Epilogue

On that night, while Jack had been infiltrating Khoronos’ phantom house, Stewie Arlinger had called Randy Eliot after having listened to Faye Rowland’s strange tale of sacrificial rites and encrypted names. Randy had easily pinpointed Jack’s location by instructing the duty programmer to recall the map grids that Jack had run through the data monitor in his vehicle. That’s how they’d found him.

Two days later the papers and the news had everything. “Suspended Cop Nails Triangle Killers,” the Post read. The police would never successfully trace the identities of the ritualists: Khoronos, Marzen, and Gilles were just names on three death reports, names without backgrounds, without lives. Jan Beck of the county police Technical Services Division easily linked the forensic evidence of the first three murders to the alleged perpetrators. The case was closed.

The body of Veronica Polk, however, was never found.

* * *

Jack did the rehab thing, if only to prove to himself that he could. He would never drink again, and, though at first it troubled him, the fact quickly diminished to insignificance. He still went to the bar, though, but drank soda water with a twist. It proved a fascinating perspective: watching a bunch of other people get drunk while remaining sober himself.

After a time, he began to think about things. He thought about love. He would always love Veronica and her memory, but he also knew that she was dead, and that the past was the past. Part of himself would mourn her for the rest of his life, but the other part would go on.

The aorists believed that time was inconsequential; whatever truth was, it went on without regard to duration. But Jack knew that this was not applicable. Time, in actuality, was short. He asked Faye to move in with him, and she did. She quit the state and got a better job with the county library system. He spent $1,400 on an engagement ring (“Ouch!” he’d remarked when the saleswoman informed him of the price); however, he hadn’t yet summoned the courage to give it to Faye. He didn’t know what she would think, or even how she might react. He didn’t know if he was moving too fast. He knew that he loved her, though, so at least he knew something. Perhaps he would give her the ring tomorrow. Perhaps tonight.

“Here are the ballistic reports,” Jan Beck said. She plopped them on Jack’s desk. Randy offered her some coffee, but she politely declined. “I’d rather drink embalming fluid than Captain Cordesman’s coffee.”

“Sure,” Jack said, “but embalming fluid doesn’t have caffeine, and what the hell do I want with the ballistics reports?”

“It was your case,” she answered, “so you can stow them. I just do tests. I’ll tell you, though — I have new faith in the.38 standard-pressure round.”

“What do you mean?”

“It did a job on Khoronos’ head.”

Jack laughed. “Some forensics expert you are. It wasn’t a.38, it was a.455 metal jacket. Most gunshops don’t even carry them anymore; the rangemaster loads them for me special.”

“You’re pulling my leg,” Jan Beck said. “A.455?”

“That’s right. I fired it out of an old Webley.”

Now it was Jan Beck’s turn to laugh. “Then you missed. The bullet I pulled out of Khoronos’ head was a.38 semijacketed wadcutter. I figured you shot it out of that little Smith snub of yours.”

Randy was frowning. “Jack didn’t shoot Khoronos.”

“Sure I did,” Jack said.

“Don’t you remember? After I tagged your location with the duty programmer, I brought a bunch of uniforms out to Khoronos’ house. Stewie went with us. When he and I were searching the upstairs, he picked up your.38 snub in that room with all the broken glass. Then we found the door that led to the basement.”

Now Jack was thoroughly confused. “What are you talking about?”

“Stewie shot Khoronos,” Randy informed him. “Not you. He shot him with your.38.”

“Are you sure?”

“Of course. I was standing right next to him.”

* * *

Jack didn’t see what difference it made. Nonetheless, it bothered him. He expressly remembered dropping the Webley’s hammer and seeing Khoronos go down. When he went home for lunch, he called Stewie’s office but his receptionist said he wasn’t in. Then he went upstairs and looked at his guns. He hadn’t cleaned them yet. He opened the Webley’s receiver; the round over the barrel port would be the one he’d shot at Khoronos. He took the round out and saw that the percussion cap was dented, which meant that the firing pin had been struck. But the big round-nosed bullet was still implanted in the casing.

A dud, Jack realized. This happened sometimes, especially with odd reloads. A bad primer wouldn’t ignite the powder. Goddamn thing never went off, he thought.

Next, he opened the Smith snub, the gun Randy claimed that Stewie had picked up in the mirrored room. Jack hadn’t fired it that night, so it should have five unspent cartridges in the cylinder. But there were only four; the casing over the barrel port was discharged, empty.

How do you like that? he thought. It was Stewie who shot Khoronos.

Faye’s briefcase sat open on the kitchen table, full of all the research she’d done on the aorists. A yellow legal pad had been top-marked Synod. Apparently she’d transcribed some text by hand, for the pad was lined with her script.

Jack didn’t bother reading any of it. Why should he? The case was closed. The last line, however, read: He who shall slay the Prelate shall become the Prelate.

* * *

“Cash or charge, sir?”

“Cash,” Stewie said. He had plenty of that now, and he always would. He bestows treasure upon the faithful, he mused. Los Angeles seemed perfect. Lots of artists, lots of creative women. Initiating two new surrogoti would be easy. An artsy town like that? Piece of cake, he concluded.

“Aisle or window?” inquired the girl at the ticket counter.

“Window, please.”

“Name?”

“Pardon me?”

“Your name, sir? For your boarding pass.”

“Oh yes, of course. Khoronos. Stewart Khoronos.”

The flight was quiet, comfortable. Stewie particularly liked the window seat. He looked out the tiny window, gazing in awe upon the world which awaited him.

He pressed his hand to the glass and whispered this:

“Aorista.”

Edward Lee

Edward Lee has had more than 40 books published in the horror and suspense field, including CITY INFERNAL, THE GOLEM, and BLACK TRAIN. His movie, HEADER was released on DVD by Synapse Films, in June, 2009. Recent releases include the stories, “You Are My Everything” and “The Cyesologniac,” the Lovecraftian novella “Trolley No. 1852,” and the hardcore novel HAUNTER OF THE THRESHOLD. Currently, Lee is working on HEADER 3. Lee lives on Florida’s St. Pete Beach. Visit him online at: Edwardleeonline.com

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