not waste my time, Cairo. There are so
many women. Sometimes they are masked or blindfolded, and I never
even see their faces, let alone learn their names. They are all one to me.
Merely vessels for the transmission of magickal power."
"It's not your childish blasphemy that I object to," Cairo observed
evenly. "Nor your physical depravity, nor even your wretched verse. It
is your lack of compassion. It renders you less than human, and beneath
contempt."
Crowley colored at the mention of his poetry, but quickly regained
control. "You are so sanctimonious, Cairo." He waved one massive,
long-fingered hand dismissively. "Yet you and I are two sides of the
same coin. I debauch young women to feed my self-esteem, you rescue
them to the same end. You focus your will through your 'craft' and your
petty conjurings, I focus mine through ritual and tantric practice, but
both of us know that will is the key. 'Do what thou wilt--'"
"'--shall be the whole of the Law,'" Cairo intoned. "So you have told us,
again and again."
"You weary me, Cairo. Begone."
Mrs. Lockhart had not yet returned. Cairo glanced at his watch. "I
dispute your comparisons," he said. "We are separate coins, and yours
is made of base metal, counterfeit."
Crowley, in a show of indifference, put a pinch of white powder on the
web of his left thumb and inhaled it briskly. From one of the darkened
corners of the room came a sharp cry, though whether of pain or
pleasure was not immediately obvious.
"And whatever else may be true of me," Cairo persisted, "I can at least
console myself that I am not the author of poetry so wretched that it is
universally reviled in my lifetime and will be forgotten promptly
thereafter."
This, at last, reduced Crowley to rage. "Hasan!" he screamed in a
high-pitched voice. A young Arab in an embroidered galabeya and
turban appeared, carrying a scimitar.
Crowley pointed to Cairo. "Kill him!"
*
Cairo, with an expression of distaste, let his gaze wander around the
room. He took three strides to the fireplace where he hefted the brass
poker. "Mmmm," he said with some dissatisfaction, and extended the
implement from a practiced fencer's stance.
Suddenly wary, Hasan, who had raised his scimitar and seemed to be
on the point of charging, glanced nervously at Crowley. "Kill him!"
Crowley shrieked again, and the young Arab inched forward, twirling
the blade with a circular motion of his wrist. Cairo gave way before it,
passing behind a sofa from which two scantily-clad women regarded
him with mild interest.
Hasan lunged and swung the curved blade in a murderous arc. Cairo
somehow stepped out of its path, letting it carry on unimpeded into a
priceless white Chinese vase, which shattered into a hundred fragments.
Glancing behind him, Cairo's eyes fell upon a heavily-laden coffee
table, and he reached back with his left foot to kick it aside. Powders,
liquids, and candles flew across the room in a graceful arc and a
teenage boy, who'd been reaching for one of the bowls, let out a sigh of
regret.
Another furious scimitar slash failed to connect, reducing Hasan to
blind fury. He became a windmill of flashing steel and yet Cairo
remained untouched as the young Arab hurtled past him, colliding with
a love seat and sending himself and its occupants sprawling across the
deep red Oriental carpet of the adjacent dining room.
Stumbling to his feet, Hasan hurled a massive chair at Cairo, who
ducked it easily. "Damn you," Crowley shouted at the boy. "Can you
not finish him?"
Hasan moved in with the sword again, backing Cairo toward a corner.
The boy's confidence was gone and he fought with the desperate
intensity of the hopeless. His blade clashed with Cairo's poker once,
twice, a third time, and then Cairo said, "Ah. There you are."
With a fluid motion he sent the scimitar spinning out of Hasan's grip,
leaving the boy with a purpling bruise across the back of his hand.
Mrs. Lockhart, who had reappeared from the back of the house, stood
in the center of the room, staring at the upturned furniture and the
shattered vase and bowls. "Shall we?" she asked Cairo.
"Indeed," Cairo replied, and he saluted Crowley with the poker before
tossing it into the fireplace. "If you'll forgive us, we'll take our leave."
"I will curse you, Cairo," Crowley muttered. "Carefully, elaborately,
and inescapably. You will regret this. Briefly, in the time that remains
to you."
"Do what thou wilt," Cairo said, and extended his arm to Mrs.
Lockhart.
*
As they walked down the driveway Mrs. Lockhart said, "No sign of
Veronica Fleming, but I did find an acquaintance of hers. She claims
that her name is Blanche. I assisted her
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