6
It wasn't a dark and stormy night.
It should have been, but that's the weather for you. For every mad scientist who's had a convenient
thunderstorm just on the night his Great Work is finished and lying on the slab, there have been dozens
who've sat around aimlessly under the peaceful stars while Igor clocks up the overtime.
But don't let the fog (with rain later, temperatures dropping to around forty-five degrees) give
anyone a false sense of security. Just because it's a mild night doesn't mean that dark forces aren't
abroad. They're abroad all the time. They're everywhere.
They always are. That's the whole point.
Two of them lurked in the ruined graveyard. Two shadowy figures, one hunched and squat, the
other lean and menacing, both of them Olympic-grade lurkers. If Bruce Springsteen had ever recorded
"Born to Lurk," these two would have been on the album cover. They had been lurking in the fog for an
hour now, but they had been pacing themselves and could lurk for the rest of the night if necessary, with
still enough sullen menace left for a final burst of lurking around dawn.
Finally, after another twenty minutes, one of them said: "Bugger this for a lark. He should of been
here hours ago."
The speaker's name was Hastur. He was a Duke of Hell.
- - -
Many phenomena-wars, plagues, sudden audits-have been advanced as evidence for the hidden
hand of Satan in the affairs of Man, but whenever students of demonology get together the M25 London
orbital motorway is generally agreed to be among the top contenders for Exhibit A.
Where they go wrong, of course, is in assuming that the wretched road is evil simply because of the
incredible carnage and frustration it engenders every day.
In fact, very few people on the face of the planet know that the very shape of the M25 forms the
sigh odegra in the language of the Black Priesthood of Ancient Mu, and means "Hail the Great Beast,
Devourer of Worlds." The thousands of motorists who daily fume their way around its serpentine
lengths have the same effect as water on a prayer wheel, grinding out an endless fog of low-grade evil to
pollute the metaphysical atmosphere for scores of miles around.
It was one of Crowley's better achievements. It had taken years to achieve, and had involved three
computer hacks, two break-ins, one minor bribery and, on one wet night when all else had failed, two
hours in a squelchy field shifting the marker pegs a few but occultly incredibly significant meters. When
Crowley had watched the first thirty-mile-long tailback he'd experienced the lovely warm feeling of a
bad job well done.
It had earned him a commendation.
Crowley was currently doing 110 mph somewhere east of Slough. Nothing about him looked
particularly demonic, at least by classical standards. No horns, no wings. Admittedly he was listening to
a Best of Queen tape, but no conclusions should be drawn from this because all tapes left in a car for
more than about a fortnight metamorphose into Best of Queen albums. No particularly demonic thoughts
were going through his head. In fact, he was currently wondering vaguely who Moey and Chandon
were.
Crowley had dark hair and good cheekbones and he was wearing snakeskin shoes, or at least
presumably he was wearing shoes, and he could do really weird things with his tongue. And, whenever
he forgot himself, he had a tendency to hiss.