Page 29 of Dark Rites


  Help was coming; she held on to the idea that help was coming.

  She made her way around the table. She stood behind it. She kept up with her flow of Latin, staring at the man who was behind the table, the one who had the knife.

  She reached for the knife.

  To her tremendous relief, he handed it to her.

  She raised it over Helena and Alex. She kept up with a dramatic flow of babble.

  She was pretty sure she was asking where to find the train for Rome at that point.

  She saw that Alex was staring up at her. His expression was troubled and bewildered at first; then it was incredulous.

  Alex had figured it out. Alex knew it was her.

  She nodded slightly. “Si deve andare!” she said, using contemporary Italian to tell him that he must go.

  But with his eyes, Alex indicated Helena. He wasn’t going anywhere without her.

  Vickie nodded again.

  Once more, she raised her voice. She made a massive display, waving the knife around over the two of them, and then she began to chant.

  “Arise! Arise! Arise!”

  She knew that it took every ounce of strength in Alex, but he rose. And, as he did so, he caught Helena’s arms, so that they seemed to rise together.

  “Arise and go before us. Go into the forest. Go! And as he commands, see to the pleasures of the flesh, open the way for these, his faithful!” She had no idea what she was saying then, but it seemed she needed something for them to be doing.

  The way the two stumbled, she thought, hot Satanic sex was probably out of the question, but she was pretty sure that wanton fornicating was probably part of the rich rewards promised, and sending the two of them off as if they were an evil Adam and Eve might just be the ticket.

  She kept talking. She watched them go.

  They staggered away.

  “The time is coming! Take this time! Find what you will! Find who you will!”

  * * *

  Griffin’s phone was on vibrate; he caught it the minute it started to buzz in his pocket, looking up and silently thanking God that, somehow, the satellites in the sky were being kind—and they had phone service.

  He answered in a whisper.

  “We’ve caught a few men,” Rocky told him. “They were sent back to make sure that the men who were attacked along the way were dead.”

  “You still close?”

  “On your tail. Wendell Harper is just behind with his men. Those who need it are getting medical attention.”

  “I’m almost there. I’m moving fast.”

  “I’ve got your back.”

  Griffin hung up.

  He was ready...

  Griffin looked to the sky again.

  He prayed he was in time. He turned his focus before him, wishing that the forest wasn’t so thick—that there weren’t different ways to go.

  Then he saw her again.

  The beautiful blonde woman who seemed so sad.

  She beckoned to him.

  Griffin began to move through the trails again, following her as quickly as he could.

  * * *

  Vickie tried to figure out how to make her own getaway. She kept talking, switching from Latin—My, what a beautiful cat you have!—to English. “Follow in his ways, do what thou will! Follow, frolic, taste the pleasures of this earth!”

  She stopped talking. One of the figures was coming toward her, head bowed.

  He was followed by three others. Two went to Vickie’s left side. One went to her right.

  She gripped the knife hilt tight in her hands.

  The one red-clad figure was just across the garden table altar from her; he raised his head.

  Satan!

  He wore a mask. A ram’s head mask.

  As if he were, indeed, a fallen angel, the embodiment of all evil.

  Milton Hanson had been in the passenger’s seat of the truck that had hit them; this man—or at least a man wearing this mask!—had been driving.

  She couldn’t see behind the mask—it hid all, except his eyes, and in the weird glow of the torches and the dying green-tinted light of the evening, she thought that his eyes burned like red fire.

  “Well, well, well. Thank you, brave, sweet Vickie! You’ve cleared the table for me. Your friends are gone, and here you are.”

  He stared at her; she felt her knees tremble. And she tried to place the voice, because it was, of course, a voice that she knew.

  “Where’s Jehovah?” he asked.

  “You don’t really give a damn about these people or Satan. You’ve sacrificed a number of women, and had people commit suicide, for pure greed,” Vickie said. She hoped that Alex and Helena had made it away. Far away.

  She couldn’t see, but she felt sure that the face behind the mask was lit up with a wicked smile.

  “More can die. All I do is say the word, and they slip little pills into their mouths, every last one of them.”

  “I don’t know where Jehovah is.”

  “Yes, you do. Alex was close. Hanson was close. You, looking for the both of them, hearing what was out here... I’m certain you know where Jehovah is!”

  She smiled. “You don’t really give a damn about finding Jehovah in order to raise Satan. You’re looking for Ezekiel Martin’s family treasure. You think that if you find Jehovah, you’ll know where it’s buried.”

  “It hasn’t been a bad gig, being high priest, Satan’s rep in the flesh. I do really enjoy sex, and I guess I’ve always had a thing for young blonde women. Of course, your hair is as black as sin, but I’ll live with that. I mean, at this point, there’s no time. You’ll do just fine as a sacrifice.”

  Vickie realized that the figures close to her—his right-hand men or women?—were slowly creeping closer, hemming her in on both sides.

  But others were milling around, watching. They all seemed to waver, as if they were uncertain.

  Vickie raised her voice. “Did you hear that? He doesn’t give a damn. Satan is definitely not coming. None of this is real. It’s all a sham. There’s no reward here on earth for you for listening to this man—for watching him kill!”

  “Um, actually, there is a reward,” the figure nearest Vickie said.

  And Vickie turned. She studied the figure—a woman.

  “Oh, Vickie, Vickie, Vickie!” she said. “Of course there’s a reward.”

  “Audrey Benson!” Vickie said. “I wondered when we’d find you. But it had to do with the café—you were one of the first followers in this ‘Satanic’ cult. You were sent to get Alex—and to watch out for Hanson and me. The leader got to you first—whoever he is.”

  “Doesn’t matter. You can just call me rich when we’re done!”

  To her other side, one of the figures was laughing softly. Again, Vickie was sure that she recognized the voice, even in laughter.

  “Cathy and Ron Dearborn! You two are good—how did you get sucked into this? You could have...done well.”

  “Well?” Cathy Dearborn said. “Playing two-bit coffeehouses and parks where the kids spill grape juice on us and the babies poop and vomit in the middle of our numbers? Please.”

  “Vickie,” Ron Dearborn urged, “you don’t have to die. If you just show us the way to Jehovah, we’ll drag someone else to the table.”

  “Sacrifice another woman? For your treasure hunt?” Vickie asked.

  “Lie down on the table, Vickie. Lie down,” the ram’s head mask, red-clad, would-be Satan said. “If you tell me where to find Jehovah, I may let you live. But hey, my faithful are gathering. You’ve lost me Alex and Helena. What I have is you. I suggest you start telling me everything you can about Jehovah. That way, you may live.”

  She shook her head. “You were crazy before—now you’
re as crazy as can be. The law is right behind you.”

  “The law has been right behind me for years. They can’t find this place. No one knows it exists. Get on the table. Do what I say.”

  “Why would I do that?” Vickie asked. “I’ve got the knife.”

  “For now,” he said menacingly, as he and the Dearborns moved even closer.

  “How the hell have you gotten away with this so long?” Vickie demanded. “Charlie Oakley! You killed her, didn’t you? You killed Sheena Petrie over thirty years ago. You let Syd Smith find her. You let the cult in Fall River take the blame—and then you used what you learned about the cult to start up your own. Why did you kill her, Charlie? Because she turned you down? You were a cop—you were supposed to protect her!”

  “Sheena Petrie was a bitch. A frigid bitch. I know why her husband left her.”

  “Did you kill her by accident?” Vickie asked.

  “You need to hurry,” Ron Dearborn, sounding nervous, warned Charlie. “Cops are coming. They’re about to find this place. Come on, we’re in this for the money. Kill her or leave her, and let’s get out of here. We can keep looking—we can find Jehovah ourselves.”

  “She’s going to give me Jehovah! Milton Hanson is dead. I just saw your precious Griffin Pryce, Vickie, and he thinks he saved Milton and I’m sure he’s going to think that he’s saved Isaac Sherman and Robert Merton, but my people were going back. They’re all going to be dead when the cops get to them. We’re always a step ahead!” Charlie said, waving his gun in the air.

  He looked at Vickie and spoke again, fury filling his voice. “So, you want the story now? Sure! No, I didn’t kill Sheena Petrie by accident. I slit her throat—and I liked it. I liked seeing her blood flow out. Guess what? I get a kick out of drinking blood. And if you take blood from people and keep them on drugs, you can really do whatever the hell you want with them. And you can make them believe anything—anything at all. So, yes...when Brenda was found last year, people started snooping around out here. I started with the Boston attacks so people would look at Boston. Then I saw all the hype about Alex Maple in the news, after he was attacked. Figured if anyone could find the Martin family treasure, it would be Alex. But I was wrong. Then what about Hanson? But they’re both academic asses. And you’ve got about sixty seconds to tell me what you know.”

  “You’ll be caught. Federal charges. You could face death,” Vickie said.

  “I won’t be caught. A dozen kids will be found in these robes. I’ll be long gone—with my true faithful, these friends right here. Oh, not to worry—anyone who might have suspected me is dead along the trail. If they haven’t expired yet, they will, soon enough.”

  “You know what? I do know where Jehovah is, Charlie,” Vickie told him quietly. “And I will never, ever tell you!”

  Charlie Oakley let out a bellow of rage. “Get her down!” he commanded the Dearborn brother and sister. “Get her on the table.”

  They reached for her.

  Vickie wasn’t going down without a fight. She turned with the knife in her hand and she stabbed out at the man and the two women trying to force her onto the table. She stabbed at them blindly, shouting all the while, screaming that there was no great power coming that day, only the downfall of everyone involved.

  Audrey and Cathy were yelling, shouting, screaming and bleeding, as well—she’d gotten them good.

  There was blood everywhere...

  Hard to see against the red robes.

  And then one of them had her arm, her wrist, wrenching the knife away from her, and she was pushed onto the table. Charlie—in his ram’s head mask—was over her; Audrey, Cathy and Ron were holding her down.

  Charlie had the knife.

  He held it over her.

  “Where is Jehovah?” he demanded.

  “Fuck you!” she told him.

  He started to lower the knife. She saw it, saw it coming toward her...

  And then, in a flash, the knife was gone.

  Charlie was gone.

  She kicked out with all her might; Ron Dearborn went flying back. Audrey was shoved aside.

  Audrey, letting out a scream of fury, came at her again.

  But then the sound of bullets firing into the air filled the night.

  Vickie punched Audrey, hard. She staggered back.

  Suddenly, there were cops and agents everywhere; chaos reigned. Vickie slipped to the ground in front of the altar, trembling. And then she saw Griffin.

  Someone was walking away with Charlie Oakley, his hands cuffed behind his back. She saw that Devin was taking Cathy Dearborn into custody.

  Rocky was there, cuffing Ron.

  None too gently.

  Griffin was coming toward her. She smiled.

  He took her into his arms.

  “Vickie, my God, Vickie. I’ve been so scared. My God...”

  She hugged him. She cupped his face between her hands. “I love you! Griffin, I did it! I found them. I stopped them! I was actually pretty darned good. If I’d just been armed. Griffin, I want to go through the academy. I’m going to meet your bosses and I’m going to beg them and—”

  “Hey!” He rose, drawing her to her feet, holding her tight.

  “Let’s just get through tonight, huh?” he asked.

  She smiled.

  “Sure. I can tell you where to find Jehovah tomorrow!”

  Even as she spoke, it seemed that the darkness of the night fell for real. For a moment, they were together in a field of black velvet.

  Then the moon broke through the clouds. It was a day away from full, but it was huge and red-rimmed in the night sky, casting down a glow that seemed to light up everything around them.

  “Okay, okay, so...maybe tonight. As soon as the chaos dies down a little!”

  * * *

  “Well, everything helps,” Vickie said. “That’s what research is. I mean, you go to all the sources there are, and you seize whatever little piece it is from each source that goes into solving your puzzle.”

  The compound was down to almost empty—all that remained were Rocky, Devin, Griffin and Vickie, Wendell Harper and a number of his men.

  Vickie had ditched the red robe she’d had on over her clothing. She’d worried that she’d been injured in all the tussling.

  She had not, thank God. Tomorrow, she’d be sore, and she might have a few bruises, but she hadn’t suffered any serious injuries.

  The cultists had been taken away. The group was grateful not to have lost a single soul—not that night. Not one of the remaining red-clad figures had taken the suicide pills they’d carried.

  Many had seemed relieved to be arrested.

  Isaac Sherman, Robert Merton and Milton Hanson were in the hospital—as were Helena Matthews and Alex Maple, who clung to one another like a pair of long-lost lovers. Vickie was happy to have seen them, if only for a minute.

  All this...

  And it was just midnight.

  “Okay, okay!” Devin said, and laughed. “We all appreciate your mad research skills. Come out with it. Where is Jehovah?”

  “It’s all in the words,” Vickie said.

  “‘Hell’s afire and Satan rules, the witches, they were real. The time has come, the rites to read, the flesh, ’twas born to heal. Yes, Satan is coming!’” Griffin quoted.

  Vickie nodded. “And, luckily, the moon is high enough for you to see. In fact, if you turn, the rise of granite right behind us looks red. ‘Hell’s afire,’” she said.

  “Okay, so then?” Rocky asked.

  “There’s where it gets tricky,” Vickie admitted. “The ‘rites’ weren’t rites. They were rights, as in the direction. If you look at the old maps, there were three natural twists in the roads, the earth and the rivers, just below that giant ‘red’ slab of g
ranite. One was a hillock, one a river and one a natural path between. The water has been diverted, but we’re standing about where the three would most closely converge.” She hesitated. “This place was chosen for the insane asylum for a reason. It sat on a barren plateau—barren, compared to all else around here!—that was referred to as—”

  “The flesh!” Devin exclaimed.

  “Exactly,” Vickie agreed.

  “So, he was here all along? Charlie Oakley was hiding out at Jehovah—looking for Jehovah?” Rocky demanded.

  “So I believe,” Vickie said. “I don’t know where to go digging, but if they get out here with metal detectors, I’d say that way...just by the clearing before you wind up back into the thick growth of trees. I think that’s where you’ll find the treasure.”

  “Not only that,” Griffin said quietly, “but it’s where Missy Prior was killed. It’s where Ezekiel Martin had her ‘sacrificed’ when she despised him so much that he wanted her dead.” He smiled at them all. “We’ve wondered which blonde has been haunting Vickie’s dreams. Rocky, we saw her at the morgue today. It’s been Missy Prior. She was murdered here, and I think she’s been trying to stop the killing ever since.”

  “Hopefully,” Vickie said, “we may have brought her peace at last.”

  She looked up at the moon again. It was strange; it was beautiful.

  Not quite full...one more night.

  “Look!” Griffin urged. The sky brightened suddenly as a gorgeous glitter of gold and red seemed to light up the night.

  For a moment, the blonde appeared to be standing before them.

  She smiled.

  She was surrounded by a small group of others who were like her, and not quite like her.

  One of them might have been Brenda Noonan.

  Another...Sheena Petrie.

  The sky seemed alive with the beauty of the shimmering light.

  And then they were gone.

  Griffin pulled Vickie close.

  “Peace!” he said softly. “Maybe we managed that much. We gave them peace.”

  Vickie smiled, resting her head on his chest.