Demon Thief

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Demon Thief Page 13

by Darren Shan


  seen a ghost.

  We come to a room even larger than the rest. A huge spider-shaped throne in the center, made of webs. A chandelier overhead, again woven from webs, with naked flames flickering in place of candles or light bulbs. Objects from my world are strewn across the floor — pieces of clothing, a tennis ball, walking sticks, the skeleton of some large animal, toys, more chess sets, scattered bones. A portrait of Lord Loss on the wall behind the throne, painted in the style of Vincent van Gogh.

  Lord Loss glides to the throne, over the legs that jut out of its base, up to the seat which is set in the body of the spider. He lowers himself onto it, so he can look down on us like a king upon his subjects. Cadaver sits on one of the legs to the left of the throne, playing with Art, holding him up on his knees, then letting him drop and catching him.

  The demon master raises a hand to stop us about ten or twelve feet away from the throne. Smiles imperiously, then waves the hand at the room in general. “What do you think of my humble abode?”

  “Not what I’d choose,” Beranabus says. He nods at some of the objects on the floor. “The remains of previous guests?”

  “Mementos,” Lord Loss says. He gestures at a knife, which rises from the floor and floats into his mangled hand. It’s not like the knives in our kitchen at home — this is more of a small sword. Lord Loss turns it around a few times, smiling at Beranabus. “You should recognize this. It was yours once.”

  Beranabus’s face is stone. “I’m not interested in the past or your mementos.”

  Lord Loss shrugs and lets the knife drop. Art grabs for it, but Cadaver flicks it away before my brother can do any damage with the blade.

  “Tell me what you are interested in,” Lord Loss says. “Tell me why you have come and risked my wrath. You know uninvited visitors are not welcome, that I am entitled to kill you all if I wish — and probably will.”

  He waves at the walls. Looking up, I see the demons from outside sneaking into the room through windows that I hadn’t noticed before. They cling to the walls, growing in number by the second, completely surrounding us. Several block the doorway through which we entered.

  “I’ve been in more promising situations,” Shark mutters wryly.

  “Do you think we could blast through the walls?” Dervish asks. “They’re only webs.”

  “Magical webs,” Sharmila corrects him. “Built to protect Lord Loss from all the demons of this universe. I would not bet on us being able to force a way through.”

  Beranabus ignores the demons. He’s gazing calmly at Lord Loss. Points at Cadaver and says, “We want him.”

  “The baby?” Lord Loss smiles, misinterpreting the gesture.

  “No. The demon.”

  Lord Loss frowns. He’d expected Beranabus to ask for Art. I had too. I want to yell at the magician and remind him of his promise. But that would be the wrong thing to do. We’re in a dangerous spot, the odds stacked against us. I have to trust Beranabus for now. Let him play it the way he wants. Only step in if I feel I absolutely have to.

  “Cadaver isn’t one of your familiars,” Beranabus says. “You’re not bound to protect him. I know you’ve granted him shelter, but I ask you to revoke that privilege and let us take him. We have no quarrel with you. Give us Cadaver and we’ll leave at once, owing you a debt which we shall do our best to repay.”

  “You would put yourself in debt to me?” Lord Loss says, eyes burning bright.

  “Yes.”

  “Tempting,” the demon master purrs. “Cadaver must be very important to you. But why? He is an average, unremarkable demon.” Lord Loss doesn’t know about our quest to find the Kah-Gash, so this makes no sense to him.

  “Our reasons are private and should be of no concern to you,” Beranabus says. “just as it’s no concern of ours why you offered him sanctuary in the first place.”

  “But that is no secret,” Lord Loss laughs. “I gave him shelter because he did a service for me. He brought me the child.” Lord Loss glances down at Art, then looks at me mockingly. I know in that instant that Lord Loss gave the order for my brother to be kidnapped. It was no accident that Cadaver took Art — the demon had been searching for him!

  Beranabus sees this too. He starts to ask about it, then changes his mind. Perhaps he’s afraid that Lord Loss will realize he’s searching for the Kah-Gash. I don’t think the demon master would be so playful if he knew we were after a weapon which could destroy him and every other demon.

  “So Cadaver did a service for you, and you rewarded him or promised to,” Beranabus says. “Does that make him one of your familiars?”

  “No,” Lord Loss says, and Cadaver looks at him quickly, worried. “But it would be wrong of me to dismiss him. I cannot let you kill him, not until I pay him for his service and he takes his leave. And that could be quite some time — he is under no obligation to depart before he wishes.”

  “What if we promised not to kill him?” Beranabus presses. “If we only made inquiries of him? I’m not saying we won’t harm him, but I’ll give my word that he won’t die.”

  The hairs on Cadaver’s arms lengthen menacingly and he whines softly. (Again I find myself wondering how he makes any noise, since he doesn’t have a mouth.) He holds Art more tightly to his chest, issuing a warning.

  “Do not be foolish, my swift-footed friend,” Lord Loss says without warmth. “If you harm the child, your torment will be eternal.” Cadaver scowls but relaxes his grip. Lord Loss faces Beranabus again, but only after staring at Nadia for a moment. Her lips haven’t stopped moving. Maybe he thinks her spell is something we’ve worked on, that she’s part of a trap.

  “As tempting as it is, the favor is not enough,” Lord Loss says. “I would need a stronger reason to turn Cadaver over to you.”

  “Such as?” Beranabus asks tightly.

  Lord Loss frowns thoughtfully, but it’s a deceptive frown — he knows exactly what he’s going to ask for. “There is no point in your promising not to kill Cadaver, since it is a promise you cannot guarantee. If I gave him to you, it would have to be unconditionally.”

  “That suits me fine,” Beranabus growls.

  Cadaver gets to his feet, trembling with rage and fear. Lord Loss ignores him.

  “A life for a life,” the demon master whispers. “I will give you Cadaver if you give me one of your followers.”

  “Which one?” Beranabus asks without blinking. Shark, Sharmila, Dervish and I gape at him, unable to believe that he’d sacrifice one of us so casually.

  “The choice would be mine,” Lord Loss murmurs. “All I guarantee is that it won’t be you. Otherwise, no deal, and I’ll unleash my familiars immediately, with orders to slaughter you all.”

  Beranabus looks around at us. His gaze is steady, but there’s a slight tremble in his left hand, the only sign that he’s not as calm as he seems. Shark returns the stare honestly — he’s ready to die if the choice goes against him. But Sharmila, Dervish and I look away. Not that it matters whether we agree or not — the choice is Beranabus’s, not ours.

  Nadia has stopped chanting. She’s sneering at Beranabus. “Go on,” she says witheringly. “Don’t pretend there’s any doubt. Sell us out. It’s what you’re good at.”

  An angry red rash rises up Beranabus’s neck, but he doesn’t respond. Instead he casts an eye over the demon-encrusted walls. “Agreed!” he says abruptly.

  Lord Loss laughs and extends a hand towards us. “Eeny . . . meeny... miny...”

  “Such games belittle you!” Beranabus barks. “Choose!”

  “Very well.” Lord Loss’s hand points at me. Vomit creeps up my throat. I see the end coming, perishing in this horrible universe, far from home. I prepare myself to run, even though I know it’s hopeless.

  But then the hand moves on and settles on its real target — Nadia!

  “Hah!” she shouts at Beranabus, all of her contempt for him contained in that one small sound.

  Then she shoots across the room. Lord Loss grabs her out of
the air. Wraps all eight arms around her. I see her eyes snap tight, her lips close, her face scrunch up with fear. There’s a blinding flash of light. I cover my eyes with an arm until the glow fades. When I look again, Lord Loss is covered in blood, bits of flesh, and shards of bone and hair — all that’s left of poor, pockmarked Nadia Moore.

  THE CHALLENGE

  ICAN’T believe it happened. I know it must have — the evidence is splattered all over Lord Loss and his arachnid throne — but still I can’t believe it. Nadia can’t be dead, not so suddenly, so bloodily. Surely even this warped universe of horrors can’t be that cruel.

  While my brain’s whirring, Cadaver shrieks and tosses Art at Lord Loss, then makes a break for freedom, racing to a wall which has slightly less demons on it than the others, scuttling towards a window.

  Lord Loss catches Art smoothly and cradles him to his chest, keeping him clear of the hole where the snakes are slithering over and under each other. Art laughs, undisturbed. Lord Loss whistles to the demons on the wall. They surge around the window, blocking it, driving Cadaver back.

  The demon momentarily thinks about fighting, then releases his grip and drops to the floor. In a crouch, he lets the hairs on his arms grow to their fullest length, glares at Lord Loss and waits for the demon master to make the next move.

  Lord Loss chuckles at Art or Cadaver, I’m not sure which. Then he says something twisted — it must be a demon language. Cadaver falls to the floor, writhing and hissing. He rolls around, scratching at his throat and face. The demons on the walls laugh and screech at him.

  Then, over the sounds of the demons, comes a strangely mixed cry of fear and delight. Cadaver stops struggling and sits up. The cry comes again, and this time I realize it comes from Cadaver. He’s been altered. He has a mouth.

  “I have honored my end of the bargain,” Lord Loss says. Cadaver screams unintelligibly in response. “Such language,” Lord Loss tuts. “I am glad most of my guests are not able to understand you, or their ears would sizzle. I apologize, Beranabus. Such curses should not be uttered even in this universe.”

  “I’ve heard worse,” Beranabus says. “Usually from demons I’m about to kill.” Cadaver goes silent and shifts his attention to Beranabus, eyeing him suspiciously. Beranabus smiles icily. “Don’t worry. If you answer my questions honestly — and that should be much easier now you have a mouth — I won’t kill you. My advice is to come quietly. Fight if you wish, but without Lord Loss to protect you, we both know you can’t win.”

  Cadaver bristles and looks at Lord Loss. He says something low and pleading. Lord Loss shakes his head. “No. I vowed to give you a mouth and voice, and promised to protect you until that time. I have acted in good faith. I owe you nothing more.”

  Cadaver sneers, then spits on the floor, putting his new mouth to good use. Facing Beranabus, he retracts his hairs and marches towards him with pride, offering himself to the magician, hateful but resigned. When Cadaver is by his side, Beranabus raises an eyebrow at Lord Loss.

  “Go,” the demon master says, waving at the demons around the door, who part at his command. He’s smiling. His eyes flicker down at Art, then up at me. He knows this isn’t over, that there’s more miserable pleasure to be had.

  Beranabus starts towards the door.

  “Wait,” I stop him. “What about Art?”

  Shark, Sharmila and Dervish haven’t moved. They’re looking at Beranabus like I am, questioningly, aware of the promise he made.

  “There’s nothing we can do,” Beranabus says without looking back.

  “But you said —” I start to protest.

  “That was before I knew Lord Loss ordered the theft,” Beranabus snaps. “I thought if the child was alive we’d only have to pry him from Cadaver. But he’s the demon master’s plaything now. He’s lost. Accept it.”

  “Toothy little Art,” Lord Loss purrs, tossing him up into the air, grey teeth exposed, red eyes narrow slits. “Do you want to see what happens when I bite, Art?”

  “Leave him alone!” I scream. I take a step toward Lord Loss. Stop. Glance back at Beranabus, wanting him to back me up. But he doesn’t even turn his head.

  As I waver, torn between wanting to save Art and knowing it means death to face Lord Loss by myself, Dervish steps up beside me. “I’m with you,” he says quietly, causing my eyes to fill with grateful tears.

  “It’s madness,” Shark says, taking up position on my other side, “but how could I leave a couple of kids behind?”

  I smile at the ex-soldier, then look hopefully at Sharmila. She bites her lower lip and stares at Beranabus. He has turned and is studying us expressionlessly. Sharmila hesitates, starts to smile, then shakes her head. “I am sorry,” she whispers. “It is hopeless. The first thing we learn as Disciples is not to throw our lives away. We have to choose our battles carefully and only fight those which we can win.”

  “Coward,” Shark growls.

  “No,” Dervish says. “It’s the sensible choice.”

  Lord Loss is beaming at us, loving this. “Such brave boys,” he murmurs, tickling Art’s chin, careful not to be bitten.

  “I can’t let you do this,” Beranabus says. “I need you — especially Kernel.”

  “You were quick enough to offer our lives a minute ago,” Shark reminds him.

  “But now I have what we came for — Cadaver. I won’t leave you to be needlessly slaughtered. I can force you to come with me.”

  “I only came for Art,” I tell him. “There’s no point trying to take me. Even if you could, it wouldn’t do you any good. I’d never open a window again, unless it was a window back to this place. Try me — see if I’m bluffing.”

  Beranabus sighs, then squints at Lord Loss. “Can we do a deal for the child?”

  “Perhaps,” Lord Loss replies smoothly. “But I’m not sure I want to. This is far more interesting. I’m dying to see if you will really abandon them, or if you and Miss Mukherji will also stay and fight.”

  “There’s no chance of that happening,” Beranabus says.

  “You are certain?”

  “Aye.”

  “Then the two of you cannot be part of any deal,” Lord Loss says, turning his attention on me. He strokes Art’s head softly, cooing. Grins, eyes alive with evil. “How much do you love your brother, Cornelius?”

  “Not enough to let you murder me for him,” I reply, thinking about Nadia.

  “You wouldn’t give your life to save his?” Lord Loss asks, surprised.

  “I’d risk it, but I won’t throw it away.”

  “Interesting.” Lord Loss purses his lips. After a few moments he calls, “Vein!”

  A dog-shaped demon slithers down one of the walls. It looks like a black Labrador with a crocodile’s head, and a woman’s delicate hands instead of paws. She trots over to her master and waits by the foot of the spider-shaped throne.

  “The Board,” Lord Loss says, and the demon races out of the room.

  Silence, waiting for the demon called Vein to return with whatever Lord Loss sent her for. I watch Art play in the demon master’s arms, wishing I could be as ignorant of danger as my brother. While I’m thinking about that, my mind replays all that’s been said. Frowning, I ask, “Why did you steal Art?”

  “I didn’t,” Lord Loss says. “Cadaver took him.”

  “But you told him to. You hired him. Why? Was it to get at me? Did you know about my gift?”

  “What gift?” Lord Loss asks.

  “Careful,” Beranabus warns. “Don’t tell him anything about yourself.”

  “So it wasn’t because you wanted me?” I press.

  “No,” Lord Loss says. “I remembered you from our previous encounter, but —”

  “You’ve met before?” Beranabus barks, startled.

  “Cornelius and I are old acquaintances,” Lord Loss says. He smiles at me. “I guessed you would come after your brother, but I expected you to perish along the way. You held no interest for me then — although you certainly do
now.”

  “It wasn’t a trap?”

  “Why go to all that effort to trap a boy I barely know?” Lord Loss laughs. “This gift of yours must be something very special if you think —”

  “Kernel!” Beranabus barks.

  I wave him quiet, letting him know I’m not stupid, that I’m being careful. “Why?” I ask again. “Why steal Art?”

  Lord Loss smiles smugly. “That answer is tied in with the game I plan to let you play — assuming you’re agreeable. Ah, here’s Vein. We can begin.”

  I look around and see the crocodile-dog making for her master with a chess board grasped in her mouth. It’s a few inches thick, made of glass or crystal. Beranabus’s eyes widen when he sees the board. He starts towards Vein, as though to take the board from her, then stops and squints at Lord Loss. “Is that...?”

  “Yes. The Board. The original.”

  “I thought it was lost forever, deep beneath the earth.”

  “No. I rescued it.”

  “I can’t play chess,” I tell Lord Loss. “I know some of the rules, but not all of them.”

  “That’s all right,” Lord Loss says, floating down from his throne, taking the Board from Vein, wiping the surface clear of spit and slime. He looks at the black and white squares, smiling softly. “This is not a regular board. It is the very first chess board, given to humans by ancient beings who came to Earth from the stars. It was designed for greater things than chess, and since unlocking its secrets, I no longer play upon it. The Board is better suited to other games. To battle.”

  “I don’t understand.” I frown.

  Lord Loss sets the Board on the floor. “Size, like time, can be different here. In this universe, an object can be both immense and microscopic. The Board is tiny in form, but enormous within. It contains a variety of universes in which I can place the souls of you and your loyal friends. There is no physical exit. Only the truth can guide you

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