“Well, we have only ONE lead-“ Sylvie started the
investigation, “the back room in the auditorium. That’s the only place where we
could have been spotted.”
“Well?” Keith said, “We know what we have to do, so let’s go
do it!”
*****
Three days later, they were back at the library
table. “Well,” Farrago asked wearily, “what do we have?”
“The same thing we had three days ago - nothin’!”
Talos shot back. “Nobody saw us go into the room. Nobody saw us leave the room.
Nobody saw us plant the body. We did it clean, so howcum we ain’t getting’ away
with it?”
“Karine, dear,” Sylvie asked blurrily, “what did the
doctors at the Powers Theory lab say?”
“They didn’t find anything. And yes, I asked them to
try all the tests. They ran them. Now, they’re starting to think that I’m some
sort of hypochondriac.”
“Okay, we’ve exhausted Detective Work and Science,”
Farrago spelled out. “That leaves Psychology and Magic.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, either we ARE being haunted, or something
like that, or for some bizarre reason, we’re sabotaging ourselves. It could be
me, I have the ability to do all of this, but to be honest, I just don't feel
guilty about this! And even if I did, I wouldn’t drag the rest of you guys down
with me.” Farrago paused and looked around. “Nope, I don’t feel any guilt at
this table, especially not from me. So, that leaves something magical. Karine,
see if you can ‘convince’ someone to leave the Mystic Arts building open, so we
can have a séance.”
“And what if the seance turns up a cropper, and we
really ARE doing this to ourselves?”
“Then we don’t really have anything to worry about.
We deal with it.”
*****
Karine lit the candles, and the other three arranged
themselves around the table. “Farrago, I know it’s a little late to ask, but if
we DO manage to contact something, what are we supposed to do about it?”
“Nothing at the moment. Right now, what we’re after
is information. We get that, then we go get whatever it is that we need.”
“Can we just get this OVER with?” Sylvie snapped.
“What’s the matter, dear?” Karine teased, “Is the
spooky place getting to you?”
“NO! I just don’t like all this superstition
garbage. My people - I mean, my family has been trying to get away from this
sort of mumbo-jumbo for centuries! Savages make their decisions by
consulting the spirits! Civilized people make rational decisions based on sound
evidence.”
Farrago patted her hand. “And that’s why we’re doing
this last, sweetheart. We’ve exhausted all the other possibilities.”
Sylvie pouted, but they went ahead. The séance was
almost exactly like millions of séances that had gone before. Almost. This one
was performed under optimum conditions, with three proven manifesters and a
telepath.
The candles went dim, the room got dark, and a chill
swept over them. A darkness pooled in the middle of the table, and gathered up
in a column, which formed into first a general human form, and then into the form
of a girl. Sylvie gasped when she recognized Beltane’s face on the figure. It
didn’t last long. Her face imploded, as if an invisible fist had mashed it in.
The figure sprawled onto the table and became formless. Tendrils reached out in
four directions, and clawed hands reached out for each of them.
All four of the Alphas scrambled out of their
chairs. Farrago blurted out the spell to stop the séance, and the lights went
up, and the thing on the table faded away. “Shit! We ARE haunted!”
*****
The four Alphas spent the next few days hanging
around the library, looking for ways to dispel a haunting. They were bogged
down by not being able to ask any who knew what they were doing. And they were
having problems getting to sleep, so they were all a little punchy.
Talos, Glissade and Farrago were sitting at a table,
going through book after thick, densely written book, and learning more about
things that go bump in the night than they really wanted to. Then Silver Rose
came stumbling out of the stacks, holding yet another book. She plopped down in
a chair. “Sylvie, sweetheart, are you okay?” Farrago asked.
“ah? Oh, yes, I’m all right,” Sylvie slurred a bit.
“Better than all right. I think I’ve found it!”
“Found what?”
“What do you think, idiot?” She held up the book.
Its title was ‘Universals In Worldwide Burial Practices’. She opened the book
to a marked page. “It says here that the Mantusi bushmen were traditional
enemies of another tribe, the Anagu. The Anangu were famous in Africa for cursing
their enemies as they died, and haunting them after death. But the Mantusi
managed to wipe out the Anangu, because they had a ceremony that could bind a
vengeful ghost to the spot where it died. After each battle with the Anangu,
they’d hold this ceremony, and bind the ghosts so that they couldn’t bother
them.”
“That’s nice,” Karine said, “but what does it have
to do with us?”
“It’s a simple ceremony, and according to this, it
WORKS.”
“That’s what ALL these books say,” Talos said dully.
“This isn’t a book of black magic,” Sylvie said
severely, “it’s an Anthropology text. Do you honestly think an Anthropologist
would put his reputation on something that off, if he wasn’t absolutely CERTAIN
that it would work?”
The other three nodded wearily. “No sense in taking
any chances. If we ever wanna sleep again, we’d better try anything that might
work,” Karine said.
“Then we’d better get on it. There’s a catch.”
“Isnt’ there always?” Farrago moaned.
“This has to be done at the place of death, within
Eight days of the death.”
The four looked around at each other. “It’s been a
week.”
“And the back room of the auditorium is locked.”
“I’ll break it in,” Talos offered.
“No, then they’ll wonder why it was broken into.”
“I imitate Carson or Hartford’s voice and order it
opened for some reason,” Glissade suggested.
“Better,” Sylvie said, “but it would still leave a
trail, and not necessary.”
“Okay, then how DO we get in there, in time?”
“Simple. I snag the key off the ring of one of the
janitors.”
“But the janitors won’t be back until tomorrow
morning. We’d have to do it during the Assembly.”
“Better and better,” Sylvie yawned cavernously. “We
sneak out as everyone’s going into Assembly, do the ritual, and rejoin the
crowd after Carson’s bored them to tears.”
Farrago looked worried. “Perform a ceremony behind
Carson’s back, WHILE she’s giving her address?”
“Well, as you say, daring and planning makes for a
winning ploy - that’s the Alpha Way.” Sylvie picked up the tome. “I’ll make
photocopies of this, and put the book back.”
Ten minutes later, Farrago found Sylvie in the
stacks, sound asleep, the photocopies next to the book.
*****
“I don’t like this!” Sylvie snapped, as she slipped
into the costume.
“Oh, NOW you don’t like it!” Karine snapped back as
she daubed her face with paint. “This was YOUR idea!”
“It was?”
“Yeah, Syl,” Farrago said as he slipped the lion’s
tooth studded armlet on one bicep, “we were lucky that they had all this stuff
in the Drama Department.”
“GOD, I will just DIE if anyone sees me like this!”
Sylvie wailed quietly. “The Tigers would never let me live this down, if they
ever heard of it!”
Farrago thought briefly of telling Sylvie that she
looked fine in a leopard skin skirt and brass bangles, with bits of tooth and
bone tied to various places. And then, having a healthy regard for his skin, he
said nothing.
Sylvie started to put paint on her face, paused, and
threw down the makeup. “I’m not doing this!” She turned to get her clothes.
Farrago shot a hand forward. “NO! Sylvie, I’m not
any happier than you are about this. But I’m not going to let you do this to
yourself. Maybe it will only take the three of us to pull this off, but I don’t
KNOW that. If you’re not here, doing this with us, you might somehow screw up
the rite for us all.” He paused, and covered his ass. “And maybe if you’re the
only one that doesn’t do this, you’ll be the only one that Beltane comes after.”
“Still, it’s so embarrassing!”
Farrago pulled her to him. “Not to worry. After
this, it’ll all be over.” He caressed one of her bare breasts. “And we’ll
finally have some ‘Us’ time again.”
Sylvie sighed and nodded. As one, they picked up
their spears and shields, and began the chant.
*****
In the Auditorium, Carson was lecturing the
assembled students about the need for respect for the cultures of other
students. As a truly international school, internal harmony depended on leaving
silly stereotypes and biases at home.
Beltane walked down the aisle to the rows where the
Poe kids were seated. She squeezed past the others to behind where Bunny ‘Bugs’
Cormack was. “Hey, Bun, did you get that bit wired?”
Bunny handed two items back. “Yep. Video and RC. How
did the ‘Stunt Double’ work out?”
“Wonderful. The ‘mashed in face’ was perfect, and
the ‘bubbling rot’ bit was a piece of art.”
“Special Effects are my life,” Bunny glowed.
Bored by Carson’s PC pontification, Nikki Reilly
leaned back. “Should you be discussing your Special Manifestation Project in
Assembly?”
“Haven’t started on that.”