Unholy Magic
by Stacia Kane
Downside Ghosts - 2
The penalty for summoning the dead back to earth is death; if the summoned spirit does not kill its summoner, be assured the Church will.
The Book of Truth, Laws, Article 3
Ghosts were stronger underground; no witch willingly went below the surface of the earth, not without a Church edict or a death wish. Chess had both to varying degrees, but that didnt make the doorway looming behind the skinny man holding the cup any more appealing. The doorway, and the stairs. Down into a basement, down into the ground.
Chesss skin crawled from more than just the squat-faced, wizened appearance of the man, more than the bizarre energy in the dirty shack. Something told her this was not going to end well.
But then, things so rarely did.
She could have busted the bastards simply for having a basement. The Church decreed they were illegal, and the Church was not to be disobeyed. But she needed more than thata month of investigation demanded a more satisfactory resolution than thatso instead she pasted what she hoped was a smile with the right touch of nervousness on her face and handed the skinny man the picture shed brought, careful not to touch his grimy fingers.
The picture was of Gary Anderson, a fellow Debunker, but the skinny man didnt know that. At least Chess hoped he didnt.
My brother, she told him. It would have been better if shed been able to squeeze out a tear, but the Cepts shed taken didnt allow it. It was hard enough to feel emotions when she was high, let alone emotions intense enough to make her weep. Hell, that was one reason why she kept taking the fucking things, wasnt it?
The skinny man focused his rheumy eyes with effort on the photo, then nodded.
Aye, seein a lookalike, he mumbled, scratching his bony chest through a hole in his ragged green sweater. He shoved the cup forward, narrowly avoiding hitting her with it. You drink, aye?
Thanks, but
Nay, nay, lil miss. You drink, or you aint get down, aye? All must drink. His chapped lips stretched and flaked in a gruesome semblance of a smile, like a fat worm crawling across his face, revealing broken, graying teeth. All must drink, or the energy, she aint work.
Shit. Who the fuck knew what was in that nasty cup? Even if the tea was harmlesswhich she doubtedthe thing looked like it hadnt been washed since before Haunted Week. She could practically see germs crawling along the rim.
The bonus on this job would be a couple of grand, she reminded herself, and snatched the cup from his dry, bony hand.
His gaze locked on hers. She held it while she tilted the cup and poured the contents down her throat.
For a second the room spun around her, whirling on its side like an amusement park ride. The concoction tasted of bitter herbs and glue, of seawater and sewage. It was the most revolting thing shed ever put in her mouth, and that was saying a lot.
She held it down through sheer force of will, and was rewarded with another flaky smile. Something lurked behind that smile, but she didnt have time to analyze it. His hand was on her sleeve, urging her into the dark mouth of the stairway, and her feet clumped on the wooden slats as she made her way into the damp cave below.
The others were already there, sitting in a circle beneath flaming torches, around a scarred wooden table. Across one end of it was draped a blue silk scarf, stained with blood or wineor perhaps someone elses stomach had lost its battle with the tea.
No time to think about it, even if shed cared to. Instead she made her way to the table, to the straight-backed wooden chair someone had pushed out for her.
Someone, she saw, was a five-foot-tall human parody of indeterminate sex wearing a belted garbage bag and white face paint. Heavy black rims surrounded its beady, pupilless eyes, and its voice was barely more than a dry whisper, like a knife cutting through cardboard.
Sit ye down, lil miss, it rasped. Sit ye down, and the Ladywitch, shell be out.
The Ladywitch was Madame Lupita, formerly known as Irene Lowe, and as soon as Chess had the evidence she neededin the form of her own eye witness testimony and whatever the minirecorder concealed in her bra picked upMadame would have a date with a guillotine. The Church did not take a forgiving stance on illegal ghost-raising or sances, even fake ones such as Lupita was rumored to run.
Rumor, hell. What was about to happen here was obvious, was even more so when a black-painted door opened opposite Chess and an enormous woman thrust her bulk into the room.
Her face was white, her eyes black-ringed, a garish parody of Church Elder makeup. Any resemblance stopped there. Madame Lupita wore a shiny silver caftan, on which were painted various runes and magical symbols. Small pieces of iron hung from it, too small to offer any real protection. Chess supposed they were there for effect, as was the heavy iron-and-amber necklace around the womans short, fat throat or the matching silver turban covering her head.
Whatever they were for, Lupitas appearance was obviously what the other people around the table expected. Chess felt rather than heard their sigh of satisfaction, their belief that theyd done the right thing in coming here. For those who couldnt afford to pay a Church Liaiser to contact the spirits of their dead loved ones, amateur sances like these seemed the answer to the prayers they were prohibited from uttering.
Too bad they were illegal, which was why Chess was there to begin with. Helping the Black Squad make a case against Lupita meant some extra cash for her.
And too bad it was all fake. If Lupita and her ilk were truly powerful enough to raise ghosts, the Church would have found them through the tests every child in the world underwent at the age of fourteen, would have trained them and hired them. Many of them had a glimmer of power, enough to send a shiver through the air and fool their clients, most of whom had no idea what real power, real magic, felt like.
Chess did. Knew the feelingloved the feelingalmost as much as the cool, smooth peace of her pills, or the foggy bliss of Dream smoke, or the sparkly, fizzing sensation created by the occasional line of speed. She knew them all, loved them all, because anything that distanced her from reality was a blessing in a world where blessing was against the law.
Of course, her drugs were illegal, too. But that hadnt stopped her from doing them, hadnt stopped her dealer, Bumpor her whatever-he-was, Lexfrom selling them. It just meant they all had to be a lot more careful.
Speaking of careful Madame Lupita settled herself at the table, clapped her hands. Something clinked behind Chess. She didnt turn around, but she heard it, soft wings beating the air. A psychopomp. Madame Lupita knew how to put on a show.
All hold hands, she commanded, in a deep, liquid voice. No messin, aye hold hands, or they dont come.
To Chesss left sat a rake-thin young man. His fingers were sweaty, his face wet with tears as he stared at the picture on the table before him. Chess couldnt make out the image.
To her right was the female half of a middle-aged couple, clad in a cheap fake silk dress. Her hand shook against Chesss palm.
Lupita reached across the table and grabbed the picture in front of the woman. What be this girls name?
A-Annabeth. Annabeth Whitman.
Lupita bowed her head. The others did the same, including Chess, who used the opportunity to look around the room from under her lashes.
The psychopomp settled on a perch behind Lupitas left shoulder. A crow, its black feathers gleaming in the firelight. To Chesss right, against the wall, row upon row of skulls grinned blankly at her. Most were small animals, cats and rats and the occasional dog. To her left a wall mural; spirits straining for the sky, their long arms and spidery fingers gruesome and sad.