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Chapter Twenty Six (Part Four)
There was smoke curling up in wisps from her bodice. Something
had ignited upon her, perhaps within her... I struggled with my bindings,
lifting the chair up behind me, managing a heavy step nearer to Maggie, but she
shoved my shoulder with preternatural strength and I nearly hit my head on one
of the table's sturdy candelabrum, a wisp of my hair catching in a candle flame.
It was a cross that burst into fire right at her sternum. A
large crucifix had been hidden beneath her bodice, and it burned free of the
layers, a solid metal pendant the size of my palm. As the cross ignited and
sizzled her flesh so did it seem the demons burned within her, broiling from
the holy water.
Jonathon jumped to his feet in the
chaos. He hadn't been tied to the chair, only bound with wrists behind his
back. He turned his back to the table and lifted his wrists over the candles on
his side of the table, burning his hands and his cuffs. I could smell these
terrible separate stenches of burning flesh and fabric. But in doing so, he
burned his bindings too. Brave man, he suffered melting flesh on the side of
his palm but snapped his wrists free. He too bounded toward Maggie, but she
tossed him off as if he were a rag doll and his body came perilously close to
the still-open portal where forces hung suspended in this precarious
battleground.
Jonathon reeled to regain his
balance and rushed back over to me. As the side of his palm wept blood and
peeling skin, he undid my bindings.
It was not only Maggie's scream that filled the room but a magnified
and horrible sound, many screams, burning from the inside out as the blessed
liquid doused the demons within. Demons who were surely killing her from inside,
as blood began pouring from her ears, dribbling from her lips, tears of blood
rolling down her cheeks.
Her still-standing body went rigid, shuddering and shaking,
the blood pouring faster. It was the most horrible sight I could have imagined.
This was after having witnessed the sallow flesh of the dead come to life. But
to see the living tortured so...
"Maggie!" I screamed amid the screams. She
staggered to the side, to me, into my arms, and I sunk with her to the floor. I
held her tight. And because I spoke now for someone else's life, somehow my
disability was no match for this fight. My tongue and speech were free.
"Maggie, listen, say with me, say to the devils,"
I cried in a choking, desperate gasp, tears streaming from my eyes as the blood
wept from hers. "I renounce thee...
I renounce thee..." Her body shuddered and shook, her blood seeped all
over my skirts and sleeves.
Margaret Hathorn looked up at me and smiled weakly, causing
another river of blood to pour forth from her lips, and there was an aura of
great white light about her, an angelic halo that took my breath away with
heavenly beauty. She seemed as though she wanted to say something.
But then she died in my arms.
I screamed a wailing sob. I closed her eyelids immediately.
Her dead, open stare would undo my mind. I held her close, her body and blood
still warm.
But there was no time to mourn. For then, another cascade of
events happened all at once. It was everything I could do to keep up.
The other two Majesties started up with the counting and the
chanting again, which made the demonic threshold active, rippling open once
more, but their incantation was stopped by Brinkman cocking the pistols. Nathaniel
had managed somehow to wrestle one of the throwing knifes into his palm and was
cutting loose his bindings and Lavinia's in turn.
Jonathon picked up a pitcher of water and threw them at the
portal, directly toward the lintel and sides, trying to wash away the blood and
ash that had activated it. Nathaniel did the same with a second pitcher.
Lavinia took up a tureen of soup and poured it over the floor, falling to her
knees and scrubbing free all the terrible things that had made this room such a
magnet for the demons. All this action against the portal caused the rectangle
to flicker. The heavy dread of the room lifted slightly. A scale sliding more
toward our victory.
But the corpse of Jonathon's mother started screaming again.
Items lifted off the table again and all of us winced, clapping our hands to
our ears. I lunged for the terrible ledger book of the Master's Society,
searching for clues in its terrible pages. We had to calm the spirits tied to the
effigy of Lady Denbury. The names of the "parts" had to be addressed
and sent to rest.
I dimly heard running footsteps in the hall coming closer. Was
it the police officers at last? But Brinkman hadn't blown the whistle… Who
else…
Yet more familiar faces ran into the room, one dark and one
fair, both looking alarmed. Reverend Blessing and Mrs. Northe! Blessing dressed
in his clerical suit and collar, Evelyn Northe in an elegant but unadorned
riding habit.
Exactly where they'd come from, I couldn't know. They likely
had traveled as soon as they could. Mrs. Northe wielded a pistol, the reverend,
a cross. My heart soared, but as Brinkman trained a gun toward them, Jonathon,
Lavinia, and I all lurched forward and shouted some variant of:
"No, they're on our side!"
Moriel, who had roused again from the punch, was aghast at
the sight of the reverend's dark skin, for he snorted: "Oh, and you dare bring a blackamoor into my sight to soil the very air around us? Your
species really is—"
Another punch from Brinkman sent Moriel back into the
pudding again, causing Blessing almost to smile, but his gaze was soon focused
directly on the more pressing matter of the reanimate corpse, and he moved near
it, knowing exactly what to do as he had done in Doctor Preston's hospital wing.
Mrs. Northe took a moment to consider the wavering, open portal but swept the
room to meet our gazes first.
"My friends," Mrs. Northe cried. "Are you all—"
That's when she saw that Maggie was in my arms. Alongside the siren-like wail
of the reanimate body, she shrieked, falling to her knees at my side. I stared
at her helplessly.
"She took them into
her," I cried. "Demons. From the portal. Five of them. We couldn't
stop her, we didn't know—"
"It should have been me," Mrs. Northe insisted,
tears splashing onto Maggie's scorched bodice. "It should always have been
me, bearing the brunt, my poor girl, no, it should have been me—"
"Right before Maggie acted," I explained, "she
looked at me, with stern resolution, as if this was the only thing she could do."
I spoke as if somehow an explanation could ease the pain. It didn't.
In the background I heard Blessing begin an exorcism rite to
untie and set to rest the collective of unseen spirits that by our experience
we knew were attached to the embodiment of Lady Denbury. The other two Majesties
were laughing and taunting the black man, calling him derogatory names, the
Society clearly based on the falsehood of racial superiority along specific
bloodlines.
But Blessing was unruffled by the racist slurs. He remained focused
on spiritual matters at hand. The Denbury body was one thing, but the retinue
of spirits, they were further unwanted company. We could all feel the chill the
ghosts carried in their wake.
"Reverend Blessing, the names of the dead are writ here,"
I declared, sliding the ledger book across the dining room table toward him,
fighting to be heard against the din of spiritual unrest.
He nodded and began addressing the spirits the Society used
in their methods to power reanimate bodies. He called them by the names listed
in the book. He bid them leave the dead flesh and promised that their remains
would be put in sacred ground. The poltergeist effects the spirits were
wreaking in the room began to settle a bit. Mrs. Northe echoed all of Blessings
words, acting as his assisting minister in the exorcism rite, though she
reiterated and enforced his scripture while still rooted to the ground near
Maggie's cooling body.
The two conscious Majesties started up with insidious
chanting again, in a tongue indiscernible to me, and as they did, the open
portal wavered, dark shadows drew closer to the threshold, as if another wave of
monsters were about to seep over. Brinkman nodded at Nathaniel and spat in one
of the Majesty's faces. Sansalme just sneered up at him. Nathaniel moved to gag
both the men on either side of the still unconscious Moriel.
"This is just the beginning," Sansalme said in a
slight accent I thought might be French. "You've really no idea." He
dabbed Brinkman's spit out of his eye with a silk handkerchief.
"Well, I'm sure you'll be telling us all about it in a
court of law," Brinkman growled.
"No…" Sansalme replied, seemingly unconcerned.
This terrified me as much as the portal. What could threaten these wretches? I
shook myself away from staring at them in disgust.
"We need to get the 'help,' the family, together,"
I cried to Jonathon, to Mrs. Northe, to Nathaniel and Lavinia, who were still
trying to repair and erase the various dark magic effects upon the room. "That's
the cue for the arrests!"
We had to settle the room, lest the police turn against the
unwitting victims, as the officers could hardly be sure who or what was doing
the damage. This was the type of horrific chaos the Society wished to wreak,
where no one could effect change and keep faith, where no one knew who was
friend or foe. Where everyone turned against one another. But the Society
couldn't know what a wonderful team we had among us.
I stared down at Maggie's corpse. My despair would not help
the dead woman in my arms who had been so brave. It was my turn to show that
kind of strength and willingness of sacrifice. I had the knowledge to wield a
countercurse, and I needed to wield it now. I shifted Maggie off my lap, and
Mrs. Northe took her into her arms instead. Her blood had soaked through my
dress, was all over my hands. I couldn't worry about that.
I darted to the elaborate screen that traditionally hid the
staff during the meal and closed off the door that led to the kitchen stairs.
And there the family stood, dazed, just behind the wooden panels. Glassy eyed, they
stood slightly swaying, waiting to be summoned. The sight of all four of them
triggered my immediate shout as I dragged the children forward first. As soon
as I moved, Jonathon was with me in the instant, following with the wife and Nathaniel
with the husband.
"Ego transporto
animus ren per ianua, Beelzebub the Devil!" I cried, and Jonathon
echoed me.
The adults struggled against us, the demons within sensing
that we were at war. Jonathon dodged a punch; I nearly had my hands bitten by
the red-eyed children. Lavinia, Blessing, and Mrs. Northe all rushed to lend
hands while still spouting scripture. The forces which sought to harm us
recoiled. Together we took up the same shout, shoving the disoriented, confused
bodies toward their respective paintings.
We said the countercurse again and again: '"sending the
soul through the door…" This had been Jonathon and my puzzle to sort
through together when we met. The words were roughly translated from Latin, but
with an Egyptian word for "soul-door" put in for an extra
complication, as the portrait frames were literally a door for the soul to be
deposited into. It had been a hard-fought mystery to solve but the countercurse
had worked for restoring Jonathon.
Jonathon, Nathaniel, and Lavinia, all of us took up the
countercurse together, utilizing variants on the Devil, Satan, the damned, any
possible name for what was supposed to be the penultimate of evil, the prince
of darkness itself. We tried to encompass all that these foul energies wished
to be, and in doing so, trap them by the title they aspired to. The power of
the name, we'd learned, was one of the eldest powers of all, and it was one the
Society seemed to take very seriously. We had our faith. They had theirs. And
now we had to play ours against theirs with everything we had.
--
(End of Chapter 26.4 - Copyright 2013 Leanna Renee Hieber, The Magic Most Foul saga - If you like what you see, please share this link with friends! Tweet it, FB, + it! The Magic Most Foul team really hopes the audience will continue to grow and it can only do so with YOUR help! If you haven't already, do pick up a copy of Magic Most Foul books 1 and 2: Darker Still and the sequel: The Twisted Tragedy of Miss Natalie Stewart and/or donate to the cause! Donations directly support the editorial staff.
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Wow! That was a lot of action! I never saw Maggie pulling off something like that.
ReplyDeleteBunny
Poor Maggie. I knew she'd die, but I still can't believe it. She was so proud, I cried.
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