The Diabolist (Dominic Grey 3) (12 page)

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BOOK: The Diabolist (Dominic Grey 3)
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And not on any of their cases had Grey seen Viktor this unnerved.

“His real name is Darius Ghassomian,” Viktor said, sitting in a chair across from Grey. “He’s from New York, though he moved to London during high school. His parents were both Iranian. We once were very close, when I was a student at Oxford. I haven’t heard from him since university, though for some time I heard rumors of his whereabouts and activities.”

“Rumors?” Grey said.

Viktor gripped his glass between his palms, hovering over it like some giant, dark bird of prey. “Do you remember we discussed two types of Satanic cults?”

“Sure.”

“The House of Lucifer and LaVey’s Church of Satan are examples of symbolic Satanism, for obvious reasons. Adherents of L’église de la Bête and its ilk are known as theistic Satanists, because they actually worship the Devil. There is a third type, however, far more rare and whose roots are planted deep in history, even before the Gnostics. It originated in ancient Persia, where the concept of the Devil arose.”

“Zoroastrianism again.” Grey whistled. “And your friend’s Iranian.”

“He’s indeed Iranian, but he had no love for Zoroaster, and we did not part ways as friends.”

Whatever this third type of devil worship entailed, Grey had the uncomfortable suspicion that Viktor had more than a surface knowledge. “What happened?”

“Remember when I said the origin of the Devil was a story for another day?” Viktor said. “Unfortunately that day has arrived.”

“It always does.”

Viktor swirled his absinthe into a tiny whirlpool inside the glass. “What even most theologians fail to realize is that the concept of the Devil as an antagonist to God
predated
Christian thought.”

“I’d think the idea of an evil deity would be timeless. Universal.”

“Not exactly,” Viktor said. “Pantheistic belief in multiple deities, both good and evil, was, of course, widespread in ancient times, as were pseudo-monotheistic beliefs in religions such as Hinduism, where a multitude of avatars represent different facets of one Supreme Being. But not until the Abrahamic concept of pure monotheism arose did we encounter a single omnipotent god and the problem of evil.”

“Which led to the need for horns and a pitchfork,” Grey said, though he had to digest Viktor’s words before responding. Viktor’s encyclopedic knowledge of religions and cults amazed Grey, but during these lectures he often felt as if he were a student in one of Viktor’s classes, struggling to keep everything in context.

“That’s right. As I said, the dilemma of theodicy troubled monotheistic theologians from the beginning, but long before the Christian era the Zoroastrians were dealing with the issue in a novel manner.”

“Dualism,” Grey said, recalling his readings on Zoroastrianism. “The belief in an equal and rival deity to God.”

Viktor rose and started to pace, reinforcing his professorial demeanor. “A logical solution to the problem of evil. The Zoroastrians believe there are twin forces at work in the universe, Ahura Mazda and Angra Mainyu, also known as Ahriman. Zoroaster and his followers worshipped Ahura Mazda as the benevolent creator-God, while Ahriman and his legion of daevas, or demons, represented the forces of darkness.”

“It does simplify things.”

“The concept of dualism threatened the fabric of the early Christian Church,” Viktor said. “The Gnostics, the gravest danger to the Catholic Church in history, lifted the dualistic elements of their theology from the belief in Ahriman. As did many other heresies.”

“To be honest,” Grey said, leaning back on the sofa, “it’s easier for me to conceive of some evil god up there causing mayhem than to believe in a Supreme Being who I have to hold responsible for genocide and child prostitution.”

“And many learned minds in history would agree. Had the Catholic Church not been so politically powerful, popular dualistic heresies such as Manichaeism, Catharism, Bogomilism, Albigensianism, and Marcionism would likely have endured to this day. Saint Augustine was a Manichaean for nine years.”

“Saint Augustine was in a cult?” Grey said. “I’ve never even heard of the Manichaeans.”

“That’s because cults, heresies, and alternative beliefs were not just frowned upon by the Catholic Church. They were annihilated.”

“It all sounds so… cosmic. The idea of an evil God.”

Viktor stopped pacing, his lips curling upward. “Who truly believes in his own evil, Grey? The perspective of those on the inside of a cult, even a monstrous one like L’église de la Bête, would surprise you.”

“I think I’ve got a handle on the history, and I see where this is leading, but how does this connect up to Darius or the murders?”

Viktor stood in front of the window, staring off into space again. Grey had the suspicion he was deciding how much to tell him. “I seek knowledge above all else, and I hope you understand that. When I was a student at Oxford, at the beginning of my journey, I was a practitioner of magic. Darius and I and… a girl… explored it together.”

Grey had a hard time imagining Viktor either as a young, carefree college student or as a romantic, but he could see by his wistful, faraway gaze that he had once been both. Yet Grey also saw a sadness, a great loss, lurking in those memories. He wondered if this was the girl Viktor had thought of when Grey asked him about marriage.

“There is a subset of black magicians,” Viktor said, “whose practitioners believe that magic derives not just from the laws of the universe but from an entity or entities who control the darker forces. These magicians are called Diabolists.”

Grey held a finger up. “When I was reading about Zoroastrianism I read about a priestly caste called magi. They were magicians of course, which is where we got the name, and also the Three Magi from the Bible. Did Ahriman have his magi as well?”

“The magi who worshipped Ahriman were reputed to have instructed King Solomon in the dark arts, including the summoning of demons. We know almost nothing about Ahriman’s followers, except they were feared throughout the ancient world. And there’s almost no mention of Ahriman in historical records except for the writings of Rudolf Steiner, a prominent philosopher and Goethe scholar from the early 1900s.”

“Don’t know him, either,” Grey said.

Viktor pushed away from the window to prepare more absinthe, speaking as he fitted the slotted spoon and sugar cube above the glass. “He started a movement he termed anthroposophy, which combined elements of Nietzsche, Goethe, European transcendentalism, and theosophy. He gained a sizable following, but his cosmology was bizarre. He viewed three figures as central to human evolution and spiritual development: Christ, Lucifer, and Ahriman. He believed an ‘Ahrimanic influence’ has been at work since the middle of the fifteenth century, and that Ahriman would incarnate sometime during the third millennium, just as Christ once did.”

“The third millennium being now? ‘Bizarre’ would be an understatement.”

“I mention it solely out of lack of reference points,” Viktor said.

“Another guess,” Grey said, rising to stretch his legs. “Your old pal was a Diabolist.”

Viktor’s lips pursed. “Correct.”

Grey placed his empty coffee cup in the kitchen, returning to face Viktor. “And so were you.”

“I dabbled,” Viktor said evenly, “but no.”

Grey had long known that Viktor’s interest in religion and cults went far beyond mere law enforcement. On more than one occasion he had questioned whether Viktor’s decision making was geared towards helping the victims or satisfying his own curiosities.

“So what does this mean for us?” Grey said.

“Darius—Simon—was brilliant, but awkward and terribly reserved. A social outcast. It’s hard to believe this was the same person I saw on the Internet, yet I’m sure of it. And magicians, especially Diabolists, shun the limelight.”

“Maybe your old pal had a change of heart along the way,” Grey said. “Decided he’d rather have a Porsche and some nubile young followers.”

Viktor did not look convinced.

“So a Diabolist,” Grey reasoned, “could have motive to call both Matthias Gregory
and
Xavier Marcel a heretic.”

“Possibly, yes.”

“Of course it could all be a coincidence, the Diabolist’s robe, the emergence of Simon close in time to the murders.”

“Of course,” Viktor said.

“I don’t believe very much in coincidence,” Grey said.

They stared at each other, Viktor in silent acquiescence.

“The immediate question,” Grey said, checking his watch, “is whether it stops here. Are we solving murders or preventing them?”

“I received a call from my Interpol contact this morning. Jacques said another letter has been delivered, to a society of magicians in York. One of the oldest in the world.”

“I didn’t know there were societies of magicians,” Grey said.

“There are many.”

“Well, today’s a day of enlightenment,” Grey said. “Another six-day deadline?”

“Yes, but three days have already passed.”

“So we go to York?” Grey said.

“I do, but not yet,” Viktor said, his gaze disappearing into his glass. “There’re a few things I need to investigate in San Francisco, based on this new information.”

Grey didn’t even bother asking. “And my job?”

“I need you to look into Xavier’s death.”

Grey nodded, slowly. “That makes sense.”

“Good. I’ll purchase a ticket to Paris for this evening. We’ve no time to waste.”

Grey said his good-bye and moved to leave, then paused with the door half-closed. “Just one more thing.”

“Yes?” Viktor said.

“I understand why you didn’t mention the Diabolist angle sooner. Keeping things to yourself is fine, Viktor, we all have our secrets. Just make sure it never impacts an investigation I’m working on.”

PARIS

F
rom a booth in the corner, Luc Morel-Renard watched the crowd gather at the working-class bar in the eighteenth arrondissement. The neighborhood was home to Sacré Coeur, but also to some of the worst neighborhoods in metro Paris, and for some time Luc had seethed as North African and other immigrants overran his childhood home, bringing unemployment, crime, and gangs.

Luc had been a rising star in the far right Unité Radicale, but when that organization disbanded after the failed Chirac assassination, Luc, gifted in both oration and the ideology of hate, had been approached by a member of L’église de la Bête. Though shocked at first by the group’s depravity and the requirements for membership, Luc realized that both his carnal and political ambitions could be furthered by joining the underground society.

Luc had never been comfortable with Xavier’s leadership, which was too blunt for his taste. Xavier’s misguided Arceneau kidnappings had almost exposed them, and if the press got a whiff of Luc’s affiliation with L’église de la Bête, even his own radical followers would shun him. His church helped his political career from the inside out, not the outside in.

As a fight broke out in the corner, Luc pondered his good fortune. Xavier was dead. Luc was now in charge of the direction of the church, and the only person he had to answer to was far more closely aligned with his own goals. In fact, Luc had come to realize the beauty and power of the Magus’s vision,
and counted himself a loyal disciple. The Magus had promised to help Luc’s political career and more.
Much
more.

The fight in the corner ended, a rare silence encasing the crowd as the bartender cranked the volume on the television. Simon Azar was speaking again, and every union man, biker, anarchist, Satanist, and local thug was listening. Luc watched in awe as Simon, sitting in a high-backed chair, spoke with a potent cocktail of intelligence, charisma, and self-effacing wisdom, his humanist message somehow managing to please intellectuals, blue-collar types, and social outcasts all at the same time. Religious leaders had already denounced him, but everyone else, the vast swaths of humanity swimming in the murky waters of agnosticism, clung to his life raft of hope. As Hitler said and proved, the power of the spoken word had started the greatest religious and political avalanches in history.

Luc listened to the translator.

“This morning I logged on to the Internet, and do you know what the three top news stories of the week were?” Simon ticked them off on his fingers. “One: another earthquake in Haiti. Two: Severe flooding in Brazil destroyed thousands of homes and millions of dollars’ worth of crops. Three: An Italian man living in an upper-class neighborhood, less than a mile from Vatican City, kidnapped and dismembered two local schoolchildren.”

Simon paused to reflect on the gravity of the events. “Do you know what these three atrocities have in common? They happened, you see, in three of the most devoutly Catholic countries on the planet, and all in the same week. How many tens of thousands of people in those countries, how many millions, had prayed just that week for peace and prosperity? How far did it get them, how did it help the poor souls who died in those events? To think that God would kill our children or allow such atrocities to occur, under any theological system, is beyond ludicrous. We are not a rational species; rather, we rationalize. We do what we must to fit God within the framework we know.”

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