“I must find her,” he growled. “Find and silence her.”
“Do you want a knife, Lord Jack?”
The question jolted him. He blinked in surprise. “A knife?”
“Yes, Lord. To kill the whores on the station, once you have killed Dr. Feroz?”
The leader of the madmen was opening a leather case. He took from it a long, shining blade, nine inches of sharpened steel edge, with a thick wooden handle. The lunatic held it out to Lachley, balancing it across both palms, presenting it like a royal sceptre. He went to one knee, offering the weapon as a token of fealty. “My Lord, we are your humble servants. Take our knife, Lord, and command us.”
Lachley picked it up slowly, realizing it was a far better tool than Maybrick’s. Better, even, than his Arabian jambala, with its thick, slightly curved steel blade, nearly as wide as his palm. Better even than the scramasax—a weapon much like an American bowie knife with a hook at the end—which he’d used as a sacramental blade in Lower Tibor to take Morgan’s trophy head. This blade, held out so reverently, was a delight to behold.
Command us, his followers offered, madmen from a hellish, sunless world he did not yet understand. ‘Tis better, the blind poet’s words rumbled through Lachley’s memory, boulders crashing down a mountainside in a thundering avalanche, ’tis better to reign in hell . . . John Lachley began to laugh, a sound so dark and wild, it brought a sharp gasp from those worshippers still huddled near the door. The leader, holding out the knife across his palms, met Lachley’s gaze and smiled slowly. Glorying in his newfound power, Lachley accepted the knife from his faithful disciple’s hands . . . and gave the orders to kill his first victim: the dark-haired, petite, and lovely Dr. Feroz.