Read The Fall of the House of Cabal Online

Authors: Jonathan L. Howard

The Fall of the House of Cabal (21 page)

BOOK: The Fall of the House of Cabal
13.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘Hur-hur. “Monstronities”. Hur,' it said.

Cabal somehow held his temper. He disliked being toyed with at the best of times, and this particular circumstance was trying his patience badly. He would have suspected the hand (or tentacle, or waving tendril of materialised thought) of Nyarlathotep behind this but for the lack of a characteristic atmosphere of trifling sadism. No, this place—like its predecessor—was nothing but a morality tale wrought in broad strokes and bright colours.

‘And what are you called?' he asked the first demon. ‘De'zeel or something similar?'

The cancerous lizard looked at him with evident astonishment. Then, rallying its limited powers of dissimulation, it said, ‘No.'

The maggot frowned, which was as unappealing as it sounds. ‘Isn't it, De'zeel? Why did you tell me it was, then?'

While the lizard flapped its angular arms at the maggot and the maggot whipped its ropey limbs in defence, Miss Smith said in a voice that betokened both wonderment and disdain, ‘You
know
these things?'

Cabal shrugged the shrug of a man of substance discovered by his fashionable friends in the company of the family he's been trying to disown since his teen years. ‘In a manner of speaking. This is an echo of my past. If the men involved had died and gone to Hell as they so richly deserved, then these are very likely the demons their souls might eventually have become.'

Miss Smith took a moment to absorb this information. ‘The human versions of them aren't dead yet? In the real world, I mean. They still live?'

‘Oh, no,' said Cabal, snorting a little at such credulity. ‘I killed them myself.'

It says little for the company of necromancers and, indeed, devils, that neither Miss Smith nor Zarenyia saw anything at all unusual or reprehensible in the statement.

‘Then, why couldn't these actually
be
the demons created from their damned souls?'

‘Because their souls are still bottled up in their bodies. I needed some cheap labour …
free
labour … and they were handy and disagreeable. I had my pistol and reagents handy, so why not? I think it turned out to everyone's satisfaction.' His audience regarded him with suspicion. Cabal elucidated. ‘They got to drive a train. They'd never have done that were they still alive.'

Both Miss Smith and Zarenyia nodded with agreement; it was all perfectly reasonable, after all.

De'zeel stopped thrashing at De'eniroth, and both demons turned their attention upon the intruders.

‘We are guardians of this 'ole flank of 'Ell,' said De'zeel, gesturing grandly over the glittering dunes. ‘Hidennfy yerselves, or we are hempowered by the Prince of 'Ell'—here he turned a jaundiced eye upon the party, jaundiced, sclerotic, bloodshot, and home to several bacterial conditions of which conjunctivitis was the very least—‘to do yer.'

‘Do our what?' asked Zarenyia with professional interest.

‘Kill us,' said Miss Smith.

Zarenyia wilted, this being the latest of her recent disappointments. Then she perked up. ‘Oh, wait. You're
threatening
us?' Her smile returned, a delightful expression filled with spring sunshine, heartfelt joy, and the imminence of wholesale slaughter.

‘Control yourself, madam,' said Cabal. He turned to the demons, aware of and ignoring Zarenyia mimicking him behind his back. ‘You are to conduct us to the presence of His Infernal Majesty.' He said it as if arranging an appointment to have the carpet shampooed. ‘What we have to discuss is for the ears of Satan only.'

De'eniroth gave the impression of blinking stupidly, despite the absence of obvious eyes. ‘'Oo?'

‘Satan,' repeated Cabal, the word slowed with caution. ‘The Prince of Hell you just mentioned. He's called Satan. That's what he's called.' He looked from one idiot demon to the other and back again. ‘Lucifer? He's called that sometimes. The Prince of Lies?' Still no response. ‘What sort of demons are you if you don't even know the name of your employer?'

‘Lucy-furr…' The sound of De'zeel's thought processes were almost audible, and would have seemed much like fracturing ice and old clockwork if they were. ‘I know that name.' Suddenly he clicked his fingers, making a noise like crushing a louse the size of a tangerine in the process. ‘I do! That was the old boss.' He grinned, and several tooth splinters oozed out on a string of drool. ‘'E's gorn now. We've got a new bloke.'

‘What? How can there be a “new bloke”?' demanded Cabal. ‘This isn't some sort of corporation, subject to hostile takeovers. Even Hell isn't
that
evil. The whole point of Hell is that it is and has always been Lucifer's domain! What exactly is supposed to have happened to him? Revolution? Coup? An assassin angel came down from on high with a blessed elephant rifle?
What?
'

‘He retired.' This said the lizard demon, and no more.

Cabal gawped, not something he was inclined towards in the usual run of things. ‘He did
what
?'

‘Retired. Said 'e'd 'ad enough, an' chucked it in.' De'zeel regarded the dumbstruck expressions of the humans (well, two out of three wasn't bad) with pleasure. ‘Said the joke wos over an' 'e wos done. Orft he went. Prob'ly got a cottage now. Cottages is nice.'

‘The joke?' Cabal thought back, and then wondered how close an analogue this place was to the reality. Was this an echo of the true current state of Hell? If so had he, Cabal, inadvertently been instrumental in causing the greatest theological upset in … well …
ever
? It was a matter of the most monumental import. The opportunities were immense. New alliances could be forged, new paths opened. The vistas of potential research blooming before him, no matter what the outcome of the current expedition, were breathtaking. With Satan off looking after the roses around the door of his retirement cottage (Cabal guessed it would be in either Dis, Tartarus, or Essex; probably Essex), Cabal would be free to make overtures to the new management.

‘So,' he said, ‘who is the new Prince of Hell?'

De'zeel and De'eniroth both huffed out their chests, made complex yet underwhelming salutes of obeisance to their ruler, and chorused, ‘His Infernal Majesty, Ratuth Slabuth!'

‘Shit,' said Cabal.

‘Not a friend, darling?' said Zarenyia. ‘Really, you should try being nice sometimes. I gather we're back to Plan A?' Without waiting for a reply she turned her attention to the demons and managed a smile no human could have managed in the face of the worst that both the vertebrate and invertebrate worlds could produce. ‘Hello, you sweet things. Quick question—do you both have anything that might equate to sexual organs?' They seemed surprised by this tack and looked foolishly at her, a look much practised. ‘I mean, more or less. Just enough for a girl to…' They still seemed very blank. She sighed. ‘You know what? Never mind answering. I'll conduct an examination of my own. You just lie back and think of Gehenna.'

And so saying, Zarenyia shed her earthly form. Her extra legs erupted from her lower torso as she reared up, suddenly towering over the startled demons. Her abdomen seemed to swell out of nowhere, her clothes shredded into mist, and she stood triumphant and clearly outclassing De'zeel and De'eniroth in every conceivable category, a queen in chitin and angora.

Her smile was ravenous and vicious, the smile of a shark. ‘I am Zarenyia! Devil of the outer darkness where even demons fear to tread! I am the smiling death, the final embrace, the killing kiss! I bring the shuddering finality to my enemies! Unbeholden to the thrones of Hell, you have no defence from me, pit spawn!' Her smile became a little more Women's Institute. ‘So, I'd just pucker up and enjoy it, if I were you.' She pointed at De'zeel, who stood rooted to the spot, his unlovely eyes wide with awe. ‘You first, poppet. You probably have more to work with. As for you'—she turned her attention to De'eniroth—‘just stay put until it's your turn. No running away, or I'll just have to run after you, and that will make me grumpy.' Her smile hardened. ‘You don't want to see me grumpy, believe you me.'

The demons looked at her in silence and then, very unexpectedly, fell to their knees. Or at least De'zeel fell to his knees. The situation was less clear-cut with De'eniroth, but he seemed to sink a little lower, and he curled his body around a little more so there was more on the lower side of the S of his body.

‘Mistress Zarenyia!' they cried. ‘We must take you to the prince immediat'ly!'

‘Eh?' said Zarenyia. ‘What?'

‘Your comin' 'as been foretold, it 'as!' said De'zeel. ‘You are most respectfully invited to the court of the new Great Satan his own self, Ratuth Slabuth!'

Zarenyia rested back on her haunches slightly in the manner of a toast rack being gently bent back, the better to regard the grovelling demons. Her brow harboured much in the way of suspicions. ‘Johannes, are these fellows committing some heinous and cunning ruse upon me?'

Cabal was as taken aback as she. ‘If they are anything like their mundane counterparts, they are severely lacking the wit for any scheme much more complicated than putting on their shoes.'

‘They're not wearing shoes. The maggoty one would need several dozen little baby pairs, by the looks of him.'

‘I was talking metaphorically, madam. My point is, no, I doubt this is a scheme. Or, at least, not one they have evolved.'

Zarenyia digested this, then addressed the demons. ‘If I go with you, what happens to my travelling companions?'

De'eniroth and De'zeel looked at one another. ‘Dunno,' said De'zeel after a short, wordless conversation with his colleague that largely consisted of shrugs. Maggots do not shrug convincingly. ‘But it's really important you come wiv us, Mistress Zarenyia. 'Is Infernal Majesty is really, really keen to see you.'

‘What do you think, darlings?' asked Zarenyia of her companions. ‘I mean, when all is said and done, this
isn't
Hell. It's more like improvisational theatre.'

‘That is no improvement,' said Cabal.

‘Philistine. You know what I mean.'

Cabal nodded. ‘I do. There is a story to work out here, and running away from it will not resolve matters. Very well; we shall act in this play, though no one has seen fit to offer us a script.'

‘That's the spirit! I'm rather enjoying all this, to be honest. We're having fun, and I've met some of your friends and your brother, all of whom seem
absolutely
delicious.' Here she favoured Miss Smith with a smile that left the necromantrix slightly breathless.

Zarenyia turned back to the demons, her smile now a beacon of complaisance. ‘Lead on, my sweets.' They started to do so, but she stopped them. ‘One tiny proviso. Should it transpire that this is all some overture to a tedious trap of one sort or another…' In a movement so rapid it blurred the thick air, she flipped De'eniroth onto his side and trapped one of his multitude of legs in a joint close to the end of her right foreleg. With no discernible effort and ignoring the agonised squeals of the demon, she scissored the limb off. She raised the miserable piece of flesh, speared on the leg's tip. She was not smiling at all now. ‘I shall destroy you both in ways your fetid little minds could not conceive if you were a thousand times cleverer than you are. Which is to say, of roughly average intelligence. Johannes, tell them; do I follow through with my warnings?'

‘She does,' he replied, a witness to one such event.

‘There.' She flung the wiggling limb off into the distance, and she smiled brightly. ‘Now, let's go and see the new boss, shall we?'

*   *   *

As they progressed in the wake of the demons De'eniroth and De'zeel—poor additions to an already displeasing vista—there was a muttered conference between the members of the mismatched little expedition.

‘Awful mess, isn't it?' Zarenyia indicated with a nod a palace that seemed to be in the progress of rotting. Tubules dangled haplessly in the fevered air, and ichor oozed from spiracles running in vague lines along the building—if
building
it truly was, and
growth
if it was not—pooling in lazy grey-green rivulets of filth. ‘That's Beelzebub's place.'

Miss Smith followed the nod. ‘Horrendous.'

Zarenyia cocked her head, considering the architecture. ‘Actually, that's an improvement. But it's still not supposed to look like that. What has happened here? It looks like a battlefield.'

‘You!' said Cabal of the demons. The misshapen lizard looked back over its shoulder. ‘Why are the mansions of the princes in ruins? What has happened in Hell?'

‘Lucifer's doin', ain't it?' rasped De'zeel. ‘When 'e pigged off to take up watercolours or whatever 'e 'ad planned, 'e didn't say 'oo was to take over, did 'e? Only left a constitutional crisis in 'is wake, selfish bugger. Owin' to us not 'avin' a constitution, 'part from the
Abandon 'Ope
thing, and that's more like a advisory.'

‘No succession? What happened then?'

De'zeel pointed at the ruination of Hell. ‘Civil war, innit? “By the sword divided.” In ta lots of lickle bits, often as not.'

‘And, of all the Princes of Hell, Ratuth Slabuth came out on top?' Cabal was having trouble with this idea. ‘Beelzebub, Lilith, Asmodeus, they ended up as also-rans, their mansions and palaces in ruins, and a ridiculous non-entity like Ratuth Slabuth gets the basalt throne?' He shook his head. ‘He wasn't even a prince! The last time I saw him, he was a corporal.'

De'zeel shrugged, an action that made his head bob upon the line of his shoulders like a dead pig in a cesspool. ‘Politics, innit? S'always politics.' It was an analysis both cynical and sadly irrefutable.

BOOK: The Fall of the House of Cabal
13.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Silent Time by Paul Rowe
A Simple Amish Christmas by Vannetta Chapman
Tell My Dad by Ram Muthiah
The Perfect Mistress by Betina Krahn
In the Commodore's Hands by Mary Nichols
Amerika by Lally, Paul
Mojitos with Merry Men by Marianne Mancusi
Mosquitoes of Summer by Julianna Kozma