Limbo's Child (4 page)

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Authors: Jonah Hewitt

BOOK: Limbo's Child
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Why would anyone want to steal a body?!

The fire spread to purple paint and old houses.

“Do you remember that funeral home in New Jersey a while back that was selling body parts to medical research firms overseas?”

“Ugh…that was horrible.”

“They think it might be something like that. Maybe junkies looking for a quick profit to supply their habit.”

The sparks carried over to foster parents and no more conversations on the porch. Lucy choked back sobs.

“Why couldn’t these women just STOP talking and
go away
?!” she thought. The water stain on the wall really did begin to resemble a face.

“Someone came in pretending to be a relative of the deceased, and got access to the morgue. They think it was an inside job too. An orderly who worked there is missing along with three bodies.”

The flames licked up the dry tinder of cold grandmothers and helicopter rides and missing parents…missing
mothers
. The water stain definitely resembled a face now – it looked familiar. Her mother’s face? No, it was a stranger’s, a woman with long, black hair and cold eyes.

“That’s just terrible.”

“Just some
random
thing…I guess.”

Random, meaningless, hopeless, pointless. That’s what it all was. That’s all it ever was. She swallowed the sobs, pushed back the tears aching to break free from her and pulled the pillow tighter over her head. The water stain was just a water stain. That was all, it was not a face and it did not mean anything. The dreams were meaningless. It was
all
meaningless.

She looked away for a second and out the window of her hospital room. Outside her window, she could see across the street. There was a park along the riverfront and a small stand of trees along a river. By the edge of the trees in the shadow just outside the glow of a lamppost, stood a small boy in a baseball cap. He was spinning a yo-yo up and down, up and down, over and over again, and it seemed like he was looking right at her. It was the same boy she had seen from the accident. She thought she had imagined him. She looked at him in disbelief for a second, blinked and turned her eyes back to the wall.

The face in the water stain lunged at her.

Lucy screamed, stood up in the bed and tried to jump away, but the wires and tubes from the monitors and IV’s pulled her back. She thrashed and yanked at them, desperate to get away, to no avail.

“OMIGOSH! She’s awake!!” The nurse ran to her and tried to restrain her. The doctor followed immediately.

Lucy flailed and fought them off and tried to get away. The nurse struggled to restrain her. Two other nurses and a large orderly came to their aid when they heard the commotion, but none of them could calm her. Finally, the doctor just grabbed her in a bear hug and held her tightly against her as Lucy flailed her arms and legs, kicking and hitting the young doctor all over. The doctor didn’t react but, instead, just held Lucy tighter to her.

“It’s alright…it’s alright…you’re safe,” the doctor said soothingly.

The nurse stroked her back while the doctor held her. Lucy relented and surrendered to the doctor’s embrace. The doctor was younger than her mother, but she was dark haired and thin like her mother. She gripped the doctor tightly, grabbing fistfuls of her white lab coat and sobbed against her neck and shoulder and cried harder and longer than she ever had before. The doctor sat on the edge of the bed and rocked Lucy for more than fifteen minutes until she was calm.

As Lucy’s wails quieted to muffled sobs, the nurse asked the doctor if she wanted a sedative for her, the doctor just shook her head no.

Then the nurse said in a whisper, “Do you think she heard us talking?”

The doctor said nothing but just sighed and continued to rock Lucy as if she were not a thirteen-year-old, but a small child.

Lucy didn’t dare look up from the doctor’s shoulder for a long time. She was afraid the face would still be there. She braved a peek. It was just a water stain that didn’t look even remotely like a face. She had imagined it. Then she turned her eyes to the window. The park, trees and lamppost were all there, but the boy with the yo-yo was gone too.

Chapter Four
The Necromancer

“I’m sorry, sir, but you can’t go in there! It’s restricted!”

The nurse on duty chased after the tall, gaunt man, but he paid her no heed. He pushed right on by her, orderlies and other nurses and though no one had ever seen him before, he seemed to know exactly where he was going.

The nurse had worked a lot of late nights at the ER and was used to dealing with crazies, so she was not about to let this one pass uncontested. She ran through the nurse’s station and practically leaped the reception desk to get out in front of him.

“STOP RIGHT THERE, BUSTER!!” She held her ground in front of him with her hand outstretched, panting slightly. She was small in frame, but she had seen a lot in her twenty-year career in Philly. Seeing that much gave you a spine of steel. “You stop right there or so help me I will call security and they will bust your behind back down to the entrance and right into the back of a waiting police car! Do you understand me?” she said forcefully.

The man finally stopped short of her outstretched hand and evaluated his opponent. Whatever he thought of her, it was clear he decided it was not wise to confront her.

He may have been tall and gaunt with narrow shoulders, but he somehow gave off a presence of authority and strength. His hair was grey and closely cropped, as was his goatee, a middle-aged man, hard to place exactly, but somewhere between 50 and 60. His face was hard, lined with enough maturity to be respectable. He wore a large, olive drab double-breasted army coat with broad lapels and collar with brass buttons. His boots and pants matched the coat – worn-out combat boots and fatigues.

It was all old-fashioned though, like the kind of military surplus from several wars back, yet he appeared too young to be a veteran of any of those wars. The oddest thing about his dress was his top, which was nearly, but not quite, obscured by his coat. It was a faded, black doublet, finely made, in black silk thread and brocade, with an embroidered scarlet dagger on each breast. The cloth of the shoulders and sleeves was slashed to allow a very dark, crimson velvet undergarment to show through. It had once had lace collars and cuffs, but the man had cut those off long ago – perhaps to avoid too much attention. It was the kind of thing someone, a courtier or nobleman, from a distant century might wear, but it didn’t faze the nurse. She had seen far stranger get-ups in her time. She just assumed this loon had come from a thrift store by way of the Renaissance Faire.

The most impressive feature on the man, however, was his eyes. His eyes were black and piercing orbs, deeply set, but sharp, and so dark there was almost no delineation between the pupils and the iris. The eyes and face were imperious and stared you down like you were some insignificant bug, but the gaze wasn’t working on nurse Lafonda this night, so the man softened his gaze and adopted a different tactic with the formidable woman. He looked from side to side and then spoke directly.

“Please…” he said it coldly as if he didn’t mean it, but followed it up with, “I’m looking for a departed…
loved
one. I
know
she is here.” He spoke with an odd, affected accent; saying his words carefully, as if they were still new to him.

The nurse lowered her guard somewhat but remained cautious. People can get awfully worked up over death, and she didn’t want any trouble.

“All right,” she said calmly, “if you would like to follow me over to the reception desk maybe we can work this out.”

She walked towards the man who gracefully slid out of the way, bowed at the neck and extended his arm as she passed. He had an overbearing and obsequious manner she didn’t like, but she didn’t want to judge anybody that had just lost someone.

Once behind the desk, she regained a little composure. The strange man stared at her, unblinking.

“Name of the deceased, please?”

He paused, took a breath and began, “Margarita Zephorah Candelaria Valda de Vasca y Hoffenstedter Holveda…” and then he paused to speak the last name with particular contempt, “
Miller
.” He rolled his “R’s” impressively as he spoke. The nurse just raised her eyebrows at him. He continued, “Age 42, Ephrata, Pennsylvania …”

“That will do,” the nurse said putting on her reading glasses. Computer monitors always gave her eyes a hard time.

She clacked away at the computer looking through names and search functions on the screen. The man looked at the computer even more contemptuously than he looked at her.

A few short clicks later and the information was on her screen.

“I’ve got her.
Margaret
Holveda Miller,” she said somewhat defiantly, “Age 42, Ephrata Pennsylvania. She was airlifted last night. Died en route. The doctor on duty confirmed time of death at 12:34 a.m.”

She looked up at the man and spoke, “I’m sorry.”

The man’s expression didn’t change.

“I need to see her. Immediately.”

“Your name please?” she looked at the man suspiciously over her glasses.

The man narrowed his eyes, but eventually spoke.

“Moríro. Lazlo Moríro. I am the deceased’s…
uncle
.”

The woman lowered her glasses once more. A few clacks of the keyboard later she looked up.

“I’m not seeing anything here in the way of contact information.” She clacked at the keyboard some more. The man curled his lip in disgust. Finally, she spoke, “I’m sorry, you’re not listed as next of kin. In fact, she has no next of kin listed, and I only have her parents’ names, both deceased, and no uncles.”

“I am her
great
uncle, and her only…” and here he paused awkwardly for emphasis… “
living
relative. It is absolutely imperative that I see her. I must know. I must
see
her for myself.”

The nurse looked at him suspiciously. Technically she should refer him back to the coroner’s office, but they were never strict about the rules down here. If anyone came in emotionally upset by grief and claimed to be a relative or close friend, they generally let them see the deceased. The last thing they wanted was a lawsuit over some distraught relative denied access to a family member because of some bureaucratic oversight. She looked at him again intently. He sure didn’t seem to be grieving, but then people grieved in different ways, and he
did
know the deceased’s name, and there’s no way he had pulled that out of nowhere or gotten it from the newspapers. Still, there was something she didn’t trust about this guy.

The nurse sighed, took off her glasses and closed her eyes while she pinched the bridge of her nose. She just knew she was going to regret this.

“All right. If you could just wait over there, I’ll have an orderly take you down in a minute.”

The man didn’t budge from that spot until the orderly showed up fifteen minutes later.

 

“Laaz-lo. Moreeroo?” Tim Riggle, the orderly, a slender young fellow in green scrubs read the name from a notepad and glanced around the waiting room.

Moríro turned slowly to look at him, the way a vulture might look at a dying rabbit.

The orderly gulped.

“If you’ll just follow me, the morgue is down this way,” the orderly gestured for Moríro to follow him, but Moríro just spoke flatly.

“Yes…I know.”

 

Tim Riggle rocked back and forth nervously on his feet. He hated being in the morgue. He had found the chart and pulled out the long metal drawer. Fortunately, the body was still pretty decent looking. Some looked like raw hamburger. This one just looked like a dark-haired woman in her 40s. Not too bad at all; surprisingly good shape for a car accident in fact. He had seen far worse, but it wasn’t the body that was making him nervous this time. It was the guy next to the body. The long army coat was weird enough, but the guy didn’t even look at the woman. That wasn’t
so
weird, a lot of people had a hard time looking at their dead relatives. Rather, it was the
way
he didn’t look at her. Most looked numb or on the edge of tears, some were even angry. Instead, this guy just stared at the wall with a look closer to contempt. He had to step back to avoid the glare of the man’s creepy, black eyes. It was far more comfortable staring at the back of the man’s head, but even then, Tim got the feeling he was watching him.

The orderly didn’t like the uncomfortable silences either. Those were common too, but this seemed…oppressive. He was about to say something when the man spoke.

“Twenty years.”

“Excuse me?” Tim nearly fell off his feet when the man spoke. It was a voice like a sepulcher door opening.

“I have not seen her since she was a young woman. Our family was…
estranged
.”

“Oh…” Tim said softly. Ah…family trouble. Well that explained everything. Family trouble was the worst. That probably explained the weird vibe he was getting from this guy. Tim had a brother he hadn’t spoken to in five years after a blowout over a deep-fried turkey one Thanksgiving – well, a deep-fried turkey, a burned down carport and the ‘68 Caprice that was parked in it at the time.

“Yeah,” Tim began awkwardly, “Pretty sad about the kid too.”

The man didn’t turn around and kept his back to the orderly, but slightly turned his ear in the orderly’s direction.

“Un
niño
?” the man whispered, and then more flatly, “A child?” the man asked abruptly, as if this was news to him.

“Um, ye-aah,” Tim began, “Her kid. Pretty beat up I heard, but she made it. One of my friends is an EMT on the flight for life. They sent her in to Harrisburg, but the mom got sent here. Pretty rough – get in a car accident and wake up an orphan.”

Tim could have sworn he heard the man’s teeth clench so hard it sounded like he was breaking a molar. Darn it, he had said too much. He was always saying the wrong things at these times.

“Yes…of course,” the man said calmly, “But she is
not
an orphan. She has me.”

“Oh, no, of course not,” Tim sputtered out flustered. He waited for a second or two and decided to make his escape. “Well, maybe I should…um…give you a moment. I’ll just…I’ll just wait outside.”

After a long pause, the man said simply, “Thank you,” and Tim made his retreat for the double swinging doors. Technically, this wasn’t exactly regulation to leave someone alone with the body, but it happened all the time, and Tim was glad for the opportunity to bolt. Once outside the morgue, he leaned against the double doors and breathed a sigh of relief.

Inside, however, no one was sighing, or even barely breathing. Moríro looked at the body of
Margaret
Holveda Miller and felt nothing but rage. Suddenly, he slammed the metal drawer that held her body shut and began pacing angrily back and forth. Under his breath, he swore oaths and curses in Spanish, Basque, Catalan, Hungarian and Arabic, and in many infernal unknown tongues as well. He stopped, stiffened and trembling with rage, raised the second knuckle of the index finger on his left hand to his teeth. The knuckle bore the scars of his teeth many times, but it had been a long time since he had bitten it this hard. He gazed upon the rows of stainless steel drawers and could sense the bodies inside and bit down so hard, his knuckle began to bleed.

He walked past the drawers and dragged the newly bloody knuckle over them as he went by, smearing his blood on each one. Even without opening them, he knew exactly what they held and counted over the dead remains in his head, sorting each by their utility and nothing more.

A child, eight, dead of leukemia…not suitable. An old woman, heart failure…worn out…bah! Seventeen-year-old meth addict… worthless!! He paused on the next. This drawer held a man in his mid-thirties, tall, slender, stabbing victim. Moríro pulled open the drawer violently and looked down….yes, this one would do.

He walked down the next row, as he passed each his mind read off the contents as pitilessly as if he were reading off a shopping list. Car wreck victim, mangled…ungainly. Liver disease, bloated. Brain tumor, pneumonia, complications from surgery, all worthless!! Finally, he paused again: young, mid-twenties, large of stature, thick arms and legs, gunshot to the head, drive-by shooting. He yanked the drawer open…yes, this will do nicely.

He went to the middle of the floor and pushed the metal carts and tables out of the way. He placed the bloody knuckle to the floor and uttered out words in Spanish in an ancient accent and dialect unheard in nearly three centuries. As he scraped the bloody knuckle across the floor, he scrawled a name in hieroglyphics, and spoke a name in a language unknown outside of ancient Egypt.

“Hokharty-Ra! Come forth!”

He lifted his knuckle from the floor and the designs he had scrawled there. At first there was nothing, but then the blood began to smoke, at first thin, red, wispy smoke, like that of a candle that has just been snuffed out. However, as it rose, it grew, red and writhing like snakes. It darkened and slithered across the ceiling until it floated over the body of the stabbing victim.

The snake of smoke plunged down and poured into the body through the ears, mouth and nose. The chest heaved and drew a long raspy breath; as it did it was transformed. It kept some of the form of the original body, but stretched to fit the soul that was called up to inhabit it.

As the body came to life, Moríro was already writing another spell and name on the floor in blood, this time in old German.

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