punched out of the black shuttersâthe complete opposite of Lonâs modern house. Like other Victorians on the block, his childhood home fit right in with the fairy-tale vibe of the Village, but the fact that it was empty gave me the creeps. When we stepped inside, the dry, dusty smell that permeated the walls didnât help, nor did the creaking wood floorboards.
Most of the furniture had been donated to charity, and what little that remained was covered in sheets. I sneezed several times as we headed up three flights of stairs to a locked attic door.
He clicked on a bare bulb that hung from the rafters. I looked around. It wasnât a finished attic. A ten-by-twenty strip of plywood had been hammered down over ceiling joists and exposed pink insulation, creating a runway of sorts leading away from the stairs. Boxes and wooden crates lined both sides.
âOver here,â Lon instructed, leading me to a separate stack of boxes. We sat on the plywood walkway and sifted though several boxes of paperwork, mostly photos and old Hellfire bulletins. The esoteric organization I grew up in, Ekklesia Eleusia, more commonly known in the occult community as Eâ´Eâ´, printed up bulletins that were passed outduring classes and meet-and-greets. They mostly advertised things like equinox energy raisings, rituals for members moving up a grade in the order, and the monthly performance of something called the Sophic Mass: think Catholic mass with a naked priestess on the alter while a quasisexual magical play is being reenacted. Itâs more pompous and less interesting than it sounds. Drinking wine and gagging on a dry homemade wafer while staring at untrimmed pubic hair and sagging breasts isnât exactly my idea of holyâand you donât even want to know whatâs in the wafer.
The Hellfire bulletins, however, were a thousand times more amusing. I thumbed through a colorful stack of them from the 1970s and â80s. They featured inventive Masonic-like symbols, weird drug-fueled poetry, interpretive cartoons of demons in silly Kama Sutra positions, and local restaurant reviews based on the sexual attractiveness of their servers. I noted that the chain fondue restaurant in the Village rated only two smiling penises, but the Alps Fondue Chalet inside Brentano Gardens got an enthusiastic five. That was an awful lot of proverbial dickâwe were so going to eat there.
While leafing through one of the old bulletins, a small picture slipped from the pages. It was a group photo of three men and four children. Three smudged names were written on the back: Dare, Merrimoth, Butler. I flipped it over and recognized Dare and a teenager who clearly was his son, Mark. Standing beside him was Lonâs dad, Jonathan Butler. Lon definitely favored his father in the broad build of his shoulders and the way his eyes were eternally creased into slits. And speak of the devil . . . Jonathan had his arm around a wickedly attractive teenager whose light brown hair fell halfway down his back. He was skinny and long, his arms tight with sinewy, lean muscle. No trace of facial hair. A BlackSabbath Heaven and Hell T-shirt clung to his torso. He scowled at the camera like he was trying to break it. A total badass.
â Lo-o-on ,â I purred, biting my bottom lip as I flipped the photo around in my fingers to show him.
He tried to take it away from me, but I wouldnât let him have it.
âYou were all kinds of adorable,â I said.
He grunted.
âHow old were you?â
âFifteen, I think.â
âFifteen?â I repeated in disbelief, turning the photo back around to inspect it. âWere you still a virgin at that point?â
âMostly.â A playful smile tugged up one side his mouth.
âMan oh man, my fifteen-year-old self would have been all over that.â
He snorted. âWhen I was fifteen, you werenât even born.â
I stuck my tongue out, then fought him off while