Read Johannes Cabal The Necromancer Online
Authors: Jonathan L. Howard
He snuffed the candles out, poked the glowing coals a little, placed the fireguard carefully, and left the room. Out into the hallway and back towards the kitchen. He stopped by the door under the stairs, opened it, took down the oil lantern, and lit it. Then he descended into the cool air of the cellar.
In the corner was the generator, and this received his immediate attention; he’d been quite happy to work by candlelight earlier, but now he needed electricity. He tapped the fuel gauge, found it satisfactory, and turned over the motor. After a couple of dry attempts, it caught, and the maintenance lights on the wall started to gently glow.
He looked around. The cellar looked innocent enough: a few shelves with empty paint cans upon them, some old tools, bundles of ancient newspaper, a couple of mousetraps here and there. Cabal had made a study of cellars to make sure that his looked utterly average. He had done a good job. He stepped into the small, empty fruit cellar, ran his hand over the nitrous stonework, and worked a hidden catch. Placing both hands against the wall at shoulder height, he pushed hard, and it swung in and away. He fumbled in the darkness for a moment before finding a switch.
Beyond lay a large room, some forty feet along an edge and ten feet high. Along the walls were workbenches, shelves lined with specimens hanging in formaldehyde, instruments, and bookshelves loaded with dark tomes stolen from restricted collections. In the centre of the floor, beneath a surgical light, was an operating table that doubled as a postmortem slab. Cabal looked around for a moment as the last of the bluish fluorescent lights finished flickering into life. Everything was as it should be, everything in its place, that which he had left dead was still dead. That always simplified things.
He shrugged his jacket off, slung it onto the table, braced himself, and shoved the heavy piece of surgical engineering out of position. Moving the light to one side revealed the end of a block-and-tackle run that extended over to the far wall. He shifted the block from its storage place until it was over the slabbed floor exposed by the table. The slabs were massive—some four feet wide by eight long—but the one that usually lay directly beneath the table was special in two respects. First, it was only faced pumice, and so nowhere near as heavy as its neighbours. Second, there was a recessed ring in its exact centre. Cabal drew the hook down from the block and tackle and latched it onto the ring. He took the rope and pulled. He often thought he should replace this manual system with an electrical one, but he had put it off so often he had finally realised that he liked to use his own strength here. It was important to him that lifting the stone was an act of personal effort.
The gear clicked and ratcheted as he slowly raised the great slab. When it was safely clear of the floor, he gently pulled it away to one side on the rail, careful not to let it build up any difficult momentum. Once he had it clear, he walked back and stood, with his hands on his hips, over what lay revealed. The pit exposed was topped by a great pane of thick glass, and Cabal looked at the dark, reflective surface for a long moment. He thought of the last year and all that had happened to him and been done by him. He thought of all the towns and all the people, the tears and the misery. He thought of the carnival now rotting on the lost spur line, and all the undeniable evil it had wrought. He thought of Nea Winshaw in the interview room, and Leonie Barrow’s defiance right to the last. He thought of his brother, Horst. Then he looked at the glass and said to himself, “It was all worthwhile.”
He knelt by the pit and felt for a concealed switch beneath the lip. In a moment, bright neon tubes were flickering into life a yard below—beneath the great glass tank a yard square by two long that lay there.
Cabal looked down at the young woman lying suspended in its heart like a beautiful insect in amber, her hair—as rich and as yellow as a lioness’s—floating in a halo about her head. He touched the glass with his fingertips. This was all he had. All he had ever had since a day ten years ago. His glance darted around to ensure that seals were secure and none of the strange, perfect preservative had leaked. This was as close as he could get for now; he dare not break the seals and open the glass coffin until he was sure of success. Now, at least and at last, he could finally hope. He lay down on the floor with his face on the cool glass and felt comforted. His eyes flickered and closed. He spoke a word, a name, quietly, his breath clouding the glass. Then Johannes Cabal slept.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Ray Bradbury, for being a personal hero, and inspiration for this novel. It was Something Wicked This Way Comes that put in my mind the question “Where would an evil carnival come from, anyway?”
Marsha A. Davis, for encouragement, advice, and breaking the news about my punctuation as gently as possible.
Michael Davis, for putting up with Marsha saying, “Jonathan says …” on a regular basis.
Jane E. Eddlestone, for research, enthusiasm, and “enigmatic sauciness.”
Katharine Long, for her valued friendship and remarkable patience.
Linda “Snugbat” Smith, for her splendid illustrations.
Emma L.B.K. Smith, for her photographic prowess.
The Mediaeval Baebes for Salva Nos. I normally disapprove of authors who give sound track listings for their work, but I am always prepared to make an exception for myself. This album was played throughout the writing of the book and had, I am sure, an effect on my imagination. Whether you consider this an advertisement or a dire warning is entirely up to you.
And
Louise and Madeleine, for reasons too numerous to mention.
DOUBLEDAY
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2009 by Jonathan L. Howard
All Rights Reserved
Published in the United States by Doubleday, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
www.doubleday.com
DOUBLEDAY and the DD colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Illustrations by Snugbat.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Howard, Jonathan L.
Johannes Cabal the necromancer / by Jonathan L. Howard.—1st ed.
p. cm.
1. Magic—Fiction. 2. Devil—Fiction 3. Wagers—Fiction. I. Title.
PR6108.O928J64 2008
823’.92—dc22
2008028390
eISBN: 978-0-385-53043-9
v3.0
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 IN WHICH A SCIENTIST VISITS HELL AND A DEAL IS STRUCK
Chapter 2 IN WHICH CABAL PRACTICES HIS MAP-READING AND MEETS AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE
Chapter 3 IN WHICH CABAL COVERS OLD GROUND AND GETS THE SHOW ON THE ROAD
Chapter 4 IN WHICH CABAL APPLIES HIMSELF WITH MIXED RESULTS
Chapter 5 IN WHICH CABAL PLAYS WITH DOLLS AND HORST BROADENS HIS VOCABULARY
Chapter 6 IN WHICH CABAL MAKES AN UNPLANNED STOP AND TALKS ABOUT THE WAR
Chapter 7 IN WHICH CABAL DISCOVERS THAT HELL COMES IN DIFFERENT FLAVOURS AND THAT
Chapter 8 IN WHICH CABAL IS EDUCATED IN BUSINESS AFFAIRS AND UNDERTAKINGS ARE UNDE
Chapter 9 IN WICH I GO TO THE CARNYVAL AND SEE STUFF
Chapter 10 IN WHICH THE CARNIVAL REACHES JOURNEY’S END AND DIFFICULTIES PRESENT THEM
Chapter 11 IN WHICH CABAL PREYS UPON MISFORTUNE AND THERE IS UNPLEASANTNESS
Chapter 12 IN WHICH CABAL DISCOVERS SOME PLACES ARE NICE TO LIVE IN BUT YOU REALLY W
Chapter 13 IN WHICH THE CARNIVAL OF DISCORD OPENS ITS GATES FOR THE LAST TIME AND TH
Chapter 14 IN WHICH NEEDS MUST WHEN THE DEVIL DRIVES
Chapter 15 IN WHICH MIDNIGHT STRIKES AND DAWN BREAKS
Chapter 16 IN WHICH A SCIENTIST RETURNS TO HELL AND A DEAL IS BROKEN