The Hell Yo - lanyon Josh (бесплатные версии книг .txt) 📗
what I had expected: maybe a dry, desiccated stick of an academic or the puffy savoir faire of
the professional hedonist.
Garibaldi was tall, olive-skinned, and hard-bodied, with a shock of white hair. His
features were severe, but rough-hewn, as though his creator hadn’t had time to finish
sculpting him. He moved with deliberation, giving an illusion of power rather than grace.
I glanced Guy’s way. His mouth curved cynically, watching me.
When Garibaldi had finished drying himself, he wrapped a purple silk dressing gown
around his compact body, and on cue, Guy rose. I followed suit.
“Guy, my dear,” Garibaldi greeted him. His voice was unexpectedly light. They bussed
each other on their cheeks in French fashion.
“This is Adrien English,” Guy introduced me.
“Hello, Adrien English.” Garibaldi offered his hand. He had a strong grip, but his
fingers were uncallused, his skin as soft as a woman’s. His eyes were black and intense, his
mouth flesh-colored and sensual in line. It was a face of great character – what kind of
character, I had no idea. “Guy tells me you have a small problem. Small, but interesting.”
I glanced at Guy, wondering exactly how much he had told Garibaldi. Everything – or
at least everything that Guy knew – I bet.
“I hope you’ll find it interesting. I appreciate your agreeing to see me.”
He shrugged, a Gallic gesture. His eyes followed one of the girls – the topless one – as
she rose from her lounge and dove neatly into the sparkling water. As though recalling
himself, he beckoned us to follow him inside.
We found ourselves in a long, elegant room with a black and red Chinese screen and a
marble statue of a noticeably excited satyr. The cause of the satyr’s excitement was not
visible, but the results were pretty impressive.
Garibaldi went to the carved cherrywood paneling. He swiveled one of the brass
sconces. The panel slid back, revealing a hidden bar well stocked with an inviting selection
of expensive bottles and crystal stemware.
“It was built during Prohibition,” Guy informed me as Garibaldi poured green shots
into three parfait glasses. I deduced that Guy had spent a fair amount of time visiting Oliver
Garibaldi in his mansion on the hill.
I watched Garibaldi dip a perforated spoon into a jar, then pour water from a carafe
over the white powder so that it drained into the glasses.
“Are you familiar with the green fairy, Mr. English?” Garibaldi inquired. His eyes met
mine in the etched mirror above the bar.
“The green fairy?” I felt sure this was someone I should know.
“Absinthe,” Guy informed me.
The toast of La Belle Epoque? I didn’t think that stuff was legal. Not that I wasn’t
curious to try it. I felt certain that Oliver Garibaldi drank only the best.
“Hemingway was a fan, wasn’t he?”
“Hemingway, Poe, Wilde – Aleister Crowley. You’re heard of Aleister Crowley?”
Writer, painter, mountain climber, occultist, and sexual revolutionary? The tabloids
had labeled him “The Wickedest Man in the World.” He had modestly referred to himself as
“The Great Beast 666.”
“Sort of the father of modern Satanism, wasn’t he?”
Garibaldi permitted himself a curve of his lips at this. He brought Guy and me our
drinks.
I could imagine what Jake would have to say about this, I reflected, sipping the milky
potion. It tasted a bit like licorice, but with an herbal or floral undertone. It was like nothing
I’d tried before.
I glanced up. Garibaldi was watching me with those coal black eyes. He had incredible
presence, close to animal magnetism. It was hard to take my eyes off him.
“Cheers,” I said.
He fetched his own glass, taking one of the elegant chairs across from us. I reminded
myself that he was sitting in a pair of damp swim trunks, however magnetic his personality.
“So?” His eyes held mine. “Tell me about this small problem of yours, Adrien English.”
I pulled the photo of the pentagram out of my Day Planner, handed it across to
Garibaldi. He took it, made an expression of distaste.
“Paint.”
“Yes.” I wondered how he knew that at a glance, but perhaps he assumed the obvious.
“This is a childish prank. There is no mystery here.” He seemed disappointed. I found
that I didn’t wish to disappoint him.
“There may not be mystery, but there is murder. That symbol has turned up at the
scene of three ritual slayings.”
The black eyes raised, met mine. Moved to Guy for confirmation. Guy nodded
imperceptibly.
“Ah.”
That was it. Ah. He made it sound profound.
I said, “That symbol. It’s a sigil, isn’t it, representing the name of a demon?”
He nodded, pondering the photograph.
“Would you happen to know which demon?”
He answered without hesitation. “The fifty-sixth spirit. Gremory. Also called Gamori,
Gemory, or Gomory.”“What does it do?”
“What do you know of demons?”
More than I had two weeks earlier.
“Well, I know that before Christianity, demons were considered either good or evil.
Post Christianity, they seem to be primarily viewed as malevolent. Like junior league devils.
Apparently a lot of earlier pagan deities have been dumped into the pantheon along with
fallen angels and political figures.”
Garibaldi considered this gravely. “It is better not to judge demons by human standards
of good and evil. Let us think of them as useful or not useful.”
“I actually don’t think of them as real,” I felt obliged to point out.
He fastened those jet eyes on mine. “No?”
One simple word that seemed to contain unspoken volumes.
I said, to fill the silence, “So what does Gremory do?”
“Do?”
Like, did I think he had a day job? Maybe he lounged around the pool drinking
absinthe and fooling with red-haired nymphs.
“Would he be considered useful or not?”
Garibaldi replied, “He’s a powerful Duke of Hell who commands twenty-six legions. He
appears as a beautiful noblewoman riding a great camel. It is his office to tell of all things
past, present, and future.”
My demon was a camel-riding transvestite? The Devil Wears Prada, indeed.
“That’s it? He can tell the future?”