The Devil of Echo Lake

Home > Other > The Devil of Echo Lake > Page 7
The Devil of Echo Lake Page 7

by Douglas Wynne


  Billy laughed as he took in the view. It was a harem. The room was made to resemble a large tent. Tapestries were draped from the ceiling and walls. Big, square velvet pillows covered the floor atop several layers of overlapping Persian rugs. The only light came from a star-shaped tin lantern hanging from a silver chain in the center of the room, its myriad pinprick holes emitting the golden rays of a candle burning within.

  Six naked young women lay sprawled around the room on the pillows. Billy’s laughter tapered off when he noticed that the reason they were all so immediately, strikingly beautiful to him was because they all looked like Kate. Even by the uneven candle light, he could tell that none of them looked exactly like her twin, but they all shared her basic body type, her height, her mane of loose, curly red hair, her breasts. One had her eyes—another, her hands—on a third, the lips were just right. The illusion was good enough to cause a tightening of his black jeans. The girl with the perfect hair relieved that discomfort by unbuttoning and unzipping them.

  She led him with a gentle grip into the center of the room where he fell to his knees on the pillows, just below the star lantern and another dangling silk rope. Now the Kates were stripping him of his jacket, shirt and everything else down to his socks with astonishing efficiency. He wondered if they were so well coordinated in everything they did.

  They were.

  Two tongues fluttered at his earlobes while two more did the same at his nipples. Then the mouths at his ears moved down to his nipples to replace the other pair, which in turn brushed across his hips and met at last in a long slow kiss around the part of him that was one. A fifth Kate was kissing his lips while the sixth embraced him from behind and sucked on the nape of his neck.

  The configuration continued to evolve in perfect speechless synchrony.

  When they had brought him to the brink for the third time and he was groaning between great heaving breaths, sweat stinging his eyes, pelvis vibrating with tremors of impending orgasm, they suddenly ceased their adorations as if in response to some silent cue.

  Billy cast about trying to set his eyes on Rail. A flame revealed the man’s face in the corner when he lit a cigarillo, holding it between the ring finger and pinky of his right hand and sucking the smoke through the tunnel of his fist, an effect that made his hand appear to be kindled from within.

  Rail spoke in smoke, his voice oily and resonant. “This token will be a reminder to you. The consummation of our contract.” He reached into the pocket of his slacks and withdrew a shining platinum ring. One of the Kates pried Billy’s clutching right hand from a pillow and held it out to Rail. Billy felt the metal mouth devour the knuckle of his ring finger.

  Rail said, “From this night forward, you are married to the music, Billy Moon. Serve the music first and all else is yours for the taking.” Billy closed his fist. The ring felt heavy and cold. Trevor Rail raised his voice in mockery of a priest orating a Latin mass and intoned, “In the name of the riches, bitches, and fame everlasting, amen.”

  The Kates resumed their rhythmic work as if they had never stopped, like a funk band kicking back in after a false ending.

  “Oh, God,” Billy said.

  “Not quite,” said Rail, pulling the silk rope that dangled over Billy's chest.

  Blood sprayed from the pinprick holes in the tin star lantern. The candle sizzled and sputtered out.

  Six

  “Looking back, I think I sold my soul.”

  “To the Devil,” Johnny said.

  Billy set his jaw and made a tic that was almost a nod.

  “That is one fucked-up tale, my friend. And your producer has probably taken you for a ride in more ways than one, but does he have to be the Devil incarnate?”

  “He showed up in my darkest hour and made me a star. Played every hole in my heart like a flute.”

  “And now you feel like payback time is nigh?”

  “I do.”

  “Okay, even if I accept the possibility of a Devil, you still didn’t make a deal for your soul as far as I can see based on what you’ve told me. Did that happen later?”

  “That’s what I can’t figure out. I think it was subtle, like I was supposed to recognize the moment and what it meant, but I didn’t. I didn’t see anything about a soul in the contract. Sometimes he seems to talk in symbolism. As a songwriter, I hate to admit I don’t always get it. But I never raised my left hand and made an oath. I never signed a piece of parchment in blood.” Billy chuckled nervously at how hokey that sounded. “Maybe just telling him I would do whatever it took... Maybe letting him put this ring on my finger.” Billy rotated the platinum band on his right hand with the thumb and forefinger of his left, a wheel turning on an axle.

  Johnny smiled. It was a kind smile, not condescending. He said, “Well I think you’re alright, bro. It doesn't sound like you made a pact. But you’re going up to that studio in a couple of days. Is that to work with this same producer? Satan himself?”

  “Yeah.”

  “If you want my advice, you should call it off. Just cancel and take some time to step away from all the head games.”

  “I can’t. I’m under contract. Last disc didn’t do so hot, and now they say they’ll drop me if I don’t play nice with the King Midas who produced my one hit.”

  “Well then, at least get some rest before you drive up. You look like shit.”

  “Thanks, Johnny. You always know how to make me feel better.”

  Part II

  Private Devils

  Seven

  “For where God built a church,

  there the Devil would also build a chapel.”

  Martin Luther

  Billy Moon came to Echo Lake on the second of November, a perfect fall day. Jake arrived at the church at eleven in the morning, one hour before the session start time. He parked his newly purchased, rusty Pontiac under the stand of pines, unlocked the double doors, and set the heavy black flight case he was carrying on the floor. The vast room was silent from the waxed floorboards and threadbare Persian rugs to the cobwebbed rafters. A hint of Pine Sol and the stronger aroma of fresh brewed coffee hung in the air. He had passed Rita, the head housekeeper, on the road from the main building.

  Jake poured himself a paper cup of coffee in the kitchenette. He put a CD on in the control room and patched it through to the monitor speakers in the big room so he could listen while he set up. It was Peter Gabriel’s Passion soundtrack, a record that had kindled his interest in engineering in the first place.

  He looked over his notes while the coffee and music sparked his brain into work mode. Kevin Brickhouse had requested a pretty standard assortment of microphones for the drum kit, and Jake had them all in the flight case. On the phone, Brickhouse had put Jake at ease with his friendly tone, but he also sounded tired. He had even joked that he would be leaning pretty hard on Jake if he didn’t get some sleep before leaving the Hit Factory, where he was finishing up a Ska record before making the trip up I-87 to Echo Lake on his Harley. “Thank God for Peruvian rocket powder, eh kid?”

  As second engineer, Jake’s first priority was to keep the session moving without a hitch, hovering in the background like a good waiter, never voicing his own opinions on musical matters unless they were asked for, and then as diplomatically as possible. If everything went smoothly, he should be seldom noticed and take no credit for the session’s success.

  But if things went awry, if equipment failed, as it invariably did in every project, or if the engineer made a mistake in front of the producer, it was his job to step in and remedy the situation, bypassing or replacing the faulty gear so fast no one noticed, or (in the case of operator error) taking the blame to save face for the guy making ten times the pay he was.

  In a room lined wall-to-wall with buttons, knobs, and LCD screens, he was expected to be able to patch a sound through any combination of processors in any order without hesitation at two in the morning, in the dark, after three weeks of fourteen-hour days, catering to the whims of ego m
aniacs and drug addicts.

  For this he could reasonably expect to earn rent and gas money and his name in microscopic print somewhere in the CD booklet. That was the apprenticeship his teachers had told him to expect. It was worth it, they said, because if you persisted and made a good impression, the day would come when an artist or producer would ask you to engineer the next one. Or, if you were very lucky, the engineer you were assisting would get sick and put you in the driver’s seat, so make sure you order his Chinese food from the worst joint in town. It wasn’t rocket science, but there were producers who acted like it was open-heart surgery. One mistake could cost you your career. There was the legend about the assistant who had walked off in the night, never to be seen again, after realizing he’d accidentally erased a Steely Dan master tape, or the one about how Paul Simon had vomited upon learning an assistant had erased one of his vocal tracks.

  It reminded him of that children’s game Operation where you tried to remove plastic bones from the patient with a pair of metal tweezers, and a buzzer went off if you touched the sides. You were trying to get something out of the artist without damaging it—probing the heart without jolting the nerves. Recording music was a craft that existed somewhere on the borderland between art and science. Terrain that Trevor Rail and Kevin Brickhouse were reputedly very good at navigating.

  Brickhouse made a loud entrance shortly after noon. Jake heard the Harley coming long before it pulled up in front of the church. He had once seen a picture of Brickhouse in Mix magazine, but the man’s appearance had changed since then. He no longer had hair, for one thing, and judging by the cinnamon and salt stubble that framed his face, Jake could tell he had taken the skinhead option as a rock fashion solution to the receding hairline he’d already had in that magazine shot.

  He wore a black t-shirt that said guttermonkey in a lowercase logo, under an unbuttoned blue denim work shirt and blue jeans smeared with oil from the hog. An open bracelet made from a metal rod with a ball bearing on each end adorned his left wrist while an athletic wristwatch as thick as a double-stuffed Oreo squeezed the other above the hand that was swinging his Captain America motorcycle helmet by its leather strap.

  He smiled at Jake with eyes that were friendly but sunken. Something about that look made Jake think of concentration camps.

  “You Jake?”

  “Yes. Kevin, it’s good to meet you.”

  “I don’t think you were here the last time I was.”

  “I’m new here.”

  “Brian still work here?”

  “Yes.”

  “Cool. I’ll have to drag him out for a beer one of these nights. So, I see the drums made it. We won’t set up any mics for them until they bring a drummer in—probably not until next week at the earliest. To start, I think we’ll just be rolling tape while Billy plays around on the guitar and the computer. Just documenting song ideas, but we have to be prepared to use it as a master if he gets anything good down, so I want you to start by printing code on track twenty-four for the first few reels. That way we can lock in with his laptop and even automate some rough mixes later on.”

  Jake got to work immediately. He was almost finished prepping the tapes when Trevor Rail arrived. His first look at the legendary producer eased some of the low-grade anxiety that had been plaguing his stomach ever since Eddie had assigned him to the project. Rail had cemented a reputation as a mean bastard, but Jake had been lacking a mental image to attach to the noxious persona.

  Steve, one of the other assistants who had worked with Rail in the city before coming to Echo Lake, had done his best impersonation for Jake while they sat in the shop doing busywork. Steve’s English accent needed work, but he had sworn that the content of such priceless one liners as “Talk while I’m listening to playback one more time and I’ll do a razor edit on your windpipe” were taken verbatim from old “Third Rail.”

  With a build-up like that, Jake was taken aback when the Trevor Rail he met on November second greeted him with a disarming smile that offset the seriousness of the man’s white-frosted black goatee and widow’s peak. Rail's nose and sideburns were sharp and angular, but his posture and clothes telegraphed the kind of laconic ease that Jake associated with wealth. When he introduced himself, his voice was gentle and courteous, his accent soft and attractive. It was difficult to imagine that voice rising in anger. What was I expecting, Jake wondered, a tail?

  But when Trevor Rail curled his fingers around Jake's eagerly extended hand and squeezed it firmly in his own, everything changed. There was a low, droning malevolence transmitted by that hand, and Jake recoiled from it as if he had just opened a kitchen drawer in someone else's house, searching for a butter knife, only to find a handgun instead.

  Rail ambled around the big room, chatting with Brickhouse about where he wanted Billy Moon’s workstation set up. More road cases had been delivered by Rock-It Cargo since Jake had opened the building, and Rail said he didn’t expect to get any further than setting up and maybe tracking the skeleton of a song tonight, if Billy was up for it.

  “Does he have some strong material this time?” Brickhouse asked.

  “I don’t know if he has any material. We’re going to write. Together, maybe.”

  “No kidding. I didn’t know you wrote music.”

  “Well, let’s say I have ideas. I’m more of a concept man. A catalyst,” Rail said.

  “So it’s going to be a concept album?”

  “God, no. Not like what they used to mean by that. But all of the best rock records have some kind of concept behind them, and Billy is at a point in his career where he could use one. Even Kurt Cobain, who despised all of that pompous seventies crap, had concepts.”

  “So what is it? What’s the concept for this record that has no songs yet?”

  “Maybe… Love and Death? What has great music or poetry ever been about, but those twin forces that undo a man?”

  “Anyone ever tell you, you can be more pretentious than your artists?” Brickhouse said with a smile.

  “I won’t deny high ambition. I want to make an immortal record.”

  “Immortal, huh? Sure you don’t want to just stick with making immoral records? You’re good at it.”

  “Kevin, I want to produce something that will still be on the charts in twenty years. A record that will outlive modern rock.”

  “I’d say that was grandiose, but these days, it shouldn’t be too difficult. Just make a hip-hop record and it’ll outlive rock-and-roll. Rock is gonna be marginalized just like jazz and blues were. Whatever rock is—guitar music—it’s gonna be the soundtrack for nursing homes when the boomers retire. It won’t be cool anymore. That’s why I’m working like a mad motherfucker while I can.”

  “You may be wrong, my friend. A new generation is discovering the first Doors album. They’re buying Imagine and Electric Ladyland, and in twenty years, new kids will still be buying Nevermind.”

  “All of those albums outlived their creators because the artists died young.”

  “There is something romantic about it, don’t you think? It adds to the mythos.”

  “Worked for Elvis.”

  “Elvis, you see? His myth outlived the rock-and-roll of his time. He and Bob Marley are on par with Jesus. They’re more than rock stars; they’re spiritual icons. That’s what I want to do: shape a legend.” Rail plucked a red pen from a coffee cup and twirled it in his long fingers.

  “But you can’t plan that. You just have to be in the right place at the right time. Those artists are freaks of nature. And who can say why the world was ready for a certain voice?”

  “I think some voices would reach an audience in any time. Styles come and go, but a voice that’s telling the truth about sex and death, a voice that’s been shaped by those energies, saturated by them… That’s magnetic. And it's the magic of this business to capture that genie in a bottle and sell it.”

  Jake had given up even pretending to organize cables within earshot of the conversation and had drift
ed closer, fascinated.

  “Maybe you can capture that,” Brickhouse said, “but you can’t create it or contrive it. Why do you think all these A&R sluts are always getting laid off and bouncing from one label to another? Those guys can’t do it either. You can’t manufacture gods. You can’t calculate genius.”

  “Genius is overrated.”

  “Well, the magazines sure do wear the word out. But Lennon, Morrison and Hendrix… Those guys were in a feedback loop with a cultural zeitgeist. Not likely to happen again in this jaded age, if you want my opinion. And that messiah thing? I don’t think that’s genius, exactly. More like a combination of beauty and tragedy.”

  “There you have it: Sex and Death.”

  “I thought your concept was Love and Death.”

  “Love is elusive. Sex can be inspired with far greater precision.”

  “And how do you inspire death?”

  “I suspect it has something to do with putting the artist in the right place… at the right time.”

  Rail lit a cigarillo and cast his gaze around the church in silence, taking it all in before heading back to his black BMW and disappearing up the dirt road toward the main building.

  * * *

  Jake was busy setting up equipment for the rest of the day while the pale light drained out of the sky. At seven-thirty Rail called the control room to ask if Moon had arrived.

  “No sign of the artiste yet, eh, Jake? Alright, then. Take a dinner break and call me when you see the Moon,” Rail said and hung up.

  Brickhouse sighed and drummed his hands on the Neve console’s leather palm rest. “So now we’re starting at what? Eight, nine, or ten? Man, I don’t know if I’ll be awake by then.”

  “There are a few beds upstairs,” Jake said. “You could take a nap, and I’ll wake you up if Billy shows.”

  “That’s tempting. But I’ve been up for almost seventy-two hours already. If I go to sleep now, I won’t be worth shit in two hours. I’ll just feel worse.” He rubbed his eyes with thumb and forefinger. “Do you know if I’m bunking here anyway?”

 

‹ Prev