Read The Wrath of Angels Online
Authors: John Connolly
Still the boy screamed, and suddenly Grady was screaming too, his voice joining with that of the boy, and her brother’s bisected lips burst with the effort, and the sound of pain was added to his fright, for Grady’s had been a cry of fear at first.
The mirror: the wasps were pouring out of the mirror. It had ceased to be a reflective surface, or so it appeared to Marielle, and had instead been transformed into a framed hole in the wall. The dying wasps, once trapped behind it, were now free.
But that was a supporting wall. It was solid concrete, not hollow, and the mirror was just a mirror. Nothing could pass through it. It was simply glass.
She felt a wasp land on her cheek and begin crawling toward her eye. She shook her head and blew at it. It buzzed away angrily, then returned. Its stinger brushed her skin, and she prepared for the pain, but it did not come. The wasp departed, and the others went with it, the little swarm returning to the mirror where they buzzed and roiled in a circular motion, forming a cloud that took on the dimensions of a head with two dark waspless holes for eyes, and another larger slit for a mouth, a face of wasps that stared out at them from the mirror, and its rage was the wasps’ rage, and it vented its fury through them.
The wasp mouth moved, forming words that Marielle could not hear, and the boy’s screams ceased. Darina clasped him to her, the back of his head against her breasts, and he shuddered in her embrace.
Grady, too, stopped screaming. The only sound in the room was the boy’s sobbing breaths, and the buzzing from the mirror.
Darina kissed the top of the boy’s head, and laid her cheek on his pale scalp. Her eyes found Marielle staring at her, and Marielle could see that Darina was both smiling and crying.
‘He remembers,’ said Darina. ‘He’s back now. He’s mine again. My Brightwell. But you shouldn’t have lied. You shouldn’t have told us lies.’
The boy stepped away from her. He wiped his eyes, and walked to the mirror. He stood before the face of wasps, and he spoke to it in a language that Marielle did not recognize, and it spoke back to him. He stayed that way until the buzzing stopped, and one by one the wasps began to fall to the floor where they crawled sluggishly for a time before dying, leaving only the boy staring at his own reflection.
Grady Vetters had curled in upon himself. He was weeping and shaking, and Marielle knew that something had snapped inside him. When she called his name he did not look at her, and his eyes were those of a stranger.
‘He has so many forms,’ said Darina to Marielle, ‘so many names.’ She was pointing to the mirror. ‘He Who Waits Behind The Glass, The Upside-Down Man, The God of Wasps . . .’
The boy found a sheet of paper in his bag. On one side was a drawing of a truck, but the other side was blank. He began to write on it with a crayon. When he was done, he handed the sheet of paper to Darina, and she read what was written there before folding the page and placing it in her pocket. She then spoke one word:
‘Parker.’
The boy advanced on Marielle, and the sense of an old mind trapped in a younger body was stronger than ever. His lamprey mouth opened, and a pale tongue flicked at his lips. Darina laid a hand upon his shoulder, and he stopped, his face inches from Marielle’s.
‘No,’ she said.
The boy looked up at her questioningly. He tried to say something, but the words just came out as a pair of harsh croaks, like the cawings of a young crow.
‘We promised,’ said Darina. ‘
I
promised.’
The boy stepped away from her. He went to the table and began packing his tools in his child’s bag. It was time to leave.
Darina stood over Marielle.
‘You lied to me,’ she said. ‘You should have told me about the detective. I could declare our bargain void, and kill you for it.’
Marielle waited. Nothing she could say would make any difference now.
‘But perhaps because of your lie something special has been restored to us. Do you know what your detective once did?’
‘No.’
‘He killed the being that you see here.’ She pointed at the boy. ‘He stilled his great spirit for a time.’
‘I don’t understand,’ said Marielle.
‘No, but Parker will when we confront him. I promised that I would let you and your brother live, and I’ll keep my word. We always keep our word.’
The boy went searching in his bag again, and came out with his metal case of syringes. He filled one from a small glass bottle of clear liquid that Marielle had not seen before.
‘No more, please,’ said Marielle.
‘This is different,’ said Darina. ‘But don’t worry: it won’t hurt.’
Marielle watched as the boy injected Grady for the last time. Her brother did not react to the needle, or to the boy’s presence. His gaze was directed inward, but within seconds his eyes had closed, and his chin fell upon his chest. The boy refilled the syringe from the glass bottle. When he was done, the vessel was empty. He dropped it in his bag, and approached Marielle.
‘It’s Actrapid,’ said Darina. ‘Injectable insulin.’
Marielle made her move. Her knees were still drawn up to her chest, her feet flat on the couch. She launched herself at Darina, but the woman was too fast, and Marielle caught her only a glancing blow before she landed hard on the floor, and then the boy was on top of her, the needle was biting, and the world was filling with shadows.
‘You’ll sleep,’ she heard Darina say. ‘You’ll sleep for a very long time.’
The massive dose flooded Marielle’s system, and her mind began to descend into coma.
E
ldritch woke in a hospital bed and thought, I have dreamed this dream before: a bed; a small, clean room; the pinging of a machine nearby; the sharp chemical odor of antiseptic and, beneath it, all that it was meant to hide; and the clawed fingers pulled at him, trying to keep him forever in the darkness. He lifted his arm and felt a tug as the intravenous drip caught on the sheet. He reached for it, and a hand closed gently but firmly upon his arm.
‘No, let me,’ said the voice, and he smelled that familiar scent of fire and nicotine, and he knew that his son had come to him; not the Collector but his son, for the Collector was never so gentle. His voice sounded slightly muffled: Eldritch’s hearing had been damaged in the blast.
‘I dreamed,’ said Eldritch. ‘I dreamed that she was gone, and then I dreamed that it was but a dream.’
His face hurt. He touched his fingers to it and explored the dressings on the worst of his wounds.
‘I’m sorry,’ said his son. ‘I know what she meant to you.’
Eldritch looked to his left. They had brought his possessions from the scene: his wallet, his keys, his watch. Little things.
But the woman was gone.
‘What do you remember?’ asked his son.
‘The power. We lost power: twice, I think. I went down to the basement, but I could see nothing wrong.’
‘And after that?’
‘A man. He passed me on the street, and I was concerned, but then he walked on, and I let him go. Seconds before it happened, I thought that he called to me. I think he was trying to warn me of something, but then there was an explosion, and I did not see him again.’
‘Do you recall anything about him?’
‘He was in his late forties or early fifties, I think. Unshaven, but not bearded. Perhaps six feet tall. Carrying some weight.’
‘In which direction did he walk?’
‘South.’
‘South. On the far side of the street?’
‘Yes.’
‘Did you tell the police this?’
‘No. I don’t think I have spoken to anyone until now. I held her in my arms, but she was gone, and I don’t remember anything else.’
‘The police will want to talk with you. Don’t mention the man to them.’
‘No.’
The son took a cloth and wiped his father’s brow, cooling it while avoiding the wounds.
‘How badly am I hurt?’ asked Eldritch.
‘Cuts and bruises, for the most part. Some concussion. They want to keep you under observation for a few days, though. They’re concerned.’
‘I have trouble hearing. Your voice, my voice, they don’t sound right to me.’
‘I’ll tell the doctors.’
Eldritch twisted on the bed. There was a pain in his groin. He looked beneath the sheet, saw the catheter, and groaned.
‘I know,’ said his son.
‘It hurts.’
‘I’ll tell them about that as well.’
‘My mouth is dry.’
His son took a plastic beaker of water from the bedside locker and held his father’s head while he drank. The old man’s skull felt fragile in his hand, like an egg that could be broken with just a tensing of the fingers. It was a miracle that he had survived. Minutes earlier, and he would have been gone too.
‘I’ll come back later,’ said the son. ‘Do you need anything?’
Now it was his father’s hand that gripped his arm, and his upper body rose from the bed. So strong, this old man . . .
‘Parker came. Parker came, and she died. She was getting his file, and then she died.’ Eldritch was tiring now, and tears of grief squeezed themselves from the corners of his eyes. ‘He warned me, warned you, to back off. He was afraid of the list. He knew that his name was on it.’
‘I had doubts. So did you. The woman, Phipps, she told me something—’
But his father was no longer listening.
‘The list,’ he whispered. ‘The list.’
‘I still have it,’ said his son, and in the soft dawn light filtering through the drapes he was altering in spirit and form, and he was both son and other. ‘And I know where I can find the rest of it.’
‘Kill them,’ said Eldritch, as he fell back on the bed. ‘Kill them all.’
He closed his eyes as his son’s transformation was completed, and it was the Collector who left the room.
Jeff and Rachel came to pick up Sam shortly after nine a.m. She had been with Angel and Louis in the kitchen since before eight, buttering toast and scrambling eggs, and as a result I had to make her change her sweater before her mother saw her and blew a gasket.
Jeff was driving a Jaguar now. From my office window, Angel and Louis watched him pull up outside, step from the car, and take in the view of the Scarborough marshes with the winter sun shining coldly upon them while Rachel walked to the front door.
‘He acts like he owns them,’ said Angel.
‘Or he made them himself,’ said Louis.
‘Transference,’ I said. ‘You know I don’t like him, so you don’t like him either.’
‘No, I just don’t like him,’ said Angel.
‘He got so much money, why’s he driving a Jaguar?’ asked Louis. ‘Jaguar depreciates faster than dollars from Zimbabwe.’
‘He drives it because he
has
so much money,’ said Angel. ‘How old is he?’
‘Old,’ said Louis.
‘Very old,’ said I.
‘Ancient,’ said Angel. ‘It’s a wonder the man can stand without a stick.’
The front door opened, and Rachel stepped into the hall and called ‘Hello!’
‘We’re in here,’ I said.
She came into the office and raised an eyebrow at the sight of the three of us standing there.
‘The welcoming committee?’
‘Just taking in the view,’ said Louis.
She saw where we were looking, and at whom.
‘Ha-ha,’ she said.
‘He’s younger than I expected,’ said Angel.
‘Really?’
‘No. He’s real old.’
Rachel scowled at Angel.
‘You keep saying things like that and you won’t live to be his age.’
‘I don’t want to live to be his age,’ said Angel. ‘He’s, like, Methuselah in pastels. Who dresses like that anyway?’
Rachel, to her credit, seemed determined to fight Jeff’s corner.
‘He’s playing golf later,’ she said.
‘Golf?’ said Louis. It might have been possible to inject more contempt into four letters and one syllable, but I couldn’t see how.
‘Yeah, golf,’ said Rachel. ‘Regular people play it. It’s a sport.’
‘Golf’s a sport?’
He looked at Angel. Angel shrugged. ‘Maybe we didn’t get the memo.’
‘You guys are jerks, you know that?’ said Rachel. ‘Where’s my daughter? I need to get her away from here before she contracts jerkdom.’
‘Too late,’ said Louis. ‘She got her father’s genes.’
‘You guys
are
jerks, you know,’ I told him, as I followed Rachel.
‘The cool kids are being mean to us,’ Louis said to Angel.
‘It’s homophobia,’ said Angel. ‘We ought to complain, or write a show tune about it.’
I left them to it.
‘Hey,’ called Angel to my back, ‘does that mean we can’t go to the prom?’
In the hallway, Rachel was helping Sam with her bag.
‘What happened to your nice new sweater?’ asked Rachel, noting that Sam was wearing the old one with holes that I kept in the house for her to use when we worked in the garden.
‘It got eggded,’ said Sam.
‘That figures,’ said Rachel. ‘Did mean Uncle Louis and Uncle Angel throw them at you and call you names?’ She glowered at me.
‘I didn’t put them up to it,’ I said. ‘They can be mean without my help.’
‘Uncle Angel said a bad word,’ said Sam. ‘The one beginning with “f”.’
There was a cry of shock from my office. ‘You promised she wouldn’t tell!’
‘That doesn’t surprise me in the least,’ said Rachel. She raised her voice and directed it to the office. ‘But I’m very disappointed in Uncle Angel.’
‘Sorry.’
Rachel checked that Sam had both socks on, that her underwear was the right way round, and she had her toothbrush and her dolls.
‘Okay, say goodbye to your daddy, and then go to the car,’ she told Sam.
Sam hugged me, and I held her tight. ‘Bye, Daddy.’
‘Bye, honey. I’ll see you soon, okay? I love you.’
‘I love you too.’
She pulled away, and I felt my heart break a little. ‘Bye, Uncle Angel who said a bad word,’ she called.
‘Bye,’ said an embarrassed voice.
‘Bye, Uncle Louis who promised to shoot that man.’
There was a long, awkward pause before Louis said ‘Bye,’ and Sam trotted out the door.
Rachel gave me the hard eye. ‘What?’
‘It was a misunderstanding,’ I said. ‘He wouldn’t really have shot him.’