Reliquary
about two feet high and four across, chiseled out of the bottom of an old archway that had been bricked up with cinder block.
    “We go down here,” Tail Gunner said.
    Smithback could feel a hot draft coming up from below, tinged with a foul odor that made his gorge rise. Interwoven with the stench Smithback thought he caught, for a moment, the smell of wood smoke.
    “Down?” he asked in disbelief, turning his face away. “Again? What, you mean slide in there on my belly?”
    But his companion was already wriggling his way through.
    “No way,” Smithback called out, squatting down near the hole. “Listen, I’m not going down there. If this Mephisto wants to talk, he has to come up here.”
    There was a silence, and then Tail Gunner’s voice echoed out of the gloom on the far side of the cinder block. “Mephisto never comes higher than level three.”
    “He’s gonna have to make an exception, then.” Smithback tried to sound more confident than he felt. He realized that he had put himself into an impossible situation, relying totally on this bizarre, unstable man. It was pitch black again, and he had no way of finding his way back.
    There was a long silence.
    “You still with me?” Smithback asked.
    “Wait there,” the voice demanded suddenly.
    “You’re leaving? Give me some matches,” Smithback pleaded. Something poked him in the knee and he cried out in surprise. It was Tail Gunner’s grimy hand, holding something out to him through the hole.
    “Is that all?” Smithback asked, counting the three matches by touch.
    “All I can spare,” came the voice, faint now and moving away. There were some more words, but Smithback could not make them out.
    Silence descended. Smithback leaned back against the wall, afraid to sit down, clutching the matches tightly in one hand. He cursed himself for being foolish enough to follow the man down here. No story is worth this, he thought. Could he get back with only three matches? He shut his eyes and concentrated, trying to remember every twist and turn that had brought him here. Eventually, he gave up: the three matches would barely get him across those electrified rails.
    When his knees began to protest he rose from the squatting position. He stared into the lightless tunnel, eyes wide, ears straining. It was so utterly black that he began to imagine things in the dark: movement, shapes. He remained still, trying to breathe calmly, as an infinity of time passed. This was insane. If only he--
    “Scriblerian!” a ghostly, incorporeal voice sounded from the hole at his feet.
    “What?” Smithback yelped, spinning around.
    “I am addressing William Smithback, scriblerian, am I not?” The voice was cracked and low, a sinister sing-song rising from the depths beneath him.
    “Yes, yes, I’m Smithback. Bill Smithback. Who are you?” he called, unsettled at speaking to this disembodied voice out of the darkness.
    “Mephisto,” came the voice, drawing the s of the name into a fierce hiss.”
    “What took you so long?” Smithback replied nervously, stooping down again toward the hole in the cinder block.
    “It is a long way up.”
    Smithback paused a minute, contemplating how this man--now standing somewhere below his feet--had needed to travel several levels up to reach this place. “Are you coming up?” he asked.
    “No! You should feel honored, scriblerian. This is as close as I have been to the surface in five years.”
    “Why is that?” Smithback asked, groping in the darkness for the microcassette recorder.
    “Because this is my domain. I am lord of all you survey.”
    “But I don’t see anything.”
    A dry chuckle rose from the hole in the cinder block. “Wrong! You see blackness. And blackness is my domain. Above your head the trains rumble past, the surface dwellers scurry on their pointless errands. But the territory below Central Park--Route 666, the Ho Chi Minh trail, the Blockhouse--is mine.”
    Smithback thought for a moment. The ironic

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