Someone stole Henry’s corpse in the morning.
The asylum was in uproar at the news, though I wasn’t entirely surprised. I’d expected someone to come investigate Henry’s death soon. That they’d been brazen enough to break into our cemetery, unearth his corpse, and abscond with it the day after I slew the Coach-Eater did take me aback. The two events had to be linked, and I could see how.
Whoever desecrated Henry’s tomb thought he had been involved in the Coach-Eater’s death and wished to confirm his demise.
This could only mean that the Coach-Eater wasn’t working alone, as scary as it sounded. Others of its kind had probably taken note of its disappearance and would hunt down the one responsible.
Did these monsters socialize like men? Did they keep in touch from a distance? I somehow couldn’t imagine such primeval horrors acting so human. It was more likely that they could sense each other’s destruction like sharks smelling blood in the water.
How long would it take until they tracked its destruction back to me? I was sure I’d left no trace nor been seen by anyone, but if the graverobbers knew about the Lost Deaths, then they could simply have to interrogate the staff to put two and two together.
I better watch my back from now on.
Neither did it surprise me when Director Rochard summoned me one morning to his office without an explanation. What took me aback was his two guests sitting on the other side of his desk: a pair of gendarmes in uniforms. They looked like nothing to write home about until I spotted the familiar, silver insignia on their chests.
The Bureau des Moeurs’ all-seeing owl.
It took all of my willpower not to show my unease and distaste. I’d been careful to hide the Lost Deaths, the blood vial, and my other research in the asylum’s basement where I doubted anyone would ever find them, yet I knew these two had come for me.
“Laurent, my dear, come in,” Director Rochard said upon inviting me in. A graying man with spectacles going on in his middle-age, he was always scrupulously clean at any hour of the day. More than that, he had always been open-minded about my research and always looked the other way. I hoped he wouldn’t change his mind today. “Let me introduce you to Officers Delacroix and Giroud. They are here to ask you some questions.”
As I feared. I hid my unease behind a tired smile. The gendarmes’ names were carved on their insignia now that I took a closer look at them. I’d always expected a visit from the Bureau since I began collecting forbidden books and rehearsed this conversation in my mind many times.
“Greetings,” I said with the utmost politeness before shaking their hands and suppressing a wince of pain. The necrosis patches beneath my gloves remained terribly painful, and neither pills nor poultices did much to lessen the agony. “Is this about the grave robbery? It was quite shocking.”
“I am afraid we are here for a potentially unrelated case, but be certain that my colleagues are investigating the incident as we speak,” Officer Delacroix replied with icy grey eyes. He assessed me for a second and then went straight for the throat. “What relationship did you have with Gérard Leloup?”
“Gérard Leloup?” I frowned in genuine confusion. “The name means nothing to me.”
“Yet you were listed among his clients.” Officer Delacroix grabbed a notebook and began to read a page. “Perhaps he approached you under an alias then. Would the name Marcel Devereaux be more familiar to you?”
“Devereaux?” I repeated, my pulse quickening with dread while I struggled to keep a straight face. Did that ruffian sell me out? I knew it was odd he hadn’t contacted me in nearly two weeks! “Yes, I’ve met a man with that name. I’ve consulted him on a few books I’ve acquired but whose legitimacy I doubted.”
“Did you now?” The officer raised a skeptical eyebrow. “I hope you knew that the man was a forger and grifter.”
“Hence why I consulted him.” I feigned curiosity. “Did something happen to this man?”
The way the gendarmes looked at me confirmed that yes, something did. Officer Giroud shifted slightly. “Where were you yesterday Mr. Valmore?”
The tone implied that whether or not I would have to follow them to a police station depended on my answer, so I told them the truth.
“I visited the Universal Exposition with another alienist colleague, and we returned later in the evening,” I replied. “Afterwards I went to assist Director Rochard until late at night and then went to sleep around… eleven, I believe?”
Rochard backed up my words with a nod. “I can confirm it.”
“Which colleague?” Delacroix pressed and wrote down Germaine’s name the moment it escaped my mouth. I knew they would interrogate her as soon as they finished with me. “When did you last meet with Mr. Devereaux?”
“Nearly two weeks ago, officers.” He’s dead or in trouble. I was sure of it now. The only reason gendarmes asked those questions was to confirm alibis or interrogate witnesses. “Did something happen to him?”
“We fished him out of the Seine this morning,” Officer Giroud replied bluntly.
I scowled. “Was… was it an accident?”
“No, clearly not. His murderer cut him open from chin to groin.” Delacroix uttered those awful words with the casualness of a law officer who had seen dozens of such cases before. “The murder took place yesterday according to our preliminary analysis.”
I didn’t hide my shock. That kind of barbarism was beyond what most criminals would go for; and I knew, deep within my bones, that it was related to his investigation of Nelson’s past.
“That is awful,” Director Rochard said with sincere horror. “What kind of savage could do this?”
“That is what we are here to find out,” Delacroix replied before focusing back on me. “What did you consult Mr. Devereaux on?”
This story has been unlawfully obtained without the author's consent. Report any appearances on Amazon.
“A copy of the Lemegeton Clavicula Salomonis,” I replied. Officer Giroud clearly struggled to stifle a laugh, and I couldn’t blame him. I’d seen what a real demon looked like, and those demonology books clearly missed the mark. “It was mere curiosity, I assure you. I do not believe in witchcraft.”
“Good for you. You understand that we will have to confiscate this book as part of our investigation, of course.” Delacroix moved on without pause. “Did the victim question you about Henry Nelson?”
They knew. They knew Devereaux died because he had been investigating a dead man’s contacts.
“Do you think this is connected to the graverobbing?” I asked while feigning surprise.
“Answer the question, young man,” Officer Giroud replied icily.
I stroked my chin and pretended to be deep in thought. “I do not recall for certain,” I lied through my teeth. “I may have idly mentioned our patient’s death during our conversation, but it was weeks ago.”
“I see,” Officer Delacroix replied. I could tell from his icy stare that he found me suspicious, but not enough to arrest me on the spot. “We will keep in touch. If you remember anything pertaining to the case, please inform us.”
“I will,” I lied through my teeth.
Afterwards, the gendarme promptly confiscated my censored copy of Lemegeton Clavicula Salomonis—whom I was sure I would never get back—interrogated the asylum staff about my whereabouts yesterday, and then left disappointed once my alibi proved foolproof. They would return, of course. The Bureau knew who I was now, and they would never keep me out of sight.
“Did you do it?” Director Rochard asked me in private the moment the gendarmes left.
I shook my head. “No. No, of course not.”
“Were you involved then?” The Director was no fool. He could tell this was no ordinary murder. “Is this about your research?”
“Mayhaps. I can’t tell yet, but I assure you I’ll do everything to ensure the asylum’s reputation remains clean.” This had been the director’s price for tolerating my more unsavory activities. Should anything happen, then I would take the blame. “I appreciate that you didn’t mention Henry’s book to them.”
Director Rochard frowned at me. “Which book?”
I stared back at him, saw the genuine confusion in his gaze, and then didn’t push the subject further.
After completing my work for the day, I descended into the asylum’s basement. Portenoire was built on old sepultures and quarries whose rooms now served as cells for our more troubled inmates, and Director Rochard allocated me one of them for more problematic experiments such as dissections. I had stored the Lost Deaths there alongside the Coach-Eater’s blood. The book was open when I found it in its hidden alcove, waiting for me under a gaslamp’s pale glow. Red words awaited me on the pages.
“My congratulations on your first hunt, master,” the book praised me. “Death’s grip on mankind has loosened a bit more, and true power is now within your grasp by right of conquest.”
The Coach-Eater’s demise was worth celebrating, but I had too many questions in mind for now. “You are like that thing,” I wrote down. “You can only be perceived by us mortals if you choose to.”
“Yes; I appeared to those whom I sensed within the potential to become my new master, such as you and that woman, Germaine. I have faded away from others’ minds until none but you may remember me. This Devereaux did not betray our secret, because he had forgotten it.”
So his murder was indeed about the Nelson investigation. “Did a Mortality slay him?”
“No,” the book said. “The Mortalities do not leave any remains. They take everything.”
A chill went down my spine. Devereaux died by the hands of men, not monstrosities. I could think of a potential culprit. “Was it the so-called Ankou Society then? Who are they?”
The Lost Deaths’ answer proved most disturbing. “A cult of humans dedicated to worshiping the Hecatombs, who rule lesser Deaths like gods lord over men.”
I sneered in disgust upon recalling the Coach-Eater. “How could anyone worship such an abomination?”
“The Mortalities can provide many blessings to the desperate and the weak-willed, the least of which being the privilege to live one more day and a sliver of their power,” the Lost Deaths replied. “Many of my previous masters died at the hands of such men.”
A chill traveled down my spine. “Why not Henry?”
The book’s pages rustled as its response appeared on the soft paper. “Because there will always be a Chassemort to hunt the Mortalities. I will always return to my master, and when lacking one, shall find my way to another.”
I pondered those words for a moment. The Lost Deaths appeared bound to a single master until their death. They only passed on to me after Henry’s demise.
It didn’t take me long to figure out a likely sequence of events. Henry had hunted creatures like this Coach-Eater and then he attracted their worshipers’ attention. They attacked his library with a handful of Mortalities, set it ablaze, and somehow drove the man insane. A demented, mentally-disturbed patient could not harm them; and since his death would lead to his vigil passing on to someone else, it was much easier for them to simply leave the man alive under close supervision.
The cult’s surveillance of Henry had likely grown lax after eighteen years of internment, but the Coach-Eater’s demise suddenly jolted them back into activity. They must have unearthed Nelson’s corpse to confirm he was dead, and likely murdered Devereaux when he dug too deep.
I worried about this society’s reach. If they were willing to murder investigators and brazenly rob graves, then they were capable of anything. They would investigate the asylum and anyone Henry had been in contact with during his internment.
I would have to lay low and be careful. Maybe even leave Paris altogether.
“Who created you?” I asked the Lost Deaths. “Who had the power to create you?”
“You will see them during the rite.”
Them. Somehow that word sent chills down my spine. If the book required that I see its creators, then… then it meant I would likely not believe its words otherwise.
Another question hung on my mind since I had seen those poor souls inside the Coach-Eater’s gullet, all those corpses crushed by hungry wheels and reaching out to me with empty black eyes. My body would have joined them had I failed, but I wasn’t sure anything of the people they had once been remained within those horrors. Still, enough humanity remained in them that they could feel pain at least.
“Then answer this, if you can,” I wrote down. “What is on the other side of death? What happens to men after death? Hell’s torture? Heaven? Another life? Or one of those things’ gullets?”
The book absorbed my words into its pale pages, and left them blank for a moment as it considered my questions. Then the answer came on pale red ink, blunt and unambiguous.
“There is no other side, master,” it said. “This life of yours is all there is.”
Next chapter is the last one and conclusion. Hope you've enjoyed this short story so far!
(access to advance chapters, arts and other bonuses)
My Amazon if you wanna check my other books
on Tapas
Thanks to my patrons on :
Andriy Karpus Thejasvi Prahlad Taccohunter Brian Mccarthy Steph mightyMiso ?a?an O'san Prem Chanumalla M Plaszczykov Shaun norden C?me Roy Pear Adrian Castillo Luis Hernandez sageco ProxReader Fritz Kühn Seth Baker Armani Mena Federico Randy FaronAan John Lim Rom Yaskant Cap'nSmurfy Max Schneider Bombastic101 SovereignDag Roma Ivanets CrossingInk ryan dougherty krakan delux Warren (Stephen) Rose Jay David Andrew B Alexander Sampson Blitzcread Maxime Bray Brendan D. King John Baugher Colonel Doloryas RA Lizy Flore Alexzendor Misra Charles Konstantin eeee elforo Pius Tumwebaze Lemky Wilfire Costaud 3107 Zomboss Zonbikirā DatUser higby Adrian Wright SirDeP Josh schneefhoove Exal DKM Mike Baker MomentarilyDisabled Julio Leite Lord Voldemorty industriousrevolution Almander Shrigma Aleck E. S.P AMERICUH Montana Peter Parker Maxum Tristan Koyamatsu Publius Decius Mus Syom Trasen56 RepossessedSoul Josiah Henderson Keith Rowland Kingman ioajfidsnmfomds77 CentaureHeart Endre Mitchell Nobody Matthew Mocias I Eat Pain Legogredo AnimeKay king ramp GloryHound Arnoud Diego Villa Flufflez Matthew Escobar CJ Tamberella Leonardo Yang General Mustard Joseph Abrathat AL Zaid Hyasat Vincent Mourey Spoop Reno BetterMike Charlie Burstiner Emil Takman Matthew Collins Abbie TPG bingus1234 Sleep J. K. Mohamed William Keith Sean Coker Patrick Booth Terv Jay Dune Black Pranshu Dhungana Yuval Roth Dorian Hampton Mmaze Jeff G Aaron U'Ren Mr. Nut undercoverducky Shadow Wing Rainer Jenning Runaway_Cactuar chidera onwuegbu MoEl Christopher Hahn Maria Cobos Mateos Arjun Aletty Eric M MadAdder FirstKingofthePotatoes Tinman Nithhogg Mason Kamer Guessed Dr. Rage Lonnie Tanay Singhvi wahtique Carlos Robert Tylena Simmonds Zharele Thomas Block Monster M Alec Ruth Okman202 Lol Isaac Mcdonald dogmaster20070 Suer Garret Chris Briar hannah922 John Hyland Mikael Markus Malex Seth P Jay Halfcrzy Nicholas Martin dxpt12 Hex Federico Bellavista Andreas Toffi coffe Dylan Alexander Matthew Flowers Tom Scheibe Tri Turtar Silim Eric S Chillitsagame Nasa Wofford Paul Kowalski Raymond Dillon Regan Santiago Cortes CaptainFlowers locky 0gain antares48 Dylan Crawford Colin Love Marquel Miles TenDust8752 Veraenderer Hussar L Karl Marc Berkowicz Arxigal noises Leyse Jacob Ward Diego Urbina R3ad Jeff Israel bobnob Aluereon Arthur Ibanda Jimmy J.K. Dixon Gao Lukasz Podgorski H Jayel Savaris Sqishy AirjellyFish Vertdure Bazoo juanmi Miles Larson George R Ceagle TheLazerCat TMKnight Nomad Myrrdin Sarcastic Traitor Kris Bruns Joshua Lau Nicholas Al Capone Roberto Tomás Jesper L?mo-Hansen Igor S. Carvalho mark harrell Robert Whitaker Mai0e TGZ Samuel Patterson Carlos Torres Rrazy HonestMan Shadeepta Deggo36 Alexander Ksendzov jak0b Benjamin Hermes The Tallest Tree Nicholas Hoekstra Stultus Yi xiu DB Alidraco richard wechsler Hunter LostOx Droog mea Doctor Zero Ozzy Randall Wald J T Lord Freezy Pop Jujuan tillery Dawil3000 Evan Fleischer Joel Magnuson Adam Jordy Broussard David Cullen John Ness Janwardha Maulana Vaulex PalmTrees Cd Lluis Jimenez Puig Chri Andrew Moreton Angus Losier SCout75 Sam Kyle Badello Trisper Brennon Shippee Halesmash Ali Cattell Gres Om V Julian Hinck Connor McCaul Joseph Barratt Francisco Rosado Pradian Darrel Kincade Joseph Duchesne Ramapriya Rangaraju Skinnybonz Michael Chermside Joseph Klos Innes PizzaNachos PcKc Xophos Justin Huddleston Kiru hunter117x Joshua Thompson Mike222 Tamás Bodnár Harry John Young Jio TheBlackfirebird Blaize Haynes Garrett Smith B1w2c3 Graham Hildebrandt Dirk Kefferpütz Elijah Tan tdb Stoney06 Dimitar Slavchev Django munkasir masud Darth Bayes Dr_Njitram Jukka V?limaa Morgan D Kauffman Elros Notcreepycreeper BoadBoad Trausti Sigurgeirsson Brett Labat thomas flipsen Alex Timothy Smith James Ryan Porcine Pirate Bernardino Campa IV boo Christopher Walker Christopher Sigmann EmliTGM Ikit Claw Orion1024 Tim Joseph Dumol padanu SundayGlasses Raphael Mengha Duco Van der Ploeg Treeman4 cadis R. B. Ezo Caleb Smith Kaleb Orduno Ethan Chen Ted Berkowitz My name is Klondike Kooooomakimi P enyuk Ran Rain song gemer Disclancer Luke Delakar John Pratt Eddie Epiphaner Chris Ferguson Dallas Gillespie BlueGraine Wei b0urne78 Frostbound slammer evan peat Niloc Necrologist Iwritestrangethings Alexander Rodriguez Adrien Matricon Slim Dakhch Miran RandomAnkle Adwait Gautam andrew barnes Dirkk Diggler Jeremy Engelberg Clawseeker Sterban Friz DHNightshadow Trucinox JohnFish Impetusin TheFool HeavenDragon Cal Fiala Jarrod Young Sir Sloth Josh Enterman Pride Ricardian Timothy Felker S T Deepsealife Grosbilljunior Loki Gianni Ghiribelli Josh Delgado42 ScottDR Contractk4 Matt Hollowlce Adrian Engel Massgamer T T Deinos AlthePal Rectum Amaury Valcry Charlie Ivan Kal Thundabear95 Adam Johnston Heikki Aitakangas Richard Lee Erik Aleksander Z Dietz Djinn Kite7 Michael S. evilperson41 Josh Turple edmuck Dalton Cade Spence mhaj58 William Johnson John Evans HarbingTarbl KilledbyBooks Guy Incognito HenryMorgan Andreas H. Conor lennon ExtraKeys202 Spartanstoryteller MasterofNova Walter Sam Paley Bob of Doom Kody Ihnat Puri Iresan morganmoll Jdosnoen Maalsc TTG Siphor Nikhil Majumdar glare31337 Slipperyfish Birbman Jonathan Spaulding H. Scott Taylor Tilbury Ashley Cameron Tate Browder Ryan Trueman Chris Mezmer Roden Alex Lindsay Sadinar Daniel Everest Ausner Gentil Kyle Reese Zach Svarog Peter Christensen-Calvin Matteo Viktor D victorious Maxwell Margetts Hulg Gohen Karthic PbookR John Carroll Parker Groseclose Zack Grog_Guy Marc Claude Louis Durand Rhodri Thornber Dax