Author's Note: As the title suggests, this story picks up from A Date With The Devil. It also includes a degree of male/female sex and unholy acts, which some people may find disturbing.
*****
Chapter Nine
(Saturday 5th June 2010)
Mary Rose had sailed through her Friday evening function with great aplomb. Well, visibly she had. None of the other attendees could possibly have guessed that her attention was elsewhere.
No, none of them could have ever imagined what was on her mind. Politely dispatching a plate of hors d'oeuvres and half a dozen flutes of fizzy champagne, perpetually smiling and exchanging platitudes, her presence had been constant while her real focus had been miles away.
Secretly her real focus had been fixed on a missing heiress, recently found dead in the river.
Secretly she had been focused on a girl she thought she knew.
Or did she?
After the over-the-top glitzy get-together and a sleepless night (very much alone), Mary Rose spent most of Saturday on the net, hunting news updates, finding dozens of "exclusives", all rehashes of the original bulletin in the Standard.
How useless was that! Billions of hard copy newspapers, nowadays replaced by a squillion electronic copies, all quoting each other, none of them adding anything fresh.
So much for the information superhighway!
By mid-afternoon she took tally of what little she had. The heiress was named as Julia Parker-Ward. She was twenty-seven and stood to inherit her father's dotcom business, currently valued at several hundreds of millions. It seemed that, despite the immense wealth ahead of her, Julia was an ordinary, everyday girl. Qualified as a teacher, she worked in a primary school and was adored by all the kids.
Her death was, consensus had it, unexpected and inexplicable. She'd been quiet but popular; nobody even mildly disliked her. It had to have been an awful, tragic accident. Parallels with Princess Dianna had been made.
An incredibly popular woman, snatched away for no reason at all.
Signs were that Julia had been in the water for "up to a week". The authorities weren't admitting much but did indicate they were unsure of exactly what had happened to her.
More information would follow when "express test results" had been received.
Convinced as she was of Julia's starring role in Friday night's orgy, Mary Rose had to wonder. A week in the water would suggest something had happened to her soon after the festivities.
Or maybe it had happened during the festivities.
That was disturbing enough to give Mary Rose's memory loss a completely new dimension.
Julia had been three sheets to the wind from early on. Her eyes had been just as much drug-crazed as lust-crazed, maybe alcohol-crazed into the bargain. Had she been allowed to go home unescorted, only to fall intoxicated into the river?
Or had she overdosed in Apollyon's chapel? Had someone then wantonly ditched her corpse?
If only she could remember!
The weight of guilt was crushing. Mary Rose would never do anything to hurt anyone, not physically, and especially not a fellow female. And neglect was just as bad. As far as she was concerned, if Julia had been allowed to toddle off alone, drugged-up to the eyeballs, then everyone who'd been present shared the blame.
Guilt by association was as culpable as guilt by deed. At least it was in her book.
If she was guilty then she'd have to confess.
And that unusual black spot in her memory caused other fears, too.
What if something bad had happened while she was out of it?
What if Julia hadn't merely overdosed?
What if Hev was right about . . . about sacrifices?
*****
Meanwhile, some five miles away across town, Lindsey was cautiously congratulating herself as she applied a touch of lipstick. Not much, just a little and hardly any makeup at all. It was important to get her appearance right tonight and, besides, she didn't need a lot of help. She was naturally a youthful-looking person, slender and petite with fetching brown hair. Most new acquaintances took her to be in her late teens.
Young, sweet and innocent; that was the look she wanted.
In reality she was thirty-three and a freelance reporter. Graduating from LSE she had first found work with a provincial rag, covering everything from village fetes to crystal meth factories, only ever wanting to get her foot in the door. But her timing had been untypically crap. In common with all rags the world over, back then the wheels had been coming off in a big way. Suddenly everybody wanted to read on line. Walking down the street to buy a newspaper made out of pulped wood was so yesterday.
Lindsey had jumped before she was pushed. While she worked for the local rag she'd sold stories to other publishers, taking great care to avoid conflicts of interest whilst taking care of her bank balance. Moving back from the sticks to London she'd had "freelance" business cards printed and gone for it.
But hitting the heights had evaded her. Okay, so she kept the wolf from the door, but she struggled on a daily basis and her name was still unknown. What she needed was a major score.
What she needed was an exposΓ© on scandalous behaviour.
Leonard Graves was her chosen route. He had a mansion worth zillions and bundles and bundles of money out of seemingly nowhere. Her investigations put him as of Polish origin, from Gdansk, his dad being one of Lech Walesa's right-hand men from the old shipyard days. At some stage (mysteriously unrecorded), "Leonard" had arrived in the UK and Anglicized his name.
And then he'd become incredibly rich.
Satanism wasn't something Lindsey had ever taken remotely seriously. But word had it that Leonard held regular "sabbats" attended by people from the top of the tree. In other words, he attracted wealth and somehow some of it stuck to him.
The more she researched, the more convinced Lindsey became. Dismissing "white magic" along with "witchcraft" as pagan and mostly benign, she quickly realized that Satanism was something else. Yes, Satanism was altogether a different can of worms.
Researching ever-deeper, she decided there were three types of Satanic gatherings. The first, and far and away the most popular, was an excuse for licentiousness . . . or orgies, in other words. Charging membership, perhaps, regular assemblies were held for the most fundamental reason of all.
Second in frequency and popularity, gatherings were held for folk who thought they were defying all common sensitivities, folk who saw themselves as adventurous and maybe even wicked. These were, she decided, the punk rockers of witchery: loud, proud and insincere as heck.
The final groupings were either the most potent or the most utterly deluded. They consisted of people who actually believed.
Personally, Lindsey reckoned Satanism was a crock of crap. She could see the attraction of wild sex orgies but couldn't accept anyone in his or her right mind would put faith in the rituals. Except . . .
Except she was aware there were nutters out there; lots and lots of nutters. And being up at the top of the tree didn't guarantee sanity, did it?
Like heck it did!
Lindsey's jury was out on the existence of God. Fair enough, someone must have started everything with a big bang ten billion years ago, but He hadn't been very noticeable over the last millennium or so, had He? If anyone ever had been caught asleep on the job . . .
Evil was something else altogether. Evil was relentless and evil was everywhere, from serial killers to mass murderers; from terrorists to rogue governments. And governments didn't have to be rogue, did they? The very idea of mustard gas, sarin and Agent Orange ought to offend humanity, full stop.
Not to mention massive stockpiles of frigging nuclear warheads, courtesy of the taxpayer.
Wasn't all that madness supposed to be over?
Yes, the world may be smaller than ever, but the presence of evil was only getting larger.
Then again, evil sold papers, be they material or beamed out over the ether.
And, if she could convincingly tag a few famous names to Leonard's sabbats . . . Well, she'd have it made. Never mind hacking the odd celeb's phone, she would rock The Establishment.