The Cellar Doorby Tevish SzatA swarthy man stepped into the room, his coat stained with soot and goggles long ago blackened. With heavy booted strides, he marched over to the bar, taking one stool and casually tossing his clanking, metal backpack into the other.
“Jonathan.” The woman behind the bar, a raven-haired lady of perhaps twenty years, sighed. “I really don’t have time for you right now.”
“Come on, Laurie,” he whined, “No time for your brother? Really? I’m on something big.”
The woman, Laurie Blake, covered her face with her hand in shame.
“What is it this time?” she asked, “What do I need to bail you out of?”
“Nothing!” he exclaimed, “This time, it’s all going to pay off for sure.”
Jonathan Blake laughed, and took a cigar from his coat, and, failing to find a candle within arms reach, picked up the rod attached to his backpack. A small flame and a distant whisper appeared, then vanished
.
“Really,” she said, “You never cease to amaze me. When did lighting a cigar become a good use for the raging souls of the dead?”
“When you didn’t get me a light, sis. Anyway, I was talking with this mage.”
“Oh, this is going to end well.”
“Now, the mage, he says there’s this stuff called mana. It’s all around us, in the ground!”
“It’s in the ground.” She repeated in dull disbelief, “Yeah.”
“So, I got a bright idea myself, something some of the other boys were already talking about, it seems.”
“Jonathan…”
“We’re going to mine for mana! Dan’s getting us some equipment right now. I figure we dig straight down and if some stuffy mage can tell its there, we’ll find it soon enough.”
“You can’t mine for mana, Jonathan.”
“How do you know?”
“Because this is your idea, and your ideas never work.”
“This time, it’s a sure thing.”
“You said that last time.”
“Last time wasn’t a mana mine.”
“No,” she said, “It was a silent werewolf whistle last time, and before that it was vampire-repelling garlic cologne, and before that-“
“Look, I’m not asking you to take out a share in the mana mine. You think I would hit up my sweet baby sister for money?”
“Not until things have gone horribly wrong, I suppose.”
“I know how tight things are for you.” He said with care. “But I’ve got something for that too.”
“Please, don’t-“
“It’s not my idea.” He said, “I just thought you’d want to know.”
He reached into his coat, took out a folded paper, and handed it to her.
“I know you’ve always wanted to get out of this dive, now here’s your chance, sis.”
“Help wanted.” She read. She couldn’t place the address exactly, but the neighborhood meant it would be one of the houses on the sea cliffs, and the offered pay was… exciting. “contact Lur Sahknochen. Jonathan-“
“Don’t say anything.” He said, “I know it’s probably too big a change, and you don’t want to be a housekeeper, and-“
“No, Jonathan… you did something right.”
***
The high house on the hill loomed over Laurie. She straightened her dress, swallowed, fought back her fear, and knocked on the door.
She waited a long moment, and then a voice answered, hollow, rasping, and deep.
“Who is there?”
“I-“ she began, “My name is Laurie Blake. I saw an ad – I’m supposed to ask for Lur?”
The door opened slowly. A tall, thin man with hair grey but body not yet decrepit from age answered. He stood silent for a moment, her eyes seeming to judge her harshly, as though considering whether to squash an insect or let it go.
“Excellent.” He said, “I am Lur. Come in.”
He made a small motion, and Laurie stepped in the door, which Lur slammed behind.
The grand entranceway of what could have once been a palace for all its opulent splendor was silent and empty, white sheets cast over old furniture, creaking floorboards releasing small puffs of ancient dust as Laurie walked over them.
“I keep no one,” Lur said behind her, “And nothing in my presence that I do not strictly require, or that does not bring me some measure of joy. I trust you see why I now require another set of hands, another pair of eyes to look over this place.”
“You live here alone?”
“I have had other housekeepers, in the past.” He said, “They become bored of this place, or find some other reason to move on, or they give me some reason to send them on their way... Good maids, young miss Blake, are far easier to find than they are to keep, at least here in Nephalia.”
“Well,” she said, “A little company probably wouldn’t hurt.”
“Company.” He scoffed, “What need have I for company. Follow me.” He lead her into a hallway, and then pushed open another door. Behind it was a library – there were probably more books here than she had seen in her life!
“All the company I need is in here, miss Blake.” He said, “I do not care for the vapid prattling of youth nor the senile ramblings of age. If that is a problem, I suggest that you search for other employment.”
“No,” she said, “Not a problem.”
“I see. If you are attempting to curry my favor, you are doing quite well.”
“Glad to hear it.”
“Then you should also be glad to hear I feel no need to carry this any further.” He paced back towards the door. “If I find your services unworthy of my coin, I may simply dismiss you from my household. You will be accorded the keys to every door you need to concern yourself about, and may roam them and take advantage of what you find in my halls freely. Gather your things and return here, you may begin immediately.”
“My… things?”
“I can’t have you wasting hours each day walking to and from your place of work and a home in the city. For the duration of your employment, miss Blake, you are both my servant and my guest.”
***
It took Laurie Blake several days to explore the old high house, dusting and rearranging as she went, interrupted as she was by average chores. She rarely saw her employer, the grave and commanding Lur, for it seemed that he preferred to spend his time in either the library or in his basement study, and by dumbwaiter received his meals there as well.
That study, delved into the Cliffside beneath the manor house, was the one place in the mansion she found she did not have a key for, having tried the entire ring in its lock, and then found every other locking door and a matched key. At first, she thought it was an oversight, and asked her host and master. He insisted, then, that his study was private, and that she ‘did not need to be concerned’ about what went on there.
Over weeks, her interest in the study that was forbidden to her grew. She left the manor less and less, until once her brother left town to pursue his ridiculous mana mine scheme, she only ventured forth when given coin to restock the larder. Her spare time grew as a backlog of work was worn out, and with it her curiosity about the study in the cellar grew as well.
By and by she found herself testing the handle to the cellar whenever she passed the intricately carved door that led down to it, while at other times she would sit at the upper end of the dumbwaiter for some time after lowering food to her employer, hoping to catch some snatch of what was happening down below.
Whatever Lur’s occupation was, it was not one that created a great deal of noise, for Laurie never heard so much of a whisper from up the shaft until the bell rang for her to recover the dishes by the same means as she had sent them down. This only made her more curious still, wondering now not just about the contents of the cellar that was forbidden to her, but also about how the man came into the money he so generously gave her.
Whatever it was, it surely had to be done in that cellar, for though occasionally visitors would come to the house and confer in that place, Lur departed even less than Laurie herself did, and so she resolved to discover what secrets lurked below her feet.
There were, after all, times when Lur preferred the comfort of his library, or slept uneasily in his chamber, rather than attending to matters in the cellar, so the matter was not so much how to avoid his notice, she believed, but how to gain entrance to and then an exit from the place.
It was a week after she first resolved to enter the cellar that Laurie realized the answer had been staring her in the face. The dumbwaiter was very large, and for a grown woman she was very small. Certainly, the contrivance could fit her as well as the silver platters, and she trusted her arms to bear her weight, at least on the way down. For the return, she hoped that the cellar door would be able to be unlocked without a key from the inside. Otherwise, it might prove a difficult matter.
It was in the dead of the night, her employer dozing in the library, when Laurie decided to lower herself into the depths, beyond the door. Her only companion for the trip down was a single candle, secured so she could light it in the dark, and into the dumbwaiter she went, and down from there to the cellar.
Down below, she lit her candle, and found it only pushed back the gloom enough to inspect what was close to her.
The first thing she noticed was a table, wooden though it was, this was no craftsman’s bench, nor did it belong in such a fine and high house as it was in. The rough surface of the thing was pitted and scarred, and on it were bands of iron – for what purpose, she dared not guess.
Other tables were placed haphazardly throughout the chamber, and they were adorned with all manner of instruments, metal things that made her brother’s geistflame-thrower look simple and understandable by comparison, beakers and spiraling glassware, things of malformed asymmetry and things of terrifying perfect geometry.
At last, Laurie came to a raised dais in the center of the room, surrounded by machinery. There was a form on it, one that looked almost… human. She approached, and raised her candle into the shadows
.
A woman’s face was there, young and fair, eyes closed peacefully, crimson hair pulled back into a tight braid. Who was this woman in the cellar? She seemed to be alive, at least at first inspection: though Laurie could not hear her breath nor see her chest rise and fall, the woman on the dais had all the color of life in her skin. Laurie reached out to touch her, when there was a grand thud of the cellar door behind her being flung open.
Immediately, Laurie recoiled, and lights came up in the laboratory as Lur descended the stairs into his sanctum.
“Beautiful, is she not?” he asked, his hollow voice more alive and interested than she had ever heard. “Truly, magnificent, in every form and proportion exact and admirable. What fine and detailed work is man!”
“Master Lur, sir…”
“But now, how did you come in? Was it the door in the cliff face? You did not take my key nor try the lock – ah.” He looked, “The dumbwaiter. Very clever of you, I did not guess it for your ingress.”
“Sir?”
“Do you think I didn’t know you would find your way here? Everyone lusts for the forbidden, it was only a matter of time. In fact, you impress me with your speed. I saw the fire burn in you. As you walked, as you glanced, as you held still and prayed I did not notice – you betrayed your intentions thoroughly. Miss Blake, you do not disappoint.”
“What is this?” Laurie demanded, “And who is she?”
“She,” Lur proclaimed as he walked up to the dais where Laurie stood, “Is my great work, the one thing that has always brought me joy. There’s not a skaberen in the world who hasn’t laughed or scoffed at Lur Hackbones and his pursuit of loveliness, but there’s not a skaberen in the world who has ever done such a thing as I, and made a skaab that could pass for human!”
Laurie tried to keep herself from gasping, from screaming. How – how had she not noticed, even in the dark? She glanced at the woman again. Only knowing did she think she spotted fine needlework about the hairline, or upon the wrist, and even then she could not be sure.
“My life’s work!” Lur shouted, “But she is still incomplete. She needs eyes yet, and a brain of course. The brain must come last, such things spoil in but little time.”
“This… This is an abomination!”
“Look!” he roared, lunging and grasping Laurie by the wrist with one hand and her hair with the other. He turned her and forced her to gaze on the skaab woman. “Look at her and tell me again that it is abomination! Tell me that I have created a monster! You cannot – for I have taken the crude skills of the stitchers and perfected them into a masterful art! I have created beauty!”
“It’s evil!” Laurie shrieked, “But if you let me go I will breathe not a word. I’ll leave you be, just – just let go of me!”
Lur laughed, a deep rumbling laugh that chilled Laurie’s heart. “My dear, if I meant to release you, I would not have provoked your invasion of my sanctum in the first place. I told you, my darling needs eyes, and yours are lovely and green. She also needs a brain, and unless this is a fluke, miss Blake, your haste has proved yours inquisitive and clever.”
“No!” She shrieked, thrashing desperately, “No! Let me go!”
But Laurie Blake was a smallish woman, and Lur Sahknochen – Lur Hackbones, a strong man despite his age. Shortly, she felt a prick in her neck, and her world began to darken.
***
The storm reached its crescendo. Every machine hummed, as Lur stood over his finished creation.
“I take this power from the gods!” he roared into the din of the storm, “I will bestow life where only death has trodden! I will shape it in the image I desire!”
Though he had raised his skaabs before, Lur Hackbones could not help but feel renewed by doing it again. As he brought life, so he lived, and tonight of all nights was special. Tonight, the creation he had labored his entire career on would be complete. She would speak to him, and his work would be done.
The machines roared and crackled, lightning arced from pillar to pillar, and finally struck the dais. It glowed with energy, and in the silence that followed, Lur counted under his breath.
One. Two. Three. Four.
His skaab, his creation – no, his daughter gasped for her first breath of air. She sat up and clutched her neck, and for the first time in his life Lur truly smiled.
“Can you hear me?” he asked. Slowly, hesitantly, she nodded.
“Can you speak?”
She looked at him for a moment, licked her lips, and then with hesitation, said “Yes.”
The singer’s vocal cords served her well – her every word would be music!
“And… do you remember your name?”
“… No.”
More music! More glorious music! Everything had gone according to plan, a blank slate to teach the ways of the world. Slowly, gracefully, she stood.
“Then I shall call you…” he hesitated. One thing he had not decided on, in all his years, was a name. There were so many choices! But which one?
“Una.” He said finally. “It means first. Do you like it?”
She nodded, and he slowly turned from the dais, tearing his eyes from the vision of loveliness he had created. At last, at long last. He listened to the light beats of her footfalls among the sound of rain and the crashes of thunder as she walked behind him, and reveled in the glory of all that he had done.
Then, he felt the hand at his throat, and the sudden, sharp pain in his gasp. Lur gasped, and tried to reach for it. His fingers found the end of a scalpel as he fell forward, but could not grasp around it. However she had struck him, he couldn’t breathe.
“For the record,” she said as his vision faded “I do remember what my name was. I know what I am, and what you are. Were. May you never find peace, Lur.”
***
‘Laura Sahknochen’ saw off the last of the officials from the house. The inquisitors had burned the things in her ‘father’s’ cellar study and seized books seemingly at random from his library. But they left her. The servants of the church, the hunters, shook her hand and passed her by, never noticing the tiny marks where two shades of skin perhaps didn’t quite match, or perhaps where the thread didn’t quite match the skin. They thanked the ‘daughter’ of Lur Hackbones for bringing him to justice, and even if they reproved her for not delivering the noted skaberen alive for trial, they did not notice that her sentence should have been surer than his.
Laura Sahknochen, once Laurie Blake, looked up at the high house after the last of them vanished down the road. It was hers, free and clear, a new life that she never expected to be able to have, much less have to endure. She looked at her reflection in a front window, at a face that had once belonged to another woman, but eyes… eyes that had always been hers. Laura knew she was a monster, a wretched thing made of bits of this and that, but for the first time since the second life she had expected to be brief had began, she thought she also might be something more than the sum of her stolen parts.