Vampire a Go-Go(39)
“It’s not that simple,” Amy said. “There’s the Kelley diary, for one thing.”
“Destroy it,” Penny said. “Burn it.”
“It’s too late for that. We all know about it. The right spells would make us talk, even good old-fashioned rubber hoses and bamboo under the fingernails.” Amy turned to Allen. “We’ve got to call the Society.”
Penny frowned. “How the hell would that help?”
“If they have the stone for safekeeping, then Allen’s out of danger. Making him talk won’t matter.”
“Then let’s call in the Vatican,” Penny said. “They can protect it better than your people.”
“You’re still forgetting I don’t trust either of those organizations,” Allen said. “We’ve come this far. I say we get the stone ourselves.”
“Dammit,” Amy said. “That’s exactly what Cassandra wants you to do.”
“Except I won’t be fetching it for her,” Allen said. “Ladies, I’m getting to the bottom of this. Are you with me or not?”
“You’re Indiana Jones all of a sudden?” Penny said. “I’m not sure I like this side of you.” A pause. “Or maybe I do.”
“We don’t even know what cemetery this astrologer guy is buried in,” Amy pointed out.
Allen shook his head. “I know. I can’t find anywhere in the manuscript where Kelley mentions the cemetery by name, and-” Allen sat up, eyes going unfocused, a strange expression on his face. “Cemetery.”
Penny reached for him, stopped short. “What is it?”
“In my dreams,” Allen said. “I’ve been seeing images of a cemetery.”
Amy asked, “Would you recognize it if you saw it?”
“I don’t know.”
“Let’s make that our priority,” Penny said. “We’ll put his name into Google and find out where he’s buried. There’s an internet café upstairs.”
“And after we find out, then what?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” A mischievous smile spread over Penny’s face. “We go grave robbing.”
Ninety minutes later they had nothing. None of the popular historical websites or Wikipedia mentioned Roderick by name, although accounts of alchemists and astrologers and other occult figures at court were plentiful. Amy brought up pictures of various graveyards around Prague, but Allen could not say for sure that any one of them matched his dream images.
“And the diary doesn’t say either,” Allen said. “Kelley says Roderick was entombed, and that he put the stone in with him. And he calls Rudolph a madman. But nothing about the name of the cemetery.”
Penny turned away from the computer screen, rubbed her eyes. “This is useless.”
“If I had all the time in the world, I could find it,” Allen said. “But if I have to dig up a grave, I’d like to be in and out of the cemetery before nightfall.”
“Why before nightfall?” Penny asked.
Amy put her fingers up to her mouth and mimed a set of fangs.
Penny blanched. “Oh, yeah.” Amy’s recent revelation still troubled her.
The three of them sat there. A minute passed.
“There might be somebody who can help,” Amy said.
Penny crossed her arms. “If you say somebody from your precious Society, I’ll scream.”
“No. Somebody freelance. The Society puts him on specialized errands from time to time.”
“This person is safe?” Allen asked.
“He can keep his mouth shut, if that’s what you mean.”
“Call him.”
Amy and Allen stood in the doorway of the two-story brick building in the old Jewish Quarter. The Quarter-Josefov-had an almost claustrophobic feel, the old buildings crowding the narrow, cobblestone street, souvenir kiosks hogging much of the sidewalk. To Allen, the Quarter felt old, with so much more history then the Letna area and the younger Holešovice suburb.
Amy raised her hand to knock but cast a sideways glance at Allen. “You sure about this?”
“There’s no time for anything else.”
It was already late afternoon. It had taken hours to track down Amy’s contact, and Allen felt more and more nervous every minute they inched toward nightfall. Allen worried with growing apprehension that there were still bits of Cassandra’s vampiric hypnotism lingering in his subconscious, and he couldn’t be sure how he would react if he saw her again.
Amy knocked. They waited.
Somewhere nearby Penny had installed herself at a café or coffeehouse. She didn’t tell them where in case Allen and Amy were interrogated, but she was close at hand in case she needed to effect some kind of rescue or, at the very least, call in the cavalry. Penny had raised holy hell about being left out, but she could see the wisdom of the maneuver.
Amy was about to knock again, when the door opened.
“Abraham Zabel?” Amy asked.
The man looked from Amy to Allen and back again. “You’re the one who called earlier?”
“Yes.”
He nodded. “I’m Abraham Zabel. Please come in.”
Allen thought Zabel did not look anything like he imagined a wizard should look. Maybe he was thinking too much of Gandalf. Zabel looked like Allen’s dentist. Allen hated his dentist.
Zabel led them into a small sitting room. The furnishings were old-not Commie surplus, but not quite antiques either. Threadbare chairs, a table that needed polishing, tall shelves filled with books, a small Persian rug, also threadbare.
Zabel didn’t sit, didn’t offer chairs to Amy or Allen. “So what can I do for you?”
“We need to speak with a dead man,” Amy told him.
Zabel nodded. “Uh-huh. Who’s paying for this?”
“I’m with the Society. I know you’ve done jobs for us before, and I was hoping our credit was good. It’s sort of a rush job.”
Zabel frowned, eyes darting around the room. “What do you know about my work for the Society?”
“No details,” Amy said. “I heard your name, knew you were in Prague. I’m not even sure you have a spell for what we need, but we had to try something.”
He seemed to relax, scratched his chin. “I have a spell. How long?”
“What?”
“The person you want to speak with,” Zabel said. “How long’s he been dead?”
“A little over four hundred years,” Allen said.
Zabel laughed. “Who do you want, Rudolph the Second himself?”
“Edward Kelley.”
Zabel stopped laughing. “Who sent you here? Somebody’s playing a joke on you. Or on me.”
“Please,” Amy said. “We think the philosopher’s stone is-”
“The philosopher’s stone?” Now Zabel laughed again. “Now I know you’re jerking me. Save it for the tourists, okay? We’ve all heard the legends. I don’t have time for jokes.”
“This isn’t a joke,” Amy said.
“It doesn’t matter,” Zabel said. “You expect me to pluck a four-hundred-year-old ghost from the cosmos and bring him here so you can play twenty questions. Spells like that are complex. I’d need a lock of his hair or some clothing, something to help focus the spell. Otherwise it’s pointless.”
“What about this?” Allen held out the manuscript. “It’s Edward Kelley’s diary.”
This caught Zabel by surprise. He looked at the manuscript. “His what?”
“I found it in Strahov Monastery,” Allen said. “It’s handwritten.”
Zabel reached for the manuscript, and took it carefully. “This has to be some kind of hoax.”
Allen shook his head. “It was kept in the library’s special collection. It was among the items relocated from the castle.”
“The philosopher’s stone.” A hint of reverence crept into Zabel’s voice. He ran his hand over the cracked leather. “Lead into gold. It’s nonsense.”
“I don’t think it has anything to do with gold,” Amy said. “The stone represents a kind of power. Something never seen before.”
They stood in a small circle, nobody speaking. Zabel had a faraway look in his eyes. He bit his thumbnail in thought while he held the manuscript in his other hand.
“I think,” Zabel said, “that you’ve piqued my curiosity. Wait here.”
Zabel left and returned two minutes later with a black leather bag, the Kelley diary tucked under one arm. He motioned for Amy and Allen to follow him.
Amy asked, “Where are we going?”
“To the roof,” Zabel said.
They followed him up to the second floor, down a hall and into a small bedroom, up a tight spiral staircase to a trapdoor in the ceiling. Zabel slid back an iron bolt, threw the hatch open. Daylight flooded in.
They climbed out onto the roof. There was a clean breeze, a good view of the castle beyond the river. Zabel pulled over a small table, placed the diary in the center. He opened his black bag and began to fish around for items. He came out with a squat, black candle, lit it from a book of matches, and set it next to the diary. Allen squirmed at the sight of the open flame near the old manuscript but said nothing.
Zabel measured various powders into a mortar and pestle, crushed some dried leaves and other ingredients into the mix. He mumbled words that danced just at the edge of Allen’s comprehension.