This is the final final form of the synopsis, written after I'd sold the book to Del Rey and rewritten it after I'd
gotten editorial notes from the editor. Why did I rewrite the synopsis? I don't know—it's not like anyone asked for it. I
suppose that after all the previous drafts, I wanted to have one on my hard drive that reflected the plot of the book
that would go to press.
When DEL PIERCE was five years old, he was possessed by a
demon. They called it the Hellion: a cackling wild child, a Katzenjammer Kid
with a slingshot who’d shoot the glasses off your face—a stunt that cost Del’s
mother her eye. With the help of pastors, psychologists, and his family, Del
regained control of his body and locked the demon away inside him.
Happy Ending.
Twenty-three years later, the Hellion’s breaking out.
Every night Del pops Nembutal and straps himself to the bed like Lon Chaney, but
still it wreaks havoc while he sleeps. This time no amount of counseling, drugs,
or meditation is going to keep the demon in its cage.
No one’s ever trapped a demon before, but Del is far from
the only victim of possession. Every day men and women are seized by alternate
intelligences that seem to jump from person to person, roaming the network of
human souls. The dozens of personalities echo heroes and villains from pop
culture—everything from pulp fiction, golden age comics, and folklore—and their
exploits have disrupted lives and warped history in ways large and small.
“Possession” and “demon,” however, are controversial words. Where fundamentalist
Christians and many other religious groups see clear evidence of spiritual
warfare, neurologists see symptoms of Possession Disorder. Jungian psychologists
talk about archetypes from the collective unconscious. Conspiracy theorists
blame the government, or aliens, or a secret race of telepaths.
With the help of his brother LEW, Del races to find
someone who can help him before the Hellion takes over. His childhood
psychiatrist and pastor are no help. DR. RAM, a ground-breaking neuroscientist,
is killed by a demon before Del can convince him to take his case. He finally
turns to MOTHER O’CONNELL, a possession survivor and a failed exorcist from a
schismatic Catholic sect. She becomes his teacher and reluctant guide. One of
the first lessons of demonology, she tells him, is that the only sure way to
drive out a demon is to kill the host. This is not good news.
Along the way Del faces off with demons, imposters, and
fanatics. His near-death experience at the hands of a cult briefly catapults him
out of his body. By the time he returns he knows the truth: he is the
demon. He possessed the real Del all those years ago, and like a hostage who
falls in love with his captors, assumed the boy’s life. The thing inside him
that’s been trying to escape is the five-year-old boy.
This body doesn’t belong to him, but where can Del go? He
doesn’t even know what he is: archetype, alien, or something stranger.
With the help of Mother O’Connell, Del searches his earliest memories for clues,
and the trail leads to a small hospital in Kansas. There Del finds BOBBY NOON, a
comatose old man who’s been serving as a gateway for demons since his paralyzing
accident at age 12. Noon’s fantasies are the stuff of dime novels and golden age
comics, and those pulp characters formed the templates for a cohort of demons
that all emerged at the same time—the Hellion among them. On the night Del finds
Bobby Noon, the demons of the cohort converge on the hospital. Bobby Noon is
ready to die, and each demon has a role to play in this final episode.
Bobby gets his wish, but to his surprise, Del doesn’t die
with him. Del still doesn’t know what he is, or what lies beyond the gate where
the demons come from, but he knows he cannot stay—the boy he possessed
deserves his own life. He returns home to say goodbye to Lew and his mother.
Finally, there’s nothing left to do but jump. As he enters the network of souls
he becomes something new in the world: no longer human, more than a demon.
Perhaps a god.