THE DRIVER TAKES US south on the Hollywood Freeway, gets off at Silver Lake, and steers us up the hills to the old reservoir. There’s a concrete path all around and a steep descent down to the water. The driver stops on the street bordering the reservoir, gets out, and opens Lucifer’s door. Neither of them says anything as the driver closes his door, gets back in the front, and drives away. Lucifer says, “He’ll be back when we need him,” and leads us through a typical L.A. excuse for a park—parched grass and a line of half-dead trees—to a walkway sticking out over the water. At the end of the walkway is a burned-out three-story concrete utility building. Technically, it’s only two stories now. It looks like the top one collapsed and caved into the second during the fire. The city bolted wire shutters over all the ground-floor windows to keep kiddies from playing in the death trap. Naturally, most of them are torn down or bent back enough for someone skinny to squeeze inside. The double metal doors in front are shut with a padlock and chain heavy enough to hitch the Loch Ness monster to a parking meter. Why am I not surprised when Lucifer pulls a key from his pocket, pops the lock, and throws open the doors? A blast of cold, wet air hits us from inside. The place smells like Neptune’s outhouse. There’s a set of stone steps inside, winding down to the waterline. A few high school kids are hunkered on the stairs below the first turn, drinking forties and passing around a joint. They lurch to their feet, a little shaky in that panicked stoner kind of way where cops and pigeons are equally terrifying. I guess they don’t see a lot of tuxedos down here. Lucifer nods to them and one of the boys nods back. “You cops?” he asks As we pass the group, Lucifer turns to the boy. “Sometimes. But not tonight.” I don’t know if it’s the dark, the narrows walls, or just being in a strange place for the first time, but the stairs seem to go down a long damn way. Feels like well below the waterline. When we hit the bottom, there’s another door. Instead of rusted metal, this one is covered in red leather and has brass hinges. There’s a doorman next to it in a gold silk coat and short breeches dripping with enough gold filigree to make Little Lord Fauntleroy look like he shops from the discount bin at Walmart. He opens the door when he hears us. I guess standing in the dark doesn’t bother him. His eyes look black and blind and his lips are sewn shut. I start to say something, but Lucifer cuts me off with a dismissive wave. “Golem. Salvage from some Parisian potter’s field. French revenants are all the rage among the Sub Rosa gentry this year. I wouldn’t waste my money. Golems aren’t much more than windup toys. You could train a dog to open that door and it could still fetch and bark on cue. This dead thing will open the door from now until doomsday, but that’s all it’ll ever do. Ridiculous.” “At least you don’t have to tip him. Are they all sewn up like that?” “Of course. Golems are lobotomized so they don’t bite, but they’re not so easy to recall if something goes wrong.” Past the door is another golem, this one with stapled lips, but that’s not the hilarious part. There’s a gondola floating in an underwater canal lit by phosphorescent globes hovering near the walls. The golem is dressed in a gondolier’s striped shirt, black pants, and flat-brimmed hat like the ticket taker at a Disneyland ride, if the ride was hidden under an L.A. reservoir and full of animated corpses. It’s a small dead world, after all. Lucifer steps down into the gondola and I follow him. The golem poles us along the narrow canal until we hit a T-intersection where he steers us right into a wider channel. “The limo driver, he was cut and stitched up, too. Is he a golem?” “No, he’s alive. He’s just annoying.” “You cut his throat?” “Of course not. When he apologized for what he did, he cut his own throat to prove his sincerity.” “I guess it’s better than ending up in a box of fingernails.” “That’s what I said.” “Where the hell are we? How far are we under the reservoir?” “We’re not under the reservoir anymore. Our brain-dead friend has taken us out into an old tributary of the L.A. River.” “Huh. It never crossed my mind that the L.A. River was ever anything more than scummy concrete runoff.” “Everyone here thinks that way. It’s only the ones who remember when the river was wild who appreciate it.” “Muninn would remember.” “I’m sure he does. If I remember right, his cavern isn’t far from another of the underground channels.” “Will he be here tonight?” “I doubt it. He’s worse than you when it comes to socializing with the Sub Rosa.” “Where are we going? Who’s going to be there?” “The party is being thrown by the head of the studio, Simon Ritchie. I think I mentioned that he’s a civilian, so the party is being thrown in the home of one of the truly outstanding Sub Rosa families, Jan and Koralin Geistwald. Lovely people. They came here all the way from the northernmost part of Germany when this river roared along the surface.” “So, that makes them a couple of hundred years old?” “I’m sure they’re considerably older than that, but they came to America two-hundred-ish years ago.” “Why?” “They were ambitious and they had the guts to do something about it. Europe was lousy with ancient Sub Rosa families who’d consolidated power centuries before. If you wanted to advance, the only way to do it was create your own dynasty and the only way to do that was to go very far away and start from nothing.” “Like the Springheels.” “Exactly. They were the first. They came a very long way and gave up virtually everything to get here.” “I guess we won’t be seeing any of them tonight.” “Why not?” “Damn. I know something you don’t. Do I get a prize?” “Be happy with your box.” “The reason why you won’t see any Springheels is that the last of them, little Enoch, died a couple of days back.” “How?” “There was a severe chewing accident. The guy was playing around with eaters.” Lucifer shakes his head and tosses his Malediction into the water. “That family fell apart and just kept on falling. What a perfect way for the last of them to go.” “That’s where I was going when I left you at the hotel. I met Wells at the Springheel place to help suss out what happened there.” “Do you do a lot of magical forensics for the Vigil? Or was it a Homeland Security matter?” “I don’t know if there’s any difference to Wells. And it was the first time.” “And you’re sure it was eaters?” “All the signs were there.” “Good for you. Congratulations on your new job. I didn’t know you were such an expert on demons.” “I’m not, but once I started looking, it seemed pretty obvious.” “Did Wells agree?” “I think so. It’s hard to tell with him. And his crew were everywhere. It was goddamn Woodstock at five hundred decibels in there. I could hardly think.” “Sounds like a hard way to work.” “It was a pain in the ass.” “Interesting that he’d call you in just to have you working in such terrible circumstances.” “That’s Wells. It was probably a test. Like he was hazing me.” “Or distracting you.” “What?” “It’s what I’d do if I didn’t want someone to find something. I’d call in someone new and then make it impossible for them to do their job. They’d be flattered I’d asked them and too embarrassed to say anything when they didn’t perform well.” “Why would Wells do that?” “I have no idea. I didn’t say he did it. I said it’s what I’d do.” “You have a lot more to cover up than Wells or the Vigil.” “Fair enough.” We come around a bend and up ahead the cavern place opens up into a huge marble room lit with hundreds of torches and candles. A dozen other canals cut through the place and there’s a golem-powered gondola in each one, steering guests under arched stone bridges. There are two Venices I know about and one of them is a hotel in Vegas. The other is an L.A. beach where pretty girls walk their dogs while wearing as little as possible and mutant slabs of tanned, posthuman beef sip iced steroid lattes and pump iron until their pecs are the size of Volkswagens. This Venice is pretty damned far from those. This is the old fairy-tale Venice with Casanova, plague, and Saint Mark’s stolen bones, meaning it’s a high-quality hoodoo copy. Hopefully without the plague. It’s not as big as a real city and there’s a vaulted roof over our heads, so we’re probably still in part of the old L.A. River system. Every few yards, there’s a dock with a couple of steps leading up from the water. The golem stops at one and Lucifer and I get out. There must be a couple of hundred people down here. People and other things. Big-shot Lurkers and civilians laugh and chat with heavyweight Sub Rosas. They can talk shit about each other behind the others’ backs, but when it comes right down to it, money is the one true race and everyone down here is the color of greenbacks and as tall as mountains. Lucifer checks his tie and gives me a quick once-over like maybe I’d changed into clown shoes during the boat ride. He nods and says, “Let’s get a drink.” I’m a little surprised that the total fucking ruler, grand vizier, and night manager of Hell can just walk into the place without us getting mobbed like he was back at the hotel. But of course, people like this don’t do that kind of thing, do they? If Jesus, Jesse James, and a herd of pink robot unicorns strolled in walking on water, this bunch wouldn’t even look up. I wonder if Lucifer had his tailor make my jacket too tight to wear a gun on purpose because I’m genuinely inspired to start shooting things just to see if anyone jumps. A golem in a white waiter’s jacket comes by with a tray of champagne. Lucifer takes one glass and hands me one. “No guzzling tonight. You’re on duty, so you get to sip politely.” “Don’t worry. These golems all need a good moisturizer. I’m not drinking anything that might have dead-guy skin flakes in it.” “Don’t worry. They’re all certified as hypoallergenic.” “It’s coming back to me why I fucking hate the fucking Sub Rosa.” When the costumed corpse that brought our drinks turns away, he bumps my shoulder, and his tray and the rest of the drinks crash to the ground. A few dozen heads turn in our direction. So, that’s what it takes to get their attention. Wasted booze. A tall, heavyset guy pushes through the crowd. He’s big, but not fat. Like maybe he was a cop or a boxer in some former life. He sticks out one hand to shake and the other goes to Lucifer’s shoulder. “Mr. Macheath, it’s good to see you. Please forgive me for the mess. It’s so hard to get really good subnaturals now that they’re so popular.” Lucifer shakes the guy’s hand warmly. “It’s no problem, Simon. You should see the kind of help I have to put up with at home.” The big man laughs. Not a big L.A. suck-up laugh, but a small relaxed one. His heartbeat isn’t even going up that much. He’s got some juice, being this relaxed around Lucifer. “Simon, I’d like you to meet an associate of mine.” Lucifer half turns to me while keeping an eye on Simple Simon. “This is James. You probably know him as—” “Sandman Slim,” says Simon. He puts out his hand to me. I shake it, but don’t say anything. I’m not exactly sure what kind of performance Lucifer wants from me tonight, but I’m guessing it isn’t bright and cheery. Lucifer smiles. “Be nice and say hello, James.” “Hello.” “I’m really happy you could make it tonight. I’ve heard so much about you, James. Or do you prefer Sandman Slim?” “Stark. Just Stark.” Lucifer says, “James, this is Simon Ritchie, the head of the studio doing my little movie.” “Have you cast him yet?” “Cast who?” asks Ritchie. I nod at Lucifer. “Him. Your star. Do you have a Lucifer yet?” “Not yet. You can probably imagine he’s a hard part to cast.” “No shit.” I look at Lucifer. “You must have a lot of actors Downtown, Mr. Macheath. How about Fatty Arbuckle? Maybe you can put him on work release for a few weeks.” “What an interesting idea. I’m going to give it no thought whatsoever.” Ritchie laughs and shoots me a glance, measuring me up, probably wondering if I’m really the monster he’s heard about. Ten to one he was LAPD before burrowing his way into the movie biz. He has those eyes that see everyone as guilty until proven otherwise. He wants to know if I’m for real or more Hollywood window dressing. Great. That ups the chances of something stupid happening while Lucifer is in town. “Would you like something to eat? I can assure you that unlike the waiters, our chefs are very much alive and the best in town.” “We’re fine, thanks,” says Lucifer. “I think we’re just going to stroll around and say hello to a few people. Care to join us?” “I need to put out a small fire first. Our new imported starlet has gone rogue. You can’t let Czechs wander around without a minder. They’ll organize the workers and start a revolution.” “Do you know where Jan and Koralin are?” “In the big ballroom straight through there,” says Ritchie, pointing a couple of bridges away. “Why don’t you go in and I’ll catch up?” “Excellent,” says Lucifer. “We’ll see you there.” Ritchie puts his hand out to me. “Nice meeting you, too. I’d love to pick your brain sometime about your experiences in the underworld. There might be a story in it.” “Uh. Okay.” After he’s gone I say, “If he calls, I don’t really have to talk to him, do I?” Lucifer shrugs and starts walking. “You might as well. If you don’t, someone else will and they’ll get it all wrong. Trust me. I know about these things.” “Think they’d make me into a toy? I’d like to be a toy.” “Only if it talks a lot and doesn’t have an off switch.” As we go over one of the stone bridges, I see something funny. “Damn, I’d forgotten about that.” “What?” “Elvis and Marilyn Monroe are talking to some drunk blonde over there. I hate that stuff.” “Don’t be so judgmental just because it’s not your kind of fun.” “People shouldn’t rent ghosts for their parties. Ghosts shouldn’t have better agents than live people.” “I never pegged you for a Puritan, Jimmy.” Errol Flynn is standing on the bridge railing, pissing into the canal. It’s just ghost piss, so it doesn’t make a sound, but he still gets a round of applause when he’s done. “Man, these rich assholes really love dead people.” “Do the math. Most celebrities are more valuable dead than they ever were when they were alive. Why shouldn’t they get a cut? Almost everyone important has a wild-blue-yonder contract these days. They get to keep working and it puts off the damnation that most know is waiting for them.” I want a smoke, but I’m tired of bumming Maledictions off Lucifer. I check my pocket and find the electronic cigarette. I take a tentative puff. It isn’t nearly as horrible as I thought it would be. “That’s the first time I ever heard you crack a joke about Hell.” “Hell is hilarious if you’re the one in charge.” The ballroom is like Rat Pack Las Vegas in a