The door was marked as such by the laminated pressboard sign affixed to it that read:
Though by the look of the project’s perimeter — a buckling plywood security wall discolored with age and papered with layer after layer of handbills — it didn’t look like much renewing had been going on for quite some time.
I unlocked the lock. Handed it to the mook. He gestured with his barrel yet again.
I took the hint, and pushed open the plywood door — or tried. The moment I touched it, my body was suffused with sudden, crawling dread. It slid down my arm and coiled around my heart, my lungs, my stomach. Like a litter of pythons, freshly hatched and hungry — tightening, choking, crushing my will as they contracted. And, though I’m certain now it was only in my mind, I felt as much as heard a low, raspy whisper in my ear accompanied by hot swamp breath that reeked like rotting flesh, uttering perhaps the most compelling command I’ve ever received: “Leave.”
The driver’s Ruger jabbed into my back, a cold hard finger between my shoulder blades. I shoved the door open and staggered through. He followed close behind, careful not to touch the door along the way. The rusty spring affixed to the hinge protested as the plywood door swung closed and the city outside disappeared.
2.
“The fuck was that?” I asked, crossing my arms and rubbing at my borrowed shoulders in a vain attempt to dispel the dread that had settled upon me as I’d forced open the door.
“Security,” he said. His gun was still drawn but no longer trained on me, instead hanging relaxed at his side in one gloved hand. “The whole fence is like that. Protects the would-be squatters and nosey bloody parkers.”
“Don’t you mean protects you from the would-be squatters and nosey bloody parkers?”
“No. Although in the Bentley’s case, that’s true enough. Its bodywork is hexed to match. Even with the gloves on, I don’t like touching it.”
“It’s a cute trick,” I said. “You’ll have to teach me.”
He shook his head. “Not mine to teach.”
“The boss?” I hazarded.
“The boss.”
Inside the perimeter of the site the air was somehow darker, closer. It took me a moment to realize why. The sky above was a formless gray far deeper than it had been a moment before, and oddly distorted, as if seen through dirty leaded windows. And though outside the gate the rain continued unabated, I neither saw nor felt any trace of it in here, and the sidewalk beneath my feet was dry. I smelled not moisture, nor exhaust, nor simmering spice, just a still alkaline nothing, like the air inside a fallout bunker. Here, as outside, the sidewalk buckled under countless weeds’ persistence, but while outside they were thriving, the weeds inside were withered, black, and dead. And inside the plywood perimeter, it was dead silent as well. I heard no city sounds, no song, not so much as the quiet patter of the rain. Just me and this mook breathing in the silence. It set my teeth on edge.
“Well then,” I said. “What say we two go meet him?”
Muffled footfalls against concrete. Massive front steps looming. Now that we were inside the barrier, the building no longer resisted being seen. It was an imposing structure in the Edwardian style with hard lines and thick columns, faced in weather-beaten limestone that gathered in heavy geometric pediments above every window. As we approached the outsized arch of the entryway, I noted the lettering carved into the rectangular cartouche atop the keystone, which read, Pemberton Baths.
“We going for a swim?” I asked.
“Something like that,” he replied.
We scaled the broad stone stairs. My gaze lighted on something on the topmost step that seemed incongruous with our surroundings, a brush-stroke of stark white against the gray. I crouched over it, and found to my surprise it was a good-sized bird, or what was left of one. I’d never seen one like it, or so I thought. When I said as much to my fair foreign companion, he snorted and said, “You never see a crow before?”
With a start, I realized he was right. It was a crow. Emphasis on the was.
The crow lay on its side, wings splayed as if felled in mid-flight, though it showed no signs of trauma from whatever felled it or from the fall itself. And every inch of it, from beak to wing to three-pronged feet, was as pale as sun-bleached bone. Save for its eyes, I realized. The one that I could see was a blackened crater with a corona of charcoal all around. It looked as if it had been burned out of the poor creature’s head.
Suddenly, the driver’s comment about protecting would-be squatters and looky-loos made a whole lot more sense.
I reached down to turn the bird over, to try to understand what sort of magic it had fallen victim to, but when I touched it, it crumbled to ash.
“Your boss has quite the bag of tricks.”
“He does, at that.”
“And he doesn’t seem too fond of visitors.”
He shrugged. “He’s a very private man, isn’t he?”
“So how come you and me could pass?”
He looked at me like I was dense. “We were invited.”
“That didn’t seem to stop the fence. Or the mojo on the Bentley.”
At that, the big man hesitated, a pained look on his face as if worried what came next might be perceived by his employer as speaking out of turn. “We weren’t harmed because the boss wishes us no harm. If I had to guess, I’d say he’s less concerned whether he hurts our feelings. And if I were you, I’d get a move on. He’s not a man who takes kindly to being kept waiting.”
The front door was unlocked. We stepped inside. Our footfalls echoed through the broad expanse of the room. The interior of the building was dark, lit only by the faint light that trickled through the dirt-crusted panes of the skylight that stretched the length of the ceiling, and the soft glow of two gas lamps at the far end of the room. All the windows save for the skylight were boarded up.
Situated beneath the skylight was a vast, white-tiled swimming pool. Circling it was a narrow walkway no doubt once dotted with low-slung lounge chairs, but now piled here and there with detritus — nail-studded boards; hunks of masonry run through with metal rebar; a pile of public restroom sinks. The pool itself was free of such detritus. A set of stairs in either corner nearest us — one crumbling, one intact — invited would-be swimmers into the shallow end a scant three feet below the walkway, and from there the pool’s bottom sloped gradually downward toward the far end.
The driver gestured toward the undamaged stairs, so I took them, he trailing just behind. Together we descended toward the gas-lit glow of the deep end. Though the pool had long been drained, I couldn’t help but feel as my sightline passed below the walkway that surrounded it that I was in over my head.
The deep end featured on its right-hand side a cluttered office. A gas lamp turned down to barely burning rested on an elegant mahogany desk, but afforded too little light to make out anything but black shapes surrounding it. The deep-end’s left-hand side was taken up by a makeshift room framed in two-by-fours and shielded from view by hanging sheets of plastic of the type I’d seen outside. Another lamp burned inside the makeshift room, this one brighter, projecting shadows of the activity therein against the walls like some nightmare paper lantern. I saw a table’s distorted shadow, its flat plane broken by a sleeping body — or a cadaver. The vague shape of a man’s head and shoulders were visible hunching over it, his hands an impossible blur of activity. He was humming, I realized — a Wagner opera. And, though the table’s supports were stick-skinny, light showing underneath, the man appeared to have no legs.