"Perhaps nothing," Vollman said. "But I hold very little faith in coincidence."
"Me, too," I said. "So?"
"So, the man in the alley was clearly a sacrifice, yes?"
"Fair assumption," I said.
"A sacrifice is used in magic to give power to a spell or incantation."
"Right."
"Most magical rituals that involve sacrifice call for the death of an animal. The sacrifice of a human being is used only in the blackest of the black arts, when some great evil is being contemplated."
"Agreed."
Vollman looked at Karl, then back at me. "Then ask yourselves this question, which has been haunting me for the last several nights: how monstrous must a spell be that requires the sacrifice of a vampire?"
There was a silence that Vollman finally broke by saying, "And remember the Opus Mago is a forbidden book precisely because it contains spells to be used for invoking the most potent of the dark forces, which are precisely the kind of powers that would require such an… extreme… sacrifice."
"So your theory," Karl said, "is that whoever stole the Opus Mago plans to carry out one of those blacker than-black rituals, and that the guy who got his throat cut is supposed to kick-start the process."
Vollman nodded. "That is the conclusion that I have reached, based on the available information."
Karl's chair creaked as he leaned forward. "So how do we find the guy who's doing this shit?"
"If I knew that…" Vollman shrugged instead of finishing the sentence.
"If you knew that, you wouldn't need us," I said. "That's the most honest thing you've ever said to us, even if you didn't really say it."
Vollman didn't respond to my dig. Istead, he asked politely, "Have your police colleagues produced any useful leads in the case of George Kulick?"
"Not a damn thing," I said. "No witnesses, no murder weapon, and the forensics stuff is pretty much useless."
"They found some stray hairs on the corpse," Karl said, "but whether they come from the perp or from the vic's girlfriend, or his mother, or whoever, we don't know. And a DNA match won't work until they have a suspect to match it to."
"I was just remembering something you said the other day," I told Vollman. "Whoever would mess around with the Opus Mago would have to be a wizard of 'supreme arrogance,' or something like that. I had the impression that you believe most practitioners of the Art wouldn't be caught dead with that book, so to speak."
"You are correct," Vollman said. "Even I have not read it – apart from a quick perusal, to verify its authenticity."
"You wouldn't read it," Karl said. "Okay, who would?"
Vollman raised his hands a few inches before dropping them back in his lap. "I have no idea."
"But among the local supes you're the man," Karl said. "You told us so yourself. So you ought to know which of the practitioners would have the stones to try a spell from this book."
"I ought to know, yes, and I do," Vollman said. "The answer to your question is, 'no one.'"
"None of the local wizards, witches, sorcerers, or wannabees would give it a try? You're sure?" Karl was like a terrier with a rat. He gets that way sometimes.
"Quite certain. The person in this area with the greatest chance of surviving such an attempt is, frankly, myself. And I would not venture such insanity."
"So it's an outsider," I said. "Somebody who came here for the express purpose of stealing the Opus Mago and making use of it."
Vollman thought about that for a while, or pretended to. Finally, he said, "You must be correct, Sergeant. I can think of no other explanation."
"Why here?" Karl asked. "Why Scranton?"
"Remember, there are only four copies of the Opus Mago known to remain in existence, Detective," Vollman said. "Kulick was the guardian of one of them. There were only so many places the thief could strike."
"Where are the other three?" I asked him.
Vollman counted them off slowly on his fingers as he spoke. "One is in London," he said, "in a secure vault at the British Museum. Another is in Cologne, Germany. The third is held in Johannesburg, South Africa. And the fourth is – was – here."
"Are the other three copies still where they're supposed to be?" I was wondering whether Scranton was the thief's first stop, or his last.
"I have made inquiries within the last few days," Vollman said. "Yes, all three are still in place." He held up a hand, palm toward me, for a moment. "And if I may anticipate your next question, no attempts have been made to steal the other copies."
"So, whoever it was wanted the book, he picked Scranton as the best place to rip it off," Karl said. "Maybe because he heard the Opus Mago was guarded by just one guy and a dinky little floor safe."
Vollman stirred in his chair a little, as if the accusation in Karl's voice had made him uncomfortable.
"He came here for the book, then stuck around," Karl went on. "Why would he do that?"
"Perhaps he is in a hurry," Vollman said. "He wants to waste no time in putting one of the spells into practice."
"It would be good if we knew what ll was," I said to Karl. "Might give us a better idea of what we're dealing with."
I turned to Vollman. "We know about the silver knife, and about the name of-" I stopped, and tapped the pad on my desk, where he had written the ancient god's name. "-this guy here. Is that enough to go on, for somebody to look in one of the other copies and work backwards?"
Vollman sat there for a while, frowning. Then he said, "I can ask. You understand, I have no authority over those people. But if I explain what is at stake here, it may be that one of the other caretakers can be persuaded to search through his copy of the Opus Mago. Perhaps, given what we know, he can determine the exact nature of the spell that is being undertaken by this lunatic, whoever he may be."
"Or 'she,'" Karl said.
Vollman dipped his head in acknowledgment. "Or she."
"If you can do that right away, it would be a very good thing," I said. "And in the meantime, Detective Renfer and I will talk to some of our contacts in the supernatural community."
Vollman looked at me. "To what end?"
"To see if there's a new wizard in town."
In Scranton, there's no shortage of what my mom used to call beer gardens. There are straight bars and supe bars. That doesn't mean a supe can't walk into any joint in town for a beer (or a Bloody Mary – with or without real blood), assuming he's of age and has the money to pay for it. Discrimination's against the law. Anyway, no bartender's going to refuse to serve somebody who might come back during the next full moon and tear his throat out.
But most supes prefer the company of their own, and the biggest supe bar in town is Renfield's on Wyoming Avenue. I'd been there plenty of times before.
The place was busy when Karl and I walked in a little after 3am. Supe bars usually stay open all night and close at dawn, for obvious reasons.
You'd think we might get a hostile reception in a place like that, but you'd be wrong. Cops on the Supe Squad spend as much time investigating crimes committed against supes as we do on crimes with a supe perpetrator, and the supe community knows that. If a cop is fair in his dealings with them, the supes remember.
And if he's not fair, they remember that, too.
I try to be fair, even when dealing with vamps. You can't let your personal views get in the way of your work – it's not professional. And I'm always professional. Well, almost always.
We got nods of welcome from a couple of ogres sitting in a corner, and a quiet wave from a werewolf we knew. The rest of the customers ignored us, or pretended to.
Elvira was tending bar, like she usually does on weeknights. That's not her real name, of course. But she's tricked out like that vamp wannabe who got famous hosting bad horror movies on TV. Why an attractive human would want to look like a vamp is beyond me, but I guess a girl's gotta make a living. Like the original, our Elvira's got boobs big enough to look good in the low-slung dress that's part of the get-up, and I bet that cleavage of hers is good for a lot of tips.