Secrets of the Hanged Man (Icarus Fell #3) (An Icarus Fell Novel)

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Secrets of the Hanged Man (Icarus Fell #3) (An Icarus Fell Novel) Page 24

by Blake, Bruce


  But other things flashed amongst the visions of carnage and mayhem, fragments of a life this creature never knew, but the boy inside did. Woven between the shrill screams and desperate pleading, I found regrets and emotions the same as those felt by any person who lived a life they wished had been different.

  Funerals, regrets, suicide attempts, resignation. A boy who’d once loved his mother and mourned his father, who’d learned hate the way anyone else does, but who’d given into it like few do. A dead baby sister—the child in the photo at Meg’s—aunts, uncles, cousins, stepfathers.

  Detective Williams. Meg Medlin-Williams.

  The cop who so badly wanted to incarcerate me for the deaths perpetrated by Father Dominic had been Cory’s stepfather, and the teen had been in the alley the night I harvested him. Williams died because of him, not me. Small consolation as my final end drew near.

  The redness penetrated deeper, flashing further pictures of death and despair, death and retribution, death and delight through my mind. Behind the mental show, I sensed the creature’s eyes burning into me, and a blackness creeping around it. The first time I died, there had been whiteness and light, this time, it seemed it would be the opposite. The end of my existence.

  Instead, it turned out to be a little girl named Dido.

  The creature jerked its gaze away from mine and to the girl held aloft in its other hand. With its eyes off me, it felt like a sword inserted into me and twisted by a vicious hand had been yanked free. It hurt, but considerably less so.

  I forced my weary eyes toward Dee. Lost in the visions and regret over how I’d lived my afterlife, I’d nearly forgotten the spirit I’d been so set on saving. If I’d thought of her, I’d have assumed the creature’s grip to have broken her little spirit neck by now, or squeezed her little spirit breath out of her, but it did neither.

  Someone still hung from the creature's grasp, but it wasn't Dido. Not quite true: it was, then it wasn’t, then it wasn’t some more, then it was again.

  Different faces flashed across her countenance, changing with a fluidity and speed which made it impossible to identify one before another took its place. Female, male, young old. Brief as they were, I recognized a few: Meg, Shaun, the baby from the photo, Dallas, and one that surprised the crap out of me.

  Poe.

  They affected the creature, too. It began to shake. The thing’s grip on the front of my shirt transferred its quaking through me, chattering my teeth and shooting pain through every nerve in my body until I cried out in a pitiful attempt to relieve it.

  On the bright side, the shaking loosened its grip and the black fingers slipped away. Unfortunately, I didn’t have the energy to keep from slumping to the ground in a messy pile.

  Not until I was curled up there like a babe who wanted to head back to the womb did I realize it wasn’t the creature shaking, but the earth shook beneath us all.

  The tremor rattled my bones and made me consider that perhaps actual death might be better than this option. My fingers pushed through the thin crust of snow, digging into the grass and dirt beneath, holding on to keep from being thrown off the world should the quake worsen. A second later, a sound like the ass of a giant’s pants tearing reverberated the air, then rock grinding against rock, the clatter of tiny landslides, and the shaking ceased.

  I lay in my ex-wife’s yard, waiting for the end to draw nigh, my breath held and my screaming muscles tensed. When the ground acted as though it would behave itself, I struggled myself up on my elbows and glanced across the lawn at Trevor. He crouched on his knees with Rae’s arms wrapped around his chest, holding him back; Ashton sat with his back against the rickety fence, a dazed look in his eyes. I raised my hand, indicating my son should stay back because I had everything under control, though I felt nothing of the sort.

  I drew a deep, painful breath into my already agonized chest and swung around to see what trouble Dee and Scarecrow had gotten themselves into while I wasn’t paying attention.

  The quake must have shaken her loose of the creature’s grip, too, for they stood a few yards apart. The tip of beast-Cory’s tail flicked and slashed back and forth across the lawn, tearing bare swaths in the snow and throwing up divots of grass and dirt. That would upset Rae because she loved her lawn, but the three-foot wide crack running from the street to within six inches from where Scarecrow stood might distract her from the chunks his tail knocked away.

  The creature roared at Dee loud enough to hurt my ears and with enough force to move her hair. She stood her ground, unflinching, her gaze holding the beast’s as her face scrolled through those different people one after another after another with dizzying speed. I couldn’t keep up with whom I saw, but Cory must have, because it angered him further.

  The beast moved a taloned foot, the muscles in its leg flexing and tightening, readying to lunge at Dido. Despite the throbbing pain overtaking my body, I resolved no to let him take her. If this soul was lost and I survived, how could I live with myself?

  “No!”

  I jumped into action, launching myself at the big, black demon-thing as best my aches and pains allowed, which equated to stumbling around in the manner of a drunk with somewhere important to be. Trevor yelled, but the blood pounding in my ears kept me from discerning what he said.

  As I bungled my way toward the creature, Dee raised her foot two inches and stomped it down hard, as though she thought throwing a tantrum the best way to make him stop.

  It didn’t, but it did start the ground moving again.

  It shook with an earth-shattering roar, mostly because the little girl’s foot shattered the earth. The three-foot-wide crack stretching from the sidewalk yawned wider, swallowing half of Rae’s yard as the quake threw us off balance—all of us except Dee. She stood with her fists clenched at her sides, gaze pinned on the hellacious thing standing in front of her, biding her time. The instant Scarecrow raised a foot to maintain his equilibrium, she moved.

  In an instant, I understood what she intended: the fissure ended right behind him, steam and an eerie glow emanating from its depths. She planned to sacrifice herself to save the rest of us, perhaps save the world.

  But I wouldn’t let her go.

  I lunged, too, every muscle in my body shrieking at me for having done so. As soon as I did, the speed of the world down-shifted a couple of gears into some sort of special effects slow-mo. Behind me, Trevor yelled again, his voice deep and drawn out by the slowing of time, and I heard Rae’s voice, too. My heart twinged as my feet fought to gain purchase on the slippery lawn with the knowledge I’d probably never see him again, that this could be the end of it all for me.

  Did I tell him I loved him last time we talked?

  Dee’s shoulder hit the creature square in the gut, the force of impact folding him in two like a cheap tackling dummy, but the demon refused to give in without a fight. It raked her back, nails tearing gashes through her shirt and into her ghostly flesh. It clawed the ground with taloned feet, scrabbling desperately to halt its backward progress, but the pit was too close behind it.

  They tumbled over the edge before I got to them, but I sprang anyway, reaching out with both hands, ignoring the searing torment it caused right down to my toes. I missed grabbing her arm. I missed grabbing his leg.

  My feet went from under me and my chest slammed hard on the ground. A rib snapped with a muted pop, but the pain I already experienced and my intent on grasping something made it unnoticeable.

  To my surprise, the creature’s tail ended up in my hands.

  I squeezed my fingers tight around it, the black scales covering it burning me, abrading the flesh of my palms. The weight of the beast pulled me forward, sliding along the slippery lawn, the toes of my shoes digging in to stop me and doing a piss-poor job of it.

  My hands went over the edge of the fissure, followed by my forearms and elbows. The weight of the creature threatened to hyper-extend my joints, snap my bones. I gritted my teeth and held on despite the blood oozing from my pa
lms onto my fingers making my grip slippery and precarious.

  My slide continued until my arms went over the edge, wrenched downward. I managed to stop myself from going over, settling on the verge with rock and dirt digging into my armpits and my head protruding over the side, giving me a view of the crevasse’s depths.

  I didn’t fancy what I saw.

  Beyond the thing dangling from my hands and the ghostly young girl held in one of its clawed hands, shadows and flame whirled and twisted like living things, or once-living things. They could have been right beneath Dee’s feet or a hundred miles below; I didn’t know and didn’t want to find out.

  “Dee!” Squeezing her name past my broken rib proved difficult, but I kept with it. “Dido. Can you climb up?”

  “Let go.”

  I should have known she’d say that, but I wasn’t about to do what she asked. I closed my eyes with the effort of holding on, my mind grasping for what to do. The weight shifted in my hands, pulling me forward a few more inches so the top of my chest rested against the edge, and I snapped my eyelids open again.

  The creature swung back and forth, its head craned on its neck to leer up at me, fire burning in its eyes. It might have been smiling, but too many wicked yellow teeth crowded its mouth to tell.

  “You cannot save her, Icarus Fell,” the thing said, its tone the sound of a limp body dragged across rocky soil.

  “Ric,” I grunted.

  “You cannot save yourself. Killing you is why I was born.”

  I stared at him, wondering how a seventeen-year-old might have been born for the task of killing one created less than a year ago, but the last few inches of his tail lashed itself around my wrist, distracting me with a grip tight enough to grate my bones. It jerked in my grip, pulling me closer to the edge, and the middle of my chest with its broken rib pressed against the lip. I didn’t want to give Cory the satisfaction of screaming in pain, but I didn’t have much choice.

  “Icarus! You have to let go!”

  Dee sounded different, her voice thicker and fuller, like more than one person spoke. I’d have spent some time considering why but, to be honest, survival instinct kicked in. If I’d been able to take her advice and release Cory’s tail, I’d have done it. Chalk up another missed opportunity in a life full of them.

  “Can’t,” I choked out. “He’s got me.”

  A sound vaguely reminiscent of a laugh rolled up to me from the beast’s lips and it jerked in my grip again, pulling me another inch closer to my demise. I looked past him, hoping for encouragement from the soul for whom I’d gotten myself in this position, but found it was her movements jerking their weight in my hands.

  Dee was attempting to extricate herself from the creature’s grasp.

  She swung up, hit it in the jaw with her free hand, and I slid another inch or two. If she kept at it, she might liberate herself and save me, or her attempts would kill me. Another punch, another inch toward Hell.

  “Ungh,” I grunted with effort. “Stop. I’m slipping.”

  The grip of Scarecrow’s tail was tight enough I didn’t need to hold on to keep them from falling, but if I released my hold, my hand might pull from my arm. It cut off the blood flow, turning my fingers purple and swelling them to the size of sausages.

  Dee ignored my pleas and pendulumed back and forth, swinging herself up to wrap her legs around the beast’s chest, pinning its free arm against its side. I’d have applauded the effort if it didn’t pull me forward until my gut rested against the lip. Another few inches and I’d be beyond the point of no return.

  The little girl clinging to the demon proceeded to pound him in the face, each swing of her fist slipping me forward incrementally. I shifted my feet, my toes digging for purchase in the hard soil, but they slipped in snow and wet grass, and my heart slipped with them. After a life of abuse and alienation, failed marriage and failed parenthood, I’d died and been forced into a job I didn’t want, but gained my son back as a by-product of the whole sordid affair. As I slipped toward my demise, I realized I’d finally found somewhere I felt as though I belonged.

  Dido swung again, landing an overhand right with a crunch of scales. I gritted my teeth, prepared to be dragged over the edge, wondering if this meant my end, or if an afterlife in Hell awaited me. Neither sounded attractive.

  I slipped forward, wishing for one more chance to tell my son how much I loved him.

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  The pain in my body was so great, I’d hardly noticed the breaking of a rib or the tail-noose tight enough on my wrist to make my hand swell to the size of one of Mickey Mouse’s, but I didn’t miss the hands grasping my ankles.

  My progress halted with me bent at the waist, my crotch pressed against the lip of the fissure and overbalanced enough I should have gone over the edge. The air wafting up out of the pit clung to the inside of my nostrils and throat like a living thing attempting to suffocate me. A cough did nothing to clear it, only shook me and made me slip an inch farther, but the hands kept me from falling.

  Trevor.

  Panic jumped into my chest. If Dido and the beast jerked too much, he might be pulled over with me, and anger at Rae for letting him go bubbled inside me.

  “Trevor. No.”

  Each word was a knife poking and prodding in my chest, finding the tender spots. My grip on the creature’s tail slipped, tightening its strangle hold on my wrist. I looked at Dee, at her punch looping in at the creature again; black fire flickered from her fist and when it hit Scarecrow, flames danced across its face and it howled in pain.

  The tug of war between the beast’s weight and the hands grasping my ankles raged. They’d pull me back half an inch, then I’d slip forward again. The hands were losing the battle. He had to let go before it was too late.

  “Trev.”

  “Dad!”

  His voice sounded too close to have come from near my ankles. I wrenched my head around and saw him kneeling at the edge beside me, which meant someone other than my son prevented me from going over the edge.

  Trevor stared past me at his one-time friend, eyes wide, and my heart lurched for him. When did my son last have a friend? Had he ever? I sympathized. I’d grown up without any of my own. But to have one and find out he’s a demon must be too much to bear.

  “Dad. What can I do?”

  I slipped and he grabbed the waistband of my pants. My gaze wandered from him, to Dee swinging at the beast, to the appendage encircling my wrist, then to my son.

  “Shears.”

  His expression suggested he thought I might be a little bit crazy. How else do you look at a man hanging over the edge of a pit leading to Hell with a demon’s tail wrapped around his wrist? Couldn’t blame him, but my window of opportunity to continue living was closing.

  “Shears,” I croaked again.

  This time he got what I meant and released his grip on my belt loops. The hands on my ankles held me fast as Dee struck the beast again and the clawed hand grasping her went slack. She jumped on the opportunity and clamored backward up him like an athletic monkey in some fucked up National Geographic nature documentary. Her legs wrapped around his knees, her head at the level of his stomach when he regained his senses.

  Both the beast’s hands were free and he raked Dido’s head and face with his claws. She blocked and dodged, their bodies swinging violently. I slipped forward and heard voices cry out—Rae’s voice, Ashton’s voice. I grunted and strained.

  Who built the garden shed so far away?

  I closed my eyes, exerting every aching, pain-filled muscle in my body to keep from slipping as the fight between spirit and demon raged. A second later, I sensed Trevor kneeling at my side and opened my eyes.

  Never in my life have a pair of long-handled pruning shears made me so happy.

  I nodded toward Scarecrow’s tail. “Can you reach?”

  “I think so.”

  Trevor lay on his belly beside me, head and shoulders stuck out over the side, and stretched out his a
rms. The blades of the shears hovered a few inches away from the bit of tail looped around my wrist. Close, but not close enough. He wriggled farther over the edge and my stomach lurched with the worry he might overbalance and fall.

  Still too far.

  “Pull,” Trevor said propping himself up on an elbow. “I can’t reach.’

  The hands on my ankles did as he asked, yanking me back. I didn’t move much, but I hoped it was enough. Trevor leaned again, hanging precariously over a quick trip to Hell. The cool metal shears brushed the skin of my wrist half an inch away from their target.

  “More,” he shouted over his shoulder.

  Crippling pain raged in my shoulders, every breath tormented me, but as Rae and Ashton pulled, I yanked up with every last bit of strength left in my body.

  The tail slid between the open jaws of the shears.

  “Dido.” I meant it to be a shout, but my parched throat emitted a pathetic croak. “Get ready.”

  The two of them kept swinging and clawing. She didn’t answer, shimmying an inch closer. With another painful exhalation, I turned my head to Trevor and nodded. He opened the shears wider, ready for a tough cut, and closed them.

  On empty air.

  At the last instant, the Cory-beast jerked and swung out of danger. If Trevor hadn’t been lying beside me, I’d probably have burst into tears. What little energy remained in me drained away, the beast dangling from my wrist solely by the grip of its tail. Through the pain, I felt the skin on my hand slipping, like a burlesque performer removing a glove. Fuzzy spots swam at the edge of my vision, threatening my consciousness.

  With no other choice, I screamed in pain and to force the gray from my eyes. Rae and Ashton must have taken it as a signal, because they pulled harder, moving me a full inch. Through the haze caused by the torture of having my hand wrenched from my arm, I watched the shears find their way to the thing’s tail again.

  “No, Trevor. Don’t.” The thing spoke with Cory’s voice and Trev hesitated. His eyes flickered toward the beast’s face and I followed his gaze; the scales had peeled back leaving the face of a teenage boy peering up at us, pleading. “Please.”

 

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