mother moved away, continuing her ablutions.

Frank tried to stretch even higher on her toes. But she couldn't relieve the pull of the chain.

God, it fucking hurt. How long was this fucking dog and pony show gonna take? Longer the better, she thought with a genuine stab of fear, afraid to think what would happen when it was over.

How did she get into this? And now that she was here, what the fuck was she going to do about it?

Вы читаете Cry Havoc
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×