by Dyrk Ashton
“Yes, Master.” The wampyr policeman clicks the radio handset clipped to his shoulder and relays the order.
Kleron crooks a devilish grin. “Let’s see what they make of this.”
* * *
Fi and Zeke help each other to their feet and gaze out over the carnage. The floor is slick with bright red blood, strewn with organs and limbs and piles of burst and steaming bodies. A divan burns, roasting the corpses of wampyr heaped upon it. Plaster is stripped from charred patches of wall and ceiling.
Cù Sìth comes lumbering through the arch, dragging his beaten and bloodied kin by the scruffs. He clean and jerks them over his head, one in each hand, looses a triumphant roar, and slams them down hard enough to crack marble and tremble the floor.
Edgar looks Fi and Zeke over to ascertain whether any of the blood that covers them is their own. “Shall we go?” he asks.
They nod eagerly.
Unfortunately, the respite is all too brief. Enemy reinforcements rush in from all directions, easily as many as before.
Edgar groans and readies himself for more, but this bunch doesn’t attack. They stay along the walls, clog the exits, block the windows, line the balcony above, and are strangely silent.
Fi and Zeke hold their breath once again. Waiting is almost worse than the earlier bedlam.
Suddenly the entire house is jolted by some unseen impact, followed by sounds of distant stamping footsteps and muffled destruction. Peter eyes the wall hung with guitars--which are mostly destroyed, Zeke observes with regret. The jolting impact comes again, and again, growing louder, and closer. The surviving guitars rattle nervously on their hooks. Then the wall on which they hang explodes, sending fragmented masonry, broken instruments and the ruined buffet flying.
Peter’s face slackens at the sight of the huffing, slobbering beast that stands before him amongst the rubble and dust.
Cù Sìth glares, growling. Kabir trips over bodies and broken furniture to Peter’s side, astounded at what he sees.
He mutters, “Mahishasura.”
Zeke mouths wordlessly, then out loud says, “The Buffalo Demon? From Hindu scripture?”
“It can be none other,” Edgar replies. “But...”
More weres and wampyr flow in through the fresh hole in the wall behind the Buffalo Demon and span to flank him on either side.
Peter stares up at the 11 foot tall hulk. “Mahisha?”
Enormous baleful eyes, cataracted in weak milky gray, roll down in wet sockets to regard him. “Yes.” His voice comes from the pit of him, hoarse and gurgling with phlegm.
“You’re dead,” Peter states flatly, clearly perplexed.
Mahisha has the build of a hairy thickset man with a tumid belly, but his back is severely humped and draped in thick curling fur and his shaggy oversized head is more buffalo than human, with upward curving horns. The straggling hair of his armpits is braided and held with golden ringlets, as is the inverted peak on his chest. In one thick hand he grips a black metallic mace with rows of runes damascened in gold and silver along its eight foot length, and wicked flanges at its head.
Thick fleshy lips crook in a lopsided grin that drools into his ragged beard. “Yes.”
Wepwawet coughs up blood and grumbles, “It’s about time!” He tries to push himself up, but Cù Sìth pounds him down with his fists.
Mahisha intones, “Samavari Maya,” while lifting his mace in both hands.
Cù Sìth halts in mid-punch.
Peter shouts, “No!”
The base of the mace’s handle stamps the floor with the sound of a ponderous gong. Air ripples from it in visible waves--and now there’s not just one Buffalo Demon--there are six.
Without hesitation, the one nearest Cù Sìth swings a leveling blow. Cù reacts fast enough to avoid the deadly flanges of the mace’s head, but the handle below strikes him in the midriff, launching him as if from a catapult to bash through the balcony at the far end of the room and punch through the ceiling.
Another Mahisha says, “Samavari Maya,” pounds his mace, and there are twelve. The dozen Buffalo Demons bellow together and attack. The wamps and weres join in, howling their savage inhumanity.
Fi and Zeke huddle in their corner once again.
The Buffalo Demons are surprisingly fast for their bulk, but Peter dodges every blow, wielding Gungnir with supreme deft and confidence, reaping a leg here, an arm there. He opens the gut of one, loosing an avalanche of steaming entrails. Its mace dematerializes in a particle cloud, and as its body falls it commences to decompose. Flesh sloughs, bones crumble and it ignites in sickly green flames that burn cold. Before the Mahisha reaches the ground it’s nothing but scattered dust and a spectral whorl of smoke. Peter frowns at the sight.
Kabir speaks at his side, “There is foul sorcery at work here.”
Peter grunts in deliberation, then nods to Edgar’s corner. “Would you?”
“Of course,” Kabir replies, and begins to fight his way across the room. He dodges the blow of a Buffalo Demon’s mace and it shatters the marble floor. He sidesteps the charge of another, slashes a tendon at its knee with his claws, then leaps on its back and bites deeply into its shaggy neck. The beast roars, smashes its back--and Kabir--into a wall. The first tugs its mace from the floor and swings in an attempt to remove Kabir from its clone, but Kabir sees it coming and drops. The mace crunches into the spine of the second Mahisha and it disappears in decay and green flame.
Kabir is of equal age with Mahisha, but The Buffalo Demons are a whole lot bigger, and buffalo are tough. He can take them in single combat and has in the distant past, but he must take care when they are in numbers, especially in these close quarters. Of greatest concern is Mahisha’s mace. It not only gives him, and only him, the ability to multiply himself, but it is also a high grade Astra weapon, its razor sharp flanges capable of incapacitating a True Ancient and killing all others with a single blow.
The Mahishas, however, seem more intent on Peter. They rush him from all sides, swinging their maces overhead. He blocks and feints, but two strike down on his head and shoulders. Flanges bend and break and stone explodes beneath Peter’s feet at the impact.
Mahisha’s mace is capable of harming all but Father, that is. No sooner have they lifted their weapons for another blow than he’s on the attack, completely unharmed. He splits one down the middle with his spear, grabs hold of another’s lower jaw with his free hand and tears it clean off, leaving the Mahisha hacking, grasping at the gushing empty space where it had been. A third he springs over the top of, gripping it by one horn as he goes, bending it over backward, then spinning to knock down others with its body and flinging it into the path of another’s mace.
But every time their numbers dwindle, another incants, “Samavari Maya,” and pounds his mace to replenish their ranks.
Kabir takes a place alongside Edgar. Protecting others--its what he does--and he’s always liked and respected the young waeponbora. He doesn’t know the young man and woman who seem to be in Edgar’s care, but it doesn’t matter. They will live through this, or Kabir will die in their defense.
A sudden roar and a glimpsed black form above.
The Buffalo Demons and Kabir may be matched in combat, but the notorious Cù Sìth is in another class entirely. He descends from the balcony in an arms-out dive, right into the center of a pack of Mahishas. In short order they are disemboweled or dropping with throats removed to the neckbone, reduced to rot and smoke. His reaction to their uncanny decomposition is a rumbling grimace.
Even Cù Sìth is susceptible to the Astra mace, however, and he must take care. But this kind of battle is what the Cerberi have always lived for. Sheer mayhem and slaughter. Kabir is still shocked that Cù turned on his brothers and defied his Asura master--Kleron could dispatch Cù Sìth as handily as Cù takes out Mahishas--and especially that he saved Kabir’s life. Shocked, but leery. It will take more than this for Kabir to trust Old Shuck, the harbinger of doom, the vile Gwyllgi, the treacherous Bargh
est, the dreaded Moddey Dhoo. By whatever name he’s ever been known, Cù Sìth has never done a kind thing for anyone in his life. Not without evil intent.
The wamps and weres are merely a nuisance to Peter and Cù, like chipmunks on lions, and those who get in the way of the Mahishas are stepped on with no more thought than walking on grass, or swept aside by a mace like dry leaves before a broom. Yet they keep coming, throwing themselves at Edgar and Kabir with reckless abandon.
Peter and Cù Sìth take the Buffalo Demons down as fast as they multiply. But only as fast. The gonging sound comes again and again. Meanwhile, wave after wave of werewolves and wampyr continue to spill into the house.
* * *
Kleron hands the goggles back to the wampyr and calls up into the rain and darkness. “Robber!”
Something shifts high in the shadows of a wizened oak, gazes down between branches with an eye like that of a dead fish.
Kleron shouts, “Go!”
It just stares at him, bereft of life.
“By authority of your master, do as you are bidden!” Kleron orders. It still doesn’t respond. Kleron’s voice rises in the revolting invidious tongue of his old master. “Obey me! The one who has summoned you commands it!”
The creature blinks sluggishly, then hops from the branch and soars into the dismal sky.
* * *
Fi fears for Edgar. He fights on, but his clothing is torn and he’s bleeding from scratches on his arms and face. Kabir helps tremendously, casting wampyr and werewolves aside like annoying chaff, but there are so many of them.
Zeke senses her anxiety. If there was only something he could do. He’s never felt more worthless in his life.
Something shoots in high through the broken windows and circles along the ceiling, artfully dodging flailing maces. It moves too quickly for Zeke and Fi to fully identify, but it’s not a wampyr. This has shining feathers of iridescent blue and green, and a long wide blur of a tail. It lights on a ruined section of the balcony and Zeke and Fi can now see that it’s form is much like a bird with a craning neck, but its blue-feathered face is strikingly like a man’s, with an unnaturally long and pointed (beak-like, in fact) white nose. Elegant stalks topped with blue puffs crown its head. Its eyes are like the Mahishas’, with irises of milky gray.
“HARK!!!” it cries in a voice that sets Fi and Zeke’s ears ringing. Louder than Cù Sìth’s roar or Kleron’s terrible squeak, louder than the bellows of the Buffalo Demons, louder even than Peter.
The bedlam grinds to a halt. Buffalo Demons back away from Peter and Cù Sìth. Kabir dispatches the few weres and wamps that remain too close.
Edgar takes advantage of the break to check on Fi and Zeke. “All well?”
Zeke frowns. That’s a relative question, deserving a relative response.
Fi gives it to him. “Okay, I guess, considering. But how are you?”
Edgar smiles appreciatively. “Right as rain, dear.” He touches his bloody fingers to her shoulder. “Hang in there, you two. We’ll get through this. Have faith.”
Fi and Zeke wonder. Faith seems like a strange thing to worry about right now.
“Tengu-Andrealphus!” Peter hails up at the new arrival. “You, too, are supposed to be dead and gone!”
“I am,” Tengu-Andrealphus replies, seeming doubtful of the fact himself.
His image ripples like a disturbance in still water. Sitting on the railing now is a stately looking man garbed in breeches and a shining blue blouse embroidered in gold beneath a silken green cape, wearing tall gilded boots and a slim sapphire crown. The eyes, however, remain the same.
“Tengu-Andrealphus,” Edgar says with a tone of dread. “The Peafowl.”
The stately man’s image ripples again. His features become less comely, his wardrobe less urbane. A simple green and blue tunic, hose, boots of sandy suede laced to the knee, a felt cone cap topped with feathers.
Edgar mutters, “The Nightingale Robber.”
Zeke gapes in response.
Tengu-Andrealphus moves his gaze over the crowd, but his dead eyes focus on nothing. “No choice,” he says almost to himself. His image shifts back to his bird-like Trueface and he fans out his impressive tail, which displays multiple false eyes of black, green, purple and gold. He sets them to subtle vibration and sway.
Edgar blocks Fi and Zeke’s view with his shield. “Do not look upon his tail!” he warns, averting his eyes as well. He regards them both very seriously. “And cover your ears.”
For the first time today, for the first time in her life, Fi sees fear in her uncle’s eyes. She does as he says and squeezes her eyes shut, then opens one and elbows Zeke to do the same.
Zeke complies, but when hers are closed again, curiosity overrides good sense and he peeks around Edgar’s shield.
The herd of Buffalo Demons stand at the ready, all dead eyes on Peter. Peter glowers at The Peafowl, curious and appalled.
The wampyr and weres are enthralled by the hypnotic movement of Tengu-Andrealphus’s tail. So is Cù Sìth. His jaw sags and long furry arms hang loosely at his side.
Overcome by his own inquisitiveness, Zeke looks. The eyes of the bird-man’s tail kaleidoscope in his vision, and he can’t look away.
Tengu-Andrealphus’s expression is blank and his gaze distant. “No free will,” he whispers, the words sounding to Zeke as if they’re spoken right in his ear. The Peafowl puffs out his bird breast, larger than should be naturally possible, and swells his throat.
“Stop!” Peter roars. He raises his spear to fire off a bolt, but a mace knocks Gungnir aside and Mahishas rush Peter in a bellowing mob. He slashes and throws them off, tries to leap away, but they crush in, slapping and grabbing to keep him down.
Kabir, who has purposefully kept his eyes averted from Tengu-Andrealphus, repeats Edgar’s warning to Zeke. “You heard the man, cover your ears!”
The harsh earnestness of his voice jolts Zeke from his spellbound haze in time to see Kabir bolt to the nearest Mahisha. He bounds to its back and scrambles across Buffalo Demon heads and shoulders, hunching beneath the ceiling as he goes. A mace grazes his ribs, horns gouge his shins, but he keeps on his precarious path long enough to launch himself at Tengu-Andrealphus.
The Peafowl thrusts his head forward, throws his mouth open and emits a sound beyond that produced by any creature that’s ever lived or machine ever invented. Kabir goes stiff in mid-flight, stunned by the auditory shockwave, and drops.
Zeke’s head snaps back as if he’s been hit by a club.
Shards of glass still hanging in the windows splinter. Plaster cracks. In the foyer, the chandelier explodes.
Cù Sìth collapses to his knees, clutching his head. He throws his jaws open in a roar but no sound can be heard over the devastating vociferation of The Peafowl.
Wampyr and werewolves shove and tug at their ears, howl noiselessly, stagger and fall.
All Kabir can manage in his defense is to lock his fingers behind his head, squeeze his forearms to his ears, and curl up into a ball.
Peter, however, is completely immune to the stentorian clamor. And by some effect of being already dead, so are the Mahishas. Their lips move and maces hit the floor. They tackle Peter, bounding over each other to bury him beneath a Demon Buffalo mass, packed in from wall to wall and piled nearly to the ceiling.
As soon as Tengu-Andrealphus loosed his clamorous assault, Edgar discarded sword and shield and threw himself on Fi, wrapped his arms around her head and pressed his own ear against her shoulder. She blindly found his other ear and now holds a hand against it while hugging Mol’s furry head tight to her chest.
The Peafowl’s cry carries such force that it’s almost no sound at all, but the crushing pressure of ocean depths. Zeke’s skull and teeth buzz. The skin of his face feels as if it’s in danger of being peeled off by a thousand forces of gravity. His bones hum. Sickening waves of nausea wrack his body. He’s certain he’s about to be squashed to nothingness, or explode.
Then the so
und suddenly alters--the whine, whir and squeak of frequency modulation, like the changing of an old fashioned radio dial.
* * *
“You’ve been bad again, Zeke.” Sour beer breath and garlic sweat. “And you know what that means.” A fleshy smack! Sudden searing pain on his bare behind. Zeke gasps his eyes open.
Naked, face down on a coffee table. The woman’s hard hands holding his wrists over his head. He knows better than to struggle, but can’t help squirming. Her mouth close to his ear, cigarette breath through tobacco stained teeth. “Bad Zeke.”
The man spanks him again. The clink of a belt unbuckled and slip of leather on cloth. The sting and burn of a whipping belt. A gut-wrenching rush of fear and pain. The total helplessness of a child.
Zeke remembers these people. He knows them. Their names, faces, where they live, what they eat. And how they abuse the children. Foster parents in a very bad home. Zeke’s aware of it all, but he’s of two minds. One is present with the child, in the moment, seeing through the boy’s eyes, feeling with his skin, sucking breath through his teeth, thinking every terrified thought. But he is Zeke, too, completely aware of himself as an observer, mute, bound and helpless.
Z-z-zip. Zeke knows what comes next. “Bad Zeke, bad,” the women croons, her calm voice and twisted grin more frightening than rage could ever be. “Punish him, baby.”
“Yeah...” the man grunts.
“Give it to bad, bad Zeke.” And she laughs.
Heartbreaking torment, pitiful, tragic anguish of a child plainly and literally tortured.
“Bad Zeke! Bad Zeke! Bad Zeke! Bad!”
He squeezes his eyes shut, spilling hot tears and terror. “Please!” his little voice cries. “I’ll be good! I promise!”
It has nothing to do with being good or bad, Zeke is well aware, just young and helpless in the hands of sadistic psychopaths, the sickest strain of sexual predators humankind has to offer.
Zeke remembers it all, every agonizing detail--but it never happened. Not to him.
Whine, whir and squeak...
* * *
The pressure claps back like air rushing in to fill a vacuum after an explosion. Hands still clamped to his ears, Zeke fears if he opens his eyes they might pop out of his skull, but he forces them anyway. The nightmare of childhood trauma has come and gone in a split second. Fresh and raw as it is, the horror of what he has returned to is little better. In fact, this time he’s sure it will be his end.