He pressed his fingertips against the heavy wooden surface and pushed; the front door silently swung wide, exposing the empty foyer.
The lights were on, but there wasn’t a sign of Karnighan.
“After we dealt with the dogs, we got in through a side door in the garage out back that I had left open the day before. We knew that the old man wouldn’t be around because he specifically told the foreman that we shouldn’t work on Friday ’cause he’d be away on business. It was the perfect opportunity—the one Dougie and I’d been waiting for.”
They stepped into the foyer and Remy closed the front door. Everything seemed pretty much the same as he remembered.
“Doesn’t sound like you had to twist Dougie’s arm all that much to get him to help you,” Remy said, speaking in almost a whisper, gesturing for the fallen to follow him. He was tempted to call out Karnighan’s name but decided against it. No need to call attention to their arrival; the old man knew that they were coming.
“We got in and went right to the room downstairs,” Madach continued. “Dougie wanted to have a run at the whole place, but I wouldn’t let him. We’d come for the weapons, and that was it.”
Madach swatted his arm, getting Remy’s attention.
“That should count for something, don’t you think?” the fallen asked. “If I’da let him, Dougie would have ripped him off blind.”
“You’d think,” Remy acknowledged as they passed through the room that was being painted the last time he’d been there. The job had been completed since then, the ceiling now a robin’s egg blue, the trim painted white. There was a baby grand piano in the corner, and a leather couch and sofa positioned around a long coffee table, its surface covered with large hardbound art books. It was like something out of a home design magazine, Remy observed as they passed through and approached the corridor that ended with the elevator.
“We headed down in the elevator and I worked on the combination for a while,” Madach said.
“Puzzles, right?” Remy asked. “You’re good at solving puzzles?”
The fallen angel nodded. “You should see me with a Rubik’s Cube.”
The aroma floated lightly in the air, and could easily have been lost amongst some of the other scents of the spacious home, but it snagged Remy’s attention, filling him immediately with dread.
“Down here,” he said, taking a right at the top of the corridor, away from the elevator, following the smell down another hallway to Karnighan’s study.
“Smell it?” Remy asked, approaching the study.
Its doors were open wide, inviting them to enter.
Madach bent his head back and sniffed at the air. “What am I supposed to be smelling? All I’m getting is new paint.”
Remy had forgotten how much the fallen had lost from their original states of being; senses once so acute that they could smell the stink of sin had been dulled by their plummet from grace. They’d had so much taken from them, it was no wonder the Denizens had turned against the Lord God and all that He stood for.
This is where he and Karnighan had shared coffee and talked about their business arrangement.
It hadn’t smelled of blood then.
The odor was nearly gagging in its intensity as Remy entered the room, and there was little doubt now as to what it was. He stopped, eyes darting around for the source. A lone reading lamp in the far corner of the room provided the only light and there Remy saw someone crouched upon the bare hardwood floor within a circle of blood.
The man worked busily, painting with gore. The body of one of Karnighan’s guard dogs—Daisy—lay just outside the circle, her stomach slit open vertically, exposing her innards. The man dipped one of his hands within the dog’s stomach for more to paint with. The room was in disarray; the furniture and priceless Oriental rug had all been pushed away to the sides of the room, giving the mysterious figure room to work.
“What’s going on?” Remy asked, his anger aroused. He’d liked Daisy quite a bit.
The man, who was dressed in a long, oversized bathrobe, flinched at the sound of his voice.
“Remiel,” the artist croaked, as if his throat was choked with dust. “I didn’t hear you come in.”
At first he was startled at the use of his angel name by this stranger. He watched as the kneeling man slowly turned himself around within the circle of blood. Then with the aid of a cane that Remy had not noticed lying on the ground beside him, he rose unsteadily.
And he was a stranger no longer.
“Karnighan?” Remy asked, not believing his eyes.
The sight of the man was disturbing to say the least, nothing but paper-thin skin and bones, the heavy bathrobe threatening to swallow his entire skeletal form. It was like looking at an Egyptian mummy Remy had once seen at the Museum of Science, brought to life by some kind of dark, powerful magick. There was no way this mockery of a man should have been alive.
But he was.
The living cadaver nodded tremulously, leaning upon its cane. “Yes, for now,” Karnighan croaked, the sound of something wet and loose rattling somewhere in his throat. The figure swayed like a Halloween decoration in a cool October wind.
“What’s happened to you?” Remy asked.
Karnighan jerkily stepped closer, a crooked grin that might have been a smile but was more likely a grimace of pain on his cadaverous face threatening to tear the paper-thin skin. He looked down at his bloody work.
“All part of the story that I need to share with you,” he said, leaning upon his cane to lower himself back down to the floor. “I’ll have to talk and work at the same time,” he wheezed. “I’m not sure how much time I still have… how much we all have, really.”
He could still reach Daisy’s corpse, and stuck his fingers into the wound again.
“What’s going on?” Remy asked as the old man added details to what Remy—on closer inspection—realized were sigils of angel magick.
“They’re going to try and use the Pitiless to free him,” the living corpse said. The scent of death hung heavy in the air, and Remy wasn’t sure if it was the body of the dog or Karnighan himself.
Though he’d hoped to be wrong, Remy’s suspicions were correct, and he felt the world drop away from beneath him. All the pain and suffering—the penance—it was all going to be for nothing.
It’s going to start again.
“Lucifer,” Karnighan spat, furiously working, his face mere inches from the floor.
“They’re going to set the Morningstar free.”
“Why would the Nomads do that?” Remy asked the living skeleton kneeling beneath him.
“The Nomads,” Karnighan repeated, stopping briefly, his breath coming in short, ragged gasps. “Is that who they are? The ones who managed to acquire the weapons?”
Remy gave Madach a sidelong glance, then looked back to the old man. “In a roundabout way, yeah.”
Madach came closer, no longer a figure in the background. “I stole them,” he confessed. “I was working in your home when I heard them… They… they called out to me… and with the help of a friend, I took them from your house.”
Karnighan rose from his work, looking at the fallen through squinting eyes. “I was going to ask who you were, but I recognize you now.” He pointed at Madach with bloodstained fingers. “You painted in the den.” The old man nodded, knowing that he was right about where he’d seen the man before. “You say that they called to you?” he asked.
Madach nodded. “I tried to ignore them, but it was impossible. I would’ve gone nuts if I hadn’t done something. It’s no excuse, but…”
Karnighan returned to his work. “I’d say it was impossible. I thought I had silenced the weapons, voices cloaked their very presence in this house by all manner of angelic sorcery, but here you are confessing to the act.”