PROLOGUE
The Glein/River
Incident
All stories ended in death.
Lost in the white noise of the engine, that
was the first thing that popped into King James White's mind as he
idled down 16th Street. Sitting tall and straight in the car seat,
he shifted uncomfortably, visibly muscled, but not with the
dieseled appearance of prison weight. A head full of regal twists
fit for a crown, he had the complexion of burnt cocoa, and a fresh
crop of razor bumps ran along his neck. The thin trace of a goatee
framed his mouth. He scanned the streets with a heavy gaze, both
decisive and sure. He hated driving and doing so put him in a foul
mood. Not a gearhead by any measure, he neither had oil in his
blood nor an overwhelming need to be under a hood. For that matter,
he didn't have any love for huge rides, trues and vogues,
ostentatious rims, booming systems, or any of the other nonsense
which seemed to accompany a love of cars. A ride was just a ride.
He much preferred walking, to have the earth solidly under his
feet.
His ace, Lott, who rode silently beside him,
simply believed him to be cheap, not wanting to pay the nearly $3
per gallon unless he absolutely had to. Lott always seemed a week
past getting his lowcut fade tightened up. His large brown eyes
took in the passing scenery. His FedEx uniform – a thick sweatshirt
over blue slacks; his name badge, "Lott Carey" with a picture
featuring his grill-revealing smile, wrapped around his arm –
girded him like a suit of armor. Lott drummed casually to himself,
caught up in the melodies in his head.
Scrunching down in his seat again to check
the skyline – as if maybe the creature might fly by in the open
skyline by day – King turned at the sound of a beat being pounded
out on the dashboard.
"What?" Lott paused mid-stroke under the
weight of King's eyes on him.
"What you doing?"
"Nothing." Lott grinned his sheepish "been
caught" smile, both beguiling and devilish. A row of faux gold caps
grilled his teeth.
"We supposed to be looking for this
thing."
"We don't even know what this thing is."
"What kind of man would I be if I ignored
that?" King asked.
"A man. An ordinary man." Lott began drumming
again. "Ain't nothing wrong with that."
For days King had trailed a beast strictly on
the say-so of a mother's plea. Not even a year ago, he'd have
dismissed the tale as another barber shop story told to pass the
time, little more than a campfire story in the hood. The only
monsters who prowled about in the dark were strictly of the
two-legged variety. That was before he found himself caught up in a
new story. One filled with magic, trolls, elementals, and dragons.
The shadow world, an invisible world, once seen couldn't be unseen.
Now the world of demons and creatures was far too real. All he
knew, all he had sworn, was that nothing would prey upon the weak
and defenseless in his neighborhood.
Descriptions of the creature changed with the
teller of the tale. Sometimes it had wings. Sometimes the body of a
lion. Sometimes it had the body of a snake. Sometimes claws. King
feared he might be dealing with more than one creature, which was
equally as bad an alternative to facing one creature with all of
those characteristics. Even in a concrete jungle, life belonged to
the swift, the strong, the smartest. King stalked among it, the
latest generation of street princes. And heavy was the head that
wore the crown.
"We heading over to Glein?" Lott asked in his
lazy drawl, obviously pleased with himself. He loved accompanying
King on his little missions.
"That where the Harding Street bridge folk
ended up?"
"As long as the problem is swept under
someone else's rug, the mess is considered clean."
"I think so. Been hearing reports about it.
Been wanting to check out this 'tent city'." For his part, King was
energized by Lott. It was like there was nothing he couldn't
accomplish with Lott by his side. The pressure piled on King more
these days. Everyone seemed to turn to him for answers. To solve
their problems. The streets were becoming his even more so than
they were his father's, except he hated the sheer… responsibility
of it all.
Lott rolled with it all. The FedEx gig was
working out. The company would be promoting him soon and he'd get a
better shift. His story, too, had changed much in only a few
months. Gone were the days of living in an abandoned house. He had
a job with a future. And, for the first time he could remember, he
had a friend who'd walk through fire for him, one for whom he'd do
the same. Lott wasn't one to swear oaths of allegiance to anyone,
but once he called someone friend, he was loyal to the end. And
King was his boy.
King wasn't the type to make friends easily.
Investing in people wasn't worth the effort: in the end, they all
abandoned him. A melancholy cloud had settled on King over the last
few months, but it wasn't anything either felt the need to talk
about. Not every little feeling had to be talked through. Sometimes
it was better to just let folks be.
They continued west on 16th Street passing
Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard, Methodist Hospital, and the
Indiana State Forensics Laboratory. On Aqueduct Street, they pulled
into a gravel lot. Signs pointed toward the Water Company, but they
were more interested in the park across the street. Calm and
resolute, King stood motionless, taking in the tranquility. His
tall and regal bearing was swathed in a trenchcoat, matching his
black jeans and black Chuck Taylors. The wind caught his open coat
ever so slightly, the brief flutter the only movement, revealing
the portrait of Medgar Evers on his T-shirt. And the butt of his
Caliburn tucked into his waist. He never looked more
lonely.
Only a few nights ago, they had cleared a
corner. It was one of those little runs King didn't tell Wayne
Orkney – the other member of their triumvirate, who was also on
staff at a homeless teen ministry called Outreach Inc – nor his
mentor, Pastor Ecktor Winburn, about. The grumbles of their
disapproval of his off-the-book runs would echo in his ears for
weeks.
But Lott would be all in.
For all of his bravado and certainty whenever
he went about his business, King needed someone to watch his back.
To Lott, he wasn't Robin to King's Batman, but rather Batman to
King's Superman. He rather reveled in that image.
Dred, though east side, hadn't been heard
from; Night, once king of the west side, had been dropped by King
(so the story went). The Eagle Terrace apartments bordered but were
a respectful distance from Breton Court, King's undisputed
dominion. A couple of non-descript fools, in baggy T-shirts and
baggier pants who couldn't have been more than fourteen years old,
not even a hard fourteen. Lott could practically smell their
mother's milk on their breath. The first one leaned toward tall, a
little bulk about the shoulders but with thin legs, like a
basketball player growing into his body. A threat from the waist
up, it was a dead giveaway that he'd found a set of weights and
concentrated on his arms and never worked his legs. The other was
short, stocky, with brown eyes too big for his head. Too quick to
show his teeth, he cracked endless jokes about doing the other's
girls heedless of the fact that he was on the clock. And then two
brothers who meant business stepped to them from the
shadows.
"You gonna have to move on," King said with
no play in his voice.
"This is our spot. Who gonna move us?" the
tall one said. His head had been filled with how good he was, the
tone of entitlement in his voice.
"I am."
"I know you?"
"Name's King. Don't make me tell you
again."
He'd said it and he meant it. King wasn't
much older than either of them, but he had the hard and tested body
of a man. As it was, it wasn't a fair fight. Lott hung back, mostly
to enjoy the show and guard for the unexpected. But these two boys?
King had this.
The lanky one turned as if to walk away, but
King read the positioning of his feet and the shifting of his
weight to know that the fool planned to swing on him. When the boy
pivoted to throw his punch in "surprise", King jabbed him in the
kidneys, grabbed him by the throat, and slammed him onto the hood
of a parked car. King had a way of blazing in and dropping fools
before they knew what hit them.
A grin had broken and froze on the face of
the other boy. He reached under his shirt tail. King drew his
Caliburn and trained it on the boy. Whenever he pulled out the
Caliburn, folks knew what was up.
"You got something you want to show
me?"
"No." The boy slowly dropped his hand to his
side.
"Good, cause I'm only saying this once. This
here was a friendly warning. Our neighborhood is tired of this
mess. So why don't you give it a rest. We cool?"
"We cool."
Lott reached into the boy's waistband and
removed the Colt. He emptied it of its bullets and tossed the
weapon into the bushes. "I didn't want any surprises should he
scrape together some courage with our backs turned."
King and Lott walked down the alley of the
apartments nodding but not smiling to the folks they recognized.
The respect left Lott so swoll, more so than any workout; respect
born out of the work, of doing right by the neighborhood.
"You a good man."
King trained himself to keep full rein on his
emotions. Prided himself on his ability to compartmentalize, remain
objective, and disciplined. Some mistook it for aloof or
indifferent, as if he didn't care, but Lott knew he cared too
much.
With the Caliburn tucked into his dip, King
adjusted his stride. He rolled his shoulders slightly, like a boxer
entering a ring. Though the gun fit in his hand with a natural
ease, as if he was always meant to wield it, he was still getting
used to it.
"You need that?" King asked as Lott retrieved
a bat from the back seat.
"Ain't all of us got weapons tucked in their
shorts."
"Don't be jealous. It's not the
size."
"When that thing busts a cap all premature,
don't come limping to me."
A hill rolled down from the street leading
into an impenetrable tract of trees, a scenic backdrop to the park.
Lott tugged at his shirt front as if preparing to get into
character. With an exaggerated bounce to his steps, he strutted for
an unseen audience. But he had his game face on, a mask of
unflinching stone etched into flesh. In his cool stare was a
flicker of warning and a hint of hostility. He may have despised
battle, but he never ran from one. And too often he sought them out
with the determination of a man trying to get into the drawers of a
woman he knew was no good for him. Resigned to his old way of
thinking – the only way he knew – a lifestyle that ended in being
locked up or in an early grave.
Despite his carefully contrived appearance,
there was no way to ease down the hill and maintain any sense of
street cool. They could take only a few awkward steps at a time,
down the steep incline, as rocks littered the grass and made it
difficult to maintain their balance and sure-footing. Down, down,
down they went and it was as if they left one world and entered
another. It didn't take long for the sounds of traffic overhead to
fade against the steady thrum of the rushing White River. The
currents roiled; the water climbed high up its banks due to the
melted snow and recent heavy rains. The greenish water appeared
brackish with up tilled silt, not that the White River was the
healthiest of waterways to begin with.
Scattered among the thin brown weeds passed
for grass was rebar and smashed concrete. A red and white umbrella
canted against a tree. A bed of large white stones formed a channel
leading from a pipe to the river. The bridge loomed above them,
dwarfing them. It never seemed this large whenever they drove over
it. The slate gray arches gleamed, only a few years old since the
city remembered this side of town. The arches created an echo
chamber as the water rushed under it.
"Some nice work." Lott nodded toward the
groups of tags along the base of the bridge. The spray-painted
figure of a life-sized, 1950s-era windup robot with the head of a
kangaroo. Two sets of names in so stylized a script, the letters
were indistinguishable. The final figure was of a Latino boy with
his cap turned to one side with an expression reminiscent of Edvard
Munch's "The Scream".
"Too bad you can't tell what they're saying."
King squatted in front of the formation of rocks on the opposite
side. Half-rotted textbooks, newspapers, and Mountain Dew bottles
littered the ground in between. Sweatshirts, pants, the occasional
blanket, coats, and towels piled between two rows of stacked rocks.
Another circle of stones, all charred, had a grill top resting on
them.
"Odd place to lay out your stuff," Lott
said.
"It's a mattress."
Lott stared at the arrangement again and
pointed to the blackened rocks. "Yeah, I see it now. That's his
stove. We in someone's squat."
"Someone not a part of tent city."
"Means we on the right track."
"You ought to wipe your feet before entering
a man's abode. It's just plain rude."
At the sound of the voice, King and Lott
turned. Merle's slate-gray eyes peered at them. His craggy auburn
beard matched what wisps remained around his huge bald spot.
Aluminum foil formed a chrome cap, which didn't quite fit atop his
head. A black raincoat draped about him like a cloak.
"You stay here?" Lott asked.
"It's one place I stay, wayward knight,
though not my secret place. You don't think I only spend my time
with you lot. Sir Rupert craves the outdoors." A washcloth popped
up, causing King to jump back. A squirrel peered left and then
right, then dashed from beneath the cloth and scampered past his
legs.
Lott could never shake the feeling that Merle
never quite trusted him, like they shared a bestforgotten secret
only the crazy old man knew. He would chide himself for caring what
the bum thought of him, though part of him feared it might be
jealousy as Merle seemed to have King's ear in a way he
didn't.
"Don't mean to bust your roll or nothing,"
King said, "but we on a mission."
"Oh? A quest? Is it that time already?
Mayhaps we'll encounter a questing beast." Merle danced in a circle
around King, hands spreading from his face in jazz hands wiggles as
he cried out. "'A star appearing in the sky, its head like a dragon
from whose mouth two beams came at an angle.' An egg-shaped
keystone, mayhaps a tower. A keystone illumination on the winter
solstice. A sacred geometry. A date carved in stone. No wait, a
stone unearthed from under a poplar tree, archaic names scribed
into it along with strange symbols. A silver chalice, the Chalice
of Antioch."
With that, Merle curtsied.
"You done?" King asked.
"It is finished," Merle said.
"Come on, we're checking in on
Glein."
"So shut up and stay down," Lott
said.
"Aren't you people supposed to be sassy?"
Merle said. "Wayne would say something sassy."
They tromped through the woods. The smell of
car exhaust from overhead gave way to the trill of budding flowers
and furtive spring. Merle occasionally muttered about the state of
his shoes or the ubiquity of mud in the tract of land.
Undistracted, King charged forward. Glein, the tent city, was the
name of this ad hoc ministry. Rumors spread about how a church
sponsored the site. They collected men from their various squats
and put them up here. The men had their own assortment of stories.
Vets, businessmen, and Ph.Ds alike among their number. Some found
themselves without homes after the housing market crashed, or after
layoffs. Some had simply dropped out of society, not wishing to
live by anyone else's rules. Some were simply sick. The church had
a regimen for the men and if they worked it, they were moved to
some apartments the church owned. The whole setup had an odd vibe
to it. Wayne said that Outreach Inc, was investigating, but if the
site dealt strictly with older men – most of whom had already
checked out of society – it was out of their purview.
"I feel like I've been here before," King
said.
"Déjà vu is the word," Merle said. "God's way
of telling you that you're exactly where you're supposed to
be."
"So I'm right in line with my own
destiny."
They wound along the river's edge. Branches
snapped underfoot and leaves crunched as their inexperience as
woodsmen betrayed them. The scent of campfire swept through the
trees. Still early spring, the blues and yellows of the tents
popped against the bleak landscape, easily spotted against the
brown background of bare trees and dead leaves. Easily spotted once
one chose to look for them.
A lone figure leaned against a thin tree,
using a long wooden spoon to stir within a large metal saucepan. A
University of Miami jacket, blue jeans, socks pulled up over the
cuff. A thick beard, graystreaked hair. A thick skim of gray to his
face, as if caked in ash. A black bag slung over his shoulder. A
foot shorter than King, but he barely glanced up at their
approach.
"Who that is?" the man asked.
"King."
"You say that like it's supposed to mean
something."
He had. It did. It meant the weight of
responsibility. It meant the consciousness of leadership. It meant
the burden of his people. "I'm here to help."
"Anyone ask for your help?" the man
asked.
"Methinks, young liege," Merle said, "that
perhaps this situation bears further investigation."
"What? You rule these here parts… King? You
got a crown tucked away in that mess of hair of yours? Maybe you
just got a cape under that jacket or something."
"There are things out here." The heft of the
Caliburn became acute in King's waistband.
"And what you gonna do?" The man took a bite
of his macaroni and cheese. His face upturned and, with a shrug,
took a heaping spoonful. Bits of food flew from his mouth as he
spoke. "You ain't nothing but a punk with a gun. We know what's out
here. And we got our own protection."
King didn't notice any movement, but he
sensed something was amiss. It was as if now that his eyes had been
opened to the story he found himself in, he could see it all around
him. His eyes widened as he caught sight of the shadow. Perched on
a thick limb, hidden in gloom among the tangle of branches, the
creature's granite gaze narrowed to grim slits studying King. Now
that King spotted it, he recognized the silhouette of such beasts
from atop cathedrals and lining many buildings downtown. A
gargoyle. Industrial magic come to life. Obviously the great beast
which haunted his streets. A supreme grotesquerie, a disturbing
ornamentation to the camp. Its concrete body transmogrified to
flesh, stone to color – gray, like shark hide – newly awakened;
cracks and dents gave way to barely healed wounds. Scars.
Knees bent, ready to flex, its corded muscles
tensed with the patience to squat immobile for decades. Nails,
which could drive into a skull with the ease of digging into
overripe cantaloupe, gripped and re-gripped the branch. Lids over
lizard eyes, the beast frowned, a fool grimace of slobber and bared
fangs, leering down at them. In its eyes, King saw brooding
nightmares invested with the lusts, hatreds, and angers of its
creators.
King pulled out the Caliburn with the ease of
reflex. As he assumed a battle posture, Lott fell to his flank,
preparing to guard it as well as stand by his friend. Another
reflex. The creature became a mass of snarling lips, murderous
eyes, claws, gothic wings, and clenching talons. King fired a shot,
hitting it center mass.
"No!" the man and Merle screamed in
unison.
Their piercing cry shattered King from his
battle fervor. The gargoyle spread its bat-like wings, fibrous and
leathery, flapping them to stir the camp. The creature skimmed
skyward.
Lott ducked as the gargoyle dove in and
swooped low, barely dodging as its talons grasped at empty air.
Wind whooshed as it passed him. Off balance, he didn't have a
chance to reposition himself and swing his bat. The beast, however,
grabbed its intended target.
Talons dug into King's shoulder, tearing
deeply before it flung him into a tree. Mid-swoon, the world
spinning. The beast was a series of halfcaught images. Yellow orbs.
Huge teeth gleaming. Gaping jaw. The creature towered over him,
swaddled in shadows, feral eyes gleaming down at him. Atonal
chittering gave way to a blast of the beast's fetid breath. Sick
with pain, King raised the Caliburn again and took aim.
"King, stop," Merle cried out. "You are the
intruder here."
"But it attacked us." King paused,
half-turning toward Merle but not wanting to take his eyes from the
beast.
"Only after you so carelessly brandished your
Caliburn. Were all those years with Pastor Ecktor wasted? Didn't he
teach you how to think? You can't fight every battle with guns.
Jesus didn't arm
his disciples and start taking out Roman
soldiers."
"I'm not Jesus."
"Believe me, I know. You would've early on
called out Judas as 'a trick ass bitch' or some such." Merle
reached for the pointed snout of the gargoyle, holding his hand out
as if letting it catch his scent. Blood trailed down the beast's
bulbous belly. "Oh dear, the wound is serious. It will take much to
heal it."
King searched the beast's eyes again. Truly
seeing it this time for what it was, he saw the soul in its eyes,
the passion of devotion, awakened to yet another new age from its
long sleep. Gentle. Protective. In a lot of ways, it reminded him
of Percy, the young boy who so often followed them around. Large,
awkward, yet ferocious when those he cared about were threatened.
Only then did it occur to him that he might as well hunt a
unicorn.
"Thanks for looking out for us, O King. We
are much safer without our protector in play," the man
said.
"I didn't know."
"You don't know much." The man stroked the
back of the gargoyle with the affection of a boy and his
dog.
Merle sidled alongside King. "It's okay,
King. We are all ignorant about something or another at one time or
another. The question is, are you willing to learn?"
"And you know things?" King asked without
sarcasm.
"I know your real name. I know your father. I
know the magic. I know your call."
"Anything else?"
"I know your glorious doom." Merle turned
from him.
"And you'll stand by me through all of
it?"
"I will be by your side until I'm
not."
There is no guarantee
with friendships, Lott thought to himself. It was easy to
make promises. The true test was if the person would be around when
times got tough. Friendships were forged in fire.
Looking back, they would consider this to be
the good days.