Excerpt
The Puppy
Sloot found Willieâs head lurking in the formal dining room. The rest of him was there as well, but the distinction was noteworthy.
âOh, hi Sloot.â Willieâs head rested on a silver platter. There was probably a metaphor there, or at least a pun.
âM-mâlord?â
âYes?â
âYou seem to be a bit âŚâ
âDebonaire? More than a bit, I imagine. I got good marks in that at school, you know.â
âIâm sure,â said Sloot, âbut I was going to remark upon your, er, decorum.â
âMy what?â
âYour … decentralization.â
âI can make up words too, Sloot.â
âI beg your pardon, mâlord, but … well, your headâs off.â
âYou noticed that too, did you? Horribly inconvenient. Iâve tried telling my body to get with the program, but it doesnât seem to want to have anything to do with me.â
âI see.â
âI just wish I knew what it was doing over there. What I was doing over there.â
Willieâs body would have been entirely unrecognizable if it hadnât been alone in the room with his head. It was wearing a tattered shroud in lieu of anything remotely fashionable, and if it was striking any pose that might have been intentional, it must have been called something like the Certain Violent Intent, or the Your Grave Needs A Good Spitting Upon.
âIâm not going to hurt us, am I?â Willie sounded truly worried for the first time since heâd realized he couldnât smell his perfume collection anymore, or find it.
âYouâve removed your own head,â said Sloot. âIâd imagine that if you were going to do worse than that, youâdâve done so already.â
âThat sounds reasonable. All the same, what am I doing over there?â
âIf I had to guess,â said Sloot, who abhorred guessing for the implied risk involved, âIâd say youâre working some sort of black magic.â
âHmmm,â said Willie, in an approximation of thoughtfulness. âThat would explain the tortured moaning thatâs coming from that melting wall over there.â
Sloot tittered nervously and nodded. âWouldnât it just?â
They watched for a while as Willieâs body committed whatever atrocities it was up to. Sloot, at least, was racking his brain for a way to stop it, but coming up empty. He didnât realize how badly the attempt was going until he found himself glancing over to Willie, in case heâd perhaps thought of something.
âDo you think you might go sit in the circle for a bit, mâlord?â
âProbably a good idea, but all of my sitting bits are otherwise engaged at the moment.â
âAh.â
âItâs a strange sort of dance, isnât it?â
âI donât think itâs dancing, mâlord.â If he were being completely honest, Sloot was no authority on the matter, having never danced a step in his life. That was just the sort of thing that led to wearing tight pants, and poor circulation would kill you. Hardly a factor now, but if that was dancing, he wanted no part of it.
âLooks like necromancy,â said Nicoleta.
âWhen did you get here?â
âI never left,â Nicoleta snapped. âWhile you were out gallivanting across the Narrative, Mr. Peril, I was here trying to help Willie! Never mind that I didnât succeed. Anyway, the best I can tell is that his bodyâs up to some sort of death magic. Necromancy.â
âIâd prefer if that were dancing,â said Sloot, feeling more than a bit abashed. His divided loyalties meant he was attending to each of them poorly, and he hated doing a bad job.
âNecromancers go in for that sort of stuff,â said Nicoleta, pointing at Willieâs body with disdain. âBig gestures, hands clawing at the heavens. Show-offs, the lot of them. Iâm sure heâd rather be on a cliff overlooking the sea during a thunderstorm.â
âI find it hard to believe that Willieâs body is a necromancer when his headâs not looking.â
âOf all the things that have happened since you died, thatâs where your suspension of disbelief hits a wall?â
She had him there.
âYouâre a wizard,â said Willie, âgo over there and tell himâmeâto stop doing that. If I come over here and put my head back on, we can try some of that âforgive and forgetâ business that Iâm told poors are fond of.â
âI am a wizard,â said Nicoleta, with a note of praise to Willie for having noticed. âBut my spells still arenât working. Besides, it looks like all of your talking and reasoning bits are on your platter. If you canât get your body on board, Iâve got nothing.â
âNever fear!â shouted a voice from behind Sloot, close enough that a whisper would have gotten the job done. âReason and logic shall prevail!â
Sloot yelped and wheeled on Arthur with a haunted look.
âWas that entirely necessary?â Slootâs voice had gone shrill and warbling in alarm.
âOh, good,â groaned Nicoleta. âArthurâs here.â
âOh, good,â beamed Willie, âArthurâs here!â
âAs always, thereâs a logical explanation for whatâs going on here. Thereâs no need to go ascribing everything that happens to magic, no matter how strange it may seem.â
âItâs summoning something,â said Nicoleta. âThat was clearly the âcome hitherâ gesture it just did with Willieâs left hand.â
âIt didnât look very welcoming to me,â said Willieâs head.
âThatâs because youâre not an unnameable terror from the void beyond the stars. Or an imp. But you use the right hand for them.â
âWhy is he summoning an unnameable terror from the void beyond the stars?â asked Sloot, throwing in some nervous fidgeting in case his voice didnât adequately convey his terror.
âAhem,â said Willie.
âSorry, mâlord. Why is mâlordâs body summoning an unnameable terror from the void beyond the stars?â
âClearly, weâre all suffering from Chestingerâs Communal Hallucination,â said Arthur. âWhat sorts of mushrooms have we all been eating?â
âNo kinds,â said Nicoleta. âWeâre dead.â
âWell, you can only catch communal hallucinations from eating the wrong sorts of mushrooms, so we must have done.â
âOr itâs not a hallucination.â
âThereâs no time for you to question my expertise!â
âWe really need to stop this before Willie finâer, mâlordâs body finishes summoning whatever itâs ⌠summoning.â
When surrounded by the trappings of incalculable evilâsuch as writhing masses of shadow tentacles wriggling across the floors of oneâs homeâitâs often difficult to decide how one should feel when said incalculable evil starts to leave. If decided in a committee, there would undoubtedly be a split between the optimistic âhooray and good riddance to itâ types, and the âbut where is it going nowâ types who consider themselves pragmatists, not pessimists. A true pessimist wouldnât turn up for a committee meeting, because whatâs the point?
âWell, thatâs a relief,â said Sloot, whoâd never been accused of optimism in his life.
âDonât relax just yet,â said Nicoleta, taking a far more Sloot-typical position. âIâm not sure what the disembodiedâwait, no, headless body of Willieâcould want with writhing tentacles of dark energy. But whatever it is, it canât be good.â
âGood,â said Arthur with a derisive snort. âNo such thing! Evil either. If youâd done your reading, youâd know that Professor Calbage of Wilcestermount-Upon-Shatserbury-Adjacent-The-Sea has a seventeen-point treatise that firmly eschews the notionââ
âIâve been to Wilcestermount-Upon-Shatserbury-Adjacent-The-Sea,â said Willieâs head. âBut donât tell anybody. I had a phase in my twenties, experimented with community theatre.â
âErâŚâ Sloot pointed to the melting wall behind Willieâs body, which had nearly melted entirely. All of the tentacles of evilâor whatever analog Professor Calbageâs treatise would acknowledgeâwere slithering off into the darkness beyond it. A pair of glowing eyes fumed within the darkness.
âEyes that glow in the dark donât growl, do they?â Sloot had surmised, accurately, that there was more to whatever lurked beyond the melting wall. Probably teeth. And if Willie could be decapitated, then perhaps teeth from within melting walls could threaten a ghost.
As the last of the tentacles slithered into the blackness beyond the wall, Sloot considered running away. He dismissed the thought without much ado, on account of the way his luck tended to go. There hadnât been a coin minted that, when tossed, would fall the way Sloot called it. Heâd be better off wagering on standing there and being devoured by whatever malevolence was assembling itself in the shadows. It seemed like a sure bet, but Sloot had a way of bucking the odds.
Perhaps it helped. Perhaps not. What emerged from the black maw in the wall was no ferocious beast.
âItâs a puppy,â said Nicoleta, her voice tinged with appropriate confusion and disbelief.
âWell, that makes perfect sense,â said Arthur.
âIt does?â asked Sloot.
âI wouldnât expect you to understand,â Arthur retorted, his nose turning upward severely enough that heâd have drowned, had it been raining. âCommunal hallucinations often cloud the minds of those experiencing them. You donât even remember eating the mushrooms.â
Willieâs body made its way over to the dining table. He didnât so much set his head back atop his shoulders as reabsorb it and waver for a moment.
âWell, thatâs a relief,â said Willie. He patted down the front of himself, most likely assuring that he was dressed appropriately for the occasion, but he also could have been looking for his keys, which he did not have. The trousers of his tuxedo were far too tight to have accommodated them.
âEr,â began Sloot, as was his fashion, âdo you know anything about the puppy, mâlord?â
âOh, I nearly forgot! Where is my head these days?â He looked around at all of them with a gleeful sneer of self-amusement. âWell, no, actually. Didnât one of you get him for me? Is it my birthday?â
âHard to say,â said Nicoleta. âBut … werenât you paying attention?â
âI have people for that. Sloot! Pay the woman.â
âYour body just summoned the puppy. All of the tentacles? The melting wall? Surely, you must remember some of it.â
âIâm pretty sure Iâm the boss,â said Willie from beneath smarmy eyebrows, âletâs leave the âmustsâ to me, shall we?â