Part 45 (1/2)

When we reached the end of the aisle, we walked into a staircase. We didn't know where it led, but we followed it blindly, ascending above the vast, dark area where Lucky and his doppelgangster were engaged in deadly stalking.

”Max, we can't just leave Lucky,” I whispered urgently as we crept upward on the spiral staircase.

”We must! This is a delaying tactic,” Max whispered back.

”It's a deadly deadly tactic.” I was panting as I dragged Nelli behind me. She had decided she didn't like climbing unfamiliar spiral stairs in the dark to an unknown destination. ”That thing is armed with a knife! A tactic.” I was panting as I dragged Nelli behind me. She had decided she didn't like climbing unfamiliar spiral stairs in the dark to an unknown destination. ”That thing is armed with a knife! A real real one.” one.”

”The preparations we made before we left the lab will protect Lucky from the fatal curse.”

”What's going to protect him from that thing stabbing him in a struggle?” I said.

”If Lucky gets the knife away from it-”

”That's a big if if, Max!”

”-it will disintegrate. Lucky knows that. The creature doesn't.”

”That seems like an awfully slim advantage!”

”That doppelgangster is a trap, a distraction!” Max was climbing the curving staircase rapidly, just ahead of me, dragging me as I dragged Nelli. ”The priest wants wants us to stay there and remain ensnared in dealing with that problem, rather than proceed. We us to stay there and remain ensnared in dealing with that problem, rather than proceed. We must must find Father Gabriel's- find Father Gabriel's-oof!”

I froze when I heard him go splat. splat. ”Max? Max!” ”Max? Max!”

He said faintly, ”The stairs end here.”

I carefully climbed the remaining couple of steps, then felt around in the darkness. I found Max's arm and helped him rise. Nelli shoved past me, then she stumbled a few feet later, too. As I made my way across the uneven floor, my heel caught on a broken tile.

”We're in the choir gallery,” I said. ”Be careful. The floor is need of repair.”

”Yes, I've noticed that.” Max still sounded winded. ”We must find a means of illumination!”

I moved through the darkness with my hands up, palms outward, hoping to find a wall and then to move along it in search of a light switch. Somewhere below us, there was a terrible clatter of pews and some shouting. I glanced over my shoulder and saw, in the church below us, the flashlight flying through the dark. It went out when it hit the floor, leaving the church in complete darkness again. So Lucky had at least gotten the flashlight away from the doppelgangster.

An ear-splitting shriek of organ music made me jump out of my skin. Nelli barked. I b.u.mped into something tall and hard, but not very stable. It fell over with a crash.

As the jarring wail of the organ faded, Max said, ”I do apologize.”

”Ow.” Realizing what I must have b.u.mped into, I bent over and felt it. ”Max, I've found a candelabra.” I hauled it upright and felt my way along its branches. ”I think it's got-yes! Candles!” Candles!”

”Excellent!” Max stumbled over to the sound of my voice. He took one of the thick candles between his hands, chanted in another language for about thirty seconds, and then blew.

Nothing happened.

”I, uh . . . I'm feeling rather stressed and distracted.” He sounded embarra.s.sed.

”It's all right. Don't rush.” My heart was pounding. ”Take your time.”

I flinched when I heard the crash of something heavy downstairs.

Max tried again and this time it worked. He blew a mystical flame onto the wick of the candle in his hands. It flickered uncertainly for a moment, then stabilized and burned steadily. I squinted as my eyes adjusted to this point of light. Max used the burning candle to light the others. Then we lifted the candelabra and brought it closer to the balcony railing. We looked out over the dark church, trying to see what was happening.

In the dim glow cast by the burning candles on the scene below us, it was easy to tell Lucky apart from his doppelgangster since he was the one with the weirdly painted face. That's how I knew he was the one lying on the floor, while his perfect double was the one standing over him with a knife.

”Lucky!” I screamed. I screamed.

Lucky twisted and drove his heel into the doppelgangster's knee. It cried out and fell sideways, rolling away. The creature retained its grip on the knife.

Lucky looked up at the choir gallery and shouted, ”I got this covered! Go stop the priest!”

Max and I each held a burning candle. I asked, ”Where should we look first?”

”Normally, I'd say the crypt. But that room obviously gets too much use in this church to be a sorcerer's secret lair.”

”And all those pink bunny costumes . . .” I shook my head. ”It just doesn't say 'lair' to me.”

Deciding where to look first became easy when we heard a woman's piercing scream.

It came from somewhere beyond the east side of the choir gallery. Max, Nelli, and I dashed toward the door there. It was locked. Max gathered his focus and made a circular gesture with his arms, then a flicking motion with his wrists, as he spoke in rhythmic Latin. A moment later, the lock clicked, the doork.n.o.b turned, and the door opened to let us through. On the other side of it was a dark hallway. There was a light switch right next to the door. I flipped it. Nothing happened.

”He must have killed the lights for the whole building,” I said.

”He knows the church intimately. We're strangers here. He counted on this to disorient us.”

The hallway was eerie in the candlelight, but probably ordinary by day. This part of the church didn't seem to be in use. The floor sagged, the paint was chipped, and the overhead lights looked older than Lucky. There were a number of doors, both to our right and our left. They were all closed. I turned to my right and tried the first door I came to. It was locked.

”These must be the old dormitory rooms,” I said, recalling the secretary's report from today's meeting. ”I don't think anyone comes up here.”

”No one but our quarry,” Max murmured.

Nelli's ear p.r.i.c.ked alertly and she trotted to the very end of the hall. She stopped when she reached a door that had, I noticed, s.h.i.+ny new hinges and a new lock instead of the rusting, decades-old hardware that was on the other doors up here. She started growling.

We approached the door. I could hear voices on the other side of it. One of the voices, which obviously belonged to a woman, was agitated and angry. The other voice was lower. Possibly a man. It sounded as if he was chanting.

Both voices ceased abruptly when Nelli scratched at the door, growling louder, wholly focused on whatever was on the other side of it.

Max's eyes met mine in the dim light of our flickering candles. ”It's time to confront our adversary.”

My heartbeat was deafening. I realized I was breathing like a runner. I swallowed and nodded. ”Let's do it.”

Max put his hand on the doork.n.o.b and turned it.

”Don't move,” said a male voice. said a male voice.

In the dark hallway behind us, I heard the sound, familiar to me from many episodes of Crime and Punishment Crime and Punishment , of someone c.o.c.king a semiautomatic gun to fire it. , of someone c.o.c.king a semiautomatic gun to fire it.

On the other side of the door, the woman screamed again.