Immortal with a Kiss

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Immortal with a Kiss Page 28

by Jacqueline Lepore


  “So this is why you went to Rome?” Valerian asked as he examined the disk. “Revenge?”

  “Perhaps not so much revenge as atonement. My church broke trust with me. I felt, very simply, that they owed me.”

  Sebastian threw his hands up and rolled his eyes. “So this is what all of the mystery was about, rushing off to meetings you would tell me nothing about, disappearing for days on end—all that to even the score? What in the name of heaven do you imagine they owed you?” He jabbed a finger at the disk. “That thing must be worth a fortune. It was a hefty debt.”

  “More than money,” Father Luke replied. “The truth.”

  “Oh, I see. You merely swept into the Vatican and demanded the truth,” Sebastian cried sarcastically, “and of course they said, ‘Oh, certainly! Here are all the secrets we hid from you, so sorry for the inconvenience.’ Honestly, I . . .” Sebastian paused, his eyebrows gathering on his smooth forehead. “Truth about what?”

  Father Luke paused, and I could see he was savoring the moment. “About the Dracula.” He tapped the gold disk. “And this.”

  “What is it?” Sebastian demanded.

  “It is the seal of the Dragon Prince,” Father Luke said. “You recognize it?”

  I looked closely. Indeed, I had seen it written into the flesh of a vampire who had tried to kill me, in the form of a tattoo. Other places, too . . . I tried to remember where. A curl of apprehension tightened in the pit of my stomach.

  “This was taken from his mightiest general, one who was vanquished long ago by a skilled and powerful vampire hunter,” Father Luke explained. “The general’s fate was to be imprisoned in the holy confines of a tree blessed for the thorns which once made up the cruel crown Our Savior’s tormentors forced on his brow. A special tree of that kind, one situated in a sacred and mystical place where the living and the dead meet.” He lifted his eyebrows to me expectantly.

  Yes, I knew what he meant. Avebury. I felt my heart lurch. “The hawthorn. That vampire . . . this is him, then . . . The one . . . ?”

  He nodded. “This seal belonged to one who called himself Oriax. The name comes from that demon who serves as Lucifer’s general. That was not the vampire’s real name in life, most certainly. However, it was an apt title, for he was the greatest of the Dracula’s followers, and under his many campaigns spreading terror through Europe and western Asia, the Dracula’s power was expanded far and wide, even here in England. But it was here he was vanquished.” Father Luke took the disk back from Sebastian, who seemed suddenly uncertain what to do with it. “This was taken from him by the vampire extirpator who banished him in that tree long ago.”

  “This was the creature we destroyed last spring?” Serena asked.

  “Yes,” I replied. “I suppose it was. We did not know its identity, though. We knew only that Marius had come to release it so that he could consume it, take that ancient and great power into himself. His plan was to become the mightiest of all vampires.”

  “Indeed, that is exactly what his plan had been. He was sent by the Great Dragon Prince himself,” Father Luke said. He stared meaningfully at Valerian and me in turn. “Anointed by him in a sense, to succeed Oriax, who had proved himself unworthy by being bested.”

  Valerian scrubbed a hand over his chin as his thoughts turned. “So the Dracula is grooming Marius to take Oriax’s place at his side.”

  “Marius. And another.” Father Luke paused, pausing as he let us digest this. “There will only be one in the end, but I suppose the Dracula learned from Oriax’s defeat. It must have been crushing when his general, the only one that terrible prince had pinned all his hopes upon, was defeated in battle. The Dracula has learned from this disappointment. He has devised a different plan to ensure it does not happen again. This time, he has chosen two sons to vie for his favor. Brothers in strength and equal in their possession of their father’s love. They despise each other, of course, for they are locked in a lethal rivalry, in which only one will survive. The Dracula pits them against each other to see which emerges the strongest, the most ruthless, the most clever and resourceful. It is this one who will be made his general, and sit at his right hand.”

  I said, “It is exactly what his father did to him and his brothers. Uncle Peter told me of the stories of Prince Vlad II, the Dracula’s father, who set his sons in conflict against each other to see which one deserved to be prince of Wallachia.”

  “Marius is one of these sons?” Valerian asked.

  “Marius is the wise one, patient, stealthy, and cunning beyond compare. He is capable of great strategy. He understands humans, knows how to use them as resources. While he is crafty, his brother—his enemy in this war to come—is much different. Impetuous, unpredictable, capricious and temperamental, he is just as dangerous and just as dedicated to winning the feud.”

  “Lliam,” I said.

  At Father Luke’s expression of surprise, Valerian quickly explained what he and I had learned both through Ruthven and on our trip to Ireland.

  “Well, then,” he said, satisfied. “It all comes together. Ruthven is from Lliam’s line. He must have made this Alistair, who in turn made your mother. He was right to call you sister.”

  “Don’t say that!” I snapped heatedly.

  “I apologize. I meant only that the source of the vampire was through the line of Lliam.” He turned thoughtfully to Valerian. “And you are from Marius.” He paused.

  “Why does the Dracula wish to have a general?” Serena inquired. It was strange to hear her voice so timid.

  Father Luke took a long inhalation of breath. “Ah.”

  Sebastian sank into a nearby chair. “That does not sound good.”

  “Serena asks a crucial question. There is indeed a reason why the Dracula requires such a powerful and ruthless general.” Father Luke’s eyebrows gathered as his face took on a troubled look. “It is, and always has been, his most fervent wish to vanquish the other Dark Princes of the Undead to rule all the world unchallenged.”

  Several beats of silence pulsed around us, filling the room. My mind spun, for I had never thought beyond the Dracula. It seemed incalculably horrible to imagine more of his kind, but it also made sense. The vampire had existed throughout time in all corners of the world; like humans, would they not be subjected to different lords, rulers, even governments, if anything in the revenant world could be so organized?

  It had never occurred to me, and yet I had known of their propensity for society. A natural outgrowth of society was governance, at the top of which was the one who held power. And where there was power, there was war.

  “Y-you are saying there are others like him, like the Dracula?” Sebastian stammered.

  Father Luke held up a cautionary finger. “Understand, there is no other like the Dracula. The Church believes there are seven princes of distinct domains, each ruling realms of varying sizes and of very different types.”

  Serena made a sound halfway between a moan and a gasp. I understood exactly how she felt.

  “The greatest, the most powerful and dangerous, is, of course, the Dragon Prince,” Father Luke continued. “The others are mere dukedoms to his great empire. The Dracula desires them all.”

  “Who are these other princes?” I asked.

  “They are all very different—that is why legends surrounding vampires are so varied, in keeping with the cultures of the domain they rule. And they are kept very secret. I was able to learn only a very little bit about them. The Tiger Prince of the Dark Continent of Africa. The Serpent Prince of India.”

  I was aware of Serena making the sign of the cross, then kissing her fingers three times in an old-fashioned charm. Sebastian saw her, too, and he looked down at his hands as if he might follow suit.

  “In the north, the undead carry on in the fashion of ancient Viking raiders,” Father Luke continued. “I read accounts of how they waylay unfortunate ships, letting the captives loose in a savage hunt across the ice fields in a parody of sport. In contrast, the G
reek have a very civilized, very small, elite clan. These vampires exist in mystery and isolation, remnants of their country’s Golden Age of philosophy, science, and art. They are elevated thinkers, and are considered mystics.”

  “That must be why the Greek vampire is so difficult to figure,” I ventured. “And why the alchemist has his research laboratory there.”

  “The Ruby Prince,” Father Luke continued, “has dominion over all of Asia and Asia Minor. His minions are many, organized into armies with powerful generals to expand power and influence within the revenant and human worlds. Next to the Dracula, he is most feared.”

  Valerian jerked to attention. “So this is why the Dracula must have a general of unsurpassed quality.”

  Father Luke flexed his hand, a powerful hand that might, in another century past, have wielded a sword as deftly as a feather. “Will it be Marius or Lliam? Only one will rise. Who it will be is yet undetermined.”

  “That is six,” Sebastian said. “Only six princes.”

  The priest nodded. “The last one is known only as the Spirit Prince. Its realm is far away, some believe in the Americas. I know nothing of its nature or what manner of vampires serve that realm.”

  Sebastian met my gaze. He seemed in shock. I, too, was in something of a daze, as if my head had gotten knocked one too many times. I rose on numb limbs and began to walk toward the door. I had had enough for tonight. I thought, perhaps, I’d had enough for a lifetime.

  “It becomes deeper and deeper,” I murmured bleakly. “And I can do nothing. I am defenseless, weaponless—”

  Valerian caught me by the arm. “Emma, wait for me.”

  I stared at him blankly. “I have to go back. The girls are still in danger.”

  “There is nothing for you to do. Stay with me. I can protect you.”

  I do not know where it came from, but a great and terrible laughter welled up inside of me, and exploded from my throat. I backed away, shaking my head. “You would protect me from all the world? From the Great Dragon Prince, and all the princes of the undead? You would—”

  He was never unkind to me, not even in the smallest way. Yet, his hand on my arm was firm—strong even, and his face as harsh as a knot. “Come with me,” he said, and he took me from Serena’s cottage. I pulled away, from pride, not fear, and once we were clear of the little house, he released me. “You are not going back to that school.”

  “He will kill them, Valerian.”

  “He will kill you.”

  “And am I to walk away, do nothing? Count myself lucky to live? Is that what you will do? And when the news comes of their deaths, shall we bow our heads in sadness and tell ourselves there was nothing else for us to do?”

  He gazed at me helplessly. In the moonlight, his face was shadows, sharp with angles. His cheekbones stuck out like blades, his eyes hollow, his mouth obscured.

  Then he did something very odd. He held his arms out to me, and whispered my name. Just once, but he said it with feeling, and I moved without thinking, obeying my heart and my broken courage, and fell into his embrace.

  I did return to Blackbriar that night. Valerian came with me.

  It had been decided quite simply. He had said, “You need me.” After a beat of hesitation, he added, “And I need you.”

  I let him in by the pantry door and we snuck undetected into my bedchamber. On our way, he helped me check that the windows in the dormitories were secure and the salt lines were intact.

  “Is there anyone you suspect will let him in if he calls to them?” Valerian asked as we were finishing our preparations.

  “Possibly Margaret. I do not know her state of mind since Vanessa’s death.”

  “Ruthven will eventually find his way in, if he wants to have at them.”

  I nodded in agreement, wrapping my arms about myself to ward off the chill. “He considers them to belong to him. Now that he is angry, and it is all falling apart once again, he will not rest until he has killed them or driven them to take their own lives.”

  Valerian paused. “And you?”

  I answered him honestly. “I do not plan to die.”

  He grinned at me, shaking his head as if I had said something to amaze him. “Brave Emma.”

  “You mean foolish Emma,” I said sadly.

  He suddenly grew serious. “I mean beloved Emma.”

  That stopped me cold. My breath caught in my throat. He held his hand out to me, and I took it as we walked back to my room. In the moonlight, we did not need to bother with the light once the door was shut behind us.

  He took out a shiny silver crucifix and hung it on the naked nail over my bed. That done, we looked at one another.

  He touched my shoulders lightly. “I would like a chance to set something aright between us.”

  “It is I who should,” I told him. “I owe you a . . . such a great apology.”

  He bent to kiss me. I hesitated, waiting to see what he did next. Pulling back to look at me, he seemed puzzled. “And I am sorry, also, Emma.”

  “Why?”

  Deep lines folded over his brow. He seemed to struggle for words for a moment, then whispered, “You have had such darkness in your life.”

  I felt my heartbeat quicken. “Darkness has touched us both,” I reminded him.

  He appeared weighted down by emotion. “That is true. But I did not want this touched by darkness. I wanted to be whole before . . .”

  “It is too long to wait for perfection. We are imperfect, and, yes, touched by this darkness we despise. But perhaps this is when we need each other the most.”

  “Ah,” he smiled. “Wise Emma, too.”

  I lowered my gaze, suddenly shy. “I prefer the other one, what you said before.”

  He cupped my face in his hands. They were strong, vibrating with warmth and vitality. I fancied I felt the rush of blood where his palms lay against my cheek. “As do I. Beloved,” he said softly, and kissed me again.

  That night he erased what damage I had done, what Ruthven had driven me to do. That night we did not think about Ruthven at all. Both of us were flawed, burdened, and tragically imperfect, it was true, but for that short time that didn’t matter.

  He slipped out when the sun came up, and I lay awake as the daylight grew strong. I used to feel safe in the sunlight, but for some reason no reassurances calmed me as I thought about the day ahead. Would this be the last one for Lilliana or Margaret, or any of the other girls whose paths had fatally crossed that of the Cyprian Queen? What, if anything, could I do to stop it?

  As I lay there, even after the peace and beauty of the night I had passed before, I felt my anxiety grow. By the time I rose, my head was heavy and my limbs sluggish. I was not drugged, I knew. It was despair creeping up upon me.

  I noticed again the drooping orchid, Suddington’s latest gift I had neglected to keep alive. I was feeling overset. So much so that the sight of the dying plant pricked tears of hopelessness into the backs of my eyes. I had had enough of death.

  I fought the heavy cloud of dread the following morning when I crept up to the dormitories to check on the safety of the girls. Three of them—Lilliana, Marion, and Therese—were fast asleep in the dormitory. Eustacia was awake to greet me, having not slept a wink.

  “He was at the window. All night,” she told me, jumping from her bed. She pulled me aside, speaking in a frantic whisper. “Lilliana wanted to let him in, but we wouldn’t let her. Therese and I had to hold her back.” She shivered. I saw how pale she was, ashen gray with smudges of coal under her eyes. “I could see him, imploring us to open the window. He was beautiful, like he was with Vanessa . . . at the end.”

  “He cannot get to you,” I reassured her. I heard the hollowness in my own ears. I wanted to convince her, but the memories of the horrible occurrences the night Vanessa died were fresh in my mind. “I sealed you in, protected you. And you have the cross?”

  She shook her head, her eyes wide with terror. “He will find a way, I fear. They cannot withstand his wil
l. He will make them invite him inside. Vampires can only come inside when invited, isn’t that right?” She paused, realizing she’d said it out loud: vampire.

  “Yes. Yes, you are right,” I replied.

  “He will make them do it. I was to be one of the seven. He will come for me. I must leave, Mrs. Andrews, or I will die! Please do not make me stay here another night,” Eustacia pleaded. “Help me or I will go on my own.”

  I knew what it would cost me should it be discovered I’d helped her flee. Yet, how could I not help this terrified child?

  At last I nodded. “You are right; you cannot stay here. Go pack your things. I will take you to those who will keep you safe.”

  I brought Eustacia to the stables and hitched the trap to a sturdy mount. Strangely, our flight down the fell was anticlimactic, for we did so without interruption or trouble. I would have to answer for this when I returned, I knew. I would have to be brilliant to find some manner of plausibility for Eustacia’s absence. But no matter what lies or patent groveling I had to do to appease Miss Sloane-Smith, I must make certain I remained at Blackbriar School, for the sake of the other girls. Just how I would manage to do this, I had no idea.

  Chapter Twenty-four

  It is so very odd how the mind works. One can labor for a solution—as I had done on this crisis of the Cyprian Queen—in intense concentration and acrobatics of thought and merely find one’s self going round and round the same unanswered questions. And then, something happens—a stray word or a chance association—and it breaks open what all of that mental exercise could not. Such was the case when it all came together for me the very next day during a casual conversation with Father Luke.

  He was saying, “Valerian and I have been discussing a possible plan,” as he stirred his coffee at the table in his small room at the Rood and Cup. The day was bitter outside, a grayish overcast quality to the sky paired with a biting wind that whistled around the edges of the window and subjected us, in the cozy room, to drafts.

  “I believe we must visit this alchemist in Greece. Valerian, of course, is interested in the possible cure for vampirism.”

 

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