|
Dead Beat - Chapter Three
Book Seven of the Dresden Files
I needed some answers.
Time to hit the lab.
Me and Mouse returned to my apartment in the Blue Beetle, the beat
up old Volkswagen Bug that is my faithful steed. "Blue" is kind of a
metaphorical description. The car has had various doors and panels
replaced with white, yellow, red, and green. My mechanic Mike had managed
to pound the hood more or less back into its original condition, which I'd
bent out of shape while ramming a bad guy, but I hadn't had the money to
repaint, so now the car had primer grey added to its ensemble.
Mouse had been growing too quickly to be very graceful about
getting out of the car. He filled up most of the back seat, and when
climbing from there to the front and then out the driver's side door he
reminded me of some footage I've seen of an elephant seal flopping through
a New Zealand parking lot. He emerged happily enough, though, panting and
waving his tail contentedly. Mouse liked going places in the car. That
the place had happened to be a clandestine meeting in a freaking graveyard
didn't seem to spoil anything for him. It was all about the journey, not
the destination. A very Zen soul, was Mouse.
Mister hadn't come back yet, and neither had Thomas. I tried not
to think too hard about that. Mister had been on his own when I found him,
and he frequently went rambling. He could take care of himself. Thomas
had managed to survive for all but the last several months of his life
without me. He could take care of himself too.
I didn't have to worry about either of them, right?
Yeah, right.
I disarmed my wards, the spells that protected my home from
various supernatural intrusion, and slipped inside with Mouse. I built up
the fire a bit, and the dog settled down in front of it with a pleased
sigh. Then I ditched my coat, grabbed my thick old flannel robe and a
Coke, and headed downstairs.
I live in a basement apartment, but a trap door underneath one of
my rugs opens up on a folding wooden stair-ladder that leads down to the
sub-basement and my lab. It's cold down there, year-round, which is why I
wear the heavy robe. It's one more drop of the romance sucked out of the
wizarding mystique, but I stay comfortable.
"Bob," I said as I climbed down into the pitch-dark lab. "Warm up
the memory banks. I've got work to do."
The first lights in the room to flicker on were the golden-orange
color and the size of candle flames. They shone out from the eye sockets
of a skull, slowly growing brighter, until I could see the entire shelf the
skull rested upon—a simple wooden shelf on the wall, covered in candles,
romance novels, a number of small items, and the pale human skull.
"About time," the skull mumbled. "It's been weeks since you
needed me."
"Tis the season," I said. "Most of the Halloween jobs start
looking the same after a few years. No need to consult you when I already
know the answers I need."
"If you were so smart," Bob muttered, "You wouldn't need me now."
"That's right," I told him. I pulled a box of kitchen matches out
of my robe's pockets and started lighting candles. I started with a bunch
of them on a metal table running down the center of the small
room. "You're a spirit of knowledge, whereas I am only human."
"Right," said Bob, drawing out the word. "Are you feeling all
right, Harry?"
I continued on, lighting candles on the white wire shelves and
workbenches on the three walls in a 'c' shape around the long steel
table. My shelves were still crowded with plastic dishes with lids, coffee
cans, bags, boxes, tins, vials, flasks, and every other kind of small
container you can imagine, filled with all kinds of substances as mundane
as lint and as exotic as octopus ink. I had several hundred pounds worth
of books and notebooks on the shelves, some arranged neatly and some
stacked hastily where they'd been when last I left them. I hadn't been
down to the lab for a while, and I don't allow the faeries access, so there
was a little bit of dust over everything.
"Why do you ask?" I said.
"Well," Bob said, his tone careful, "you're complimenting me,
which is never goodl. Plus lighting all of your candles with matches."
"So?" I said.
"So you can light all the candles with that stupid little spell
you made up," Bob said. "And you keep dropping the box because your of
your burned hand. So it's taken you seven matches now to keep lighting
those candles."
I fumbled and dropped the matchbox again from my stiff, gloved
fingers.
"Eight," he said.
I suppressed a growl, struck a fresh match, and did it too
forcefully, snapping it.
"Nine," Bob said.
"Shut up," I told him.
"You got it, boss. I'm the best at shutting up." I lit the last
few candles, and Bob said, "So did you come down here to get my help when
start working on your new blasting rod?"
"No," I said. "Bob, I've only got the one hand. I can't carve it
with one hand."
"You could use a vice-grip," the skull suggested.
"I'm not ready," I said. My maimed fingers burned and
throbbed. "I'm just . . . not."
"You'd better get ready," Bob said. "It's only a matter of time
before some nasty shows up and—"
I shot the skull a hard look.
"All right, all right," Bob said. If he had hands, the skull
would have raised them in a gesture of surrender. "So you're telling me
you still won't use any fire magic."
"Stars and stones," I sighed. "So I'm using matches instead of my
candle spell and I'm too busy to get the new blasting rod done. It's not a
big deal. There's just not much call for blowing anything up or burning it
to cinders on my average day."
"Harry?" Bob asked. "Are your feet wet? And can you see the
pyramids?"
I blinked. "What?"
"Earth to Dresden," Bob said. "You are standing knee-deep in De
Nile."
I threw the matchbook at the skull. It bounced off
half-heartedly, and the few matches left in tumbled out at random. "Keep
your inner psychoanalyst to your damned self," I growled. "We've got work
to do."
"Yeah," Bob said. "You're right, Harry. What do I know about
anything?"
I glowered at Bob, and pulled up my stool to the work table. I
got out a notebook and a pencil. "The question of the hour is what do you
know about something called the Word of Kemmler?"
Bob made a sucking sound through his teeth, which is fairly
impressive given that he's got no saliva to work with. Or maybe I'm giving
him too much credit. I mean, he can make a 'b' sound with no lips,
too. "Can you give me a reference point or anything?"
"Not for certain," I said. "But I have a gut instinct that says
it has something to do with necromancy."
Bob made a whistling sound. "I hope not."
"Why?" I asked.
"Because that Kemmler was a certifiable nightmare," Bob said. "I
mean, wow. He was sick, Harry. Evil."
That got my attention. Bob the skull was an air spirit, a being
that existed in a world of knowledge without morality. He was fairly fuzzy
on the whole good-evil conflict, and as a result he had only vague ideas of
where lines got drawn. If Bob thought someone was evil, well. Kemmler
must have really pushed the envelope.
"What'd he do?" I asked. "What made him so evil?"
"He was best known for World War One," Bob said.
"The whole thing?" I demanded.
"Mostly, yeah," Bob said. "There were about a hundred and fifty
years of engineering built into it, and he had his fingers into all kinds
of pies. He vanished at the end of hostilities and didn't show up again
until he started animating mass graves during World War Two. Went on
rampages out in eastern Europe, where things were pretty much a nightmare
even without his help. Nobody is sure how many people he killed."
"Stars and stones," I said. "Why would he do something like that?"
"A wild guess? He was freaky insane. Plus evil."
"You say was," I said. "Past tense?"
"Very," Bob said. "After what the guy did, the White Council
hunted him down and wiped his dusty ass out in 1961."
"You mean the Wardens?"
"I mean the White Council," Bob said. "The Merlin, the whole
Senior Council, the brute squad out of Archangel, the Wardens, and every
wizard and ally the wizards could get their hands on."
I blinked. "For one man?"
"See above, regarding nightmare," Bob said. "Kemmler was a
necromancer, Harry. Power over the dead. He had truck with demons, too,
was buddies with most of the vampire Courts, every nasty in Europe and some
of the uglier faeries, too. Plus he had his own little cadre of baby
Kemmlers to help him out. Apprentices. And thugs of every description."
"Damn," I said.
"Doubtless he was," Bob said. "They killed him pretty good. A
bunch of times. He'd shown up again after the Wardens had killed him early
in the nineteenth century, so they were real careful the second time. And
good riddance to the psychotic bastard."
I blinked. "You knewhim?"
"Didn't I ever tell you?" Bob asked. "He was my owner for about
forty years."
I stared. "You worked with this monster?"
"I do what I do," Bob said proudly.
"How did Justin get you, then?"
"Justin DuMorne was a Warden, Harry, back at Kemmler's last
stand. He pulled me out of the smoldering ruins of Kemmler's lab. Sort of
like when you pulled me out of the smoldering ruins of Justin's lab when
you killed him. Circle of life, like that Elton John song."
I felt more than a little tiny bit cold. I chewed on my lip and
laid my pencil down. I had the feeling the rest of this conversation was
not going to be something I wanted to create a written record of. "So what
is the Word of Kemmler, Bob?"
"Not a clue," Bob said.
I glowered. "What do you mean, not a clue? I thought you were
his skull Friday."
"Well, yeah," Bob said. His eyelights flickered suddenly, a
nervous little dance. "I don't remember very much of it."
I snorted out a laugh. "Bob. You never forget anything."
"No," Bob said. His voice shrank into something very
small. "Unless I want to, Harry."
I frowned and took a deep breath. "You're saying that you chose
to forget things about Kemmler."
"Or was compelled to," Bob said. "Um. Harry, can I come
out? Just inside the lab? You know, while we talk."
I blinked a couple of times. Bob was full of mischief on the best
of days. I didn't let him out except on specific intelligence-gathering
missions any more. And while he often pestered me to let him out on one of
his perverted mini-rampages, he had never asked permission to leave his
skull for the duration of a chat. "Sure," I told him. "Stay inside the
lab and be back in the skull at the end of this conversation."
"Right," Bob said. A small cloud of glowing motes of light the
size of campfire sparks came sailing out of the skull's eyes and darted to
the far corner of the lab. "So anyway, when are we going to work on the
new blasting rod?"
"Bob," I said. "We're talking about the Word of Kemmler."
The lights shot restlessly over to the other side of the lab,
swirling through the steps on my stairladder in a glowing helix. "You're
talking about the Word of Kemmler," Bob said. The glowing cloud stretched,
motes now spiraling up and down the stairs simultaneously. "I'm working on
my Vegas act. Lookit, I'm DNA."
"Would you stop goofing around. Can you remember anything at all
about Kemmler?"
Bob's voice quavered, the motes becoming a vague cloud again. "I
can."
"Then tell me what you know."
"Is that a command?"
I blinked. "Do I have to make it one?"
"You don't want to command me to remember, Harry."
"Why not?" I demanded.
The cloud of lights drifted in vague loops around the
lab. "Because knowledge is what I am. Losing my knowledge of what I knew
of Kemmler took away a . . . a big piece of my existence. Like if someone
had cut off your arm. What's left of what I know of Kemmler is close to
the missing pieces."
I thought I started to understand him. "It hurts."
The lights swirled uncertainly. "It also hurts. It's more than
that."
"If it hurts," I said, "I'll stop, and you can forget it again
when we're done talking."
"But—" Bob said.
"It's a command, Bob. Tell me."
Bob shuddered.
It was a bizarre sight. The cloud of lights shivered for a
second, as if in a trembling breath of wind, and then abruptly just
shifted, flickering to one side as quickly as if I had been looking at it
with one eye closed and suddenly switched to the other.
"Kemmler," Bob said. "Right." The lights came to rest on the
other end of the table in the shape of a perfect sphere. "What do you want
to know, wizard?"
I watched the lights warily, but nothing seemed all that
wrong. Other than that Bob was suddenly calm. And geometric. "Tell me
what the Word of Kemmler is."
The lights pulsed scarlet. "Knowledge. Truth. Power."
"Uh," I said. "A little more specific?"
"The master wrote down his teachings, wizard, so that those who
came after him could learn from him. Could learn about the true power of
magic."
"You mean," I said, "so that they could learn about necromancy."
Bob's voice took on the edge of a sneer. "What you call magic is
nothing but a mound of parlor tricks, beside the power to master life and
death itself."
"That's an opinion, I guess," I said.
"More than that," Bob said. "It is a Truth. A Truth that reveals
itself to those who seek it out."
"What do you mean?" I said, slowly.
There was a flash, and a pair of white eyes formed in the
glittering cloud of red points of light. They weren't pleasant. "Shall I
show you the start of the path?" Bob's voice said. "Death, Dresden, is a
part of you. It is woven into the fabric of your being. You are a
collection of pieces, each of them dying and in turn being reborn and
remade."
The white lights were cold. Not mountain-spring cold,
either. Graveyard mist cold. But I'd never seen anything quite like them
before. And there was no sense interrupting Bob when he was finally
spilling some information.
Besides. Fascinating light.
"Dead flesh adorns you even now. Nails. Hair. You tend them and
caress them like any other mortal. Your women decorate them. Entice with
them. Death is not a thing to be feared, boy. She is a lover who waits to
take you into her arms. You can feel her if you know what her touch is
like. Cold, slow, sweet."
He was right. A cold, tingling non-feeling was glittering over my
fingernails and my scalp. For a second, I thought that it hurt, but then I
realized that it was only a shivering sensation where that cold energy
brushed close to the blood pulsing beneath my skin. It was where they met
that it felt uncomfortable. Without the blood, the cold would be a pure,
endless sweetness.
"Take a little of death inside, boy. And it will lead you to
more. Open your mouth."
I did. I was staring at the light in any case, and it was amazing
enough to merit a bit of gaping. I barely noticed a frozen mote of dark
blue light, like the corpse of a tiny star, that appeared from one of the
spirit's white eyes and began drifting toward my mouth. The cold sensation
grew, and it hit my tongue like a thermonuclear peppermint, freezing hot,
searingly bitter and sweet and—
—and wrong. I spat it out, recoiling, throwing my arms up in
front of my face. I fell to the floor, numbness spreading.
"Too late!" crowed the spirit. It shot into the air, swirling
around over me, gloating. "Whatever you have done to my thoughts, the
master will not be pleased that you have meddled with his servant."
The cold started spreading, and it wasn't purely physical. There
was a empty, heartless void to it, a starless, frozen quality that raked at
me—not just my body, but me—with a mindless hunger. And I could feel
it,
sending tendrils out through me, slowing my heartbeat, making it impossible
to breathe.
"Do you know how long I've been waiting for that?" the spirit
purred, drifting back and forth over me. "Sitting there locked behind my
own thoughts? Waiting for the chance to fight free? Finally, you thick
witted ogre, I get to leave your stupidity behind."
"Bob," I choked out. "This conversation is over."
The spirit's scarlet lights flared to sudden, incandescent rage
and it screamed, a wailing sound that rattled my shelves and felt like it
was splitting my head. Then the cloud was ripped backwards across the
room, sucked into the eye-holes of the skull as though down a hellish drain.
Once of the last of the motes went flickering back into the skull,
the horrible cold faltered a little, and I curled up, focusing my will and
trying to push it away. It took me a while, and that hideous void-presence
lingered against my fingernails, even after I could feel my fingers again,
but after a little while I was able to sit up again.
After that, I just curled up my knees against my chest, shocked
and scared half out of my mind. I had always known that Bob was an
incredibly valuable asset, and that no spirit with as much knowledge as he
had could be weak. But I had not been at all prepared for the sheer power
he had wielded, or for the malice with which he did it. Bob wasn't
supposed to be a sleeping nightmare waiting to wake up. Bob was supposed
to be my wisecracking porta-geek.
Good lord, I couldn't remember the last time I'd confronted a
demon with that much raw psychic power. If I'd been a second slower, or
stars and stones, if I hadn't remembered the condition that would banish
Bob back to the skull and once again remove the dark memories, I'd be dead
now. Or maybe dead and then some.
And it would have been my own stupid fault, too.
"Harry?" Bob said.
I flinched and let out a small squeaking sound. Then I got hold
of myself and blinked up at the skull. It rested on its shelf, and its
orange-gold eye-lights were back to their usual color. "Oh. Hey."
Bob's voice was very quiet. "Your lips are blue."
"Yeah."
"What happened?" Bob asked.
"It got kind of cold in here."
"Me."
"Yeah."
"I'm sorry, Harry," Bob said. "I tried to tell you."
"I know," I said. "I had no idea."
"Kemmler was bad, Harry," Bob said. "He . . . he took what I
was. And he twisted it. I destroyed most of my memories of my time with
him, and I locked away everything I couldn't. Because I didn't want to be
like that."
"You won't," I told him quietly. "Now hear this, Bob. I command
you never to recover those memories again. Never to let them out
again. Never to obey any command to unleash them again. From here on out
they sleep with the fishes. Understand me?"
"If I do," Bob said, carefully. "I won't be able to do much to
help you, Harry. You'll be on your own."
"Let me worry about that," I said. "It's a command, Bob."
The skull let out a slow sigh of relief. "Thank you, Harry."
"Don't mention it," I said. "Literally."
"Right," he said.
"Okay. Let's see," I said. "Can you still remember general
information about Kemmler?"
"Nothing you couldn't find in other places. But general knowledge
I learned when Justin was with the Wardens, yes."
"All right, then. You—that is, that other you—said that
Kemmler
had written down his teachings when I asked him what the Word of Kemmler
was. So I figure it's a book."
"Maybe," Bob said, carefully. "Council records stated that
Kemmler had written three books; the Blood of Kemmler, the Mind of Kemmler,
and the Heart of Kemmler."
"He published them?"
"Self-published," Bob said. "He started spreading them around
Europe."
"Resulting in what?"
"Way too many penny-ante sorcerers getting their hands on some
real necromancy."
I nodded. "What happened?"
"The Wardens put on their own epic production of Fahrenheit 451,"
Bob said. "They spent about twenty years finding and destroying
copies. They think they accounted for all of them."
I whistled. "So if the Word of Kemmler is a fourth manuscript?"
"That could be bad," Bob said.
"Why?"
"Because some of Kemmler's disciples escaped the White Council's
dragnet," Bob said. "They're still running around. If they get a new
round of necro-at-home lessons to expand their talents, they could use it
to do fairly horrible things."
"They're wizards?"
"Black wizards, yes," Bob said.
"How many?"
"Four or five at the most, but the Wardens' information was very
sketchy."
"Doesn't sound like anything the Wardens can't handle," I said.
"Unless what's in the fourth book contains the rest of what
Kemmler had to teach them," Bob said. "In which case, we might end up with
four or five Kemmlers running around."
"Holy crap," I said. I plunked my tired ass down on my stool and
rubbed at my head. "And it's no coincidence that tomorrow night is
Halloween."
"The season when the barriers between the mortal realm and the
spirit world will be weakest," Bob said.
"Like when that asshole the Nightmare was hunting down my
friends," I said. I peered at Bob. "But for him to do that, he had to
weaken the barriers even more. He and Bianca had tormented all those
ghosts to start making the barriers more unstable. Would it have to be
ghosts to stir up the kind of turbulence you'd need for big magic?"
"No," Bob said. "But that's one way. Otherwise, you'd have to
use some rituals or sacrifices of one kind or another."
"You mean deaths," I said.
"Exactly."
I frowned, nodding. "They'd have to invest some energy early to
get things moving for a big necromantic working. Like bouncing on a diving
board a couple of times before you jump." "An accurate, if crude
aphorism," Bob said. "You'd have to do a little pre-work if you wanted to
start working Kemmler-level necromancy, even on Halloween." He
sighed. "Though that doesn't really help you much."
I got up and headed for the stepladder. "It helps more than you
know, man. I'm getting you new romances."
The skull's eye-lights brightened. "You are? I mean, of course
you are. But why?"
"Because if someone's setting up for big bad juju, they'll have
left bodies. If they've done that, then I have a place to start tracking
them and finding out what's going on."
"Harry?" Bob called up as I left the lab. "Where are you going?"
I stuck my head back down the trap door and said, "The morgue."
|