Authors: Justin Richards
So Rutherford took the chance, and eased open the study door. The room was in darkness. He closed the door behind him, calling softly, just in case: âMr Crowley? Aleister â are you there? I need to speak to youâ¦'
No answer.
He felt his way across the room to the desk and fumbled for the lamp. It cast a pale glow across the blotter and he waited for a moment until his eyes were used to the gloom. Then he examined the bookcase behind the desk. It took a few moments, but eventually he found the catch, and eased the heavy bookcase away from the wall.
Crowley had been annoyed that he had seen the hidden doorway open. Whatever was concealed inside must be valuable. Valuable enough for him either to sell and get enough money to disappear for ever, or valuable enough for him to trade with the MI5 man for his freedom.
Behind the bookcase was a rectangle of darkness. He moved the light on the desk, pulling it across and angling it into the doorway. It revealed a small room, lined with shelves. Papers and ancient books were arranged along one shelf, a metal strong box on another. Something at the back of the small room glinted like metal â¦
He peered closer, moving into the room, but careful not to block the light. Yes, it
was
metal â strips of metal, or narrow bars. A cage, he realised. A metal cage on a low shelf at the back of the room. Inside the cage, the darkness itself seemed to move, to stir, to wake.
As he approached he made out the shape of the thing inside, dark and malevolent. A single eye snapped open, staring back at him.
Rutherford's hand went to his mouth as he stifled a cry of horror, tasted the bile at the back of his throat, and flung himself backwards out of the room.
âWhy Ralph,' a voice said from the darkness behind him. âWhatever is the matter?' And the main lights came on.
Â
âI gather you've been a bit of a naughty boy,' Crowley said. He handed Rutherford a glass of brandy.
Rutherford looked like he needed it â pale and shivering. He gulped the brandy down, and Crowley refilled the glass.
âNot me,' Rutherford managed to gasp. âIt's Jane you need to watch. She's telling the Manners woman everything, I'm sure of it.'
Crowley leaned back in his chair, amused. âAnd that's worse than you running off to Herr Hitler's friends, is it?'
Rutherford didn't meet his gaze. He sipped at the brandy. âI justâ¦' he muttered.
âJust nothing!' Crowley roared. âYou were nobody when you came here. You had nothing. You knew no one. If it weren't for me, you'd probably be dead in a gutter by now, and don't you forget it. This is how you repay me?'
Rutherford didn't answer.
âOur friends at MI5 want me to kill you, you know.' Crowley's tone was offhand, conversational â as if he was remarking on the weather outside.
But it snapped Rutherford back to reality. He stared at Crowley. âKill me?' he echoed, his voice strung out with nerves.
â“Execute” was the word they used. And I ought to after thisâ¦' He nodded at the bookcase still standing away from the wall to reveal the hidden room behind.
âBut â you can't!'
Crowley's voice was hard. âOh yes I can. I always could, but now I have official permission to kill you in cold blood any time I see fit. Don't forget that, not ever. But for the moment, wellâ¦' He smiled. âWe'll see, shall we? I might be able to persuade MI5 to keep you alive. Perhaps.'
âWhat do you want me to do?' Rutherford asked.
âAs you are told, for a change. For a start, you say nothing of what you've seen here.'
Now he knew he was safe for the moment, there was a hint of the old defiance in Rutherford's voice. âI don't know what I have seen.'
âThen perhaps I should enlighten you.'
âAnd Jane Roylston? I was telling you the truth â she's passing on everything to Brinkman and his lot.'
âYesâ¦' Crowley considered. âI suppose that's hardly surprising.' He stood up. âI think perhaps it is time for poor Jane to meet her destiny.'
âKill her?' Rutherford breathed.
âI'm still deciding whether or not to kill
you
.'
âThen what do you mean?'
Crowley took Rutherford's empty glass from him, placing it on the desk. âBring her to the cellar. Just Jane and you, no one else. I'll meet you there.'
âWhat if she won't come with me?'
âI'm sure you can persuade her, Ralph. You're good at that, I know. And I'm sure you'd enjoy it.' Crowley turned to the dark opening behind the bookcase. âI have someone else to bring.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
To Rutherford's disappointment, mention of Crowley's name was enough for Jane Roylston to follow him down to the cellars. She glanced warily back at him as they descended into the flickering light of the stone-lined chamber. But Crowley was already there, the candles already lit. A copper bowl of incense burned smokily on a stand close to the altar stone.
âYou want me to try making contact again?' Jane asked. âI told you, the link has been broken. There's nothing there to make contact with, not any more.'
âYou have a very special ability, Jane,' Crowley said. His craggy face was an escarpment of trembling shadow in the candlelight. âI think it's time to take your talents to the next level. Into new territory â for all of us.' He gestured to the stone altar table in the centre of the chamber. âPlease.'
As she had done so many times before, Jane stepped up on to the dais surrounding the table. She glanced back at Crowley, and glared at Rutherford who stood smirking next to him.
âNaked, if you would be so kind,' Crowley said. His pale tongue licked quickly over his bloodless lips.
âI'll help you if you want,' Rutherford said. The anticipation was obvious in his voice.
âI can manage,' Jane told them. She was close to the burning incense, the smoke making her lightheaded and woozy. She kicked off her shoes and unbuttoned her blouse, all the while conscious of the two men staring at her. She was used to it, but she still found it unsettling. Especially Rutherford.
The table was cold under her back as she lay down. She stared up at the vaulted roof above, its details lost in shadow as the light danced over the stone surface. The perfumed smoke from the copper bowl beside the table drifted across, blurring the image and dulling her senses. âI'm ready.'
âNot quite,' Crowley said. âDon't resist, my dear. It will all be over soon.'
The smell of the incense was stronger now, the smoke thicker. Through it, she saw Crowley looking down at her, holding the copper bowl close to her face, letting the smoke drift across her. She breathed it in, feeling herself begin to slip away.
Someone took her hand, pulling it gently away from her body until it was stretched out to the edge of the stone table. She felt the metal clasp round her wrist, securing it in place. Then the other arm. Jane felt a moment's panic as her legs too were pulled apart. She tried to sit up, to see what they were doing, but her head felt so heavy â¦
Then cold metal closed round her ankles, holding her spread-eagled across the stone.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Crowley replaced the copper bowl on its stand and looked down at the woman stretched out on the stone.
âWhat are you going to do to her?' Rutherford asked. He too was staring at Jane. He'd never seen her look so beautiful. So helpless.
âI shall do nothing,' Crowley said.
For a moment, Rutherford thought Crowley would just leave, and let Rutherford do whatever needed to be done. But instead he stepped down from the dais and went to one of the alcoves at the side of the chamber, reaching down into the shadowy darkness.
When he straightened up and turned around, Crowley was holding the metal cage Rutherford had seen in the hidden room. It was covered with a black velvet cloth, and Crowley carried it carefully, almost reverently to the altar table. He set it down on the stone surface, between Jane's ankles.
âWhat's going to happen?' Rutherford asked, breathless.
âTo be honest, I don't know.' Crowley gently pulled the cover from the cage, murmuring quietly as he did so. Rutherford could not hear the words, wasn't sure it was English â Latin perhaps? Or an even older tongue?
Darkness quivered inside the cage. A living shadow. Slowly, carefully, warily, Crowley undid the clasp at the front of the cage, and lifted up a section. He stepped back as the inchoate darkness reached out through the opening.
An angular limb, gnarled and grotesque like the leg of a giant spider, licked out of the cage. Then another. The creature inside pulled itself out, and squatted malevolently between the cage and Jane. Sensing something was happening, she tried to raise her head, looking down along the length of her body. Rutherford didn't know if she could see the nightmare creature that was moving slowly towards her. He hoped so. Her eyes were wide with fear, her whole body trembling.
One of the creature's skeletal limbs brushed against her thigh, and Jane cried out in surprised terror. The cry was choked off as the creature moved on, upwards, reaching out across her flesh, hauling itself up onto her body. The single eye swivelled back and forth as it surveyed its prey. It paused, the pulsing, bulbous body resting on the woman's naked belly, gnarled legs stretching out across her thighs, her breasts, towards her face.
Jane's head lifted again and she saw the dark nightmare stretched out across her. Her whole body convulsed with the effort of screaming, back arched and limbs straining at the manacles. The creature's limbs curled round her in a macabre embrace, clutching her tight, then abruptly releasing her.
Her body slackened, fell back to the stone.
Crowley stepped forward, muttering urgently to the creature. A limb whipped out like a tentacle, narrowly missing Crowley's face. He stepped back with a snarl, gave an angry, guttural order. Slowly, reluctantly, the creature withdrew. Its crooked limbs gathered into a knotted mass beneath its dark, bulbous body. A single defiant eye glared for a moment back at Crowley.
Then it withdrew into the cage, and Crowley snapped the bars back into place and closed the clasp.
âHow do you control it?' Rutherford's voice was a dry rasp.
Crowley glanced at him. âAncient words of power, handed down through the generations of natives in the Himalayan foothills of Nepal. I am never quite sure whether the words control it, or whether it merely does as I ask.'
Rutherford's heart was thumping and he was breathing heavily â part excited and stimulated by what he'd seen. Part horrified. He stepped up onto the dais beside Crowley, keeping well clear of the cage. Not daring to look at what it held. Instead he stared down at the body of Jane Roylston.
âIs she dead?'
âNo, she's not dead,' Crowley said.
A thin trail of blood wept from a narrow slash across her left breast and down her chest. Several smaller lacerations criss-crossed her stomach and the top of her legs. A bead of blood welled up from a point close to her navel, running slowly across the undulations of her body and dripping to the stone table.
âWhat now?' Rutherford said, his voice a nervous whisper.
Crowley picked up the black velvet cloth and draped it back over the cage. âNow we wait.'
Â
Before leaving for the Bertesgarten, Himmler insisted on a status report from both Hoffman and Nachten.
âPerhaps you will have some good news for me to pass on to our Fuhrer,' he suggested, looking from one to the other.
Hoffman was too familiar with Himmler to be intimidated, but Nachten â he was pleased to see â shuffled uncomfortably. They were sitting at a large, round stone table in one of the anterooms. Nachten had brought a plentiful supply of notes and papers, books and folders which were stacked in front of him. Hoffman had his notebook.
When he judged that Nachten has squirmed enough, Hoffman replied. âAs you know I have been researching the axe supposedly connected to the Black Forest. But, I am sorry to report, with little progress so far,' Hoffman admitted. âI shall inform you both when I get a lead.'
He made a point of looking down at the notebook on the table in front of him. He saw to his surprise that while they had been talking he had drawn in the margin. Several small axe-heads. A few of the runic symbols. And a complex circular pattern, lines spiralling inwards to form paths â some blocked and some opening into other sections. It was a shape he had seen before, in his mind's eye and in his dreams. He closed the notebook and looked up. âThere are several possibilities I should like to follow up.'
Himmler nodded, and turned back to Nachten. âWhat of the third axe?'
âI need to do more research myself. But I have discovered enough already to believe that my researches are pointed in the right direction.'
âAnd what direction is that, if I may ask?'
âGreek myths and legends. I believe the third axe-head is still in Greece.'
âExplain, if you would.' Himmler leaned forward, hands clasped together on the cold stone surface of the table. âBriefly,' he added.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âYou two are looking very pleased with yourselves,' Sarah said.
Leo was perched on the edge of Miss Manners' desk, the two of them talking quietly. There was no one else in the office, and Sarah had heard Leo's laughter from the stairs on her way up.
âWe think we may have tracked down our elusive axe,' Leo explained.
âDr Wiles and Mrs Archer suggested Crete as a possible location,' Miss Manners said. âBut it was just a theory, based on a myth and Evans' archaeological finds. Nothing very concrete to back it up.'
âAnd now?' Sarah asked.
âNow it looks as if there may be a connection to the Labyrinth in Crete after all,' Leo said.