The Devil's Details
a commissioned work
Chapter Two
"The next month of your life could very well be the
last
month of your life, Tabby," Veronica said to her, a tail extending out from beneath the dark skirt, whipping back and forth as the woman moved about the room. Tabitha wondered where the tail attached to her body, and if it had pierced through the stockings or just gone over them. "Because if you fail, it's their job to kill you." She gestured at the two men claiming to be gods, who both nodded cordially. "As it part of the duties of performing as judges for this content you find yourself in."
"This has always been in the cards for your fate, young one, so harbor us no ill will for passing judgment one way or another," Shango said. "If it was not us, it would be someone else."
"And, should it come to that, we will make the matter as quick as we are able," Zhurong said to her.
"Isn't the expression 'quick and painless,' when it comes to killing someone?" Tabitha said, the tone of her voice somewhere between fear and anger.
"There is always pain in death," Shango said. "Which is why we strive to make the quick as quick as we are able."
"So maybe let's talk about how I go about
not
dying, then, because even if I believed all of this, which I still kinda don't, I'm keen on remaining in the land of the living. Start there. Start with the not dying part," Tabitha said, reaching up to tie her long wavy longs behind her head, making sure they stayed out of her face.
"You're going to have to build an empire. In a month. More specifically, a harem. Seven souls who will be bound to you by their love and your abilities," Veronica said, walking closer to her. "They need to be semi-divine beings, so you can't just pick up seven random souls and call it good. They'll mostly be nephilim, like you, but never direct descendants of Lucifer herself. In fact, they'll almost all be descendants of non-fallen angels."
"Angels go around having kids?" Tabitha asked, surprise in her voice. The more Veronica talked, the more real all of this felt, especially since she had two small horns on her forehead that Tabitha found herself unable to look away from.
As if to drive the point home, both Shango and Zhurong had removed their sunglasses, so wherever she turned her eyes, she was being confronted with visual proof of the unreality of all of it, gods on either side of her, a demon lecturing her about survival. "They're like anyone else, Tabby. They get bored. They fuck. Shit happens. And in some cases, these people are two to ten generations removed from their angelic ancestor. Sometimes there are outward signs, but in a lot of cases, there aren't. They'll be exceptional women, smarter, stronger, prettier than they would be without that stripe of holy blood running through their veins, but none of them will know they've got an angel somewhere in their family tree."
"You said 'women,'" Tabitha said. "No men?"
"You're not into men," Veronica said with a smile. "You're meant to be enjoying this challenge. It's been custom tailored to you, by me, your shepherd through the reeds."
"Bending people to my will and forcing them to follow my every order?" Tabitha asked. "I can't imagine what would've possibly made you think that's something that's my speed."
"You think you're hiding it, Tabby," Veronica said, walking past her, tapping Tabitha's temple with one of her fingernails. "But it bleeds out of that noggin of yours. You may have tried to keep your life private, but the more you try and tamp it down, the more it starts to seep out and affect the world around you. It wasn't you see perversity in the world around you because you were looking; because you were looking, you brought perversity out into the world. You've always loved inflicting your will on others, reaching into their skulls and finding what deviant delights linger there that they're afraid to let loose. Those people sucking and fucking, on the street corner, in the subway cars, in the shadowy corners of the hallways that you pass by? They're doing so because of you, Tabby."
"Stop calling me Tabby," Tabitha growled a little bit at the woman.
"Seven women, bound to your will, loving you, adoring you, engaging in whatever devilish idea springs forth into your head," Veronica said. "Once you take them, claim them, make them yours. By the time you're done, they'll all be eager to press flesh with you as much and as often as you'll let them, even while you're overseeing your portion of Hell."
"Portion?" Tabitha asked, arching a finely trimmed eyebrow. "You want me to jump through all of these hoops, and you're not even going to give me
all
of Hell if I succeed?"
"Hell is multi-fragmented kingdom at this point, segmented into so many tiny fiefdoms and principalities that it's far too large for any one being to control all of," Veronica said, her long fingers plucking lightly at one of the buttons on her blood red blouse. "But the portion left for Lucifer's heir is sizable. It's under the watch of three barons of Hell at the moment, and they, of course, are the ones who've set up this little contest, to make sure that should one of Lucifer's heirs become old enough to assume their place lording over part of Hell, that they're capable of the task."
"How many children has Lucifer had over the years?"
"That have lived long enough to reach the age of challenge? Four."
"And how many have succeeded?" Tabitha asked, already dreading the answer.
"You know the answer to that, silly girl," Veronica said with a soft, almost cruel laugh. "None, obviously. They've all been presented with the challenge, and they've all died, having failed to show the willpower needed to live with Queen Lucifer's blood running through their body."
"Better to be a star in Hell than a slave in Heaven? That what you're saying?"
"You won't even get
that
far," Veronica said as she slipped out of her suitcoat, hanging it over the back of one of the chairs. "When you're killed by a god, your soul ceases to be. No Heaven, no Hell, no afterlife of any kind. Your soul simply dissolves into nothingness."
"How is any of this my fault?"
Shango barked with laughter. "Are you arguing that the universe should be
fair,
child?" he said, swinging an angry fist in the air as he spoke. "I took great care to provide for those who worshiped me, protecting them and striking down their adversaries, and yet, over time I have been lost and forgotten. Another lost god with no flock to tend. No followers to put their faith, their
power
, into my being. There is no justice, and nothing is fair," he said, pointing a finger at her. "Ignore that lesson at your own peril."
"How long do I have for all of this?" Tabitha asked.