Jonathan L. Howard
Johannes Cabal the Necromancer
A Clock stopped
Not the Mantels
Genevas farthest skill
Cant put the puppet bowing
That just now dangled still
Emily Dickinson
CHAPTER 1
in which a scientist visits Hell and a deal is struck
Walpurgisnacht, the Hexennacht. The last night of April. The night of witches, when evil walks abroad.
He stood at a desolate and lonely place where there would be no interruption, no prying eyes. The air smelled metallic with freshly spilt blood; the body of a decapitated virgin kid goat lay nearby. He had no alloyed metal about him but for a thin-bladed sword of fine steel he held in his right hand; that arm was naked, his shirt sleeve rolled up to the biceps. A silver coin wrapped in paper nestled in his waistcoat pocket. Before him burned a fire of white wood.
His name was Johannes Cabal, and he was summoning a demon.
Oarios! Almoazin! Arios! Membrot! The chanted names faded into the unusually still night air. Only the crackling of the fire accompanied him. Janna! Etitnamus! Zariatnatmix and so on. He drew a deep breath and sighed, bored with the ritual. A. E. A. J. A. T. M. O
There was hidden meaning in the names he must call, the letters he must chant. That didnt mean he had to approve or even be impressed by them. As he recited the Grand Conjuration, he thought that some magicians might have better served the world by writing crossword puzzles.
Then space distorted, and he was no longer alone.
The demons name was Lucifuge Rofocale. He stood a little taller than Cabals six feet, but the bizarre fools cap he wore three flopping horns, or perhaps tentacles, ending with arrowheads made his height vary from moment to moment. In one hand he held a bag containing, at least symbolically, the riches of the world. In the other, a golden hoop. He wore a segmented, studded leather skirt rather like a Roman soldiers. Beneath it, fur-covered legs ended in hooves. He had a fat anteaters tail, and a silly little Hercule Poirot moustache. As is often the case with demons, Lucifuge looked like an anatomical game of Consequences.
Lo! cried the demon. I am here! What dost thou seek of me? Why dost thou disturb my repose? Smite me no more with that dread rod! He looked at Cabal. Wheres your dread rod?
I left it at home, replied Cabal. Didnt think I really needed it.
You cant summon me without a dread rod! said Lucifuge, appalled.
Youre here, arent you?
Well, yes, but under false pretences. You havent got a goatskin or two vervain crowns or two candles of virgin wax made by a virgin girl and duly blessed. Have you got the stone called Ematille?
I dont even know what Ematille is.
Neither did the demon. He dropped the subject and moved on. Four nails from the coffin of a dead child?
Dont be fatuous.
Half a bottle of brandy?
I dont drink brandy.
Its not for you.
I have a hip flask, said Cabal, and threw it to him. The demon caught it and took a dram.
Cheers, said Lucifuge, and threw it back. They regarded each other for a long moment. This really is a shambles, the demon added finally. What did you summon me for, anyway?
* * *
he Gates of Hell are an impressive structure. A great adamantine finger of rock a mile in diameter and two miles high punches through the surface of the cracked and baking desert plain of Limbo. On one side of this impenetrable edifice are the Gates themselves: massive iron constructions hundreds of feet wide and a thousand high. Their rough, barely worked surfaces are pocked and pitted with great bolts driven through in ragged lines, huge bands of brass running across in uneven ranks. One could be forgiven for thinking Hells a popular place to get into.
Perhaps surprisingly, it is.
On the outside, one wonders what happens once you pass through that terrible, cruel portal. Some believe that all Hell is somehow crammed within the rock, a place where dimensions mean nothing. Others say that immediately beyond the Gates, within the hollowed rock, is a great chasm that opens into the pit of Hell, and that those stepping within must surely plunge straight to their eternal dooms. Others believe that the rock conceals the top of a very big escalator. Nobody on the outside knows for sure, but everyone wants to find out, and they want to find out because anything anything is better than the forms.
Lots of forms. Stacks of forms. An average of nine thousand, seven hundred, and forty-seven of them were required to gain entrance to Hell. The largest form ran to fifteen thousand, four hundred, and ninety-seven questions. The shortest to just five, but five of such subtle phraseology, labyrinthine grammar, and malicious ambiguity that, released into the mortal world, they would certainly have formed the basis of a new religion or, at the least, a management course.
This, then, was the first torment of Hell, as engineered by the soul of a bank clerk.
Nobody had to fill in the forms, of course. But, given that the alternative was eternity spent naked in an endless desert that has never known night, most people found themselves sooner or later queuing up at the small porters door set into one of Hells Gates. There they would receive a form entitled Infernal Regions (Local Authority) Hades Admission Application Provisional (AAAA/342) and a soft pencil.
Congas of hopeful applicants wound around the gatehouse like a line drawn by somebody wanting to find out how much writing you could get out of a box of ballpoints. The formerly quiet desert hummed to a steady drone of sub-vocalised reading and flipped pages. New arrivals and old hands queued patiently at the porters door to hand in and receive forms. The quickest route through the paper trail necessitated the completion of two thousand, seven hundred, and eighty-five, but nobody had yet fulfilled the extremely narrow conditions that would permit such a speedy passage. Most could anticipate three or four times as many, not counting forms rejected for mistakes; the hand-picked team of administrative imps that dealt with admissions didnt like errors at all, nor did they issue erasers.
* * *
Through the muttering crowds, stepping over form-fillers and never pausing to apologise, came a pale man. Johannes Cabal was walking to Hell.
Tow-headed, lean, in his late twenties, but with any spirit of that youth long since evaporated, Cabal seemed otherwise unremarkable except for his air of intent, his unwavering advance on the gatehouse, and his clothes.
Hey, watch it! barked Al Capone, wrestling with the spelling of venereal, as Cabal stepped over him. Why dont you just The protest died on his lips. Hey Hey! That guys dressed! Hes got clothes!
That guy did, indeed, have clothes. A short black frock coat, slouch-brimmed black hat, black trousers, black shoes, a white shirt, and a tidy black cravat. He wore dark-blue tinted glasses with side-baffles, and he carried a black gladstone bag. Unexciting clothes, but clothes nonetheless.
It was the first sensation that the desert had ever experienced. The damned parted before Cabal, who, in his turn, seemed to accept this as his due. Some excitedly speculated that he must be a messenger from the Other Place, that the end times had finally arrived. Others pointed out that nothing in Revelation referred to a man in a black hat and sensible shoes.
Cabal walked directly to the porters door and slammed his hand on the closed window. While he waited for a reply, he looked about him, and the damned withered beneath his soulless and impassive gaze.
The window snapped open.
What do ye want? demanded a weasely man wearing a tellers shade from the other side, a man named Arthur Trubshaw.