The Black Tattoo
The Black Tattoo - a book about demonic possession, flying kung fu, vomiting bats, the end of the universe and other fun stuff like that, by Sam Enthoven.

THE LEGAL BIT:, © Sam Enthoven 2006. 'This is copyright material and may not be copied or distributed in any way without prior permission, (c) Sam Enthoven 2006. All rights reserved.

-In other words, this is to read but not to keep! Just a taste: the opening few pages of The Black Tattoo. Hope you like 'em. Here we go...

FRESH BLOOD

LONDON. The West End. A little after four in the morning. At the base of the skyscraper known as Centre Point Tower, in the darkness at the end of a dank concrete walkway, something stirred. The shadows there began to ripple and coalesce. The dark became a manlike shape of pure liquid black. Then the demon emerged, taking its first leisurely step towards the woman who stood there watching it.
Jessica,’ it said.
Hearing that voice again, and the way the sound of it seemed to take shape inside her head like black flowers blossoming behind her eyelids, it was all Jessica could do to stop her legs from trembling. She’d been so close! Another few minutes and she’d’ve made it! She gritted her teeth and told herself to concentrate. The demon took another step. It was clear of the shadows now, and the rainy orange streetlight glinted off its inky wet skin. Its face was a blank, but she could feel it looking at her.
You should not have come back,’it said.
Slowly Jessica put down the plastic bag full of fourteen years’ worth of carefully hoarded tobacco shreds and cigarette ends that she’d been collecting and saving for this moment. She unbuttoned her filthy overcoat.
Really,’ she replied. ‘And what makes you say that?’
You must have realized that I can’t let you warn them,’ the demon told her. ‘You must have known that if I found you you’d be killed, and what knowledge you possess would die with you – but you still came. Why?
Confident,’ said Jessica, ‘aren’t you?’
Her amber eyes glittered. Her hard brown hands lifted fractionally from her sides.
The demon looked at her.
Very well,’ it said. ‘Since you insist . . .
It took one more step –
– blurred into motion –
– and attacked.
Jessica wasn’t as young as she used to be. She’d been expecting the demon’s charge, but her reactions had slowed over the years since they’d last fought. When she leapt, with superhuman speed, two metres straight up in the air, flinging herself in a twisting forward roll so tight it left her dizzy, she was, therefore, slightly too late. Her knackered old trainers clipped the demon’s back as it flashed past beneath her. She was slightly off balance as her soles smacked back onto the concrete – and the first knife she threw as she landed went wide, spanging off the walkway’s railing and spinning off into the night.
Smoothly her right hand whipped back and out again, but the demon had already recovered itself; it swatted her second knife out of the air with something very like contempt. Jessica held her breath as she reached for her third: the blade crossed the space in a flash of silver and struck the demon in the face, right between where its eyes would have been if it had been a person.
But it was not a person. Grimly she watched her knife vanish into the glossy darkness, leaving barely a ripple. The demon didn’t even break stride. With the best speed she could muster, Jessica dived to one side. She just had time to notice that the demon had anticipated her . . .
. . . when she felt a blow that took her breath away.
The concrete wall at the end of the walkway was a clear six metres behind her; the blow flung her the distance in less than a second, and she smacked into the wall back first. Helpless with pain, she slid to the floor, waiting for the follow-up that would finish her.
But it didn’t come.
When she looked up, the demon was watching her.
Feeling your age, Jessica?’ it enquired.
Jessica didn’t answer. Her bones were aching, and she could taste blood in her mouth, warm and coppery. She gritted her teeth and got to her feet, keeping one hand behind her back. Magic, she was thinking. All right: she was going to have to use magic.
I sympathize,’ said the demon. ‘Truly, I do. As you see’ – it gestured at itself with one ink-black hand – ‘I’ve taken what strength I can from my current host. But he, like you, is old now, and weak. He will not sustain me for much longer.
Jessica said nothing. She was concentrating. Behind her, slowly, agonizingly, the air above her palm wobbled, bulged – then a light appeared. It was a tiny spark at first. The spark glistened and twinkled as she coaxed it into life, gradually becoming a little brighter, a little stronger with each passing moment. It was herself that Jessica was pouring into it – all her determination, her power and her hatred, condensed into a single, glittering point. The spark grew to a sphere, a whirling globe of orange-flecked and sizzling silvery blue, as the demon continued to speak.
What I need,’ it said, ‘is a new vessel to work from – fresh blood,’ it added, ‘as it were. Someone vigorous yet . . . pliable. Someone spirited yet suggestible. In short, someone young. Why did you come back?’ it asked again suddenly. ‘Was it the girl?
Still Jessica did not reply.
Well,’ said the demon, ‘it doesn’t matter.’ It waved wearily at the hand Jessica still held behind her back.
All right,’ it said. ‘Go on, then. Surprise me.
Jessica bowed her head. She brought out her hand and what was inside it –
– and she smiled.
Already, a thin shell of softer blue was forming around the small globe of light that still danced and whirled over her hand. Another second and the shell seemed to harden, then crush inwards, turning the light of the globe to an angry red, then white.
Then, suddenly, the demon was screaming.
Its head tipped back, the glistening liquid black of its jaws gaping so far they seemed to roll and fold back on themselves. Its body was flailing now, around where the light was hitting it, reaching and flailing as if being blown about in a wind tunnel, and all the time the scream went on and on.
The sound was one Jessica knew well. She had heard it in her dreams every night for fourteen years: a sound like paper tearing in your head; an intaken, wailing, braying sound that shot up in pitch like a rocket – a sound like nothing on Earth.
Her amber eyes flashed as she stared the demon down. Holding the light out in front of her, Jessica walked towards it. It was reaching for her: long, liquid-black fingers were grasping at the light, testing her will, checking her strength, but Jessica fought with all her heart, forcing the demon back, step by step. Without taking her eyes off it, she reached out and picked up her bag.
From her years on the streets, Jessica had learnt to make the best use she could of whatever materials came to hand. Manifesting her power externally for any length of time was exhausting, but certain substances (Jessica had discovered) could be induced to hold magic, storing it up and releasing it slowly like a battery does an electric charge.
Tobacco, for example.
She began to pour the bag’s contents out onto the ground at her feet, a little at a time, as evenly as she could with just one hand. Slowly, steadily, she let the precious stuff fall, shaking it out, forming a line on the concrete between herself and her enemy. Holding the blazing light above her head, she forced herself to turn her back on the demon as she continued to pour. The bag emptied; her collection of shreds and dog ends flared briefly, then blackened as she completed the protective circle. She sat down and crossed her legs.
Suddenly the demon seemed to realize what she was doing. It sprang towards her in a spreading flood of darkness – swallowing the walls, the rain, the world outside, and everything. Jessica took a deep breath. Forcing herself to blank out everything except the light of her will, forcing herself not to think of what would happen if that light went out . . .
. . . she closed her eyes.

 

© Sam Enthoven 2006.


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