grimoire - Wikipedia commons
THE IRASCIBLE DEMON
Nik Morton
At the third attempt
he finally mastered the skylight. Wood splintered from the rusted latch and he
raised the creaking frame. Moonlight dimly revealed the attic floor nine feet
below. The room appeared to be empty: Raditz hadn't returned unexpectedly,
then.
Axel Houston crouched, indecisive;
then he was committed, lowering himself over the sill. His angular frame
dangled a moment then he dropped the remaining three feet to the carpeted
floor. A renegade board creaked under his weight. Earlier, on deciding to break
in, he’d felt slightly absurd dressing entirely in black, like a fugitive from
some spy movie; but now, merging into the shadows, he was thankful: the
precaution seemed to give him some measure of reassurance. Breaking and
entering was not new to him, but he was still affected: there was considerable
pleasure in a quickened pulse and heart-beat, all senses acutely alert.
Grey eyes now accustomed to the
dark, he perceived the two walls completely obscured by stacks of dust-draped
books and dockets of senescent papers. A long wide table stood against the
third wall, crammed with large old leather-bound tomes. A human skull - or a
good replica - served as a bizarre paperweight.
Stubs of green-wax candles had overflowed
two black candlesticks. Rashly, Axel lit one, almost burning his stubby fingers
as the wick abruptly flared into hissing yellow-green light. The candles
released a sickly sulphurous odour.
Above the table was a small recessed
window, its lowered blind decorated with arcane symbols. Alongside the door set
in the other wall was a grandfather clock, pendulum soundlessly swaying,
mesmerising.
In the centre of the room were two
chintz-covered armchairs. He stared, suddenly aware that from the skylight he’d
been unable to see whether anyone had been ensconced in either. The wings of
the chair-backs seemed almost predatory, malevolent. He faltered, stepped
forward slowly; his whole body trembled in expectation, anticipating the worst
though incapable of giving his fears form.
A movement of furniture springs sent
his heart hammering.
He involuntarily jumped as a black
cat hissed and leapt to the floor, its pads lightly thudding. Bright yellow
eyes glared, accusing. Axel attempted to calm his pounding heart while the cat
disappeared in the shadows. Both chairs were now empty.
He began to breathe more normally
again and looked around. It seemed that Raditz was more than merely interested
in the occult. Axel hefted a weighty tome: Ashtakhan's Grimoire. He perused the
piles of books, located a row of dictionaries. ‘Grimoire: a work on black magic
detailing how to utilise the services of devils...’ What utter rubbish!
Nevertheless, an uncanny tingling
sensation tiptoed his spine. Suggestion, he told himself; fear of the unknown
or the unexplained. Strong weapons in any sorcerer's armoury. Fear of the
unknown makes people susceptible; they create horrors out of their own minds.
This Grimoire, for instance. It had
opened at an obviously well thumbed section about halfway through. Beautiful
illuminated script, delicately executed. If it was a spell, as he assumed, it
wasn't in any language he could name; indeed, it bore no resemblance to Romance
or its forebear, Latin. He tried rolling the words round his tongue. They had a
distinctive, rather poetic ring, incomprehensible though they were.
He coughed on the candle-smoke,
leafed through again, came across a similar arrangement of characters. He tried
these. Yes, attractive; he could see why some people might learn to hold such
utterances in awe. Rare poetry held similar sway. But as for simple
word-permutations creating some form of life or effect - !
‘You're not impressed, then?’
Axel's heart almost decided to give
up; right now he was sure it had plummeted into his shoes. He pivoted round,
nerves jangling, adrenaline flooding his system. Nobody was in the room: the
door hadn't opened, he was sure. He consulted grandfather - still only 11pm.
Barring a change in pattern, Raditz wouldn't be back till past midnight.
Then - where'd - ?
‘Down here, you numbskull!’
The voice came from –
He looked down between his palms that rested on the Grimoire, and
couldn't move an eyelid, let alone a muscle.
Against all sense or reason, a small
naked man stood between his hands on the Grimoire's slightly smoke-laden pages.
Measuring no more than eight inches tall, he was hairless and covered in green
and rust scales. Aubergine-coloured wings were folded neatly behind his
shoulder blades. A disproportionately large penis dangled, provocatively
twitching as he spoke. His head seemed to sprout two small stumps - embryo
horns?
‘Correct - very percipient... But
enough time wasting twaddle! Why have you summoned me, tell me that?’
Unfortunately, Axel was not able to
tell him anything. He was thinking that his plan to steal esoteric curios had
gone wrong. What kind of power did the old doctor possess? Indeed, what would
he do when he learned that his attic had been broken into, his secrets laid
bare?
‘Your mind seems in a sorry state.
Look, I'm growing impatient, poltroon.’ The little demon screwed up his face to
look even more unprepossessing, and tapped his foot in added emphasis. ‘It's
against my nature to wait, so come on now.’
Lips quivered but Axel couldn't
muster any sound. He paled.
The demon sighed. ‘I've got too much
to do in the infernal regions to bother about folk who don't know what they
want, dullard! Plenty of souls to damn thrice-fold!’
CRACK! went his leathery wings and in an instant he was hovering in front of
Axel's unmoving if sweating face. ‘I must have a death in order to
dematerialise,’ he explained reasonably enough, ‘so you'll have to do.’ And he
proceeded to strangle Axel with an invisible cord and there was nothing Axel
could do about it but lose consciousness.
‘Feeling better, are
you?’ enquired a grave voice.
Head throbbing like too many
hangovers hung-over, Axel tentatively nodded and wished he hadn’t. He elbowed
himself off the table.
Grandfather chimed six. In the morning? The blind was raised and
sunlight beamed onto Raditz seated in his armchair, a benign, almost paternal
smile creasing his lined weathered features. Flecks of grey bordered the
jet-black long hair. Then Axel remembered and shuddered: ‘I - I had this
terrible dream...’
‘What have you got to say about
breaking into my rooms, which is more to the point, don't you think?’
Axel quietened, trying to sort out
fact from dream. He studied his surroundings. There wasn't a trace of occult
paraphernalia at all. And he was still in the attic, the broken skylight
blatant evidence above... ‘I was curious about your rumoured hobby,’ he said.
‘Occult goods're fetching a good price these days. Wizards are popular – all to
do with that Harry Potter, I reckon.’ Gingerly, he planted his feet on the floor,
edged towards the door.
Raditz stood up abruptly. ‘So you
know I’m a wizard?’
‘Well,’ he gestured at the room, ‘it
looks like it.’
‘Oh, dear.’
‘I was curious, that’s all…’
Raditz placed his slightly bent frame in Axel's way. ‘You know what
curiosity did?’ He smiled; but there was no good humour in it.
‘Killed the cat. But I’m not a cat –
or even a cat burglar.’ He laughed at his witticism but Raditz simply studied
him. ‘Look, I’m a good burglar, I never trash my targets’ places. Never. Too
much respect.’ He paused, fingered his chin. ‘They get insurance money and
probably blow it on a holiday or cruise. I’m doing them a favour.’
‘For a thief, you're honest enough, I suppose. Let me go with you as
far as the end of the street.’
‘You're not calling the police?’
Raditz shook his head; that damnable
smile again! ‘You can catch a bus?’
‘How did you know I had no c- ?’
Axel swallowed, nodded, and lowered his gaze from those penetrating eyes.
Suddenly, he didn't want to know anything more about Dr Raditz.
As they emerged onto the deserted
street, Raditz broke the silence. ‘You realise, that wasn't a dream...’
Feet disconcertingly like lead, Axel
stared. ‘The incantation - it worked?’
‘Oh, indubitably. You were lying
quite dead when...’
‘Dead?’
‘Please, don't interrupt - there
isn't much time... your bus will be here soon...’ They walked on. ‘When I found
you dead, obviously strangled, I smelled traces of henbane and aconite and knew
by the spell displayed in the open Grimoire that you'd summoned Ignatius the
irascible demon... I didn't want a corpse on the premises.’ Raditz smiled,
almost apologetically. ‘For obvious reasons... So I called the little devil
back again.’
They stopped by the bus stop.
Axel touched his throat. It was a little tender... But - dead? He felt
all right.
‘Naturally, he was most upset about
being summoned. Doesn't like a recall. My demands really got his ire up.
Ignatius didn't want to bring you back to life; against his religion, he said.
Told me to see the other feller.’ Raditz thumbed at the dull, bruised sky. ‘I
was pretty desperate. I’d settle for anything to get you out of my place -
sorry, but I've my reputation to think of. Eventually, we came to an agreement.
Under the circumstances, I'm happy enough.’
‘You mean - that little demon - he
actually brought me back to life? Just like that?’
‘Ah, here's the bus! Yes, that's it
- just like that.’
The bus pulled up; it seemed brimful
with workmen, standing room only. Axel stood on the pay-as-you-enter steps,
fishing out change. ‘I can hardly credit it, doctor - but, well, thanks for -
for putting things right.’ He pocketed his ticket as the vehicle moved off.
Raditz called after him, ‘Trouble
was, Ignatius only settled for a short while...’
A few hundred yards down the road
Raditz's words finally penetrated.
Axel's fingers tightened on the
hand-grip; he broke out into a cold sweat, craned his neck and saw the doctor
at the roadside shrugging his shoulders: ‘Sorry,’ he seemed to be implying.
Axel's hand went to his chest, it felt constricted, breathing difficult. Yellow
dots spun before his eyes. Sudden massive and excruciating pain creased his
features as the iron band tightened over his chest. ‘My heart!’ he cried and
died.
***
Previously published in Peeping Tom, 1990
Copyright, 2014
If you enjoyed this
story, you might like Spanish Eye,
my
short story collection featuring Leon Cazador, private eye in 22 cases
published
by Crooked Cat Publishing.
US: http://amazon.com/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Canada: http://amazon.ca/dp/B00GXK5C6S
UK: http://amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GXK5C6S
France: http://amazon.fr/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Germany: http://amazon.de/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Austria: http://amazon.at/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Italy: http://amazon.it/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Spain: http://amazon.es/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Japan: http://amazon.jp/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Canada: http://amazon.ca/dp/B00GXK5C6S
UK: http://amazon.co.uk/dp/B00GXK5C6S
France: http://amazon.fr/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Germany: http://amazon.de/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Austria: http://amazon.at/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Italy: http://amazon.it/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Spain: http://amazon.es/dp/B00GXK5C6S
Japan: http://amazon.jp/dp/B00GXK5C6S
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