The Devil Will Come

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Authors: Glenn Cooper
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treatment, emerging dramatically from blackness with the headline: DAMJAN KREK – WHY WON’T HE RUN FOR PRESIDENT ? A political commentator they knew well, a gadfly of the right, was stirring the pot again.
    ‘We should ignore it,’ Krek sighed. ‘Why won’t this guy leave me alone?’
    Mulej answered his question with another. ‘How many billionaires are there in Slovenia?’
    ‘The disadvantage of being a large fish in a small lake,’ Krek said. ‘We do best when we work in the shadows. Politicians!’ He spat the word out.
    ‘We’ve had our share,’ Mulej said.
    Krek’s voice was full of contempt. ‘Moths to the flame.’
    The phone on the internal line from the gatehouse rang. Krek answered it. ‘I’d forgotten,’ he said. ‘Send her up.’
    ‘Do you want me to stay?’ Mulej asked.
    ‘I’ll be no more than an hour,’ Krek said. ‘Yes, stay! Don’t you dare leave. When I get back I want to see a proposal of the trades we’re going to set up between now and next week.’
    ‘I know what to do, K,’ Mulej said wearily.
    ‘And I want you to make sure the statement is checked by one of our Arabic speakers. It has to appear authentic.’
    ‘It’s being done.’
    ‘And draw up a press release expressing the company’s outrage on behalf of myself and, of course, our Catholic employees. Got it?’
    ‘Got it.’
    ‘And, most importantly, I want a plan for dealing with the catacombs. I can’t believe this happened at the worst possible moment. I want our people in Italy to know this is my highest priority. I want the best information, the best plan and the best execution.’ He had been gradually creeping closer to Mulej and now he stood over him. He stabbed a finger into his shoulder. ‘Got it?’
    The big man nodded obediently. ‘Yes, K.’
    The doorbell chimed and Krek responded personally.
    One of his security men was escorting a young woman. Krek welcomed her into the hall with a smile. ‘What’s your name?’
    ‘My name is Aleida, Mister Krek.’ She had a Dutch accent.
    ‘My friends call me K,’ he said. ‘I was told you were lovely. I’m not disappointed.’
    ‘It’s an honor to meet you. Surely one of the great events of my life.’ Aleida was a brunette with a film-star face. Her cheeks were flushed with the excitement of the moment.
    ‘Come with me,’ Krek said. ‘My time is limited.’
    ‘Of course, Mister Krek – K – a man like you has many responsibilities, I’m sure.’
    He led her up an ornately carved staircase past a succession of bygone Kreks frozen in portraiture. ‘You have no idea.’
    Both sides of the hallway were lined with stag antlers, a dangerous gauntlet to run if one stumbled through in a drunken stupor. The residential areas of the castle were also uncontaminated by any traces of femininity. Krek’s wife had died of a swiftly moving neurological condition years earlier and what frills of hers he had tolerated were purged when she was gone. His estate was feral, populated with wild boar and roe deer. It was a hunting castle. A man’s house.
    Krek’s bedroom was large but austere. A planked floor with a few small rugs. A huge spiral-carved oak post in the center of the room supporting enormous beams. A medieval chest against a wall. A tapestry. A large bed with a half-canopy covered in striped damask.
    Krek sat at the foot of the bed and removed his necktie.
    ‘I was told you’re altered,’ he said.
    Aleida lowered her eyes and whispered something by way of apology.
    ‘I don’t ordinarily accept altered women but I was advised I should make an exception.’
    ‘My parents sent me to a boarding school where the girls showered together,’ she said softly. ‘I didn’t want to lose it but they sent me for the operation.’
    ‘It’s a common story. I wish these things didn’t happen but I accept that they do. Show me.’
    Obediently, Aleida began to remove her clothes. First her coat, then her high-heeled shoes, her blouse, her tight skirt.

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