This story can be read on its own, but would be richer and deeper
if read after A Montauk Nightmare and An Unseelie Court.
A Demon on the Payroll
PROLOGUE
Splitting the Baby
Solomon Sappirino sat in a large office on the top floor of a nondescript office building near the Nassau-Queens border. If he looked out his window in one direction, he would see cars crawling by on the Long Island Expressway. If he looked in the other direction, he would see the urban sprawl as New York City continued its relentless march east.
Solomon liked to consider himself a CEO. He had convinced himself that there were few differences between astute businessmen, leading politicians, and someone in his line of work.
He ran a criminal organization and had no qualms about his occupation.
Reaching over his large teak desk, Sol hit the intercom button on his nearly antique phone. "Have them searched and sent in. "
Sol was confident that his two men were not fearing repercussions in spite of their failure. After all, he had just lavishly rewarded a man he thought of as The Ape. The Ape wasn't the brightest of his employees, but had no compunctions when it came to violence. He got things done, and that was a priority for Sol. The Ape was another tool in a box that contained many, each with different virtues. Where broken skulls were necessary, The Ape was sent in.
The two men entered the office and hovered near the door. Sol smiled to himself as he noted their tasteful suits. He wanted his men to be professionals, and professionals dressed for success. Remaining seated, he gestured for them to step forward.
"Gentlemen, where is my son?"
The two men looked at each other and silently debated who should speak. One finally cleared his throat.
"Boss, we didn't get him. It was the wrong house. We'll definitely get him next time."
As if their home in Great Neck was a modern Jerusalem, Sol's wife had fled and took their son to her own Sheba. He'd spent an obnoxiously large amount of money to track them as far as the safe house for at-risk women on eastern Long Island.
Unfortunately, the charity they found had numerous homes, each housing up to seven women and numerous children. His employees had chosen the one home they thought most likely to hold his wife, arrived the previous evening and left after having killed everyone there.
"Gentlemen, I'm going to explain the way I operate. I want you to pay close attention. If I need a coconut cracked open, I will send a strong man who won't have to rely on his intellect. When I need something extracted, I will send someone with the skills of a surgeon. Get in, get what's needed, and get out as unobtrusively as possible. You were supposed to be my surgeons.
"You brought attention to yourselves and possibly attention to me in exchange for...what, exactly? What did you gain from last night's activities? Shall I answer for you? You gained an enemy who is now forewarned. My son is my heir. You have just made it more difficult for me to get him back. What do you think I should do about this?"
Neither of them answered, so he continued. "Gentlemen, the question wasn't rhetorical." T
he first man looked to the second and shrugged. "I don't know, boss. We messed up. Tell me what we gotta do to fix this."
The second man stood straight and met his employer's eyes. "Mistakes were made. Maybe we were too eager. Give us the rest of the day to work out a new strategy. We'll have your son back by the end of the week."
Sol listened to them both, nodding slowly as they spoke. "End of the week? With planning? Where was this forethought twenty-four hours ago?"
The second man was more ambitious than the first and overestimated his own intelligence, while the first was smart enough to ask for help and insightful enough to know that he needed guidance. Sol pulled out his gun and shot the second man in the thigh, shattering his femur. As the man fell to the ground, Sol turned to his other employee."
"Thank you, Roger. I have a meeting with some colleagues this afternoon. I'm bringing in some specialized help and you're going out again this evening. Follow the new guys' directions when it comes to finding my son. Other than that, follow the instructions you'll be receiving later. Leave Carlos here and close the door as you leave."
Sol studiously ignored the screaming of the man bleeding on his carpet. Satisfied with the money he had spent to soundproof the room, Sol stood, removed his suit jacket, neatly placed it on the back of his chair, and moved around to the front of his desk. Not a large man, Sol kept himself in shape and was strong enough to quickly and easily move the heavy rug by himself. Beneath it lay a painted circle with sigils and runes engraved in the wood flooring. Grabbing Carlos under the shoulders, he pushed him into the circle and began chanting.
The temperature in the room dropped, which seemed to be counterintuitive to Sol. According to all of the legends, the temperature should surely be rising. The flooring inside the circle grew hazy, like the air above asphalt on a hot summer day. A flicker of red popped up and down in that haze, the flickering turned into a finger that rose, revealing a hand. The hand, red in color, was attached to an arm that arm seemed to prop itself up on the wood as its match followed.
A head came next, its vestigial horns leading the way. Hairless and also red, the face held two eyes of obsidian, an abscess where the nose should be and a close-lipped mouth that had fangs reaching past those lips, both up and down. As if the interior of the circle was an earthen pit, the creature used its arms to pull the rest of its body from wherever it was crawling from. Finally, it sat in the middle of the circle, staring at Carlos while Sol continued his chanting.
The demon looked at Sol before speaking. "Hello, Artie." It nodded towards Carlos. "Is this a gift?"
"No, it is most certainly not a gift. It is the first of ten, in agreement with the Accords. I need your service. Now that the formalities are out of the way, don't call me Artie."
The demon tilted its head as it stared at the human with the ability to summon his kind. "But that is your name and names have power."
"It's no longer my name. My name is Solomon, as you know. Your petty attempts to annoy me are beneath you. I'm ascending to my throne, having been reincarnated into this new age. I have lost none of my powers, creature. Taunt me and I will prove that to you with exquisite torture."
The demon tilted its head in the other direction and continued to stare at the insane human. It wasn't just a tracker, it was the best tracker it knew of. It took pride in that. There were so few pleasures to be taken in Hell that it relished being the best at something.
"Who are you looking for, oh great Solomon?"
"My son."
"A son. He must be very important to you." The demon tilted his head back and sniffed the air. "I shall need some of your blood or the mother's blood."
Sol walked over to the small refrigerator near the window and took out two vials.
"I have both. You'll start this evening."
He tossed both vials into the circle, knowing that the demon would catch them. Sol pointed to Carlos, who had fallen silent as shock set in.
"I'll step outside while you enjoy the fruits of our agreement. Bon appΓ©tit."
Closing the door behind him, Sol smiled at his secretary, but regretted leaving his coat behind him. Sloppy. Very sloppy. He had a responsibility to lead by example. After all, he was the return of Solomon the Wise, master of demons and Djinn.
JENNIFER
"Jennifer..."
I'd been rubbing my temples and staring at the table when I heard Finn. I realized he had been speaking for a few minutes and looked up to meet his eyes. He glanced over my shoulder and raised his eyebrows. Turning, I saw Cynthia at the entrance to the kitchen. I sniffled, took a deep breath, and turned to her.
"Sorry, did you say something, honey?"
She nodded. "Are you okay?"
Not knowing what to say, I remained silent, which in and of itself probably told her too much. "We got some bad news this morning. Some people that we help, well, they were hurt last night. We're trying to figure out what to do about it."
When I turned to Finn in a silent request for help, he shrugged. "We don't talk about it often, but it's no secret that we have money. Your aunt, the one you're named after, she left us wealthy. Very wealthy. Your mom and I made some decisions after that happened. We decided to not let that money change us or turn you and your brother into people that...well, sometimes people who grew up wealthy have issues, and we didn't want you to be burdened with that.
"We still live in the same house I bought before we had the money and before I met your mom. We don't have maids or cleaning people. Both your mom and I still have regular jobs, and we try to use the money to help other people."
She was old enough to know at least a piece of what was going on. I continued where Finn left off. "You know that we give money to the clinic, right? Well, we do the same with an organization that runs women's shelters. Do you know what that is?"
Cynthia shook her head.
"If a woman is in danger or she's afraid, it's a place where she can go, and they'll give her a safe place to stay and food and whatever other help they can. Does that make sense?"