In my vision, I saw a teenage boy who had been raised by the agents of Order to take over the world. I saw this boy rise to power. I saw him take away the rights of choice and decision from countless numbers of people. Then I saw a girl, filled with the spirit of Azazel, come from the depths of the woods. She carried with her a spear of fire.
And she smote the agent of order, and Chaos reigned again in the world.
(c) Michaela Weem, www.thegreatgodazazel.com
Trees streamed by outside the window of Toby's truck as I struggled against the rope he'd tied my hands with. Toby drove recklessly fast, his mask still on. I didn't think he could see with it over his eyes. I strained, yanking my wrists away from each other as hard as I could. But the rope held. I wasn't doing anything except giving myself rug burn.
I glared at Toby. "Where are we going?" I asked. Was this some kind of practical joke? If it was, it wasn't funny. I really wasn't enjoying it.
Toby just laughed from behind his mask. He didn't answer.
"What are you doing with Jason?" I asked.
Nothing from Toby.
I was flabbergasted when Toby pulled his truck into my driveway. He was taking me to
my
house? Why were we here? Toby got out of the truck and came around to my side. Roughly, he pulled me out. I stumbled as I tried to keep my balance while he yanked me forward. Behind us, I could see the car that Jason was in. He was getting similar treatment. The football players, still wearing their masks, were dragging Jason along with them.
"Toby, what is going on?" I demanded.
Toby cocked his head at me. From behind the mask, he looked so blank. "Oh, come on, Zaza," he said. "We're going to consummate our relationship. Isn't that what you've wanted all this time?"
I winced at the ugliness of his voice. And what the hell was he talking about? If Toby thought I still wanted to have sex with him after what had happened, he was a mental patient. I didn't want to look at Toby ever again, let alone touch him.
He dug his fingers into my arm and tugged me forward. I had to go with him. If I resisted, I'd just fall down.
The lights in my house were all off, but the kitchen door was open. We all went inside. Toby led the group of masked madmen through my dining room and living room, to the door to the basement. He opened it.
The soft light of candles greeted us. Our basement wasn't much. It wasn't finished. It was just a concrete hole in the ground. It always smelled musty down there, and no one went into it except to get our washer and dryer.
But someone had been in the basement recently. A tea light candle blazed on each step of the stairs leading down into its depths. Toby forced me onto the first step. I tried to resist, but he was strong. Carefully, we descended into the gaping mouth of the basement, one step at a time. As I got lower and lower, I could see that the entire basement was covered in candles. They were clustered in every corner. They sat on tables, which surrounded the room. Each table was covered in a black velvet tablecloth. The washer and dryer had been similarly covered in black velvet, and candles of various heights and widths placed on them.
All of the candles were black.
On one of the tables, many silver chalices sat next to a decanter of wine. There was also a loaf of bread next to them. It sat on a silver platter. In the center of the basement, there was a bed. It was covered in black silk sheets. From the steps to the bed was a trail of black rose petals.
I nearly gagged. What was this? What had Toby planned? It was like an inversion of everything he'd ever said to me. Black rose petals? A bed with silk sheets? Me tied up? Half of the football team?
I was started to feel very, very frightened.
"We're a little early," said Toby to the rest of them. He pulled some rope from his pocket and tossed it to his friends. "Tie Jason to that pole," he ordered, gesturing with his head.
The football players dragged Jason to the pole and began lashing him to it. His arms.
His feet. His neck. Jason caught my eyes. I looked back at him. I could tell he was trying to figure out a way out of this.
"I'll get Azazel ready," said Toby, his voice cruel and determined.
Toby took me to the bed. He made me sit down. I realized that not everything silk on the bed was a sheet. There were also two black silk hooded robes sitting next to us.
They looked like something off the cover of a death metal album. What was this?
What was going on? My heart beat in my chest loudly. It pumped blood against my temple. I was freaking out.
I tried to smile at Toby. "Okay," I said. "This was funny. I'm laughing. You can stop now, though. Really."
Toby sighed. "It wasn't supposed to be like this Azazel. I didn't want to have to tie you up. But after you heard Lilith and me, I didn't know what else to do. The ritual has to go on as scheduled, whether you're willing or not."
Ritual? What ritual? I was terrified.
"I'm going to have to untie you for a minute," said Toby. "But you can't try to run away or anything, or else I'm going to have to get some of the guys over here to hold you down. And I really don't want to do that."
Okay. Maybe I wouldn't run.
Toby fumbled in his back pocket for a pocketknife. I shied away from it as he opened the blade. But he just cut the rope holding my wrists together.
Toby surveyed the marks on my wrists that I'd made trying to get free from the rope.
He touched them almost tenderly. "You shouldn't have struggled," he said. "You're just hurting yourself." He looked into my eyes. "This is really an honor, you know.
You're going to become so powerful."
Powerful? Honor? Hadn't Toby said something about an honor in the restroom earlier? Oh God. There was more to everything than just Toby and Lilith having sex.
They'd said all kinds of weird things. And they both had said things about not being allowed. This was connected to that, somehow. Somehow.
But how?
Toby reached around me and put his hands on the zipper of my dress. He started to unzip it. He was going to take my dress off?! In front of everyone?!
"No!" I said. I put both of my hands on his chest and pushed him as hard as I could.
He grabbed my wrists, irritated.
"Don't struggle," he said. "I'm just trying to put the robe on you."
"Toby, don't," I begged suddenly. "Don't." I looked deep into his eyes, and shook my head, trying to find some piece of the boy I thought I knew in there.
"Don't look at me like that," he yelled. He dropped my hands and took a step back, disgust all over his face.
I pressed my advantage. "Toby, you can let me go," I said. "You can just let me go. I won't tell anyone. I'll just walk away, and I'll—"
"It's not supposed to be like this," he said.
"Please Toby," I said.
He reached over and balled up one of the robes in his hands. He shoved it at me. "Put on the robe," he said, his voice shaking. "Just take everything off and put on the robe."
A little sound escaped my mouth. Take everything off? I didn't want to—I
couldn't
think about what was going to happen to me.
Jason looked at me from where he was tied to the pole. His face was unreadable.
"Do it!" Toby screamed.
I couldn't. I couldn't just take off my clothes.
Toby turned around. He glanced over his shoulder. "Don't try to run," he warned me.
The other guys on the football team were standing around Jason, watching Toby and I.
"Turn around," Toby ordered them.
Silently, they did.
"And Jason," said Toby. "Close your eyes."
Jason closed his eyes.
But I couldn't move. I looked at the crumpled robe in my lap, and I couldn't move.
"Hurry up," growled Toby.
And because I didn't know what else to do, I did it. I unzipped my dress. It fell off me, pooled around my feet. There I was in the lingerie I had put on for Toby to see. I nearly gagged in revulsion. But I took it off. And I put on the robe. It buttoned up, and I buttoned every button, but I still felt very, very exposed.
"I'm done," I whispered.
Toby turned around. He looked me up and down. "Good," he said. Then he tied my hands again. He walked me over to the football players, threw me into one of their arms. "Hold her," he said. "I'll be back with the rest of the coven to do the Invocation."
Toby swept up the stairs. One of the football players had me in a bear hug. There was nothing between my skin and his body except the stupid, flimsy robe. I started to think about what was happening to me, to speculate about the near future. Then I decided it was a bad idea, and so I stopped. I just concentrated on breathing.
In a few minutes, the door at the top of the steps opened and a long line of people in black robes like mine came down the steps. Their hoods were over their heads and they stared at the floor. I couldn't see their faces in the scant candlelight.
They formed a circle. One of them came for me, pulled me into the center of the circle.
Now that he was close, I could see it was Toby.
"Why are her hands tied?" asked one of the hooded people. The voice sounded familiar, but I was sick of identifying voices tonight. I knew who it was, but I didn't want to know, so I just tried not to.
"Complication," said Toby. "Let's just get on with it."
"Untie her," ordered another hooded person. I knew that voice too.
No. No. No.
No.
I struggled for other thoughts, and there was only one. No.
Toby fumbled with the knot at my wrist. I had started to shake. My teeth were chattering. I couldn't believe this was happening to me. I couldn't believe it. Maybe, if I tried hard enough, I'd just faint. Couldn't I just faint? Couldn't I just make this not real, somehow?
One of the hooded people advanced to help Toby. I could tell from her hands that she was a woman as she deftly untied the knot at my wrist. I purposefully didn't look at her face. I tried so hard not to, but...
She cupped my chin in her hands. "Zaza, it's okay," she said.
And then I lost it. I started sobbing. And I said the only word I knew to identify the woman with. The only thing that sprang to mind. My voice broke with the betrayal of it. "Mommy," I sobbed.
My mother gathered me into her arms. "Why are you crying, sweetie?" she asked me.
Why was I crying? Was she insane? My own parents had set me up to be in some sort of cult ritual where my boyfriend...raped me, and she wanted to know why I was crying?
Still, I clung to her as my body was wracked with sobs that I thought would tear me apart. She was the only ghost of comfort left in a world that had been completely and utterly turned upside down, ripped apart, ruined.
My mother clutched me, stroking my hair. She turned to another hooded person.
"Daniel, I told you she wasn't ready," she said.
My father lowered his hood. He looked at us sympathetically. "It has to be tonight,"
he said helplessly. "The next night of power isn't until the solstice. We can't wait that long."
My mother nodded. She turned back to me, wiping at my tears, brushing my hair out of my face. "Okay, then, Zaza," she said. "You're just going to have to be strong, okay? Can you do that for me? Can you be my strong girl?"
No, I couldn't be strong! What did she want from me? I just shook my head violently, back and forth. I couldn't do this. I couldn't do this.
Around me, all of the hooded people were lowering their hoods. Lilith. Sheriff Damon. His wife. The principal of my high school. Mrs. Clem, the dean of students.
Mrs. Zimmerman, my French teacher. Sherry Astor. My older brothers, Noah and Gordon. I knew them all. I gazed around the circle, and I saw the pillars of society in our town. I saw people from my high school. They were all part of this. Whatever this was. I didn't know. And I didn't think I wanted to know.
"This is all going wrong," said Sheriff Damon. "What did you do, Toby?"
Lilith stepped forward. "It’s not Toby's fault, it's mine," she said. "Let me talk to her."
She walked up to me and took my hand. "Upstairs, Zaza," she said.
Confused, I let Lilith drag me upstairs.
Once through the basement door, she shut it after us. She looked down at herself.
"God, these robes are so unflattering," she said. "You'd think they'd at least let you wear a bra under them, you know? But it's all, 'The host has be defiled through sexuality, blah, blah, blah.'"
What was she talking about?
"You're probably wondering what's going on," she said.
That was an understatement.
"It's weird, I know," she said. "When it happened to me, I was totally freaked out, too."
"This happened to you?" I asked in a small voice.
"Well, sort of," she said. "It's supposed to happen on your eighteenth birthday, and there's supposed to be a little more lead up to the whole thing, like a couple hints and a test."
"A test?"
"Not like on paper, but someone from the coven like grills you on choice and chaos and junk. You didn't get that because you've been chosen from birth to be the vessel or whatever, and they had to rush the whole thing, because Jason showed up, so they have to do the Invocation and the Entering of the Circle all on one night. Which incidentally is almost over. We've got like fifteen minutes until midnight, so I've got to talk fast."
"What?" I said. But I was starting to calm down. Sort of. At least Lilith seemed like herself still.
"We're Satanists, Azazel," said Lilith.
Satanists?! I considered bolting for the door right then. But I was only wearing a flimsy black robe, and practically everyone I knew and would ask for help was already in my basement. Besides I couldn't leave Jason down there with them.
"I mean, kind of," said Lilith. "We worship Azazel. The demon you're named after."
"Oh God," I moaned.
"Yeah, don't say that. That's like blasphemy," she said. "Okay, so, see Azazel is an incarnation of what most people would identify with Satan. But we worship Satan, or Azazel, because he symbolizes the ability of people to have free will and to be individuals. We worship Chaos because it isn't stifling, and it doesn't assume that people need order enforced upon them to function properly in society."