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The
Nimble Man
By Christopher Golden & Thomas E. Sniegoski
Within the silent halls of the Boston Antiquities Museum
the shadows were in motion. Red alarm sensors shone brightly
but recorded nothing out of the ordinary. Only the nearly
somnambulant passing of security guards disturbed the dust
that eddied up on currents of air. Hidden cameras revealed
only exhibits and artifacts in otherwise empty rooms.
Yet there was one room that was not empty.
The exhibit was Egyptian, devoted almost wholly to the Twelfth
Dynasty. Though its collection of stone fragments, papyrus,
masks, and sarcophagi might impress schoolchildren, to those
educated in the area of antiquities the exhibit would have
been wholly unremarkable. Or nearly so. Those who noticed
anything at all out of place would likely have attributed
it to simple human error, a curator who had made an honest
mistake.
In one corner of the room Mr. Doyle thoughtfully stroked his
thick mustache and admired a small sphinx. The piece had been
unearthed at Katna millennia before and bore the name of a
daughter of Ammenemes II, but the curators of the museum had
badly mislabeled it. He shook his head and his heavy gray
brows knitted with disapproval. If he had them there he would
have given them a tongue-lashing for being so careless. Of
course, on this night their carelessness had worked in his
favor.
The moment he tore his attention away from the priceless sphinx,
Doyle caught sight of the object that had drawn him here.
With a grunt of satisfaction he crossed the room to a marble
pedestal and peered through the thick glass enclosure atop
it at the artifact inside. It was a crystal spider set inside
a gold frame, perhaps five inches in length and four at the
widest legspan. A small placard rested atop the enclosure.
Crystal Spider, circa 1995 B.C., discovered at Lisht, believed
to have been a gift to the illegitimate pharaoh Nebtawyre
Menthotope III during the "seven kingless years"
preceding the Twelfth Dynasty.
"Well, well. Hello my little friend," Mr. Doyle
rasped, standing a bit straighter and smoothing his greatcoat
as though he was in the presence of respectable company. Which
was not at all the case.
"So?" came a voice from a shadowy corner of the
exhibit. "How did I do?"
He glanced in the direction of that voice. There was a large,
ornate sarcophagus on display, and beside it several lighted
glass enclosures that contained burial jars apparently associated
with whomever had been put to rest within the sarcophagus.
Eve stepped from amidst this tableau of death with grace and
nonchalance, the same way she would walk into a bar or step
onto a subway train. She wore crisply new blue jeans and a
tight green turtleneck beneath a stylishly long brown suede
coat. With her silken black hair and exotic features she was
beautiful in a way only cruel things are. A tragedy, to be
sure, for though Eve could be cruel she had so many other
facets, so many better qualities.
They were old friends, these two, but it had been quite some
time since they had seen one another. Doyle understood. He
was just as guilty as Eve of letting their acquaintance grow
fallow. With lives as busy-and as long-as they both led, the
years could go by with the deceptive speed of clouds in the
sky. When each one was so much like the last, it was easy
to lose count.
As always, they were becoming reacquainted in a time of crisis.
It was the nature of their friendship. He had contacted Eve
for assistance and her efforts had produced results in less
than a day. He had located her on the island of Mykonos. Fourteen
hours later she had knocked on the door of his sprawling townhouse
on Beacon Hill with the news that led them here.
Doyle smiled indulgently at her, as he would have at a daughter
of whom he was particularly proud. "How did you do? Remarkably
well, Eve. I've inquired all over the world in search of a
Lemurian Spider." He turned his focus back upon his prize.
"Bangladesh, Cyprus, Istanbul, Minsk. I confess to feeling
more than a little foolish that you located one right here
beneath my nose. And so quickly. How did you manage it?"
Eve strode across the room to join him, leather heels scuffing
the floor. "We all have our specialties, Doyle. For instance,
how did you get us in here without setting off any alarms?
Without the guards noticing?"
A rare tremor of amusement passed through him. There had been
so little humor or camaraderie in his life of late. Too many
times in the past he had been betrayed by colleagues and friends,
so that he had come to count on his enemies as far more reliable.
Eve was one exception. There were others, but he had not seen
most of them for a very, very long time.
With a mischievous smile he touched the enclosure around the
spider and whispered a minor incantation. The glass turned
to damp mist that fogged the air around their heads and warped
the thin beam of red light that should have triggered an alarm
the moment the enclosure had been removed. It did not. When
the mist had dissipated, Mr. Doyle picked up the crystal spider
and examined it more closely.
"As you say," he mused, "we all have our specialities."
Eve allowed herself an appreciative nod and then began to
stride impatiently around the exhibit hall. It was typical
of her.
"Relax, Eve. We're not leaving just yet." He shot
her an admonishing glance. "If the whispers Dr. Graves
has been hearing are correct, we don't have time for certain
niceties. I'm not going to be able to take my new toy home
to play with it."
He began to pry the crystal spider out of its golden frame.
"Hold on," Eve protested, hurrying to his side with
a rasp of suede and denim. "Do you have to do that? You
know how much I love the sparkly things. The spider would
look nice on my mantel next to that Buddha with the clock
in his belly."
He ignored her. It had grown warm in the museum in spite of
the cool air blowing out of the vents, but Mr. Doyle had been
a magician long enough to know the heat had nothing to do
with the actual temperature. His face felt flush and the gold
softened in his fingers, peeling away like hot wax.
"Fine," Eve sighed. "This thing wasn't easy
to find. Just doesn't seem right to ruin it. How many bits
and pieces of flea market junk do you think survived from
Lemuria?"
Doyle sniffed in contempt. "More than you realize. I
doubt there's a major museum in the world that doesn't have
at least one Lemurian piece misclassified as Egyptian or Greek
or Etruscan, even Japanese. It's one of the great failings
of the human mind. One of our primary irrationalities. We
see the improbable and call it impossible, and would rather
accept convenient untruths than seek out unpopular solutions."
"Do you have to be such an elitist asshole about everything?"
The man flinched and, crystal spider in his hands, turned
to glare at her. They were allies and sometimes friends and
he was fond of Eve, but there were times when her behavior
puzzled him. Other times it reminded him that though he had
put a great deal of distance between himself and the odd primness
of the era of his birth, he had not entirely escaped it.
"No," he replied at last, "just about some
things. And most certainly about history and archaeology.
I would think you of all people would understand."
Her eyes narrowed and a hint of fury glimmered in them a moment,
and then passed. She sighed. "You are the most aggravating
man."
Mr. Doyle cleared his throat, back rigid, and nodded once.
"Yes. I believe I am." Then he bent to his task
once more. The job was nearly done and it took him only another
minute or so before he had removed the gold entirely from
the elegantly designed crystal spider. It was a marvel from
an age far more distant than anyone would have guessed.
"So are you going to tell me how this is going to help
us find your dead sorcerer friend?"
The edges of Doyle's mouth tugged upward, his mustache twitching
in the smallest of smiles. He stared at the Lemurian Spider
in his hand, felt its edges sharp against the callused flesh
of his palm.
"Our quarry is not precisely dead, lovely Eve. And this?
With the proper incantations, it will weave us an answer."
Eve arched an eyebrow. "What the hell does that mean?"
He felt the words rising from deep within his chest, as though
they had been born not of his mind but of his heart. When
he spoke them his voice was higher and lilting, the way he
had sung the melodies his mother had taught him as a boy in
Edinburgh.
"Atti mannu kashshaptu sha tuyub ta enni."
Mr. Doyle turned from her, raised the spider, and hurled it
with all his might at the wall. Eve shouted and lunged to
stop him but for all her uncanny speed she was too late. Her
eyes were wide and her gaze ticked toward the wall. It was
clear she expected the spider to shatter.
Instead, it stuck to the wall.
For several long moments nothing happened. The only sounds
in the room was the hum of electricity in the walls and the
shush of the air filtration system, and Doyle's own breathing.
The illumination cast by the display lighting in the otherwise
darkened room only lent to the gathering and shifting of shadows
in every corner and they seemed to darken, to cluster more
closely, as Doyle and Eve stared at the crystal spider.
"All right," Eve said, "what the hell is-"
She never finished the sentence.
With a grating, clicking sound, the spider began to move.
Its legs scratched at the wall as it crept upward and Mr.
Doyle narrowed his gaze, peering more closely until he could
make out the thin strand of crystalline webbing it was leaving
behind.
Eve slid her hands into her pockets and gave her hair an insouciant
toss. "You know, with all I've seen-which is pretty much
everything-you'd think I couldn't be surprised any more. What
is it doing?"
"Watch," he chided her.
And so they stood in silence in the midst of the Egyptian
exhibit and watched as the spider spun its crystal web, clicking
up the wall and then to the left, moving back down to diagonally
cross its original line. Soon enough a pattern began to take
form.
"It's a map," Eve said. She stepped closer and looked
up, head tilted back as she studied the circumference of the
web pattern and the shape it had taken, the grid that was
forming along the length of it and the large open rectangle
in the center.
Brows knitted, Eve turned to stare at Doyle. "It's a
map of Manhattan."
The spider paused for several long seconds at a spot upon
its web that corresponded to where Greenwich Village would
have been on the map. When it at last moved on, it had left
something behind. Amidst that crystalline web, at one particular
junction of gleaming thread, a tiny crystal stood out from
the pattern of the map.
A chill passed through Mr. Doyle like ice sliding down his
back and he stared at the map. Slowly he nodded. He had wondered
for so long what had happened to the Mage, what had become
of Lorenzo Sanguedolce, that it seemed unreal to him, looking
at that crystal and knowing that it symbolized an end to his
search.
He nodded gruffly and glanced at Eve. "All right, then.
To New York."
Shortly before dawn, with heavy storm clouds aiding the night
in its quest to keep morning at bay, the limousine swept through
midtown Manhattan. Its tires shushed through pools of rainwater
and the windshield wipers hissed as they beat their hypnotic
rhythm upon the glass. New York had its reputation as the
city that never slept, but on that Sunday morning it seemed,
at least, to be dozing. The limousine was not the only vehicle
about-they passed several taxis and police cars and a handful
of automobiles whose drivers were likely about on business
of questionable intent-but the streets were lonely nevertheless.
With the storm hanging so low over the city and the rain driving
down upon the limousine, the city seemed very inhospitable
indeed.
In the back of the limo, Eve rested her head against the tinted
window and gazed up at the cityscape that unfolded with each
block. Twenty four hour neon storefronts, digital billboards,
and the glass and steel faces of thousands of corporations.
In her life she had seen the rise and fall of cities more
glorious than this one, and yet there was something about
New York-with its old-fashioned personality and its vast ambition
for the future-that she admired.
Her long legs were stretched out and she had slid down in
the seat. From time to time her mind drifted so that she was
in a sort of trance state in which ghosts of the past haunted
her memory, but she did not sleep. Eve never slept during
the night.
In the driver's seat, Squire yawned, revealing teeth as jagged
and numerous as a shark's. The gnarled, ugly little man glanced
into the rearview mirror and saw her watching him. His grin
was hideous.
"Hey, babe. Good morning. You were zoning out back there
so I didn't want to interrupt."
Eve stretched languidly against the leather upholstery, aware
of the goblin's hungry eyes but unconcerned. She twisted her
neck, muscles popping. Across from her, behind the driver's
seat, Doyle slept in a sitting position with his hands clasped,
corpselike, over his chest. He snored lightly, head bobbing
from time to time.
She glanced at the driver again. "Usually you can't keep
your mouth shut, Squire. I appreciate it."
"My pleasure," he said.
The goblin returned his attention to the road. They had passed
through Times Square and were now rolling south on Seventh
Avenue. Squire was a cautious driver. Doyle had paid to have
the limo customized so that Squire could see through the windshield
and still reach the accelerator and brake, mainly because
the goblin liked to drive. Of all the services the creature
performed for his employer, chauffeuring was the one at which
he had the least amount of skill. Eve would not deny that
Squire had his uses, but there were times when they were outweighed
by his more annoying attributes.
"So, what's this about, babe?" the goblin asked,
casting a quick glance over his shoulder, his gnarled features
silhouetted by the greenish light from the limo's dashboard.
"I mean, I need my beauty sleep and the boss rousted
me without telling me much. What's the hurry?"
Eve closed her eyes and sighed. "If I explain it to you,
will you stop calling me 'babe?'"
"I can try."
She nodded, opening her eyes and sitting up straighter in
her seat. Her black hair fell in a tumble across her face
and she swept it back again. "That's good. Doyle would
be unhappy if I ripped your throat out."
The rain pelted the limousine's roof and sluiced down the
windows. The engine purred and Squire kept both hands on the
wheel as they slid through another intersection. Once again
he caught her eye in the rearview mirror.
"Don't be that way, darlin'. I don't mean anything by
it. And I'd have to be blind not to notice what a looker you
are."
Eve's upper lip curled back in a hiss that revealed her fangs.
"That could be arranged."
"Okay, okay," Squire protested, shrugging. "Just
making conversation. You don't wanna talk, we won't talk."
Eve turned her gaze out the window again as they passed closed
shops and newsstands with their metal rolling doors locked
down tight. A tall, thin man in a hooded rain slicker hunched
over as he walked his dog, the little beast leading him along
by its leash, creating confusion as to which of them was the
pet. Given the hour, Eve was tempted to believe the dog was
in charge.
"I know very little," she began, still peering out
into the rain.
"That's more than I know," Squire noted. He fished
around the front seat and then held up a pack of cigarettes
in triumph. The limo slowed as he tapped one out and used
his lips to draw it from the pack.
"I've forgotten more than you'll ever know," Eve
said, and her voice sounded hollow even to her, tinged with
a melancholy she rarely allowed in herself. It was the rain.
The damned rain. For some reason it always put her in mind
of a simpler time, long ago.
Squire either missed her tone or ignored it entirely. "All
right, you know so much, then spill it." The goblin pushed
in the dashboard lighter, the unlit cigarette rolling like
a toothpick between his lips.
"You're not going to smoke in here," she said.
His wiry eyebrows went up and he glanced at her in the mirror.
"I'm not? No, I guess I'm not."
Eve glanced over at Doyle. He grumbled in his sleep now, brow
knitted in consternation. She was not surprised. He was not
the sort of man she would ever expect to have sweet dreams.
"It's pretty simple, actually. You know the story of
Lorenzo Sanguedolce?"
"Sure. Sweetblood. That's what all the arcane books call
him. Sweetblood the Mage."
Eve nodded once. She had expected Squire to know the story.
Anyone even tangentially involved with the magical community
would have. Tales of Sanguedolce could be traced back as early
as the eleventh century and though he seemed to have changed
his name several times the stories about him cropped up in
journals from a dozen countries over the course of hundreds
of years. He was called Sweetblood, but it was unclear whether
this was a literal translation of his Italian surname, or
if the surname was simply another variation on that descriptive
appellation.
By all accounts Sanguedolce had been the most powerful sorcerer
who had ever lived. Yet early in the twentieth century, he
had simply disappeared. None of the dark powers in the world
had laid claim to having destroyed him and though there were
rumors and whispers, no mage was ever proven to have knowledge
of his whereabouts, or his possible demise.
"You know your boss has been looking for the mage for
a very long time?" Eve asked.
Squire chuckled without humor. "That's an understatement.
Never thought it was a great idea, myself. You know what they
say about searching for Sweetblood."
"We may have found him."
The goblin jerked the steering wheel so hard to the right
as he spun to stare at Eve that he nearly plowed the limousine
into a squat blue mailbox on the sidewalk. In a panic, Squire
hit the brakes and got the limo's nose headed in the right
direction again.
Eve watched him in the mirror. Several times the annoying
little creature opened his mouth and closed it again, as though
for the first time in his life he had no clever or boorish
remark to make. She knew it would pass, though. With Squire,
it always did.
"Hell," the goblin said, the word coming out in
a harsh grunt. "All the stories say . . .
ah, hell, Eve, all the stories say that would be a bad idea."
Squire kept his hands on the wheel and his eyes on the road.
A taxi cut in front of the limousine despite that there were
only a handful of cars on Seventh Avenue. Ahead a light turned
red and the goblin began to slow the limo.
"True."
The word came from Doyle. Eve glanced over at him and saw
that his eyes were red and his face somewhat flushed. He had
not slept nearly enough, but that was not unusual. Magic had
suspended the aging process in him, had even partially reversed
it, but there was no escaping that the man was still human.
An alchemist and magician, a brilliant writer and scholar,
a believer in both the goodness of the world and the darkness
that tainted it. Mr. Doyle was among the most powerful magicians
on Earth, but he was also just a man. Human.
Eve envied him that. She could not even remember what it meant
to be human.
"Boss, you're awake," Squire said, turning to glance
back at Doyle now that he was stopped at the red light.
Tiredly, Mr. Doyle smoothed his jacket and ran his fingers
through his silver hair to straighten it. "And you, my
small friend, have a gift for stating the obvious."
"What can I say?" Squire muttered happily. "I'm
blessed."
The light turned green but Squire was careful to look in both
directions before the limousine picked up speed again. Behind
him, his employer tugged out a pocket watch and clicked it
open. He checked the time and then slid the watch back into
his vest pocket.
Doyle cleared his throat and glanced at Eve, then turned his
attention to Squire again.
"The warnings about what would happen to anyone who searched
for Sweetblood are dire," the magician absently admitted
as he began searching the inner pockets of his jacket for
something. "But I suspect they were spread by Lorenzo
himself in an effort to dissuade the curious."
Eve stared at him. "And if you're wrong?"
Doyle raised an eyebrow and stared at her, his eyes as silver
as his hair. "If I'm wrong, then we handle it."
"That's your plan?" Squire asked. "That's not
much of a plan."
"There isn't time for subtlety," Doyle replied.
"My search has always been a casual one, rarely the focus
of my efforts. But Dr. Graves has word that someone-someone
with malevolent intentions-has indeed located Sweetblood."
"And we need to get to him first," Squire said,
nodding to himself as he turned the limousine down a side
street, the rear tire bumping up over the curb.
"Precisely."
The goblin turned south again at the next corner and soon
enough the city was changing around them. The skyscrapers
had given way to brownstones and rowhouses and there were
trees growing up out of the sidewalk. They passed a park that
seemed remarkably free of litter and graffiti.
"All right," Squire said. "I get it. But I
was still half asleep when you got me out of bed to drive
you, so there's still one thing I'm not understanding."
"Only one?" Eve taunted.
Doyle frowned at her. "What's that, Squire?"
"Where do the glass spiders come in? You said something
about glass spiders, didn't you? Or was that in my dream?"
Before the dapper magician could answer, Eve spied their destination,
the address plainly exhibited on the front door of the brownstone.
The sky had begun to lighten but the drenching rain and the
heavy cloud cover would shield her from the sun.
"Stop here. This is it."
The goblin pulled the limo to the curb. Doyle leaned across
the back seat to peer through Eve's rain-streaked window,
eyebrows raised. Then he popped his own door open and slipped
out. Eve stripped off her suede coat, folded it and left it
on the seat, then followed suit. The rain began to dampen
her hair immediately, streaming like tears upon her cheeks.
Thunder rolled across the sky, echoing off the faces of the
buildings. Lightning blinked and flickered up inside the clouds
as though behind that veil the gods were at war.
Doyle slammed his door without another word to Squire. His
gaze was locked upon the brownstone and he stared up at its
darkened windows as he strode around the limousine to join
Eve on the sidewalk.
Her nostrils flared and she sniffed at the air. "Does
this seem too easy to you?"
"I'm not certain that's a word I would choose,"
Doyle replied, wiping rain from his eyes.
Eve pushed her hair back from her face and rapped on the limo's
passenger window. When Squire rolled it down she bent to peer
in at him. The goblin's eyes went to her chest, where the
tight cotton of her turtleneck stretched across her breasts.
"Up here, you little shit."
A dreamy smile spread across his features. "Sorry. What
can I do for you?"
"Open the trunk."
He reached for the release and there was a small pop, then
the trunk lid rose. The sound of the rain pelting the metal
altered at this new angle. Eve went to the rear of the limo
and reached into the trunk to retrieve a parcel wrapped in
soft leather. She unfolded the leather and folded her fingers
around the stock of the sawed-off shotgun, and she smiled
as she dropped the leather wrap into the trunk and slammed
it shut.
Turning to Doyle she cocked the shotgun. "Too easy."
"Perhaps," he replied. Then he nodded toward the
brick steps in front of the brownstone. "Would you like
to get the door?"
Eve strode purposefully up the short walkway, not even bothering
to check the windows of the surrounding homes for prying eyes.
That sort of thing was Doyle's problem, and he dealt with
it often enough. She went up the four steps and paused on
the landing, then shot a kick at the front door. The blow
cracked it in half and tore it from its hinges. The bottom
part of the door flew across the building's foyer and shattered
the legs of a small table, the top half swung like a guillotine
from the security chain that still connected it to the door
frame.
With preternatural swiftness she darted inside the brownstone,
swinging the gaping double barrels of the shotgun around as
she scanned the parlor on her left, and then the formal living
room on her right. Nothing moved. Nothing breathed.
Doyle stepped in behind her. Eve glanced at him and saw the
corona of pale blue light that encircled his eyes, the aura
of that same glow surrounding his fingers. The illusion of
the kindly, aging gentleman had disappeared. This was the
magician. This was who Doyle was.
"Anything?" he asked.
Eve's eyelids fluttered as she inhaled. She glanced at the
stairs that led up into darkness. "Nothing that way."
Then she narrowed her eyes as she stared into the shadowed
corridor that led toward the back of the brownstone. "But
that way . . . "
"Magic. Yes. I feel it."
Doyle went past her, heedless of any danger. The blue light
around his fingers and leaking from his eyes grew brighter
and he was a beacon in the darkened corridor. Eve tried to
make sense of the layout of the place in her head. Living
room and parlor in front. Probably a back staircase somewhere,
a pantry, big kitchen, and the sort of sprawling dining room
that had been popular in the first half of the twentieth century.
There were framed photographs on the walls that had obviously
hung there for decades and wallpaper that had gone out of
style before John F. Kennedy was President. Yet there was
no dust. No cobwebs. No sign that time had continued to pass
within that home while it went by on the outside.
The corridor ended at a door that was likely either a closet
or bathroom, but there were rooms to either side, elegant
woodwork framing their entrances. Doyle did not even glance
to his left, but turned into the room on the right. Eve was
right behind him and nearly jammed the shotgun into his spine
when he came to a sudden stop.
She moved up beside him, staring into the dining room.
Six figures sat in a circle around the elegant dining room
table, all of them clasping hands as if joining in prayer-or
a séance. There were candlesticks on the table and
several on a sideboard; Doyle waved his hand and each of the
wicks flickered to life, those tiny flames illuminating the
room. Perhaps the old magician needed the light to see by,
but Eve did not. She saw better in the dark.
Of the six, five were very clearly dead, and had been so for
a very long time. Though their skeletal fingers were still
clasped they were withered, eyes sunken to dark sockets, only
wisps of hair left upon their heads. In many places all that
remained of their flesh was tattered bits clinging to bone,
like parchment paper. Eve peered more closely. She had not
smelled death in this place and so she wondered if it was
some sort of illusion. But no. There was an earthy, rot odor
that lingered in the air. It was simply that, like dust and
other sediment of time, the stink of putrefying flesh seemed
to have been suspended somehow.
The five withered corpses were of indeterminate age and race
but at least one of them had been female. And then there was
the sixth member of this chain, a woman in a blue dress, her
brown hair up in a tight bun, with small-framed glasses resting
on the bridge of her nose. Her eyes were closed and her face
peaceful, as though she might well have been in the midst
of a natural slumber rather than eternal repose.
"Yvette Darnall," Doyle observed.
Eve glanced at him, saw the puzzlement on his face and knew
that it matched her own. "You know her?"
"A mystic and psychic. She disappeared in 1943."
"Or maybe she didn't," Eve said, her gaze once more
surveying the hideous gathering, the sunken faces waxy and
yellow in the candlelight. "Maybe it was just that nobody
knew where to look."
Doyle frowned thoughtfully and stepped further into the room.
Eve followed but her nostrils flared and the hair rose on
the back of her neck. Her fingers hooked into talons. She
sensed something in the room and she knew that Doyle had felt
it too.
Yvette Darnall opened her eyes.
Eve and Doyle froze. For just a moment there was a kind of
terrible awareness in the psychic woman's gaze and then her
eyes rolled upward so that they seemed completely white. Her
head lolled back and her jaw went slack, mouth falling open.
One by one, the five cadavers did the same. Some of their
jawbones cracked. When the most dessicated among them lay
his head back it simply tore off above the jaw with a sound
like snapping kindling. Upon hitting the hardwood floor his
skull shattered into dust and bone fragments.
Yvette Darnall began to moan, and so did the chorus of the
dead.
She choked as a stream of milky, opalescent mist issued from
her throat, and a moment later thinner tendrils of the same
substance flowed from the gaping mouths of the dead. Eve recognized
the material. Ectoplasm. Malleable spirit-flesh. But
she did not think it was the ghosts of these dead summoners
or even of the medium herself who was manipulating the ectoplasm
here.
It coalesced in the midst of the table and as it did, Eve
saw that Yvette Darnall had begun to decay. Whatever this
power was, it was drawing on whatever essence remained in
her; it had kept her here for more than sixty years as a spiritual
battery, and now it was using her up.
The ectoplasm churned like thick, heavy storm clouds and began
to take shape. In a moment Eve could see human features forming
there, a face, a man with a long, hawk nose and thin lips,
with wild unkempt hair and a shaggy beard.
The face in the pooling ectoplasm narrowed its eyes as though
it had seen them and it sneered imperiously, gaze rife with
disapproval. When it spoke, its lips moved without sound,
yet its voice issued from the wide, gaping mouth of Yvette
Darnall.
"Doyle," the voice rasped scornfully. "You
damned fool."
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