Immortal with a Kiss

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Immortal with a Kiss Page 20

by Jacqueline Lepore


  “Why don’t you come and sit with me this evening?” Eloise had prodded soon after we returned. “You are alone far too much.”

  And Ann always was there to fetch me for every meal, during which she made special effort to draw me into conversations. I suppose her intention was to make me seem friendlier, less aloof, and I was touched by her loyalty.

  I became aware that there was a line being drawn, with me on one side and the sly Trudy Grisholm on the other. So I was present at every meal, sat with the teachers in the parlor in the evening, joined in their discussions, and in every way tried to appear dependable, sensible, scholarly, and untroubled. But all the while I was biding my time, and after services on Sunday I slipped away to the inn at last.

  Valerian was in the common room when I arrived. He knew better than to approach me in a public place. Mrs. Danby greeted me in between her rounds seeing to the tables. While she was occupied, I wandered over to the empty hearth. Madge was not in her chair, but I wanted to get another look at the headstone.

  I found it a curiosity, more so since the name Winifred had come up in the story about my mother that Eloise Boniface had told me.

  “Are you that chilled?” Mrs. Danby said as she found me by the hearth.

  “No. I was looking at this,” I said, pointing to the headstone.

  She frowned. “It’s depressing, isn’t it? Well, at least they put it in upside down so it’s not so obvious there’s a gravestone there.”

  “Why was it put in the wall?”

  “Well, now, we aren’t ones here in the fells to waste.” She clasped her hands together under her ample bosom. “When that wall was built—hundreds of years ago it was—they used all the stone they could scavenge. That’s how it’s always been around here, make use of what’s at hand. So, they put the headstone in there.”

  “So it was removed from the grave?”

  “Well,” she said, giving a sigh, “that’s an ugly tale. That Winifred’s grave got opened up after she was gone and her remains burned. They said it was because she was a witch, but women like that—known to have the sight, and maybe know a thing or two about herbs—were always regarded with suspicion. It was how it was with all the women in that family, through the generations.”

  I wondered if that suspicion was due to her healing gifts, or the close association with Holt Manor. I was still unsettled by the connection of that dragon necklace I’d seen; I didn’t know what to make of it.

  “I heard of a Winifred whose son, Alistair, was a groundskeeper up at the school,” I said. “They also took care of Lord Suddington’s house. Was this her relative?”

  “Oh, yes, indeed, that’s right. The husband and son did the school, took care of Holt Manor before Lord Suddington came back. She was the last of the Winifreds around these parts.”

  This made sense. I felt anger at the prejudice against women whose only crime was a desire to help others with their healing talents. I felt it for this Winifred whose grave had been defiled and her headstone stolen and placed in the inn’s wall, and for the Winifred who had tended my mother. And I felt it for me, for the tale of this poor woman’s persecution was a cautionary one. Women with powers were thought to be dangerous, even if those powers saved your life. You could be thought a witch, or insane, or worse . . . evil.

  I shook off this dark thought. “Well, thank you for telling me,” I said. “I had wondered. I notice your mother is not in her usual place in her chair. Is she well?”

  “Oh, bless you for asking, Mrs. Andrews, but she’s having her rheumatism today. I keep her in bed through the worst of it.”

  “Oh, I am sorry to hear she is suffering,” I said sincerely. “Please send my regards.”

  “Kindness itself you are, and understanding of the old. The mind goes, you know. Some complain about her. She can ramble on so. I’m glad it didn’t upset you.”

  “Not at all.” I hesitated, and then said, “Although when I was in here last, Sir Charles Morton had a fit of pique over it.”

  “Oh, him,” Mrs. Danby said with a sneer. “What was he on about?”

  “Your mother mentioned something called the Cyprian Queen. It upset him a great deal.”

  She made a snorting sound, a kind of derisive laugh. “Oh, well, he wouldn’t care to have his high and mighty self associated with that old legend, would he? He’s complained about her before—my mother, I mean. But I can’t keep her locked in her bed day and night, and her talk is harmless. It’s just an old scary story nobody else puts any stock in.”

  “I suppose he believes that kind of talk casts a bad light on the school somehow.”

  “He’s a popinjay,” she agreed. “Thinks better of himself than he is, that one. But I can’t say that I blame him. Rumors of girls going missing from time to time would hardly benefit any institution educating female students.”

  I had noticed Valerian watching me the entire time I conversed with Mrs. Danby. He said nothing, wisely keeping his distance so as not to draw attention to our frequent meetings. He followed me with his obsidian gaze as I crossed to Sebastian, who was waiting for me at the bottom of the stairs. “He just returned,” he said, referring to Valerian as we climbed the stairs. “He went into Penwith to see about several deaths that appeared to be the work of our vampire.”

  “Ruthven is feeding far away now, so he will not stir suspicions,” I surmised.

  “Exactly. Valerian thinks he favors the larger city, where the more dense population makes it less likely the strange deaths will be noticed.”

  We were at the top of the stairs. The door to Father Luke’s room was to our left. “How is he?” I asked.

  Sebastian’s face puckered into a dark scowl. “You will see for yourself. He will not speak to either Valerian or myself, the ungrateful cur. I have a mind to leave him to this business of destroying himself, to which he seems so devoted.” The cloud of grief in his eyes bespoke his deep feeling in contrast to his brash words.

  I braced myself and entered the room. It was darkened again and it stank of unwashed body, and of despair.

  “Do not open the drapes,” Father Luke said. I had expected him to be abed, as he had been in the early days of his recovery, but he was seated at the table. “I will light a lamp if you want.”

  I approached slowly and sat down. “Please,” I said.

  He took the flint box and used it to light an oil lamp among the refuse strewn on the table surface. We sat in silence.

  “Do you recall the time you came to me, and asked me to hear your confession?” he said finally.

  “I do, yes.”

  “I have no one to hear mine,” he said.

  I blinked in astonishment, not certain I was getting the correct inference. “Do you want to make a confession to me? But I am obviously no priest.”

  He closed his eyes. “I want to say it. Say it all. If I do not, Emma, I will go mad. It keeps spinning inside my head, and I need to get it out.” He shook his head violently. “Even if the bishop himself were here, I could not speak. I took vows—not just the ordinary ones of ordination. Vows of secrecy that bind me . . .”

  He took a moment, frowning in thought. Then he said, “I have broken them already, so many times. But I cannot go to the Church for this. The truth is, I do not trust it anymore. That is part of my suffering. I want to tell you. I trust you, Emma.”

  My throat constricted, but I found my voice. “Then I am here, father.”

  “Do not call me that,” he snapped. “Call me Luke if you must, although that is not even my name. I am a man of lies, Emma. That is the first thing you must know. Luke is the man who lived a good life, but I am only part him. The other parts . . . I have done terrible things.”

  “We all have,” I told him.

  “No. I do not want comfort. I do not want compassion or understanding. Just . . .”

  “All right,” I assured him. “I will only listen.”

  He paused, then nodded slowly. “Very good, then. Very good.” His mouth twi
sted very slightly. “Do you still have the crucifix you stole from my church?”

  “It hangs over my bed. I learned my lesson after the incident with the rats.”

  “I stole a crucifix from a church once,” he said. “That was why I never minded you took it. I thought if it were important enough for you to remove it without asking permission, then you must have it. I know that was the case for me.” Then he settled in. His voice was steady, emotionless. He told me this story:

  My family was not religious, although I was raised Calvinist. I envied the Catholics, with their cheerful priest and their statues and paintings and colored light from the stained glass. I used to sneak into the village church and stare at those things, imagining the Bible stories they depicted. It was an escape from my home. My home was a terrible place.

  We were poor. My two brothers, older than me, were brutes. It was nothing for me, the youngest, to be pummeled into submission over the most trivial matter—a scrap of bread or the use of a threadbare sweater—and come away sporting a welt or a bloody lip. My father was unsympathetic. All he cared about was drink. My mother was too busy working to put food on the table to bother with us boys, and she caught her share of cuffs and kicks as well from my da’s fists. It was a miserable house, a miserable life, and it made me mean.

  We used to steal, my brothers and I. Those were the good times, when I was with them as opposed to being the brunt of their aimless rage. One day, they put me up to taking the money from the poor box at St. Alfonse’s. I had no compunctions about doing so. We were poor, weren’t we? And I had no morality back then. I liked the crucifix hanging near to the box, and I took that as well. But the priest, Father Lawrence, caught me in the act. I thought I was done for, but instead of getting the lash, as expected, I was taken inside and given a meal. Later, Father Lawrence told me he’d been ready to beat me, as I deserved, but when he’d grabbed my collar he’d seen the bruises along my neck.

  So, I kept the crucifix and got away without a scratch. Except I could not live with what the priest had done. It was like something foreign, and it haunted me. For the first time in my life, I felt pangs of guilt. I kept the gold crucifix secret, knowing it would have been nearly my life if I was discovered keeping such a valuable trinket from my greedy family. But I would take it out when I was alone and gaze at it for long periods of time. The look of agony on the Savior’s face mesmerized me. I knew enough Christian doctrine to realize Christ had died for sinners. And I knew that I was a sinner.

  I began to do things to pay the priest back for his kindness. They were of dubious virtue, but they were the only way I knew to try to make reparations in order to put a stop to the disturbing rumblings of my conscience. I stole apples from a neighbor’s orchard and left them on the back stoop of the rectory. I even dared encroach on the squire’s land and left a brace of rabbits for the priest’s dinner. Given these offerings, I felt entitled to sneak inside the church and gaze at the beautiful pictures of the saints. I continued to raid and pillage, leaving my spoils like a well-trained hound at the priest’s doorstep.

  Then one time, the father was lying in wait, having camped out in the cold all night to catch me. He gave me a proposition. He would teach me, for he had noticed my fascination with the church, in exchange for my doing legitimate chores for him. I wanted to leap at this chance, but you cannot imagine how terrified I was, for I knew if my brothers learned what I was doing, they would beat me senseless. I accepted anyway.

  But they caught on eventually, and did what I knew they would. When Father Lawrence saw the results, he was appalled. I was in a bad state, you understand, so much so that Father Lawrence insisted I move into the rectory.

  That was when I was able to study in earnest. Father was also teaching another student, George Wentworth. George possessed an intellect far beyond mine. His mother baked and cleaned for Father Lawrence in exchange for her son’s education. I discovered, not long after moving to the rectory, that she and Father Lawrence were lovers. I was shocked to learn this, of course, but I was also happy for the father. I had always sensed a sadness in him, and I hoped love could cure it. And George’s mother was a pretty woman. It was easy to see she was neglected by her husband and she was kind to me. She would bring me clothing, and food treats from time to time, although they could ill afford it. George’s sister, Bethany, often came with her mother when Mrs. Wentworth was at the church. She would practice reading with us while they were gone. I was besotted with her.

  One day, when I was fifteen years of age, a bishop visited the parish. Father Lawrence presented young George to him. I was so jealous I could not keep away, and hid myself to spy on the meeting. The bishop spotted me hovering, and I felt he picked up instantly on the resentment I could not keep from my face. I had been told I had heavy, unpleasant features, and tended to glower. I fled, thinking I’d been exposed as the ungrateful sinner I was.

  Bethany found me sulking behind the barn. While she consoled me, something magical happened: she kissed me and, to my utter shock, she told me she loved me. I was incredulous. I had never before had anyone’s love. We began seeing each other every chance we could get and soon we decided to marry. I abandoned my education to find work. I saved every ha’penny I earned so Bethany and I could be wed as soon as possible. It soon became urgent, for she gave me the news that she was carrying my child.

  Now, my brothers had come around through the years to bully me. I had found if I gave them money, they left quickly. But when they came to me during this time, I refused to give them any of my hard-earned wages. I had grown taller and stronger than them. I gave notice that they were never to come around again, that I was marrying Bethany and soon would have a family to provide for. Intimidating them felt good. I thought I had won, that I had broken free of the dark, shameful past they represented. But I did not understand, not yet, that evil will never be denied.

  A week later, Bethany went missing. I was a madman, searching all day and all night. I finally found her, out on the moors, soaking wet and nearly dead from exposure. She’d been beaten and obviously badly abused. Raped. I brought her to her parents’ house. Her mother took her from me to clean her up and put her to bed. But after Bethany was recovered, she would not see me. Her mother told me it was because Bethany feared I would despise her, sullied as she felt. I wanted so badly to assure her nothing was further from the truth. I loved her; nothing would change that. But before I could reassure her, she succumbed to despair. She tore open her delicate wrists in great, shredding gashes and let the life’s blood drain from her . . .

  I never loved drink as the other men in my family did, but I sought the tavern that night. I would have inhaled fire if I thought it would dull the pain. I found my brothers already well into their cups. They were of good cheer and welcomed me, and I emptied my purse buying round after round. When my money was exhausted, one of my brothers fished a trinket out of his pocket and slapped it down on the table in lieu of coin. I recognized Bethany’s necklace immediately and I knew then it had been these two who had killed her, and my child. The stupid brutes were too drunk to realize they’d just given themselves away.

  I said nothing. I was somehow stone-sober. And cold. I remember being very cold.

  When my brothers had consumed the last of the gin their money would buy, I stumbled out of the pub with them, pretending to be as drunk as they were. Then, when there was no one around to see, I knocked them unconscious. Then I placed my hands around their necks—first one, then the other—and snuffed the life from each one in turn.

  I did not fight when the magistrates came for me. I was imprisoned to await the trial. I was sure to be found guilty and hung. That was fine with me; I was ready to die. But I did not wish to go to hell. Bethany and our baby would be in heaven and I wished desperately to be with them. I asked for Father Lawrence to hear my confession. I told him my entire tale.

  A few days later, I received a surprise in the form of the bishop. He told me he had noticed me when he’d come t
o the village to inspect George for the order. He said he liked the hungry look in my eye and my recent actions showed I had certain desirable qualities. That was when he told me of the Order of the Knights of Saint Michael’s Wing.

  I recall him asking me, with a keen eye to watch my every reaction, “You know what it is to hate. I need someone whom I can teach to hate the right things, evil things. That strength—your strength—can save the world.”

  That was how he made me believe I could achieve redemption for what I had done. I entered my training in the Order while at the same time studying to take my vows as a priest. I learned to listen, to submit, to suspend all thought of self. The authority of the Church was a solace, and I, its servant, was redeemed. I did not have to think for myself. They taught me all the answers, what to do, what to believe. They gave me purpose, one so great, so vital, it eclipsed all I had ever been or hoped to be, and I embraced it.

  I was sent to Saint Michael in the Fields, one of the most important outposts that guarded the fragile line where the worlds of the living and the dead come together. They gave me all the tools I would need should I be the one called to battle. Life was suddenly simple, clean. I was good again. A priest of God. A protector of the world. I had found redemption. For a time, at least. Until I lost it all over again.

  Father Luke lapsed into silence. He had not looked at me the entire time he’d spoken. I did not know what to say. What came to my mind was inadequate, trivial. As if I could make an impact with mere words.

  “My mother is a vampire,” I said suddenly. “I am made from the very fact that she is undead, that she drinks the blood of human beings to subsist. I know nothing about her, save this. And I do not know how much of that blood, which flows in my veins, lays claim to my soul.

  “Valerian Fox is a partially made vampire. He is caught between two worlds. Not human, not completely. Not yet undead. If Marius bites him once more, Valerian will become stricken with the thirst and crave nothing more than that final bite, that transformation into evil.

 

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