The mass was still barely beating. Balls grabbed it and yanked, then with surprising finesse severed the aortic arch with the razor-sharp Buck knife.
After doing so, an inch-thick plume of blood vaulted out and hit Dicky right in the face.
"Dang, Balls! Aw, man!"
Balls chuckled. "Sorry, Dicky. Don't swaller none. Bet it's loaded with the AIDS and everthang."
Dicky spat, frantically flapping the blood off his face, while Balls twisted the sac and severed the pulmonary trunk, superior and inferior vena cava, and all the other meaty connections.
"Like cuttin' fuckin' steak." Eventually he unseated it all. Cora hung limp now, eyes still open in a look that seemed accusory, tongue sticking out. Never again would she have to suck dirty redneck penises for meth money. Her bladder voided like a pregnant woman breaking her water.
"Hope she don't shit, too," Dicky fretted.
"Naw. All she eats is fellas' cum. Bet she ain't taken a solid shit in five years. Cum don't turn to turds, I don't imagine."
The Writer blanched.
Balls turned with the severed heart in a red hand. "So's now I gotta... "
"Put it in the crucible, then put the crucible in the crematory," the Writer droned. "Use the tongs. It's probably close to 2000 degrees in there."
Balls followed the instructions, and opened the crematory hatch. Heat flooded the room at once. Balls' shadow moved meticulously on the wall when he placed the crucible inside, removed the tongs, and closed the hatch.
"There. Purdy dang easy, I gotta say." He wiped his hands off on Cora's tube top. Then he walked to the door on which Cora's regrettable corpse hung, and opened it.
All that filled the doorway were bricks.
"The hail? There's supposed ta be a demon in there now!"
"No, no, Mr. Balls," the Writer corrected. "In tephramancy, the heart must first be reverted to ash, then the ashes must be spread over the gems in the door. It'll take a while for that heart to burn down. Oh, and now that I think of it, it can't hurt for you to put on that surplice."
"Put on the what?"
"This here," Dicky said and grabbed the stone-studded smock. "It's like a magic jacket that warlocks gotta wear."
"Yeah?" Balls slipped it on. The hundreds of semi-precious stones glittered like a disco ball. "Cool! Look at me—I'se a genuine warlock!"
Dicky chuckled. "Look more like a Fire Island fag."
"Shut up!" Balls huffed, and again addressed the Writer. "Hadn't even thunk of it before, but just what kind'a demon are we summonin'?"
"The door you chose—according to this written index—supposedly opens to an accessway in Hell that is in proximity to the domain of the Spermotagoyle."
Balls shot his now familiar funky look. "Say again?"
The Writer held out his hands. "That's what it says in the book and on that brass plate. I have no idea what it is," and after he'd responded he had to wonder.
Would anything really come through that door?
No, he felt certain. Even after everything I've witnessed tonight... I simply can't believe it.
"Did'ju say sperm? Like man-batter, petersnot, dick-loogie?"
"Spermatogoyle," the Writer repeated. "I can only presume it's some sort of fertility demon."
"Well, will it be tough enough ta whup that bitch upstairs with the bull's head?"
"All we can do is hope so... "
Balls stroked his goatee in further contemplation. "And, hail, should we be reading some kinda incanter-ray-shun or some shit?"
Another dejected sigh. "I'm a speculative novelist, not a sorcerer. I don't know. It does support the folklore: prayers, intercessions, hymns of praise to the Devil. It's been recorded that vocal incantations often accompany such rites, but... there are no such prerequisites mentioned in any of Crafter's notes or sources."
"Guess we just sit tight, and wait," but, lo, Balls pronounced the word tight as "tat" The heat in the room grew, which only worsened the death-stench from the first corpse. The three of them sat around sweating, fidgeting, tapping their feet. None of them said anything on occasions when the Minotauress bellowed or snorted upstairs. Every so often a crash could be heard when it knocked something over. Its footfalls paced back and forth along the hall by the basement door.
It's waiting for us to make a move, the Writer presumed.
An hour later, Balls checked the crucible. "Looks like ash ta me!"
"Now carefully pour the ashes on that sheet of slate," the Writer advised. "You'll have to let them cool before you can proceed with the rest."
Balls shot the cuffs of his sorcerer's surplice, and did as he was told. He gently fanned the ashes with one of the books, then said, "Dicky, put'cher hand in them ashes ta see if they'se cool."
"Kiss my ass, Balls!"
Balls chuckled. "Ya know? I kind'a dig this warlock shit. Might even take it up as a hobby."
"In another time," the Writer informed, "you would be burned alive or disemboweled for saying such a thing. Black magic was considered the worst crime a person could commit. Worse than murder, worse than rape and child molestation."
"Yeah? Well I done all's that without no problem. Why not this, too?"
"Aw, Balls," Dicky pointed out. "You should stick ta runnin' ‘shine. If ya wanna be a full-time warlock, ya gots to wear that magic jacket a lot. Folks'll think ya turned inta Liberace."
"Oh... Yeah... "
Eventually, the ashes had cooled to the touch. "All's right, Writer. Now all I gotta do is spread these here ashes over the door?"
"Over the keystone in the archway."
"With my blammed hand?"
"Sure. Why not?"
Balls grabbed a fistful of the ash, then spread it across the jeweled keystone above Cora's very dead head.
"What now?"
The Writer shrugged. "Open the door."
"Here goes... " Balls took hold of the door's iron latch. He thumbed down the release, paused, took a deep breath...
Dicky shivered, but the Writer only looked on in the certainty that nothing but bricks would be found behind the door.
Balls' thumb slowly lowered, raising the latch, and—
—the rickety door swung open on its own.
Down went the Writer's jaw. The brick wall behind the door no longer existed, but in its place stood a black gulf. Greenish-gray fog slowly eddied into the room along with still more humid heat. Sounds could be heard as if at a great distance: wind, the mad clatter of metal, and layered screams. The Writer, Balls, and Dicky sat or stood frozen in shock.
And another noise—much closer—could be heard coming from the arcane passageway.
Footsteps? the Writer wondered.
A series of wet, slapping thuds. Balls stood closest to the open Bridle. His eyes widened as they detected the approach of something, and he slowly stepped back, aghast.
"You guys ain't gonna believe what's walkin' out'a there... "