Read Hounacier (Valducan Book 2) Online
Authors: Seth Skorkowsky
Lush tree canopy blurred past the windows as Malcolm's bus barreled down the I10 toward New Orleans. Home. The rhythmic thumping of spacers in the seemingly endless bridge through the swamplands sounded like a metronome keeping time. Counting down the miles. Brackish water glistened in the trench between the East and West spans. The occasional fisherman floated through the treeless lane. Malcolm peered down as they neared the next mile marker. Someone had written a name on the window glass with black marker, its stylized letters impossible to read. Through the scrubbed and faded scrawl, he could almost spot the place where Ulises and he had sunk two dead familiars nine years earlier. Now, a limbless log floated there, its barkless surface encrusted with sunning turtles.
After the hospital had released Orlovski, they'd loaded him into the back of the SUV for Sam to make the five-thousand-mile drive to the Valducans' wind farm in Chile. Malcolm didn't envy the infinitely shitty roads the Russian and his broken leg would have to endure. Once they were off, Malcolm drove to Jackson, Mississippi. Any FBI in search of what might have happened to their now missing witness would find the Toyota rented by his only known associate, Alex Jones, returned to the rental car company, sending them off in the wrong direction. The next morning, Malcolm purchased a bus ticket and, with only a suitcase, a locking guitar case, and a backpack, had started the last leg of his journey home.
His response to Tasha's email had been short.
Thank you for letting me know. I'm on my way.
I'll call you when I arrive.
-Mal
The long drive had afforded a good deal of time to think, only fueling his need to get there. During his night in Jackson, he'd searched for news articles about the murder. The most he'd found was a short blurb, detailing the briefest of facts. Ulises Belair, 81, found murdered in his home. His house was ransacked, and his head was missing. Police had no suspects.
Malcolm, however, did have a suspect. Tiamat's cultists, the ones who had killed dozens of his fellow hunters and their holy weapons, had taken the heads of any knights they hadn't offered as sacrifice. Hounacier had helped kill their god. This reeked of retribution.
Ulises' two last emails had been brief. They always were.
Malcolm, you need to come home. There's something you must see.
Ulises
The other simply said, "Call me," and his phone number.
Malcolm had messaged the Valducans what he knew. Ulises was never a Valducan, but he was a hunter. An attack on one was still an attack on all. The full strength of the Order would come down on who or what had murdered him.
#
The balmy stink of humidity rot, diesel fumes, and urine greeted Malcolm as he stepped off the bus. He breathed deep, savoring the all-too-familiar smell. It carried memories. Some bad, most good.
An unwashed woman, her face speckled with tiny scabs, sauntered past, pushing a yellowed stroller piled with bags. New Orleans held its own special breed of homeless residents. The city was a magnet for demonic energy, and many former familiars, their masters long dead, were drawn here as well. Most never knew why they felt the calling. A few managed seemingly normal lives. The rest were simply insane. Junkies looking for a fix they didn't know or understand. San Francisco was the same way.
He booked a room at a hotel on Canal Street. Not knowing how long his stay would be, he paid cash for the first week. The clerk, a pretty girl with a tattoo of an eagle on her neck and about ten pounds of braids piled atop her head, didn't seem the least put out when Malcolm didn't give her any ID.
"That'll require a two-hundred-dollar security deposit," she said, her perfectly sculpted brow sharply arched.
Malcolm handed her the money, took his plastic pass-card, and headed up to the third floor. Room 318 smelled of cheap potpourri spray and old cigarettes. He removed a photograph of himself, Nick, and Colin grinning outside Notre Dame Cathedral. Out of the three knights, Malcolm was the only one still alive. He propped it up on the bedside table, making sure it faced both the door to the hall and to the adjoining room. A tiny motion sensor hidden in the grooved frame would activate a micro-camera and notify his phone. The unit itself was worth more than anything else Malcolm planned to leave unattended, but theft wasn't what concerned him.
After a quick shower to wash off the bus film, Malcolm changed the bandage on his left forearm. What little scarring the razor-sharp blade left would soon be concealed beneath a new tattoo. Three golden lines, their ends tapered to points. It bothered him that Hounacier kept trying to place her blessing on his face. The eyes on his palms were difficult enough to conceal. Either she didn't understand the social issues a facial tattoo would cause, or she simply didn't care. The marks were his gifts, like medals or merit badges, tokens celebrating special kills, each one bestowing a power. His first demon kill marked his left palm: the warding eye. A triple-kill earned him his blue scarab. A jorogumo's fire gave him stamina. Whatever the mist cat's death would bestow, Malcolm didn't know. First, he needed to find an artist, one who worked in the old way. Maybe AJ was still in New Orleans. She'd inked two of his marks before.
Once dressed, Malcolm picked up the brown guitar case with his Remington and Hounacier strapped inside and headed out.
He made his way to the Quarter. The drone of traffic calmed, gradually replaced by music. An enormous accordion player sat shoehorned into a wheelchair, his plump fingers gliding across the keyboard. Eyes hidden behind neon green sunglasses, the musician smiled as Malcolm passed.
Parked cars cluttered one side of the street, leaving little room for drivers. The wall of vehicles, combined with the overhanging balconies, formed a tunnel along the shop fronts. Glitter dust sparkled between the concrete bricks, too deep for brooms or wind to dislodge. Tourists shuffled past, nursing kitschy plastic drinking glasses. Locals, dressed in an eclectic carnival of styles, glided along like sharks amongst tuna. Suited men stood before strip clubs, wearing black earpieces like they were Secret Servicemen, pimping the pleasures inside. The streets stank of body odor, exhaust, and beer. Occasional whiffs of oily ganja smoke wafted through, their origins impossible to pinpoint. Malcolm found himself grinning. He was home.
"Excuse me, sir."
He turned to see a short, bald man in a hole-speckled polo smiling at him. Another man stood behind him, grinning around a stubby cigarette.
"I really like those shoes," the bald man said.
Malcolm glanced down at his slightly worn hiking boots. "Thank you."
"What would ya say if I could tell ya where and what street ya got those shoes?"
Smirking, Malcolm rubbed his chin. I guess I don't appear as local as I'd thought.
The man with the cigarette seemed to notice Malcolm's tattooed arms. Eyes widening, the grin fell from his lips.
"I'd say," Malcolm started, "that I got my shoes on my feet on Royal Street."
The bald man laughed and snapped his fingers. "Aw, that's right! On yo feet on Royal Street!" He turned to his friend, still standing like a wax statue. "Man here knows his lines."
The friend shook his head tensely, almost unnoticeably. His lips tightened, as if trying to pass some important, unspoken danger.
"Say, man," the bald man said, turning back to Malcolm. "Since ya already got my line, ya think you can spare a dollar?"
"Don't know. Got any other lines?"
Baldy's smile widened. Two of his bottom teeth were missing. "'Course I got more. Tell ya what—"
His friend thumped him hard in the back. Baldy snapped his head around. The guy with the cigarette gave a quick gesture with his head, stabbing his nose toward Malcolm's hands. Baldy turned back to Malcolm, quizzical. Then his gaze lowered.
Malcolm slowly rolled over his open palm, like a stage magician revealing a materialized ball.
All joviality vanished from baldy's face. "Uh…um…shit."
"You know these marks?" Malcolm asked.
Baldy gulped. "Yeah."
"You knew Ulises, then?"
Both men nodded.
"We was real sorry to hear what happened to him," Smoker said. "Papa Ulises was a good man."
"Do you know who I am?" Malcolm asked.
"Yeah," Baldy said. "You're his boy, the Doctor. He talked about ya. Said ya was off…" he glanced at the worn case in Malcolm's other hand, "…killin' evil."
So much for anonymity.
"You men have any ideas who might have killed him?"
They shook their heads.
"Don't know," Smoker said. "I hadn't spoke with him in a while. Always real nice. Helped me out with some stuff when things got bad. He did that. Helped folks."
Malcolm nodded understandingly. "Well, I'm going to be around for a while. If either of you gentlemen hear anything…" He extended a folded twenty from his previously empty fingers.
Baldy held his hands up, like the money was trying to arrest him. "No, no, man. That's all right. Ya ain't got to pay us. Papa Ulises was a friend."
"You sure?" Malcolm eyed Smoker.
He didn't seem to want it either.
"Well, thank you." Malcolm withdrew the bill into his palm again. Ulises had spent long hours, and quite a few drinks, teaching him some basic sleight of hand tricks. Real magic was less obvious, at least until it became dangerous. "I'll owe you one. My name's Malcolm."
"We know that, Doctor," Baldy said. "I'm Julian." He motioned to Smoker. "This here's Dwayne."
"Pleasure to meet you. You know Alpuente's?" Malcolm nodded to the shop just half a block away.
"Jim Luison's place," Julian said.
"That's right. You two hear anything, just let him know." He offered his hand.
Julian looked at it as if maybe the tattoo had teeth. Reluctantly, he shook it. "We will."
Smiling, Malcolm turned and continued on. By tomorrow, everyone would know Ulises' pupil had arrived. A vengeful bokor was nothing to take lightly. He passed several antique shops until coming to one, its walls the color of wet terracotta. A suit of archaic armor stood in one of the windows beside a Victorian divan, upholstered in shades of scarlet and cream. "Alpuente's Antiques" it said above the door in golden letters.
He stepped inside, the stink of the city immediately giving way to the aroma of fresh lilies bulging from a blown glass vase atop the counter. Furniture from different eras filled most of the shop's floor space, nestled around dark wood and glass cases, their contents brimming with treasures. Not seeing anyone right off, Malcolm took a step toward the counter. His right wrist began to itch.
His cobalt scarab tattoo shuddered. Three of its legs twitched nervously, as if unsure what to do. The beetle warned him of demons, even in human form. When near the possessed, about ten feet or so, it scuttled around to the side opposite. The only time it had ever moved like this was in France, in the Valducans' chateau.
Malcolm looked around. There. A black stone mask, like a skull or withered face, leered from a support column ahead. Brow furrowed, he stepped closer. A semicircular table rested against the column, making it hard to get too close. He leaned in, gazing at the shriveled eyes nestled deep within their sockets. The scarab shuffled like a child needing to pee, causing the hair on his arms to stand on end.
The Valducans once owned a pair of Oriental jade masks that housed the essence of demonic lions. Ancient, their secrets of creation long since lost, the masks repelled demons, possibly even familiars. He'd never seen them work, but he had witnessed the catastrophic result when those masks were pressed to faces of two of his friends, possessing his Valducan brothers. He'd had to kill them. If this mask was as those, it was powerful. Powerful and dangerous. There was one way to be sure.
Transferring Hounacier's case to his other hand, Malcolm tentatively raised his palm. While the tattoo on his left hand could repel demonic powers, the one in his right could sense energies, sometimes more than he wanted. He winced as the lid parted, revealing the blue iris beneath. Hovering his palm inches from the mask, he closed his eyes.
Hatred. Rage. Withered hands peeling a screaming child's skull like a grapefruit. Crushing blackness, like ice. The sweet taste of a corpse riddled with—
Malcolm yanked his hand back, nearly stumbling into a chair. Gritting his teeth, he released a long breath, fighting nausea.
God damned ghoul
, he thought. How the hell did it end up in there, and how did Jim get it? Did he have any idea what he had? Rubbing the apprehension from his fingertips, Malcolm flipped over the little white tag hanging from the demon mask.
"Not for Sale."
Looks like he did.
"Can I help you?" a creaky voice asked.
Startled, Malcolm turned to see an old white man sitting in a chair behind the counter, nearly hidden behind the enormous bouquet. A silver haze of hair tufted from the sides of his bald head. A slender air hose looped up over his ears and down below his nose, resting just above a thick moustache.
"Now that piece there isn't for sale," the old man said.
A mulatto woman peered around one of the shelves near the back, her dark curls brushing her shoulders. "There you are."