The Vampire Lestat - The Vampire Chronicles #2 (Anne Rice)
The Vampire Lestat
Anne Rice
Part 2 of The Vampire Chronicles
Downtown Saturday Night In The Twentieth Century
1984
I am The Vampire Lestat. I'm immortal. More or less. The light of the sun, the sustained
heat of an intense fire-these things might destroy me. But then again, they might not.
I'm six feet tall, which was fairly impressive in the 1780s when I was a young mortal man.
It's not bad now. I have thick blond hair, not quite shoulder length, and rather curly, which
appears white under fluorescent light. My eyes are gray, but they absorb the colors blue or
violet easily from surfaces around them. And I have a fairly short narrow nose, and a mouth
that is well shaped but just a little too big for my face. It can look very mean, or extremely
generous, my mouth. It always looks sensual. But emotions and attitudes are always reflected
in my entire expression. I have a continuously animated face.
My vampire nature reveals itself in extremely white and highly reflective skin that has to
be powdered down for cameras of any kind.
And if I'm starved for blood I look like a perfect horrorskin shrunken, veins like ropes over
the contours of my bones. But I don't let that happen now. And the only consistent indication
that I am not human is my fingernails. It's the same with all vampires. Our fingernails look
like glass. And some people notice that when they don't notice anything else.
Right now I am what America calls a Rock Superstar. My first album has sold 4 million
copies. I'm going to San Francisco for the first spot on a nationwide concert tour that will
take my band from coast to coast. MTV, the rock music cable channel, has been playing my
video clips night and day for two weeks. They're also being shown in England on "Top of the
Pops" and on the Continent, probably in some parts of Asia, and in Japan. Video cassettes of
the whole series of clips are selling worldwide.
I am also the author of an autobiography which was published last week.
Regarding my English-the language I use in my autobiography-I first learned it from a
flatboatmen who came down the Mississippi to New Orleans about two hundred years ago. I
learned more after that from the English language writers-everybody from Shakespeare
through Mark Twain to H. Rider Haggard, whom I read as the decades passed. The final
infusion I received from the detective stories of the early twentieth century in the Black Mask
magazine. The adventures of Sam Spade by Dashiell Hammett in Black Mask were the last
stories I read before I went literally and figuratively underground.
That was in New Orleans in 1929.
When I write I drift into a vocabulary that would have been natural to me in the eighteenth
century, into phrases shaped by the authors I've read. But in spite of my French accent, I talk
like a cross between a flatboatman and detective Sam Spade, actually. So I hope you'll bear
with me when my style is inconsistent. When I blow the atmosphere of an eighteenth century
scene to smithereens now and then.
I came out into the twentieth century last year.
What brought me up were two things.
First-the information I was receiving from amplified voices that had begun their cacophony
in the air around the time I lay down to sleep.
I'm referring here to the voices of radios, of course, and phonographs and later television
machines. I heard the radios in the cars that passed in the streets of the old Garden District
near the place where I lay. I heard the phonographs and TVs from the houses that surrounded
mine.
Now, when a vampire goes underground as we call it when he ceases to drink blood and he
just lies in the earth he soon becomes too weak to resurrect himself, and what follows is a
dream state.
In that state, I absorbed the voices sluggishly, surrounding them with my own responsive
images as a mortal does in sleep. But at some point during the past fifty-five years I began to
"remember" what I was hearing, to follow the entertainment programs, to listen to the news
broadcasts, the lyrics and rhythms of the popular songs.
And very gradually, I began to understand the caliber of the changes that the world had
undergone. I began listening for specific pieces of information about wars or inventions,
certain new patterns of speech.
Then a self-consciousness developed in me. I realized I was no longer dreaming. I was
thinking about what I heard. I was wide awake. I was lying in the ground and I was starved
for living blood. I started to believe that maybe all the old wounds I'd sustained had been
healed by now. Maybe my strength had come back. Maybe my strength had actually
increased as it would have done with time if I'd never been hurt. I wanted to find out.
I started to think incessantly of drinking human blood.
The second thing that brought me back-the decisive thing really-was the sudden presence
near me of a band of young rock singers who called themselves Satan's Night Out.
They moved into a house on Sixth Street-less than a block away from where I slumbered
under my own house on Prytania near the Lafayette Cemetery-and they started to rehearse
their rock music in the attic some time in 1984.
I could hear their whining electric guitars, their frantic singing. It was as good as the radio
and stereo songs I heard, and it was more melodic than most. There was a romance to it in
spite of its pounding drums. The electric piano sounded like a harpsichord.
I caught images from the thoughts of the musicians that told me what they looked like,
what they saw when they looked at each other and into mirrors. They were slender, sinewy,
and altogether lovely young mortals-beguilingly androgynous and even a little savage in their
dress and movements-two male and one female.
They drowned out most of-the other amplified voices around me when they were playing.
But that was perfectly all right.
I wanted to rise and join the rock band called Satan's Night Out. I wanted to sing and to
dance.
But I can't say that in the very beginning there was great thought behind my wish. It was
rather a ruling impulse, strong enough to bring me up from the earth.
I was enchanted by the world of rock music-the way the singers could scream of good and
evil, proclaim themselves angels or devils, and mortals would stand up and cheer. Sometimes
they seemed the pure embodiment of madness. And yet it was technologically dazzling, the
intricacy of their performance. It was barbaric and cerebral in a way that I don't think the
world of ages past had ever seen.
Of course it was metaphor, the raving. None of them believed in angels or devils, no matter
how well they assumed their parts. And the players of the old Italian commedia had been as
shocking, as inventive, as lewd.
Yet it was entirely new, the extremes to which they took it, the brutality and the defianceand
the way they were embraced by the world from the very rich to the very poor.
Also there was something vampiric about rock music. It must have sounded supernatural
even to those who don't believe in the supernatural. I mean the way the electricity could
stretch a single note forever; the way harmony could be layered upon harmony until you felt
yourself dissolving in the sound. So eloquent of dread it was, this music. The world just didn't
have it in any form before.
Yes, I wanted to get closer to it. I wanted to do it. Maybe make the little unknown band of
Satan's Night Out famous. I was ready to come up.
It took a week to rise, more or less. I fed on the fresh blood of the little animals who live
under the earth when I could catch them. Then I started clawing for the surface, where I could
summon the rats. From there it wasn't too difficult to take felines and finally the inevitable
human victim, though I had to wait a long time for the particular kind I wanted-a man who
had killed other mortals and showed no remorse.
One came along eventually, walking right by the fence, a young male with a grizzled beard
who had murdered another, in some far-off place on the other side of the world. True killer,
this one. And oh, that first taste of human struggle and human blood!
Stealing clothes from nearby houses, getting some of the gold and jewels I'd hidden in the
Lafayette Cemetery, that was no problem.
Of course I was scared from time to time. The stench of chemicals and gasoline sickened
me. The drone of air conditioners and the whine of the jet planes overhead hurt my ears.
But after the third night up, I was roaring around New Orleans on a big black Harley-
Davidson motorcycle making plenty of noise myself. I was looking for more killers to feed
on. I wore gorgeous black leather clothes that I'd taken from my victims, and I had a little
Sony Walkman stereo in my pocket that fed Bach's Art of the Fugue through tiny earphones
right into my head as I blazed along.
I was the vampire Lestat again. I was back in action. New Orleans was once again my
hunting ground.
As for my strength, well, it was three times what it had once been. I could leap from the
street to the top of a four-story building. I could pull iron gratings off windows. I could bend
a copper penny double. I could hear human voices and thoughts, when I wanted to, for blocks
around.
By the end of the fast week I had a pretty female lawyer in a downtown glass and steel
skyscraper who helped me procure a legal birth certificate, Social Security card, and driver's
license. A good portion of my old wealth was on its way to New Orleans from coded
accounts in the immortal Bank of London and the Rothschild Bank.
But more important, I was swimming in realizations. I knew that everything the amplified
voices had told me about the twentieth century was true.
As I roamed the streets of New Orleans in 1984 this is what I beheld:
The dark dreary industrial world that I'd gone to sleep on had burnt itself out finally, and
the old bourgeois prudery and conformity had lost their hold on the American mind.
People were adventurous and erotic again the way they'd been in the old days, before the
great middle-class revolutions of the late 1700s. They even looked the way they had in those
times.
The men didn't wear the Sam Spade uniform of shirt, tie, gray suit, and gray hat any
longer. Once again, they costumed themselves in velvet and silk and brilliant colors if they
felt like it. They did not have to clip their hair like Roman soldiers anymore; they wore it any
length they desired.
And the women-ah, the women were glorious, naked in the spring warmth as they'd been
under the Egyptian pharaohs, in skimpy short skirts and tunic like dresses, or wearing men's
pants and shirts skintight over their curvaceous bodies if they pleased. They painted, and
decked themselves out in gold and silver, even to walk to the grocery store. Or they went
fresh scrubbed and without ornament-it didn't matter. They curled their hair like Marie
Antoinette or cut it off or let it blow free.
For the first time in history, perhaps, they were as strong and as interesting as men.
And these were the common people of America. Not just the rich who've always achieved
a certain androgyny, a certain joie de vivre that the middle-class revolutionaries called
decadence in the past.
The old aristocratic sensuality now belonged to everybody. It was wed to the promises of
the middle-class revolution, and all people had a right to love and to luxury and to graceful
things.
Department stores had become palaces of near Oriental loveliness-merchandise displayed
amid soft tinted carpeting, eerie music, amber light. In the all-night drugstores, bottles of
violet and green shampoo gleamed like gems on the sparkling glass shelves. Waitresses drove
sleek leather-lined automobiles to work. Dock laborers went home at night to swim in their
heated backyard pools. Charwomen and plumbers changed at the end of the day into
exquisitely cut manufactured clothes.
In fact the poverty and filth that had been common in the big cities of the earth since time
immemorial were almost completely washed away.
You just didn't see immigrants dropping dead of starvation in the alleyways. There weren't
slums where people slept eight and ten to a room. Nobody threw the slops in the gutters. The
beggars, the cripples, the orphans, the hopelessly diseased were so diminished as to constitute
no presence in the immaculate streets at all.
Even the drunkards and lunatics who slept on the park benches, and in the bus stations had
meat to eat regularly, and even radios to listen to, and clothes that were washed.
But this was just the surface. I found myself astounded by the more profound changes that
moved this awesome current along.
For example, something altogether magical had happened to time.
The old was not being routinely replaced by the new anymore. On the contrary, the English
spoken around me was the same as it had been in the 1800s. Even the old slang ("the coast is
clear" or "bad luck" or "that's the thing") was still "current." Yet fascinating new phrases like
"they brainwashed you" and "it's so Freudian" and "I can't relate to it" were on everyone's
lips.
In the art and entertainment worlds all prior centuries were being "recycled." Musicians
performed Mozart as well as jazz and rock music; people went to see Shakespeare one night
and a new French film the next.
In giant fluorescent-lighted emporiums you could buy tapes of medieval madrigals and
play them on your car stereo as you drove ninety miles an hour down the freeway. In the
bookstores Renaissance poetry sold side by side with the novels of Dickens or Ernest
Hemingway. Sex manuals lay on the same tables with the Egyptian Book of the Dead.
Sometimes the wealth and the cleanliness everywhere around me became like an
hallucination. I thought I was going out of my head.
Through shop windows I gazed stupefied at computers and telephones as pure in form and
color as nature's most exotic shells. Gargantuan silver limousines navigated the narrow
French Quarter streets like indestructible sea beasts. Glittering office towers pierced the night
sky like Egyptian obelisks above the sagging brick buildings of old Canal Street. Countless
television programs poured their ceaseless flow of images into every air-cooled hotel room.
But it was no series of hallucinations. This century had inherited the earth in every sense.
And no small part of this unpredicted miracle was the curious innocence of these people in
the very midst of their freedom and their wealth. The Christian god was as dead as he had
been in the 1700s. And no new mythological religion had arisen to take the place of the old.
On the contrary, the simplest people of this age were driven by a vigorous secular morality
as strong as any religious morality I had ever known. The intellectuals carried the standards.
But quite ordinary individuals all over America cared passionately about "peace" and "the
poor" and "the planet" as if driven by a mystical zeal.
Famine they intended to wipe out in this century. Disease they would destroy no matter
what the cost. They argued ferociously about the execution of condemned criminals, the
abortion of unborn babies. And the threats of "environmental pollution" and "holocaustal
war" they battled as fiercely as men have battled witchcraft and heresy in the ages past.
As for sexuality, it was no longer a matter of superstition and fear. The last religious
overtones were being stripped from it. That was why the people went around half naked. That
was why they kissed and hugged each other in the streets. They talked ethics now and
responsibility and the beauty of the body. Procreation and venereal disease they had under
control.
Ah, the twentieth century. Ah, the turn of the great wheel.
It had outdistanced my wildest dreams of it, this future. It had made fools of grim prophets
of ages past.
I did a lot of thinking about this sinless secular morality, this optimism. This brilliantly
lighted world where the value of human life was greater than it had ever been before.
In the amber electric twilight of a vast hotel room I watched on the screen before me the
stunningly crafted film of war called Apocalypse Now. Such a symphony of sound and color
it was, and it sang of the age-old battle of the Western world against evil. "You must make a
friend of horror and moral terror," says the mad commander in the savage garden of
Cambodia, to which the Western man answers as he has always answered: No.
No. Horror and moral terror can never be exonerated. They have no real value. Pure evil
has no real place.
And that means, doesn't it, that I have no place.
Except, perhaps, the art that repudiates evil-the vampire comics, the horror novels, the old
gothic tales-or in the roaring chants of the rock stars who dramatize the battles against evil
that each mortal fights within himself.
It was enough to make an old world monster go back into the earth, this stunning
irrelevance to the mighty scheme of things, enough to make him lie down and weep. Or
enough to make him become a rock singer, when you think about it ....
But where were the other old world monsters? I wondered. How did other vampires exist
in a world in which each death was recorded in giant electronic computers, and bodies were
carried away to refrigerated crypts? Probably concealing themselves like loathsome insects in
the shadows, as they have always done, no matter how much philosophy they talked or how
many covens they formed.
Well, when I raised my voice with the diode band called Satan's Night Out, I would bring
them all into the light soon enough.
I continued my education. I talked to mortals at bus stops and at gas stations and in elegant
drinking places. I read books. I decked myself out in the shimmering dream skins of the
fashionable shops. I wore white turtleneck shirts and crisp khaki safari jackets, or lush gray
velvet blazers with cashmere scarves. I powdered down my face so that I could "pass"
beneath the chemical lights of the all-night supermarkets, the hamburger joints, the carnival
thoroughfares called nightclub strips.
I was learning. I was in love.
And the only problem I had was that murderers to feed upon were scarce. In this shiny
world of innocence and plenty, of kindness and gaiety and full stomachs, the common
cutthroat thieves of the past and their dangerous waterfront hangouts were almost gone.
And so I had to work for a living. But I'd always been a hunter. I liked the dim smoky
poolrooms with the single light shining on the green felt as the tattooed ex-convicts gathered
around it as much as I liked the shiny satin-lined nightclubs of the big concrete hotels. And I
was learning more all the time about my killers-the drug dealers, the pimps, the murderers
who fell in with the motorcycle gangs.
And more than ever, I was resolute that I would not drink innocent blood.
Finally it was time to call upon my old neighbors, the rock band called Satan's Night Out.
At six thirty on a hot sticky Saturday night, I rang the doorbell of the attic music studio.
The beautiful young mortals were all lying about in their rainbow-colored silk shirts and
skintight dungarees smoking hashish cigarettes and complaining about their rotten luck
getting "gigs" in the South.
They looked like biblical angels, with their long clean shaggy hair and feline movements;
their jewelry was Egyptian. Even to rehearse they painted their faces and their eyes.
I was overcome with excitement and love just looking at them, Alex and Larry and the
succulent little Tough Cookie.
And in an eerie moment in which the world seemed to stand still beneath me, I told them
what I was. Nothing new to them, the word "vampire." In the galaxy in which they shone, a
thousand other singers had worn the theatrical fangs and the black cape.
And yet it felt so strange to speak it aloud to mortals, the forbidden truth. Never in two
hundred years had I spoken it to anyone who had not been marked to become one of us. Not
even to my victims did I confide it before their eyes closed.
And now I said it clearly and distinctly to these handsome young creatures. I told them that
I wanted to sing with them, that if they were to trust to me, we would all be rich and famous.
That on a wave of preternatural and remorseless ambition, I should carry them out of these
rooms and into the great world.
Their eyes misted as they looked at me. And the little twentieth-century chamber of stucco
and pasteboard rang with their laughter and delight.
I was patient. Why shouldn't I be? I knew I was a demon who could mimic almost any
human sound or movement. But how could they be expected to understand? I went to the
electric piano and began to play and to sing.
I imitated the rock songs as I started, and then old melodies and lyrics came back to me-
French songs buried deep in my soul yet never abandoned-and I wound these into brutal
rhythms, seeing before me a tiny crowded little Paris theater of centuries ago. A dangerous
passion welled in me. It threatened my equilibrium. Dangerous that this should come so soon.
Yet I sang on, pounding the slick white keys of the electric piano, and something in my soul
was broken open. Never mind that these tender mortal creatures gathered around me should
never know.
It was sufficient that they were jubilant, that they loved the eerie and disjointed music, that
they were screaming, that they saw prosperity in the future, the impetus that they had lacked
before. They turned on the tape machines and we began singing and playing together,
jamming as they called it. The studio swam with the scent of their blood and our thunderous
songs.
But then came a shock I had never in my strangest dreams anticipated-something that was
as extraordinary as my little revelation to these creatures had been. In fact, it was so
overwhelming that it might have driven me out of their world and back underground.
I don't mean I would have gone into the deep slumber again.
But I might have backed off from Satan's Night Out and roamed about for a few years,
stunned and trying to gather my wits.
The men-Alex, the sleek delicate young drummer, and his taller blond-haired brother,
Larry-recognized my name when I told them it was Lestat.
Not only did they recognize it, but they connected it with a body of information about me
that they had read in a book.
In fact, they thought it was delightful that I wasn't just pretending to be any vampire. Or
Count Dracula. Everybody was sick of Count Dracula. They thought it was marvelous that I
was pretending to be the vampire Lestat.
"Pretending to be the vampire Lestat?" I asked.
They laughed at my exaggeration, my French accent.
I looked at all of them for a long moment, trying to scan their thoughts. Of course I hadn't
expected them to believe I was a real vampire. But to have read of a fictional vampire with a
name as unusual as mine? How could this be explained?
But I was losing my confidence. And when I lose my confidence, my powers drain. The
little room seemed to be getting smaller. And there was something insectile and menacing
about the instruments, the antenna, the wires.
"Show me this book," I said.
From the other room they brought it, a small pulp paper "novel" that was falling to pieces.
The binding was gone, the cover ripped, the whole held together by a rubber band.
I got a preternatural chill of sorts at the sight of the cover. Interview with the Vampire.
Something to do with a mortal boy getting one of the undead to tell the tale.
With their permission, I went into the other room, stretched out on their bed, and began to
read. When I was halfway finished, I took the book with me and left the house. I stood stockstill
beneath a street lamp with the book until I finished it. Then I placed it carefully in my
breast pocket.
I didn't return to the band for seven nights.
During much of that time, I was roaming again, crashing through the night on my Harley-
Davidson motorcycle with the Bach Goldberg Variations turned up to full volume. And I was
asking myself, Lestat, what do you want to do now?
And the rest of the time I studied with a renewed purpose. I read the fat paperback histories
and lexicons of rock music, the chronicles of its stars. I listened to the albums and pondered
in silence the concert video tapes. And when the night was empty and still, I heard the voices
of Interview with the Vampire singing to me, as if they sang from the grave. I read the book
over and over. And then in a moment of contemptible anger, I shredded it to bits.
Finally, I came to my decision.
I met my young lawyer, Christine, in her darkened skyscraper office with only the
downtown city to give us light. Lovely she looked against the glass wall behind her, the dim
buildings beyond forming a harsh and primitive terrain in which a thousand torches burned.
"It is not enough any longer that my little rock band be successful," I told her. "We must
create a fame that will carry my name and my voice to the remotest parts of the world."
Quietly, intelligently, as lawyers are wont to do, she advised me against risking my
fortune. Yet as I continued with maniacal confidence, I could feel her seduction, the, slow
dissolution of her common sense.
"The best French directors for the rock video films," I said. "You must lure them from New
York and Los Angeles. There is ample money for that. And here you can find the studios,
surely, in which we will do our work. The young record producers who mix the sound afteragain,
you must hire the best. It does not matter what we spend on this venture. What is
important is that it be orchestrated, that we do our work in secret until the moment of
revelation when our albums and our films are released with the book that I propose to write."
Finally her head was swimming with dreams of wealth and power. Her pen raced as she
made her notes.
And what did I dream of as I spoke to her? Of an unprecedented rebellion, a great and
horrific challenge to my kind all over the world.
"These rock videos," I said. "You must find directors who'll realize my visions. The films
are to be sequential. They must tell the story that is in the book I want to create. And the
songs, many of them I've already written. You must obtain superior instruments-synthesizers,
the finest sound systems, electric guitars, violins. Other details we can attend to later. The
designing of vampire costumes, the method of presentation to the rock television stations, the
management of our first public appearance in San Francisco-all that in good time. What is
important now is that you make the phone calls, get the information you need to begin."
I didn't go back to Satan's Night Out until the first agreements were struck and signatures
had been obtained. Dates were fixed, studios rented, letters of agreement exchanged.
Then Christine came with me, and we had a great leviathan of a limousine for my darling
young rock players, Larry and Alex and Tough Cookie. We had breathtaking sums of money,
we had papers to be signed.
Under the drowsy oaks of the quiet Garden District street, I poured the champagne into the
glistening crystal glasses for them:
"To The Vampire Lestat," we all sang in the moonlight. It was to be the new name of the
band, of the book I'd write. Tough Cookie threw her succulent little arms around me. We
kissed tenderly amid the laughter and the reek of wine. Ah, the smell of innocent blood!
And when they had gone off in the velvet-lined motor coach, I moved alone through the
balmy night towards St. Charles Avenue, and thought about the danger facing them, my little
mortal friends.
It didn't come from me, of course. But when the long period of secrecy was ended, they
would stand innocently and ignorantly in the international limelight with their sinister and
reckless star. Well, I would surround them with bodyguards and hangers-on for every
conceivable purpose. I would protect them from other immortals as best I could. And if the
immortals were anything like they used to be in the old days, they'd never risk a vulgar
struggle with a human force like that.
As I walked up to the busy avenue, I covered my eyes with mirrored sunglasses. I rode the
rickety old St. Charles streetcar downtown.
And through the early evening crowd I wandered into the elegant double-decker bookstore
called de Ville Books, and there stared at the small paperback of Interview with the vampire
on the shelf.
I wondered how many of our kind had "noticed" the book. Never mind for the moment the
mortals who thought it was fiction. What about other vampires? Because if there is one law
that all vampires hold sacred it is that you do not tell mortals about us.
You never pass on our "secrets" to humans unless you mean to bequeath the Dark Gift of
our powers to them. You never name other immortals. You never tell where their lairs might
be.
My beloved Louis, the narrator of Interview with the Vampire, had done all this. He had
gone far beyond my secret little disclosure to my rock singers. He had told hundreds of
thousands of readers. He had all but drawn them a map and placed an X on the very spot in
New Orleans where I slumbered, though what he really knew about that, and what his
intentions were, was not clear.
Regardless, for what he'd done, others would surely hunt him down. And there are very
simple ways to destroy vampires, especially now. If he was still in existence, he was an
outcast and lived in a danger from our kind that no mortal could ever pose.
All the more reason far me to bring the book and the band called The Vampire Lestat to
fame as quickly as possible. I had to find Louis. I had to talk to him. In fact, after reading his
account of things, I ached for him, ached for his romantic illusions, and even his dishonesty. I
ached even for his gentlemanly malice and his physical presence, the deceptively soft sound
of his voice.
Of course I hated him for the lies he told about me. But the love was far greater than the
hate. He had shared the dark and romantic years of the nineteenth century with me, he was
my companion as no other immortal had ever been.
And I ached to write my story for him, not an answer to his malice in Interview with the
Vampire, but the tale of all the things I'd seen and learned before I came to him, the story I
could not tell him before.
Old rules didn't matter to me now, either.
I wanted to break every one of them. And I wanted my band and my book to draw out not
only Louis but all the other demons that I had ever known and loved. I wanted to find my lost
ones, awaken those who slept as I had slept.
Fledglings and ancient ones, beautiful and evil and mad and heartless-they'd all come after
me when they saw those video clips and heard those records, when they saw the book in the
windows of the bookstores, and they'd know exactly where to find me. I'd be Lestat, the rock
superstar. Just come to San Francisco for my first live performance. I'll be there.
But there was another reason for the whole adventure-a reason even more dangerous and
delicious and mad.
And I knew Louis would understand. It must have been behind his interview, his
confessions. I wanted mortals to know about us. I wanted to proclaim it to the world the way
I'd told it to Alex and Larry and Tough Cookie, and my sweet lawyer, Christine.
And it didn't matter that they didn't believe it. It didn't matter that they thought it was art.
The fact was that, after two centuries of concealment, I was visible to mortals! I spoke my
name aloud. I told my nature. I was there!
But again, I was going farther than Louis. His story, for all its peculiarities, had passed for
fiction. In the mortal world, it was as safe as the tableaux of the old Theater of the Vampires
in the Paris where the fiends had pretended to be actors pretending to be fiends on a remote
and gas lighted stage.
I'd step into the solar lights before the cameras, I'd reach out and touch with my icy fingers
a thousand warm and grasping hands. I'd scare the hell out of them if it was possible, and
charm them and lead them into the truth of it if I could.
And suppose-just suppose-that when the corpses began to turn up in ever greater numbers,
that when those closest to me began to hearken to their inevitable suspicions-just suppose that
the art ceased to be art and became real!
I mean what if they really believed it, really understood that this world still harbored the
Old World demon thing, the vampire-oh, what a great and glorious war we might have then!
We would be known, and we would be hunted, and we would be fought in this glittering
urban wilderness as no mythic monster has ever been fought by man before.
How could I not love it, the mere idea of it? How could it not be worth the greatest danger,
the greatest and most ghastly defeat? Even at the moment of destruction, I would be alive as I
have never been.
But to tell the truth, I didn't think it would ever come to that-I mean, mortals believing in
us. Mortals have never made me afraid.
It was the other war that was going to happen, the one in which we'd all come together, or
they would all come to fight me.
That was the real reason for The Vampire Lestat. That was the kind of game I was playing.
But that other lovely possibility of real revelation and disaster . . . Well, that added a hell of
a lot of spice!
Out of the gloomy waste of canal street, I went back up the stairs to my rooms in the oldfashioned
French Quarter hotel. Quiet it was, and suited to me, with the Vieux Carrel spread
out beneath its windows, the narrow little streets of Spanish town houses I'd known for so
long.
On the giant television set I played the cassette of the beautiful Visconti film Death in
Venice. An actor said at one point that evil was a necessity. It was food for genius.
I didn't believe that. But I wish it were true. Then I could just be Lestat, the monster,
couldn't I? And I was always so good at being a monster! Ah, well...
I put a fresh disk into the portable computer word processor and I started to write the story
of my life.
The Early Education And Adventures Of The Vampire Lestat
Part I
Lelio Rising
1
In the winter of my twenty-first year, I went out alone on horseback to kill a pack of
wolves.
This was on my father's land in the Auvergne in France, and these were the last decades
before the French Revolution.
It was the worst winter that I could remember, and the wolves were stealing the sheep from
our peasants and even running at night through the streets of the village.
These were bitter years for me. My father was the Marquis, and I was the seventh son and
the youngest of the three who had lived to manhood. I had no claim to the title or the land,
and no prospects. Even in a rich family, it might have been that way for a younger boy, but
our wealth had been used up long ago. My eldest brother, Augustin, who was the rightful heir
to all we possessed, had spent his wife's small dowry as soon as he married her.
My father's castle, his estate, and the village nearby were my entire universe. And I'd been
born restless-the dreamer, the angry one, the complainer. I wouldn't sit by the fire and talk of
old wars and the days of the Sun King. History had no meaning for me.
But in this dim and old-fashioned world, I had become the hunter. I brought in the
pheasant, the venison, and the trout from the mountain streams-whatever was needed and
could be got-to feed the family. It had become my life by this time-and one I shared with no
one else-and it was a very good thing that I'd taken it up, because there were years when we
might have actually starved to death.
Of course this was a noble occupation, hunting one's ancestral lands, and we alone had the
right to do it. The richest of the bourgeois couldn't lift his gun in my forests. But then again
he didn't have to lift his gun. He had money.
Two times in my life I'd tried to escape this life, only to be brought back with my wings
broken. But I'll tell more on that later.
Right now I'm thinking about the snow all over those mountains and the wolves that were
frightening the villagers and stealing my sheep. And I'm thinking of the old saying in France
in those days, that if you lived in the province of Auvergne you could get no farther from
Paris.
Understand that since I was the lord and the only lord anymore who could sit a horse and
fire a gun, it was natural that the villagers should come to me, complaining about the wolves
and expecting me to hunt them. It was my duty.
I wasn't the least afraid of the wolves either. Never in my life had I seen or heard of a wolf
attacking a man. And I would have poisoned them, if I could, but meat was simply too scarce
to lace with poison.
So early on a very cold morning in January, I armed myself to kill the wolves one by one. I
had three flintlock guns and an excellent flintlock rifle, and these I took with me as well as
my muskets and my father's sword. But just before leaving the castle, I added to this little
arsenal one or two ancient weapons that I'd never bothered with before.
Our castle was full of old armor. My ancestors had fought in countless noble wars since the
times of the Crusades with St. Louis. And hung on the walls above all this clattering junk
were a good many lances, battleaxes, flails, and maces.
It was a very large mace--that is, a spiked club-that I took with me that morning, and also a
good-sized flail: an iron ball attached to a chain that could be swung with immense force at
an attacker.
Now remember this was the eighteenth century, the time when white-wigged Parisians
tiptoed around in high-heeled satin slippers, pinched snuff, and dabbed at their noses with
embroidered handkerchiefs.
And here I was going out to hunt in rawhide boots and buckskin coat, with these ancient
weapons tied to the saddle, and my two biggest mastiffs beside me in their spiked collars.
That was my life. And it might as well have been lived in the Middle Ages. And I knew
enough of the fancy-dressed travelers on the post road to feel it rather keenly. The nobles in
the capital called us country lords "harecatchers." Of course we could sneer at them and call
them lackeys to the king and queen. Our castle had stood for a thousand years, and not even
the great Cardinal Richelieu in his war on our kind had managed to pull down our ancient
towers. But as I said before, I didn't pay much attention to history.
I was unhappy and ferocious as I rode up the mountain.
I wanted a good battle with the wolves. There were five in the pack according to the
villagers, and I had my guns and two dogs with jaws so strong they could snap a wolf's spine
in an instant.
Well, I rode for an hour up the slopes. Then I came into a small valley I knew well enough
that no snowfall could disguise it. And as I started across the broad empty field towards the
barren wood, I heard the first howling.
Within seconds there had come another howling and then another, and now the chorus was
in such harmony that I couldn't tell the number of the pack, only that they had seen me and
were signaling to each other to come together, which was just what I had hoped they would
do.
I don't think I felt the slightest fear then. But I felt something, and it caused the hair to rise
on the backs of my arms. The countryside for all its vastness seemed empty. I readied my
guns. I ordered my dogs to stop their growling and follow me, and some vague thought came
to me that I had better get out of the open field and into the woods and hurry.
My dogs gave their deep baying alarm. I glanced over my shoulder and saw the wolves
hundreds of yards behind me and streaking straight towards me over the snow. Three giant
gray wolves they were, coming on in a line.
I broke into a run for the forest.
It seemed I would make it easily before the three reached me, but wolves are extremely
clever animals, and as I rode hard for the trees I saw the rest of the pack, some five fullgrown
animals, coming out ahead of me to my left. It was an ambush, and I could never make
the forest in time. And the pack was eight wolves, not five as the villagers had told me.
Even then I didn't have sense enough to be afraid. I didn't ponder the obvious fact that
these animals were starving or they'd never come near the village. Their natural reticence
with men was completely gone.
I got ready for battle. I stuck the flail in my belt, and with the rifle I took aim. I brought
down a big male yards away from me and had time to reload as my dogs and the pack
attacked each other.
They couldn't get my dogs by the neck on account of the spiked collars. And in this first
skirmish my dogs brought down one of the wolves in their powerful jaws immediately. I fired
and brought down a second.
But the pack had surrounded the dogs. As I fired again and again, reloading as quickly as I
could and trying to aim clear of the dogs, I saw the smaller dog go down with its hind legs
broken. Blood streamed over the snow; the second dog stood off the pack as it tried to devour
the dying animal, but within two minutes, the pack had torn open the second dog's belly and
killed it.
Now these were powerful beasts, as I said, these mastiffs. I'd bred them and trained them
myself. And each weighed upwards of two hundred pounds. I always hunted with them, and
though I speak of them as dogs now, they were known only by their names to me then, and
when I saw them die, I knew for the first time what I had taken on and what might happen.
But all this had occurred in minutes.
Four wolves lay dead. Another was crippled fatally. But that left three, one of whom had
stopped in the savage feasting upon the dogs to fix its slanted eyes on me.
I fired the rifle, missed, fired the musket, and my horse reared as the wolf shot towards me.
As if pulled on strings, the other wolves turned, leaving the fresh kill. And jerking the reins
hard, I let my horse run as she wanted, straight for the cover of the forest.
I didn't look back even when I heard the growling and snapping. But then I felt the teeth
graze my ankle. I drew the other musket, turned to the left, and fired. It seemed the wolf went
up on his hind legs, but it was too quickly out of sight and my mare reared again. I almost
fell. I felt her back legs give out under me.
We were almost to the forest and I was off her before she went down. I had one more
loaded gun. Turning and steadying it with both hands, I took dead aim at the wolf who bore
down on me and blasted away the top of his skull.
It was now two animals. The horse was giving off a deep rattling whinny that rose to a
trumpeting shriek, the worst sound I have ever heard from any living thing. The two wolves
had her.
I bolted over the snow, feeling the hardness of the rocky land under me, and made it to the
tree. If I could reload I could shoot them down from there. But there was not a single tree
with limbs low enough for me to catch hold of.
I leapt up trying to catch hold, my feet slipping on the icy bark, and fell back down as the
wolves closed in. There was no time to load the one gun I had left to me. It was the flail and
the sword because the mace I had lost a long way back.
I think as I scrambled to my feet, I knew I was probably going to die. But it never even
occurred to me to give up. I was maddened, wild. Almost snarling, I faced the animals and
looked the closest of the two wolves straight in the eye.
I spread my legs to anchor myself. With the flail in my left hand, I drew the sword. The
wolves stopped. The first, after staring back, bowed its head and trotted several paces to the
side. The other waited as if for some invisible signal. The first looked at me again in that
uncannily calm fashion and then plunged forward.
I started swinging the flail so that the spiked ball went round in a circle. I could hear my
own growling breaths, and I know I was bending my knees as if I would spring forward, and I
aimed the flail for the side of the animal's jaw, bashing it with all my strength and only
grazing it.
The wolf darted off and the second ran round me in a circle, dancing towards me and then
back again. They both lunged in close enough to make me swing the flail and slash with the
sword, then they ran off again.
I don't know how long this went on, but I understood the strategy. They meant to wear me
down and they had the strength to do it. It had become a game to them.
I was pivoting, thrusting, struggling back, and almost falling to my knees. Probably it was
no more than half an hour that this went on. But there is no measuring time like that.
And with my legs giving out, I made one last desperate gamble. I stood stock-still,
weapons at my sides. And they came in for the kill this time just as I hoped they would.
At the last second I swung the flail, felt the ball crack the bone, saw the head jerked
upwards to the right, and with the broadsword I slashed the wolf's neck open.
The other wolf was at my side. I felt its teeth rip into my breeches. In one second it would
have torn my leg out of the socket. But I slashed at the side of its face, gashing open its eye.
The ball of the flail crashed down on it. The wolf let go. And springing back, I had enough
room for the sword again and thrust it straight into the animal's chest to the hilt before I drew
it out again.
That was the end of it.
The pack was dead. I was alive.
And the only sound in the empty snow-covered valley was my own breathing and the
rattling shriek of my dying mare who lay yards away from me.
I'm not sure I had my reason. I'm not sure the things that went through my mind were
thoughts. I wanted to drop down in the snow, and yet I was walking away from the dead
wolves towards the dying horse.
As I came close to her, she lifted her neck, straining to rise up on her front legs, and gave
one of those shrill trumpeting pleas again. The sound bounced off the mountains. It seemed to
reach heaven. And I stood staring at her, staring at her dark broken body against the
whiteness of the snow, the dead hindquarters and the struggling forelegs, the nose lifted
skyward, ears pressed back, and the huge innocent eyes rolling up into her head as the rattling
cry came out of her. She was like an insect half mashed into a floor, but she was no insect.
She was my struggling, suffering mare. She tried to lift herself again.
I took my rifle from the saddle. I loaded it. And as she lay tossing her head, trying vainly to
lift herself once more with that shrill trumpeting, I shot her through the heart.
Now she looked all right. She lay still and dead and the blood ran out of her and the valley
was quiet. I was shuddering. I heard an ugly choking noise come from myself, and I saw the
vomit spewing out onto the snow before I realized it was mine. The smell of wolf was all
over me, and the smell of blood. And I almost fell over when I tried to walk.
But not even stopping for a moment, I went among the dead wolves, and back to the one
who had almost killed me, the last one, and slung him up to carry over my shoulders, and
started the trek homeward.
It took me probably two hours.
Again, I don't know. But whatever I had learned or felt when I was fighting those wolves
went on in my mind even as I walked. Every time I stumbled and fell, something in me
hardened, became worse.
By the time I reached the castle gates; I think I was not Lestat. I was someone else
altogether, staggering into the great hall, with that wolf over my shoulders, the heat of the
carcass very much diminished now and the sudden blaze of the fire an irritant in my eyes. I
was beyond exhaustion.
And though I began to speak as I saw my brothers rising from the table and my mother
patting my father, who was blind already then and wanted to know what was happening, I
don't know what I said. I know my voice was very flat, and there was some sense in me of the
simplicity of describing what had happened:
"And then . . . and then. . ." Sort of like that.
But my brother Augustin suddenly brought me to myself. He came towards me, with the
light of the fire behind him, and quite distinctly broke the low monotone of my words with
his own:
"You little bastard," he said coldly. "You didn't kill eight wolves!" His face had an ugly
disgusted look to it.
But the remarkable thing was this: Almost as soon as he spoke these words, he realized for
some reason that he had made a mistake.
Maybe it was the look on my face. Maybe it was my mother's murmured outrage or my
other brother not speaking at all. It was probably my face. Whatever it was, it was almost
instantaneous, and the most curious look of embarrassment came over him.
He started to babble something about how incredible, and I must have been almost killed,
and would the servants heat some broth for me immediately, and all of that sort of thing, but
it was no good. What had happened in that one single moment was irreparable, and the next
thing I knew I was lying alone in my room. I didn't have the dogs in bed with me as always in
winter because the dogs were dead, and though there was no fire lighted, I climbed, filthy and
bloody, under the bed covers and went into deep sleep.
For days I stayed in my room.
I knew the villagers had gone up the mountain, found the wolves, and brought them back
down to the castle, because Augustin came and told me these things, but I didn't answer.
Maybe a week passed. When I could stand having other dogs near me, I went down to my
kennel and brought up two pups, already big animals, and they kept me company. At night I
slept between them.
The servants came and went. But no one bothered me.
And then my mother came quietly and almost stealthily into the room.
2
It was evening. I was sitting on the bed, with one of the dogs stretched out beside me and
the other stretched out under my knees. The fire was roaring.
And there was my mother coming at last, as I supposed I should have expected.
I knew her by her particular movement in the shadows, and whereas if anyone else had
come near me I would have shouted "Go away," I said nothing at all to her.
I had a great and unshakable love of her. I don't think anyone else did. And one thing that
endeared her to me always was that she never said anything ordinary.
"Shut the door,"
"Eat your soup,"
"Sit still," things like that never passed her lips. She read all the time; in fact, she was the
only one in our family who had any education, and when she did speak it was really to speak.
So I wasn't resentful of her now.
On the contrary she aroused my curiosity. What would she say, and would it conceivably
make a difference to me? I had not wanted her to come, nor even thought of her, and I didn't
turn away from the fire to look at her.
But there was a powerful understanding between us. When I had tried to escape this house
and been brought back, it was she who had shown me the way out of the pain that followed.
Miracles she'd worked for me, though no one around us had ever noticed.
Her first intervention had come when I was twelve, and the old parish priest, who had
taught me some poetry by rote and to read an anthem or two in Latin, wanted to send me to
school at the nearby monastery.
My father said no, that I could learn all I needed in my own house. But it was my mother
who roused herself from her books to do loud and vociferous battle with him. I would go, she
said, if I wanted to. And she sold one of her jewels to pay for my books and clothing. Her
jewels had all come down to her from an Italian grandmother and each had its story, and this
was a hard thing for her to do. But she did it immediately.
My father was angry and reminded her that if this had happened before he went blind, his
will would have prevailed surely. My brothers assured him that his youngest son wouldn't be
gone long. I'd come running home as soon as I was made to do something I didn't want to do.
Well, I didn't come running home. I loved the monastery school.
I loved the chapel and the hymns, the library with its thousands of old books, the bells that
divided the day, the ever repeated rituals. I loved the cleanliness of the place, the
overwhelming fact that all things here were well kept and in good repair, that work never
ceased throughout the great house and the gardens.
When I was corrected, which wasn't often, I knew an intense happiness because someone
for the first time in my life was trying to make me into a good person, one who could learn
things.
Within a month I declared my vocation. I wanted to enter the order. I wanted to spend my
life in those immaculate cloisters, in the library writing on parchment and learning to read the
ancient books. I wanted to be enclosed forever with people who believed I could be good if I
wanted to be.
I was liked there. And that was a most unusual thing. I didn't make other people there
unhappy or angry.
The Father Superior wrote immediately to ask my father's permission. And frankly I
thought my father would be glad to be rid of me.
But three days later my brothers arrived to take me home with them. I cried and begged to
stay, but there was nothing the Father Superior could do.
And as soon as we reached the castle, my brothers took away my books and locked me up.
I didn't understand why they were so angry. There was the hint that I had behaved like a fool
for some reason. I couldn't stop crying. I was walking round and round and smashing my fist
into things and kicking the door.
Then my brother Augustin started coming in and talking to me. He'd circle the point at
first, but what came clear finally was that no member of a great French family was going to
be a poor teaching brother. How could I have misunderstood everything so completely? I was
sent there to learn to read and write. Why did I always have to go to extremes? Why did I
behave habitually like a wild creature?
As for becoming a priest with real prospects within the Church, well, I was the youngest
son of this family, now, wasn't I? I ought to think of my duties to my nieces and nephews.
Translate all that to mean this: We have no money to launch a real ecclesiastical career for
you, to make you a bishop or cardinal as befits our rank, so you have to live out your life here
as an illiterate and a beggar. Come in the great hall and play chess with your father.
After I got to understand it, I wept right at the supper table, and mumbled words no one
understood about this house of ours being "chaos," and was sent back to my room for it.
Then my mother came to me.
She said: "You don't know what chaos is. Why do you use words like that?"
"I know," I said. I started to describe to her the dirt and the decay that was everywhere here
and to tell how the monastery had been, clean and orderly, a place where if you set your mind
to it, you could accomplish something.
She didn't argue. And young as I was, I knew that she was warming to the unusual quality
of what I was saying to her.
The next morning, she took me on a journey.
We rode for half a day before we reached the impressive chateau of a neighboring lord,
and there she and the gentleman took me out to the kennel, where she told me to choose my
favorites from a new litter of mastiff puppies.
I have never seen anything as tender and endearing as these little mastiff pups. And the big
dogs were like drowsy lions as they watched us. Simply magnificent.
I was too excited almost to make the choice. I brought back the male and female that the
lord advised me to pick, carrying them all the way home on my lap in a basket.
And within a month, my mother also bought for me my first flintlock musket and my first
good horse for riding.
She never did say why she'd done all this. But I understood in my own way what she had
given me. I raised those dogs, trained them, and founded a great kennel upon them.
I became a true hunter with those dogs, and by the age of sixteen I lived in the field.
But at home, I was more than ever a nuisance. Nobody really wanted to hear me talk of
restoring the vineyards or replanting the neglected fields, or of making the tenants stop
stealing from us.
I could affect nothing. The silent ebb and flow of life without change seemed deadly to me.
I went to church on all the feast days just to break the monotony of life. And when the
village fairs came round, I was always there, greedy for the little spectacles I saw at no other
time, anything really to break the routine.
It might be the same old jugglers, mimes, and acrobats of years past, but it didn't matter. It
was something more than the change of the seasons and the idle talk of past glories.
But that year, the year I was sixteen, a troupe of Italian players came through, with a
painted wagon in back of which they set up the most elaborate stage I'd ever seen. They put
on the old Italian comedy with Pantaloon and Pulcinella and the young lovers, Lelio and
Isabella, and the old doctor and all the old tricks.
I was in raptures watching it. I'd never seen anything like it, the cleverness of it, the
quickness, the vitality. I loved it even when the words went so fast I couldn't follow them.
When the troupe had finished and collected what they could from the crowd, I hung about
with them at the inn and stood them all to wine I couldn't really afford, just so that I could
talk to them.
I felt inexpressible love for these men and women. They explained to me how each actor
had his role for life, and how they did not use memorized words, but improvised everything
on the stage. You knew your name, your character, and you understood him and made him
speak and act as you thought he should. That was the genius of it.
It was called the commedia dell'arte.
I was enchanted. I fell in love with the young girl who played Isabella. I went into the
wagon with the players and examined all the costumes and the painted scenery, and when we
were drinking again at the tavern, they let me act out Lelio, the young lover to Isabella, and
they clapped their hands and said I had the gift. I could make it up the way they did.
I thought this was all flattery at first, but in some very real way, it didn't matter whether or
not it was flattery.
The next morning when their wagon pulled out of the village, I was in it. I was hidden in
the back with a few coins I'd managed to save and all my clothes tied in a blanket. I was
going to be an actor.
Now, Lelio in the old Italian comedy is supposed to be quite handsome; he's the lover, as I
have explained, and he doesn't wear a mask. If he has manners, dignity, aristocratic bearing,
so much the better because that's part of the role.
Well, the troupe thought that in all these things I was blessed. They trained me
immediately for the next performance they would give. And the day before we put on the
show, I went about the town, a much larger and more interesting place than our village, to be
certain-advertising the play with the others.
I was in heaven. But neither the journey nor the preparations nor the camaraderie with my
fellow players came near to the ecstasy I knew when I finally stood on that little wooden
stage.
I went wildly into the pursuit of Isabella. I found a tongue for verses and wit I'd never had
in life. I could hear my voice bouncing off the stone walls around me. I could hear the
laughter rolling back at me from the crowd. They almost had to drag me off the stage to stop
me, but everyone knew it had been a great success.
That night, the actress who played my inamorata gave me her own very special and
intimate accolades. I went to sleep in her arms, and the last thing I remember her saying was
that when we got to Paris we'd play the St. Germain Fair, and then we'd leave the troupe and
we'd stay in Paris working on the boulevard du Temple until we got into the Comedie-
Francaise itself and performed for Marie Antoinette and King Louis.
When I woke up the next morning, she was gone and so were all the players, and my
brothers were there. I never knew if my friends had been bribed to give me over, or just
frightened off. More likely the latter. Whatever the case, I was taken back home again.
Of course my family was perfectly horrified at what I'd done. Wanting to be a monk when
you are twelve is excusable.
But the theater had the taint of the devil. Even the great Moliere had not been given a
Christian burial. And I'd run off with a troupe of ragged vagabond Italians, painted my face
white, and acted with them in a town square for money.
I was beaten severely, and when I cursed everyone, I was beaten again.
The worst punishment, however, was seeing the look on my mother's face. I hadn't even
told her I was going. And I had wounded her, a thing that had never really happened before.
But she never said anything about it.
When she came to me, she listened to me cry. I saw tears in her eyes. And she laid her
hand on my shoulder, which for her was something a little remarkable.
I didn't tell her what it had been like, those few days. But I think she knew. Something
magical had been lost utterly. And once again, she defied my father. She put an end to the
condemnations, the beatings, the restrictions.
She had me sit beside her at the table. She deferred to me, actually talked to me in
conversation that was perfectly unnatural to her, until she had subdued and dissolved the
rancor of the family.
Finally, as she had in the past, she produced another of her jewels and she bought the fine
hunting rifle that I had taken with me when I killed the wolves.
This was a superior and expensive weapon, and in spite of my misery, I was fairly eager to
try it. And she added to that another gift, a sleek chestnut mare with strength and speed I'd
never known in an animal before. But these things were small compared to the general
consolation my mother had given me.
Yet the bitterness inside me did not subside.
I never forgot what it had been like when I was Lelio. I became a little crueler for what had
happened, and I never, never went again to the village fair. I conceived of the notion that I
should never get away from here, and oddly enough as my despair deepened, so my
usefulness increased.
I alone put the fear of God into the servants or tenants by the time I was eighteen. I alone
provided the food for us. And for some strange reason this gave me satisfaction. I don't know
why, but I liked to sit at the table and reflect that everyone there was eating what I had
provided.
So these moments had bound me to my mother. These moments had given us a love for
each other unnoticed and probably unequaled in the lives of those around us.
And now she had come to me at this odd time, when for reasons I didn't understand myself,
I could not endure the company of any other person.
With my eyes on the fire, I barely saw her climb up and sink down into the straw mattress
beside me.
Silence. Just the crackling of the fire, and the deep respiration of the sleeping dogs beside
me.
Then I glanced at her, and I was vaguely startled.
She'd been ill all winter with a cough, and now she looked truly sickly, and her beauty,
which was always very important to me, seemed vulnerable for the first time.
Her face was angular and her cheekbones perfect, very high and broadly spaced but
delicate. Her jaw line was strong yet exquisitely feminine. And she had very clear cobalt blue
eyes fringed with thick ashen lashes.
If there was any flaw in her it was perhaps that all her features were too small, too
kittenish, and made her look like a girl. Her eyes became even smaller when she was angry,
and though her mouth was sweet, it often appeared hard. It did not turn down, it wasn't
twisted in any way, it was like a little pink rose on her face. But her cheeks were very smooth
and her face narrow, and when she looked very serious, her mouth, without changing at all,
looked mean for some reason.
Now she was slightly sunken. But she still looked beautiful to me. She still was beautiful. I
liked looking at her. Her hair was full and blond, and that I had inherited from her.
In fact I resemble her at least superficially. But my features are larger, cruder, and my
mouth is more mobile and can be very mean at times. And you can see my sense of humor in
my expression, my capacity for mischievousness and near hysterical laughing, which I've
always had no matter how unhappy I was. She did not laugh often. She could look profoundly
cold. Yet she had always a little girl sweetness.
Well, I looked at her as she sat on my bed-I even stared at her, I suppose-and immediately
she started to talk to me.
"I know how it is," she said to me. "You hate them. Because of what you've endured and
what they don't know. They
haven't the imagination to know what happened to you out there on the mountain."
I felt a cold delight in these words. I gave her the silent acknowledgment that she
understood it perfectly.
"It was the same the first time I bore a child," she said. "I was in agony for twelve hours,
and I felt trapped in the pain, knowing the only release was the birth or my own death. When
it was over, I had your brother Augustin in my arms, but I didn't want anyone else near me.
And it wasn't because I blamed them. It was only that I'd suffered like that, hour after hour,
that I'd gone into the circle of hell and come back out. They hadn't been in the circle of hell.
And I felt quiet all over. In this common occurrence, this vulgar act of giving birth, I
understood the meaning of utter loneliness."
"Yes, that's it," I answered. I was a little shaken.
She didn't respond. I would have been surprised if she had. Having said what she'd come to
say, she wasn't going to converse, actually. But she did lay her hand on my forehead-very
unusual for her to do that-and when she observed that I was wearing the same bloody hunting
clothes after all this time, I noticed it too, and realized the sickness of it.
She was silent for a while.
And as I sat there, looking past her at the fire, I wanted to tell her a lot of things, how much
I loved her particularly.
But I was cautious. She had a way of cutting me off when I spoke to her, and mingled with
my love was a powerful resentment of her.
All my life I'd watched her read her Italian books and scribble letters to people in Naples,
where she had grown up, yet she had no patience even to teach me or my brothers the
alphabet. And nothing had changed after I came back from the monastery. I was twenty and I
couldn't read or write more than a few prayers and my name. I hated the sight of her books; I
hated her absorption in them.
And in some vague way, I hated the fact that only extreme pain in me could ever wring
from her the slightest warmth or interest.
Yet she'd been my savior. And there was no one but her. And I was as tired of being alone,
perhaps, as a young person can be.
She was here now, out of the confines of her library, and she was attentive to me.
Finally I was convinced that she wouldn't get up and go away, and I found myself speaking
to her.
"Mother," I said in a low voice, "there is more to it. Before it happened, there were times
when I felt terrible things." There was no change in her expression. "I mean I dream
sometimes that I might kill all of them," I said. "I kill my brothers and my father in the
dream. I go from room to room slaughtering them as I did the wolves. I feel in myself the
desire to murder..."
"So do I, my son," she said. "So do I" And her face was lighted with the strangest smile as
she looked at me.
I bent forward and looked at her more closely. I lowered my voice.
"I see myself screaming when it happens," I went on. "I see my face twisted into grimaces
and I hear bellowing coming out of me. My mouth is a perfect O, and shrieks, cries, come out
of me."
She nodded with that same understanding look, as if alight were flaring behind her eyes.
"And on the mountain, Mother, when I was fighting the wolves . . . it was a little like that."
"Only a little?" she asked.
I nodded.
"I felt like someone different from myself when I killed the wolves. And now I don't know
who is here with you-your son Lestat, or that other man, the killer."
She was quiet for a long time.
"No," she said finally. "It was you who killed the wolves. You're the hunter, the warrior.
You're stronger than anyone else here, that's your tragedy."
I shook my head. That was true, but it didn't matter. It couldn't account for unhappiness
such as this. But what was the use of saying it?
She looked away for a moment, then back to me.
"But you're many things," she said. "Not only one thing. You're the killer and the man.
And don't give in to the killer in you just because you hate them. You don't have to take upon
yourself the burden of murder or madness to be free of this place. Surely there must be other
ways."
Those last two sentences struck me hard. She had gone to the core. And the implications
dazzled me.
Always I'd felt that I couldn't be a good human being and fight them. To be good meant to
be defeated by them. Unless of course I found a more interesting idea of goodness.
We sat still for a few moments. And there seemed an uncommon intimacy even for us. She
was looking at the fire, scratching at her thick hair which was wound into a circle on the back
of her head.
"You know what I imagine," she said, looking towards me again. "Not so much the
murdering of them as an abandon which disregards them completely. I imagine drinking wine
until I'm so drunk I strip off my clothes and bathe in the mountain streams naked."
I almost laughed. But it was a sublime amusement. I looked up at her, uncertain for a
moment that I was hearing her correctly. But she had said these words and she wasn't
finished.
"And then I imagine going into the village," she said, "and up into the inn and taking into
my bed any men that come there-crude men, big men, old men, boys. Just lying there and
taking them one after another, and feeling some magnificent triumph in it, some absolute
release without a thought of what happens to your father or your brothers, whether they are
alive or dead. In that moment I am purely myself. I belong to no one."
I was too shocked and amazed to say anything. But again this was terribly, terribly
amusing. When I thought of my father and brothers and the pompous shopkeepers of the
village and how they would respond to such a thing, I found it damn near hilarious.
If I didn't laugh aloud it was probably because the image of my mother naked made me
think I shouldn't. But I couldn't keep altogether quiet. I laughed a little, and she nodded, half
smiling. She raised her eyebrows, as if to say, 'We understand each other'.
Finally I roared laughing. I pounded my knee with my fist and hit my head on the wood of
the bed behind me. And she almost laughed herself. Maybe in her own quiet way she was
laughing.
Curious moment. Some almost brutal sense of her as a human being quite removed from
all that surrounded her. We did understand each other, and all my resentment of her didn't
matter too much.
She pulled the pin out of her hair and let it tumble down to her shoulders.
We sat quiet for perhaps an hour after that. No more laughter or talk, just the fire blazing,
and her near to me.
She had turned so she could see the fire. Her profile, the delicacy of her nose and lips, were
beautiful to look at. Then she looked back at me and in the same steady voice without undue
emotion she said:
"I'll never leave here. I am dying now."
I was stunned. The little shock before was nothing to this.
"I'll live through this spring," she continued, "and possibly the summer as well. But I won't
survive another winter. I know. The pain in my lungs is too bad."
I made some little anguished sound. I think I leaned forward and said, "Mother!"
"Don't say any more," she answered.
I think she hated to be called mother, but I hadn't been able to help it.
"I just wanted to speak it to another soul," she said. "To hear it out loud. I'm perfectly
horrified by it. I'm afraid of it."
I wanted to take her hands, but I knew she'd never allow it. She disliked to be touched. She
never put her arms around anyone. And so it was in our glances that we held each other. My
eyes filled with tears looking at her.
She patted my hand.
"Don't think on it much," she said. "I don't. Just only now and then. But you must be ready
to live on without me when the time comes. That may be harder for you than you realize."
I tried to say something; I couldn't make the words come.
She left me just as she'd come in, silently.
And though she'd never said anything about my clothes or my beard or how dreadful I
looked, she sent the servants in with clean clothes for me, and the razor and warm water, and
silently I let myself be taken care of by them.
3
I began to feel a little stronger. I stopped thinking about what happened with the wolves
and I thought about her.
I thought about the words "perfectly horrified," and I didn't know what to make of them
except they sounded exactly true. I'd feel that way if I were dying slowly. It would have been
better on the mountain with the wolves.
But there was more to it than that. She had always been silently unhappy. She hated the
inertia and the hopelessness of our life here as much as I did. And now, after eight children,
three living, five dead, she was dying. This was the end for her.
I determined to get up if it would make her feel better, but when I tried I couldn't. The
thought of her dying was unbearable. I paced the floor of my room a lot, ate the food brought
to me, but still I wouldn't go to her.
But by the end of the month, visitors came to draw me out.
My mother came in and said I must receive the merchants from the village who wanted to
honor me for killing the wolves.
"Oh, hell with it," I answered.
"No, you must come down," she said. "They have gifts for you. Now do your duty."
I hated all this.
When I reached the hall, I found the rich shopkeepers there, all men I knew well, and all
dressed for the occasion.
But there was one startling young man among them I didn't recognize immediately.
He was my age perhaps, and quite tall, and when our eyes met I remembered who he was.
Nicolas de Lenfent, eldest son of the draper, who had been sent to school in Paris.
He was a vision now.
Dressed in a splendid brocade coat of rose and gold, he wore slippers with gold heels, and
layers of Italian lace at his collar. Only his hair was what it used to be, dark and very curly,
and boyish looking for some reason though it was tied back with a fine bit of silk ribbon.
Parisian fashion, all this-the sort that passed as fast as it could through the local post house.
And here I was to meet him in threadbare wool and scuffed leather boots and yellowed lace
that had been seventeen times mended.
We bowed to each other, as he was apparently the spokesman for the town, and then he
unwrapped from its modest covering of black serge a great red velvet cloak lined in fur.
Gorgeous thing. His eyes were positively shining when he looked at me. You would have
thought he was looking at a sovereign.
"Monsieur, we beg you to accept this," he said very sincerely. "The forest fur of the wolves
has been used to line it and we thought it would stand you well in the winter, this fur lined
cloak, when you ride out to hunt."
"And these too, Monsieur," said his father, producing a finely sewn pair of fur-lined boots
in black suede. "For the hunt, Monsieur," he said.
I was a little overcome. They meant these gestures in the kindest way, these men who had
the sort of wealth I only dreamed of, and they paid me respect as the aristocrat.
I took the cloak and the boots. I thanked them as effusively as I'd ever thanked anybody for
anything.
And behind me, I heard my brother Augustin say:
"Now he will really be impossible!"
I felt my face color. Outrageous that he should say this in the presence of these men, but
when I glanced to Nicolas de Lenfent I saw the most affectionate expression on his face.
"I too am impossible, Monsieur," he whispered as I gave him the parting kiss. "Someday,
will you let me come to talk to you and tell me how you killed them all? Only the impossible
can do the impossible."
None of the merchants ever spoke to me like that. We were boys again for a moment. And
I laughed out loud. His father was disconcerted. My brothers stopped whispering, but Nicolas
de Lenfent kept smiling with a Parisian's composure.
As soon as they had left I took the red velvet cloak and the suede boots up into my
mother's room.
She was reading as always while very lazily she brushed her hair. In the weak sunlight
from the window, I saw gray in her hair for the first time. I told her what Nicolas de Lenfent
had said.
"Why is he impossible?" I asked her. "He said this with feeling, as if it meant something."
She laughed.
"It means something all right," she said. "He's in disgrace." She stopped looking at her
book for a moment and looked at me. "You know how he's been educated all his life to be a
little imitation aristocrat. Well, during his first term studying law in Paris, he fell madly in
love with the violin, of all things. Seems he heard an Italian virtuoso, one of those geniuses
from Padua who is so great that men say he has sold his soul to the devil. Well, Nicolas
dropped everything at once to take lessons from Wolfgang Mozart. He sold his books. He did
nothing but play and play until he failed his examinations. He wants to be a musician. Can
you imagine?"
"And his father is beside himself."
"Exactly. He even smashed the instrument, and you know what a piece of expensive
merchandise means to the good draper."
I smiled.
"And so Nicolas has no violin now?"
"He has a violin. He promptly ran away to Clermont and sold his watch to buy another.
He's impossible all right, and the worst part of it is that he plays rather well."
"You've heard him?"
She knew good music. She grew up with it in Naples. All I'd ever heard were the church
choir, the players at the fairs.
"I heard him Sunday when I went to mass," she said. "He was playing in the upstairs
bedroom over the shop. Everyone could hear him, and his father was threatening to break his
hands."
I gave a little gasp at the cruelty of it. I was powerfully fascinated! I think I loved him
already, doing what he wanted like that.
"Of course he'll never be anything," she went on.
"Why not?"
"He's too old. You can't take up the violin when you're twenty. But what do I know? He
plays magically in his own way. And maybe he can sell his soul to the devil."
I laughed a little uneasily. It sounded magic.
"But why don't you go down to the town and make a friend of him?" she asked.
"Why the hell should I do that?" I asked.
"Lestat, really. Your brothers will hate it. And the old merchant will be beside himself with
joy. His son and the Marquis's son."
"Those aren't good enough reasons."
"He's been to Paris," she said. She watched me for a long moment. Then she went back to
her book, brushing her hair now and then lazily.
I watched her reading, hating it. I wanted to ask her how she was, if her cough was very
bad that day. But I couldn't broach the subject to her.
"Go on down and talk to him, Lestat," she said, without another glance at me.
4
It took me a week to make up my mind I would seek out Nicolas de Lenfent.
I put on the red velvet fur-lined cloak and fur lined suede boots, and I went down the
winding main street of the village towards the inn.
The shop owned by Nicolas's father was right across from the inn, but I didn't see or hear
Nicolas.
I had no more than enough for one glass of wine and I wasn't sure just how to proceed
when the innkeeper came out, bowed to me, and set a bottle of his best vintage before me.
Of course these people had always treated me like the son of the lord. But I could see that
things had changed on account of the wolves, and strangely enough, this made me feel even
more alone than I usually felt.
But as soon as I poured the first glass, Nicolas appeared, a great blaze of color in the open
doorway.
He was not so finely dressed as before, thank heaven, yet everything about him exuded
wealth. Silk and velvet and brand-new leather.
But he was flushed as if he'd been running and his hair was windblown and messy, and his
eyes full of excitement. He bowed to me, waited for me to invite him to sit down, and then he
asked me:
"What was it like, Monsieur, killing the wolves?" And folding his arms on the table, he
stared at me.
"Why don't you tell me what's it like in Paris, Monsieur?" I said, and I realized right away
that it sounded mocking and rude. "I'm sorry," I said immediately. "I would really like to
know. Did you go to the university? Did you really study with Mozart? What do people in
Paris do? What do they talk about? What do they think?"
He laughed softly at the barrage of questions. I had to laugh myself. I signaled for another
glass and pushed the bottle towards him.
"Tell me," I said, "did you go to the theaters in Paris? Did you see the Comedie-
Francaise?"
"Many times," he answered a little dismissively. "But listen, the diligence will be coming
in any minute. There'll be too much noise. Allow me the honor of providing your supper in a
private room upstairs. I should so like to do it-"
And before I could make a gentlemanly protest, he was ordering everything. We were
shown up to a crude but comfortable little chamber.
I was almost never in small wooden rooms, and I loved it immediately. The table was laid
for the meal that would come later on, the fire was truly warming the place, unlike the roaring
blazes in our castle, and the thick glass of the window was clean enough to see the blue
winter sky over the snow-covered mountains.
"Now, I shall tell you everything you want to know about Paris," he said agreeably,
waiting for me to sit first. "Yes, I did go to the university." He made a little sneer as if it had
all been contemptible. "And I did study with Mozart, who would have told me I was hopeless
if he hadn't needed pupils. Now where do you want me to begin? The stench of the city, or
the infernal noise of it? The hungry crowds that surround you everywhere? The thieves in
every alley ready to cut your throat?"
I waved all that away. His smile was very different from his tone, his manner open and
appealing.
"A really big Paris theater..." I said. "Describe it to me . . . what is it like?"
I think we stayed in that room for four solid hours and all we did was drink and talk.
He drew plans of the theaters on the tabletop with a wet finger, described the plays he had
seen, the famous actors, the little houses of the boulevards. Soon he was describing all of
Paris and he'd forgotten to be cynical, my curiosity firing him as he talked of the Ile de la
Cite, and the Latin Quarter, the Sorbonne, the Louvre.
We went on to more abstract things, how the newspapers reported events, how his student
cronies gathered in cafes to argue. He told me men were restless and out of love with the
monarchy. That they wanted a change in government and wouldn't sit still for very long. He
told me about the philosophers, Diderot, Voltaire, Rousseau.
I couldn't understand everything he said. But in rapid, sometimes sarcastic speech he gave
me a marvelously complete picture of what was going on.
Of course, it didn't surprise me to hear that educated people didn't believe in God, that they
were infinitely more interested in science, that the aristocracy was much in ill favor, and so
was the Church. These were times of reason, not superstition, and the more he talked the
more I understood.
Soon he was outlining the Encyclopedie, the great compilation of knowledge supervised by
Diderot. And then it was the salons he'd gone to, the drinking bouts, his evenings with
actresses. He described the public balls at the Palms Royal, where Marie Antoinette appeared
right along with the common people.
"I'll tell you," he said finally, "it all sounds a hell of a lot better in this room than it really
is."
"I don't believe you," I said gently. I didn't want him to stop talking. I wanted it to go on
and on.
"It's a secular age, Monsieur," he said, filling our glasses from the new bottle of wine.
"Very dangerous."
"Why dangerous?" I whispered. "An end to superstition? What could be better than that?"
"Spoken like a true eighteenth-century man, Monsieur," he said with a faint melancholy to
his smile. "But no one values anything anymore. Fashion is everything. Even atheism is a
fashion."
I had always had a secular mind, but not for any philosophical reason. No one in my family
much believed in God or ever had. Of course they said they did, and we went to mass. But
this was duty. Real religion had long ago died out in our family, as it had perhaps in the
families of thousands of aristocrats. Even at the monastery I had not believed in God. I had
believed in the monks around me.
I tried to explain this in simple language that would not give offense to Nicolas, because
for his family it was different.
Even his miserable money-grubbing father (whom I secretly admired) was fervently
religious.
"But can men live without these beliefs?" Nicolas asked almost sadly. "Can children face
the world without them?"
I was beginning to understand why he was so sarcastic arid cynical. He had only recently
lost that old faith. He was bitter about it.
But no matter how deadening was this sarcasm of his, a great energy poured out of him, an
irrepressible passion. And this drew me to him. I think I loved him. Another two glasses of
wine and I might say something absolutely ridiculous like that.
"I've always lived without beliefs," I said.
"Yes. I know," he answered. "Do you remember the story of the witches? The time you
cried at the witches' place?"
"Cried over the witches?" I looked at him blankly for a moment. But it stirred something
painful, something humiliating. Too many of my memories had that quality. And now I had
to remember crying over witches. "I don't remember," I said.
"We were little boys. And the priest was teaching us our prayers. And the priest took us out
to see the place where they burnt the witches in the old days, the old stakes and the blackened
ground."
"Ah, that place." I shuddered. "That horrid, horrid place."
"You began to scream and to cry. They sent someone for the Marquise herself because
your nurse couldn't quiet you."
"I was a dreadful child," I said, trying to shrug it off. Of course I did remember nowscreaming,
being carried home, nightmares about the fires. Someone bathing my forehead
and saying, "Lestat, wake up."
But I hadn't thought of that little scene in years. It was the place itself I thought about
whenever I drew near it-the thicket of blackened stakes, the images of men and women and
children burnt alive.
Nicolas was studying me. "When your mother came to get you, she said it was all
ignorance and cruelty. She was so angry with the priest for telling us the old tales."
I nodded.
The final horror to hear they had all died for nothing, those long-forgotten people of our
own village, that they had been innocent. "Victims of superstition," she had said. "There were
no real witches." No wonder I had screamed and screamed.
"But my mother," Nicolas said, "told a different story, that the witches had been in league
with the devil, that they'd blighted the crops, and in the guise of wolves killed the sheep and
the children-"
"And won't the world be better if no one is ever again burnt in the name of God?" I asked.
"If there is no more faith in God to make men do that to each other? What is the danger in a
secular world where horrors like that don't happen?"
He leaned forward with a mischievous little frown.
"The wolves didn't wound you on the mountain, did they?" he asked playfully. "You
haven't become a werewolf, have you, Monsieur, unbeknownst to the rest of us?" He stroked
the furred edge of the velvet cloak I still had over my shoulders. "Remember what the good
father said, that they had burnt a good number of werewolves in those times. They were a
regular menace."
I laughed.
"If I turn into a wolf," I answered, "I can tell you this much. I won't hang around here to
kill the children. I'll get away from this miserable little hellhole of a village where they still
terrify little boys with tales of burning witches. I'll get on the road to Paris and never stop till
I see her ramparts."
"And you'll find Paris is a miserable hellhole," he said. "Where they break the bones of
thieves on the wheel for the vulgar crowds in the place de Greve."
"No," I said. "I'll see a splendid city where great ideas are born in the minds of the
populace, ideas that go forth to illuminate the darkened comers of this world."
"Ah, you are a dreamer!" he said, but he was delighted. He was beyond handsome when he
smiled.
"And I'll know people like you," I went on, "people who have thoughts in their heads and
quick tongues with which to voice them, and we'll sit in cafes and we'll drink together and
we'll clash with each other violently in words, and we'll talk for the rest of our lives in divine
excitement."
He reached out and put his arm around my neck and kissed me. We almost upset the table
we were so blissfully drunk.
"My lord, the wolfkiller," he whispered.
When the third bottle of wine came, I began to talk of my life, as I'd never done before-of
what it was like each day to ride out into the mountains, to go so far I couldn't see the towers
of my father's house anymore, to ride above the tilled land to the place where the forest
seemed almost haunted.
The words began to pour out of me as they had out of him, and soon we were talking about
a thousand things we had felt in our hearts, varieties of secret loneliness, and the words
seemed to be essential words the way they did on those rare occasions with my mother. And
as we came to describe our longings and dissatisfactions, we were saying things to each other
with great exuberance, like "Yes, yes," and "Exactly," and "I know completely what you
mean," and "And yes, of course, you felt that you could not bear it," etc.
Another bottle, and a new fire. And I begged Nicolas to play his violin for me. He rushed
home immediately to get it.
It was now late afternoon. The sun was slanting through the window and the fire was very
hot. We were very drunk. We had never ordered supper. And I think I was happier than I had
ever been in my life. I lay on the lumpy straw mattress of the little bed with my hands under
my head watching him as he took out the instrument.
He put the violin to his shoulder and began to pluck at it and twist the pegs.
Then he raised the bow and drew it down hard over the strings to bring out the first note.
I sat up and pushed myself back against the paneled wall and stared at him because I
couldn't believe the sound I was hearing.
He ripped into the song. He tore the notes out of the violin and each note was translucent
and throbbing. His eyes were closed, his mouth a little distorted, his lower lip sliding to the
side, and what struck my heart almost as much as the song itself was the way that he seemed
with his whole body to lean into the music, to press his soul like an ear to the instrument.
I had never known music like it, the rawness of it, the intensity, the rapid glittering torrents
of notes that came out of the strings as he sawed away. It was Mozart that he was playing,
and it had all the gaiety, the velocity, and the sheer loveliness of everything Mozart wrote.
When he'd finished, I was staring at him and I realized I was gripping the sides of my head.
"Monsieur, what's the matter!" he said, almost helplessly, and I stood up and threw my
arms around him and kissed him on both cheeks and kissed the violin.
"Stop calling me Monsieur," I said. "Call me by my name." I lay back down on the bed and
buried my face on my arm and started to cry, and once I'd started I couldn't stop it.
He sat next to me, hugging me and asking me why I was crying, and though I couldn't tell
him, I could see that he was overwhelmed that his music had produced this effect. There was
no sarcasm or bitterness in him now.
I think he carried me home that night.
And the next morning I was standing in the crooked stone street in front of his father's
shop, tossing pebbles up at his window.
When he stuck his head out, I said:
"Do you want to come down and go on with our conversation?"
5
From then on, when I was not hunting, my life was with Nicolas and "our conversation."
Spring was approaching, the mountains were dappled with green, the apple orchard starting
back to life. And Nicolas and I were always together.
We took long walks up the rocky slopes, had our bread and wine in the sun on the grass,
roamed south through the ruins of an old monastery. We hung about in my rooms or
sometimes climbed to the battlements. And we went back to our room at the inn when we
were too drunk and too loud to be tolerated by others.
And as the weeks passed we revealed more and more of ourselves to each other. Nicolas
told me about his childhood at school, the little disappointments of his early years, those
whom he had known and loved.
And I started to tell him the painful things-and finally the old disgrace of running off with
the Italian players.
It came to that one night when we were in the inn again, and we were drunk as usual. In
fact we were at that moment of drunkenness that the two of us had come to call the Golden
Moment, when everything made sense. We always tried to stretch out that moment, and then
inevitably one of us would confess, "I can't follow anymore, I think the Golden Moment's
passed."
On this night, looking out the window at the moon over the mountains, I said that at the
Golden Moment it was not so terrible that we weren't in Paris, that we weren't at the Opera or
the Comedie, waiting for the curtain to rise.
"You and the theaters of Paris," he said to me. "No matter what we're talking about you
bring it back to the theaters and the actors-'
His brown eyes were very big and trusting. And even drunk as he was, he looked spruce in
his red velvet Paris frock coat.
"Actors and actresses make magic," I said. "They make things happen on the stage; they
invent; they create."
"Wait until you see the sweat streaming down their painted faces in the glare of the
footlights," he answered.
"Ah, there you go again," I said. "And you, the one who gave up everything to play the
violin."
He got terribly serious suddenly, looking off as if he were weary of his own struggles.
"That I did," he confessed.
Even now the whole village knew it was war between him and his father. Nicki wouldn't
go back to school in Paris.
"You make life when you play," I said. "You create something from nothing. You make
something good happen. And that is blessed to me."
"I make music and it makes me happy," he said. "What is blessed or good about that?"
I waved it away as I always did his cynicism now.
"I've lived all these years among those who create nothing and change nothing," I said.
"Actors and musicians-they're saints to me."
"Saints?" he asked. "Blessedness? Goodness? Lestat, your language baffles me."
I smiled and shook my head.
"You don't understand. I'm speaking of the character of human beings, not what they
believe in. I'm speaking of those who won't accept a useless lie, just because they were born
to it. I mean those who would be something better. They work, they sacrifice, they do things.
. ."
He was moved by this, and I was a little surprised that I'd said it. Yet I felt I had hurt him
somehow.
"There is blessedness in that," I said. "There's sanctity. And God or no God, there is
goodness in it. I know this the way I know the mountains are out there, that the stars shine."
He looked sad for me. And he looked hurt still. But for the moment I didn't think of him.
I was thinking of the conversation I had had with my mother and my perception that I
couldn't be good and defy my family. But if I believed what I was saying . . .
As if he could read my mind, he asked:
"But do you really believe those things?"
"Maybe yes. Maybe no," I said. I couldn't bear to see him look so sad.
And I think more on account of that than anything else I told him the whole story of how
I'd run off with the players. I told him what I'd never told anyone, not even my mother, about
those few days and the happiness they'd given me.
"Now, how could it not have been good," I asked, "to give and receive such happiness? We
brought to life that town when we put on our play. Magic, I tell you. It could heal the sick, it
could."
He shook his head. And I knew there were things he wanted to say which out of respect for
me he was leaving to silence.
"You don't understand, do you?" I asked.
"Lestat, sin always feels good," he said gravely. "Don't you see that? Why do you think the
Church has always condemned the players? It was from Dionysus, the wine god, that the
theater came. You can read that in Aristotle. And Dionysus was a god that drove men to
debauchery. It felt good to you to lie on that stage because it was abandoned and lewd-the
age-old service of the god of the grape-and you were having a high time of it defying your
father-'
"No, Nicki. No, a thousand times no."
"Lestat, we're partners in sin," he said, smiling finally.
"We've always been. We've both behaved badly, both been utterly disreputable. It's what
binds us together."
Now it was my turn to look sad and hurt. And the Golden Moment was gone beyond
reprieve-unless something new was to happen.
"Come on," I said suddenly. "Get your violin, and we'll go off somewhere in the woods
where the music won't wake up anybody. We'll see if there isn't some goodness in it."
"You're a madman!" he said. But he grabbed the unopened bottle by the neck and headed
for the door immediately.
I was right behind him.
When he came out of his house with the violin, he said:
"Let's go to the witches' place! Look, it's a half moon. Plenty of light. We'll do the devil's
dance and play for the spirits of the witches."
I laughed. I had to be drunk to go along with that. "We'll reconsecrate the spot," I insisted,
"with good and pure music."
It had been years and years since I'd walked in the witches' place.
The moon was bright enough, as he'd said, to see the charred stakes in their grim circle and
the ground in which nothing ever grew even one hundred years after the burnings. The new
saplings of the forest kept their distance. And so the wind struck the clearing, and above,
clinging to the rocky slope, the village hovered in darkness.
A faint chill passed over me, but it was the mere shadow of the anguish I'd felt as a child
when I'd heard those awful words "roasted alive," when I had imagined the suffering.
Nicki's white lace shoes shone in the pale light, and he struck up a gypsy song at once and
danced round in a circle as he played it.
I sat on a broad burned stump of tree and drank from the bottle. And the heartbreaking
feeling came as it always did with the music. What sin was there, I thought, except to live out
my life in this awful place? And pretty soon I was silently and unobtrusively crying.
Though it seemed the music had never stopped, Nicki was comforting me. We sat side by
side and he told me that the world was full of inequities and that we were prisoners, he and I,
of this awful corner of France, and someday we would break out of it. And I thought of my
mother in the castle high up the mountain, and the sadness numbed me until I couldn't bear it,
and Nicki started playing again, telling me to dance and to forget everything.
Yes, that's what it could make you do, I wanted to say. Is that sin? How can it be evil? I
went after him as he danced in a circle. The notes seemed to be flying up and out of the violin
as if they were made of gold. I could almost see them flashing. I danced round and round him
now and he sawed away into a deeper and more frenzied music. I spread the wings of the fur
lined cape and threw back my head to look at the moon. The music rose all around me like
smoke, and the witches' place was no more. There was only the sky above arching down to
the mountains.
We were closer for all this in the days that followed.
But a few nights later, something altogether extra-ordinary happened.
It was late. We were at the inn again and Nicolas, who was walking about the room and
gesturing dramatically, declared what had been on our minds all along.
That we should run away to Paris, even if we were penniless, that it was better than
remaining here. Even if we lived as beggars in Paris! It had to be better.
Of course we had both been building up to this.
"Well, beggars in the streets it might be, Nicki," I said. "Because I'll be damned in hell
before I'll play the penniless country cousin begging at the big houses."
"Do you think I want you to do that?" he demanded. "I mean run away, Lestat," he said.
"Spite them, every one of them."
Did I want to go on like this? So our fathers would curse us. After all, our life was
meaningless here.
Of course, we both knew this running off together would be a thousand times more serious
than what I had done before. We weren't boys anymore, we were men. Our fathers would
curse us, and this was something neither of us could laugh off.
Also we were old enough to know what poverty meant.
"What am I going to do in Paris when we get hungry?" I asked. "Shoot rats for supper?"
"I'll play my violin for coins on the boulevard du Temple if I have to, and you can go to the
theaters!" Now he was really challenging me. He was saying, Is it all words with you, Lestat?
"With your looks, you know, you'd be on the stage in the boulevard du Temple in no time."
I loved this change in "our conversation"! I loved seeing him believe we could do it. All
his cynicism had vanished, even though he did throw in the word "spite" every ten words or
so. It seemed possible suddenly to do all this.
And this notion of the meaninglessness of our lives here began to enflame us.
I took up the theme again that music and acting were good because they drove back chaos.
Chaos was the meaninglessness of day-to-day life, and if we were to die now, our lives would
have been nothing but meaninglessness. In fact, it came to me that my mother dying soon was
meaningless and I confided in Nicolas what she had said. "I'm perfectly horrified. I'm afraid."
Well, if there had been a Golden Moment in the room it was gone now. And something
different started to happen.
I should call it the Dark Moment, but it was still high-pitched and full of eerie light. We
were talking rapidly, cursing this meaninglessness, and when Nicolas at last sat down and put
his head in his hands, I took some glamourous and hearty swigs of wine and went to pacing
and gesturing as he had done before.
I realized aloud in the midst of saying it that even when we die we probably don't find out
the answer as to why we were ever alive. Even the avowed atheist probably thinks that in
death he'll get some answer. I mean God will be there, or there won't be anything at all.
"But that's just it," I said, "we don't make any discovery at that moment! We merely stop!
We pass into nonexistence without ever knowing a thing." I saw the universe, a vision of the
sun, the planets, the stars, black night going on forever. And I began to laugh.
"Do you realize that! We'll never know why the hell any of it happened, not even when it's
over!" I shouted at Nicolas, who was sitting back on the bed, nodding and drinking his wine
out of a flagon. "We're going to die and not even know. We'll never know, and all this
meaninglessness will just go on and on and on. And we won't any longer be witnesses to it.
We won't have even that little bit of power to give meaning to it in our minds. We'll just be
gone, dead, dead, dead, without ever knowing!"
But I had stopped laughing. I stood still and I understood perfectly what I was saying!
There was no judgment day, no final explanation, no luminous moment in which all
terrible wrongs would be made right, all horrors redeemed.
The witches burnt at the stake would never be avenged.
No one was ever going to tell us anything!
No, I didn't understand it at this moment. I saw it! And I began to make the single sound:
"Oh!" I said it again "Oh!" and then I said it louder and louder and louder, and I dropped the
wine bottle on the floor. I put my hands to my head and I kept saying it, and I could see my
mouth opened in that perfect circle that I had described to my mother and I kept saying, "Oh,
oh, oh!"
I said it like a great hiccupping that I couldn't stop. And Nicolas took hold of me and
started shaking arse, saying:
"Lestat, stop!"
I couldn't stop. I ran to the window, unlatched it and swung out the heavy little glass, and
stared at the stars. I couldn't stand seeing them. I couldn't stand seeing the pure emptiness, the
silence, the absolute absence of any answer, and I started roaring as Nicolas pulled me back
from the windowsill and pulled shut the glass.
"You'll be all right," he said over and over. Someone was beating on the door. It was the
innkeeper, demanding why we had to carry on like this.
"You'll feel all right in the morning," Nicolas kept insisting. "You just have to sleep."
We had awakened everyone. I couldn't be quiet. I kept making the same sound over again.
And I ran out of the inn with Nicolas behind me, and down the street of the village and up
towards the castle with Nicolas trying to catch up with me, and through the gates and up into
my roam.
"Sleep, that's what you need," he kept saying to me desperately. I was lying against the
wall with my hands aver my ears, and that sound kept coming. "Oh, oh, oh."
"In the morning," he said, "it will be better."
Well, it was not better in the morning.
And it was no better by nightfall, and in fact it got worse with the coming of the darkness.
I walked and talked and gestured like a contented human being, but I was flayed. I was
shuddering. My teeth were chattering. I couldn't stop it. I was staring at everything around me
in horror. The darkness terrified me. The sight of the old suits of armor in the hall terrified
me. I stared at the mace and the flail I'd taken out after the wolves. I stared at the faces of my
brothers. I stared at everything, seeing behind every configuration of color and light and
shadow the same thing: death. Only it wasn't just death as I'd thought of it before, it was
death the way I saw it now. Real death, total death, inevitable, irreversible, and resolving
nothing!
And in this unbearable state of agitation I commenced to do something I'd never done
before. I turned to those around me and questioned them relentlessly.
"But do you believe in God?" I asked my brother Augustin. "How can you live if you
don't!"
"But do you really believe in anything!" I demanded of my blind father. "If you knew you
were dying at this very minute, would you expect to see God or darkness! Tell me."
"You're mad, you've always been mad!" he shouted. "Get out of this house! You'll drive us
all crazy."
He stood up, which was hard for him, being crippled and blind, and he tried to throw his
goblet at me and naturally he missed.
I couldn't look at my mother. I couldn't be near her. I didn't want to make her suffer with
my questions. I went down to the inn. I couldn't bear to think of the witches' place. I would
not have walked to that end of the village for anything! I put my hands over my ears and shut
my eyes. "Go away!" I said at the thought of those who'd died like that without ever, ever
understanding anything.
The second day it was no better.
And it wasn't any better by the end of the week either.
I ate, drank, slept, but every waking moment was pure panic and pure pain. I went to the
village priest and demanded did he really believe the Body of Christ was present on the altar
at the Consecration. And after hearing his stammered answers, and seeing the fear in his eyes,
I went away more desperate than before.
"But how do you live, how do you go on breathing and moving and doing things when you
know there is no explanation?" I was raving finally. And then Nicolas said maybe the music
would make me feel better. He would play the violin.
I was afraid of the intensity of it. But we went to the orchard and in the sunshine Nicolas
played every song he knew. I sat there with my arms folded and my knees drawn up, my teeth
chattering though we were right in the hot sun, and the sun was glaring off the little polished
violin, and I watched Nicolas swaying into the music as he stood before me, the raw pure
sounds swelling magically to fill the orchard and tile valley, though it wasn't magic, and
Nicolas put his arms around me finally and we just sat there silent, and then he said very
softly, "Lestat, believe me, this will pass."
"Play again," I said. "The music is innocent."
Nicolas smiled and nodded. Pamper the madman.
And I knew it wasn't going to pass, and nothing for the moment could make me forget, but
what I felt was inexpressible gratitude for the music, that in this horror there could be
something as beautiful as that.
You couldn't understand anything; and you couldn't change anything. But you could make
music like that. And I felt the same gratitude when I saw the village children dancing, when I
saw their arms raised and their knees bent, and their bodies turning to the rhythm of the songs
they sang. I started to cry watching them.
I wandered into the church and on my knees I leaned against the wall and I looked at the
ancient statues and I felt the same gratitude looking at the finely carved fingers and the noses
and the ears and the expressions on their faces and the deep folds in their garments, and I
couldn't stop myself from crying.
At least we had these beautiful things, I said. Such goodness.
But nothing natural seemed beautiful to me now! The very sight of a great tree standing
alone in a field could make me tremble and cry out. Fill the orchard with music.
And let me tell you a little secret. It never did pass, really.
6
What caused it? Was it the late night drinking and talking, or did it have to do with my
mother and her saying she was going to die? Did the wolves have something to do with it?
Was it a spell cast upon the imagination by the witches' place?
I don't know. It had come like something visited upon me from outside. One minute it was
an idea, and the next it was real. I think you can invite that sort of thing, but you can't make it
come.
Of course it was to slacken. But the sky was never quite the same shade of blue again. I
mean the world looked different forever after, and even in moments of exquisite happiness
there was the darkness lurking, the sense of our frailty and our hopelessness.
Maybe it was a presentiment. But I don't think so. It was more important than that, and
frankly I don't believe in presentiments.
But to return to the story, during all this misery I kept away from my mother. I wasn't
going to say these monstrous things about death and chaos to her. But she heard from
everyone else that I'd lost my reason.
And finally, on the first Sunday night of Lent, she came to me.
I was alone in my room and the whole household had gone down to the village at twilight
for the big bonfire that was the custom every year on this evening.
I had always hated the celebration. It had a ghastly aspect to it-the roaring flames, the
dancing and singing, the peasants going afterwards through the orchards with their torches to
the tune of their strange chanting.
We had had a priest for a little while who called it pagan. But they got rid of him fast
enough. The farmers of our mountains kept to their old rituals. It was to make the trees bear
and the crops grow, all this. And on this occasion, more than any other, I felt I saw the kind
of men and women who could burn witches.
In my present frame of mind, it struck terror. I sat by my own little fire, trying to resist the
urge to go to the window and look down on the big fire that drew me as strongly as it scared
me.
My mother came in, closed the door behind her, and told me that she must talk to me. Her
whole manner was tenderness.
"Is it on account of my dying, what's come over you?" she asked. "Tell me if it is. And put
your hands in mine."
She even kissed me. She was frail in her faded dressing gown, and her hair was undone. I
couldn't stand to see the streaks of gray in it. She looked starved.
But I told her the truth. I didn't know, and then I explained some of what had happened in
the inn. I tried not to convey the horror of it, the strange logic of it. I tried not to make it so
absolute.
She listened and then she said, "You're such a fighter, my son. You never accept. Not even
when it's the fate of all mankind, will you accept it."
"I can't!" I said miserably.
"I love you for it," she said. "It's all too like you that you should see this in a tiny bedroom
in the inn late at night when you're drinking wine. And it's entirely like you to rage against it
the way you rage against everything else."
I started to cry again though I knew she wasn't condemning me. And then she took out a
handkerchief and opened it to reveal several gold coins.
"You'll get over this," she said. "For the moment, death is spoiling life for you, that's all.
But life is more important than death. You'll realize it soon enough. Now listen to what I have
to say. I've had the doctor here and the old woman in the village who knows more about
healing than he knows. Both agree with me I won't live too long."
"Stop, Mother," I said, aware of how selfish I was being, but unable to hold back. "And
this time there'll be no gifts. Put the money away."
"Sit down," she said. She pointed to the bench near the hearth. Reluctantly I did as I was
told. She sat beside me.
"I know," she said, "that you and Nicolas are talking of running away."
"I won't go, Mother. . ."
"What, until I'm dead?"
I didn't answer her. I can't convey to you the frame of mind. I was still raw, trembling, and
we had to talk about the fact that this living, breathing woman was going to stop living and
breathing and start to putrefy and rot away, that her soul would spin into an abyss, that
everything she had suffered in life, including the end of it, would come to nothing at all. Her
little face was like something painted on a veil.
And from the distant village came the thinnest sound of the singing villagers.
"I want you to go to Paris, Lestat," she said. "I want you to take this money, which is all I
have left from my family. I want to know you're in Paris, Lestat, when my-time comes. I
want to die knowing you are in Paris."
I was startled. I remembered her stricken expression years ago when they'd brought me
back from the Italian troupe. I looked at her for a long moment. She sounded almost angry in
her persuasiveness.
"I'm terrified of dying," she said. Her voice went almost dry. "And I swear I will go mad if
I don't know you're in Paris and you're free when it finally comes."
I questioned her with my eyes. I was asking her with my eyes, "Do you really mean this?"
"I have kept you here as surely as your father has," she said. "Not on account of pride, but
on account of selfishness. And now I'm going to atone for it. I'll see you go. And I don't care
what you do when you reach Paris, whether you sing while Nicolas plays the violin, or turn
somersaults on the stage at the St. Germain Fair. But go, and do what you will do as best you
can."
I tried to take her in my arms. She stiffened at first but then I felt her weaken and she
melted against me, and she gave herself over so completely to me in that moment that I think
I understood why she had always been so restrained. She cried, which I'd never heard her do.
And I loved this moment for all its pain. I was ashamed of loving it, but I wouldn't let her go.
I held her tightly, and maybe kissed her for all the times she'd never let me do it. We seemed
for the moment like two parts of the same thing.
And then she grew calm. She seemed to settle into herself, and slowly but very firmly she
released me and pushed me away.
She talked for a long time. She said things I didn't understand then, about how when she
would see me riding out to hunt, she felt some wondrous pleasure in it, and she felt that same
pleasure when I angered everyone and thundered my questions at my father and brothers as to
why we had to live the way we lived. She spoke in an almost eerie way of my being a secret
part of her anatomy, of my being the organ for her which women do not really have.
"You are the man in me," she said. "And so I've kept you here, afraid of living without
you, and maybe now in sending you away, I am only doing what I have done before."
She shocked me a little. I never thought a woman could feel or articulate anything quite
like this.
"Nicolas's father knows about your plans," she said. "The innkeeper overheard you. It's
important you leave right away. Take the diligence at dawn, and write to me as soon as you
reach Paris. There are letter writers at the cemetery of les Innocents near the St. Germain
Market. Find one who can write Italian for you. And then no one will be able to read the
letter but me."
When she left the room, I didn't quite believe what had happened. For a long moment I
stood staring before me. I stared at my bed with its mattress of straw, at the two coats I
owned and the red cloak, and my one pair of leather shoes by the hearth. I stared out the
narrow slit of a window at the black hulk of the mountains I'd known all my life. The
darkness, the gloom, slid back from me for a precious moment.
And then I was rushing down the stairs and down the mountain to the village to find
Nicolas and to tell him we were going to Paris! We were going to do it. Nothing could stop us
this time.
He was with his family watching the bonfire. And as soon as he saw me, he threw his arm
around my neck, and I hooked my arm around his waist and I dragged him away from the
crowds and the blaze, and towards the end of the meadow.
The air smelled fresh and green as it does only in spring. Even the villagers' singing didn't
sound so horrible. I started dancing around in a circle.
"Get your violin!" I said. "Play a song about going to Paris, we're on our way. We're going
in the morning!"
"And how are we going to feed ourselves in Paris?" he sang out as he made with his empty
hands to play an invisible violin. "Are you going to shoot rats for our supper?"
"Don't ask what we'll do when we get there!" I said. "The important thing is just to get
there."
7
Not even a fortnight passed before I stood in the midst of the noonday crowds in the vast
public cemetery of les Innocents, with its old vaults and stinking open graves-the most
fantastical marketplace I had ever beheld-and, amid the stench and the noise, bent over an
Italian letter writer dictating my first letter to my mother.
Yes, we had arrived safely after traveling day and night, and we had rooms in the lie de la
Cite, and we were inexpressibly happy, and Paris was warm and beautiful and magnificent
beyond all imagining.
I wished I could have taken the pen myself and written to her.
I wished I could have told her what it was like, seeing these towering mansions, ancient
winding streets aswarm with beggars, peddlers, noblemen, houses of four and five stories
banking the crowded boulevards.
I wished I could have described the carriages to her, the rumbling confections of gilt and
glass bullying their way over the Pont Neuf and the Pont Notre Dame, streaming past the
Louvre, the Palais Royal.
I wished I could describe the people, the gentlemen with their clocked stockings and silver
walking sticks, tripping through the mud in pastel slippers, the ladies with their pearlencrusted
wigs and swaying panniers of silk and muslin, my first certain glimpse of Queen
Marie Antoinette herself walking boldly through the gardens of the Tuileries.
Of course she'd seen it all years and years before I was born. She'd lived in Naples and
London and Rome with her father. But I wanted to tell her what she had given to me, how it
was to hear the choir in Notre Dame, to push into the jam-packed cafes with Nicolas, talk
with his old student cronies over English coffee, what it was like to get dressed up in
Nicolas's fine clothes-he made me do it-and stand below the footlights at the Comedie-
Francaise gazing up in adoration at the actors on the stage.
But all I wrote in this letter was perhaps the very best of it, the address of the garret rims
we called our home in the lie de la Cite, and the news:
"I have been hired in a real theater to study as an actor with a fine prospect of performing
very soon."
What I didn't tell her was that we had to walk up six flights of stairs to our rooms, that men
and women brawled and screamed in the alleyways beneath our windows, that we had run out
of money already, thanks to my dragging us to every opera, ballet, and drama in town. And
that the establishment where I worked was a shabby little boulevard theater, one step up from
a platform at the fair, and my jobs were to help the players dress, sell tickets, sweep up, and
throw out the troublemakers.
But I was in paradise again. And so was Nicolas though no decent orchestra in the city
would hire him, and he was now playing solos with the little bunch of musicians in the
theater where I worked, and when we were really pinched he did play right on the boulevard,
with me beside him, holding out the hat. We were shameless!
We ran up the steps each night with our bottle of cheap wine and a loaf of fine sweet
Parisian bread, which was ambrosia after what we'd eaten in the Auvergne. And in the light
of our one tallow candle, the garret was the most glorious place I'd ever inhabited.
As I mentioned before, I'd seldom been in a little wooden roam except in the inn. Well, this
room had plaster walls and a plaster ceiling! It was really Paris! It had polished wood
flooring, and even a tiny little fireplace with a new chimney which actually made a draft.
So what if we had to sleep on lumpy pallets, and the neighbors woke us up fighting. We
were waking up in Paris, and could roam arm in arm for hours through streets and alleyways,
peering into shops full of jewelry and plate, tapestries and statues, wealth such as I'd never
seen. Even the reeking meat markets delighted me. The crash and clatter of the city, the
tireless busyness of its thousands upon thousands of laborers,
clerks, craftsmen, the comings and goings of an endless multitude.
By day I almost forgot the vision of the inn, and the darkness. Unless, of course, I
glimpsed some uncollected corpse in a filthy alleyway, of which there were many, or I
happened upon a public execution in the place de Grave.
And I was always happening upon a public execution in the place de Grave.
I'd wander out of the square shuddering, almost moaning. I could become obsessed with it
if not distracted. But Nicolas was adamant.
"Lestat, no talk of the eternal, the immutable, the unknowable!" He threatened to hit me or
shake me if I should start.
And when twilight came on-the time I hated more than ever-whether I had seen an
execution or not, whether the day had been glorious or vexing, the trembling would start in
me. And only one thing saved me from it: the warmth and excitement of the brightly lighted
theater, and I made sure that before dusk I was safely inside.
Now, in the Paris of those times, the theaters of the boulevards weren't even legitimate
houses at all. Only the Comedie-Francaise and the Theatre des Italians were governmentsanctioned
theaters, and to them all serious drama belonged. This included tragedy as well as
comedy, the plays off Racine, Corneille, the brilliant Voltaire.
But the old Italian commedia that I loved-Pantaloon, Harlequin, Scaramouche, and the
rest-lived on as they always had, with tightrope walkers, acrobats, jugglers, and puppeteers,
in the platform spectacles at the St. Germain and the St. Laurent fairs.
And the boulevard theaters had grown out of these fairs. By my time, the last decades of
the eighteenth century, they were permanent establishments along the boulevard du Temple,
and though they played to the poor who couldn't afford the grand houses, they also collected
a very well-to-do crowd. Plenty of the aristocracy and the rich bourgeoisie crowded into the
loges to see the boulevard performances, because they were lively and full of good talent, and
not so stiff as the plays of the great Racine or the great Voltaire.
We did the Italian comedy just as I'd learned it before, full of improvisation so that every
night it was new and different yet always the same. And we also did singing and all kinds of
nonsense, not just because the people loved it, but because we had to: we couldn't be accused
of breaking the monopoly of the state theaters on straight plays.
The house itself was a rickety wooden rattrap, seating no more than three hundred, but its
little stage and props were elegant, it had a luxurious blue velvet stage curtain, and its private
boxes had screens. And its actors and actresses were seasoned and truly talented, or so it
seemed to me.
Even if I hadn't had this newly acquired dread of the dark, this "malady of mortality," as
Nicolas persisted in calling it, it couldn't have been more exciting to go through that stage
door.
For five to six hours every evening, I lived and breathed in a little universe of shouting and
laughing and quarreling men and women, struggling for this one and against that one, aid of
us comrades in the wings even if we weren't friends. Maybe it was like being in a little boat
on the ocean, all of us pulling together, unable to escape each other. It was divine.
Nicolas was slightly less enthusiastic, but then that was to be expected. And he got even
more ironical when his rich student friends came around to talk to him. They thought he was
a lunatic to live as he did. And for me, a nobleman shoveling actresses into their costumes
and emptying slop buckets, they had not words at all.
Of course all that these young bourgeois really wanted was to be aristocrats. They bought
titles, married into aristocratic families whenever they could. And it's one of the little jokes of
history that they got mixed up in the Revolution, and helped to abolish the class which in fact
they really wanted to join.
I didn't care if we ever saw Nicolas's friends again. The actors didn't know about my
family, and in favor of the very simple Lestat de Valois, which meant nothing actually, I'd
dropped my real name, de Lioncourt.
I was learning everything I could about the stage. I memorized, I mimicked. I asked
endless questions. And only stopped my education long enough each night for that moment
when Nicolas played his solo on the violin. He'd rise from his seat in the tiny orchestra, the
spotlight would pick him out from the others, and he would rip into a little sonata, sweet
enough and just short enough to bring down the house.
And all the while I dreamed of my own moment; when the old actors, whom I studied and
pestered and imitated and waited upon like a lackey, would finally say: "All right, Lestat,
tonight we need you as Lelio. Now you ought to know what to do."
It came in late August at last.
Paris was at its warmest, and the nights were almost balmy and the house was full of a
restless audience canning itself with handkerchiefs and handbills. The thick white paint was
melting on my face as I put it on.
I wore a pasteboard sword with Nicolas's best velvet coat, and I was trembling before I
stepped on the stage thinking, 'This is like waiting to be executed or something.'
But as soon as I stepped out there, I turned and looked directly into the jam-packed hall
and the strangest thing happened. The fear evaporated.
I beamed at the audience and very slowly I bowed. I stared at the lovely Flaminia as if I
were seeing her for the first time. I had to win her. The romp began.
The stage belonged to me as it had years and years ago in that far-off" country town. And
as we pranced madly together across the boards-quarreling, embracing, clowning-laughter
rocked the house.
I could feel the attention as if it were an embrace. Each gesture, each line brought a roar
from the audience-it was too easy almost-and we could have worked it for another half hour
if the other actors, eager to get into the next trick as they called it, hadn't forced us finally
towards the wings.
The crowd was standing up to applaud us. And it wasn't that country audience under the
open sky. These were Parisians shouting for Lelio and Flaminia to come back out.
In the shadows off the wings, I reeled. I almost collapsed. I could not see anything for the
moment but the vision of the audience gazing up at me over the footlights. I wanted to go
right back on stage. I grabbed Flanunia and kissed her and realized that she was kissing me
back passionately.
Then Renaud, the old manager, pulled her away.
"All right, Lestat," he said as if he were cross about something. "All right, you've done
tolerably well, I'm going to let you go on regularly from now on."
But before I could start jumping up and down for joy, half the troup materialized around
us. And Luchina, one of the actresses, immediately spoke up.
"Oh no, you'll not let him go on regularly" she said. "He's the handsomest actor on the
boulevard du Temple and you'll hire him outright for it, and pay him outright for it, and he
doesn't touch another broom or mop." I was terrified. My career had just started and it was
about to be over, but to my amazement Renaud agreed to all her terms.
Of course I was very flattered to be called handsome, and I understood as I had years ago
that Lelio, the lover, is supposed to have considerable style. An aristocrat with any breeding
whatsoever was perfect for the part.
But if I was going to make the Paris audiences really notice me, if I was going to have
them talking about me at the Comedic-Francaise, I had to be more than some yellow-haired
angel fallen out of a marquis's family onto the stage. I had to be a great actor, and that is
exactly what I determined to be.
That night Nicolas and I celebrated with a colossal drunk. We had all the troupe up to our
rooms for it, and I climbed out on the slippery rooftops and opened my arms to Paris and
Nicolas played his violin in the window until we'd awakened the whole neighborhood.
The music was rapturous, yet people were snarling and screaming up the alleyways, and
banging on pots and pans. We paid no attention. We were dancing and singing as we had in
the witches' place. I almost fell off the window ledge.
The next day, bottle in hand, I dictated the whole story to the Italian letter writer in the
stinking sunshine in les Innocents and saw that the letter went off to my mother at once. I
wanted to embrace everybody I saw in the streets. I was Lelio. I was an actor.
By September I had my name on the handbills. And I sent those to my mother, too.
And we weren't doing the old commedia. We were performing a farce by a famous writer
who, on account of a general playwrights' strike, couldn't get it performed at the Comedie-
Francaise.
Of course we couldn't say his name, but everyone knew it was his work, and half the court
was packing Renaud's House of Thesbians every night.
I wasn't the lead, but I was the young lover, a sort of Lelio again really, which was almost
better than the lead, and I stole every scene in which I appeared. Nicolas had taught me the
part, bawling me out constantly for not learning to read. And by the fourth performance, the
playwright had written extra lines for me.
Nicki was having his own moment at the intermezzo, when his latest rendering of a frothy
little Mozart sonata was keeping the house in its seats. Even his student friends were back.
We were getting invitations to private balls. I went tearing off to les Innocents every few days
to write to my mother, and finally I had a clipping from an English paper, The Spectator, to
send her, which praised our little play and in particular the blond-haired rogue who steals the
hearts of the ladies in the third and fourth acts. Of course I couldn't read this clipping. But the
gentleman who'd brought it to me said it was complementary, and Nicolas swore it was too.
When the first chill nights of fall came on, I wore the fur lined red cloak on the stage. You
could have seen it in the back row of the gallery even if you were almost blind. I had more
skill now with the white makeup, shading it here and there to heighten the contours of my
face, and though my eyes were ringed in black and my lips reddened a little, I looked both
startling and human at the same time. I got love notes from the women in the crowd.
Nicolas was studying music in the mornings with an Italian maestro. Yet we had money
enough for good food, wood, and coal. My mother's letters came twice a week and said her
health had taken a turn for the better. She wasn't coughing as badly as last winter. She wasn't
in pain. But our fathers had disowned us and would not acknowledge any mention of our
names.
We were too happy to worry about that. But the dark dread, the "malady of mortality," was
with me a lot when the cold weather came on.
The cold seemed worse in Paris. It wasn't clean as it had been in the mountains. The poor
hovered in doorways, shivering and hungry, the crooked unpaved streets were thick with
filthy slush. I saw barefoot children suffering before my very eyes, and more neglected
corpses lying about then ever before. I was never so glad of the fur-lined cape as I was then. I
wrapped it around Nicolas and held him close to me when we went out together, and we
walked in a tight embrace through the snow and the rain.
Cold or no cold, I can't exaggerate the happiness of these days. Life was exactly what I
thought it could be. And I knew I wouldn't be long in Renaud's theater. Everybody was
saying so. I had visions of the big stages, of touring London and Italy and even America with
a great troupe of actors. Yet there was no reason to hurry. My cup was full.
But in the month of October when Paris was already freezing, I commenced to see, quite
regularly, a strange face in the audience that invariably distracted me. Sometimes it almost
made me forget what I was doing, this face. And then it would be gone as if I'd imagined it. I
must have seen it off and on for a fortnight before I finally mentioned it to Nicki.
I felt foolish and found it hard to put into words:
"There is someone out there watching me," I said.
"Everyone's watching you," Nicki said. "That's what you want."
He was feeling a little sad that evening, and his answer was slightly sharp.
Earlier when he was making the fire, he had said he would never amount to much with the
violin. In spite of his ear and his skill, there was too much he didn't know. And I would be a
great actor, he was sure. I had said this was nonsense, but it was a shadow falling over my
soul. I remembered my mother telling me that it was too late for him.
He wasn't envious, he said. He was just unhappy a little, that's all.
I decided to drop the matter of the mysterious face. I tried to think of some way to
encourage him. I reminded him that his playing produced profound emotions in people, that
even the actors backstage stopped to listen when he played. He had an undeniable talent.
"But I want to be a great violinist," he said. "And I'm afraid it will never be. As long as we
were at home, I could pretend that it was going to be."
"You can't give up on it!" I said.
"Lestat, let me be frank with you," he said. "Things are easy for you. What you set your
sights on you get for yourself. I know what you're thinking about all the years you were
miserable at home. But even then, what you really set your mind to, you accomplished. And
we left for Paris the very day that you decided to do it."
"You don't regret coming to Paris, do you?" I asked.
"Of course not. I simply mean that you think things are possible which aren't possible! At
least not for the rest of us. Like killing the wolves..."
A coldness passed over me when he said this. And for some reason I thought of that
mysterious face again in the audience, the one watching. Something to do with the wolves.
Something to do with the sentiments Nicki was expressing. Didn't make sense. I tried to
shrug it off.
"If you'd set out to play the violin, you'd probably be playing for the Court by now," he
said.
"Nicki, this kind of talk is poison," I said under my breath. "You can't do anything but try
to get what you want. You knew the odds were against you when you started. There isn't
anything else . . . except..."
"I know." He smiled. "Except the meaninglessness. Death."
"Yes," I said. "All you can do is make your life have meaning, make it good."
"Oh, not goodness again," he said. "You and your malady of mortality, and your malady of
goodness." He had been looking at the fire and he turned to me with a deliberately scornful
expression. "We're a pack of actors and entertainers who can't even be buried in consecrated
ground. We're outcasts."
"God, if you could only believe in it," I said, "that we do good when we make others forget
their sorrow, make them forget for a little while that. . ."
"What? That they are going to die?" He smiled in a particularly vicious way. "Lestat, I
thought all this would change with you when we got to Paris."
"That was foolish of you, Nick," I answered. He was making me angry now. "I do good in
the boulevard du Temple. I feel it-"
I stopped because I saw the mysterious face again and a dark feeling had passed over me,
something of foreboding. Yet even that startling face was usually smiling, that was the odd
thing. Yes, smiling . . . enjoying . . .
"Lestat, I love you," Nicki said gravely. "I love you as I have loved few people in my life,
but in a real way you're a fool with all your ideas about goodness."
I laughed.
"Nicolas," I said, "I can live without God. I can even come to live with the idea there is no
life after. But I do not think I could go on if I did not believe in the possibility of goodness.
Instead of mocking me for once, why don't you tell me what you believe?"
"As I see it," he said, "there's weakness and there's strength. And there is good art and bad
art. And that is what I believe in. At the moment we are engaged in making what is rather bad
art and it has nothing to do with goodness!"
"Our conversation" could have fumed into a full-scale fight here if I had said all that was
on my mind about bourgeois pomposity. For I fully believed that our work at Renaud's was in
many ways finer than what I saw at the grand theaters. Only the framework was less
impressive. Why couldn't a bourgeois gentleman forget about the frame? How could he be
made to look at something other than the surface?
I took a deep breath.
"If goodness does exist," he said, "then I'm the opposite of it. I'm evil and I revel in it. I
thumb my nose at goodness. And if you must know, I don't play the violin for the idiots who
come to Renaud's to make them happy. I play it for me, for Nicolas."
I didn't want to hear any more. It was time to go to bed. But I was bruised by this little talk
and he knew it, and as I started to pull off my boots, he got up from the chair and came and
sat next to me.
"I'm sorry," he said in the most broken voice. It was so changed from the posture of a
minute ago that I looked up at him, and he was so young and so miserable that I couldn't help
putting my arm around him and telling him that he must not worry about it anymore.
"You have a radiance in you, Lestat," he said. "And it draws everyone to you. It's there
even when you're angry, or discouraged."
"Poetry," I said. "We're both tired."
"No, it's true," he said. "You have a light in you that's almost blinding. But in me there's
only darkness. Sometimes I think it's like the darkness that infected you that night in the inn
when you began to cry and to tremble. You were so helpless, so unprepared for it. I try to
keep the darkness from you because I need your light. I need it desperately, but you don't
need the darkness."
"You're the mad one," I said. "If you could see yourself, hear your own voice, your musicwhich
of course you play for yourself-you wouldn't see darkness, Nicki. You'd see an
illumination that is all your own. Somber, yes, but light and beauty come together in you in a
thousand different patterns."
The next night the performance went especially well. The audience was a lively one,
inspiring all of us to extra tricks. I did some new dance steps that for some reason never
proved interesting in private rehearsal but worked miraculously on the stage. And Nicki was
extraordinary with the violin, playing one of his own compositions.
But towards the end of the evening I glimpsed the mysterious face again. It jarred me
worse than it ever had, and I almost lost the rhythm of my song. In fact it seemed my head for
a moment was swimming.
When Nicki and I were alone I had to talk about it, about the peculiar sensation that I had
fallen asleep on the stage and had been dreaming.
We sat by the hearth together with our wine on the top of a little barrel, and in the firelight
Nicki looked as weary and dejected as he had the night before.
I didn't want to trouble him, but I couldn't forget about the face.
"Well, what does he look like?" Nicolas asked. He was warming his hands. And over his
shoulder, I saw through the window a city of snow-covered rooftops that made me feel more
cold. I didn't like this conversation.
"That's the worst part of it," I said. "All I see is a face. He must be wearing something
black, a cloak and even a hood. But it looks like a mask to me, the face, very white and
strangely clear. I mean the lines in his face are so deep they seemed to be etched with black
greasepaint. I see it for a moment. It veritably glows. Then when I look again, there's no one
there. Yet this is an exaggeration. It's more subtle than that, the way he looks and yet . . ."
The description seemed to disturb Nicki as much as it disturbed me. He didn't say
anything. But his face softened somewhat as if he were forgetting his sadness.
"Well, I don't want to get your hopes up," he said. He was very kind and sincere now. "But
maybe it is a mask you're seeing. And maybe it's someone from the Comedie-Francaise come
to see you perform."
I shook my head. "I wish it was, but no one would wear a mask like that. And I'll tell you
something else, too."
He waited, but I could see I was passing on to him some of my own apprehension. He
reached over and took the wine bottle by the neck and poured a little in my glass.
"Whoever he is," I said, "he knows about the wolves."
"He what?"
"He knows about the wolves." I was very unsure of myself. It was like recounting a dream
I had all but forgotten. "He knows I killed the wolves back home. He knows the cloak I wear
is lined with their fur."
"What are you talking about? You mean you've spoken to him?"
"No, that's just it," I said. This was so confusing to me, so vague. I felt that swimming
sensation again. "That's what I'm trying to tell you. I've never spoken to him, never been near
him. But he knows."
"Ah, Lestat," he said. He sat back on the bench. He was smiling at me in the most
endearing way. "Next you'll be seeing ghosts. You have the strongest imagination of anyone
I've ever known."
"There are no ghosts," I answered softly. I scowled at our little fire. I laid a few more
lumps of coal on it.
All the humor went out of Nicolas.
"How in the hell could he know about the wolves? And how could you..."
"I told you already, I don't know." I said. I sat thinking and not saying anything, disgusted,
maybe, at how ridiculous it all seemed.
And then as we remained silent together, and the fire was the only sound or movement in
the room, the name Wolfkiller came to me very distinctly as if someone had spoken it.
But nobody had.
I looked at Nicks, painfully aware that his lips had never moved, and I think all the blood
drained from my face. I felt not the dread of death as I had on so many other nights, but an
emotion that was really alien to me: fear.
I was still sitting there, too unsure of myself to say anything, when Nicolas kissed me.
"Let's go to bed," he said softly.
Part II
The Legacy of Magnus
It must have been three o'clock in the morning; I'd heard the church bells in my sleep.
And like all sensible men in Paris, we had our door barred and our window locked. Not
good for a room with a coal fire, but the roof was a path to our window. And we were locked
in.
I was dreaming of the wolves. I was on the mountain and surrounded and I was swinging
the old medieval flail. Then the wolves were dead again, and the dream was better, only I had
all those miles to walk in the snow. The horse screamed in the snow. My mare turned into a
loathsome insect half smashed on the stone floor.
A voice said "Wolfkiller" long and low, a whisper that was like a summons and a tribute at
the same time.
I opened my eyes. Or I thought I did. And there was someone standing in the room. A tall,
bent figure with its back to the little hearth. Embers still glowed on the hearth. The light
moved upwards, etching the edges of the figure clearly, then dying out before it reached the
shoulders, the head. But I realized I was looking right at the white face I'd seen in the
audience at the theater, and my mind, opening, sharpening, realized the room was locked, that
Nicolas lay beside me, that this figure stood over our bed.
I heard Nicolas's breathing. I looked into the white face.
"Wolfkiller," came the voice again. But the lips hadn't moved, and the figure drew nearer
and I saw that the face was no mask. Black eyes, quick and calculating black eyes, and white
skin, and some appalling smell coming from it, like the smell of moldering clothes in a damp
room.
I think I rose up. Or perhaps I was lifted. Because in an instant I was standing on my feet.
The sleep was slipping off me like garments. I was backing up into the wall.
The figure had my red cloak in its hands. Desperately I thought of my sword, my muskets.
They were under the bed on the floor. And the thing thrust the red cloak towards me and then,
through the fur-lined velvet, I felt its hand close on the lapel of my coat.
I was torn forward. I was drawn off my feet across the room. I shouted for Nicolas. I
screamed, "Nicki, Nicki!" as loud as I could. I saw the partially opened window, and then
suddenly the glass burst into thousands of fragments and the wooden frame was broken out. I
was flying over the alleyway, six stories above the ground.
I screamed. I kicked at this thing that was carrying me. Caught up in the red cloak, I
twisted, trying to get loose.
But we were flying over the rooftop, and now going up the straight surface of a brick wall!
I was dangling in the arm of the creature, and then very suddenly on the surface of a high
place, I was thrown down.
I lay for a moment seeing Paris spread out before me in a great circle-the white snow, and
chimney pots and church belfries, and the lowering sky. And then I rose up, stumbling over
the fur-lined cloak, and I started to run. I ran to the edge of the roof and looked down.
Nothing but a sheer drop of hundreds of feet, and then to another edge and it was exactly the
same. I almost fell!
I turned desperate, panting. We were on the top of some square tower, no more than fifty
feet across! And I could see nothing higher in any direction. And the figure stood staring at
me, and I heard come out of it a low rasping laughter just like the whisper before.
"Wolfkiller," it said again.
"Damn you!" I shouted. "Who the hell are you!" And in a rage I flew at it with my fists.
It didn't move. I struck it as if I were striking the brick wall. I veritably bounced off it,
losing my footing in the snow and scrambling up and attacking it again.
Its laughter grew louder and louder, and deliberately mocking, but with a strong
undercurrent of pleasure that was even more maddening than the mockery. I ran to the edge
of the tower and then fumed on the creature again.
"What do you want with me!" I demanded. "Who are you!" And when it gave nothing but
this maddening laughing, I went for it again. But this time I went for the face and the neck,
and I made my hands like claws to do it, and I pulled off the hood and saw the creature's
black hair and the full shape of its human-looking head. Soft skin. Yet it was as immovable
as before.
It backed up a little, raising its arms to play with me, to push me back and forth as a man
would push a little child. Too fast for my eyes, it moved its face away from me, fuming to
one side and then the other, and all of these movements with seeming effortlessness, as I
frantically tried to hurt it and could feel nothing but that soft white skin sliding under my
fingers and maybe once or twice its fine black hair.
"Brave strong little Wolfkiller," it said to me now in a rounder, deeper voice.
I stopped, panting and covered with sweat, staring at it and seeing the details of its face.
The deep lines I had only glimpsed in the theater, its mouth drawn up in a jester's smile.
"Oh, God help me; help me..." I said as I backed away. It seemed impossible that such a
face should move, show expression, and gaze with such affection on me as it did. "God!"
"What god is that, Wolfkiller?" it asked.
I turned my back on it, and let out a terrible roar. I felt its hands close on my shoulders like
things forged of metal, and as I went into a last frenzy of struggling, it whipped me around so
that its eyes were sight before me, wide and dark, and the lips were closed yet still smiling,
and then it bent down and I felt the prick of its teeth on my neck.
Out of all the childhood tales, the old fables, the name came to me, like a drowned thing
shooting to the surface of black water and breaking free in the light.
"Vampire!" I gave one last frantic cry, shoving at the creature with all I had.
Then there was silence. Stillness.
I knew that we were still on the roof. I knew that I was being held in the thing's arms. Yet
it seemed we had risen, become weightless, were traveling through the darkness even more
easily than we had traveled before.
"Yes, yes," I wanted to say, "exactly."
And a great noise was echoing all around me, enveloping me, the sound of a deep gong
perhaps, being struck very slowly in perfect rhythm, its sound washing through me so that I
felt the most extraordinary pleasure through all my limbs.
My lips moved, but nothing came out of them; yet this didn't really matter. All the things I
had ever wanted to say were clear to me and that is what mattered, not that they be expressed.
And there was so much time, so much sweet time in which to say anything and do anything.
There was no urgency at all.
Rapture. I said the word, and it seemed clear to me, that one word, though I couldn't speak
or really move my lips. And I realized I was no longer breathing. Yet something was making
me breathe. It was breathing for me and the breaths came with the rhythm of the gong which
was nothing to do with my body, and I loved it, the rhythm, the way that it went on and on,
and I no longer had to breathe or speak or know anything.
My mother smiled at me. And I said, "I love you..." to her, and she said, "Yes, always
loved, always loved..." And I was sitting in the monastery library and I was twelve years old
and the monk said to me, "A great scholar," and I opened all the books and could read
everything, Latin, Greek, French. The illuminated letters were indescribably beautiful, and I
fumed around and faced the audience in Renaud's theater and saw all of them on their feet,
and a woman moved the painted fan from in front of her face, and it was Marie Antoinette.
She said "Wolfkiller," and Nicolas was running towards me, crying for me to come back. His
face was full of anguish. His hair was loose and his eyes were rimmed with blood. He tried to
catch me. I said, "Nicki, get away from me!" and I realized in agony, positive agony, that the
sound of the gong was fading away.
I cried out, I begged. Don't stop it, please, please. I don't want to . . . I don't . . . please.
"Lelio, the Wolfkiller," said the thing, and it was holding me in its arms and I was crying
because the spell was breaking.
"Don't, don't."
I was heavy all over, my body had come back to me with its aches and its pains and my
own choking cries, and I was being lifted, thrown upwards, until I fell over the creature's
shoulder and I felt its arm around my knees.
I wanted to say God protect me, I wanted to say it with every particle of me but I couldn't
say it, and there was the alleyway below me again, that drop of hundreds of feet, and the
whole of Paris tilted at an appalling angle, and there was the snow and the searing wind.
2
I was awake and I was very thirsty.
I wanted a great deal of very cold white wine, the way it is when you bring it up out of the
cellar in autumn. I wanted something fresh and sweet to eat, like a ripe apple.
It did occur to me that I had lost my reason, though I couldn't have said why.
I opened my eyes and knew it was early evening. The light might have been morning light,
but too much time had passed for that. It was evening.
And through a wide, heavily barred stone window I saw hills and woods, blanketed with
snow, and the vast tiny collection of rooftops and towers that made up the city far away. I
hadn't seen it like this since the day I came in the post carriage. I closed my eyes and the
vision of it remained as if I'd never opened my eyes at all.
But it was no vision. It was there. And the room was warm in spite of the window. There
had been a fire in the room, I could smell it, but the fire had gone out.
I tried to reason. But I couldn't stop thinking about cold white wine, and apples in the
basket. I could see the apples. I felt myself drop down out of the branches of the tree, and I
smelled all around me the freshly cut grass.
The sunlight was blinding on the green fields. It shone on Nicolas's brown hair, and on the
deep lacquer of the violin. The music climbed up to the soft, rolling clouds. And against the
sky I saw the battlements of my father's house.
Battlements.
I opened my eyes again.
And I knew I was lying in a high tower room several miles from Paris.
And just in front of me, on a crude little wooden table, was a bottle of cold white wine,
precisely as I had dreamed it.
For a long time I looked at it, looked at the frost of droplets covering it, and I could not
believe it possible to reach for it and drink.
Never had I known the thirst I was suffering now. My whole body thirsted. And I was so
weak. And I was getting a little cold.
The room moved when I moved. The sky gleamed in the window.
And when at last I did reach for the bottle and pull the cork from it and smell the tart,
delicious aroma, I drank and drank without stopping, not caring what would happen to me, or
where I was, or why the bottle had been set here.
My head swung forward. The bottle was almost empty and the faraway city was vanishing
in the black sky, leaving a little sea of lights behind it.
I put my hands to my head.
The bed on which I'd been sleeping was no more than stone with straw strewn upon it, and
it was coming to me slowly that I might be in some sort of jail.
But the wine. It had been too good for a jail. Who would give a prisoner wine like that,
unless of course the prisoner was to be executed.
And another aroma came to me, rich and overpowering and so delicious that it made me
moan. I looked about, or I should say, I tried to look about because I was almost too weak to
move. But the source of this aroma was near to me, and it was a large bowl of beef broth. The
broth was thick with bits of meat, and I could see the steam rising from it. It was still hot.
I grabbed it in both hands immediately and I drank it as thoughtlessly and greedily as I'd
chunk the wine.
It was so satisfying it was as if I'd never known any food like it, that rich boiled-down
essence of the meat, and when the bowl was empty I fell back, full, almost sick, on the straw.
It seemed something moved in the darkness near me. But I was not sure. I heard the chink
of glass.
"More wine," said a voice to me, and I knew the voice.
Gradually, I began remembering everything. Scaling the walls, the small square rooftop,
that smiling white face.
For one moment, I thought, No, quite impossible, it must have been a nightmare. But this
just wasn't so. It had happened, and I remembered the rapture suddenly, the sound of the
gong, and I felt myself grow dizzy as though I were losing consciousness again.
I stopped it. I wouldn't let it happen. And fear crept over me so that I didn't dare to move.
"More wine," said the voice again.
Turning my head slightly I saw a new bottle, corked, but ready for me, outlined against the
window's luminous glow.
I felt the thirst again, and this time it was heightened by the salt of the broth. I wiped my
lips and then I reached for the bottle and again I drank.
I fell back against the stone wall, and I struggled to look clearly through the darkness, half
afraid of what I knew I would see.
Of course I was very drunk now.
I saw the window, the city. I saw the little table. And as my eyes moved slowly over the
dusky corners of the room, I saw him there.
He no longer wore his black hooded cape, and he didn't sit or stand as a man might.
Rather he leaned to rest, it seemed, upon the thick stone frame of the window, one knee
bent a little towards it, the other long spindly leg sprawled out to the other side. His arms
appeared to hang at his sides.
And the whole impression was of something limp and lifeless, and yet his face was as
animated as it had been the night before. Huge black eyes seeming to stretch the white flesh
in deep folds, the nose long and thin, and the mouth the jester's smile. There were the fang
teeth, just touching the colorless lip, and the hair, a gleaming mass of black and silver
growing up high from the white forehead, and flowing down over his shoulders and his arms.
I think that he laughed.
I was beyond terror. I could not even scream.
I had dropped the wine. The glass bottle was rolling on the floor. And as I tried to move
forward, to gather my senses and make my body more than something drunken and sluggish,
his thin, gangly limbs found animation ail at once.
He advanced on me.
I didn't cry out. I gave a low roar of angry terror and scrambled up off the bed, tripping
over the small table and running from him as fast as I could.
But he caught me in long white fingers that were as powerful and as cold as they had been
the night before.
"Let me go, damn you, damn you, damn you!" I was stammering. My reason told me to
plead, and I tried. "I'll just go away, please. Let me out of here. You have to. Let me go."
His gaunt face loomed over me, his lips drawn up sharply into his white cheeks, and he
laughed a low riotous laugh that seemed endless. I struggled, pushing at him uselessly,
pleading with him again, stammering nonsense and apologies, and then I cried, "God help
me!" He clapped one of those monstrous hands over my mouth.
"No more of that in my presence, Wolfkiller, or I'll feed you to the wolves of hell," he said
with a little sneer. "Hmmmm? Answer me. Hmmmm?"
I nodded and he loosened his grip.
His voice had had a momentary calming effect. He sounded capable of reason when he
spoke. He sounded almost sophisticated.
He lifted his hands and stroked my head as I cringed.
"Sunlight in the hair," he whispered, "and the blue sky fixed forever in your eyes." He
seemed almost meditative as he looked at me. His breath had no smell whatsoever, nor did
his body, it seemed. The smell of mold was coming from his clothes.
I didn't dare to move, though he was not holding me. I stared at his garments.
A ruined silk shirt with bag sleeves and smocking at the neck of it. And worsted leggings
and short ragged pantaloons.
In sum he was dressed as men had been centuries before. I had seen such clothes in
tapestries in my home, in the paintings of Caravaggio and La Tour that hung in my mother's
rooms.
"You're perfect, my Lelio, my Wolfkiller," he said to me, his long mouth opening wide so
that again I saw the small white fangs. They were the only teeth he possessed.
I shuddered. I felt myself dropping to the floor.
But he picked me up easily with one arm and laid me down gently on the bed.
In my mind I was praying fiercely, God help me, the Virgin Mary help me, help me, help
me, as I peered up into his face.
What was it I was seeing? What had I seen the night before? The mask of old age, this
grinning thing cut deeply with the marks of time and yet frozen, it seemed, and hard as his
hands. He wasn't a living thing. He was a monster. A vampire was what he was, a bloodsucking
corpse from the grave gifted with intellect!
And his limbs, why did they so horrify me?. He looked like a human, but he didn't move
like a human. It didn't seem to matter to him whether he walked or crawled, bent over or
knelt. It filled me with loathing. Yet he fascinated me. I had to admit it. He fascinated me.
But I was in too much danger to allow such a strange state of mind.
He gave a deep laugh now, his knees wide apart, his fingers resting on my cheek as he
made a great arc over me.
"Yeeeees, lovely one, I'm hard to look at!" he said. His voice was still a whisper and he
spoke in long gasps. "I was old when I was made. And you're perfect, my Lelio, my blueeyed
young one, more beautiful even without the lights of the stage."
The long white hand played with my hair again, lifting up the strands and letting them drop
as he sighed.
"Don't weep, Wolfkiller," he said. "You're chosen, and your tawdry little triumphs in the
House of Thesbians will be nothing once this night comes to a close."
Again came that low riot of laughter.
There was no doubt in my mind, at least at this moment, that he was from the devil, that
God and the devil existed, that beyond the isolation I'd known only hours ago lay this vast
realm of dark beings and hideous meanings and I had been swallowed into it somehow.
It occurred to me quite clearly I was being punished for my life, and yet that seemed
absurd. Millions believed as I believed the world over. Why the hell was this happening to
me? And a grim possibility started irresistibly to take shape, that the world was no more
meaningful than before, and this was but another horror...
"In God's name, get away!" I shouted. I had to believe in God now. I had to. That was
absolutely the only hope. I went to make the Sign of the Cross.
For one moment he stared at me, his eyes wide with rage. And then he remained still.
He watched me make the Sign of the Cross. He listened to me call upon God again and
again.
He only smiled, making his face a perfect mask of comedy from the proscenium arch.
And I went into a spasm of crying like a child. "Then the devil reigns in heaven and heaven
is hell," I said to him. "Oh, God, don't desert me. . ." I called on all the saints I had ever for a
little while loved.
He struck me hard across the face. I fell to one side and almost slipped from the bed to the
floor. The room went round. The sour taste of the wine rose in my mouth.
And I felt his fingers again on my neck.
"Yes, fight, Wolfkiller," he said. "Don't go into hell without a battle. Mock God."
"I don't mock!" I protested.
Once again he pulled me to himself.
And I fought him harder than I had ever fought anyone or anything in my existence, even
the wolves. I beat on him, kicked him, tore at his hair. But I might as well have fought the
animated gargoyles from a cathedral, he was that powerful.
He only smiled.
Then all the expression went out of his face. It seemed to become very long. The cheeks
were hollow, the eyes wide and almost wondering, and he opened his mouth. The lower lip
contracted. I saw the fangs.
"Damn you, damn you, damn you!" I was roaring and bellowing. And he drew closer and
the teeth went through my flesh.
Not this time, I was raging, not this time. I will not feel it. I will resist. I will fight for my
soul this time.
But it was happening again.
The sweetness and the softness and the world far away, and even he in his ugliness was
curiously outside of me, like an insect pressed against a glass who causes no loathing in us
because he cannot touch us, and the sound of the gong, and the exquisite pleasure, and then I
was altogether lost. I was incorporeal and the pleasure was incorporeal. I was nothing but
pleasure. And I slipped into a web of radiant dreams.
A catacomb I saw, a rank place. And a white vampire creature waking in a shallow grave.
Bound in heavy chains he was, the vampire; and over him bent this monster who had
abducted me, and I knew that his name was Magnus, and that he was mortal still in this
dream, a great and powerful alchemist. And he had unearthed and bound this slumbering
vampire right before the crucial hour of dusk.
And now as the light died out of the heavens, Magnus drank from his helpless immortal
prisoner the magical and accursed blood that would make him one of the living dead.
Treachery it was, the theft of immortality. A dark Prometheus stealing a luminescent fire.
Laughter in the darkness. Laughter echoing in the catacomb. Echoing as if down the
centuries. And the stench of the grave. And the ecstasy, absolutely fathomless, and
irresistible, and then drawing to a finish.
I was crying. I lay on the straw and I said:
"Please, don't stop it. . ."
Magnus was no longer holding me and my breathing was once again my own, and the
dreams were dissolved. I fell down and down as the nightful of stars slid upwards, jewels
affixed to a dark purple veil. "Clever that. I had thought the sky was...real."
The cold winter air was moving just a little in this room. I felt the tears on my face. I was
consumed with thirst!
And far, far away from me, Magnus stood looking down at me, his hands dangling low
beside his thin legs.
I tried to move. I was craving. My whole body was thirsty.
"You're dying, Wolfkiller," he said. "The light's going out of your blue eyes as if all the
summer days are gone..."
"No, please..." This thirst was unbearable. My mouth was open, gaping, my back arched.
And it was here at last, the final horror, death itself, like this.
"Ask for it, child," he said, his face no longer the grinning mask, but - utterly transfigured
with compassion. He looked almost human, almost naturally old. "Ask and you shall
receive," he said.
I saw water rushing down all the mountain streams of my childhood. "Help me. Please."
"I shall give you the water of all waters," he said in my ear, and it seemed he wasn't white
at all. He was just an old man, sitting there beside me. His face was human, and almost sad.
But as I watched his smile and his gray eyebrows rise in wonder, I knew it wasn't true. He
wasn't human. He was that same ancient monster only he was filled with my blood!
"The wine of all wines," he breathed. "This is my Body, this is my Blood." And then his
arms surrounded me. They drew me to him and I felt a great warmth emanating from him,
and he seemed to be filled not with blood but with love for me.
"Ask for it, Wolfkiller, and you will live forever," he said, but his voice sounded weary and
spiritless, and there was something distant and tragic in his gaze.
I felt my head turn to the side, my body a heavy and damp thing that I couldn't control. I
will not ask, I will die without asking, and then the great despair I feared so much lay before
me, the emptiness that was death, and still I said No. In pure horror I said No. I will not bow
down to it, the chaos and the horror. I said No.
"Life everlasting," he whispered.
My head fell on his shoulder.
"Stubborn Wolfkiller." His lips touched me, warm, odorless breath on my neck.
"Not stubborn," I whispered. My voice was so weak I wondered if he could hear me.
"Brave. Not stubborn." It seemed pointless not to say it. What was vanity now? What was
anything at all? And such a trivial word was stubborn, so cruel . . .
He lifted my face, and holding me with his right hand, he lifted his left hand and gashed his
own throat with his nails.
My body bent double in a convulsion of terror, but he pressed my face to the wound, as he
said: "Drink."
I heard my scream, deafening in my own ears. And the blood that was flowing out of the
wound touched my parched and cracking lips.
The thirst seemed to hiss aloud. My tongue licked at the blood. And a great whiplash of
sensation caught me. And my mouth opened and locked itself to the wound. I drew with all
my power upon the great fount that I knew would satisfy my thirst as it had never been
satisfied before.
Blood and blood and blood. And it was not merely the dry hissing coil of the thirst that was
quenched and dissolved, it was all my craving, all the want and misery and hunger that I had
ever known.
My mouth widened, pressed harder to him. I felt the blood coursing down the length of my
throat. I felt his head against me. I felt the tight enclosure of his arms.
I was against him and I could feel his sinews, his bones, the very contour of his hands. I
knew his body. And yet there was this numbness creeping through me and a rapturous
tingling as each sensation penetrated the numbness, and was amplified in the penetration so
that it became fuller, keener, and I could almost see what I felt.
But the supreme part of it remained the sweet, luscious blood filling me, as I drank and
drank.
More of it, more, this was all I could think, if I thought at all, and for all its thick
substance, it was like light passing into me, so brilliant did it seem to the mind, so blinding,
that red stream, and all the desperate desires of my life were a thousand fold fed.
But his body, the scaffolding to which I clung, was weakening beneath me. I could hear his
breath in feeble gasps. Yet he didn't make me stop.
Love you, I wanted to say, Magnus, my unearthly master, ghastly thing that you are, love
you, love you, this was what I had always so wanted, wanted, and could never have, this, and
you've given it to me!
I felt I would die if it went on, and on it did go, and I did not die.
But quite suddenly I felt his gentle loving hands caressing my shoulders and with his
incalculable strength, he forced me backwards.
I let out a long mournful cry. Its misery alarmed me. But he was pulling me to my feet. He
still held me in his arms.
He brought me to the window, and I stood looking out, with my hands out to the stone on
either side. I was shaking and the blood in me pulsed in all my veins. I leaned my forehead
against the iron bars.
Far, far below lay the dark cusp of a hill, overgrown with trees that appeared to shimmer in
the faint light of the stars.
And beyond, the city with its wilderness of little lights sunk not in darkness but in a soft
violet mist. The snow everywhere was luminescent, melting. Rooftops, towers, walls, all
were myriad facets of lavender, mauve, rose.
This was the sprawling metropolis.
And as I narrowed my eyes, I saw a million windows like so many projections of beams of
light, and then as if this were not enough, in the very depths I saw the unmistakable
movement of the people. Tiny mortals on tiny streets, heads and hands touching in the
shadows, a lone man, no more than a speck ascending a windblown belfry. A million souls on
the tessellated surface of the night, and coming soft on the air a dim mingling of countless
human voices. Cries, songs, the faintest wisps of music, the muted throb of bells.
I moaned. The breeze seemed to lift my hair and I heard my own voice as I had never
heard it before crying.
The city dimmed. I let it go, its swarming millions lost again in the vast and wondrous play
of lilac shadow and fading light.
"Oh, what have you done, what is this that you've given to me!" I whispered.
And it seemed my words did not stop one after another, rather they ran together until all of
my crying was one immense and coherent sound that perfectly amplified my horror and my
joy.
If there was a God, he did not matter now. He was part of some dull and dreary realm
whose secrets had long ago been plundered, whose lights had long ago gone out. This was the
pulsing center of life itself round which all true complexity revolved. Ah, the allure of that
complexity, the sense of being there . . .
Behind me the scratch of the monster's feet came on the stones.
And when I turned I saw him white and bled dry and like a great husk of himself. His eyes
were stained with blood-red tears and he reached out to me as if in pain.
I gathered him to my chest. I felt such love for him as I had never known before.
"Ah, don't you see?" came the ghastly voice with its long words, whispers without end,
"My heir chosen to take the Dark Gift from me with more fiber and courage than ten mortal
men, what a Child of Darkness you are to be."
I kissed his eyelids. I gathered his soft black hair in my hands. He was no ghastly thing to
me now but merely that which was strange and white, and full of some deeper lesson perhaps
than the sighing trees below or the shimmering city calling me over the miles.
His sunken cheeks, his long throat, the thin legs . . . these were but the natural parts of him.
"No, fledgling," he sighed. "Save your kisses for the world. My time has come and you
owe me but one obeisance only. Follow me now."
3
Down a winding stairs he drew me. And every thing I beheld absorbed me. The rough-cut
stones seemed to give forth their own light, and even the rats shooting past in the dark had a
curious beauty.
Then he unlocked a thick iron-studded wooden door and, giving over his heavy key ring to
me, led me into a large and barren room.
"You are now my heir, as I told you," he said. "You'll take possession of this house and all
my treasure. But you'll do as I say first."
The barred windows gave a limitless view of the moonlit clouds, and I saw the soft
shimmering city again as if it were spreading its arms:
"Ah, later you may drink your fill of all you see," he said. He turned me towards him as he
stood before a huge heap of wood that lay in the center of the floor.
"Listen carefully," he said. "For I'm about to leave you." He gestured to the wood
offhandedly. "And there are things you must know. You're immortal now. And your nature
shall lead you soon enough to your first human victim. Be swift and show no mercy. But stop
your feasting, no matter how delicious, before the victim's heart ceases to beat."
"In years to come, you'll be strong enough to feel that great moment, but for the present
pass the cup to time just before it's empty. Or you may pay heavily for your pride."
"But why are you leaving me!" I asked desperately. I clung to him. Victims, mercy,
feasting . . . I felt myself bombarded by these words as if I were being physically beaten.
He pulled away so easily that my hands were hurt by his movement, and I wound up
staring at them, marveling at the strange quality of the pain. It wasn't like mortal pain.
He stopped, however, and pointed to the stones of the wall opposite. I could see that one
very large stone had been dislodged and lay a foot from the unbroken surface around it.
"Grasp that stone," he said, "and pull it out of the wall."
"But I can't," I said. "It must weigh-"
"Pull it out!" He pointed with one of his long bony fingers and grimaced so that I tried to
do it as he said.
To my pure astonishment I was able to move the stone easily, and I saw beyond it a dark
opening just large enough for a man to enter if he crawled on his face.
He gave a dry cackling laugh and nodded his head.
"There, my son, is the passageway that leads to my treasure," he said. "Do with my
treasure as you like, and with all my earthly property. But for now, I must have my vows."
And again astonishing me, he snatched up two twigs from the wood and rubbed them
together so fiercely they were soon burning with bright small flames.
This he tossed at the heap, and the pitch in it caused the fire to leap up at once, throwing an
immense light over the curved ceiling and the stone walls.
I gasped and stepped back. The riot of yellow and orange color enchanted and frightened
me, and the heat, though I felt it, did not cause me a sensation I understood. There was no
natural alarm that I should be burned by it. Rather the warmth was exquisite and I realized for
the first time how cold I had been. The cold was an icing on me and the fire melted it and I
almost moaned.
He laughed again, that hollow, gasping laugh, and started to dance about in the light, his
thin legs snaking him look like a skeleton dancing, with the white face of a man. He crooked
his arms over his head, bent his torso and his knees, and turned round and round as he circled
the fire.
"Mon Dieu!" I whispered. I was reeling. Horrifying it might have been only an hour ago to
see him dancing like this, but now in the flickering glare he was a spectacle that drew me
after it step by step. The light exploded on his satin rags, the pantaloons he wore, the tattered
shirt.
"But you can't leave me!" I pleaded, trying to keep my thoughts clear, trying to realize
what he had been saying. My voice was monstrous in my ears. I tried to make it lower, softer,
more like it should have been. "Where will you go!"
He gave his loudest laugh then, slapping his thigh and dancing faster and farther away
from me, his hands out as if to embrace the fire.
The thickest logs were only now catching. The room for all its size was like a great clay
oven, smoke pouring out its windows.
"Not the fire." I flew backwards, flattening myself against the wall. "You can't go into the
fire!"
Fear was overwhelming me, as every sight and sound had overwhelmed me. It was like
every sensation I had known so far. I couldn't resist it or deny it. I was half whimpering and
half screaming.
"Oh, yes I can," he laughed. "Yes, I can!" He threw back his head and let his laughter
stretch into howls. "But from you, fledgling," he said, stopping before me with his finger out
again, "promises now. Come, a little mortal honor, my brave Wolfkiller, or though it will
cleave my heart in two, I shall throw you into the fire and claim for myself another offspring.
Answer me!"
I tried to speak. I nodded my head.
In the raging light I could see my hands had become white. And I felt a stab of pain in my
lower lip that almost made me cry out.
My eyeteeth had become fangs already! I felt them and looked at him in panic, but he was
leering at me as if he enjoyed my terror.
"Now, after I am burned up," he said, snatching my wrist, "and the fire is out, you must
scatter the ashes. Hear me, little one. Scatter the ashes. Or else I might return, and in what
shape that would be, I dare not contemplate. But mark my words, if you allow me to come
back, more hideous than I am now, I shall hunt you down and burn you till you are scarred
the same as I, do you hear me?"
I still couldn't bring myself to answer. This was not fear. It was hell. I could feel my teeth
growing and my body tingling all over. Frantically, I nodded my head.
"Ah, yes." He smiled, nodding too, the fire licking the ceiling behind him, the light leaking
all about the edges of his face. "It's only mercy I ask, that I go now to find hell, if there is a
hell, or sweet oblivion which surely I do not deserve. If there is a Prince of Darkness, then I
shall set eyes upon him at last. I shall spit in his face.
"So scatter what is burned, as I command you, and when that is done, take yourself to my
lair through that low passage, being most careful to replace the stone behind you as you enter
there. Within you will find my coffin. And in that box or the like of it, you must seal yourself
by day or the sun's light shall bum you to a cinder. Mark my words, nothing on earth can end
your life save the sun, or a blaze such as you see before you, and even then, only, and I say,
only if your ashes are scattered when it is done."
I turned my face away from him and away from the flames. I had begun to cry and the only
thing that kept me from sobbing was the hand I clapped to my mouth.
But he pulled me about the edge of the fire until we stood before the loose stone, his finger
pointing at it again.
"Please stay with me, please," I begged him. "Only a little while, only one night, I beg
you!" Again the volume of my voice terrified me. It wasn't my voice at all. I put my arms
around him. I held tight to him. His gaunt white face was inexplicably beautiful to me, his
black eyes filled with the strangest expression.
The light flickered on his hair, his eyes, and then again he made his mouth into a jester's
smile.
"Ah, greedy son," he said. "Is it not enough to be immortal with all the world your repast?
Good-bye, little one. Do as I say. Remember, the ashes! And beyond this stone the inner
chamber. Therein lies all that you will need to prosper."
I straggled to hold on to him. And he laughed low in my ear, marveling at my strength.
"Excellent, excellent," he whispered. "Now, live forever, beautiful Wolfkiller, with the gifts
which I have added to the lot."
He sent me stumbling away from him. And he leapt so high and so far into the very middle
of the flames he appeared to be flying.
I saw him descend. I saw the fire catch his garments.
It seemed his head became a torch, and then all of a sudden his eyes grew wide and his
mouth became a great black cavern in the radiance of the flames and his laughter rose in such
piercing volume, I covered my ears.
He appeared to jump up and down on all fours in the flames, and suddenly I realized that
my cries had drowned out his laughter.
The spindly black arms and legs rose and fell, rose and fell and then suddenly appeared to
wither. The fire shifted, roared. And in the heart of it I could see nothing now but the blaze
itself.
Yet still I cried. I fell down upon my knees, my hands over my eyes. But against my closed
lids I could still see it, one vast explosion of sparks after another until I pressed my forehead
on the stones.
4
For years it seemed I lay on the floor watching the fire burn itself out to charred timbers.
The room had cooled. The freezing air moved through the open window. And again and
again I wept. My own sobs reverberated in my ears until I felt I couldn't endure the sound of
them. And it was no comfort to know that all things were magnified in this state, even the
misery that I felt.
Now and then I prayed again. I begged for forgiveness, though forgiveness for what I
couldn't have said. I prayed to the Blessed Mother, to the saints. I murmured the Aves over
and over until they became a senseless chant.
And my tears were blood, and they left their stain on my hands when I wiped at my face.
Then I lay flat on the stones, murmuring not prayers any longer but those inarticulate pleas
we make to all that is powerful, all that is holy, all that may or may not exist by any and all
names. Do not leave me alone here. Do not abandon me. I am in the witches' place. It's the
witches' place. Do not let me fall even farther than I have already fallen this night. Do not let
it happen . . . Lestat, wake up.
But Magnus's words came back to me, over and over: To find hell, if there is a hell . . . If
there is a Prince of Darkness...
Finally I rose on my hands and knees. I felt light-headed and mad, and almost giddy. I
looked at the fire and saw that I might still bring it back to a roaring blaze and throw myself
into it.
But even as I forced myself to imagine the agony of this, I knew that I had no intention of
doing it.
After all, why should I do it? What had I done to deserve the witches' fate? I didn't want to
be in hell, even for a moment.
I sure as hell wasn't going there just to spit in the face of the Prince of Darkness, whoever
he might be!
On the contrary, if I was a damned thing, then let the son of a bitch come for me! Let him
tell me why I was meant to suffer. I would truly like to know.
As for oblivion, well, we can wait a little while for that. We can think this over for a little
while . . . at least.
An alien calm crept slowly over me. I was dark, full of bitterness and growing fascination.
I wasn't human anymore.
And as I crouched there thinking about it, and looking at the dying embers, an immense
strength was gathering in me. Gradually my boyish sobs died away. And I commenced to
study the whiteness of my skin, the sharpness of the two evil little teeth, and the way that my
fingernails gleamed in the dark as though they'd been lacquered.
All the little familiar aches were gone out of my body. And the remaining warmth that
came from the smoking wood was good to me, as something laid over me or wrapped about
me.
Time passed; yet it did not pass.
Each change in the moving air was caressing. And when there came from the softly lighted
city beyond a chorus of dim church bells ringing the hour, they did not mark the passage of
mortal time. They were only the purest music, and I lay stunned, my mouth open, as I stared
at the passing clouds.
But in my chest I started to feel a new pain, very hot and mercurial.
It moved through my veins, tightened about my head, and then seemed to collect itself in
my bowels and belly. I narrowed my eyes. I cocked my head to one side. I realized I wasn't
afraid of this pain, rather I was feeling it as if I were listening to it.
And I saw the cause of it then. My waste was leaving me in a small torrent. I found myself
unable to control it. Yet as I watched the foulness stain my clothes, this didn't disgust me.
Rats creeping into the very room, approaching this filth on their tiny soundless feet, even
these did not disgust me.
These things couldn't touch me, even as they crawled over me to devour the waste.
In fact, I could imagine nothing in the dark, not even the slithering insects of the grave, that
could bring about revulsion in me. Let them crawl on my hands and face, it wouldn't matter
now.
I wasn't part of the world that cringed at such things. And with a smile, I realized that I was
of the dark ilk that makes others cringe. Slowly and with great pleasure, I laughed.
And yet my grief was not entirely gone from me. It lingered like an idea, and that idea had
a pure truth to it.
I am dead, I am a vampire. And things will die so that I may live; I will drink their blood
so that I may live. And I will never, never see Nicolas again, nor my mother, nor any of the
humans I have known and loved, nor any of my human family. I'll drink blood. And I'll live
forever. That is exactly what will be. And what will be is only beginning; it is just born! And
the labor that brought it forth was rapture such as I have never known.
I climbed to my feet. I felt myself light and powerful, and strangely numbed, and I went to
the dead fire, and walked through the burnt timbers.
There were no bones. It was as if the fiend had disintegrated. What ashes I could gather in
my hands I took to the window. And as the wind caught them, I whispered a farewell to
Magnus, wondering if he could yet hear me.
At last only charred logs were left and the soot that I wiped up with my hands and dusted
off into the darkness.
It was time now to examine the inner room.
5
The stone moved out easily enough, as I'd seen before, and it had a hook on the inside of it
by which I could pull it closed behind me.
But to get into the narrow dark passage I had to lie on my belly. And when I dropped down
on my knees and peered into it, I could see no visible light at the end. I didn't like the look of
it.
I knew that if I'd been mortal still, nothing could have induced me to crawl into a passage
like this.
But the old vampire had been plain enough in telling me the sun could destroy me as surely
as the fire. I had to get to the coffin. And I felt the fear coming back in a deluge.
I got down flat on the ground, and crawled as a lizard might into the passage. As I feared, I
could not really raise my head. And there was no room to turn and reach for the hook in the
stone. I had to slip my foot into the hook and crawl forward to pull the stone behind me.
Total darkness. With room to rise only a few inches on my elbows.
I gasped, and the fear welled and I almost went mad thinking about the fact that I couldn't
raise my head and finally I smacked it against the stone and lay still, whimpering.
But what was I to do? I must reach the coffin.
So telling myself to stop this whining, I commenced to crawl, faster and faster. My knees
scraped the stone. My hands sought crevices and cracks to pull me along. My neck ached
with the strain as I struggled not to try to lift my head again in panic.
And when my hand suddenly felt solid stone ahead, I pushed upon it with all my strength. I
felt it move as a pale light seeped in.
I scrambled out of the passage, and found myself standing in a small room.
The ceiling was low, curved, and the high window was narrow with the familiar heavy grid
of iron bars. But the sweet, violet light of the night poured in revealing a great fireplace cut in
the far wall, the wood ready for the torch, and beside it, beneath the window, an ancient stone
sarcophagus.
My red velvet fur-lined cape lay over the sarcophagus. And on a rude bench I glimpsed a
splendid suit of red velvet worked with gold, and much Italian lace, as well as red silk
breeches and white silk hose and red-heeled slippers.
I smoothed back my hair from my face and wiped the thin film of sweat from my upper lip
and my forehead. It was bloody, this sweat, and when I saw this on my hands, I felt a curious
excitement.
Ah, what am I, I thought, and what lies before me? For a long moment I looked at this
blood and then I licked my fingers. A lovely zinging pleasure passed through me. It was a
moment before I could collect myself sufficiently to approach the fireplace.
I lifted two sticks of kindling as the old vampire had done and, rubbing them very hard and
fast, saw them almost disappear as the flame shot up from them. There was no magic in this,
only skill. And as the fire warmed me, I took off my soiled clothes, and with my shirt wiped
every last trace of human waste away, and threw all this in the fire, before putting on the new
garments.
Iced, dazzling red. Not even Nicolas had had such clothes as these. They were clothes for
the Court at Versailles, with pearls and tiny rubies worked into their embroidery. The lace of
the shirt was Valenciennes, which I had seen on my mother's wedding gown.
I put the wolf cape over my shoulders. And though the white chill was gone from my
limbs, I felt like a creature carved from ice. My smile felt hard and glittering to me and
strangely slow as I allowed myself to feel and to see these garments.
In the blaze of the fire, I looked at the coffin. The effigy of an old man was carved upon its
heavy lid, and I realized immediately it was the likeness of Magnus.
But here he lay in tranquility, his jester's mouth sealed, his eyes staring mildly at the
ceiling, his hair a neat mane of deeply carved waves and ringlets.
Three centuries old was this thing surely. He lay with his hands folded on his chest, his
garments long robes, and from his sword that had been carved into the stone, someone had
broken out the hilt and part of the scabbard.
I stared at this for an interminable length of time, seeing that it had been carefully chipped
away with much effort.
Was it the shape of the cross that someone had sought to remove? I traced it over with my
finger. Nothing happened of course, any more than when I'd murmured all those prayers. And
squatting in the dust beside the coffin, I drew a cross there.
Again, nothing.
Then to the cross I added a few strokes to suggest the body of Christ, his arms, the crook of
his knees, his bowed head. I wrote "The Lord Jesus Christ," the only words I could write
well, save for my own name, and again nothing.
And still glancing back uneasily at the words and the little crucifix, I tried to lift the lid of
the coffin.
Even with this new strength, it was not easy. And no mortal man alone could have done it.
But what perplexed me was the extent of my difficulty. I did not have limitless strength.
And certainly I didn't have the strength of the old vampire. Maybe the strength of three men
was what I now possessed, or the strength of four; it was impossible to calculate.
It seemed pretty damned impressive to me at the moment.
I looked into the coffin. Nothing but a narrow place, full of shadows, where I couldn't
imagine myself lying. There were Latin words inscribed around the rim, and I couldn't read
them.
This tormented me. I wished the words weren't there, and my longing for Magnus, my
helplessness, threatened to close in on me. I hated him for leaving me! And it struck me with
full ironic force that I'd felt love for him before he'd leapt into the fire. I'd felt love for him
when I saw the red garments.
Do devils love each other? Do they walk arm in arm in hell saying, "Ah, you are my friend,
how I love you," things like that to each other? It was a rather detached intellectual question I
was asking, as I did not believe in hell. But it was a matter of a concept of evil, wasn't it? All
creatures in hell are supposed to hate one another, as all the saved hate the damned, without
reservation.
I'd known that all my life. It had terrified me as a child, the idea that I might go to heaven
and my mother might go to hell and that I should hate her. I couldn't hate her. And what if we
were in hell together?
Well, now I know, whether I believe in hell or not, that vampires can love each other, that
in being dedicated to evil, one does not cease to love. Or so it seemed for that brief instant.
But don't start crying again. I can't abide all this crying.
I turned my eyes to a large wooden chest that was partially hidden at the head of the coffin.
It wasn't locked. Its rotted wooden lid fell almost off the hinges wheat I opened it.
And though the old master had said he was leaving me his treasure, I was flabbergasted by
what I saw here. The chest was crammed with gems and gold and silver. There were
countless jeweled rings, diamond necklaces, ropes of pearls, plate and coins and hundreds
upon hundreds of miscellaneous valuables.
I ran my fingers lightly over the heap and then held up handfuls of it, gasping as the light
ignited the red of the rubies, the green of the emeralds. I saw refractions of color of which I'd
never dreamed, and wealth beyond any calculation. It was the fabled Caribbean pirates' chest,
the proverbial king's ransom.
And it was mine now.
More slowly I examined it. Scattered throughout were personal and perishable articles.
Satin masks rotting away from their trimming of gold, lace handkerchiefs and bits of cloth to
which were fixed pins and brooches. Here was a strip of leather harness hung with gold bells,
a moldering bit of lace slipped through a ring, snuffboxes by the dozens, lockets of velvet
ribbon.
Had Magnus taken all this from his victims?
I lifted up a jewel-encrusted sword, far too heavy for these times, and a worn slipper saved
perhaps for its rhinestone buckle.
Of course he had taken what he wanted. Yet he himself had worn rags, the tattered costume
of another age, and he lived here as a hermit might have lived in some earlier century. I
couldn't understand it.
But there were other objects scattered about in this treasure. Rosaries made up of gorgeous
gems, and they still had their crucifixes! I touched the small sacred images. I shook my head
and bit my lip, as if to say, How awful that he should have stolen these! But I also found it
very funny. And further proof that God had no power over me.
And as I was thinking about this, trying to decide if it was as fortuitous as it seemed for the
moment, I lifted from the treasure an exquisite pearl-handled mirror.
I looked into it almost unconsciously as one often glances in mirrors. And there I saw
myself as a man might expect, except that my skin was very white, as the old fiend's had been
white, and my eyes had been transformed from their usual blue to a mingling of violet and
cobalt that was softly iridescent. My hair had a high luminous sheen, and when I ran my
fingers back through it I felt a new and strange vitality there.
In fact, this was not Lestat in the mirror at all, but some replica of him made of other
substances! And the few lines time had given me by the age of twenty years were gone or
greatly simplified and just a little deeper than they had been.
I stared at my reflection. I became frantic to discover myself in it. I rubbed my face, even
rubbed the mirror and pressed my lips together to keep from crying.
Finally I closed my eyes and opened them again, and I smiled very gently at the creature.
He smiled back. That was Lestat, all right. And there seemed nothing in his face that was any
way malevolent. Well, not very malevolent, just the old mischief, the impulsiveness. He
could have been an angel, in fact, this creature, except that when his tears did rise, they were
red, and the entire image was tinted red because his vision was red. And he had these evil
little teeth that he could press into his lower lip when he smiled that made him look
absolutely terrifying. A good enough face with one thing horribly, horribly wrong with it!
But it suddenly occurred to me, I am looking at my own reflection! And hadn't it been said
enough that ghosts and spirits and those who have, lost their souls to hell have no reflections
in mirrors?
A lust to know all things about what I was came over me. A lust to know how I should
walk among mortal men. I wanted to walk in the streets of Paris, seeing with my new eyes all
the miracles of life that I'd ever glimpsed. I wanted to see the faces of the people, to see the
flowers in bloom, and the butterflies. To see Nicki, to hear Nicki play his music-no.
Forswear that. But there were a thousand forms of music, weren't there? And as I closed
my eyes I could almost hear the orchestra of the Opera, the arias rising in my ears. So sharp
the, recollection so clear.
But nothing would be ordinary now. Not joy or pain, or the simplest memory. All would
possess this magnificent luster, even grief for things that were forever lost.
I put down the mirror, and taking one of the old yellowed lace handkerchiefs from the
chest, I wiped my tears. I turned and sat down slowly before the fire. Delicious the warmth on
my face and hands.
A great sweet drowsiness came over me and as I closed my eyes again I felt myself
immersed suddenly in the strange dream of Magnus stealing the blood. A sense of
enchantment returned, of dizzying pleasure-Magnus holding me, connected to me, my blood
flowing into him. But I heard the chains scraping the floor of the old catacomb, I saw the
defenseless vampire thing in Magnus's arms. Something more to it... something important. A
meaning. About theft, treachery, about surrendering to no one, not God, not demon, and
never man.
I thought and thought about it, half awake, half dreaming again, and the maddest thought
came to me, that I would tell Nicki all about this, that as soon as I got home I would lay it all
out, the dream, the possible meaning and we would talk.
With an ugly shock, I opened my eyes. The human in me looked helplessly about this
chamber. He started to weep again and the newborn fiend was too young yet to rein him in.
The sobs came up like hiccups, and I put my hand over my mouth.
Magnus, why did you leave me? Magnus, what I am supposed to do, how do I go on?
I drew up my knees and rested my head on them, and slowly my head began to clear.
Well, it has been great fun pretending you will be this vampire creature, I thought, wearing
these splendid clothes, running your fingers through all that glorious lucre. But you can't live
as this! You can't feed on living beings! Even if you are a monster, you have a conscience in
you, natural to you . . . Good and Evil, good and evil. You cannot live without believing in-
You cannot abide the acts that- Tomorrow you will . . . you will . . . you will what?
You will drink blood, won't you?
The gold and the precious stones glowed like embers in the nearby chest, and beyond the
bars of the window, there rose against the gray clouds the violet shimmer of the distant city.
What is their blood like? Hot living blood, not monster blood. My tongue pushed at the roof
of my mouth, at my fangs.
Think on it, Wolfkiller.
I rose to my feet slowly. It was as if the will made it happen rather than the body, so easy
was it. And I picked up the iron key ring which I'd brought with me from the outer chamber
and I went to inspect the rest of my tower.
6
Empty chambers. Barred windows. The great endless sweep of the night above the
battlements. That is all I found aboveground.
But on the lower floor of the tower, just outside the door to the dungeon stairs, there was a
resin torch in the sconce, and a tinderbox in the niche beside it. Tracks in the dust. The lock
well oiled and easy to turn when I finally found the right key for it.
I shone the torch before me on a narrow screw stairway and started down, a little repelled
by a stench that rose from somewhere quite far below me.
Of course I knew that stench. It was common enough in every cemetery in Paris. In les
Innocents it was thick as noxious gas, and you had to live with it to shop the stalls there, deal
with the letter writers. It was the stench of decomposing bodies.
And though it sickened me, made me back up a few steps, it wasn't all that strong, and the
odor of the burning resin helped to subdue it.
I went on down. If there were dead mortals here, well, I couldn't run away from them.
But on the first level beneath the ground, I found no corpses. Only a vast cool burial
chamber with its rusted iron doors open to the stairs, and three giant stone sarcophagi in the
center of it. It was very like Magnus's cell above, only much larger. It had the same low
curved ceiling, the same crude and gaping fireplace.
And what could that mean, except that other vampires had once slept here? No one puts
fireplaces in burial vaults. At least not that I had ever known. And there were even stone
benches here. And the sarcophagi were like the one above, with great figures carved on them.
But years of dust overlay everything. And there were so many spider webs. Surely no
vampires dwelled here now. Quite impossible. Yet it was very strange. Where were those
who had lain in these coffins? Had they burnt themselves up like Magnus? Or were they still
existing somewhere?
I went in and opened the sarcophagi one by one. Nothing but dust inside. No evidence of
other vampires at all, no indication that any other vampires existed.
I went out and continued down the stairway, even though the smell of the decay grew
stronger and stronger. In fact, it very quickly became unbearable.
It was coming from behind a door that I could see below, and I had real difficulty in
making myself approach it. Of course as a mortal man I'd loathed this smell, but that was
nothing to the aversion I felt now. My new body wanted to run from it. I stopped, took a deep
breath, and forced myself towards the door, determined to see what the fiend had done here.
Well, the stench was nothing to the sight of it.
In a deep prison cell lay a heap of corpses in all states of decay, the bones and rotted flesh
crawling with worms and insects. Rats ran from the light of the torch, brushing past my legs
as they made for the stairs. And my nausea became a knot in my throat. The stench
suffocated me.
But I couldn't stop staring at these bodies. There was something important here, something
terribly important, to be realized. And it came to me suddenly that all these dead victims had
been men-their boots and ragged clothing gave evidence of that-and every single one of them
had yellow hair, very much like my own hair. The few who had features left appeared to be
young men, tall, slight of build. And the most recent occupant here-the wet and reeking
corpse that lay with its arms outstretched through the bars-so resembled me that he might
have been a brother.
In a daze, I moved forward until the tip of my boot touched his head. I lowered the torch,
my mouth opening as if to scream. The wet sticky eyes that swarmed with gnats were blue
eyes!
I stumbled backwards. A wild fear gripped me that the thing would move, grab hold of my
ankle. And I knew why it would. As I drew up against the wall, I tripped on a plate of rotted
food and a pitcher. The pitcher went over and broke, and out of it the curdled milk spilled like
vomit.
Pain circled my ribs. Blood came up like liquid fire into my mouth and it shot out of my
lips, splashing on the floor in front of me. I had to reach for the open door to steady myself.
But through the haze of nausea, I stared at the blood. I stared at the gorgeous crimson color
of it in the light of the torch. I watched the blood darken as it sank into the mortar between
the stones. The blood was alive and the sweet smell of it cut like a blade through the stench of
the dead. Spasms of thirst drove away the nausea. My back was arching. I was bending lower
and lower to the blood with astonishing elasticity.
And all the while, my thoughts raced: This young man had been alive in this cell; this
rotted food and milk were here either to nourish or torment him. He had died in the cell,
trapped with those corpses, knowing full well he would soon be one of them.
God, to suffer that! To suffer that! And how many others had known exactly the same fate,
young men with yellow hair, all of them.
I was down on my knees and bending over. I held the torch low with my left hand and my
head went all the way down to the blood, my tongue flashing out of my mouth so that I saw it
like the tongue of a lizard. It scraped at the blood on the floor. Shivers of ecstasy. Oh, too
lovely!
Was I doing this? Was I lapping up this blood not two inches from this dead body? Was
my heart heaving with every taste not two inches from this dead boy whom Magnus had
brought here as he brought me? This boy that Magnus had then condemned to death instead
of immortality?
The filthy cell flickered on and off like a flame as I licked up the blood. The dead man's
hair touched my forehead. His eye like a fractured crystal stared at me.
Why wasn't I locked in this cell? What test had I passed that I was not screaming now as I
shook the bars, the horror that I had foreseen in the village inn slowly closing in on me?
The blood tremors passed through my arms and legs. And the sound I heard-the gorgeous
sound, as enthralling as the crimson of the blood, the blue of the boy's eye, the glistening
wings of the gnat, the sliding opaline body of the worm, the blaze of the torch-was my own
raw and guttural screaming.
I dropped the torch and struggled backwards on my knees, crashing against the tin plate
and the broken pitcher. I climbed to my feet and ran up the stairway. And as I slammed shut
the dungeon door, my screams rose up and up to the very top of the tower.
I was lost in the sound as it bounced off the stones and came back at me. I couldn't stop,
couldn't close my mouth or cover it.
But through the barred entranceway and through a dozen narrow windows above I saw the
unmistakable light of morning coming. My screams died. The stones had begun to glow. The
light seeped around me like scalding steam, burning my eyelids.
I made no decision to run. I was simply doing it, running up and up to the inner chamber.
As I came out of the passage, the room was full of a dim purple fire. The jewels
overflowing the chest appeared to be moving. I was almost blind as I lifted the lid of the
sarcophagus.
Quickly, it fell into place above me. The pain in my face and hands died away, and I was
still and I was safe, and fear and sorrow melted into a cool and fathomless darkness.
7
It was thirst that awakened me.
And I knew at once where I was, and what I was, too.
There were no sweet mortal dreams of chilled white wine or the fresh green grass beneath
the apple trees in my father's orchard.
In the narrow darkness of the stone coffin, I felt of my fangs with my fingers and found
them dangerously long and keen as little knife blades.
And a mortal was in the tower, and though he hadn't reached the door of the outer chamber
I could hear his thoughts.
I heard his consternation when he discovered the door to the stairs unlocked. That had
never happened before. I heard his fear as he discovered the burnt timbers on the floor and
called out "Master." A servant was what he was, and a somewhat treacherous one at that.
It fascinated me, this soundless hearing of his mind, but something else was disturbing me.
It was his scent!
I lifted the stone lid of the sarcophagus and climbed out. The scent was faint, but it was
almost irresistible. It was the musky smell of the first whore in whose bed I had spent my
passion. It was the roasted venison after days and days of starvation in winter. It was new
wine, or fresh apples, or water roaring over a cliff's edge on a hot day when I reached out to
gulp it in handfuls.
Only it was immeasurably richer than that, this scent, and the appetite that wanted it was
infinitely keener and more simple.
I moved through the secret tunnel like a creature swimming through the darkness and,
pushing out the stone in the outer chamber, rose to my feet.
There stood the mortal, staring at me, his face pale with shock.
An old, withered man he was, and by some indefinable tangle of considerations in his
mind, I knew he was a stable master and a coachman. But the hearing of this was
maddeningly imprecise.
Then the immediate malice he felt towards me came like the heat of a stove. And there was
no misunderstanding that. His eyes raced over my face and form. The hatred boiled, crested.
It was he who had procured the fine clothes I wore. He who had tended the unfortunates in
the dungeon while they had lived. And why, he demanded in silent outrage, was I not there?
This made me love him very much, as you can imagine. I could have crushed him to death
in my bare hands for this.
"The master!" he said desperately. "Where is he? Master!"
But what did he think the master was? A sorcerer of some kind, that was what he thought.
And now I had the power. In sum, he didn't know anything that would be of use to me.
But as I comprehended all this, as I drank it up from his mind, quite against his will, I was
becoming entranced with the veins in his face and in his hands. And that smell was
intoxicating me.
I could feel the dim throbbing of his heart, and then I could taste his blood, just what it
would be like, and there came to me some full-blown sense of it, rich and hot as it filled me.
"The master's gone, burned in the fire," I murmured, hearing a strange monotone coming
from myself. I moved slowly towards him.
He glanced at the blackened floor. He looked up at the blackened ceiling. "No, this is a
lie," he said. He was outraged, and his anger pulsed like a light in my eye. I felt the bitterness
of his mind and its desperate reasoning.
Ah, but that living flesh could look like this! I was in the grip of remorseless appetite.
And he knew it. In some wild and unreasoning way, he sensed it; and throwing me one last
malevolent glance he ran for the stairway.
Immediately I caught him. In fact, I enjoyed catching him, so simple it was. One instant I
was willing myself to reach out and close the distance between us. The next I had him
helpless in my hands, holding him off the floor so that his feet swung free, straining to kick
me.
I held him as easily as a powerful man might hold a child, that was the proportion. His
mind was a jumble of frantic thoughts, and he seemed unable to decide upon any course to
save himself.
But the faint humming of these thoughts was being obliterated by the vision he presented
to me.
His eyes weren't the portals of his soul anymore. They were gelatinous orbs whose colors
tantalized me. And his body was nothing but a writhing morsel of hot flesh and blood, that I
must have or die without.
It horrified me that this food should be alive, that delicious blood should flow through
these struggling arms and fingers, and then it seemed perfect that it should. He was what he
was, and I was what I was, and I was going to feast upon him.
I pulled him to my lips. I tore the bulging artery in his neck. The blood hit the roof of my
mouth. I gave a little cry as I crushed him against me. It wasn't the burning fluid the master's
blood had been, not that lovely elixir I had drunk from the stones of the dungeon. No, that
had been light itself made liquid. Rather this was a thousand times more luscious, tasting of
the thick human heart that pumped it, the very essence of that hot, almost smoky scent.
I could feel my shoulders rising, my fingers biting deeper into his flesh, and almost a
humming sound rising out of me. No vision but that of his tiny gasping soul, but a swoon so
powerful that he himself, what he was, had no part in it.
It was with all my will that, before the final moment, I forced him away. How I wanted to
feel his heart stop. How I wanted to feel the beats slow and cease and know I possessed him.
But I didn't dare.
He slipped heavily from my arms, his limbs sprawling out on the stones, the whites of his
eyes showing beneath his half-closed eyelids.
And I found myself unable to turn away from his death, mutely fascinated by it. Not the
smallest detail must escape me. I heard his breath give out, I saw the body relax into death
without struggle.
The blood warmed me. I felt it beating in my veins. My face was hot against the palms of
my hands, and my vision had grown powerfully sharp. I felt strong beyond all imagining.
I picked up the corpse and dragged it down and down the winding steps of the tower, into
the stinking dungeon, and threw it to rot with the rest there.
8
It was time to go, time to test my powers.
I filled my purse and my pockets with as much money as they would comfortably hold,
and I buckled on a jeweled sword that was not too old-fashioned, and then went down,
locking the iron gate to the tower behind me.
The tower was obviously all that remained of a ruined house. But I picked up the scent of
horses on the wind-strong, very nice smell, perhaps the way an animal would pick up the
scent and I made my way silently around the back to a makeshift stable.
It contained not only a handsome old carriage, but four magnificent black mares. Perfectly
wonderful that they weren't afraid of me. I kissed their smooth flanks and their long soft
noses. In fact, I was so in love with them I could have spent hours just learning all I could of
them through my new senses. But I was eager for other things.
There was a human in the stable also, and I'd caught his scent too as soon as I entered. But
he was sound asleep, and when I roused him, I saw he was a dull-wilted boy who posed no
danger to me.
"I'm your master now," I said, as I gave him a gold coin, "but I won't be needing you
tonight, except to saddle a horse for me."
He understood well enough to tell me there was no saddle in the stable before he fell back
to dozing.
All right. I cut the long carriage reins from one of the bridles, put it on the most beautiful
of the mares myself, and rode out bareback.
I can't tell you what it was like, the burst of the horse under me, the chilling wind, and the
high arch of the night sky. My body was melded to animal. I was flying over the snow,
laughing aloud and now and then singing. I hit high notes I had never reached before, then
plunged into a lustrous baritone. Sometimes I was simply crying out in something like joy. It
had to be joy. But how could a monster feel joy?
I wanted to ride to Paris, of course. But I knew I wasn't ready. There was too much I didn't
know about my powers yet. And so I rode in the opposite direction, until I came to the
outskirts of a small village.
There were no humans about, and as I approached the little church, I felt a human rage and
impulsiveness breaking through my strange, translucent happiness.
I dismounted quickly and tried the sacristy door. Its lock gave and I walked through the
nave to the Communion rail.
I don't know what I felt at this moment. Maybe I wanted something to happen. I felt
murderous. And lightning did not strike. I stared at the red glare of the vigil lights on the
altar. I looked up at the figures frozen in the unilluminated blackness of the stained glass.
And in desperation, I went up over the Communion rail and put my hands on the
tabernacle itself. I broke open its tiny little doors, and I reached in and took out the jeweled
ciborium with its consecrated Hosts. No, there was no power here, nothing that I could feel or
see or know with any of my monstrous senses, nothing that responded to me. There were
wafers and gold and wax and light.
I bowed my head on the altar. I must have looked like the priest in the middle of mass.
Then I shut up everything in the tabernacle again. I closed it all up just fine, so nobody would
know a sacrilege had been committed.
And then I made my way down one side of the church and up the other, the lurid paintings
and statues captivating me. I realized I was seeing the process of the sculptor and the painter,
not merely the creative miracle. I was seeing the way the lacquer caught the light. I was
seeing little mistakes in perspective, flashes of unexpected expressiveness.
What will the great masters be to my eyes, I was thinking. I found myself staring at the
simplest designs painted in the plaster walls. Then I knelt down to look at the patterns in the
marble, until I realized I was stretched out, staring wideeyed at the floor under my nose.
This is getting out of hand, surely. I got up, shivering a little and crying a little, and looking
at the candles as if they were alive, and getting very sick of this.
Time to get out of this place and go into the village.
For two hours I was in the village, and for most of that time I was not seen or heard by
anyone.
I found it absurdly easy to jump over the garden walls, to spring from the earth to low
rooftops. I could leap from a height of three stories to the ground, and climb the side of a
building digging my nails and my toes into the mortar between the stones.
I peered in windows. I saw couples asleep in their ruffled beds, infants dozing in cradles,
old women sewing by feeble light.
And the houses looked like dollhouses to me in their completeness. Perfect collections of
toys with their dainty little wooden chairs and polished mantelpieces, mended curtains and
well-scrubbed floors.
I saw all this as one who had never been a part of life, gazing lovingly at the simplest
details. A starched white apron on its hook, worn boots on the hearth, a pitcher beside a bed.
And the people . . . oh, the people were marvels.
Of course I picked up their scent, but I was satisfied and it didn't make me miserable.
Rather I doted upon their pink skin and delicate limbs, the precision with which they moved,
the whole process of their lives as if I had never been one of them at all. That they had five
fingers on each hand seemed remarkable. They yawned, cried, shifted in sleep. I was
entranced with them.
And when they spoke, the thickest walls could not prevent me from hearing their words.
But the most beguiling aspect of my explorations was that I heard the thoughts of these
people, just as I had heard the evil servant whom I killed. Unhappiness, misery, expectation.
These were currents in the air, some weak, some frighteningly strong, some no more than a
glimmer gone before I knew the source.
But I could not, strictly speaking, read minds.
Most trivial thought was veiled from me, and when I lapsed into my own considerations,
even the strongest passions did not intrude. In sum, it was intense feeling that carried thought
to me and only when I wished to receive it, and there were some minds that even in the heat
of anger gave me nothing.
These discoveries jolted me and almost bruised me, as did the common beauty everywhere
I looked, the splendor in the ordinary. But I knew perfectly well there was an abyss behind it
into which I might quite suddenly and helplessly drop.
After all, I wasn't one of these warm and pulsing miracles of complication and innocence.
They were my victims.
Time to leave the village. I'd learned enough here. But just before I left, I performed one
final act of daring. I couldn't help myself. I just had to do it.
Pulling up the high collar of my red cloak, I went into the inn, sought a corner away from
the fire, and ordered a glass of wine. Everyone in the little place gave me the eye, but not
because they knew there was a supernatural being in their midst. They were merely glancing
at the richly dressed gentleman! And for twenty minutes I remained, testing it even further.
No one, not even the man who served me, detected anything! Of course I didn't touch the
wine. One whiff of it and I knew that my body could not abide it. But the point was, I could
fool mortals! I could move among them!
I was jubilant when I left the inn. As soon as I reached the woods, I started to run. And
then I was running so fast that the sky and the trees had become a blur. I was almost flying.
Then I stopped, leapt, danced about. I gathered up stones and threw them so far I could not
see them land. And when I saw a fallen tree limb, thick and full of sap, I picked it up and
broke it over my knee as if it were a twig.
I shouted, then sang at the top of my lungs again. I collapsed on the grass laughing.
And then I rose, tore off my cloak and my sword, and commenced to turn cartwheels. I
turned cartwheels just like the acrobats at Renaud's. And then I somersaulted perfectly. I did
it again, and this time backwards, and then forward, and then I turned double somersaults and
triple somersaults, and leapt straight up in the air some fifteen feet off the ground before
landing squarely on my feet, somewhat out of breath, and wanting to do these tricks some
more.
But the morning was coming.
Only the subtlest change in the air, the sky, but I knew it as if Hell's Bells were ringing.
Hell's Bells calling the vampire home to the sleep of death. Ah, the melting loveliness of the
sky, the loveliness of the vision of dim belfries. And an odd thought came to me, that in hell
the light of the fires would be so bright it would be like sunlight, and this would be the only
sunlight I would ever see again.
But what have I done? I thought. I didn't ask for this, I didn't give in. Even when Magnus
told me I was dying, I fought him, and yet I am hearing Hell's Bells now.
Well, who gives a damn?
When I reached the Churchyard, quite ready for the ride home, something distracted me.
I stood holding the rein of my horse and looking at the small field of graves and could not
quite figure what it was. Then again it came, and I knew. I felt a distinct presence in the
churchyard.
I stood so still I heard the blood thundering in my veins.
It wasn't human, this presence! It had no scent. And there were no human thoughts coming
from it. Rather it seemed veiled and defended and it knew I was here. It was watching me.
Could I be imagining this?
I stood listening, looking. A scattering of gray tombstones poked through the snow. And
far away stood a row of old crypts, larger, ornamented, but just as ruined as the stones.
It seemed the presence lingered somewhere near the crypts, and then I felt it distinctly as it
moved towards the enclosing trees.
"Who are you!" I demanded. I heard my voice like a knife. "Answer me!" I called out even
louder.
I felt a great tumult in it, this presence, and I was certain that it was moving away very
rapidly.
I dashed across the churchyard after it, and I could feel it receding. Yet I saw nothing in the
barren forest. And I realized I was stronger than it, and that it had been afraid of me!
Well, fancy that. Afraid of me.
And I had no idea whether or not it was corporeal, vampire the same as I was, or
something without a body.
"Well, one thing is sure," I said. "You're a coward!"
Tingling in the air. The forest seemed to breathe for an instant.
A sense of my own might came over me that had been brewing all along. I was in fear of
nothing. Not the church, not the dark, not the worms swarming over the corpses in my
dungeon. Not even this strange eerie force that had retreated into the forest, and seemed to be
near at hand again. Not even of men.
I was an extraordinary fiend! If I'd been sitting on the steps of hell with my elbows on my
knees and the devil had said, "Lestat, come, choose the form of the fiend you wish to be to
roam the earth," how could I have chosen a better fiend that what I was? And it seemed
suddenly that suffering was an idea I'd known in another existence and would never know
again.
I can't help but laugh now when I think of that first night, especially of that particular
moment.
9
The next night I went tearing into Paris with as much gold as I could carry. The sun had
just sunk beneath the horizon when I opened my eyes, and a clear azure light still emanated
from the sky as I mounted and rode off to the city.
I was starving.
And as luck would have it, I was attacked by a cutthroat before I ever reached the city
walls. He came thundering out of the woods, pistol blazing, and I actually saw the ball leave
the barrel of the gun and go past me as I leapt off my horse and went at him.
He was a powerful man, and I was astonished at how much I enjoyed his cursing and
struggling. The vicious servant I'd taken last night had been old. This was a hard young body.
Even the roughness of his badly shaven beard tantalized me, and I loved the strength in his
hands as he struck at me. But it was no sport. He froze as I sank my teeth into the artery, and
when the blood came it was pure voluptuousness. In fact, it was so exquisite that I forgot
completely about drawing away before the heart stopped.
We were on our knees in the snow together, and it was a wallop, the life going into me
with the blood. I couldn't move for a long moment. Hmmm, broke the rules already, I
thought. Am I supposed to die now? Doesn't look like that is going to happen. Just this rolling
delirium.
And the poor dead bastard in my arms who would have blown my face off with his pistol if
I had let him.
I kept staring at the darkening sky, at the great spangled mass of shadows ahead that was
Paris. And there was only this warmth after, and obviously increasing strength.
So far so good. I climbed to my feet and wiped my lips. Then I pitched the body as far as I
could across the unbroken snow. I was more powerful than ever.
And for a little while I stood there, feeling gluttonous and murderous, just wanting to kill
again so this ecstasy would go on forever. But I couldn't have drunk any more blood, and
gradually I grew calm and changed somewhat. A desolate feeling came over me. An
aloneness as though the thief had been a friend to me or kin to me and had deserted me. I
couldn't understand it, except that the drinking had been so intimate. His scent was on me
now, and I sort of liked it. But there he lay yards away on the crumpled crust of the snow,
hands and face looking gray under the rising moon.
Hell, the son of a bitch was going to kill me, wasn't he?
Within an hour I had found a capable attorney, name of Pierre Roget, at his home in the
Marais, an ambitious young man with a mind that was completely open to me. Greedy,
clever, conscientious. Exactly what I wanted. Not only could I read his thoughts when he
wasn't talking, but he believed everything I told him.
He was most eager to be a service to the husband of an heiress from Saint-Domingue. And
certainly he would put out all the candles, save one, if my eyes were still hurting from
tropical fever. As for my fortune in gems, he dealt with the most reputable jewelers. Bank
accounts and letters of exchange for my family in the Auvergne-yes, immediately.
This was easier than playing Lelio.
But I was having a hell of a time concentrating. Everything was a distraction-the smoky
flame of the candle on the brass inkstand, the gilded pattern of the Chinese wallpaper, and
Monsieur Roget's amazing little face, with its eyes glistening behind tiny octagonal
spectacles. His teeth kept making me think of clavier keys.
Ordinary objects in the room appeared to dance. A chest stared at me with its brass knobs
for eyes. And a woman singing in an upstairs room over the low rumble of a stove seemed to
be saying something in a low and vibrant secret language, such as Come to me.
But it was going to be this way forever apparently, and I had to get myself in hand. Money
must be sent by courier this very night to my father and my brothers, and to Nicolas de
Lenfent, a musician with Renaud's House of Thesbians, who was to be told only that the
wealth had come from his friend Lestat de Lioncourt. It was Lestat de Lioncourt's wish that
Nicolas de Lenfent move at once to a decent flat on the St. Louis or some other proper place,
and Roget should, of course, assist in this, and thereafter Nicolas de Lenfent should study the
violin. Roget should buy for Nicolas de Lenfent the best available violin, a Stradivarius.
And finally a separate letter was to be written to my mother, the Marquise Gabrielle de
Lioncourt, in Italian, so that no one else could read it, and a special purse was to be sent to
her. If she could undertake a journey to southern Italy, the place where she'd been born,
maybe she could stop the course of her consumption.
It made me positively dizzy to think of her with the freedom to escape. I wondered what
she would think about it.
For a long moment I didn't hear anything Roget said. I was picturing her dressed for once
in her life as the marquise she was, and riding out of the gates of our castle in her own coach
and six. And then I remembered her ravaged face and heard the cough in her lungs as if she
were here with me.
"Send the letter and the money to her tonight," I said. "I don't care what it costs. Do it." I
laid down enough gold to keep her in comfort for a lifetime, if she had a lifetime.
"Now," I said, "do you know of a merchant who deals in fine furnishings--paintings,
tapestries? Someone who might open his shops and storehouses to us this very evening?"
"Of course, Monsieur. Allow me to get my coat. We shall go immediately."
We were headed for the faubourg St. Denis within minutes.
And for hours after that, I roamed with my mortal attendants through a paradise of material
wealth, claiming everything that I wanted. Couches and chairs, china and silver plate, drapery
and statuary-all things were mine for the taking. And in my mind I transformed the castle
where I'd grown up as more and more goods were carried out to be crated and shipped south
immediately. To my little nieces and nephews I sent toys of which they'd never dreamed-tiny
ships with real sails, dollhouses of unbelievable craft and perfection.
I learned from each thing that I touched. And there were moments when all the color and
texture became too lustrous, too overpowering. I wept inwardly.
But I would have got away with playing human to the hilt during all this time, except for
one very unfortunate mishap.
At one point as we wandered through the warehouse, a rat appeared as bold city rats will,
racing along the wall very close to us. I stared at it. Nothing unusual of course. But there
amid plaster and hardwood and embroidered cloth, the rat looked marvelously particular. And
the men, misunderstanding of course, began mumbling frantic apologies for the rat and
stamping their feet to drive it away from us.
To me, their voices became a mixture of sounds like stew bubbling in a pot. All I could
think was that the rat had very tiny feet, and that I had not yet examined a rat nor any small
warm-blooded creature. I went and caught the rat, rather too easily I think, and looked at its
feet. I wanted to see what kind of little toenails it had, and what was the flesh like between its
little toes, and I forgot the men entirely.
It was their sudden silence that brought me back to myself. They were both staring
dumbfounded at me.
I smiled at them as innocently as I could, let the rat go, and went back to purchasing.
Well, they never said anything about it. But there was a lesson in this. I had really
frightened them.
Later that night, I gave my lawyer one last commission: He must send a present of one
hundred crowns to a theater owner by the name of Renaud with a note of thanks from me for
his kindness.
"Find out the situation with this little playhouse," I said. "Find out if there are any debts
against it."
Of course, I'd never go near the theater. They must never guess what had happened, never
be contaminated by it. And for now I had done what I could for all those I loved, hadn't I?
And when all this was finished, when the church clocks struck three over the white
rooftops and I was hungry enough to smell blood everywhere that I turned, I found myself
standing in the empty boulevard du Temple.
The dirty snow had turned to slush under the carriage wheels, and I was looking at the
House of Thesbians with its spattered walls and its torn playbills and the name of the young
mortal actor, Lestat de Valois, still written there in red letters.
10
The following nights were a rampage. I began to drink up Paris as if the city were blood. In
the early evening I raided the worst sections, tangling with thieves and killers, often giving
them a playful chance to defend themselves, then snarling them in a fatal embrace and
feasting to the point of gluttony.
I savored different types of kills: big lumbering creatures, small wiry ones, the hirsute and
the dark-skinned, but my favorite was the very young scoundrel who'd kill you for the coins
in your pocket.
I loved their grunting and cursing. Sometimes I held them with one hand and laughed at
them till they were in a positive fury, and I threw their knives over the rooftops and smashed
their pistols to pieces against the walls. But in all this my full strength was like a cat never
allowed to spring. And the one thing I loathed in them was fear. If a victim was really afraid I
usually lost interest.
As time went on, I learned to postpone the kill. I drank a little from one, and more from
another, and then took the grand wallop of the death itself from the third or the fourth one. It
was the chase and the struggle that I was multiplying for my own pleasure. And when I'd had
enough of all this hunting and drinking in an evening to content some six healthy vampires, I
turned my eyes to the rest of Paris, all the glorious pastimes I couldn't afford before.
But not before going to Roget's house for news off Nicolas or my mother.
Her letters were brimming with happiness at my good fortune, and she promised to go to
Italy in the spring if only she could get the strength to do it. Right now she wanted books
from Paris, of course, and newspapers, and keyboard music for the harpsichord I'd sent. And
she had to know, Was I truly happy? Had I fulfilled my dreams? She was leery of wealth. I
had been so happy at Renaud's. I must confide in her.
It was agony to hear these words read to me. Time to become a liar in earnest, which I had
never been. But for her I would do it.
As for Nicki, I should have known he wouldn't settle for gifts and vague tales, that he
would demand to see me and keep on demanding it. He was frightening Roget a little bit.
But it didn't do any good. There was nothing the attorney could tell him except what I've
explained. And I was so wary of seeing Nicki that I didn't even ask for the location of the
house into which he'd moved. I told the lawyer to make certain he studied with his Italian
maestro and that he had everything he could possibly desire.
But I did manage somehow to hear quite against my will that Nicolas hadn't quit the
theater. He was still playing at Renaud's House of Thesbians.
Now this maddened me. Why the hell, I thought, should he do that?
Because he loved it there, the same as I had, that was why. Did anybody really have to tell
me this? We had all been kindred in that little rattrap playhouse. Don't think about the
moment when the curtain goes up, when the audience begins to clap and shout...
No. Send cases of wine and champagne to the theater. Send flowers for Jeannette and
Luchina, the girls I had fought with the most and most loved, and more gifts of gold for
Renaud. Pay off the debts he had.
But as the nights passed and these gifts were dispatched, Renaud became embarrassed
about all this. A fortnight later, Roget told me Renaud had made a proposal.
He wanted me to buy the House of Thesbians and keep him on as manager with enough
capital to stage larger and more wondrous spectacles than he'd ever before attempted. With
my money and his cleverness, we could make the house the talk of Paris.
I didn't answer right away. It took me more than a moment to realize that I could own the
theater just like that. Own it like the gems in the chest, or the clothes I wore, or the dollhouse
I'd sent to my nieces. I said no, and went out slamming the door.
Then I came right back.
"All right, buy the theater," I said, "and give him ten thousand crowns to do whatever he
wants." This was a fortune. And I didn't even know why I had done this.
This pain will pass, I thought, it has to. And I must gain some control over my thoughts,
realize that these things cannot affect me.
After all, where did I spend my time now? At the grandest theaters in Paris. I had the finest
seats for the ballet and the opera, for the dramas of Moliere and Racine. I was hanging about
before the footlights gazing up at the great actors and actresses. I had suits made in every
color of the rainbow, jewels on my fingers, wigs in the latest fashion, shoes with diamond
buckles as well as gold heels.
And I had eternity to be drunk on the poetry I was hearing, drunk on the singing and the
sweep of the dancer's arms, drunk on the organ throbbing in the great cavern of Notre Dame
and drunk on the chimes that counted out the hours to me, drunk on the snow falling
soundlessly on the empty gardens of the Tuileries.
And each night I was becoming less wary among mortals, more at ease with them.
Not even a month had passed before I got up the courage to plunge right into a crowded
ball at the Palais Royal. I was warm and ruddy from the kill and at once I joined the dance. I
didn't arouse the slightest suspicion. Rather the women seemed drawn to me, and I loved the
touch of their hot fingers and the soft crush of their arms and their breasts.
After that, I bore right into the early evening crowds in the boulevards. Rushing past
Renaud's, I squeezed into the other houses to see the puppet shows, the mimes, and the
acrobats. I didn't flee from street lamps anymore. I went into cafes and bought coffee just to
feel the warmth of it against my fingers, and I spoke to men when I chose.
I even argued with them about the state of the monarchy, and I went madly into mastering
billiards and card games, and it seemed to me I might go right into the House of Thesbians if
I wanted to, buy a ticket, and slip up into the balcony and see what was going on. See
Nicolas!
Well, I didn't do that. What was I dreaming of to go near to Nicki? It was one thing to fool
strangers, men and women who'd never known me, but what would Nicolas see if he looked
into my eyes? What would he see when he looked at my skin? Besides I had too much to do,
I told myself.
I was learning more and more about my nature and my powers.
My hair, for example, was lighter, yet thicker, and grew not at all. Nor did my fingernails
and toenails, which had a greater luster, though if I filed them away, they would regenerate
during the day to the length they had been when I died. And though people couldn't discern
such secrets on inspection, they sensed other things, an unnatural gleam to my eyes, too many
reflected colors in them, and a faint luminescence to my skin.
When I was hungry this luminescence was very marked. All the more reason to feed.
And I was learning that I could put people in thrall if I stared at them too hard, and my
voice required very strict modulation. I might speak too low for mortal hearing, and were I to
shout or laugh too loud, I could shatter another's ears. I could hurt my own ears.
There were other difficulties: my movements. I tended to walk, to run, to dance, and to
smile and gesture like a human being, but if surprised, horrified, grieved, my body could
bend and contort like that of an acrobat.
Even my facial expressions could be wildly exaggerated. Once forgetting myself as I
walked in the boulevard du Temple, thinking of Nicolas naturally, I sat down beneath a tree,
drew up my knees, and put my hands to the side of my head like a stricken elf in a fairy tale.
Eighteenth-century gentlemen in brocade frock coats and white silk stockings didn't do things
like that, at least not on the street.
And another time, while deep in contemplation of the changing of the light on surfaces, I
hopped up and sat with my legs crossed on the top of a carriage, with my elbows on my
knees.
Well, this startled people. It frightened them. But more often than not, even when
frightened by the whiteness of my skin, they merely looked away. They deceived themselves,
I quickly realized, that everything was explainable. It was the rational eighteenth-century
habit of mind.
After all there hadn't been a case of witchcraft in a hundred years, the last that I knew of
being the trial of La Voisin, a fortune-teller, burnt alive in the time of Louis the Sun King.
And this was Paris. So if I accidentally crashed crystal glasses when I lifted them, or
slammed doors back into the walls when opening them, people assumed I was drunk.
But now and then I answered questions before mortals had asked them of me. I fell into
stuporous states just looking at candles or tree branches, and didn't move for so long that
people asked if I was ill.
And my worst problem was laughter. I would go into fits of laughter and I couldn't stop.
Anything could set me off. The sheer madness of my own position might set me off.
This can still happen to me fairly easily. No loss, no pain, no deepening understanding of
my predicament changes it. Something strikes me as funny. I begin to laugh and I can't stop.
It makes other vampires furious, by the way. But I jump ahead of the tale.
As you have probably noticed, I have made no mention of other vampires. The fact was I
could not find any.
I could find no other supernatural being in all of Paris.
Mortals to the left of me, mortals to the right of me, and now and then-just when I'd
convinced myself it wasn't happening at all-I'd feel that vague and maddeningly elusive
presence.
It was never any more substantial than it had been the first night in the village churchyard.
And invariably it was in the vicinity of a Paris cemetery.
Always, I'd stop, turn, and try to draw it out. But it was never any good, the thing was gone
before I could be certain of it. I could never find it on my own, and the stench of city
cemeteries was so revolting I wouldn't, couldn't, go into them.
This was coming to seem more than fastidiousness or bad memories of my own dungeon
beneath the tower. Revulsion at the sight or smell of death seemed part of my nature.
I couldn't watch executions any more than when I was that trembling boy from the
Auvergne, and corpses made me cover my face. I think I was offended by death unless I was
the cause of it! And I had to get clean away from my dead victims almost immediately.
But to return to the matter of the presence. I came to wonder if it wasn't some other species
of haunt, something that couldn't commune with me. On the other hand, I had the distinct
impression that the presence was watching me, maybe even deliberately revealing itself to
me.
Whatever the case, I saw no other vampires in Paris. And I was beginning to wonder if
there could be more than one of us at any given time. Maybe Magnus destroyed the vampire
from whom he stole the blood. Maybe he had to perish once he passed on his powers. And I
too would die if I were to make another vampire.
But no, that didn't make sense. Magnus had had great strength even after giving me his
blood. And he had bound his vampire victim in chains when he stole his powers.
An enormous mystery, and a maddening one. But for the moment, ignorance was truly
bliss. And I was doing very well discovering things without the help of Magnus. And maybe
this was what Magnus had intended. Maybe this had been his way of learning centuries ago.
I remembered his words, that in the secret chamber of the tower I would find ail that I
needed to prosper.
The hours flew as I roamed the city. And only to conceal myself in the tower by day did I
ever deliberately leave the company of human beings.
Yet I was beginning to wonder: "If you can dance with them, and play billiards with them
and talk with them, then why can't you dwell among them, just the way you did when you
were living? Why couldn't you pass for one of them? And enter again into the very fabric of
life where there is . . . what? Say it!"
And here it was nearly spring. And the nights were getting warmer, and the House of
Thesbians was putting on a new drama with new acrobats between the acts. And the trees
were in bloom again, and every waking moment I thought of Nicki.
One night in march, I realized as Roget read my mother's letter to me that I could read as
well as he could. I had learned from a thousand sources how to read without even trying. I
took the letter home with me.
Even the inner chamber was no longer really cold. And I sat by the window reading my
mother's words for the first time in private. I could almost hear her voice speaking to me:
"Nicolas writes that you have purchased Renaud's. So you own the little theater on the
boulevard where you were so happy. But do you possess the happiness still? When will you
answer me?"
I folded up the letter and put it in my pocket. The blood tears were coming into my eyes.
Why must she understand so much, yet so little?
11
The wind had lost it's sting. All the smells of the city were coming back. And the markets
were full of flowers. I dashed to Roget's house without even thinking of what I was doing and
demanded that he tell me where Nicolas lived.
I would just have a look at him, make certain he was in good health, be certain the house
was fine enough.
It was on the Ile St. Louis, and very impressive just as I'd wanted, but the windows were all
shuttered along the quais.
I stood watching it for a long time, as one carriage after another roared over the nearby
bridge. And I knew that I had to see Nicki.
I started to climb the wall just as I had climbed walls in the village, and I found it
amazingly easy. One story after another I climbed, much higher than I had ever dared to
climb in the past, and then I sped over the roof, and down the inside of the courtyard to look
for Nicki's flat.
I passed a handful of open windows before I came to the right one. And then there was
Nicolas in the glare of the supper table and Jeannette and Luchina were with him, and they
were having the late night meal that we used to take together when the theater closed.
At the first sight of him, I drew back away from the casement and closed my eyes. I might
have fallen if my right hand hadn't held fast to the wall as if with a will of its own. I had seen
the room for only an instant, but every detail was fixed in my mind.
He was dressed in old green velvet, finery he'd worn so casually in the crooked streets at
home. But everywhere around him were signs of the wealth I'd sent him, leather-bound books
on the shelves, and an inlaid desk with an oval painting above it, and the Italian violin
gleaming atop the new pianoforte.
He wore a jeweled ring I'd sent, and his brown hair was tied back with a black silk ribbon,
and he sat brooding with his elbows on the table eating nothing from the expensive china
plate before him.
Carefully I opened my eyes and looked at him again. All his natural gifts were there in a
blaze of light: the delicate but strong limbs, large sober brown eyes, and his mouth that for all
the irony and sarcasm that could come out of it was childlike and ready to be kissed.
There seemed in him a frailty I'd never perceived or understood. Yet he looked infinitely
intelligent, my Nicki, full of tangled uncompromising thoughts, as he listened to Jeannette,
who was talking rapidly.
"Lestat's married," she said as Luchina nodded, "the wife's rich, and he can't let her know
he was a common actor, it's simple enough."
"I say we let him in peace," Luchina said. "He saved the theater from closing, and he
showers us with gifts.. ."
"I don't believe it," Nicolas said bitterly. "He wouldn't be ashamed of us." There was a
suppressed rage in his voice, an ugly grief. "And why did he leave the way he did? I heard
him calling me! The window was smashed to pieces! I tell you I was half awake, and I heard
his voice..."
An uneasy silence fell among them. They didn't believe his account of things, how I'd
vanished from the garret, and telling it again would only isolate him and embitter him further.
I could sense this from all their thoughts.
"You didn't really know Lestat," he said now, almost in a surly fashion, returning to the
manageable conversation that other mortals would allow him. "Lestat would spit in the face
of anyone who would be ashamed of us! He sends me money. What am I supposed to do with
it? He plays games with us!"
No answer from the others, the solid, practical beings who would not speak against the
mysterious benefactor. Things were going too well.
And in the lengthening silence, I felt the depth of Nicki's anguish, I knew it as if I were
peering into his skull. And I couldn't bear it.
I couldn't bear delving into his soul without his knowing it. Yet I couldn't stop myself from
sensing a vast secret terrain inside him, grimmer perhaps than I had ever dreamed, and his
words came back to me that the darkness in him was like the darkness I'd seen at the inn, and
that he tried to conceal it from me.
I could almost see it, this terrain. And in a real way it was beyond his mind, as if his mind
were merely a portal to a chaos stretching out from the borders of all we know.
Too frightening that. I didn't want to see it. I didn't want to feel what he felt!
But what could I do for him? That was the important thing. What could I do to stop this
torment once and for all?
Yet I wanted so to touch him-his hands, his arms, his face. I wanted to feel his flesh with
these new immortal fingers. And I found myself whispering the word "Alive." Yes, you are
alive and that means you can die. And everything I see when I look at you is utterly
insubstantial. It is a commingling of tiny movements and indefinable colors as if you haven't
a body at all, but are a collection of heat and light. You are light itself, and what am I now?
Eternal as I am, I curl like a cinder in that blaze.
But the atmosphere of the room had changed. Luchina and Jeannette were taking their
leave with polite words. He was ignoring them. He had turned to the window, and he was
rising as if he'd been called by a secret voice. The look on his face was indescribable.
He knew I was there!
Instantly, I shot up the slippery wall to the roof.
But I could still hear him below. I looked down and I saw his naked hands on the window
ledge. And through the silence I heard his panic. He'd sensed that I was there! My presence,
mind you, that is what he sensed, just as I sensed the presence in the graveyards, but how, he
argued with himself, could Lestat have been here?
I was too shocked to do anything. I clung to the roof gutter, and I could feel the departure
of the others, feel that he was now alone. And all I could think was, What in the name of hell
is this presence that he felt?
I mean I wasn't Lestat anymore, I was this demon, this powerful and greedy vampire, and
yet he felt my presence, the presence of Lestat, the young man he knew!
It was a very different thing from a mortal seeing my face and blurting out my name in
confusion. He had recognized in my monster self something that he knew and loved.
I stopped listening to him. I merely lay on the roof.
But I knew he was moving below. I knew it when he lifted the violin from its place on the
pianoforte, and I knew he was again at the window.
And I put my hands over my ears.
Still the sound came. It came rising out of the instrument and cleaving the night as if it
were some shining element, other than air and light and matter, that might climb to the very
stars.
He bore down on the strings, and I could almost see him against my eyelids, swaying back
and forth, his head bowed against the violin as if he meant to pass into the music, and then all
sense of him vanished and there was only the sound.
The long vibrant notes, and the chilling glissandos, and the violin singing in its own tongue
to make every other form of speech seem false. Yet as the song deepened, it became the very
essence of despair as if its beauty were a horrid coincidence, grotesquery without a particle of
truth.
Was this what he believed, what he had always believed when I talked on and on about
goodness? Was he making the violin say it? Was he deliberately creating those long, pure
liquid notes to say that beauty meant nothing because it came from the despair inside him,
and it had nothing to do with the despair finally, because the despair wasn't beautiful, and
beauty then was a horrid irony?
I didn't know the answer. But the sound went beyond him as it always had. It grew bigger
than the despair. It fell effortlessly into a slow melody, like water seeking its own downward
mountain path. It grew richer and darker still and there seemed something undisciplined and
chastening in it, and heartbreaking and vast. I lay on my back on the roof now with my eyes
on the stars.
Pinpoints of light mortals could not have seen. Phantom clouds. And the raw, piercing
sound of the violin coming slowly with exquisite tension to a close.
I didn't move.
I was in some silent understanding of the language the violin spoke to me. Nicki, if we
could talk again . . . If "our conversation" could only continue.
Beauty wasn't the treachery he imagined it to be, rather it was an uncharted land where one
could make a thousand fatal errors, a wild and indifferent paradise without signposts of evil
or good.
In spite of all the refinements of civilization that conspired to make art-the dizzying
perfection of the string quartet or the sprawling grandeur of Fragonard's canvases-beauty was
savage. It was as dangerous and lawless as the earth had been eons before man had one single
coherent thought in his head or wrote codes of conduct on tablets of clay. Beauty was a
Savage Garden.
So why must it wound him that the most despairing music is full of beauty? Why must it
hurt him and make him cynical and sad and untrusting?
Good and evil, those are concepts man has made. And man is better, really, than the
Savage Garden.
But maybe deep inside Nicki had always dreamed of a harmony among all things that I had
always known was impossible. Nicki had dreamed not of goodness, but of justice.
But we could never discuss these things now with each other. We could never again be in
the inn. Forgive me, Nicki. Good and evil exist still, as they always will. But "our
conversation" is over forever.
Yet even as I left the roof, as I stole silently away from the Ile St. Louis, I knew what I
meant to do.
I didn't admit it to myself but I knew.
The next night it was already late when I reached the boulevard de Temple. I'd fed well in
the Ile de la Cite, and the first act at Renaud's House of Thesbians was already under way.
12
I'd dressed as if I were going to court, in silver brocade with a lavender velvet roquelaure
over my shoulders. I had a new sword with a deep-carved silver handle and the usual heavy,
ornate buckles on my shoes, the usual lace gloves, tricorne. And I came to the theater in a
hired carriage.
But as soon as I paid the driver I went back the alley and opened the stage door exactly as I
used to do.
At once the old atmosphere surrounded me, the smell of the thick greasepaint and the
cheap costumes full of sweat and perfume, and the dust. I could see a fragment of the lighted
stage burning beyond the helter-skelter of hulking props and hear bursts of laughter from the
hall. A group of acrobats waited to go on at the intermezzo, a crowd of jesters in red tights,
caps and dagged collars studded with little gold bells.
I felt dizzy, and for a moment afraid. The place felt close and dangerous over my head, and
yet it was wonderful to be inside it again. And a sadness was swelling inside me, no, a panic,
actually.
Luchina saw me and she let out a shriek. Doors opened everywhere on the cluttered little
dressing rooms. Renaud plunged toward me and pumped my hand. Where there had been
nothing but wood and drapery a moment before, there was now a little universe of excited
human beings, faces full of high color and dampness, and I found myself drawing back from
a smoking candelabra with the quick words, "My eyes . . . put it out."
"Put out the candles, they hurt his eyes, can't you see that?" Jeannette insisted sharply. I
felt her wet lips open against my face. Everyone was around me, even the acrobats who didn't
know me, and the old scene painters and carpenters who had taught me so many things.
Luchina said, "Get Nicki," and I almost cried No.
Applause was shaking the little house. The curtain was being pulled closed from either
side. At once the old actors were upon me, and Renaud was calling for champagne.
I was holding my hands over my eyes as if like the basilisk I'd kill every one of them if I
looked at them, and I could feel tears and knew that before they saw the blood in the tears, I
had to wipe the tears away. But they were so close I couldn't get to my handkerchief, and
with a sudden terrible weakness, I put my arms around Jeannette and Luchina, and I pressed
my face against Luchina's face. Like birds they were, with bones full of air, and hearts like
beating wings, and for one second I listened with a vampire's ear to the blood in them, but
that seemed an obscenity. And I just gave in to the hugging and the kissing, ignoring the
thump of their hearts, and holding them and smelling their powdered skin, and feeling again
the press of their lips.
"You don't know how you worried us!" Renaud was booming. "And then the stories of
your good fortune! Everyone, everyone!" He was clapping his hands. "It's Monsieur de
Valois, the owner of this great theatrical establishment. . ." and he said a lot of other pompous
and playful things, dragging up the new actors and actresses to kiss my hand, I suppose, or
my feet. I was holding tight to the girls as if I'd explode into fragments if I let them go, and
then I heard Nicki, and knew he was only a foot away, staring at me, and that he was too glad
to see me to be hurt anymore.
I didn't open my eyes but I felt his hand on my face, then holding tight to the back of my
neck. They must have made way for him and when he came into my arms, I felt a little
convulsion of terror, but the light was dim here, and I had fed furiously to be warm and
human-looking, and I thought desperately I don't know to whom I pray to make the deception
work. And then there was only Nicolas and I didn't care.
I looked up and into his face.
How to describe what humans look like to us! I've tried to describe it a little, when I spoke
of Nicki's beauty the night before as a mixture of movement and color. But you can't imagine
what it's like for us to look on living flesh. There are those billions of colors and tiny
configurations of movement, yes, that make up a living creature on whom we concentrate.
But the radiance mingles totally with the carnal scent. Beautiful, that's what any human
being is to us, if we stop to consider it, even the old and the diseased, the downtrodden that
one doesn't really "see" in the street. They are all like that, like flowers ever in the process of
opening, butterflies ever unfolding out of the cocoon.
Well, I saw all this when I saw Nicki, and I smelled the blood pumping in him, and for one
heady moment I felt love and only love obliterating every recollection of the horrors that had
deformed me. Every evil rapture, every new power with its gratification, seemed unreal.
Maybe I felt a profound joy, too, that I could still love, if I'd ever doubted it, and that a tragic
victory had been confirmed.
All the old mortal comfort intoxicated me, and I could have closed my eyes and slipped
from consciousness carrying him with me, or so it seemed.
But something else stirred in me, collecting strength so fast my mind raced to catch up
with it and deny it even as it threatened to grow out of control. And I knew it for what it was,
something monstrous and enormous and natural to me as the sun was unnatural. I wanted
Nicki. I wanted him as surely as any victim I'd ever struggled with in the Ile de la Cite. I
wanted his blood flowing into me, wanted its taste and its smell and its heat.
The little place shook with shouts and laughter, Renaud telling the acrobats to get on with
the intermezzo and Luchina opening the champagne. But we were closed off in this embrace.
The hard heat of his body made me stiffen and draw back, though it seemed I didn't move
at all. And it maddened me suddenly that this one whom I loved even as I loved my mother
and my brothers-this one who had drawn from me the only tenderness I'd ever felt-was an
unconquerable citadel, holding fast in ignorance against my thirst for blood when so many
hundreds of victims had so easily given it up.
This was what I'd been made for. This was the path I had been meant to walk. What were
those others to me now-the thieves and killers I'd cut down in the wilderness of Paris? This
was what I wanted. And the great awesome possibility of Nicki's death exploded in my brain.
The darkness against my closed eyelids had become blood red. Nicki's mind emptying in that
last moment, giving up its complexity with its life.
I couldn't move. I could feel the blood as if it were passing into me and I let my lips rest
against his neck. Every particle in me said, "Take him, spirit him out of this place and away
from it and feed on him and feed on him... until..." Until what! Until he's dead!
I broke loose and pushed him away. The crowd around us roared and rattled. Renaud was
shouting at the acrobats, who stood staring at these proceedings. The audience outside
demanded the intermezzo entertainment with a steady rhythmic clap. The orchestra was
fiddling away at the lively ditty that would accompany the acrobats. Bones and flesh poked
and pushed at me. A shambles it had become, rank with the smell of those ready for the
slaughter. I felt the all too human rise of nausea.
Nicki seemed to have lost his equilibrium, and when our eyes met, I felt the accusations
emanating from him. I felt the misery and, worse, the near despair.
I pushed past all of them, past the acrobats with the jingling bells, and I don't know why I
went forward to the wings instead of out the side door. I wanted to see the stage. I wanted to
see the audience. I wanted to penetrate deeper into something for which I had no name or
word.
But I was mad in these moments. To say I wanted or I thought makes no sense at all.
My chest was heaving and the thirst was like a cat clawing to get out. And as I leaned
against the wooden beam beside the curtain, Nicki, hurt and misunderstanding everything,
came to me again.
I let the thirst rage. I let it tear at my insides. I just clung to the rafter and I saw in one great
recollection all my victims, the scum of Paris, scraped up from its gutters, and I knew the
madness of the course I'd chosen, and the lie of it, and what I really was. What a sublime
idiocy that I had dragged that paltry morality with me, striking down the damned ones
onlyseeking to be saved in spite of it all? What had I thought I was, a righteous partner to the
judges and executioners of Paris who strike down the poor for crimes that the rich commit
every day?
Strong wine I'd had, in chipped and broken vessels, and now the priest was standing before
me at the foot of the altar with the golden chalice in his hands, and the wine inside it was the
Blood of the Lamb.
Nicki was talking rapidly:
"Lestat, what is it? Tell me!" as if the others couldn't hear us. "Where have you been?
What's happened to you? Lestat!"
"Get on that stage!" Renaud thundered at the gaping acrobats. They trotted past us into the
smoky blaze of the footlamps and went into a chain of somersaults.
The orchestra made its instruments into twittering birds. A flash of red, harlequin sleeves,
bells jangling, taunts from the unruly crowd, "Show us something, really show us
something!"
Luchina kissed me and I stared at her white throat, her milky hands. I could see the veins in
Jeannette's face and the soft cushion of her lower lip coming ever closer. The champagne,
splashed into dozens of little glasses, was being drunk. Some speech was issuing forth from
Renaud about our "partnership" and how tonight's little farce was but the beginning and we
would soon be the grandest theater on the boulevards. I saw myself decked out for the part of
Lelio, and heard the ditty I had sung to Flaminia on bended knee.
Before me, little mortals flip-flopped heavily and the audience was howling as the leader
of the acrobats made some vulgar movement with his hind end.
Before I even meant to do it, I had gone out on the stage.
I was standing in the very center, feeling the heat of the footlights, the smoke stinging my
eyes. I stared at the crowded gallery, the screened boxes, the rows and rows of spectators to
the back wall. And I heard myself snarl a command for the acrobat to get away.
It seemed the laughter was deafening, and the taunts and shouts that greeted me were
spasms and eruptions, and quite plainly behind every face in the house was a grinning skull. I
was humming the little ditty I'd sung as Lelio, no more than a fragment of the part, but the
one I'd carried in the streets afterwards with me, "lovely, lovely, Flaminia," and on and on,
the words forming meaningless sounds.
Insults were cutting through the din.
"On with the performance!" and "You're handsome enough, now let's see some action!"
From the gallery someone threw a half-eaten apple that came thumping just past my feet.
I unclasped the violet roquelaure and let it fall. I did the same with the silver sword.
The song had become an incoherent humming behind my lips, but mad poetry was
pounding in my head. I saw the wilderness of beauty and its savagery, the way I'd seen it last
night when Nicki was playing, and the moral world seemed some desperate dream of
rationality that in this lush and fetid jungle had not the slightest chance. It was a vision and I
saw rather than understood, except that I was part of it, natural as the cat with her exquisite
and passionless face digging her claws into the back of the screaming rat.
" 'Handsome enough' is this Grim Reaper," I half uttered, "who can snuff all these 'brief
candles,' every fluttering soul sucking the air, from this hall."
But the words were really beyond my reach. They floated in some stratum perhaps where a
god existed who understood the colors patterned on a cobra's skin and the eight glorious notes
that make up the music erupting out of Nicki's instrument, but never the principle, beyond
ugliness or beauty, "Thou shalt not kill."
Hundreds of greasy faces peered back at me from the gloom. Shabby wigs and paste jewels
and filthy finery, skin like water flowing over crooked bones. A crew of ragged beggars
whistled and hooted from the gallery, humpback and one eye, and stinking underarm crutch,
and teeth the color of the skull's teeth you sift from the dirt of the grave.
I threw out my arms. I crooked my knee, and I began turning as the acrobats and dancers
could turn, round and round on the ball of one foot, effortlessly, going faster and faster, until
I broke, flipping over backwards into a circle of cartwheels, and then somersaults, imitating
everything I had ever seen the players at the fairs perform.
Applause came immediately. I was agile as I'd been in the village, and the stage was tiny
and hampering, and the ceiling seemed to press down on me, and the smoke from the
footlights to close me in. The little song to Flaminia came back to me and I started singing it
loudly as I turned and jumped and spun again, and then gazing at the ceiling I willed my body
upwards as I bent my knees to spring.
In an instant I touched the rafters and I was dropping down gracefully, soundlessly to the
boards.
Gasps rose from the audience. The little crowd in the wings was stunned. The musicians in
the pit who had been silent all the while were turning to one another. They could see there
was no wire.
But I was soaring again to the delight of the audience, this time somersaulting all the way
up, beyond the painted arch again to descend in even slower, finer turns.
Shouts and cheers broke out over the clapping, but those backstage were mute. Nicki stood
at the very edge, his lips silently shaping my name.
"It has to be trickery, an illusion." The same avowals came from all directions. People
demanded agreement from those around them. Renaud's face shone before me for an instant
with gaping mouth and squinting eyes.
But I had gone into a dance again. And this time the grace of it no longer mattered to the
audience. I could feel it, because the dance became a parody, each gesture broader, longer,
slower than a human dancer could have sustained.
Someone shouted from the wings and was told to be still. And little cries burst from the
musicians and those in the front rows. People were growing uneasy and whispering to one
another, but the rabble in the gallery continued to clap.
I dashed suddenly towards the audience as if I meant to admonish it for its rudeness.
Several persons were so startled they rose and tried to escape into the aisles. One of the
hornplayers dropped his instrument and climbed out of the pit.
I could see the agitation, even the anger in their faces. What were these illusions? It wasn't
amusing them suddenly; they couldn't comprehend the skill of it; and something in my
serious manner made them afraid. For one terrible moment, I felt their helplessness.
And I felt their doom.
A great horde of jangling skeletons snared in flesh and rags, that's what they were, and yet
their courage blazed out of them, they shouted at me in their irrepressible pride.
I raised my hands slowly to command their attention, and very loudly and steadily I sang
the ditty to Flaminia, my lovely Flaminia, a dull little couplet spilling into another couplet,
and I let my voice grow louder and louder until suddenly people were rising and screaming
before me, but louder still I sang it until it obliterated every other noise and in the intolerable
roar I saw them all, hundreds of them, overturning the benches as they stood up, their hands
clamped to the sides of their heads.
Their mouths were grimaces, toneless screams.
Pandemonium. Shrieks, curses, all stumbling and struggling towards the doors. Curtains
were pulled from their fastenings. Men dropped down from the gallery to rush for the street.
I stopped the horrid song.
I stood watching them in a ringing silence, the weak, sweating bodies straining clumsily in
every direction. The wind gusted from the open doorways, and I felt a strange coldness over
all my limbs and it seemed my eyes were made of glass.
Without looking, I picked up the sword and put it on again, and hooked my finger into the
velvet collar of my crumpled and dusty roquelaure. All these gestures seemed as grotesque as
everything else I had done, and it seemed of no import that Nicolas was trying to get loose
from two of the actors who held him in fear of his life as he shouted my name.
But something out of the chaos caught my attention. It did seem to matter-to be terribly,
terribly important, in fact that there was a figure standing above in one of the open boxes who
did not struggle to escape or even move.
I turned slowly and looked up at him, daring him, it seemed, to remain there. An old man
he was, and his dull gray eyes were boring into me with stubborn outrage, and as I glared at
him, I heard myself let out a loud open-mouthed roar. Out of my soul it seemed to come, this
sound. It grew louder and louder until those few left below cowered again with their ears
stopped, and even Nicolas, rushing forward, buckled beneath the sound of it, both hands
clasped to his head.
And yet the man stood there in the loge glowering, indignant and old, and stubborn, with
furrowed brows under his gray wig.
I stepped back and leapt across the empty house, landing in the box directly before him,
and his jaw fell in spite of himself and his eyes grew hideously wide.
He seemed deformed with age, his shoulders rounded, his hands gnarled, but the spirit in
his eyes was beyond vanity and beyond compromise. His mouth hardened and his chin jutted.
And from under his frock coat he pulled his pistol and he aimed it at me with both hands.
" Lestat!" Nicki shouted.
But the shot exploded and the ball hit me with full force. I didn't move. I stood as steady as
the old man had stood before, and the pain rolled through me and stopped, leaving in its wake
a terrible pulling in all my veins.
The blood poured out. It flowed as I have never seen blood flow. It drenched my shirt and I
could feel it spilling down my back. But the pulling grew stronger and stronger, and a warm
tingling sensation had commenced to spread across the surface of my back and chest.
The man stared, dumbfounded. The pistol dropped out of his hand. His head went back,
eyes blind, and his body crumpled as if the air had been let out of it, and he lay on the floor.
Nicki had raced up the stairs and was now rushing into the box. A low hysterical
murmuring was issuing from him. He thought he was witnessing my death.
And I stood still hearkening to my body in that terrible solitude that had been mine since
Magnus made me the vampire. And I knew the wounds were no longer there.
The blood was drying on the silk vest, drying on the back of my torn coat. My body
throbbed where the bullet had passed through me and my veins were alive with the same
pulling, but the injury was no more.
And Nicolas, coming to his senses as he looked at me, realized I was unharmed, though his
reason told him it couldn't be true.
I pushed past him and made for the stairs. He flung himself against me and I threw him off.
I couldn't stand the sight of him, the smell of him.
"Get away from me!" I said.
But he came back again and he locked his arm around my neck. His face was bloated and
there was an awful sound coming out of him.
"Let go of me. Nicki!" I threatened him. If I shoved him off too roughly, I'd tear his arms
out of the sockets, break his back.
Break his back . . .
He moaned, stuttered. And for one harrowing split second the sounds he made were as
terrible as the sound that had come from my dying animal on the mountain, my horse,
crushed like an insect into the snow.
I scarcely knew what I was doing when I pried loose his hands.
The crowd broke, screaming, when I walked out onto the boulevard.
Renaud ran forward, in spite of those trying to restrain him.
"Monsieur!" He grabbed my hand to kiss it and stopped, staring at the blood.
"Nothing, my dear Renaud," I said to him, quite surprised at the steadiness of my voice and
its softness. But something distracted me as I started to speak again, something I should
hearken to, I thought vaguely, yet I went on.
"Don't give it a thought, my dear Renaud," I said. "Stage blood, nothing but an illusion. It
was all an illusion. A new kind of theatrical. Drama of the grotesque, yes, the grotesque."
But again came that distraction, something I was sensing in the melee around me, people
shuffling and pushing to get close but not too close, Nicolas stunned and staring.
"Go on with your plays," I was saying, almost unable to concentrate on my own words,
"Your acrobats, your tragedies, your more civilized theatricals, if you like."
I pulled the bank notes out of my pocket and put them in his unsteady hand. I spilled gold
coins onto the pavement. The actors darted forward fearfully to gather them up. I scanned the
crowd around for the source of this strange distraction, what was it, not Nicolas in the door of
the deserted theater, watching me with a broken soul.
No, something else both familiar and unfamiliar, having to do with the dark.
"Hire the finest mummers," I was half babbling, "the best musicians, the great scene
painters." More bank notes. My voice was getting loud again, the vampire voice, I could see
the grimaces again and the hands going up, but they were afraid to let me see them cover
their ears. "There is no limit, NO LIMIT, to what you can do here!"
I broke away, dragging my roquelaure with me, the sword clanking awkwardly because it
was not buckled right. Something of the dark.
And I knew when I hurried into the first alleyway and started to run what it was that I had
heard, what had distracted me, it had been the presence, undeniably, in the crowd!
I knew it for one simple reason: I was running now in the back streets faster than a mortal
can run. And the presence was keeping time with me and the presence was more than one!
I came to a halt when I knew it for certain.
I was only a mile from the boulevard and the crooked alley around me narrow and black as
any in which I had ever been. And I heard them before they seemed, quite purposefully and
abruptly, to silence themselves.
I was too anxious and miserable to play with them! I was too dazed. I shouted the old
question, "Who are you, speak to me!" The glass panes rattled in the nearby windows.
Mortals stirred in their little chambers. There was no cemetery here. "Answer me, you pack
of cowards. Speak if you have a voice or once and for all get away from me!"
And then I knew, though how I knew, I can't tell you, that they could hear me and they
could answer me, if they chose. And I knew that what I had always heard was the
irrepressible evidence of their proximity and their intensity, which they could disguise. But
their thoughts they could cloak and they had. I mean, they had intellect, and they had words.
I let out a long low breath.
I was stung by their silence, but I was stung a thousand times more by what had just
happened, and as I'd done so many times in the past I turned my back on them.
They followed me. This time they followed, and no matter how swiftly I moved, they came
on.
And I did not lose the strange toneless shimmer of them until I reached the place de Greve
and went into the Cathedral of Notre Dame.
I spent the remainder of the night in the cathedral, huddled in a shadowy place by the right
wall. I hungered for the blood I'd lost, and each time a mortal drew near I felt a strong pulling
and tingling where the wounds had been.
But I waited.
And when a young beggar woman with a little child approached, I knew the moment had
come. She saw the dried blood, and became frantic to get me to the nearby hospital, the
Hotel-Dieu. Her face was thin with hunger, but she tried to lift me herself with her little arms.
I looked into her eyes until I saw them glaze over. I felt the heat of her breasts swelling
beneath her rags. Her soft, succulent body tumbled against me, giving itself to me, as I
nestled her in all the bloodstained brocade and lace. I kissed her, feeding on her heat as I
pushed the dirty cloth away from her throat, and I bent for the drink so skillfully that the
sleepy child never saw it. Then I opened with careful trembling fingers the child's ragged
shirt. This was mine, too, this little neck.
There weren't any words for the rapture. Before I'd had all the ecstasy that rape could give.
But these victims had been taken in the perfect semblance of love. The very blood seemed
warmer with their innocence, richer with their goodness.
I looked at them afterwards, as they slept together in death. They had found no sanctuary in
the cathedral on this night.
And I knew my vision of the garden of savage beauty had been a true vision. There was
meaning in the world, yes, and laws, and inevitability, but they had only to do with the
aesthetic. And in this Savage Garden, these innocent ones belonged in the vampire's arms. A
thousand other things can be said about the world, but only aesthetic principles can be
verified, and these things alone remain the same.
I was now ready to go home. And as I went out in the early morning, I knew that the last
barrier between my appetite and the world had been dissolved.
No one was safe from me now, no matter how innocent. And that included my dear friends
at Renaud's and it included my beloved Nicki.
13
I wanted them gone from Paris. I wanted the playbills down, the doors shut; I wanted
silence and darkness in the little rattrap theater where I had known the greatest and most
sustained happiness of my mortal life.
Not a dozen innocent victims a night could make me stop thinking about them, could make
this ache in me dissolve. Every street in Paris led to their door.
And an ugly shame came over me when I thought of my frightening them. How could I
have done that to them? Why did I need to prove to myself with such violence that I could
never be part of them again?
No. I'd bought Renaud's. I'd turned it into the showcase of the boulevard. Now I would
close it down.
It was not that they suspected anything, however. They believed the simple stupid excuses
Roget gave them, that I was just back from the heat of the tropical colonies, that the good
Paris wine had gone right to my head. Plenty of money again to repair the damage.
God only knows what they really thought. The fact was, they went back to regular
performances the following evening, and the jaded crowds of the boulevard du Temple
undoubtedly put upon the mayhem a dozen sensible explanations. There was a queue under
the chestnut trees.
Only Nicki was having none of it. He had taken to heavy drinking and refused to return to
the theater or study his music anymore. He insulted Roget when he came to call. To the
worse cafes and taverns he went, and wandered alone through the dangerous nighttime
streets.
Well, we have that in common, I thought.
All this Roget told me as I paced the floor a good distance from the candle on his table, my
face a mask of my true thoughts.
"Money doesn't mean very much to the young man, Monsieur," he said. "The young man
has had plenty of money in his life, he reminds me. He says things that disturb me, Monsieur.
I don't like the sound of them."
Roget looked like a nursery rhyme figure in his flannel cap and gown, legs and feet naked
because I had roused him again in the middle of the night and given him no time to put on his
slippers even or to comb his hair.
"What does he say?" I demanded.
"He talks about sorcery, Monsieur. He says that you possess unusual powers. He speaks of
La Voisin and the Chambre Ardente, an old case of sorcery under the Sun King, the witch
who made charms and poisons for members of the Court."
"Who would believe that trash now?" I affected absolute bewilderment. The truth was, the
hair was standing up on the back of my neck.
"Monsieur, he says bitter things," he went on. "That your kind, as he puts it, has always
had access to great secrets. He keeps speaking of some place in your town, called the witches'
place."
"My kind!"
"That you are an aristocrat, Monsieur," Roget said. He was a little embarrassed. "When a
man is angry as Monsieur de Lenfent is angry, these things come to be important. But he
doesn't whisper his suspicions to the others. He tells only me. He says that you will
understand why he despises you. You have refused to share with him your discoveries! Yes,
Monsieur, your discoveries. He goes on about La Voisin, about things between heaven and
earth for which there are no rational explanations. He says he knows now why you cried at
the witches' place."
I couldn't look at Roget for a moment. It was such a lovely perversion of everything! And
yet it hit right at the truth. How gorgeous, and how perfectly irrelevant. In his own way, Nicki
was right.
"Monsieur, you are the kindest man-" Roget said.
"Spare me, please.. ."
"But Monsieur de Lenfent says fantastical things, things he should not say even in this day
and age, that he saw a bullet pass through your body that should have killed you."
"The bullet missed me," I said. "Roget, don't go on with it. Get them out of Paris, all of
them."
"Get them out?" he asked. "But you've put so much money into this little enterprise. . ."
"So what? Who gives a damn?" I said. "Send them to London, to Drury Lane. Offer
Renaud enough for his own London theater. From there they might go to America-Saint-
Domingue, New Orleans, New York. Do it, Monsieur. I don't care what it takes. Close up my
theater and get them gone!"
And then the ache will be gone, won't it? I'll stop seeing them gathered around me in the
wings, stop thinking about Lelio, the boy from the provinces who emptied their slop buckets
and loved it.
Roget looked so profoundly timid. What is it like, working for a well-dressed lunatic who
pays you triple what anyone else would pay you to forget your better judgment?
I'll never know. I'll never know what it is like to be human in any way, shape, or form
again.
"As for Nicolas," I said. "You're going to persuade him to go to Italy and I'll tell you how."
"Monsieur, even persuading him to change his clothes would take some doing."
"This will be easier. You know how ill my mother is. Well, get him to take her to Italy. It's
the perfect thing. He can very well study music at the conservatories in Naples, and that is
exactly where my mother should go."
"He does write to her... is very fond of her."
"Precisely. Convince him she'll never make the journey without him. Make all the
arrangements for him. Monsieur, you must accomplish this. He must leave Paris. I give you
till the end of the week, and then I'll be back for the news that he's gone."
It was asking a lot of Roget, of course. But I could think of no other way. Nobody would
believe Nicki's ideas about sorcery, that was no worry. But I knew now that if Nicki didn't
leave Paris, he would be driven slowly out of his mind.
As the nights passed, I fought with myself every waking hour not to seek him out, not to
risk one last exchange.
I just waited, knowing full well that I was losing him forever and that he would never
know the reasons for anything that had come to pass. I, who had once railed against the
meaninglessness of our existence, was driving him off without explanation, an injustice that
might torment him to the end of his days.
Better that than the truth, Nicki. Maybe I understand all illusions a little better now. And if
you can only get my mother to go to Italy, if there is only time for my mother still . . .
Meantime I could see for myself that Renaud's House of Thesbians was closed down. In
the nearby cafe, I heard talk of the troupe's departure for England. So that much of the plan
had been accomplished.
It was near dawn on the eighth night when I finally wandered up to Roget's door and pulled
the bell.
He answered sooner than I expected, looking befuddled and anxious in the usual white
flannel nightshirt.
"I'm getting to like that garb of yours, Monsieur," I said wearily. "I don't think I'd trust you
half as much if you wore a shirt and breeches and a coat.. ."
"Monsieur," he interrupted me. "Something quite unexpected-"
"Answer me first. Renaud and the others went happily to England?"
"Yes, Monsieur. They're in London by now, but-"
"And Nicki? Gone to my mother in the Auvergne. Tell me I'm right. It's done."
"But Monsieur!" he said. And then he stopped. And quite unexpectedly, I saw the image of
my mother in his mind.
Had I been thinking, I would have known what it meant. This man had never to my
knowledge laid eyes upon my mother, so how could he picture her in his thoughts? But I
wasn't using my reason. In fact my reason had flown.
"She hasn't . . . you're not telling me that it's too late," I said.
"Monsieur, let me get my coat..." he said inexplicably. He reached for the bell.
And there it was, her image again, her face, drawn and white, and all too vivid for me to
stand it.
I took Roget by the shoulders.
"You've seen her! She's here."
"Yes, Monsieur. She's in Paris. I'll take you to her now. Young de Lenfent told me she was
coming. But I couldn't reach you, Monsieur! I never know where to reach you. And yesterday
she arrived."
I was too stunned to answer. I sank down into the chair, and my own images of her blazed
hot enough to eclipse everything that was emanating from him. She was alive and she was in
Paris. And Nicki was still here and he was with her.
Roget came close to me, reached out as if he wanted to touch me:
"Monsieur, you go ahead while I dress. She is in the Ile St. Louis, three doors to the right
of Monsieur Nicolas. You must go at once."
I looked up at him stupidly. I couldn't even really see him. I was seeing her. There was less
than an hour before sunrise. And it would take me three-quarters of that time to reach the
tower.
"Tomorrow . . . tomorrow night," I think I stammered. That line came back to me from
Shakespeare's Macbeth.. . "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow..."
"Monsieur, you don't understand! There will be no trips to Italy for your mother. She has
made her last journey in coming here to see you."
When I didn't answer he grabbed hold of me and tried to shake me. I'd never seen him like
this before. I was a boy to him and he was the man who had to bring me to my senses.
"I've gotten lodgings for her," he said. "Nurses, doctors, all that you could wish. But they
aren't keeping her alive. You are keeping her alive, Monsieur. She must see you before she
closes her eyes. Now forget the hour and go to her. Even a will as strong as hers can't work
miracles."
I couldn't answer. I couldn't form a coherent thought.
I stood up and went to the door, pulling him along with me. "Go to her now," I said, "and
tell her I'll be there tomorrow night."
He shook his head. He was angry and disgusted. And he tried to turn his back on me.
I wouldn't let him.
"You go there at once, Roget," I said. "Sit with her all day, do you understand, and see that
she waits-that she waits for me to come! Watch her if she sleeps. Wake her and talk to her if
she starts to go. But don't let her die before I get there!"
Part III
Viaticum For The Marquise
1
In vampire parlance, I am an early riser. I rise when the sun has just sunk below the
horizon and there is still red light in the sky. Many vampires don't rise until there is full
darkness, and so I have a tremendous advantage in this, and in that they must return to the
grave a full hour or more before I do. I haven't mentioned it before because I didn't know it
then, and it didn't come to matter until much later.
But the next night, I was on the road to Paris when the sky was on fire.
I'd clothed myself in the most respectable garments I possessed before I slipped into the
sarcophagus, and I was chasing the sun west into Paris.
It looked like the city was burning, so bright was the light to me and so terrifying, until
finally I came pounding over the bridge behind Notre Dame, into the Ile St. Louis.
I didn't think about what I would do or say, or how I might conceal myself from her. I
knew only I had to see her and hold her and be with her while there was still time. I couldn't
truly think of her death. It had tile fullness of catastrophe, and belonged to the burning sky.
And maybe I was being the common mortal, believing if I could grant her last wish, then
somehow the horror was under my command.
Dusk was just bleeding the light away when I found her house on the quais.
It was a stylish enough mansion. Roget had done well, and a clerk was at the door waiting
to direct me up the stairs. Two maids and a nurse were in the parlor of the flat when I came
in.
"Monsieur de Lenfent is with her, Monsieur," the nurse said. "She insisted on getting
dressed to see you. She wanted to sit in the window and look at the towers of the cathedral,
Monsieur. She saw you ride over the bridge."
"Put out the candles in the room, except for one," I said. "And tell Monsieur de Lenfent
and my lawyer to come out."
Roget came out at once, and then Nicolas appeared.
He too had dressed for her, all in brilliant red velvet, with his old fancy linen and his white
gloves. The recent drinking had left him thinner, almost haggard. Yet it made his beauty all
the more vivid. When our eyes met, the malice leapt out of him, scorching my heart.
"The Marquise is a little stronger today, Monsieur," Roget said, "but she's hemorrhaging
badly. The doctor says she will not-"
He stopped and glanced back at the bedroom. I got it clear from his thought. She won't last
through the night.
"Get her back to bed, Monsieur, as fast you can."
"For what purpose do I get her back to bed?" I said. My voice was dull, a murmur. "Maybe
she wants to die at the damned window. Why the hell not?"
"Monsieur!" Roget implored me softly.
I wanted to tell him to leave with Nicki.
But something was happening to me. I went into the hall and looked towards the bedroom.
She was in there. I felt a dramatic physical change in myself. I couldn't move or speak. She
was in there and she was really dying.
All the little sounds of the flat became a hum. I saw a lovely bedroom through the double
doors, a white painted bed with gold hangings, and the windows draped in the same gold, and
the sky in the high panes of the windows with only the faintest wisps of gold cloud. But all
this was indistinct and faintly horrible, the luxury I'd wanted to give her and she about to feel
her body collapse beneath her. I wondered if it maddened her, made her laugh.
The doctor appeared. The nurse came to tell me only one candle remained, as I had
ordered. The smell of medicines intruded and mingled with a rose perfume, and I realized I
was hearing her thoughts.
It was the dull throb of her mind as she waited, her bones aching in her emaciated flesh so
that to sit at the window even in the soft velvet chair with the comforter surrounding her was
almost unendurable pain.
But what was she thinking, beneath her desperate anticipation? Lestat, Lestat, and Lestat, I
could hear that. But beneath it:
"Let the pain get worse, because only when the pain is really dreadful do I want to die. If
the pain would just get bad enough so that I'd be glad to die and I wouldn't be so frightened. I
want it to be so terrible that I'm not frightened."
"Monsieur." The doctor touched my arm. "She will not have the priest come."
"No . . . she wouldn't."
She had turned her head towards the door. If I didn't come in now, she would get up, no
matter how it hurt her, and come to me.
It seemed I couldn't move. And yet I pushed past the doctor and the nurse, and I went into
the room and closed the doors.
Blood scent.
In the pale violet light of the window she sat, beautifully dressed in dark blue taffeta, her
hand in her lap and the other on the arm of the chair, her thick yellow hair gathered behind
her ears so that the curls spilled over her shoulders from the pink ribbons. There was the
faintest bit of rouge on her cheeks.
For one eerie moment she looked to me as she had when I was a little boy. So pretty. The
symmetry of her face was unchanged by time or illness, and so was her hair. And a
heartbreaking happiness came over me, a warm delusion that I was mortal again, and
innocent again, and with her, and everything was all right, really truly all right.
There was no death and no terror, just she and I in her bedroom, and she would take me in
her arms. I stopped.
I'd come very close to her, and she was crying as she looked up. The girdle of the Paris
dress bound her too tightly, and her skin was so thin and colorless over her throat and her
hands that I couldn't bear to look at them, and her eyes looked up at me from flesh that was
almost bruised. I could smell death on her. I could smell decay.
But she was radiant, and she was mine; she was as she'd always been, and I told her so
silently with all my power, that she was lovely as my earliest memory of her when she had
had her old fancy clothes still, and she would dress up so carefully and carry me on her lap in
the carriage to church.
And in this strange moment when I gave her to know this, how much I cherished her, I
realized she heard me and she answered me that she loved me and always had.
It was the answer to a question I hadn't even asked. And she knew the importance of it; her
eyes were clear, unentranced.
If she realized the oddity of this, that we could talk to each other without words, she gave
no clue. Surely she didn't grasp it fully. She must have felt only an outpouring of love.
"Come here so I can see you," she said, "as you are now."
The candle was by her arm on the windowsill. And quite deliberately I pinched it out. I
saw her frown, a tightening of her blond brows, and her blue eyes grew just a little larger as
she looked at me, at the bright silk brocade and the usual lace I'd chosen to wear for her, and
the sword on my hip with its rather imposing jeweled hilt.
"Why don't you want me to see you?" she asked. "I came to Paris to see you. Light the
candle again." But there was no real chastisement in the words. I was here with her and that
was enough.
I knelt down before her. I had some mortal conversation in mind, that she should go to
Italy with Nicki, and quite distinctly, before I could speak, she said:
"Too late, my darling, I could never finish the journey. I've come far enough."
A clamp of pain stopped her, circling her waist where the girdle bound it, and to hide it
from me, she made her face very blank. She looked like a girl when she did this, and again I
smelt the sickness in her, the decay in her lungs, and the clots of blood.
Her mind became a riot of fear. She wanted to scream out to me that she was afraid. She
wanted to beg me to hold on to her and remain with her until it was finished, but she couldn't
do this, and to my astonishment, I realized she thought I would refuse her. That I was too
young and too thoughtless to ever understand.
This was agony.
I wasn't even conscious of moving away from her, but I'd walked across the room. Stupid
little details embedded themselves in my consciousness: nymphs playing on the painted
ceiling, the high gilt door handles and the melted wax in brittle stalactites on the white
candles that I wanted to break off and crumple in my hand. The place looked hideous,
overdressed. Did she hate it? Did she want those barren stone rooms again?
I was thinking about her as if there were "tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow.. ." I
looked back at her, her stately figure holding to the windowsill. The sky had deepened behind
her and a new light, the light of house lamps and passing carriages and nearby windows,
gently touched the small inverted triangle of her thin face.
"Can't you talk to me," she said softly. "Can't you tell me how it's come about? You've
brought such happiness to all of us." Even talking hurt her. "But how does it go with you?
With YOU!"
I think I was on the verge of deceiving her, of creating some strong emanation of
contentment with all the powers I had. I'd tell mortal lies with immortal skill. I'd start talking
and talking and testing my every word to make it perfect. But something happened in the
silence.
I don't think I stood still more than a moment, but something changed inside of me. An
awesome shift took place. In one instant I saw a vast and terrifying possibility, and in that
same instant, without question, I made up my mind.
It had no words to it or scheme or plan. And I would have denied it had anyone questioned
me at that moment. I would have said, "No, never, farthest from my thoughts. What do you
think I am, what sort of monster" . . . And yet the choice had been made.
I understood something absolute.
Her words had completely died away, she was afraid again and in pain again, and in spite
of the pain, she rose from her chair.
I saw the comforter slip away from her, and I knew she was coming towards me and that I
should stop her, but I didn't do it. I saw her hands close to me, reaching for me, and the next
thing I knew she had leapt backwards as if blown by a mighty wind.
She had scuffed backwards across the carpet, and fallen past the chair against the wall. But
she grew very still quickly as though she willed it, and there wasn't fear in her face, even
though her heart was racing. Rather there was wonder and then a baffled calm.
If I had thoughts at that moment, I don't know what they were. I came towards her just as
steadily as she had come towards me. Gauging her every reaction, I drew closer until we were
as near to each other as we had been when she leapt away. She was staring at my skin and my
eyes, and quite suddenly she reached out again and touched my face.
"Not alive!" That was the horrifying perception that came from her silently. "Changed into
something. But NOT ALIVE."
Quietly I said no. That was not right. And I sent a cool torrent of images to her, a
procession of glimpses of what my existence had become. Bits, pieces of the fabric of the
nighttime Paris, the sense of a blade cutting through the world soundlessly.
With a little hiss she let out her breath. The pain balled its fist in her, opened its claw. She
swallowed, sealing her lips against it, her eyes veritably burning into me. She knew now
these were not sensations, these communications, but that they were thoughts.
"How then?" she demanded.
And without questioning what I meant to do I gave her the tale link by link, the shattered
window through which I'd been torn by the ghostly figure who had stalked me at the theater,
the tower and the exchange of blood. I revealed to her the crypt in which I slept, and its
treasure, my wanderings, my powers, and above all, the nature of the thirst. The taste of
blood and the feel of blood, and what it meant for all passion, all greed to be sharpened in
that one desire, and that one desire to be satisfied over and over with the feeding and the
death.
The pain ate at her but she no longer felt it. Her eyes were all that was left of her as she
stared at me. And though I didn't mean to reveal all these things, I found I had taken hold of
her and was turning so that the light of the carriages crashing along the quaff below fell full
on my face.
Without taking my eyes from her, I reached for the silver candelabra on the windowsill,
and lifting it I slowly bent the metal, working it with my fingers into loops and twists.
The candle fell to the floor.
Her eyes rolled up into her head. She slipped backwards and away from me, and as she
caught the curtains of the bed in her left hand, the blood came up out of her mouth.
It was coming from her lungs in a great silent cough. She was slipping down on her knees,
and the blood was all over the side of the draped bed.
I looked at the twisted silver thing in my hands, the idiotic loops that meant nothing, and I
let it drop. And I stared at her, her struggling against unconsciousness and pain, and wiping
her mouth suddenly in sluggish gestures, like a vomiting drunk, on the bedclothes, as she
sank unable to support herself to the floor.
I was standing over her. I was watching her, and her momentary pain meant nothing in
light of the vow that I was speaking to her now. No words again, just the silent thrust of it,
and the question, more immense than could ever be put into words, Do you want to come
with me now? DO YOU WANT TO COME WITH ME INTO THIS NOW?
I hide nothing from you, not my ignorance, not my fear, not the simple terror that if I try I
might fail. I do not even know if it is mine to give more than once, or what is the price of
giving it, but I will risk this for you, and we will discover it together, whatever the mystery
and the terror, just as I've discovered alone all else.
With her whole being she said Yes.
"Yes!" she screamed aloud suddenly, drunkenly, the voice maybe that had always been her
voice yet one that I had never heard. Her eyes closed and tightened and her head turned from
the left and to the right. "Yes!"
I leant forward and kissed the blood on her open lips. It sent a zinging through all my limbs
and the thirst leapt out for her and tried to transform her into mere flesh. My arms slipped
around her light little form and I lifted her up and up, until I was standing with her against the
window, and her hair was falling down behind her, and the blood came up in her out of her
lungs again, but it didn't matter now.
All the memories of my life with her surrounded us; they wove their shroud around us and
closed us off from the world, the soft poems and songs of childhood, and the sense of her
before words when there had only been the flicker of the light on the ceiling above her
pillows and the smell of her all around me and her voice silencing my crying, and then the
hatred of her and the need of her, and the losing of her behind a thousand closed doors, and
cruel answers, and the terror of her and her complexity and her indifference and her
indefinable strength.
And jetting up into the current came the thirst, not obliterating but heating every concept of
her, until she was flesh and blood and mother and lover and all things beneath the cruel
pressure of my fingers and my lips, everything I had ever desired. I drove my teeth into her,
feeling her stiffen and gasp, and I felt my mouth grow wide to catch the hot flood when it
came.
Her heart and soul split open. There was no age to her, no single moment. My knowledge
dimmed and flickered and there was no mother anymore, no petty need and petty terror; she
was simply who she was. She was Gabrielle.
And all her life came to her defense, the years and years of suffering and loneliness, the
waste in those damp, hollow chambers to which she'd been condemned, and the books that
were her solace, and the children who devoured her and abandoned her, and the pain and
disease, her final enemy, which had, in promising release, pretended to be her friend.. Beyond
words and images there came the secret thudding of her passion, her seeming madness, her
refusal to despair.
I was holding her, holding her off her feet, my arms crossed behind her narrow back, my
hand cradling her limp head, and I was groaning so loud against her with the pumping of the
blood that it was a song in time with her heart. But the heart was slowing too quickly. Her
death was coming, and with all her will she pumped against it, and in a final burst of denial I
pushed her away from me and held her still.
I was almost swooning. The thirst wanted her heart. It was no alchemist, the thirst. And I
was standing there with my lips parted and my eyes glazed and I held her far, far away from
me as if I were two beings, the one wanting to crush her and the other to bring her to me.
Her eyes were open and seemingly blind. For a moment she was in some place beyond all
suffering, where there was nothing but sweetness and even something that might be
understanding, but then I heard her calling to me by name.
I lifted my right wrist to my mouth and slashed the vein and pushed it against her lips. She
didn't move as the blood spilled over her tongue.
"Mother, drink," I said frantically, and pushed it harder, but some change had already
commenced.
Her lips quivered, and her mouth locked to me and the pain whipped through me suddenly
encircling my heart.
Her body lengthened, tensed, her left hand rising to grasp my wrist as she swallowed the
first spurt. And the pain grew stronger and stronger so that I almost cried out. I could see it as
if it were molten metal coursing through my vessels, branching through every sinew and
limb. Yet it was only her pulling, her sucking, her taking the blood out of me that I had taken
from her. She was standing now on her own feet, her head barely leaning against my chest.
And a numbness crept over me with the pulling burning through the numbness, and my heart
thundered against it, feeding the pain as it fed her-pulling with every beat.
Harder and harder she drew and faster, and I felt her grip tighten and her body grow hard. I
wanted to force her away, but I would not do it, and when my legs gave under me it was she
who held me up. I was swaying and the room was tilting, but she went on with it and a vast
silence stretched out in all directions from me and then without will or conviction, I thrust her
backwards away.
She stumbled and stood before the window, her long fingers pressed flat against her open
mouth. And before I turned and collapsed into the nearby chair I looked full at her white face
for an instant, and her form swelling, it seemed, under the thin peeling of dark blue taffeta,
her eyes like two crystal orbs gathering the light.
I think I said, "Mother," in that instant like some stupid mortal, and I closed my eyes.
2
I was sitting in the chair it seemed I'd been asleep forever, but I hadn't been asleep at all. I
was home in my father's house.
I looked around for the fire poker and my dogs, and to see if there was any wine left, and
then I saw the gold drapery around the windows and the back of Notre Dame against the
evening stars, and I saw her there.
We were in Paris. And we were going to live forever.
She had something in her hands. Another candelabra. A tinderbox. She stood very straight
and her movements were quick. She made a spark and touched it to the candles one by one.
And the little flames rose, and the painted flowers on the walls rolled up to the ceiling and the
dancers on the ceiling moved for one moment and then were frozen in their circle again.
She was standing in front of me, the candelabra to the right of her. And her face was white
and perfectly smooth. The dark bruises under her eyes had gone away, in fact every blemish
or flaw she had ever had had gone away, though what those flaws had been I couldn't have
told you. She was perfect now.
And the lines given her by age had been reduced and curiously deepened, so that there
were tiny laugh lines at the edge of each eye, and a very tiny crease on either side of her
mouth. The barest fold of extra flesh remained to each eyelid, heightening her symmetry, the
sense of triangles in her face, and her lips were the softest shade of pink. She looked delicate
as a diamond can look delicate when preyed upon by the light. I closed my eyes and opened
them again and saw it was no delusion, any more than her silence was a delusion. And I saw
that her body was even more profoundly changed. She had the fullness of young womanhood
again, the breasts that the illness had withered away. They were swelling above the dark blue
taffeta of her corset, the pale pink tint of her flesh so subtle it might have been reflected light.
But her hair was even more astonishing because it appeared to be alive. So much color
moved in it that the hair itself appeared to be writhing, billions of tiny strands stirring around
the flawless white face and throat.
The wounds on her throat were gone.
Now nothing remained but the final act of courage. Look into her eyes.
Look with these vampire eyes at another being like yourself for the first time since Magnus
leapt into the fire.
I must have made some sound because she responded ever so slightly as if I had. Gabrielle,
that was the only name I could ever call her now. "Gabrielle," I said io her, never having
called her that except in some very private thoughts, and I saw her almost smile.
I looked down at my wrist. The wound was gone but the thirst gnashed in me. My veins
spoke to me as if I had spoken to them. And I stared at her and saw her lips move in a tiny
gesture of hunger. And she gave me a strange, meaningful expression as if to say, "Don't you
understand?"
But I heard nothing from her. Silence, only the beauty of her eyes looking full at me and
the love perhaps with which we saw each other, but silence stretching in all directions,
ratifying nothing. I couldn't fathom it. Was she closing her mind? I asked her silently and she
didn't appear to comprehend.
"Now," she said, and her voice startled me. It was softer, more resonant than before. For
one moment we were in Auvergne, the snow was falling, and she was singing to me and it
was echoing as if in a great cave. But that was finished. She said, "Go . . . done with all of
this, quickly-now!" She nodded to coax me and she came closer and she tugged at my hand.
"Look at yourself in the minor," she whispered.
But I knew. I had given her more blood than I had taken from her. I was starved. I hadn't
even fed before I came to her.
But I was so taken with the sound of the syllables and that glimpse of snow falling and the
memory of the singing that for a moment I didn't respond. I looked at her fingers touching
mine. I saw our flesh was the same. I rose up out of the chair and held her two hands and then
I felt of her arms and her face. It was done and I was alive still! She was with me now. She
had come through that awful solitude and she was with me, and I could think of nothing
suddenly except holding her, crushing her to me, never letting her go.
I lifted her off her feet. I swung her up in my arms and we turned round and round.
She threw back her head and her laughter shook loose from her, growing louder and
louder, until I put my hand over her mouth.
"You can shatter all the glass in the room with your voice," I whispered. I glanced towards
the doors. Nicki and Roget were out there.
"Then let me shatter it!" she said, and there was nothing playful in her expression. I set her
on her feet. I think we embraced again and again almost foolishly. I couldn't keep myself
from it.
But other mortals were moving in the flat, the doctor and the nurses thinking that they
should come in.
I saw her look to the door. She was hearing them too. But why wasn't I hearing her?
She broke away from me, eyes darting from one object to another. She snatched up the
candles again and brought them to the mirror where she looked at her face.
I understood what was happening to her. She needed time to see and to measure with her
new vision. But we had to get out of the flat.
I could hear Nicki's voice through the wall, urging the doctor to knock on the door.
How was I to get her out of here, get rid of them?
"No, not that way," she said when she saw me look at the door.
She was looking at the bed, the objects on the table. She went to the bed and took her
jewels from under the pillow. She examined them and put them back into the worn velvet
purse. Then she fastened the purse to her skirt so that it was lost in the folds of cloth.
There was an air of importance to these little gestures. I knew even though her mind was
giving me nothing that this was all she wanted from this room. She was taking leave of
things, the clothes she'd brought with her, her ancient silver brush and comb, and the tattered
books that lay on the table by the bed.
There was knocking at the door.
"Why not this way?" she asked, and turning to the window, she threw open the glass. The
breeze gusted into the gold draperies and lifted her hair off the back of her neck, and when
she turned I shivered at the sight of her, her hair tangling around her face, and her eyes wide
and filled with myriad fragments of color and an almost tragic light. She was afraid of
nothing.
I took hold of her and for a moment wouldn't let her go. I nestled my face into her hair, and
all I could think again was that we were together and nothing was ever going to separate us
now. I didn't understand her silence, why I couldn't hear her, but I knew it wasn't her doing,
and perhaps I believed it would pass. She was with me. That was the world. Death was my
commander and I gave him a thousand victims, but I'd snatched her right out of his hand. I
said it aloud. I said other desperate and nonsensical things. We were the same terrible and
deadly beings, the two of us, we were wandering in the Savage Garden and I tried to make it
real for her with images, the meaning of the Savage Garden, but it didn't matter if she didn't
understand.
"The Savage Garden," she repeated the words reverently, her lips making a soft smile.
It was pounding in my head. I felt her kissing me and making some little whisper as if in
accompaniment to her thoughts.
She said, "But help me, now, I want to see you do it, now, and we have forever to hold to
each other. Come."
Thirst. I should have been burning. I positively required the blood, and she wanted the
taste, I knew she did. Because I remembered that I had wanted it that very first night. It struck
me then that the pain of her physical death . . . the fluids leaving her... might be lessened if
she could first drink.
The knocking came again. The door wasn't locked.
I stepped up on the sill of the window and reached for her, and immediately she was in my
arms. She weighed nothing, but I could feel her power, the tenacity of her grip. Yet when she
saw the alley below, the top of the wall and the quai beyond, she seemed for a moment to
doubt.
"Put your arms around my neck," I said, "and hold tight."
I climbed up the stones, carrying her with her feet dangling, her face turned upwards to me,
until we had reached the slippery slates of the roof.
Then I took her hand and pulled her after me, running faster and faster, over the gutters and
the chimney pots, leaping across the narrow alleys until we had reached the other side of the
island. I'd been ready any moment for her to cry out or cling to me, but she wasn't afraid.
She stood silent, looking over the rooftops of the Left Bank, and down at the river crowded
with thousands of dark little boats full of ragged beings, and she seemed for the moment
simply to feel the wind unraveling her hair. I could have fallen in a stupor looking at her,
studying her, all the aspects of the transformation, but there was an immense excitement in
me to take her through the entire city, to reveal all things to her, to teach her everything I'd
learned. She knew nothing of physical exhaustion now any more than I did. And she wasn't
stunned by any horror such as I had been when Magnus went into the fire.
A carriage came speeding along the quai below, listing badly towards the river, the driver
hunched over, trying to keep his balance on the high bench. I pointed to it as it drew near and
I clasped her hand.
We leapt as it came beneath us, landing soundlessly on the leather top. The busy driver
never looked around. I held tight to her, steadying her, until we were both riding easily, ready
to jump off the vehicle when we chose.
It was indescribably thrilling, doing this with her.
We were thundering over the bridge and past the cathedral, and on through the crowds on
the Pont Neuf. I heard her laughter again. I wondered what those in the high windows saw
when they looked down on us, two gaily dressed figures clinging to the unsteady roof of the
carriage like mischievous children as if it were a raft.
The carriage swerved. We were racing towards St. Germain des-Pres, scattering the crowds
before us and roaring past the intolerable stench of the cemetery of les Innocents as towering
tenements closed in.
For one second, I felt the shimmer of the presence, but it was gone so quickly I doubted
myself. I looked back and could catch no glimmer of it. And I realized with extraordinary
vividness that Gabrielle and I would talk about the presence together, that we would talk
about everything together, and approach all things together. This night was as cataclysmic in
its own way as the night Magnus had changed me, and this night had only begun.
The neighborhood was perfect now. I took her hand again, and pulled her after me, off the
carriage, down into the street.
She stared dazed at the spinning wheels, but they were immediately gone. She didn't even
look disheveled so much as she looked impossible, a woman torn out of time and place, clad
only in slippers and dress, no chains on her, free to soar.
We entered a narrow alleyway and ran together, arms around each other, and now and then
I looked down to see her eyes sweeping the walls above us, the scores of shuttered windows
with their little streaks of escaping light.
I knew what she was seeing. I knew the sounds that pressed in on her. But still I could hear
nothing from her, and this frightened me a little to think maybe she was deliberately shutting
me out.
But she had stopped. She was having the first spasm of her death. I could see it in her face.
I reassured her, and reminded her in quick words of the vision I'd given her before.
"This is brief pain, nothing compared to what you've known. It will be gone in a matter of
hours, maybe less if we drink now."
She nodded, more impatient with it than afraid.
We came out into a little square. In the gateway to an old house a young man stood, as if
waiting for someone, the collar of his gray cloak up to shield his face.
Was she strong enough to take him? Was she as strong as I? This was the time to find out.
"If the thirst doesn't carry you into it, then it's too soon," I told her.
I glanced at her and a coldness crept over me. Her look of concentration was almost purely
human, so intent was it, so fixed; and her eyes were shadowed with that same sense of
tragedy I'd glimpsed before. Nothing was lost on her. But when she moved towards the man
she wasn't human at all. She had become a pure predator, as only a beast can be a predator,
and yet she was a woman walking slowly towards a man-a lady, in fact, stranded here without
cape or hat or companions, and approaching a gentleman as if to beg for his aid. She was all
that.
It was ghastly to watch it, the way that she moved over the stones as if she did not even
touch them, and the way that everything, even the wisps of her hair blown this way and that
by the breeze, seemed somehow under her command. She could have moved through the wall
itself with that relentless step.
I drew back into the shadows.
The man quickened, turned to her with the faint grind of his boot heel on the stones, and
she rose on tiptoe as if to whisper in his ear. I think for one moment she hesitated. Perhaps
she was faintly horrified. If she was, then the thirst had not had time enough to grow strong.
But if she did question it, it was for no more than that second. She was taking him and he was
powerless and I was too fascinated to do anything but watch.
But it came to me quite unexpectedly that I hadn't warned her about the heart. How could I
have forgotten such a thing? I rushed towards her, but she had already let him go. And he had
crumpled against the wall, his head to one side, his hat fallen at his feet. He was dead.
She stood looking down at him, and I saw the blood working in her, heating her and
deepening her color and the red of her lips. Her eyes were a flash of violet when she glanced
at me, almost exactly the color the sky had been when I'd come into her bedroom. I was silent
watching her as she looked down at the victim with a curious amazement as if she did not
completely accept what she saw. Her hair was tangled again and I lifted it back from her.
She slipped into my arms. I guided her away from the victim. She glanced back once or
twice, then looked straight forward.
"It's enough for this night. We should go home to the tower," I said. I wanted to show her
the treasure, and just to be with her in that safe place, to hold her and comfort her if she began
to go mad over it all. She was feeling the death spasms again. There she could rest by the fire.
"No, I don't want to go yet," she said. "The pain won't go on long, you promised it
wouldn't. I want it to pass and then to be here." She looked up at me, and she smiled. "I came
to Paris to die, didn't I?" she whispered.
Everything was distracting her, the dead man back there, slumped in his gray cape, the sky
shimmering on the surface of a puddle of water, a cat streaking atop a nearby wall. The blood
was hot in her, moving in her.
I clasped her hand and urged her to follow me. "I have to drink," I said.
"Yes, I see it," she whispered. "You should have taken him. I should have thought . . . And
you are the gentleman, even still."
"The starving gentleman." I smiled. "Let's not stumble over ourselves devising an etiquette
for monsters." I laughed. I would have kissed her, but I was suddenly distracted. I squeezed
her hand too tightly.
Far away, from the direction of les Innocents, I heard the presence as strongly as ever
before.
She stood as still as I was, and inclining her head slowly to one side, moved the hair back
from her ear.
"Do you hear it?" I asked.
She looked up at me. "Is it another one!" She narrowed her eyes and glanced again in the
direction from which the emanation had come.
"Outlaw!" she said aloud.
"What?" Outlaw, outlaw, outlaw. I felt a wave of lightheadedness, something of a dream
remembered. Fragment of a dream. But I couldn't think. I'd been damaged by doing it to her. I
had to drink.
"It called us outlaws," she said. "Didn't you hear it?" And she listened again, but it was
gone and neither of us heard it, and I couldn't be certain that I received that clear pulse,
outlaw, but it seemed I had!
"Never mind it, whatever it is," I said. "It never comes any closer than that." But even as I
spoke I knew it had been more virulent this time. I wanted to get away from les Innocents. "It
lives in graveyards," I murmured. "It may not be able to live elsewhere . . . for very long."
But before I finished speaking, I felt it again, and it seemed to expand and to exude the
strongest malevolence I'd received from it yet.
"It's laughing!" she whispered.
I studied her. Without doubt, she was hearing it more clearly than I.
"Challenge it!" I said. "Call it a coward! Tell it to come out!"
She gave me an amazed look.
"Is that really what you want to do?" she questioned me under her breath. She was
trembling slightly, and I steadied her. She put her arm around her waist as if one of the
spasms had come again.
"Not now then," I said. "This isn't the time. And we'll hear it again, just when we've
forgotten all about it."
"It's gone," she said. "But it hates us, this thing. . ."
"Let's get away from it," I said contemptuously, and putting my arm around her I hurried
her along.
I didn't tell her what I was thinking, what weighed on me far more than the presence and its
usual tricks. If she could hear the presence as well as I could, better in fact, then she had all
my powers, including the ability to send and hear images and thoughts. Yet we could no
longer hear each other!
3
I found a victim as soon as we had crossed the river, and as soon as I spotted the man, there
came the deepening awareness that everything I had done alone I would now do with her. She
would watch this act, learn from it. I think the intimacy of it made the blood rush to my face.
And as I lured the victim out of the tavern, as I teased him, maddened him, and then took
him, I knew I was showing off for her, making it a little crueler, more playful. And when the
kill came, it had an intensity to it that left me spent afterwards.
She loved it. She watched everything as if she could suck up the very vision as she sucked.
blood. We came together again and I took her in my arms and I felt her heat and she felt my
heat. The blood was flooding my brain. And we just held each other, even the thin covering
of our garments seeming alien, two burning statues in the dark.
After that, the night lost all ordinary dimensions. In fact, it remains one of the longest
nights I have ever endured in my immortal life.
It was endless and fathomless and dizzying, and there were times when I wanted some
defense against its pleasures and its surprises, arid I had none.
And though I said her name over and over, to make it natural, she wasn't really Gabrielle
yet to me. She was simply she, the one I had needed all of my life with all of my being. The
only woman I had ever loved.
Her actual death didn't take long.
We sought out an empty cellar room where we remained until it was finished. And there I
held on to her and talked to her as it went on. I told her everything that had happened to me
again, in words this time.
I told her all about the tower. I told everything that Magnus had said. I explained all the
occurrences of the presence. And how I had become almost used to it and contemptuous of it,
and not willing to chase it down. Over and over again I tried to send her images, but it was
useless. I didn't say anything about it. Neither did she. But she listened very attentively.
I talked to her about Nicki's suspicions, which of course he had not mentioned to her at all.
And I explained that I feared for him even more now. Another open window, another empty
room, and this time witnesses to verify the strangeness of it all.
But never mind, I should tell Roget some story that would make it plausible. I should find
some means to do right by Nicki, to break the chain of suspicions that was binding him to me.
She seemed dimly fascinated by all of this, but it didn't really matter to her. What mattered
to her was what lay before her now.
And when her death was finished, she was unstoppable. There was no wall that she could
not climb, no door she wouldn't enter, no rooftop terrain too steep.
It was as if she did not believe she would live forever; rather she thought she had been
granted this one night of supernatural vitality and all things must be known and accomplished
before death would come for her at dawn.
Many times I tried to persuade her to go home to the tower. As the hours passed, a spiritual
exhaustion came over me. I needed to be quiet there, to think on what had happened. I'd open
my eyes and see only blackness for an instant. But she wanted only experiment, adventure.
She proposed that we enter the private dwellings of mortals now to search for the clothes
she needed. She laughed when I said that I always purchased my clothes in the proper way.
"We can hear if a house is empty," she said, moving swiftly through the streets, her eyes on
the windows of the darkened mansions. "We can hear if the servants are asleep."
It made perfect sense, though I'd never attempted such a thing. And I was soon following
her up narrow back stairs and down carpeted corridors, amazed at the ease of it all, and
fascinated by the details of the informal chambers in which mortals lived. I found I liked to
touch personal things: fans, snuffboxes, the newspaper the master of the house had been
reading, his boots on the hearth. It was as much fun as peering into windows.
But she had her purpose. In a lady's dressing room in a large St. Germain house, she found
a fortune in lavish clothes to fit her new and fuller form. I helped to peel off the old taffeta
and to dress her up in pink velvet, gathering her hair in tidy curls under an ostrich-plume hat.
I was shocked again by the sight of her, and the strange eerie feeling of wandering with her
through this over furnished house full of mortal scents. She gathered objects from the
dressing table. A vial of perfume, a small gold pair of scissors. She looked at herself in the
glass.
I went to kiss her again and she didn't stop me. We were lovers kissing. And that was the
picture we made together, white-faced lovers, as we rushed down the servants' stairs and out
into the late evening streets.
We wandered in and out of the Opera and the Comedie before they closed, then through
the ball in the Palais Royal. It delighted her the way mortals saw us, but did not see us, how
they were drawn to us, and completely deceived.
We heard the presence very sharply after that, as we explored the churches, then again it
was gone. We climbed belfries to survey our kingdom, and afterwards huddled in crowded
coffeehouses for a little while merely to feel and smell the mortals around us, to exchange
secret glances, to laugh softly, tete-a-tete.
She fell into dream states, looking at the steam rising from the mug of coffee, at the layers
of cigarette smoke hovering around the lamps.
She loved the dark empty streets and the fresh air more than anything else. She wanted to
climb up into the limbs of the trees and onto the rooftops again. She marveled that I didn't
always travel through the city by means of the rooftops, or ride about atop carriages as we
had done.
Some time after midnight, we were in the deserted market, just walking hand in hand.
We had just heard the presence again but neither of us could discern a disposition in it as
we had before. It was puzzling me.
But everything around us was astonishing her still-the refuse, the cats that chased the
vermin, the bizarre stillness, the way that the darkest comers of the metropolis held no danger
for us. She remarked on that. Perhaps it was that which enchanted her most of all, that we
could slip past the dens of thieves unheard, that we could easily defeat anyone who should be
fool enough to trouble us, that we were both visible and invisible, palpable and utterly
unaccountable.
I didn't rash her or question her. I was merely borne along with her and content and
sometimes lost in my own thoughts about this unfamiliar content.
And when a handsome, slightly built young man came riding through the darkened stalls I
watched him as if he were an apparition, something coming from the land of the living into
the land of the dead. He reminded me of Nicolas because of his dark hair and dark eyes, and
something innocent yet brooding in the face. He shouldn't have been in the market alone. He
was younger than Nicki and very foolish, indeed.
But just how foolish he was I didn't realize until she moved forward like a great pink
feline, and brought him down almost silently from the horse.
I was shaken. The innocence of her victims didn't trouble her. She didn't fight my moral
battles. But then I didn't fight them anymore either, so why should I judge her? Yet the ease
with which she slew the young man-gracefully breaking his neck when the little drink she
took was not enough to kill him-angered me though it had been extremely exciting to watch.
She was colder than I. She was better at all of it, I thought. Magnus had said, "Show no
mercy." But had he meant us to kill when we did not have to kill?"
It came clear in an instant why she'd done it. She tore off the pink velvet girdle and skirts
right there and put on the boy's clothes. She'd chosen him for the fit of the clothes.
And to describe it more truly, as she put on his garments, she became the boy.
She put on his cream silk stockings and scarlet breeches, the lace shirt and the yellow
waistcoat and then the scarlet frock coat, and even took the scarlet ribbon from the boy's hair.
Something in me rebelled against the charm of it, her standing so boldly in these new
garments with all her hair still full over her shoulders looking more the lion's mane now than
the lovely mass of woman's tresses it had been moments before. Then I wanted to ravage her.
I closed my eyes.
When I looked at her again, my head was swimming with all that we'd seen and done
together. I couldn't endure being so near to the dead boy.
She tied all of her blond hair together with the scarlet ribbon and let the long locks hang
down her back. She laid the pink dress over the body of the boy to cover him, and she
buckled on his sword, and drew it once and sheathed it again, and took his cream-colored
roquelaure.
"Let's go, then, darling," she said, and she kissed me.
I couldn't move. I wanted to go back to the tower, and just be close to her. She looked at
me and pressed my hand to spur me on. And she was almost immediately running ahead.
She had to feel the freedom of her limbs, and I found myself pounding after her, having to
exert myself to catch up.
That had never happened with me and any mortal, of course. She seemed to be flying. And
the sight of her flashing through the boarded-up stalls and the heaps of garbage made me
almost lose my balance. Again I stopped.
She came back to me and kissed me. "But there's no real reason for me to dress that way
anymore, is there?" she asked. She might have been talking to a child.
"No, of course there isn't," I said. Maybe it was a blessing that she couldn't read my
thoughts. I couldn't stop looking at her legs, so perfect in the cream-colored stockings. And
the way that the frock coat gathered at her small waist. Her face was like a flame.
Remember in those times you never saw a woman's legs like that. Or the silk of breeches
tight over her small belly, or thighs.
But she was not really a woman now, was she? Any more than I was a man. For one silent
second the horror of it all bled through.
"Come, I want to take to the roofs again," she said. "I want to go to the boulevard du
Temple. I should like to see the theater, the one that you purchased and then shut up. Will
you show that to me?" She was studying me as she asked this.
"Of course," I said. "Why not?"
We had two hours left of the endless night when we finally returned to the Ile St. Louis and
stood on the moonlit quais. Far down the paved street I saw my mare tethered where I'd left
her. Perhaps she had gone unnoticed in the confusion that must have followed our departure.
We listened carefully for any sign of Nicki or Roget, but the house appeared deserted and
dark.
"They are near, however," she whispered. "I think somewhere further down . . . "
"Nicki's flat," I said. "And from Nicki's flat someone could be watching the mare, a servant
posted to watch in case we came back."
"Better to leave the horse and steal another," she said.
"No, it's mine," I said. But I felt her grip on my hand tighten.
Our old friend again, the presence, and this time it was moving along the Seine on the
other side of the island and toward the Left Bank.
"Gone," she said. "Let's go. We can steal another mount."
"Wait, I'm going to try to get her to come to me. To break the tether."
"Can you do that?"
"We'll see." I concentrated all my will on the mare, telling her silently to back up, to pull
loose from the bond holding her and come.
In a second, the horse was prancing, jerking at the leather. Then she reared and the tether
broke.
She came clattering towards us over the stones, and we were on her immediately, Gabrielle
leaping up first and I right behind her, gathering up what was left of the rein as I urged the
horse to go into a dead run.
As we crossed the bridge I felt something behind us, a commotion, the tumult of mortal
minds.
But we were lost in the black echo chamber of the Ile de la City.
When we reached the tower, I lighted the resin torch and took her down with me into the
dungeon. There was no time now to show her the upper chamber.
Her eyes were glassy and she looked about herself sluggishly as we descended the screw
stairs. Her scarlet clothes gleamed against the dark stones. Ever so slightly she recoiled from
the dampness.
The stench from the lower prison cells disturbed her, but I told her gently it was nothing to
do with us. And once we had entered the huge burial crypt, the smell was shut out by the
heavy iron-studded door.
The torchlight spread out to reveal the low arches of the ceiling, the three great sarcophagi
with their deeply graven images.
She did not seem afraid. I told her that she must see if she could lift the stone lid of the one
she chose for herself. I might have to do it for her.
She studied the three carved figures. And after a moment's reflection, she chose not the
woman's sarcophagus but the one with the knight in armor carved on the top of it. And slowly
she pushed the stone lid out of place so she could look into the space within.
Not as much strength as I possessed but strong enough.
"Don't be frightened," I said.
"No, you mustn't ever worry on that account," she answered softly. Her voice had a lovely
frayed sound to it, a faint timbre of sadness. She appeared to be dreaming as she ran her
hands over the stone.
"By this hour," she said, "she might have already been laid out, your mother. And the room
would be full of evil smells and the smoke of hundreds of candles. Think how humiliating it
is, death. Strangers would have taken off her clothes, bathed her, dressed her-strangers seen
her emaciated and defenseless in the final sleep. And those whispering in the corridors would
have talked of their good health, and how they have never had the slightest illness in their
families, no, no consumption in their families. 'The poor Marquise,' they would have said.
They would have been wondering, did she have any money of her own? Did she leave it to
her sons? And the old woman when she came to collect the soiled sheets, she would have
stolen one of the rings off the dead woman's hand."
I nodded. And so we stand in this dungeon crypt, I wanted to say, and we prepare to lie
down on stone beds, with only rats to keep us company. But it's infinitely better than that,
isn't it? It has its dark splendor, to walk the nightmare terrain forever.
She looked wan, cold all over. Sleepily, she drew something out of her pocket.
It was the golden scissor she'd taken from the lady's table in the faubourg St. Germain.
Sparkling in the light of the torch like a bauble.
"No, Mother," I said. My own voice startled me. It leapt out echoing too sharply under the
arched ceiling. The figures on the other sarcophagi seemed merciless witnesses. The hurt in
my heart stunned me.
Evil sound, the snipping, the shearing. Her hair fell down in great long locks on the floor.
"Ooooh, Mother."
She looked down at it, scattering it silently with the tip of her boot, and then she looked up
at me, and she was a young man now certainly, the short hair curling against her cheek. But
her eyes were closing. She reached out to me and the scissors fell out of her hands.
"Rest now," she whispered.
"It's only the rising sun," I said to reassure her. She was weakening sooner than I did. She
turned away from me and moved towards the coffin. I lifted her and her eyes shut. Pushing
the lid of the sarcophagus even farther to the right, I laid her down inside, letting her pliant
limbs arrange themselves naturally and gracefully.
Her face had already smoothed itself into sleep, her hair framing her face with a young
boy's locks.
Dead, she seemed, and gone, the magic undone.
I kept looking at her.
I let my teeth cut into the tip of my tongue until I felt the pain and tasted the hot blood
there. Then bending low I let the blood fall in tiny shining droplets on her lips. Her eyes
opened. Violet blue and glittering, they stared up at me. The blood flowed into her opening
mouth and slowly she lifted her head to meet my kiss. My tongue passed into her. Her lips
were cold. My lips were cold. But the blood was hot and it flowed between us.
"Good night, my darling one," I said. "My dark angel Gabrielle."
She sank back into stillness as I let her go. I closed the stone over her.
4
I did not like rising in the black underground crypt. I didn't like the chill in the air, and that
faint stench from the prison below, the feeling that this was where all the dead things lay.
A fear overcame me. What if she didn't rise? What if her eyes never opened again? What
did I know of what I'd done?
Yet it seemed an arrogant thing, an obscene thing to move the lid of the coffin again and
gaze at her in her sleep as I had done last night. A mortal shame came over me. At home, I
would never have dared to open her door without knocking, never dared to draw back the
curtains of her bed.
She would rise. She had to. And better that she should lift the stone for herself, know how
to rise, and that the thirst should drive her to it at the proper moment as it had driven me.
I lighted the torch on the wall for her, and went out for a moment to breathe the fresh air.
Then leaving gates and doors unlocked behind me, I went up into Magnus's cell to watch the
twilight melt from the sky.
I'd hear her, I thought, when she awakened.
An hour must have passed. The azure light faded, the stars rose, and the distant city of
Paris lighted its myriad tiny beacons. I left the windowsill where I had sat against the iron
bars and I went to the chest and began to select jewels for her.
Jewels she still loved. She had taken her old keepsakes with her when we left her room. I
lighted the candles to help me see, though I didn't really need them. The illumination was
beautiful to me. Beautiful on the jewels. And I found very delicate and lovely things for herpearl-
studded pins that she might wear in the lapels of her mannish little coat, and rings that
would look masculine on her small hands if that was what she wanted.
I listened now and then for her. And this chill would clutch my heart. What if she did not
rise? What if there had been only that one night for her? Horror thudding in me. And the sea
of jewels in the chest, the candlelight dancing in the faceted stones, the gold settings-it meant
nothing.
But I didn't hear her. I heard the wind outside, the great soft rustle of the trees, the faint
distant whistling of the stable boy as he moved about the barn, the neighing of my horses.
Far off a village church bell rang.
Then very suddenly there came over me the feeling that someone was watching me. This
was so unfamiliar to me that I panicked. I turned, almost stumbling into the chest, and stared
at the mouth of the secret tunnel. No one there.
No one in this small empty sanctum with the candlelight playing on the stones and
Magnus's grim countenance on the sarcophagus.
Then I looked straight in front of me at the barred window.
And I saw her looking back at me.
Floating in the air she seemed to be, holding to the bars with both hands, and she was
smiling.
I almost cried out. I backed up and the sweat broke out all over my body. I was
embarrassed suddenly to be caught off guard, to be so obviously startled.
But she remained motionless, smiling still, her expression gradually changing from
serenity to mischievousness. The candlelight made her eyes too brilliant.
"It's not very nice to frighten other immortals like that," I said.
She laughed more freely and easily than she ever had when she was alive.
Relief coursed through me as she moved, made sounds. I knew I was blushing.
"How did you get there!" I said. I went to the window and reached through the bars and
clasped both her wrists.
Her little mouth was all sweetness and laughter. Her hair was a great shimmering mane
around her face.
"I climbed the wall, of course," she said. "How do you think I got here?"
"Well, go down. You can't come through the bars. I'll go to meet you."
"You're very right about that," she said. "I've been to all the windows. Meet me on the
battlements above. It's faster."
She started climbing, hooking her boots easily into the bars, then she vanished.
She was all exuberance as she'd been the night before as we came down the stairs together.
"Why are we lingering here?" she said. "Why don't we go on now to Paris?"
Something was wrong with her, lovely as she was, something not right . . . what was it?
She didn't want kisses now, or even talk, really. And that had a little sting to it.
"I want to show you the inner room," I said. "And the jewels."
"The jewels?" she asked.
She hadn't seen them from the window. The cover of the chest had blocked her view. She
walked ahead of me into the room where Magnus had burned, and then she lay down to crawl
through the tunnel.
As soon as she saw the chest, she was shocked by it.
She tossed her hair a little impatiently over her shoulder and bent to study the brooches, the
rings, the small ornaments so like those heirlooms she'd had to sell long ago one by one.
"Why, he must have been collecting them for centuries," she said. "And such exquisite
things. He chose what he would take, didn't he? What a creature he must have been."
Again, almost angrily, she pushed her hair out of her way. It seemed paler, more luminous,
fuller. A glorious thing.
"The pearls, look at them," I said. "And these rings." I showed her the ones I'd already
chosen for her. I took her hand and slipped the rings on her fingers. Her fingers moved as if
they had life of their own, could feel delight, and again she laughed.
"Ah, but we are splendid devils, aren't we?"
"Hunters of the Savage Garden," I said.
"Then let's go into Paris," she said. Faint touch of pain in her face, the thirst. She ran her
tongue over her lips. Was I half as fascinating to her as she was to me?
She raked her hair back from her forehead, and her eyes darkened with the intensity of her
words.
"I wanted to feed quickly tonight," she said, "then go out of the city, into the woods. Go
where there are no men and women about. Go where there is only the wind and the dark
trees, and the stars overhead. Blessed silence."
She went to the window again. Her back was narrow and straight, and her hands at her
sides, alive with the jeweled rings. And coming as they did out of the thick cuffs of the man's
coat, her hands looked all the more slender and exquisite. She must have been looking at the
high dim clouds, the stars that burned through the purple layer of evening mist.
"I have to go to Roget," I said under my breath. "I have to take care of Nicki, tell them
some lie about what's happened to you."
She turned, and her face looked small and cold suddenly, the way it could at home when
she was disapproving. But she'd never really look that way again.
"Why tell them anything about me?" she asked. "Why ever even bother with them again?"
I was shocked by this. But it wasn't a complete surprise to me. Perhaps I'd been waiting for
it. Perhaps I'd sensed it in her all along, the unspoken questions.
I wanted to say Nicki sat by your bed when you were dying, does that mean nothing? But
how sentimental, how mortal that sounded, how positively foolish.
Yet it wasn't foolish.
"I don't mean to judge you," she said. She folded her arms and leaned against the window.
"I simply don't understand. Why did you write to us? Why did you send us all the gifts? Why
didn't you take this white fire from the moon and go where you wanted with it?"
"But where should I want to go?" I said. "Away from all those I'd known and loved? I did
not want to stop thinking of you, of Nicki, even of my father and my brothers. I did what I
wanted," I said.
"Then conscience played no role in it?"
"If you follow your conscience, you do what you want," I said. "But it was simpler than
that. I wanted you to have the wealth I gave you. I wanted you . . . to be happy."
She reflected for a long time.
"Would you have had me forget you?" I demanded. It sounded spiteful, angry.
She didn't answer immediately.
"No, of course not," she said. "And had it been the other way around, I would never have
forgotten you either. I'm sure of it. But the rest of them? I don't give a damn about them. I
shall never exchange words with them again. I shall never lay eyes on them."
I nodded. But I hated what she was saying. She frightened me.
"I cannot overcome this notion that I've died," she said. "That I am utterly cut off from all
living creatures. I can taste, I can see, I can feel. I can drink blood. But I am like something
that cannot be seen, cannot affect things."
"It's not so," I said. "And how long do you think it will sustain you, feeling and seeing and
touching and tasting, if there is no love? No one with you?"
The same uncomprehending expression.
"Oh, why do I bother to tell you this?" I said. "I am with you. We're together. You don't
know what it was like when I was alone. You can't imagine it."
"I trouble you and I don't mean to," she said. "Tell them what you will. Maybe you can
somehow make up a palatable story. I don't know. If you want me to go with you, I'll go. I'll
do what you ask of me. But I have one more question for you." She dropped her voice.
"Surely you don't mean to share this power with them!"
"No, never." I shook my head as if to say the thought was incredible. I was looking at the
jewels, thinking of all the gifts I'd sent, thinking of the dollhouse. I had sent them a dollhouse.
I thought of Renaud's players safely across the Channel.
"Not even with Nicolas?"
"No, God, no!" I looked at her.
She nodded slightly as if she approved of this answer. And she pushed at her hair again in
a distracted way.
"Why not with Nicolas?" she asked.
I wanted this to stop.
"Because he's young," I said, "and he has life before him. He's not on the brink of death."
Now I was more than uneasy. I was miserable. "In time, he'll forget about us. . ." I wanted to
say "about our conversation."
"He could die tomorrow," she said. "A carriage could crush him in the streets. . ."
"Do you want me to do it!" I glared at her.
"No, I don't want you to do it. But who am I to tell you what to do? I am trying to
understand you."
Her long heavy hair had slipped over her shoulders again, and exasperated, she took hold
of it in both hands.
Then suddenly she made a low hissing sound, and her body went rigid. She was holding
her long tresses and staring at them.
"My God," she whispered. And then in a spasm, she let go of her hair and screamed.
The sound paralyzed me. It sent a flash of white pain through my head. I had never heard
her scream. And she screamed again as if she were on fire. She had fallen back against the
window and she was screaming louder as she looked at her hair. She went to touch it and then
pulled her fingers back from it as if it were blazing. And she struggled against the window,
screaming and twisting from side to side, as if she were trying to get away from her own hair.
"Stop it!" I shouted. I grabbed hold of her shoulders and shook her. She was gasping. I
realized instantly what it was. Her hair had grown back! It had grown back as she slept until
it was as long as it had been before. And it was thicker even, more lustrous. That is what was
wrong with the way she looked, what I had noticed and not noticed! And what she herself had
just seen.
"Stop it, stop it now!" I shouted louder, her body shaking so violently I could hardly keep
her in my arms. "It's grown back, that's all!" I insisted. "It's natural to you, don't you see? It's
nothing!"
She was choking, trying to calm herself, touching it and then screaming as if her fingertips
were blistered. She tried to get away from me, and then ripped at her hair in pure terror.
I shook her hard this time.
"Gabrielle!" I said. "Do you understand me? It's grown back, and it will every time you cut
it! There's no horror in it, for the love of hell, stop!" I thought if she didn't stop, I'd start to
rave myself. I was trembling as badly as she was.
She stopped screaming and she was giving little gasps. I'd never seen her like this, not in
all the years and years in Auvergne. She let me guide her towards the bench by the hearth,
where I made her sit down. She put her hands to her temples and tried to catch her breath, her
body rocking back and forth slowly.
I looked about for a scissor. I had none. The little gold scissor had fallen on the floor of the
crypt below. I took out my knife.
She was sobbing softly in her hands.
"Do you want me to cut it off again?" I asked.
She didn't answer.
"Gabrielle, listen to me." I took her hands from her face, "I'll cut it again if you like. Each
night, cut it, and burn it. That's all."
She stared at me in such perfect stillness suddenly that I didn't know what to do. Her face
was smeared with blood from her tears, and there was blood on her linen. Blood all over her
linen.
"Shall I cut it?" I asked her again.
She looked exactly as if someone had hit her and made her bleed. Her eyes were wide and
wondering, the blood tears seeping out of them down her smooth cheeks. And as I watched,
the flow stopped and the tears darkened and dried to a crust on her white skin.
I wiped her face carefully with my lace handkerchief. I went to the clothing I kept in the
tower, the garments made for me in Paris that I'd brought back and kept here now.
I took off her coat. She made no move to help me or stop me and I unhooked the linen shirt
that she wore.
I saw her breasts and they were perfectly white except for the palest pink tint to the small
nipples. Trying not to look at them, I put the fresh shirt on her and buttoned it quickly. Then I
brushed her hair, brushed it and brushed it, and not wanting to hack at it with the knife, I
braided it for her in one long plait, and I put her coat back on her.
I could feel her composure and her strength coming back. She didn't seem ashamed of
what had happened. And I didn't want her to be. She was merely considering things. But she
didn't speak. She didn't move.
I started talking to her.
"When I was little, you used to tell me about all the places you'd been. You showed me
pictures of Naples and Venice, remember? Those old books? And you had things, little
keepsakes from London and St. Petersburg, all the places you'd seen."
She didn't answer.
"I want us to go to all those places. I want to see them now. I want to see them and live in
them. I want to go farther even, places I never dreamed of seeing when I was alive."
Something changed in her face.
"Did you know it would grow back?" she asked in a whisper.
"No. I mean yes, I mean, I didn't think. I should have known it would do that."
For a long time she stared at me again in the same still, listless fashion.
"Does nothing about it all . . . ever . . . frighten you?" she asked. Her voice was guttural
and unfamiliar. "Does nothing . . . ever . . . stop you?" she asked. Her mouth was open and
perfect and looked like a human mouth.
"I don't know," I whispered helplessly. "I don't see the point," I said. But I felt confused
now. Again I told her to cut it each night and to bum it. Simple.
"Yes, bum it," she sighed. "Otherwise it should fill all the rooms of the tower in time,
shouldn't it? It would be like Rapunzel's hair in the fairy tale. It would be like the gold that
the miller's daughter had to spin from straw in the fairy tale of the mean dwarf,
Rumpelstiltskin."
"We write our own fairy tales, my love," I said. "The lesson in this is that nothing can
destroy what you are now. Every wound will heal. You are a goddess."
"And the goddess thirsts," she said.
Hours later, as we walked arm in arm like two students through the boulevard crowds, it
was already forgotten. Our faces were ruddy, our skin warm.
But I did not leave her to go to my lawyer. And she did not seek the quiet open country as
she had wanted to do. We stayed close to each other, the faintest shimmer of the presence
now and then making us turn our heads.
5
By the hour of three, when we reached the livery stables, we knew we were being stalked
by the presence.
For half an hour, forty-five minutes at a time, we wouldn't hear it. Then the dull hum
would come again. It was maddening me.
And though we tried hard to hear some intelligible thoughts from it, all we could discern
was malice, and an occasional tumult like the spectacle of dry leaves disintegrated in the roar
of the blaze.
She was glad that we were riding home. It wasn't that the thing annoyed her. It was only
what she had said earlier-she wanted the emptiness of the country, the quiet.
When the open land broke before us, we were going so fast that the wind was the only
sound, and I think I heard her laughing but I wasn't sure. She loved the feel of the wind as I
did, she loved the new brilliance of the stars over the darkened hills.
But I wondered if there had been moments tonight when she had wept inwardly and I had
not known. There had been times when she was obscure and silent, and her eyes quivered as
if they were crying, but there were absolutely no tears.
I was deep into thoughts of that, I think, when we neared a dense wood that grew along the
banks of a shallow stream, and quite suddenly the mare reared and lurched to the side.
I was almost thrown, it was so unexpected. Gabrielle held on tight to my right arm.
Every night I rode into this little glade, crashing over the narrow wooden bridge above the
water. I loved the sound of the horse's hooves on the wood and the climb up the sloping bank.
And my mare knew the path. But now, she would have none of it.
Shying, threatening to rear again, she turned of her own accord and galloped back towards
Paris until, with all the power of my will, I commanded her, reining her in.
Gabrielle was staring back at the thick copse, the great mass of dark, swaying branches that
concealed the stream. And there came over the thin howling of the wind and that soft volume
of rustling leaves, the definite pulse of the presence in the trees.
We heard it at the same moment, surely, because I tightened my arm around Gabrielle as
she nodded, gripping my hand.
"It's stronger!" she said to me quickly. "And it is not one alone."
"Yes," I said, enraged, "and it stands between me and my lair!" I drew my sword, bracing
Gabrielle in my left arm.
"You're not riding into it," she cried out.
"The hell I'm not!" I said, trying to steady the horse. "We don't have two hours before
sunrise. Draw your sword!"
She tried to turn to speak to me, but I was already driving the horse forward. And she drew
her sword as I'd told her to do, her little hand knotted around it as firmly as that of a man.
Of course, the thing would flee as soon as we reached the copse, I was sure of that. I mean
the damned thing had never done anything but turn tail and run. And I was furious that it had
frightened my mount, and that it was frightening Gabrielle.
With a sharp kick, and the full force of my mental persuasion, I sent the horse racing
straight ahead to the bridge.
I locked my hand to the weapon. I bent low with Gabrielle beneath me. I was breathing
rage as if I were a dragon, and when the mare's hooves hit the hollow wood over the water, I
saw them, the demons, for the first time!
White faces and white arms above us, glimpsed for no more than a second, and out of their
mouths the most horrid shrieking as they shook the branches sending down on us a shower of
leaves.
"Damn you, you pack of harpies!" I shouted as we reached the sloping bank on the other
side, but Gabrielle had let out a scream.
Something had landed on the horse behind me, and the horse was slipping in the damp
earth, and the thing had hold of my shoulder and the arm with which I tried to swing the
sword.
Whipping the sword over Gabrielle's head and down past my left arm, I chopped at the
creature furiously, and saw it fly off, a white blur in the darkness, while another one sprang at
us with hands like claws. Gabrielle's blade sliced right through its outstretched arm. I saw the
arm go up into the air, the blood spurting as if from a fountain. The screams became a searing
wail. I wanted to slash every one of them to pieces. I turned the horse back too sharply so that
it reared and almost fell.
But Gabrielle had hold of the horse's mane and she drove it again towards the open road.
As we raced for the tower, we could hear them screaming as they came on. And when the
mare gave out, we abandoned her and ran, hand in hand, towards the gates.
I knew we had to get through the secret passage to the inner chamber before they climbed
the outside wall. They must not see us take the stone out of place.
And locking the gates and doors behind me as fast as I could, I carried Gabrielle up the
stairs.
By the time we reached the secret room and pushed the stone into place again, I heard their
howling and shrieking below and their first scraping against the walls.
I snatched up an armful of firewood and threw it beneath the window.
"Hurry, the kindling," I said.
But there were half a dozen white faces already at the bars. Their shrieks echoed
monstrously in the little cell. For one moment I could only stare at them as I backed away.
They clung to the iron grating like so many bats, but they weren't bats. They were
vampires, and vampires as we were vampires, in human form.
Dark eyes peered at us from under mops of filthy hair, howls growing louder and fiercer,
the fingers that clung to the grating caked with filth. Such clothing as I could see was no
more than colorless rags. And the stench coming from them was the graveyard stench.
Gabrielle pitched the kindling at the wall, and she jumped away as they reached to catch
hold of her. They bared their fangs. They screeched. Hands struggled to pick up the firewood
and throw it back at us. All together they pulled at the grating as if they might free it from the
stone.
"Get the tinderbox," I shouted. I grabbed up one of the stouter pieces of wood and thrust it
right at the closest face, easily flinging the creature out and off the wall. Weak things. I heard
its scream as it fell, but the others had clamped their hands on the wood and they struggled
with me now as I dislodged another dirty little demon. But by this time Gabrielle had lighted
the kindling.
The flames shot upwards. The howling stopped in a frenzy of ordinary speech:
"It's fire, get back, get down, get out of the way, you idiots! Down, down. The bars are hot!
Move away quickly!"
Perfectly regular French! In fact an ever increasing flood of pretty vernacular curse words.
I burst out laughing, stomping my foot and pointing to them, as I looked at Gabrielle.
"A curse on you, blasphemer!" one of them screamed. Then the fire licked at his hands and
he howled, falling backwards.
"A curse on the profaners, the outlaws!" came screams from below. It caught on quickly
and became a regular chorus. "A curse on the outlaws who dared to enter the House of God!"
But they were scrambling down to the ground. The heavy timbers were catching, and the fire
was roaring to the ceiling.
"Go back to the graveyard where you came from, you pack of pranksters!" I said. I would
have thrown the fire down on them if I could have gotten near the window.
Gabrielle stood still with her eyes narrow, obviously listening.
Cries and howls continued from below. A new anthem of curses upon those who broke the
sacred laws, blasphemed, provoked the wrath of God and Satan. They were pulling on the
gates and lower windows. They were doing stupid things like throwing rocks at the wall.
"They can't get in," Gabrielle said in a low monotone, her head still cocked attentively.
"They can't break the gate."
I wasn't so certain. The gate was rusted, very old. Nothing to do but wait.
I collapsed on the floor, leaning against the side of the sarcophagus, my arms around my
chest and my back bent. I wasn't even laughing anymore.
She too sat down against the wall with her legs sprawled out before her. Her chest heaved
a little, and her hair was coming loose from the braid. It was a cobra's hood around her face,
loose strands clinging to her white cheeks. Soot clung to her garments.
The heat of the fire was crushing. The airless room shimmered with vapors and the flames
rose to shut out the night. But we could breathe the little air there was. We suffered nothing
except the fear and the exhaustion.
And gradually I realized she was right about the gate. They hadn't managed to break it
down. I could hear them drawing away.
"May the wrath of God punish the profane!"
There was some faint commotion near the stables. I saw in my mind my poor half-witted
mortal stable boy dragged in terror from his hiding place, and my rage was redoubled. They
were sending me images of it from their thoughts, the murder of that poor boy. Damn them.
"Be still," Gabrielle said. "It's too late."
Her eyes widened and then grew small again as she listened. He was dead, the poor
miserable creature.
I felt the death just as if I had seen a small dark bird suddenly rising from the stables. And
she sat forward as though seeing it too, and then settled back as if she had lost consciousness,
though she had not. She murmured and it sounded like "red velvet," but it was under her
breath and I didn't catch the words.
"I'll punish you for this, you gang of ruffians!" I said aloud. I sent it out towards them.
"You trouble my house. I swear you'll pay for this."
But my limbs were getting heavier and heavier. The heat of the fire was almost drugging.
All the night's strange happenings were taking their toll.
In my exhaustion and in the glare of the fire I could not guess the hour. I think I fell to
dreaming for an instant, and woke myself with a shiver, unsure of how much time had
passed.
I looked up and saw the figure of an unearthly young boy, an exquisite young boy, pacing
the floor of the chamber.
Of course it was only Gabrielle.
6
She gave the impression of almost rampant strength as she walked back and forth. Yet all
of it was contained in an unbroken grace. She kicked at the timbers and watched the
blackened ruin of the fire flare for a moment before settling into itself again. I could see the
sky. An hour perhaps remained.
"But who are they?" she asked. She stood over me, her legs apart, her hands in two liquid
summoning gestures. "Why do they call us outlaws and blasphemers?"
"I've told you everything I know," I confessed. "Until tonight I didn't think they possessed
faces or limbs or real voices."
I climbed to my feet and brushed off my clothes.
"They damned us for entering the churches!" she said. "Did you catch it, those images
coming from them? And they don't know how we managed to do it. They themselves would
not dare."
For the first time I observed that she was trembling. There were other small signs of alarm,
the way the flesh quivered around her eyes, the way that she kept pushing the loose strands of
her hair out of her eyes again.
"Gabrielle," I said. I tried to make my tone authoritative, reassuring. "The important thing
is to get out of here now. We don't know how early those creatures rise, or how soon after
sunset they'll return. We have to discover another hiding place."
"The dungeon crypt," she said.
"A worse trap than this," I said, "if they break through the gate." I glanced at the sky again.
I pulled the stone out of the low passage. "Come on," I said.
"But where are we going?" she asked. For the first time tonight she looked almost fragile.
"To a village east of here," I said. "It's perfectly obvious that the safest place is within the
village church itself."
"Would you do that?" she asked. "In the church?"
"Of course I would. As you just said, the little beasts would never dare to enter! And the
crypts under the altar will be as deep and dark as any grave."
"But Lestat, to rest under the very altar!"
"Mother, you astonish me," I said. "I have taken victims under the very roof of Notre
Dame." But another little idea came to me. I went to Magnus's chest and started picking at the
heap of treasure. I pulled out two rosaries, one of pearls, another of emeralds, both having the
usual small crucifix.
She watched me, her face white, pinched.
"Here, you take this one," I said, giving her the emerald rosary. "Keep it on you. If and
when we do meet with them, show them the crucifix. If I am right, they'll run from it."
"But what happens if we don't find a safe place in the church?"
"How the hell should I know? We'll come back here!"
I could feel a fear collecting in her and radiating from her as she hesitated, looking through
the windows at the fading stars. She had passed through the veil into the promise of eternity
and now she was in danger again.
Quickly, I took the rosary from her and kissed her and slipped the rosary into the pocket of
her frock coat.
"Emeralds mean eternal life, Mother," I said.
She appeared the boy standing there again, the last glow of the fire just tracing the line of
her cheek and mouth.
"It's as I said before," she whispered. "You aren't afraid of anything, are you?"
"What does it matter if I am or not?" I shrugged. I took her arm and drew her to the
passage. "We are the things that others fear," I said. "Remember that."
When we reach the stable, I saw the boy had been hideously murdered. His broken body
lay twisted on the hay strewn floor as if it had been flung there by a Titan. The back of his
head was shattered. And to mock him, it seemed, or to mock me, they had dressed him in a
gentleman's fancy velvet frock coat. Red velvet. Those were the words she'd murmured when
they had done the crime. I'd seen only the death. I looked away now in disgust. All the horses
were gone.
"They'll pay for that," I said.
I took her hand. But she stared at the miserable boy's body as if it drew her against her will.
She glanced at me.
"I feel cold," she whispered. "I'm losing the strength in my limbs. I must, I must get to
where it's dark. I can feel it."
I led her fast over the rise of the nearby hill and towards the road.
There were no howling little monsters hidden in the village churchyard, of course. I didn't
think there would be. The earth hadn't been turned up on the old graves in a long time.
Gabrielle was past conferring with me on this.
I half carried her to the side door of the church and quietly broke the latch.
"I'm cold all over. My eyes are burning," she said again under her breath. "Someplace
dark."
But as I started to take her in, she stopped.
"What if they're right," she said. "And we don't belong in the House of God."
"Gibberish and nonsense. God isn't in the House of God."
"Don't! . . ." She moaned.
I pulled her through the sacristy and out before the altar. She covered her face, and when
she looked up it was at the crucifix over the tabernacle. She let out a long low gasp. But it
was from the stained-glass windows that she shielded her eyes, turning her head towards me.
The rising sun that I could not even feel yet was already burning her!
I picked her up as I had done last night. I had to find an old burial crypt, one that hadn't
been used in years. I hurried towards the Blessed Virgin's altar, where the inscriptions were
almost worn away. And kneeling, I hooked my fingernails around a slab and quickly lifted it
to reveal a deep sepulcher with a single rotted coffin.
I pulled her down into the sepulcher with me and moved the slab back into place.
Inky blackness, and the coffin splintering under me so that my right hand closed on a
crumbling skull. I felt the sharpness of other bones under my chest. Gabrielle spoke as if in a
trance:
"Yes. Away from the light."
"We're safe," I whispered.
I pushed the bones out of the way, making a nest of the rotted wood and the dust that was
too old to contain any smell of human decay.
But I did not fall into the sleep for perhaps an hour or more.
I kept thinking over and over of the stable boy, mangled and thrown there in that fancy red
velvet frock coat. I had seen that coat before and I couldn't remember where I had seen it.
Had it been one of my own? Had they gotten into the tower? No, that was not possible, they
couldn't have gotten in. Had they had a coat made up identical to one of my own? Gone to
such lengths to mock me? No. How could such creatures do a thing like that? But still . . . that
particular coat. Something about it...
7
I heard the softest, loveliest singing when I opened my eyes. And as sound can often do,
even the most precious fragments, it took me back to childhood, to some night in winter when
all my family had gone down to the church in our village and stood for hours among the
blazing candles, breathing the heavy, sensual smell of the incense as the priest walked in
procession with the monstrance lifted high.
I remembered the sight of the round white Host behind the thick glass, the starburst of gold
and jewels surrounding it, and overhead the embroidered canopy, swaying dangerously as the
altar boys in their lace surplices tried to steady it as they moved on.
A thousand Benedictions after that one had engraved into my mind the words of the old
hymn.
O Salutaris Hostia
Quae caeli pandis ostium
Bella premunt hostilia,
Da robur, fer auxilium . . .
And as I lay in the remains of this broken coffin under the white marble slab at the side
altar in this large country church, Gabrielle clinging to me still in the paralysis of sleep, I
realized very slowly that above me were hundreds upon hundreds of humans who were
singing this very hymn right now.
The church was full of people! And we could not get out of this damned nest of bones until
all of them went away.
Around me in the dark, I could feel creatures moving. I could smell the shattered,
crumbling skeleton on which I lay. I could smell the earth, too, and feel dampness and the
harshness of the cold.
Gabrielle's hands were dead hands holding to me. Her face was as inflexible as bone.
I tried not to brood on this, but to lie perfectly still.
Hundreds of humans breathed and sighed above. Perhaps a thousand of them. And now
they moved on into the second hymn.
What comes now, I thought dismally. The litany, the blessings? On this of all nights, I had
no time to lie here musing. I must get out. The image of that red velvet coat came to me again
with an irrational sense of urgency, and a flash of equally inexplicable pain.
And quite suddenly, it seemed, Gabrielle opened her eyes. Of course I didn't see it. It was
utterly black here. I felt it. I felt her limbs come to life.
And no sooner had she moved than she grew positively rigid with alarm. I slipped my hand
over her mouth.
"Be still," I whispered, but I could feel her panic.
All the horrors of the preceding night must be coming back to her, that she was now in a
sepulcher with a broken skeleton, that she lay beneath a stone she could hardly lift.
"We're in the church!" I whispered. "And we're safe."
The singing surged on. "Tantum ergo Sacramentum, Veneremur cernui."
"No, it's a Benediction," Gabrielle gasped. She was trying to lie still, but abruptly she lost
the struggle, and I had to grip her firmly in both arms.
"We must get out," she whispered. "Lestat, the Blessed Sacrament is on the altar, for the
love of God!"
The remains of the wooden coffin clattered and creaked against the stone beneath it,
causing me to roll over on top of her and force her flat with my weight.
"Now lie still, do you hear me!" I said. "We have no choice but to wait."
But her panic was infecting me. I felt the fragments of bone crunching beneath my knees
and smelled the rotting cloth. It seemed the death stench was penetrating the walls of the
sepulcher, and I knew I could not bear to be shut up with that stench.
"We can't," she gasped. "We can't remain here. I have to get out!" She was almost
whimpering. "Lestat, I can't." She was feeling the walls with both hands, and then the stone
above us. I heard a pure toneless sound of terror issue from her lips.
Above the hymn had stopped. The priest would go up the altar steps, lift the monstrance in
both hands. He would turn to the congregation and raise the Sacred Host in blessing.
Gabrielle knew that of course, and Gabrielle suddenly went mad, writhing under me,
almost heaving me to the side.
"All right, listen to me!" I hissed. I could control this no longer. "We are going out. But we
shall do it like proper vampires, do you hear! There are one thousand people in the church
and we are going to scare them to death. I will lift the stone and we will rise up together, and
when we do, raise your arms and make the most horrible face you can muster and cry out if
you can. That will make them fall back, instead of pouncing upon us and dragging us off to
prison, and then we'll rush to the door."
She couldn't even stop to answer, she was already struggling, slamming the rotted boards
with her heels.
I rose up, giving the marble slab a great shove with both hands, and leapt out of the vault
just as I had said I would do, pulling my cloak up in a giant arc.
I landed upon the floor of the choir in a blaze of candlelight, letting out the most powerful
cry I could make.
Hundreds rose to their feet before me, hundreds of mouths opening to scream.
Giving another shout, I grabbed Gabrielle's hand and lunged towards them, leaping over
the Communion rail. She gave a lovely high-pitched wail, her left hand raised as a claw as I
pulled her down the aisle. Everywhere there was panic, men and women clutching for
children, shrieking and falling backwards.
The heavy doors gave at once on the black sky and the gusting breeze. I threw Gabrielle
ahead of me and, turning back, made the loudest shriek that I could. I bared my fangs at the
writhing, screaming congregation, and unable to tell whether some pursued or merely fell
towards me in panic, I reached into my pockets and showered the marble floor with gold
coins.
"The devil throws money!" someone screeched.
We tore through the cemetery and across the fields.
Within seconds, we had gained the woods and I could smell the stables of a large house
that lay ahead of us beyond the trees.
I stood still, bent almost double in concentration, and summoned the horses. And we ran
towards them, hearing the dull thunder of their hooves against the stalls.
Bolting over the low hedge with Gabrielle beside me, I pulled the door off its hinges just as
a fine gelding raced out of his broken stall, and we sprang onto his back, Gabrielle
scrambling into place before me as I threw my arm around her.
I dug my heels into the animal and rode south into the woods and towards Paris.
8
I Tried to form a plan as we approached the city, but in truth I was not sure at all how to
proceed.
There was no avoiding these filthy little monsters. We were riding towards a battle. And it
was little different from the morning on which I'd gone out to kill the wolves, counting upon
my rage and my will to carry me through.
We had scarcely entered the scattered farmhouses of Montmartre when we heard for a split
second their faint murmuring. Noxious as a vapor, it seemed.
Gabrielle and I knew we had to drink at once, in order to be prepared for them.
We stopped at one of the small farms, crept through the orchard to the back door, and
found inside the man and wife dozing at an empty hearth.
When it was finished, we came out of the house together and into the little kitchen garden
where we stood still for a moment, looking at the pearl gray sky. No sound of others. Only
the stillness, the clarity of the fresh blood, and the threat of rain as the clouds gathered
overhead.
I turned and silently bid the gelding to come to me. And gathering the reins, I turned to
Gabrielle.
"I see no other way but to go into Paris," I told her, "to face these little beasts head on. And
until they show themselves and start the war all over again, there are things that I must do. I
have to think about Nicki. I have to talk to Roget."
"This isn't the time for that mortal nonsense," she said.
The dirt of the church sepulcher still clung to the cloth of her coat and to her blond hair,
and she looked like an angel dragged in the dust.
"I won't have them come between me and what I mean to do," I said.
She took a deep breath.
"Do you want to lead these creatures to your beloved Monsieur Roget?" she asked.
That was too dreadful to contemplate.
The first few drops of rain were falling and I felt cold in spite of the blood. In a moment it
would be raining hard.
"All right," I said. "Nothing can be done until this is finished!" I said. I mounted the horse
and reached for her hand.
"Injury only spurs you on, doesn't it?" she asked. She was studying me. "It would only
strengthen you, whatever they did or tried to do."
"Now this is what I call mortal nonsense!" I said. "Come on!"
"Lestat," she said soberly. "They put your stable boy in a gentleman's frock coat after they
killed him. Did you see the coat? Hadn't you seen it before?"
That damned red velvet coat . . .
"I have seen it," she said. "I had looked at it for hours at my bedside in Paris. It was
Nicolas de Lenfent's coat."
I looked at her for a long moment. But I don't think I saw her at all. The rage building in
me was absolutely silent. It will be rage until I have proof that it must be grief, I thought.
Then I wasn't thinking.
Vaguely, I knew she had no notion yet how strong our passions could be, how they could
paralyze us. I think I moved my lips, but nothing came out.
"I don't think they've killed him, Lestat," she said.
Again I tried to speak. I wanted to ask, Why do you say that, but I couldn't. I was staring
forward into the orchard.
"I think he is alive," she said. "And that he is their prisoner. Otherwise they would have left
his body there and never bothered with that stable boy."
"Perhaps, perhaps not." I had to farce my mouth to form the words.
"The coat was a message."
I couldn't stand this any longer.
"I'm going after them," I said. "Do you want to return to the tower? If I fail at this. . ."
"I have no intention of leaving you," she said.
The rain was falling in earnest by the time we reached the boulevard du Temple, and the
wet paving stones magnified a thousand lamps.
My thoughts had hardened into strategies that. were more instinct than reason. And I was
as ready for a fight as I have ever been. But we had to find out where we stood. How many of
them were there? And what did they really want? Was it to capture and destroy us, or to
frighten us and drive us off? I had to quell my rage, I had to remember they were childish,
superstitious, conceivably easy to scatter or scare.
As soon as we reached the high ancient tenements near Notre Dame, I heard them near us,
the vibration coming as in a silver flash and vanishing as quickly again.
Gabrielle drew herself up, and I felt her left hand on my wrist. I saw her right hand on the
hilt of her sword.
We had entered a crooked alleyway that turned blindly in the dark in front of us, the iron
clatter of the horse's shoes shattering the silence, and I struggled not to be unnerved by the
sound itself.
It seemed we saw them at the same moment.
Gabrielle pressed back against me, and I swallowed the gasp that would have given an
impression of fear.
High above us, on either side of the narrow thoroughfare, were their white faces just over
the eaves of the tenements, a faint gleam against the lowering sky and the soundless drifts of
silver rain.
I drove the horse forward in a rush of scraping and clattering. Above they streaked like rats
over the roof. Their voices rose in a faint howling mortals could never have heard.
Gabrielle stifled a little cry as we saw their white arms and legs descending the walls ahead
of us, and behind I heard the soft thud of their feet on the stones.
"Straight on," I shouted, and drawing my sword, I drove right over the two ragged figures
who'd dropped down in our path. "Damnable creatures, out of my way," I shouted, hearing
their screams underfoot.
I glimpsed anguished faces for a moment. Those above vanished and those behind us
seemed to weaken and we bore ahead, putting yards between us and our pursuers as we came
into the deserted place de Grave.
But they were regathering on the edges of the square, and this time I was hearing their
distinct thoughts, one of them demanding what power was it we had, and why should they be
frightened, and another insisting that they close in.
Some force surely came from Gabrielle at that moment because I could see them visibly
fall back when she threw her glance in their direction and tightened her grip on the sword.
"Stop, stand them off!" she said under her breath. "They're terrified." Then I heard her
curse. Because flying towards us out of the shadows of the Hotel-Dieu, there came at least six
more of the little demons, their thin white limbs barely swathed in rags, their hair flying,
those dreadful wails coming out of their mouths. They were rallying the others. The malice
that surrounded us was gaining force.
The horse reared, and almost threw us. They were commanding it to halt as surely as I
commanded it to go on.
I grabbed Gabrielle about the waist, leapt off the horse, and ran top speed to the doors of
Notre Dame.
A horrid derisive babble rose silently in my ears, wails and cries and threats:
"You dare not, you dare not!" Malice like the heat of a blast furnace opened upon us, as
their feet came . thumping and splashing around us, and I felt their hands struggling to grab
hold of my sword and my coat.
But I was certain of what would happen when we reached the church. I gave it one final
spurt, heaving Gabrielle ahead of me so that together we slid through the doors across the
threshold of the cathedral and landed sprawling within on the stones.
Screams. Dreadful dry screams curling upwards and then an upheaval, as if the entire mob
had been scattered by a cannon blast.
I scrambled to my feet, laughing out loud at them. But I was not waiting so near the door to
hear more. Gabrielle was on her feet and pulling me after her and together we hurried deep
into the shadowy nave, past one lofty archway after another until we were near the dim
candles of the sanctuary, and then seeking a dark and empty comer by a side altar, we sank
down together on our knees.
"Just like those damned wolves!" I said. "A bloody ambush."
"Shhhhh, be quiet a moment," Gabrielle said as she clung to me. "Or my immortal heart
will burst."
9
After a long moment, I felt her stiffen. She was looking towards the square.
"Don't think of Nicolas," she said. "They are waiting and they are listening. They are
hearing everything that goes on in our minds."
"But what are they thinking?" I whispered. "What is going on in their heads?"
I could feel her concentration.
I pressed her close, and looked straight at the silver light that came through the distant
open doors. I could hear them too now, but just that low shimmer of sound coming from all
of them collected there.
But as I stared at the rain, there came over me the strongest sense of peace. IL was almost
sensuous. It seemed to me we could yield to them, that it was foolish to resist them further.
All things would be resolved were we merely to go out to them and give ourselves over. They
would not torture Nicolas, whom they had in their power; they would not tear him limb from
limb.
I saw Nicolas in their hands. He wore only his lace shirt and breeches because they had
taken the coat. And I heard his screams as they pulled his arms from the sockets. I cried out
No, putting my own hand over my mouth so that I did not rouse the mortals in the church.
Gabrielle reached up and touched my lips with her fingers.
"It's not being done to him," she said under her breath. "It's merely a threat. Don't think of
him."
"He's still alive, then," I whispered.
"So they want us to believe. Listen!"
There came again the sense of peace, the summons, that's what it was, to join them, the
voice saying Come out of the church. Surrender to us, we welcome you, and we will not harm
either of you if only you come.
I turned towards the door and rose to my feet. Anxiously Gabrielle rose beside me,
cautioning me again with her hand.
She seemed wary of even speaking to me as we both looked at that great archway of
silvery light.
You are lying to us, I said. You have no power over us! It was a rolling current of defiance
moving through the distant door. Surrender to you? If we do that then what's to stop you from
holding the three of us? Why should we come out? Within this church we are safe; we can
conceal ourselves in its deepest burial vaults. We could hunt among the faithful, drink their
blood in the chapels and niches so skillfully we'd never be discovered, sending our victims
out confused to die in the streets afterwards. And what would you do, you who cannot even
cross the door! Besides, we don't believe you have Nicolas. Show him to us. Let him come to
the door and speak.
Gabrielle was in a welter of confusion. She was scanning me, desperate to know what I
said. And she was clearly hearing them, which I could not do when I was sending these
impulses.
It seemed their pulse weakened, but it had not stopped.
It went on as it had before, as if I'd not answered it, as if it were someone humming. It was
promising truce again, and now it seemed to speak of rapture, that in the great pleasure of
joining with it, all conflict would be resolved. It was sensuous again, it was beautiful.
"Miserable cowards, the lot of you." I sighed. I said the words aloud this time, so that
Gabrielle could hear as well. "Send Nicolas into the church."
The hum of the voices became thin. I went on, but beyond it there was a hollow silence as
if other voices had been withdrawn and only one or two remained now. Then I heard the thin,
chaotic strains of argument and rebellion.
Gabrielle's eyes narrowed.
Silence. Only mortals out there now, weaving their way against the wind across the place
de Grave. I didn't believe they would withdraw. Now what do we do to save Nicki?
I blinked my eyes. I felt weary suddenly; it was almost a feeling of despair. And I thought
confusedly, This is ridiculous, I never despair! Others do that, not me. I go on fighting no
matter what happens. Always. And in my exhaustion and anger, I saw Magnus leaping and
jumping in the fire, I saw the grimace of his face before the flames consumed him and he
disappeared. Was that despair?
The thought paralyzed me. Horrified me as the reality of it had done then. And I had the
oddest feeling that someone else was speaking to me of Magnus. That is why the thought of
Magnus had come into my head!
"Too clever..." Gabrielle whispered.
"Don't listen to it. It's playing tricks with our very thoughts," I said.
But as I stared past her at the open doorway, I saw a small figure appear. Compact it was,
the figure of a young boy, not a man.
I ached for it to be Nicolas, but knew immediately that it was not. It was smaller than
Nicolas, though rather heavier of build. And the creature was not human.
Gabrielle made some soft wondering sound. It sounded almost like prayer in its reference.
The creature wasn't dressed as men dress now. Rather he wore a belted tunic, very
graceful, and stockings on his wellshaped legs. His sleeves were deep, hanging at his sides.
He was clothed like Magnus, actually, and for one moment I thought madly that by some
magic it was Magnus returned.
Stupid thought. This was a boy, as I had said, and he had a head of long curly hair, and he
walked very straight and very simply through the silvery light and into the church. He
hesitated for a moment. And by the tilt of the head, it seemed he was looking up. And then he
came on through the nave and towards us, his feet making not the faintest sound on the
stones.
He moved into the glow of the candles on the side altar. His clothes were black velvet,
once beautiful, and now eaten away by time, and crusted with dirt. But his face was shining
white, and perfect, the countenance of a god it seemed, a Cupid out of Caravaggio, seductive
yet ethereal, with auburn hair and dark brown eyes.
I held Gabrielle closer as I looked at him, and nothing so startled me about him, this
inhuman creature, as the manner in which he was staring at us. He was inspecting every detail
of our persons, and then he reached out very gently and touched the stone of the altar at his
side. He stared at the altar, at its crucifix and its saints, and then he looked back to us.
He was only a few yards away, and the soft inspection of us yielded to an expression that
was almost sublime. And the voice I'd heard before came out of this creature, summoning us
again, calling upon us to yield, saying with indescribable gentleness that we must love one
another, he and Gabrielle, whom he didn't call by name, and I.
There was something naive about it, his sending the summons as he stood there.
I held fast against him. Instinctively. I felt my eyes becoming opaque as if a wall had gone
up to seal off the windows of my thoughts. And yet I felt such a longing for him, such a
longing to fall into him and follow him and be led by him, that all my longings of the past
seemed nothing at all. He was all mystery to me as Magnus had been. Only he was beautiful,
indescribably beautiful, and there seemed in him an infinite complexity and depth which
Magnus had not possessed.
The anguish of my immortal life pressed in on me. He said, "Come to me. Come to me
because only I, and my like, can end the loneliness you feel. It touched a well of inexpressible
sadness." It sounded the depth of the sadness, and my throat went dry with a powerful little
knot where my voice might have been, yet I held fast.
We two are together, I insisted, tightening my grip on Gabrielle. And then I asked him,
Where is Nicolas? I asked that question and clung to it, yielding to nothing that I heard or
saw.
He moistened his lips; very human thing to do. And silently he approached us until he was
standing no more than two feet from us, looking from one of us to the other. And in a voice
very unlike a human voice, he spoke.
"Magnus," he said. It was unobtrusive. It was caressing. "He went into the fire as you
said?"
"I never said it," I answered. The human sound of my own voice startled me. But I knew
now he meant my thoughts of only moments before. "It's quite true," I answered. "He went
into the fire." Why should I deceive anyone on that account?
I tried to penetrate his mind. He knew I was doing it and he threw up against me such
strange images that I gasped.
What was it I'd seen for an instant? I didn't even know. Hell and heaven, or both made one,
vampires in a paradise drinking blood from the very flowers that hung, pendulous and
throbbing, from the trees.
I felt a wave of disgust. It was as if he had come into my private dreams like a succubus.
But he had stopped. He let his eyes pucker slightly and he looked down out of some vague
respect. My disgust was withering him. He hadn't anticipated my response. He hadn't
expected . . . what? Such strength?
Yes, and he was letting me know it in an almost courteous way.
I returned the courtesy. I let him see me in the tower room with Magnus; I recalled
Magnus's words before he went into the fire. I let him know all of it.
He nodded and when I told the words Magnus had said, there was a slight change in his
face as if his forehead had gone smooth, or all of his skin had tightened. He gave me no such
knowledge of himself in answer.
On the contrary, much to my surprise, he looked away from us to the main altar of the
church. He glided past us, turning his back to us as if he had nothing to fear from us and had
for the moment forgotten us.
He moved towards the great aisle and slowly up it, but he did not appear to walk in a
human way. Rather he moved so swiftly from one bit of shadow to another that he seemed to
vanish and reappear. Never was he visible in the light. And those scores of souls milling in
the church had only to glance at him for him to instantly disappear.
I marveled at his skill, because that is all it was. And curious to see if I could move like
that, I followed him to the choir. Gabrielle came after without a sound.
I think we both found it simpler than we had imagined it would be. Yet he was clearly
startled when he saw us at his side.
And in the very act of being startled, he gave me a glimpse of his great weakness, pride.
He was humiliated that we had crept up on him, moving so lightly and managing at the same
time to conceal our thoughts.
But worse was to come. When he realized that I had perceived this . . . it was revealed for a
split second. . . he was doubly enraged. A withering heat emanated from him that wasn't heat
at all.
Gabrielle made a little scornful sound. Her eyes flashed on him for a second in some
shimmer of communication between them that excluded me. He seemed puzzled.
But he was in the grip of some greater battle I was struggling to understand. He looked at
the faithful around him, and at the altar and all the emblems of the Almighty and the Virgin
Mary everywhere that he turned. He was perfectly the god out of Caravaggio, the light
playing on the hard whiteness of his innocent-looking face.
Then he put his arm about my waist, slipping it under my cloak. His touch was so strange,
so sweet and enticing, and the beauty of his face so entrancing that I didn't move away. He
put his other arm around Gabrielle's waist, and the sight of them together, angel and angel,
distracted me.
He said: You must come.
"Why, where?" Gabrielle asked. I felt an immense pressure. He was attempting to move
me against my will, but he could not. I planted myself on the stone floor. I saw Gabrielle's
face harden as she looked at him. And again, he was amazed. He was maddened and he
couldn't conceal it from us.
So he had underestimated our physical strength as well as our mental strength. Interesting.
"You must come now," he said, giving me the great force of his will, which I could see
much too clearly to be fooled. "Come out and my followers won't harm you."
"You're lying to us," I said. "You sent your followers away, and you want us to come out
before your followers return, because you don't want them to see you come out of the church.
You don't want them to know you came into it!"
Again Gabrielle gave a little scornful laugh.
I put my hand on his chest and tried to move him away. He might have been as strong as
Magnus. But I refused to be afraid. "Why don't you want them to see?" i whispered, peering
into his face.
The change in him was so startling and so ghastly that I found myself holding my breath.
His angelic countenance appeared to wither, his eyes widening and his mouth twisting down
in consternation. His entire body became quite deformed as if he were trying not to grit his
teeth and clench his fists.
Gabrielle drew away. I laughed. I didn't really mean to, but I couldn't help it. It was
horrifying. But it was also very funny.
With stunning suddenness this awful illusion, if that is what it was, faded, and he came
back to himself. Even the sublime expression returned. He told me in a steady stream of
thought that I was infinitely stronger than he supposed. But it would frighten the others to see
him emerge from the church, and so we should go at once.
"Lies again," Gabrielle whispered.
And I knew this much pride would forgive nothing. God help Nicolas if we couldn't trick
this one!
Turning, I took Gabrielle's hand and we started down the aisle to the front doors, Gabrielle
glancing back at him and to me questioningly, her face white and tense.
"Patience," I whispered. I turned to see him far away from us, his back to the main altar,
and his eyes were so big as he stared that he looked horrible to me, loathsome, like a ghost.
When I reached the vestibule I sent out my summons to the others with all my power. And
I whispered aloud for Gabrielle as I did so. I told them to come back and into the church if
they wanted to, that nothing could harm them, their leader was inside the church standing at
the very altar, unharmed.
I spoke the words louder, pumping the summons under the words, and Gabrielle joined me,
repeating the phrases in unison with me.
I felt him coming towards us from the main altar, and then suddenly I lost him. I didn't
know where he was behind us.
He grabbed hold of me suddenly, materializing at my side, and Gabrielle was thrown to the
floor. He was attempting to lift me and pitch me through the door.
But I fought him. And desperately collecting everything I remembered of Magnus-his
strange walk, and this creature's strange manner of moving-I hurled him, not off balance as
one might do to a heavy mortal, but straight up in the air.
Just as I suspected, he went over in a somersault, crashing into the wall.
Mortals stirred. They saw movement, heard noises. But he'd vanished again. And Gabrielle
and I looked no different from other young gentlemen in the shadows.
I motioned for Gabrielle to get out of the way. Then he appeared, shooting towards me, but
I perceived what was to happen and stepped aside.
Some twenty feet away from me, I saw him sprawled on the stones staring at me with
positive awe, as if I were a god. His long auburn hair was tossed about, his brown eyes
enormous as he looked up. And for all the gentle innocence of his face, his will was rolling
over me, a hot stream of commands, telling me I was weak and imperfect and a fool, and I
would be torn limb from limb by his followers as soon as they appeared. They would roast
my mortal lover slowly till he died.
I laughed silently. This was as ludicrous as a fight out of the old commedia.
Gabrielle was staring from one to the other of us.
I sent the summons again to the others, and this time when I sent it, I heard them
answering, questioning.
"Come into the church." I repeated it over and over, even as he rose and ran at me again in
blind and clumsy rage. Gabrielle caught him just as I did, and we both had hold of him and he
couldn't move.
In a moment of absolute horror for me he tried to sink his fangs into my neck. I saw his
eyes round and empty as the fangs descended over his drawn lip. I flung him back and again
he vanished.
They were coming nearer, the others.
"He's in the church, your leader, look at him!" I repeated it. "And any of you can come into
the church. You won't be hurt."
I heard Gabrielle let out a scream of warning. And too late. He rose up right in front of me,
as if out of the floor itself, and struck my jaw, jerking my head back so that I saw the church
ceiling. And before I could recover, he had dealt me one fine blow in the middle of the back
that sent me flying out the door and onto the stones of the square.
Part IV
The Children Of Darkness
1
I could see nothing but the rain. But I could hear them all around me. And he was giving
his command.
"They have no great power, these two," he was telling them in thoughts that had a curious
simplicity to them, as if he were commanding vagrant children. "Take them both prisoner."
Gabrielle said: "Lestat, don't fight. It's useless to prolong it."
And I knew she was right. But I'd never surrendered to anybody in my life. And pulling her
with me past the Hotel-Dieu, I made for the bridge.
We tore through the press of wet cloaks and mud-spattered carriages, yet they were gaining
upon us, rushing so fast they were almost invisible to mortals, and with only a little fear of us
now.
In the dark streets of the Left Bank, the game was finished.
White faces appeared above and below me as though they were demonic cherubs, and
when I tried to draw my weapon, I felt their hands on my arms. I heard Gabrielle say, "Let it
be done."
I held fast to my sword but I couldn't stop them from lifting me off the ground. They were
lifting Gabrielle too.
And in a blaze of hideous images, I understood where they were taking us. It was to les
Innocents, only yards away. I could already see the flicker of the bonfires that burned each
night among the stinking open graves, the flames that were supposed to drive away the
effluvia.
I locked my arm around Gabrielle's neck and cried out that I couldn't bear that stench, but
they were carrying us on swiftly through the darkness, through the gates and past the white
marble crypts.
"Surely you can't endure it," I said, struggling. "So why do you live among the dead when
you were made to feed on life?"
But I felt such revulsion now I couldn't keep it up, the verbal or physical struggle. All
around us lay bodies in various states of decomposition, and even from the rich sepulchers
there came that reek.
And as we moved into the darker part of the cemetery, as we entered an enormous
sepulcher, I realized that they too hated the stench, as much as I. I could feel their disgust,
and yet they opened their mouths and their lungs as if they were eating it. Gabrielle was
trembling against me, her fingers digging into my neck.
Through another doorway we passed, and then, by dim torchlight, down an earthen stairs.
The smell grew stronger. It seemed to ooze from the mud walls. I turned my face down and
vomited a thin stream of glittering blood upon the steps beneath me, which vanished as we
moved swiftly on.
"Live among graves," I said furiously. "Tell me, why do you suffer hell already by your
own choice?"
"Silence," whispered one of them close to me, a dark-eyed female with a witch's mop of
hair. "You blasphemer," she said. "You cursed profaner."
"Don't be a fool for the devil, darling!" I sneered. We were eye to eye. "Unless he treats
you a damn sight better than the Almighty!"
She laughed. Or rather she started to laugh, and she stopped as if she weren't allowed to
laugh. What a gay and interesting little get-together this was going to be!
We were going lower and lower into the earth.
Flickering light, the scrape of their bare feet on the dirt, filthy rags brushing my face. For
an instant, I saw a grinning skull. Then another, then a heap of them filling a niche in the
wall.
I tried to wrench free and my foot hit another heap and sent the bones clattering on the
stairs. The vampires tightened their grip, trying to lift us higher. Now we passed the ghastly
spectacle of rotted corpses fixed in the walls like statues, bones swathed in rotted rags.
"This is too disgusting'." I said with my teeth clenched.
We had come to the foot of the steps and were being carried through a great catacomb. I
could hear the low rapid beat of kettledrums.
Torches blazed ahead, and over a chorus of mournful wails,
there came other cries, distant but filled with pain. Yet something beyond these puzzling
cries had caught my attention.
Amid all the foulness, I sensed a mortal was near. It was Nicolas and he was alive and I
could hear him, vulnerable current of his thoughts mingled with his scent. And something
was terribly wrong with his thoughts. They were chaos.
I couldn't know if Gabrielle had caught it.
We were quite suddenly thrown down together, in the dust. And the others backed away
from us.
I climbed to my feet, lifting Gabrielle with me. And I saw that we were in a great domed
chamber, scarcely illuminated by three torches which the vampires held to form a triangle, in
the center of which we stood.
Something huge and black to the back of the chamber; smell of wood and pitch, smell of
damp, moldering cloth, smell of living mortal. Nicolas there.
Gabrielle's hair had come loose entirely from the ribbon, and it fell around her shoulders as
she cleaved to me, looking about with seemingly calm, cautious eyes.
Wails rose all around us, but the most piercing supplications came from those other beings
we had heard before, creatures somewhere deep in the earth.
And I realized these were entombed vampires screaming, screaming for blood, and
screaming for forgiveness and release, screaming even for the fires of hell. The sound was as
unbearable as the stench.
No real thoughts from Nicki, only the formless shimmer of his mind. Was he dreaming?
Was he mad?
The roll of the drums was very loud and very close, and yet those screams pierced the
rumbling again and again without rhythm or warning. The wailing of those nearest us died
away, but the drums went on, the pounding suddenly coming from inside my head.
Trying desperately not to clamp my hands to my ears, I looked about.
A great circle had been formed, and there were ten of them at least, these creatures. I saw
young ones, old ones, men and women, a young boy-and all clothed in the remnants of
human garments, caked with earth, feet bare, hair tangled with filth. There was the woman I
had spoken to on the stairs, her well-shaped body clothed in a filthy robe, her quick black
eyes glinting like jewels in the dirt as she studied us. And beyond these, the advance guard,
were a pair in the shadows beating the kettledrums.
I begged silently for strength. I tried to hear Nicolas without actually thinking of him.
Solemn vow: l shall get us all out of here, though at the moment I do not know exactly how.
The drumbeat was slowing, becoming an ugly cadence that made the alien feeling of fear a
fist against my throat. One of the torchbearers approached.
I could feel the anticipation of the others, a palpable excitement as the flames were thrust
at me.
I snatched the torch from the creature, twisting his right hand until he was flung down on
his knees. With a hard kick, I sent him sprawling, and as the others rushed in, I swung the
torch wide driving them back.
Then defiantly, I threw down the torch.
This caught them off guard and I sensed a sudden quietness. The excitement was drained
away, or rather it had lapsed into something more patient and less volatile.
The drums beat insistently, but it seemed they were ignoring the drums. They were staring
at the buckles on our shoes, at our hair, and at our faces, with such distress they appeared
menacing and hungry. And the young boy, with a look of anguish, reached out to touch
Gabrielle.
"Get back!" I hissed. And he obeyed, snatching up the torch from the ground as he did.
But I knew it for certain now-we were surrounded by envy and curiosity, and this was the
strongest advantage we possessed.
I looked from one to the other of them. And quite slowly, I commenced to brush the filth
from my frock coat and breeches. I smoothed my cloak as I straightened my shoulders. Then
I ran a hand through my hair, and stood with my arms folded, the picture of righteous dignity,
gazing about.
Gabrielle gave a faint smile. She stood composed, her hand on the hilt of her sword.
The effect of this on the others was universal amazement. The dark-eyed female was
enthralled. I winked at her. She would have been gorgeous if someone had thrown her into a
waterfall and held her there for half an hour and I told her so silently. She took two steps
backwards and pulled closed her robe over her breasts. Interesting. Very interesting indeed.
"What is the explanation for all this?" I asked, staring at them one by one as if they were
quite peculiar. Again Gabrielle gave her faint smile.
"What are you meant to be?" I demanded. "The images of chain-rattling ghosts who haunt
cemeteries and ancient castles?"
They were glancing to one another, getting uneasy. The drums had stopped.
"My childhood nurse many a time thrilled me with tales of such fiends," I said. "Told me
they might at any moment leap out of the suits of armor in our house to carry me away
screaming." I stomped my foot and dashed forward. "IS THAT WHAT YOU ARE?" They
shrieked and shrank back.
The black-eyed woman didn't move, however.
I laughed softly.
"And your bodies are just like ours, aren't they?" I asked slowly. "Smooth, without flaw,
and in your eyes I can see evidence of my own powers. Most strange..."
Confusion coming from them. And the howling in the walls seemed fainter as if the
entombed were listening in spite of their pain.
"Is it great fun living in filth and stench such as this?" I asked. "Is that why you do it?"
Fear. Envy again. How had we managed to escape their fate?
"Our leader is Satan," said the dark-eyed woman sharply. Cultured voice. She'd been
something to reckon with when she was mortal. "And we serve Satan as we are meant to do."
"Why?" I asked politely.
Consternation all around.
Faint shimmer of Nicolas. Agitation without direction. Had he heard my voice?
"You will bring down the wrath of God on all of us with your defiance," said the boy, the
smallest of them, who couldn't have been more than sixteen when he was made. "In vanity
and wickedness you disregard the Dark Ways. You live among mortals! You walk in the
places of light."
"And why don't you?" I asked. "Are you to go to heaven on white wings when this
penitential sojourn of yours is ended? Is that what Satan promises? Salvation? I wouldn't
count on it, if I were you."
"You will be thrown into the pit of hell for your sins!" said one of the others, a tiny hag of
a woman. "You will have power to do evil on earth no more."
"When is that supposed to happen?" I asked. "For half a year I've been what I am. God and
Satan have not troubled me! It is you who trouble me!"
They were paralyzed for the moment. Why hadn't we been struck dead when we entered
the churches? How could we be what we were?
It was very likely they could have been scattered now and beaten. But what about Nicki? If
only his thoughts were directed, I could have gained some image of exactly what lay behind
that great heap of moldering black cloth.
I kept my eyes on the vampires.
Wood, pitch, a pyre there surely. And these damned torches.
The dark-eyed woman edged in. No malice, only fascination. But the boy pushed her to the
side, infuriating her. He stepped so close I could feel his breath on my face:
"Bastard!" he said. "You were made by the outcast, Magnus, in defiance of the coven, and
in defiance of the Dark Ways. And so you gave the Dark Gift to this woman in rashness and
vanity as it was given to you."
"If Satan does not punish," said the tiny woman, "we will punish as is our duty and our
right!"
The boy pointed to the black draped pyre. He motioned for the others to draw back.
The kettledrums came up again, fast and loud. The circle widened, the torchbearers
drawing near to the cloth.
Two of the others tore down the ragged drapery, great sheets of black serge that sent up the
dust in a suffocating cloud.
The pyre was as big as the one that had consumed Magnus.
And on top of the pyre in a crude wooden cage, Nicolas knelt slumped against the bars. He
stared blindly at us, and I could find no recognition in his face or his thoughts.
The vampires held their torches high for us to see. And I could feel their excitement rising
again as it had when they had first brought us into the room.
Gabrielle was cautioning me with the press of her hand to be calm. Nothing changed in her
expression.
There were bluish marks on Nicki's throat. The lace of his shirt was filthy as were their
rags, and his breeches were snagged and torn. He was in fact covered with bruises and
drained almost to the point of death.
The fear silently exploded in my heart, but I knew this was what they wanted to see. And I
sealed it within.
The cage is nothing, I can break it. And there are only three torches. The question is when
to move, how. We would not perish like this, not like this.
I found myself staring coldly at Nicolas, coldly at the bundles of kindling, the crude
chopped wood. The anger rolled out of me. Gabrielle's face was a perfect mask of hate.
The group seemed to feel this and to move ever so slightly away from it, and then to draw
in, confused and uncertain again.
But something else was happening. The circle was tightening.
Gabrielle touched my arm.
"The leader is coming," she said.
A door had opened somewhere. The drums surged and it seemed those imprisoned in the
walls went into agony, pleading to be forgiven and released. The vampires around us took up
the cries in a frenzy. It was all I could do not to cover my ears.
A strong instinct told me not to look at the leader. But I couldn't resist him, and slowly I
turned to look at him and measure his powers again.
2
He was moving towards the center of the great circle, his back to the pyre, a strange
woman vampire at his side.
And when I looked full at him in the torchlight I felt the same shock I had experienced
when he entered Notre Dame.
It wasn't merely his beauty; it was the astonishing innocence of his boyish face. He moved
so lightly and swiftly I could not see his feet actually take steps. His huge eyes regarded us
without anger, his hair, for all the dust in it, giving off faint reddish glints.
I tried to feel his mind, what it was, why such a sublime being should command these sad
ghosts when it had the world to roam. I tried to discover again what I had almost discovered
when we stood before the altar of the cathedral, this creature and I. If I knew that, maybe I
could defeat him and defeat him I would.
I thought I saw him respond to me, some silent answer, some flash of heaven in the very
pit of hell in his innocent expression, as if the devil still retained the face and form of the
angel after the fall.
But something was very wrong. The leader was not speaking. The drums beat on
anxiously, yet there was no communal conviction. The dark-eyed woman vampire was not
joined with the others in their wailing. And others had stopped as well.
And the woman who had come in with the leader, a strange creature clothed as an ancient
queen might have been in ragged gown and braided girdle, commenced to laugh.
The coven or whatever it called itself was quite understandably stunned. One of the
kettledrums stopped.
The queen creature laughed louder and louder. Her white teeth flashed through the filthy
veil of her snarled hair.
Beautiful she'd been once. And it wasn't mortal age that had ravaged her. Rather, she
appeared the lunatic, her mouth a horrid grimace, her eyes staring wildly before her, her body
bent suddenly in an arc with her laughing, as Magnus had bent when he danced around his
own funeral pyre.
"Did I not warn you?" she screamed. "Did I not?"
Far behind her, Nicolas moved in the little cage. I felt the laughter scorning him. But he
was looking steadily at me, and the old sensibility was stamped on his features in spite of
their distortion. Fear struggled with malice in him, and this was tangled with wonder and near
despair.
The auburn-haired leader stared at the queen vampire, his expression unreadable, and the
boy with the torch stepped forward and shouted for the woman to be silent at once. He made
himself rather regal now, in spite of his rags.
The woman turned her back on him and faced us. She sang her words in a hoarse, sexless
voice that gave way to a galloping laughter.
"A thousand times I said it, yet you would not listen to me," she declared. Her gown
shivered about her as she trembled. "And you called me mad, time's martyr, a vagrant
Cassandra corrupt by too long a vigil on this earth. Well, you see, every one of my
predictions has come true."
The leader gave her not the slightest recognition.
"And it took this creature," she approached me, her face a hideous comic mask as
Magnus's face had been, "this romping cavalier to prove it to you once and for all."
She hissed, drew in her breath, and stood erect. And for one moment in perfect stillness she
passed into beauty. I longed to comb her hair, to wash it with my own hands, and to clothe
her in a modern dress, to see her in the mirror of my time. In fact, my mind went suddenly
wild with the idea of it, the reclaiming of her and the washing away of her evil disguise.
I think for one second the concept of eternity burned in me. I knew then what immortality
was. All things were possible with her, or so for that one moment it seemed.
She gazed at me and caught the visions, and the loveliness of her face deepened, but the
mad humor was coming back.
"Punish them," the boy screamed. "Call down the judgment of Satan. Light the fire."
But no one moved in the vast room.
The old woman hummed with her lips closed, some eerie melody with the cadence of
speech. The leader stared as before.
But the boy in panic advanced upon us. He bared his fangs, raised his hand in a claw.
I snatched the torch from him and dealt him an indifferent blow to the chest that sent him
across the dusty circle, sliding into the kindling banked against the pyre. I ground out the
torch in the dirt.
The queen vampire let out a shriek of laughter that seemed to terrify the others, but nothing
changed in the leader's face.
"I won't stand here for any judgment of Satan!" I said, glancing around the circle. "Unless
you bring Satan here."
"Yes, tell them, child! Make them answer to you!" the old woman said triumphantly.
The boy was on his feet again.
"You know the crimes," he roared as he reentered the circle. He was furious now, and he
exuded power, and I realized how impossible it was to judge any of them by the mortal form
they retained. He might well have been an elder, the tiny old woman a fledgling, the boyish
leader the eldest of them all.
"Behold," he said, stepping closer, his gray eyes gleaming as he felt the attention of the
others. "This fiend was no novice here or anywhere; he did not beg to be received. He made
no vows to Satan. He did not on his deathbed give up his soul, and in fact, he did not die!"
His voice went higher, grew louder.
"He was not buried! He has not risen from the grave as a Child of Darkness! Rather he
dares to roam the world in the guise of a living being! And in the very midst of Paris
conducts business as a mortal man!"
Shrieks answered him from the walls. But the vampires of the circle were silent as he
gazed at them. His jaw trembled.
He threw up his arms and wailed. One or two of the others answered. His face was
disfigured with rage.
The old queen vampire gave a shiver of laughter and looked at me with the most maniacal
smile.
But the boy wasn't giving up.
"He seeks the comforts of the hearth, strictly forbidden," he screamed, stamping his foot
and shaking his garments. "He goes into the very palaces of carnal pleasure, and mingles
there with mortals as they play music! As they dance!"
"Stop your raving!" I said. But in truth, I wanted to hear him out.
He plunged forward, sticking his finger in my face.
"No rituals can purify him!" he shouted. "Too late for the Dark Vows, the Dark
Blessings..."
"Dark Vows? Dark Blessings?" I turned to the old queen. "What do you say to all this?
You're as old as Magnus was when he went into the fire .... Why do you suffer this to go on?"
Her eyes moved in her head suddenly as if they alone possessed life, and there came that
racing laughter out of her again.
"I shall never harm you, young one," she said. "Either of you." She looked lovingly at
Gabrielle. "You are on the Devil's Road to a great adventure. What right have I to intervene
in what the centuries have in store for you?"
The Devil's Road. It was the first phrase from any of them that had rung a clarion in my
soul. An exhilaration took hold of me merely looking at her. In her own way, she was
Magnus's twin.
"Oh yes, I am as old as your progenitor!" She smiled, her white fangs just touching her
lower lip, then vanishing. She glanced at the leader, who watched her without the slightest
interest or spirit. "I was here," she said, "within this coven when Magnus stole our secrets
from us, that crafty one, the alchemist, Magnus . . . when he drank the blood that would give
him life everlasting in a manner which the World of Darkness had never witnessed before.
And now three centuries have passed and he has given his pure and undiluted Dark Gift to
you, beautiful child!"
Her face became again that leering, grinning mask of comedy, so much like Magnus's face.
"Show it to me, child," she said, "the strength he gave you. Do you know what it means to
be made a vampire by one that powerful, who has never given the Gift before? It's forbidden
here, child, no one of such age conveys his power! For if he should, the fledgling born of him
should easily overcome this gracious leader and his coven here."
"Stop this ill-conceived lunacy!" the boy interrupted.
But everyone was listening. The pretty dark-eyed woman had come nearer to us, the better
to see the old queen, and completely forgetting to fear or hate us now.
"One hundred years ago you'd said enough," the boy roared at the old queen, with his hand
up to command her silence. "You're mad as all the old ones are mad. It's the death you suffer.
I tell you all this outlaw must be punished. Order shall be restored when he and the woman he
made are destroyed before us all."
With renewed fury, he turned on the others.
"I tell you, you walk this earth as all evil things do, by the will of God, to make mortals
suffer for his Divine Glory. And by the will of God you can be destroyed if you blaspheme,
and thrown in the vats of hell now, for you are damned souls, and your immortality is given
you only at the price of suffering and torment."
A burst of wailing commenced uncertainly.
"So there it is finally," I said. "'The whole philosophy and the whole is founded upon a lie.
And you cower like peasants, in hell already by your own choosing, enchained more surely
than the lowest mortal, and you wish to punish us because we do not? Follow our examples
because we do not!"
The vampires were some of them staring at us, others in frantic conversations that broke
out all around. Again and again they glanced to the leader and to the old queen.
But the leader would say nothing.
The boy screamed for order:
"It is not enough that he has profaned holy places," he said, "not enough that he goes about
as a mortal man. This very night in a village in the banlieue he terrified the congregation of
an entire church. All of Paris is talking of this horror, the ghouls rising from the graves
beneath the very altar, he and this female vampire on whom he worked the Dark Trick
without consent or ritual, just as he was made."
There were gasps, more murmurs. But the old queen screamed with delight.
"These are high crimes," he said. "I tell you, they cannot go unpunished. And who among
you does not know of his mockeries on the stage of the boulevard theater which he himself
holds as property as a mortal man! There to a thousand Parisians he flaunted his powers as a
Child of Darkness! And the secrecy we have protected for centuries was broken for his
amusement and the amusement of a common crowd."
The old queen rubbed her hands together, cocking her head to the side as she looked at me.
"Is it all true, child?" she asked. "Did you sit in a box at the Opera? Did you stand there
before the footlights of the Theatre-Francaise? Did you dance with the king and queen in the
palace of the Tuileries, you and this beauty you made so perfectly? Is it true you traveled the
boulevards in a golden coach?"
She laughed and laughed, her eyes now and then scanning the others, subduing them as if
she gave forth a beam of warm light.
"Ah, such finery and such dignity," she continued. "What happened in the great cathedral
when you entered it? Tell me now!"
"Absolutely nothing, madam!" I declared.
"High crimes!" roared the outraged boy vampire. "These are frights enough to rouse a city,
if not a kingdom against us. And after centuries in which we have preyed upon this
metropolis in stealth, giving birth only to the gentlest whispers of our great power. Haunts we
are, creatures of the right, meant to feed the fears of man, not raving demons!"
"Ah, but it is too sublime," sang the old queen with her eyes on the domed ceiling. "From
my stone pillow I have dreamed dreams of the mortal world above. I have heard its voices, its
new music, as lullabies as I lie in my grave. I have envisioned its fantastical discoveries, I
have known its courage in the timeless sanctum of my thoughts. And though it shuts me out
with its dazzling forms, I long for one with the strength to roam it fearlessly, to ride the
Devil's Road through its heart."
The gray-eyed boy was beside himself.
"Dispense with the trial," he said, glaring at the leader. "Light the pyre now."
The queen stepped back out of my way with an exaggerated gesture, as the boy reached for
the torch nearest him, and I rushed at him, snatching the torch away from him, and heaving
him up towards the ceiling, head over heels, so that he came tumbling in that manner all the
way down. I stamped out the torch.
That left one more. And the coven was in perfect disorder, several rushing to aid the boy,
the others murmuring to one another, the leader stock-still as if in a dream.
And in this interval I went forward, climbed up the pyre and tore loose the front of the little
wooden cage.
Nicolas looked like an animated corpse. His eyes were leaden, and his mouth twisted as if
he were smiling at me, hating me, from the other side of the grave. I dragged him free of the
cage and brought him down to the dirt floor. He was feverish, and though I ignored and
would have concealed it if I could, he shoved at me and cursed me under his breath.
The old queen watched in fascination. I glanced at Gabrielle, who watched without a
particle of fear. I drew out the pearl rosary from my waistcoat and letting the crucifix dangle,
I placed the rosary around Nicolas's neck. He stared stuporously down at the little cross, and
then he began to laugh. The contempt, the malice, came out of him in this low metallic sound.
It was the very opposite of the sounds made by the vampires. You could hear the human
blood in it, the human thickness of it, echoing against the walls. Ruddy and hot and strangely
unfinished he seemed suddenly, the only mortal among us, like a child thrown among
porcelain dolls.
The coven was more confused than ever. The two burntout torches still lay untouched.
"Now, by your own rules, you cannot harm him," I said. "Yet it's a vampire who has given
him the supernatural protection. Tell me, how to compass that?"
I carried Nicki forward. And Gabrielle at once reached out to take him in her arms.
He accepted this, though he stared at her as if he didn't know her and even lifted his fingers
to touch her face. She took his hand away as she might the hand of a baby, and kept her eyes
fixed on the leader and on me.
"If your leader has no words for you now, I have words,"
I said. "Go wash yourselves in the waters of the Seine, and clothe yourselves like humans
if you can remember how, and prowl among men as you are obviously meant to do."
The defeated boy vampire stumbled back into the circle, pushing roughly away those who
had helped him to his feet.
"Armand," he implored the silent auburn-haired leader. "Bring the coven to order!
Armand! Save us now!"
"Why in the name of hell," I outshouted him, "did the devil give you beauty, agility, eyes
to see visions, minds to cast spells?"
Their eyes were fixed on me, all of them. The gray-haired boy cried out the name
"Armand" again, but in vain.
"You waste your gifts!" I said. "And worse, you waste your immortality! Nothing in all the
world is so nonsensical and contradictory, save mortals, that is, who live in the grip of the
superstitions of the past."
Perfect silence reigned. I could hear Nicki's slow breathing. I could feel his warmth. I
could feel his numbed fascination struggling against death itself.
"Have you no cunning?" I asked the others, my-voice swelling in the stillness. "Have you
no craft? How did I, an orphan, stumble upon so much possibility, when you, nurtured as you
are by these evil parents," I broke off to stare at the leader and the furious boy, "grope like
blind things under the earth?"
"The power of Satan will blast you into hell," the boy bellowed, gathering all his remaining
strength.
"You keep saying that!" I said. "And it keeps not happening, as we can all see!"
Loud murmurs of assent!
"And if you really thought it would happen," I said, "you would never have bothered to
bring me here."
Louder voices in agreement.
I looked at the small forlorn figure of the leader. And all eyes turned away from me to him.
Even the mad queen vampire looked at him.
And in the stillness I heard him whisper:
"It is finished."
Not even the tormented ones in the wall made a sound.
And the leader spoke again:
"Go now, all of you, it is at an end."
"Armand, no!" the boy pleaded.
But the others were backing away, faces concealed behind hands as they whispered. The
drums were cast aside, the single torch was hung upon the wall.
I watched the leader. I knew his words weren't meant to release us.
And after he had silently driven out the protesting boy with the others, so that only the
queen remained with him, he turned his gaze once again to me.
3
The great empty room beneath its immense dome, with only the two vampires watching us,
seemed all the more ghastly, the one torch giving a feeble and gloomy light.
Silently I considered: Will the others leave the cemetery, or hover at the top of the stairs?
Will any of them allow me to take Nicki alive from this place? The boy will remain near, but
the boy is weak; the old queen will do nothing. That leaves only the leader, really. But I must
not be impulsive now.
He was still staring at me and saying nothing.
"Armand?" I said respectfully. "May I address you in this way?" I drew closer, scanning
him for the slightest change of expression. "You are obviously the leader. And you are the
one who can explain all this to us."
But these words were a poor cover for my thoughts. I was appealing to him. I was asking
him how he had led them in all this, he who appeared as ancient as the old queen, compassing
some depth they would not understand. I pictured him standing before the altar of Notre
Dame again, that ethereal expression on his face. And I found myself perfectly in him, and
the possibility of him, this ancient one who had stood silent all this while.
I think I searched him now for just an instant of human feeling! That's what I thought
wisdom would reveal. And the mortal in me, the vulnerable one who had cried in the inn at
the vision of the chaos, said:
"Armand, what is the meaning of all this?"
It seemed the brown eyes faltered. But then the face so subtly transformed itself to rage,
that I drew back.
I didn't believe my senses. The sudden changes he had undergone in Notre Dame were
nothing to this. And such a perfect incarnation of malice I'd never seen. Even Gabrielle
moved away. She raised her right hand to shield Nicki, and I stepped back until I was beside
her and our arms touched.
But in the same miraculous way, the hatred melted. The face was again that of a sweet and
fresh mortal boy.
The old queen vampire smiled almost wanly and ran her white claws through her hair.
"You turn to me for explanations?" the leader asked.
His eyes moved over Gabrielle and the dazed figure of Nicolas against her shoulder. Then
returned to me.
"I could speak until the end of the world," he said, "and I could never tell you what you
have destroyed here."
I thought the old queen made some derisive sound, but I was too engaged with him, the
softness of his speech and the great raging anger within.
"Since the beginning of time," he said, "these mysteries have existed." He seemed small
standing in this vast chamber, the voice issuing from him effortlessly, his hands limp at his
sides. "Since the ancient days there have been our kind haunting the cities of man, preying
upon him by night as God and the devil commanded us to do. The chosen of Satan we are,
and those admitted to our ranks had first to prove themselves through a hundred crimes
before the Dark Gift of immortality was given to them."
He came just a little nearer to me, the torchlight glimmering in his eyes.
"Before their loved ones they appeared to die," he said, "and with only a small infusion of
our blood did they endure the terror of the coffin as they waited for us to come. Then and
only then was the Dark Gift given, and they were sealed again in the grave after, until their
thirst should give them the strength to break the narrow box and rise."
His voice grew slightly louder, more resonant.
"It was death they knew in those dark chambers," he said. "It was death and the power of
evil they understood as they rose, breaking open the coffin, and the iron doors that held them
in. And pity the weak, those who couldn't break out.
Those whose wails brought mortals the day after-for none would answer by night. We gave
no mercy to them.
"But those who rose, ah, those were the vampires who walked the earth, tested, purified,
Children of Darkness, born of a fledgling's blood, never the full power of an ancient master,
so that time would bring the wisdom to use the Dark Gifts before they grew truly strong. And
on these were imposed the Rules of Darkness. To live among the dead, for we are dead
things, returning always to one's own grave or one very nearly like it. To shun the places of
light, luring victims away from the company of others to suffer death in unholy and haunted
places. And to honor forever the power of God, the crucifix about the neck, the Sacraments.
And never, never to enter the House of God, lest he strike you powerless, casting you into
hell, ending your reign on earth in blazing torment."
He paused. He looked at the old queen for the first time, and it seemed, though I could not
truly tell, that her face maddened him.
"You scorn these things," he said to her. "Magnus scorned these things!" He commenced to
tremble. "It was the nature of his madness, as it is the nature of yours, but I tell you, you do
not understand these mysteries! You shatter them like so much glass, but you have no
strength, no power save ignorance. You break and that is all."
He turned away, hesitating as if he would not go on, and looking about at the vast crypt.
I heard the old vampire queen very softly singing.
She was chanting something under her breath, and she began to rock back and forth, her
head to one side, her eyes dreamy. Once again, she looked beautiful.
"It is finished for my children," the leader whispered. "It is finished and done, for they
know now they can disregard all of it. The things that bound us together, gave us the strength
to endure as damned things! The mysteries that protected us here."
Again he looked at me.
"And you ask me for explanations as if it were inexplicable!" he said. "You, for whom the
working of the Dark Trick is an act of shameless greed. You gave it to the very womb that
bore you! Why not to this one, the devil's fiddler, whom you worship from afar every night?"
"Have I not told you?" sang the vampire queen. "Haven't we always known? There is
nothing to fear in the sign of the Cross, nor the Holy Water, nor the Sacrament itself..." She
repeated the words, varying the melody under her breath, adding as she went on. "And the old
rites, the incense, the fire, the vows spoken, when we thought we saw the Evil One in the
dark, whispering..."
"Silence!" said the leader, dropping his voice. His hands almost went to his ears in a
strangely human gesture. Like a boy he looked, almost lost. God, that our immortal bodies
could be such varied prisons for us, that our immortal faces should be such masks for our true
souls.
Again he fixed his eyes on me. I thought for a moment there would be another of those
ghastly transformations or that some uncontrollable violence would come from him, and I
hardened myself.
But he was imploring me silently.
Why did this come about! His voice almost dried in his throat as he repeated it aloud, as he
tried to curb his rage. "You explain to me! Why you, you with the strength of ten vampires
and the courage of a hell full of devils, crashing through the world in your brocade and your
leather boots! Lelio, the actor from the House of Thesbians, making us into grand drama on
the boulevard! Tell me! Tell me why!"
"It was Magnus's strength, Magnus's genius," sang the woman vampire with the most
wistful smile.
"No!" He shook his head. "I tell you, he is beyond all account. He knows no limit and so he
has no limit. But why!"
He moved just a little closer, not seeming to walk but to come more clearly into focus as an
apparition might.
"Why you," he demanded, "with the boldness to walk their streets, break their locks, call
them by name. They dress your hair, they fit your clothes! You gamble at their tables!
Deceiving them, embracing them, drinking their blood only steps from where other mortals
laugh and dance. You who shun cemeteries and burst from crypts in churches. Why you!
Thoughtless, arrogant, ignorant, and disdainful! You give me the explanation. Answer me!"
My heart was racing. My face was warm and pulsing with blood. I was in no fear of him
now, but I was angry beyond all mortal anger, and I didn't fully understand why.
His mind-I had wanted to pierce his mind-and this is what I heard, this superstition, this
absurdity. He was no sublime spirit who understood what his followers had not. He had not
believed it. He had believed in it, a thousand times worse!
And I realized quite clearly what he was not demon or angel at all, but a sensibility forged
in a dark time when the small orbs of the sun traveled the dome of the heavens, and the stars
were no more than tiny lanterns describing gods and goddesses upon a closed night. A time
when man was the center of this great world in which we roam, a time when for every
question there had been an answer. That was what he was, a child of olden days when
witches had danced beneath the moon and knights had battled dragons.
Ah, sad lost child, roaming the catacombs beneath a great city and an incomprehensible
century. Maybe your mortal form is more fitting than I supposed.
But there was no time to mourn for him, beautiful as he was. Those entombed in the walls
suffered at his command. Those he had sent out of the chamber could be called back.
I had to think of a reply to his question that he would be able to accept. The truth wasn't
enough. It had to be arranged poetically the way that the older thinkers would have arranged
it in the world before the age of reason had come to me.
"My answer?" I said softly. I was gathering my thoughts and I could almost feel Gabrielle's
warning, Nicki's fear. "I'm no dealer in mysteries," I said. "No lover of philosophy. But it's
plain enough what has happened here."
He studied me with a strange earnestness.
"If you fear so much the power of God," I said, "then the teachings of the Church aren't
unknown to you. You must know that the forms of goodness change with the ages, that there
are saints for all times under heaven."
Visibly he hearkened to this, warmed to the words I used.
"In ancient days," I said, "there were martyrs who quenched the flames that sought to burn
them, mystics who rose into the air as they heard the voice of God. But as the world changed,
so changed the saints. What are they now but obedient nuns and priests? They build hospitals
and orphanages, but they do not call down the angels to rout armies or tame the savage
beast."
I could see no change in him but I pressed on.
"And so it is with evil, obviously. It changes its form. How many men in this age believe in
the crosses that frighten your followers? Do you think mortals above are speaking to each
other of heaven and hell? Philosophy is what they talk about, and science! What does it
matter to them if white-faced haunts prowl a churchyard after dark? A few more murders in a
wilderness of murders? How can this be of interest to God or the devil or to man?"
I heard again the old queen vampire laughing.
But Armand didn't speak or move.
"Even your playground is about to be taken from you," I continued. "This cemetery in
which you hide is about to be removed altogether from Paris. Even the bones of our ancestors
are no longer sacred in this secular age."
His face softened suddenly. He couldn't conceal his shock.
"Les Innocents destroyed!" he whispered. "You're lying to me..."
"I never lie," I said offhand. "At least not to those I don't love. The people of Paris don't
want the stench of graveyards around them anymore. The emblems of the dead don't matter
to them as they matter to you. Within a few years, markets, streets, and houses will cover this
spot. Commerce. Practicality. That is the eighteenth-century world."
"Stop!" he whispered. "Les Innocents has existed as long as I have existed!" His boyish
face was strained. The old queen was undisturbed.
"Don't you see?" I said softly. "It is a new age. It requires a new evil. And I am that new
evil." I paused, watching him. "I am the vampire for these times."
He had not foreseen my point. And I saw in him for the first time a glimmer of terrible
understanding, the first glimmer of real fear.
I made a small accepting gesture.
"This incident in the village church tonight," I said cautiously, "it was vulgar, I'm inclined
to agree. My actions on the stage of theater, worse still. But these were blunders. And you
know they aren't the source of your rancor. Forget them for the moment and try to envision
my beauty and my power. Try to see the evil that I am. I stalk the world in mortal dressthe
worst of fiends, the monster who looks exactly like everyone else."
The woman vampire made a low song of her laughter. I could feel only pain from him, and
from her the warm emanation of her love.
"Think of it, Armand," I pressed carefully. "Why should Death lurk in the shadows? Why
should Death wait at the gate? There is no bedchamber, no ballroom that I cannot enter.
Death in the glow of the hearth, Death on tiptoe in the corridor, that is what I am. Speak to
me of the Dark Gifts-I use them. I'm Gentleman Death in silk and lace, come to put out the
candles. The canker in the heart of the rose."
There was a faint moan from Nicolas.
I think I heard Armand sigh.
"There is no place where they can hide from me," I said, "these godless and powerless ones
who would destroy les Innocents. There is no lock that can keep me out."
He stared back at me silently. He appeared sad and calm. His eyes were darkened slightly,
but they were untroubled by malice or rage. He didn't speak for a long moment, and then:
"A splendid mission, that," he said, "to devil them mercilessly as you live among them. But
it's you still who don't understand."
"How so?" I asked.
"You can't endure in the world, living among men, you cannot survive."
"But I do," I said simply. "The old mysteries have given way to a new style. And who
knows what will follow? There's no romance in what you are. There is great romance in what
I am!"
"You can't be that strong," he said. "You don't know what you're saying, you have only just
come into being, you are young."
"He is very strong, however, this child," mused the queen, "and so is his beautiful newborn
companion. They are fiends of high-blown ideas and great reason, these two."
"You can't live among men!" Armand insisted again.
His face colored for one second. But he wasn't my enemy now; rather he was some
wondering elder struggling to tell me a critical truth. And at the same moment he seemed a
child imploring me, and in that struggle lay his essence, parent and child, pleading with me to
listen to what he had to say.
"And why not? I tell you I belong among men. It is their blood that makes me immortal."
"Ah, yes, immortal, but you have not begun to understand it," he said. "It's no more than a
word. Study the fate of your maker. Why did Magnus go into the flames? It's an age-old truth
among us, and you haven't even guessed it. Live among men, and the passing years will drive
you to madness. To see others grow old and die, kingdoms rise and fall, to lose all you
understand and cherish-who can endure it? It will drive you to idiot raving and despair. Your
own immortal kind is your protection, your salvation. The ancient ways, don't you see, which
never changed!"
He stopped, shocked that he had used this word, salvation, and it reverberated through the
room, his lips shaping it again.
"Armand," the old queen sang softly. "Madness may come to the eldest we know, whether
they keep to the old ways or abandon them." She made a gesture as if to attack him with her
white claws, screeching with laughter as he stared coldly back. "I have kept to the old ways
as long as you have and I am mad, am I not? Perhaps that is why I have kept them so well!"
He shook his head angrily in protest. Was he not the living proof it need not be so?
But she drew near to me and took hold of my arm, turning my face towards hers.
"Did Magnus tell you nothing, child?" she asked.
I felt an immense power flowing from her.
"While others prowled this sacred place," she said, "I went alone across the snow-covered
fields to find Magnus. My strength is so great now it is as if I have wings. I climbed to his
window to find him in his chamber, and together we walked the battlements unseen by all
save the distant stars."
She drew even closer, her grip tightening.
"Many things, Magnus knew," she said. "And it is not madness which is your enemy, not if
you are really strong. The vampire who leaves his coven to dwell among human beings faces
a dreadful hell long before madness comes. He grows irresistibly to love mortals! He comes
to understand all things in love."
"Let me go," I whispered softly. Her glance was holding me as surely as her hands.
"With the passage of time he comes to know mortals as they may never know each other,"
she continued, undaunted, her eyebrows rising, "and finally there comes the moment when he
cannot bear to take life, or bear to make suffering, and nothing but madness or his own death
will ease his pain. That is the fate of the old ones which Magnus described to me, Magnus
who suffered all afflictions in the end."
At last she released me. She receded from me as if she were an image in a sailor's glass.
"I don't believe what you're saying," I whispered. But the whisper was like a hiss.
"Magnus? Love mortals?"
"Of course you do not," she said with her graven jester's smile.
Armand, too, was looking at her as if he did not understand.
"My words have no meaning now," she added. "But you have all the time in the world to
understand!"
Laughter, howling laughter, scraping the ceiling of the crypt. Cries again from within the
walls. She threw back her head with her laughter.
Armand was horror-stricken as he watched her. It was as if he saw the laughter emanating
froth her like so much glittering light.
"No, but it's a lie, a hideous simplification!" I said. My head was throbbing suddenly. My
eyes were throbbing. "I mean it's a concept born out of moral idiocy, this idea of love!"
I put my hands to my temples. A deadly pain in me was growing. The pain was dimming
my vision, sharpening my memory of Magnus's dungeon, the mortal prisoners who had died
among the rotted bodies of those condemned before them in the stinking crypt.
Armand looked to me now as if I were torturing him as the old queen tortured him with her
laughter. And her laughter went right on, rising and falling away. Armand's hands went out
towards me as if he would touch me but did not dare.
All the rapture and pain I'd known in these past months came together inside me. I felt
quite suddenly as if I would begin to roar as I had that night on Renaud's stage. I was aghast
at these sensations. I was murmuring nonsense syllables again aloud.
"Lestat!" Gabrielle whispered.
"Love mortals?" I said. I stared at the old queen's inhuman face, horrified suddenly to see
the black eyelashes like spikes about her glistening eyes, her flesh like animated marble.
"Love mortals? Does it take you three hundred years!" I glared at Gabrielle. "From the first
nights when I held them close to me, I loved them. Drinking up their life, their death, I love
them. Dear God, is that not the very essence of the Dark Gift?"
My voice was growing in volume as it had that night in the theater. "Oh, what are you that
you do not? What vile things that this is the sum of your wisdom, the simple capacity to
feel!"
I backed away from them, looking about me at this giant tomb, the damp earth arching
over our heads. The place was passing out of the material into a hallucination.
"God, do you lose your reason with the Dark Trick," I asked, "with your rituals, your
sealing up of the fledglings in the grave? Or were you monsters when you were living? How
could we not all of us love mortals with every breath we take!"
No answer. Except the senseless cries of the starving ones. No answer. Just the dim beating
of Nicki's heart.
"Well, hear me, whatever the case," I said.
I pointed my finger first at Armand, at the old queen.
"I never promised my soul to the devil for this! And when I made this one it was to save
her from the worms that eat the corpses around here. If loving mortals is the hell you speak
of, I am already in it. I have met my fate. Leave me to it and all scores are settled crow."
My voice had broken. I was gasping. I ran my hands back through my hair. Armand
seemed to shimmer as he came close to me. His face was a miracle of seeming purity and
awe.
"Dead. things, dead things. . ." I said. "Come no closer. Talking of madness and love, in
this reeking place! And that old monster, Magnus, locking them up in his dungeon. How did
he love them, his captives? The way boys love butterflies when they rip off their wings!"
"No, child, you think you understand but you do not," sang the woman vampire
unperturbed. "You have only just begun your loving." She gave a soft lilting laugh. "You feel
sorry for them, that is all. And for yourself that you cannot be both human and inhuman. Isn't
it so?"
"Lies!" I said. I moved closer to Gabrielle. I put my arm around her.
"You will come to understand all things in love," the old queen went on, "when you are a
vicious and hateful thing. This is your immortality, child. Ever deeper understanding of it."
And throwing up her arms, again she howled.
"Damn you," I said. I picked up Gabrielle and Nicki and carried them backwards towards
the doors. "You're in hell already," I said, "and I intend to leave you in hell now."
I took Nicolas out of Gabrielle's arms and we ran through the catacomb towards the stairs.
The old queen was in a frenzy of keening laughter behind us.
And human as Orpheus perhaps, I stopped and glanced back.
"Lestat, hurry!" Nicolas whispered in my ear. And Gabrielle gave a desperate gesture for
me to come.
Armand had not moved, and the old woman stood beside him laughing still.
"Good-bye, brave child," she cried. "Ride the Devil's Road bravely. Ride the Devil's Road
as long as you can."
The coven scattered like frightened ghosts in the cold rain as we burst out of the sepulcher.
And baffled, they watched as we sped out of les Innocents into the crowded Paris streets.
Within moments we had stolen a carriage and were on our way out of the city into the
countryside.
I drove the team on relentlessly. Yet I was so mortally tired that preternatural strength
seemed purely an idea. At every thicket and turn of the road I expected to see the filthy
demons surrounding us again.
But somehow I managed to get from a country inn the food and drink Nicolas would need,
and the blankets to keep him warm.
He was unconscious long before we reached the tower, and I carried him up the stairs to
that high cell where Magnus had first kept me.
His throat was still swollen and bruised from their feasting on him. And though he slept
deeply as I laid him on the straw bed, I could feel the thirst in him, the awful craving that I'd
felt after Magnus had drunk from me.
Well, there was plenty of wine for him when he awakened, and plenty of food. And I
knew-though how I couldn't tell that he wouldn't die.
What his daylight hours would be like, I could hardly imagine. But he would be safe once I
turned the key in the lock. And no matter what he had been to me, or what he stood to be in
the future, no mortal could wander free in my lair while I slept.
Beyond that I couldn't reason. I felt like a mortal walking in his sleep.
I was still staring down at him, hearing his vague jumbled dreams-dreams of the horrors of
les Innocents-when Gabrielle came in. She had finished burying the poor unfortunate stable
boy, and she looked like a dusty angel again, her hair stiff and tangled and full of delicate
fractured light.
She looked down at Nicki for a long moment and then she drew me out of the room. After
I had locked the door, she led me down to the lower crypt. There she put her arms tightly
around me and held me, as if she too were worn almost to collapse.
"Listen to me," she said finally, drawing back and putting her hands up to hold my face.
"We'll get him out of France as soon as we rise. No one will ever believe his mad tales."
I didn't answer. I could scarce understand her, her reasoning or her intentions. My head
swam.
"You can play the puppeteer with him," she said, "as you did with Renaud's actors. You
can send him off to the New World."
"Sleep," I whispered. I kissed her open mouth. I held her with my eyes closed. I saw the
crypt again, heard their strange, inhuman voices. All this would not stop.
"After he's gone, then we can talk about these others," she said calmly. "Whether to leave
Paris altogether for a while.. ."
I let her go, and I turned away from her and I went to the sarcophagus and rested for a
moment against the stone lid. For the first time in my immortal life I wanted the silence of the
tomb, the feeling that all things were out of my hands.
It seemed she said something else then.
Do not do this thing.
4
When I awoke, I heard his cries. He was beating on the oaken door, cursing me for keeping
him prisoner. The sound filled the tower, and the scent of him came through the stone walls:
succulent, oh so succulent, smell of living flesh and blood, his flesh and blood.
She slept still.
Do not do this thing.
Symphony of malice, symphony of madness coming through the walls, straining to contain
the ghastly images, the torture, to surround it with language . . .
When I stepped into the stairwell, it was like being caught in a whirlwind of his cries, his
human smell.
And all the remembered scents mingled with it-the afternoon sunshine on a wooden table,
the red wine, the smoke of the little fire.
"Lestat! Do you hear me! Lestat!" Thunder of fists against the door.
Memory of childhood fairy tale: the giant says he smells the blood of a human in his lair.
Horror. I knew the giant was going to find the human. I could hear him coming after the
human, step by step. I was the human.
Only no more.
Smoke and salt and flesh and pumping blood.
"This is the witches' place! Lestat, do you hear me! This is the witches' place!"
Dull tremor of the old secrets between us, the love, the things that only we had known, felt.
Dancing in the witches' place. Can you deny it? Can you deny everything that passed
between us?
Get him out of France. Send him to the New World. And then what? All his life he is one
of those slightly interesting but generally tiresome mortals who have seen spirits, talk of them
incessantly, and no one believes him. Deepening madness. Will he be a comical lunatic
finally, the kind that even the ruffians and bullies look after, playing his fiddle in a dirty coat
for the crowds on the streets of Port-au-Prince?
"Be the puppeteer again," she had said. Is that what I was?
No one will ever believe his mad tales.
But he knows the place where we lie, Mother. He knows our names, the name of our kintoo
many things about us. And he will never go quietly to another country. And they may go
after him; they will never let him live now.
Where are they?
I went up the stairs in the whirlwind of his echoing cries, looked out the little barred
window at the open land. They'll be coming again. They have to come. First I was alone, then
I had her with me, and now I have them!
But what was the crux? That he wanted it? That he had screamed over and over that I had
denied him the power?
Or was it that I now had the excuses I needed to bring him to me as I had wanted to do
from the first moment? My Nicolas, my love. Eternity awaits. All the great and splendid
pleasures of being dead.
I went further up the stairs towards him and the thirst sang in me. To hell with his cries.
The thirst sang and I was an instrument of its singing.
And his cries had become inarticulate-the pure essence of his curses, a dull punctuating to
the misery that I could hear without need of any sound. Something divinely carnal in the
broken syllables coming from his lips, like the low gush of blood through his heart.
I lifted the key and put it in the lock and he went silent, his thoughts washing backwards
and into him as if the ocean could be sucked back into the tiny mysterious coils of a single
shell.
I tried to see him in the shadows of the room, and not it the love for him, the aching,
wrenching months of longing for him, the hideous and unshakable human need for him, the
lust. I tried to see the mortal who didn't know what he was saying as he glared at me:
"You, and your talk of goodness"-low seething voice, eyes glittering-"your talk of good
and evil, your talk of what was right and what was wrong and death, oh yes, death, the horror,
the tragedy . . ."
Words. Borne on the ever swelling current of hatred, like flowers opening in the current,
petals peeling back, then falling apart:
". . . and you shared it with her, the lord's son giveth to the lord's wife his great gift, the
Dark Gift. Those who live in the castle share the Dark Gift-never were they dragged to the
witches' place where the human grease pools on the ground at the foot of the burnt stake, no,
kill the old crone who can no longer see to sew, and the idiot boy who cannot till the field.
And what does he give us, the lord's son, the wolfkiller, the one who screamed in the witches'
place? Coin of the realm! That's good enough for us!"
Shuddering. Shirt soaked with sweat. Gleam of taut flesh through the torn lace.
Tantalizing, the mere sight of it, the narrow tightly muscled torso that sculptors so love to
represent, nipples pink against the dark skin.
"This power"-sputtering as if all day long he had been saying the words over with the same
intensity, and it does not really matter that now I am present-"this power that made all the lies
meaningless, this dark power that soared over everything, this truth that obliterated. . ."
No. Language. No truth.
The wine bottles were empty, the food devoured. His lean arms were hardened and tense
for the struggle-but what struggle?-his brown hair fallen out of its ribbon, his eyes enormous
and glazed.
But suddenly he pushed against the wall as if he'd go through it to get away from me-dim
remembrance of their drinking from him, the paralysis, the ecstasy-yet he was drawn
immediately forward again, staggering, putting his hands out to steady himself by taking hold
of things that were not there.
But his voice had stopped.
Something breaking in his face.
"How could you keep it from me!" he whispered. Thoughts of old magic, luminous legend,
some great eerie strata in which all the shadowy things thrived, an intoxication with
forbidden knowledge in which the natural things become unimportant. No miracle anymore
to the leaves falling from the autumn trees, the sun in the orchard.
No.
The scent was rising from him like incense, like the heat and the smoke of church candles
rising. Heart thumping under the skin of his naked chest. Tight little belly glistening with
sweat, sweat staining the thick leather belt. Blood full of salt. I could scarce breathe.
And we do breathe. We breathe and we taste and we smell and we feel and we thirst.
"You have misunderstood everything." Is this Lestat speaking? It sounded like some other
demon, some loathsome thing for whom the voice was the imitation of a human voice. "You
have misunderstood everything you have seen and heard."
"I would have shared anything I possessed with you!" Rage building again. He reached
out. "It was you who never understood," he whispered.
"Take your life and leave with it. Run."
"Don't you see it's the confirmation of everything? That it exists is the confirmation-pure
evil, sublime evil!" Triumph in his eyes. He reached out suddenly and closed his hand on my
face.
"Don't taunt me!" I said. I struck him so hard he fell back wards, chastened, silent. "When
it was offered me I said no. I tell you I said no. With my last breath, I said no."
"You were always the fool," he said. "I told you that." But he was breaking down. He was
shuddering and the rage was alchemizing into desperation. He lifted his arms again and then
stopped. "You believed things that didn't matter," he said almost gently. "There was
something you failed to see. Is it impossible you don't know yourself what you possess now?"
The glaze over his eyes broke instantly into tears.
His face knotted. Unspoken words coming from him of love.
And an awful self-consciousness came over me. Silent and lethal, I felt myself flooded
with the power I had over him and his knowledge of it, and my love for him heated the sense
of power, driving it towards a scorching embarrassment which suddenly changed into
something else.
We were in the wings of the theater again; we were in the village in Auvergne in that little
inn. I smelled not merely the blood in him, but the sudden terror. He had taken a step back.
And the very movement stoked the blaze in me, as much as the vision of his stricken face.
He grew smaller, more fragile. Yet he'd never seemed stronger, more alluring than he was
now.
All the expression drained from his face as I drew nearer. His eyes were wondrously clear.
And his mind was opening as Gabrielle's mind had opened, and for one tiny second there
flared a moment of us together in the garret, talking and talking as the moon glared on the
snow-covered roofs, or walking through the Paris streets, passing the wine back and forth,
heads bowed against the first gust of winter rain, and there had been the eternity of growing
up and growing old before us, and so much joy even in misery, even in the misery-the real
eternity, the real forever-the mortal mystery of that. But the moment faded in the shimmering
expression on his face.
"Come to me, Nicki," I whispered. I lifted both hands to beckon. "If you want it, you must
come..."
I saw a bird soaring out of a cave above the open sea. And there was something terrifying
about the bird and the endless waves over which it flew. Higher and higher it went and the
sky turned to silver and then gradually the silver faded and the sky went dark. The darkness
of evening nothing to fear, really, nothing. Blessed darkness. But it was falling gradually and
inexorably over nothing save this one tiny creature cawing in the wind above a great
wasteland that was the world. Empty caves, empty sands, empty sea.
All I had ever loved to look upon, or listen to, or felt with my hands was gone, or never
existed, and the bird, circling and gliding, flew on and on, upwards past me, or more truly
past no one, holding the entire landscape, without history or meaning, in the flat blackness of
one tiny eye.
I screamed but without a sound. I felt my mouth full of blood and each swallow passing
down my throat and into fathomless thirst. And I wanted to say, yes, I understand now, I
understand how terrible, how unbearable, this darkness. I didn't know. Couldn't know. The
bird sailing on through the darkness over the barren shore, the seamless sea. Dear God, stop
it. Worse than the horror in the inn. Worse than the helpless trumpeting of the fallen horse in
the snow. But the blood was the blood after all, and the heart-the luscious heart that was all
hearts-was right there, on tiptoe against my lips.
Now, my love, now's the moment. I can swallow the life that beats from your heart and
send you into the oblivion in which nothing may ever be understood or forgiven, or I can
bring you to me.
I pushed him backwards. I held him to me like a crushed thing. But the vision wouldn't
stop.
His arms slipped around my neck, his face wet, eyes rolling up into his head. Then his
tongue shot out. It licked hard at the gash I had made for him in my own throat. Yes, eager.
But please stop this vision. Stop the upward flight and the great slant of the colorless
landscape, the cawing that meant nothing over the howl of the wind. The pain is nothing
compared to this darkness. I don't want to . . . I don't want to . . .
But it was dissolving. Slowly dissolving.
And finally it was finished. The veil of silence had come down, as it had with her. Silence.
He was separate. And I was holding him away from me, and he was almost falling, his hands
to his mouth, the blood running down his chin in rivulets. His mouth was open and a dry
sound came out of it, in spite of the blood, a dry scream.
And beyond him, and beyond the remembered vision of the metallic sea and the lone bird
who was its only witness-I saw her in the doorway and her hair was a Virgin Mary veil of
gold around her shoulders, and she said with the saddest expression on her face:
"Disaster, my son."
By midnight it was clear that he would not speak or answer to any voice, or move of his
own volition. He remained still and expressionless in the places to which he was taken. If the
death pained him he gave no sign. If the new vision delighted him, he kept it to himself. Not
even the thirst moved him.
And it was Gabrielle who, after studying him quietly for hours, took him in hand, cleaning
him and putting new clothes on him. Black wool she chose, one of the few somber coats I
owned. And modest linen that made him look oddly like a young cleric, a little too serious, a
little naive.
And in the silence of the crypt as I watched them, I knew without doubt that they could
hear each other's thoughts. Without a word she guided him through the grooming. Without a
word she sent him back to the bench by the fire.
Finally, she said, "He should hunt now," and when she glanced at him, he rose without
looking at her as if pulled by a string.
Numbly I watched them going. Heard their feet on the stairs. And then I crept up after
them, stealthily, and holding to the bars of the gate I watched them move, two feline spirits,
across the field.
The emptiness of the night was an indissoluble cold settling over me, closing me in. Not
even the fire on the hearth warmed me when I returned to it.
Emptiness here. And the quiet I had told myself that I wanted-just to be alone after the
grisly struggle in Paris. Quiet, and the realization gnawing at my insides like a starved
animal-that I couldn't stand the sight of him now.
5
When I opened my eyes the next night, I knew what I meant to do. Whether or not I could
stand to look at him wasn't important. I had made him this, and I had to rouse him from his
stupor somehow.
The hunt hadn't changed him, though apparently he'd drunk and killed well enough. And
now it was up to me to protect him from the revulsion I felt, and to go into Paris and get the
one thing that might bring him around.
The violin was all he'd ever loved when he was alive. Maybe now it would awaken him. I'd
put it in his hands, and he'd want to play it again, he'd want to play it with his new skill, and
everything would change and the chill in my heart would somehow melt.
As soon as Gabrielle rose, I told her what I meant to do. "But what about the others?" she
said. "You can't go riding into Paris alone."
"Yes, I can," I said. "You're needed here with him. If the little pests should come round,
they could lure him into the open, the way he is now. And besides, I want to know what's
happening under les Innocents. If we have a real truce, I want to know."
"I don't like your going," she said, shaking her head. "I tell you, if I didn't believe we
should speak to the leader again, that we had things to learn from him and the old woman, I'd
be for leaving Paris tonight."
"And what could they possibly teach us?" I said coldly. "That the sun really revolves
around the earth? That the earth is flat?" But the bitterness of my words made me feel
ashamed.
One thing they could tell me was why the vampires I'd made could hear each other's
thoughts when I could not. But I was too crestfallen over my loathing of Nicki to think of all
these things.
I only looked at her and thought how glorious it had been to see the Dark Trick work its
magic in her, to see it restore her youthful beauty, render her again the goddess she'd been to
me when I was a little child. To see Nicki change had been to see him die.
Maybe without reading the words in my soul she understood it only too well.
We embraced slowly. "Be careful," she said.
I should have gone to the flat right away to look for his violin. And there was still my poor
Roget to deal with. Lies to tell. And this matter of getting out of Paris-it seemed more and
more the thing for us to do.
But for hours I did just what I wanted. I hunted the Tuileries and the boulevards,
pretending there was no coven under les Innocents, that Nicki was alive still and safe
somewhere, that Paris was all mine again.
But I was listening for them every moment. I was thinking about the old queen. And I
heard them when I least expected it, on the boulevard du Temple, as I drew near to Renaud's.
Strange that they'd be in the places of light, as they called them. But within seconds, I
knew that several of them were hiding behind the theater. And there was no malice this time,
only a desperate excitement when they sensed that I was near.
Then I saw tile white face of the woman vampire, the darkeyed pretty one with the witch's
hair. She was in the alleyway beside the stage door, and she darted forward to beckon to me.
I rode back and forth for a few moments. The boulevard was the usual spring evening
panorama: hundreds of strollers amid the stream of carriage traffic, lots of street musicians,
jugglers and tumblers, the lighted theaters with their doors open to invite the crowd. Why
should I leave it to talk to these creatures? I listened. There were four of them actually, and
they were desperately waiting for me to come. They were in terrible fear.
All right. I turned the horse and rode into the alley and all the way to the back where they
hovered together against the stone wall.
The gray-eyed boy was there, which surprised me, and he had a dazed expression on his
face. A tall blond male vampire stood behind him with a handsome woman, both of them
swathed in rags like lepers. It was the pretty one, the dark-eyed one who had laughed at my
little jest on the stairs under les Innocents, who spoke:
"You have to help us!" she whispered.
"I do?" I tried to steady the mare. She didn't like their company. "Why do I have to help
you?" I demanded.
"He's destroying the coven," she said.
"Destroying us..." the boy said. But he didn't look at me. He was staring at the stones in
front of him, and from his mind I caught flashes of what was happening, of the pyre lighted,
of Armand forcing his followers into the fire.
I tried to get this out of my head. But the images were now coming from all of them. The
dark-eyed pretty one looked directly into my eyes as she strove to sharpen the pictures
Armand swinging a great charred beam of wood as he drove the others into the blaze, then
stabbing them down into the flames with the beam as they struggled to escape.
"Good Lord, there were twelve of you!" I said. "Couldn't you fight?"
"We did and we are here," said the woman. "He burned six together, and the rest of us fled.
In terror, we sought strange resting places for the day. We had never done this before, slept
away from our sacred graves. We didn't know what would happen to us. And when we rose
he was there. Another two he managed to destroy. So we are all that is left. He has even
broken open the deep chambers and burned the starved ones. He has broken loose the earth to
block the tunnels to our meeting place."
The boy looked up slowly.
"You did this to us," he whispered. "You have brought us all down."
The woman stepped in front of him.
"You must help us," she said. "Make a new coven with us. Help us to exist as you exist."
She glanced impatiently at the boy.
"But the old woman, the great one?" I asked.
"It was she who commenced it," said the boy bitterly. "She threw herself into the fire. She
said she would go to join Magnus. She was laughing. It was then that he drove the others into
the flames as we fled."
I bowed my head. So she was gone. And all she had known and witnessed had gone with
her, and what had she left behind but the simple one, the vengeful one, the wicked child who
believed what she had known to be false.
"You must help us," said the dark-eyed woman. "You see, it's his right as coven master to
destroy those who are weak, those who can't survive."
"He couldn't let the coven fall into chaos," said the other woman vampire who stood
behind the boy. "Without the faith in the Dark Ways, the others might have blundered,
alarmed the mortal populace. But if you help us to form a new coven, to perfect ourselves in
new ways. . ."
"We are the strongest of the coven," said the man. "And if we can fend him off long
enough, and manage to continue without him, then in time he may leave us alone."
"He will destroy us," the boy muttered. "He will never leave us alone. He will lie in wait
for the moment when we separate. . ."
"He isn't invincible," said the tall male. "And he's lost all conviction. Remember that."
"And you have Magnus's tower, a safe place..." said the boy despairingly as he looked up
at me.
"No, that I can't share with you," I said. "You have to win this battle on your own."
"But surely you can guide us..." said the man.
"You don't need me," I said. "What have you already learned from my example? What did
you learn from the things I said last night?"
"We learned more from what you said to him afterwards," said the dark-eyed woman. "We
heard you speak to him of a new evil, an evil for these times destined to move through the
world in handsome human guise."
"So take on the guise," I said. "Take the garments of your victims, and take the money
from their pockets. And you can then move among mortals as I do. In time you can gain
enough wealth to acquire your own little fortress, your secret sanctuary. Then you will no
longer be beggars or ghosts."
I could see the desperation in their faces. Yet they listened attentively.
"But our skin, the timbre of our voices.. ." said the darkeyed woman.
"You can fool mortals. It's very easy. It just takes a little skill."
"But how do we start?" said the boy dully, as if he were only reluctantly being brought into
it. "What sort of mortals do we pretend to be?"
"Choose for yourself!" I said. "Look around you. Masquerade as gypsies if you will-that
oughtn't to be too difficult-or better yet mummers," I glanced towards the light of the
boulevard.
"Mummers!" said the dark-eyed woman with a little spark of excitement.
"Yes, actors. Street performers. Acrobats. Make yourselves acrobats. Surely you've seen
them out there. You can cover your white faces with greasepaint, and your extravagant
gestures and facial expressions won't even be noticed. You couldn't choose a more nearly
perfect disguise than that. On the boulevard you'll see every manner of mortal that dwells in
this city. You'll learn all you need to know."
She laughed and glanced at the others. The man was deep in thought, the other woman
musing, the boy unsure.
"With your powers, you can become jugglers and tumblers easily," I said. "It would be
nothing for you. You could be seen by thousands who'd never guess what you are."
"That isn't what happened with you on the stage of this little theater," said the boy coldly.
"You put terror into their hearts."
"Because I chose to do it," I said. Tremor of pain. "That's my tragedy. But I can fool
anyone when I want to and so can you."
I reached into my pockets and drew out a handful of gold crowns. I gave them to the darkeyed
woman. She took them in both hands and stared at them as if they were burning her. She
looked up and in her eyes I saw the image of myself on Renaud's stage performing those
ghastly feats that had driven the crowd into the streets.
But she had another thought in her mind. She knew the theater was abandoned, that I'd sent
the troupe off.
And for one second, I considered it, letting the pain double itself and pass through me,
wondering if the others could feel it. What did it really matter, after all?
"Yes, please," said the pretty one. She reached up and touched my hand with her cool
white fingers. "Let us inside the theater! Please." She turned and looked at the back doors of
Renaud's.
Let them inside. Let them dance on my grave.
But there might be old costumes there still, the discarded trappings of a troupe that had had
all the money in the world to buy itself new finery. Old pots of white paint. Water still in the
barrels. A thousand treasures left behind in the haste of departure.
I was numb, unable to consider all of it, unwilling to reach back to embrace all that had
happened there.
"Very well," I said, looking away as if some little thing had distracted me. "You can go
into the theater if you wish. You can use whatever is there."
She drew closer and pressed her lips suddenly to the back of my hand.
"We won't forget this," she said. "My name is Eleni, this boy is Laurent, the man here is
Felix, and the woman with him, Eugenie. If Armand moves against you, he moves against
us."
"I hope you prosper," I said, and strangely enough, I meant it. I wondered if any of them,
with all their Dark Ways and Dark Rituals, had ever really wanted this nightmare that we all
shared. They'd been drawn into it as I had, really. And we were all Children of Darkness now,
for better or worse.
"But be wise in what you do here," I warned. "Never bring victims here or kill near here.
Be clever and keep your hiding place safe."
It was three o'clock before I rode over the bridge on to the Ile St.Louis. I had wasted
enough time. And now I had to find the violin.
But as soon as I approached Nicki's house on the quai I saw that something was wrong.
The windows were empty. All the drapery had been pulled down, and yet the place was full
of light, as if candles were burning inside by the hundreds. Most strange. Roget couldn't have
taken possession of the flat yet. Not enough time had passed to assume that Nicki had met
with foul play.
Quickly, I went up over the roof and down the wall to the courtyard window, and saw that
the drapery had been stripped away there too.
And candles were burning in all the candelabra and in the wall sconces. And some were
even stuck in their own wax on the pianoforte and the desk. The room was in total disarray.
Every book had been pulled off the shelf. And some of the books were in fragments, pages
broken out. Even the music had been emptied sheet by sheet onto the carpet, and all the
pictures were lying about on the tables with other small possessions-coins, money, keys.
Perhaps the demons had wrecked the place when they took Nicki. But who had lighted all
these candles? It didn't make sense.
I listened. No one in the flat. Or so it seemed. But then I heard not thoughts, but tiny
sounds. I narrowed my eyes for a moment, just concentrating, and it came to me that I was
hearing pages turn, and then something being dropped. More pages turning, stiff, old
parchment pages. Then again the book dropped.
I raised the window as quietly as I could. The little sounds continued, but no scent of
human, no pulse of thought.
Yet there was a smell here. Something stronger than the stale tobacco and the candle wax.
The smell the vampires carried with them from the cemetery soil.
More candles in the hallway. Candles in the bedroom and the same disarray, books open as
they lay in careless piles, the bedclothes snarled, the pictures in a heap. Cabinets emptied,
drawers pulled out.
And no violin anywhere, I managed to note that.
And those little sounds coming from another room, pages being turned very fast.
Whoever he was-and of course I knew who he had to be-he did not give a damn that I was
there! He had not even stopped to take a breath.
I went farther down the hall and stood in the door of the library and found myself staring
right at him as he continued with his task.
It was Armand, of course. Yet I was hardly prepared for the sight he presented here.
Candle wax dripped down the marble bust of Caesar, flowed over the brightly painted
countries of the world globe. And the books, they lay in mountains on the carpet, save for
those of the very last shelf in the corner when he stood, in his old rags still, hair full of dust,
ignoring me as he ran his hand over page after page, his eyes intent on the words before him,
his lips half open, his expression like that of an insect in its concentration as it chews through
a leaf.
Perfectly horrible he looked, actually. He was sucking everything out of the books!
Finally he let this one drop and took down another, and opened it and started devouring it
in the same manner, fingers moving down the sentences with preternatural speed.
And I realized that he had been examining everything in the flat in this fashion, even the
bed sheets and curtains, the pictures that had been taken off their hooks, the contents of
cupboards and drawers. But from the books he was taking concentrated knowledge.
Everything from Caesar's Gallic Wars to modern English novels lay on the floor.
But his manner wasn't the entire horror. It was the havoc he was leaving behind him, the
utter disregard of everything he used.
And his utter disregard of me.
He finished his last book, or broke off from it, and went to the old newspapers stacked on a
lower shelf.
I found myself backing out of the room and away from him, staring numbly at his small
dirty figure. His auburn hair shimmered despite the dirt in it; his eyes burned like two lights.
Grotesque he seemed, among all the candles and the swimming colors of the flat, this filthy
waif of the netherworld, and yet his beauty held sway. He hadn't needed the shadows of
Notre Dame or the torchlight of the crypt to flatter him. And there was a fierceness in him in
this bright light that I hadn't seen before.
I felt an overwhelming confusion. He was both dangerous and compelling. I could have
looked on him forever, but an overpowering instinct said: Get away. Leave the place to him if
he wants it. What does it matter now?
The violin. I tried desperately to think about the violin. To stop watching the movement of
his hands over the words in front of him, the relentless focus of his eyes.
I turned my back on him and went into the parlor. My hands were trembling. I could hardly
endure knowing he was there. I searched everywhere and didn't find the damned violin. What
could Nicki have done with it? I couldn't think.
Pages turning, paper crinkling. Soft sound of the newspaper dropping to the floor.
Go back to the tower at once.
I went to pass the library quickly, when without warning his soundless voice shot out and
stopped me. It was like a hand touching my throat. I turned and saw him staring at me.
Do you love them, your silent children? Do they love you?
That was what he asked, the sense disentangling itself from an endless echo.
I felt the blood rise to my face. The heat spread out over me like a mask as I looked at him.
All the books in the room were now on the floor. He was a haunt standing in the ruins, a
visitant from the devil he believed in. Yet his face was so tender, so young.
The Dark Trick never brings love, you see, it brings only the silence. His voice seemed
softer in its soundlessness, clearer, the echo dissipated. We used to say it was Satan's will,
that the master and the fledgling not seek comfort in each other. It was Satan who had to be
served, after all.
Every word penetrated me. Every word was received by a secret, humiliating curiosity and
vulnerability. But I refused to let him see this. Angrily I said:
"What do you want of me?"
It was shattering something to speak. I was feeling more fear of him at this moment than
ever during the earlier battles and arguments, and I hate those who make me feel fear, those
who know things that I need to know, who have that power over me.
"It is like not knowing how to read, isn't it?" he said aloud. "And your maker, the outcast
Magnus, what did he care for your ignorance? He did not tell you the simplest things, did
he?"
Nothing in his expression moved as he spoke.
"Hasn't it always been this way? Has anyone ever cared to teach you anything?"
"You're taking these things from my mind. . ." I said. I was appalled. I saw the monastery
where I'd been as a boy, the rows and rows of books that I could not read, Gabrielle bent over
her books, her back to all of us. "Stop this!" I whispered.
It seemed the longest time had passed. I was becoming disoriented. He was speaking again,
but in silence.
They never satisfy you, the ones you make. In silence the estrangement and the resentment
only grow.
I willed myself to move but I wasn't moving. I was merely looking at him as he went on.
You long for me and 1 for you, and we alone in all this realm are worthy of each other.
Don't you know this?
The toneless words seemed to be stretched, amplified, like a note on the violin drawn out
forever and ever.
"This is madness," I whispered. I thought of all the things he had said to me, what he had
blamed me for, the horrors the others had described-that he had thrown his followers into the
fire.
"Is it madness?" he asked. "Go then to your silent ones. Even now they say to each other
what they cannot say to you."
"You're lying..." I said.
"And time will only strengthen their independence. But learn for yourself. You will find
me easily enough when you want to come to me. After all, where can I go? What can I do?
You have made me an orphan again."
"I didn't-" I said.
"Yes, you did," he said. "You did it. You brought it down." Still there was no anger. "But I
can wait for you to come, wait for you to ask the questions that only I can answer."
I stared at him for a long moment. I don't know how long. It was as if I couldn't move, and
I couldn't see anything else but him, and the great sense of peace I'd known in Notre Dame,
the spell he cast, was again working. The lights of the room were too bright. There was
nothing else but light surrounding him, and it was as if he were coming closer to me and I to
him, yet neither of us was moving. He was drawing me, drawing me towards him.
I turned away, stumbling, losing my balance. But I was out of the room. I was running
down the hallway, and then I was climbing out of the back window and up to the roof.
I rode into the Ile de la Cite as if he were chasing me. And my heart didn't stop its frantic
pace until I had left the city behind.
Hell's Bells ringing.
The tower was in the darkness against the first glimmer of the morning light. My little
coven had already gone to rest in their dungeon crypt.
I didn't open the tombs to look at them, though I wanted desperately to do it, just to see
Gabrielle and touch her hand.
I climbed alone towards the battlements to look out at the burning miracle of the
approaching morning, the thing I should never see to its finish again. Hell's Bells ringing, my
secret music . . .
But another sound was comming to me. I knew it as I went up the stairs. And I marveled at
its power to reach me. It was like a song arching over an immense distance, low and sweet.
Once years ago, I had heard a young farm boy singing as he walked along the high road
out of the village to the north. He hadn't known anyone was listening. He had thought himself
alone in the open country, and his voice had a private power and purity that gave it unearthly
beauty. Never mind the words of his old song.
This was the voice that was calling to me now. The lone voice, rising over the miles that
separated us to gather all sounds into itself.
I was frightened again. Yet I opened the door at the top of the staircase and went out onto
the stone roof. Silken the morning breeze, dreamlike the twinkling of the last stars. The sky
was not so much a canopy as it was a mist rising endlessly above me, and the stars drifted
upwards, growing ever smaller, in the mist.
The faraway voice sharpened, like a note sung in the high mountains, touching my chest
where I had laid my hand.
It pierced me as a beam pierces darkness, singing Come to me; all things will be forgiven if
only you come to me. I am more alone than I have ever been.
And there came in time with the voice a sense of limitless possibility, of wonder and
expectation that brought with it the vision of Armand standing alone in the open doors of
Notre Dame. Time and space were illusions. He was in a pale wash of light before the main
altar, a lissome shape in regal tatters, shimmering as he vanished, and nothing but patience in
his eyes. There was no crypt under les Innocents now. There was no grotesquery of the
ragged ghost in the glare of Nicki's library, throwing down the books when he had finished
with them as if they were empty shells.
I think I knelt down and rested my head against the jagged stones. I saw the moon like a
phantom dissolving, and the sun must have touched her because she hurt me and I had to
close my eyes.
But I felt an elation, an ecstasy. It was as if my spirit could know the glory of the Dark
Trick without the blood flowing, in the intimacy of the voice dividing me and seeking the
tenderest, most secret part of my soul.
What do you want of me, I wanted to say again. How can there be this forgiveness when
there was such rancor only a short while ago? Your coven destroyed. Horrors I don't want to
imagine . . . I wanted to say it all again.
But I couldn't shape the words now any more than I could before. And this time, I knew
that if I dared to try, the bliss would melt and leave me and the anguish would be worse than
the thirst for blood.
Yet even as I remained still, in the mystery of this feeling, I knew strange images and
thoughts that weren't my own.
I saw myself retreat to the dungeon and lift up the inanimate bodies of those kindred
monsters I loved. I saw myself carrying them up to the roof of the tower and leaving them
there in their helplessness at the mercy of the rising sun. Hell's Bells rang the alarm in vain
for them. And the sun took them up and made them cinders with human hair.
My mind recoiled from this; it recoiled in the most heartbreaking disappointment.
"Child, still," I whispered. Ah, the pain of this disappointment, the possibility
diminishing... "How foolish you are to think that such things could be done by me."
The voice faded; it withdrew itself from me. And I felt my aloneness in every pore of my
skin. It was as if all covering had been taken from me forever and I would always be as naked
and miserable as I was now.
And I felt far off a convulsion of power, as if the spirit that had made the voice was curling
upon itself like a great tongue.
"Treachery!" I said louder. "But oh, the sadness of it, the miscalculation. How can you say
that you desire me!"
Gone it was. Absolutely gone. And desperately, I wanted it back even if it was to fight with
me. I wanted that sense of possibility, that lovely flare again.
And I saw his face in Notre Dame, boyish and almost sweet, like the face of an old da
Vinci saint. A horrid sense of fatality passed over me.
6
As soon as Gabrielle rose, I drew her away from Nicki, out into the quiet of the forest, and
I told her all that had taken place the preceding night. I told her all that Armand had
suggested and said. In an embarrassed way, I spoke of the silence that existed between her
and me, and of how I knew now that it wasn't to change.
"We should leave Paris as soon as possible," I said finally. "This creature is too dangerous.
And the ones to whom I gave the theater-they don't know anything other than what they've
been taught by him. I say let them have Paris. And let's take the Devil's Road, to use the old
queen's words."
I had expected anger from her, and malice towards Armand. But through the whole story
she remained calm.
"Lestat, there are too many unanswered questions," she said. "I want to know how this old
coven started, I want to know all that Armand knows about us."
"Mother, I am tempted to turn my back on it. I don't care how it started. I wonder if he
himself even knows."
"I understand, Lestat," she said quietly. "Believe me, I do. When all is said and done, I care
less about these creatures than I do about the trees in this forest or the stars overhead. I'd
rather study the currents of wind or the patterns in the falling leaves. . . "
"Exactly."
"But we mustn't be hasty. The important thing now is for the three of us to remain together.
We should go into the city together and prepare slowly for our departure together. And
together, we must try your plan to rouse Nicolas with the violin."
I wanted to talk about Nicki. I wanted to ask her what lay behind his silence, what could
she divine? But the words dried up in my throat. I thought as I had all along of her judgment
in those first moments: "Disaster, my son."
She put her arm around me and led me back towards the tower.
"I don't have to read your mind," she said, "to know what's in your heart. Let's take him to
Paris. Let's try to find the Stradivarius." She stood on tiptoe to kiss me. "We were on the
Devil's Road together before all this happened," she said. "We'll be on it soon again."
It was as easy to take Nicolas into Paris as to lead him in everything else. Like a ghost he
mounted his horse and rode alongside of us, only his dark hair and cape seemingly animate,
whipped about as they were by the wind.
When we fed in the Ile de la Cite, I found I could not watch him hunt or kill.
It gave me no hope to see him doing these simple things with the sluggishness of a
somnambulist. It proved nothing more than that he could go like this forever, our silent
accomplice, little more than a resuscitated corpse.
Yet an unexpected feeling came over me as we moved through the alleyways together. We
were not two, but three, now. A coven. And if only I could bring him around. But the visit to
Roget had to come first. I alone had to confront the lawyer. So I left them to wait only a few
doors from his house, and as I pounded the knocker, I braced myself for the most grueling
performance yet of my theatrical career.
Well, I was very quickly to learn an important lesson about mortals and their willingness to
be convinced that the world is a safe place. Roget was overjoyed to see me. He was so
relieved that I was "alive and in good health" and still wanted his services, that he was
nodding his acceptance before my preposterous explanations had even begun.
(And this lesson about mortal peace of mind I never forgot. Even if a ghost is ripping a
house to pieces, throwing tin pans all over, pouring water on pillows, making clocks chime at
all hours, mortals will accept almost any "natural explanation" offered, no matter how absurd,
rather than the obvious supernatural one, for what is going on.)
Also it became clear almost at once that he believed Gabrielle and I had slipped out of the
flat by the servants' door to the bedroom, a nice possibility I hadn't considered before. So all I
did about the twisted-up candelabra was mumble something about having been mad with
grief when I saw my mother, which he understood right off.
As for the reason for our leaving, well, Gabrielle insisted upon being removed from
everyone and taken to a convent, and there she was right now.
"Ah, Monsieur, it's a miracle, her improvement," I said. "If you could only see her-but
never mind. We're going on to Italy immediately with Nicolas de Lenfent, and we need
currency, letters of credit, whatever, and a traveling coach, a huge traveling coach, and a
good team of six. You take care of it. Have it all ready by Friday evening early. And write to
my father and tell him we're taking my mother to Italy. My father is all right, I presume?"
"Yes, yes, of course, I didn't tell him anything but the most reassuring-"
"How clever of you. I knew I could trust you. What would I do without you? And what
about these rubies, can you turn them into money for me immediately? And I have here some
Spanish coins to sell, quite old, I think."
He scribbled like a madman, his doubts and suspicions fading in the heat of my smiles. He
was so glad to have something to do!
"Hold my property in the boulevard du Temple vacant," I said. "And of course, you'll
manage everything for me. And so forth and so on."
My property in the boulevard de Temple, the hiding place of a ragged and desperate band
of vampires unless Armand had already found them and burnt them up like old costumes. I
should find the answer to that question soon enough.
I came down the steps whistling to myself in strictly human fashion, overjoyed that this
odious task had been accomplished. And then I realized that Nicki and Gabrielle were
nowhere in sight.
I stopped and turned around in the street.
I saw Gabrielle just at the moment I heard her voice, a young boyish figure emerging full
blown from an alleyway as if she had just made herself material on the spot.
"Lestat, he's gone-vanished," she said.
I couldn't answer her. I said something foolish, like "What do you mean, vanished!" But
my thoughts were more or less drowning out the words in my own head. If I had doubted up
until this moment that I loved him, I had been lying to myself.
"I turned my back, and it was that quick, I tell you," she said. She was half aggrieved, half
angry.
"Did you hear any other..."
"No. Nothing. He was simply too quick."
"Yes, if he moved on his own, if he wasn't taken..."
"I would have heard his fear if Armand had taken him," she insisted.
"But does he feel fear? Does he feel anything at all?" I was utterly terrified and utterly
exasperated. He'd vanished in a darkness that spread out all around us like a giant wheel from
its axis. I think I clenched my fist. I must have made some uncertain little gesture of panic.
"Listen to me," she said. "There are only two things that go round and round in his mind..."
"Tell me!"
"One is the pyre under les Innocents where he was almost burned. And the other is a small
theater-footlights, a stage."
"Renaud's," I said.
She and I were archangels together. It didn't take us a quarter of an hour to reach the noisy
boulevard and to move through its raucous crowd past the neglected facade of Renaud's and
back to the stage door.
The boards had all been ripped down and the locks broken. But I heard no sound of Eleni
or the others as we slipped quietly into the hallway that went round the back of the stage. No
one here.
Perhaps Armand had gathered his children home after all, and that was my doing because I
would not take them in.
Nothing but the jungle of props, the great painted scrims of night and day and hill and dale,
and the open dressing rooms, those crowded little closets where here and there a mirror
glared in the light that seeped through the open door we had left behind.
Then Gabrielle's hand tightened on my sleeve. She gestured towards the wings proper. And
I knew by her face that it wasn't the other ones. Nicki was there.
I went to the side of the stage. The velvet curtain was drawn back to both sides and I could
see his dark figure plainly in the orchestra pit. He was sitting in his old place, his hands
folded in his lap. He was facing me but he didn't notice me. He was staring off as he had done
all along.
And the memory came back to me of Gabrielle's strange words the night after I had made
her, that she could not get over the sensation that she had died and could affect nothing in the
mortal world.
He appeared that lifeless and that translucent. He was the still, expressionless specter one
almost stumbles over in the shadows of the haunted house, all but melded with the dusty
furnishings-the fright that is worse perhaps than any other kind.
I looked to see if the violin was there-on the floor, or against his chair-and when I saw that
it wasn't, I thought, Well, there is still a chance.
"Stay here and watch," I said to Gabrielle. But my heart was knocking in my throat when I
looked up at the darkened theater, when I let myself breathe in the old scents. Why did you
have to bring us here, Nicki? To this haunted place? But then, who am I to ask that? I had
come back, had I not?
I lighted the first candle I found in the old prima donna's dressing room. Open pots of paint
were scattered everywhere, and there were many discarded costumes on the hooks. All the
rooms I passed were full of cast-off clothing, forgotten combs and brushes, withered flowers
still in the vases, powder spilled on the floor.
I thought of Eleni and the others again, and I realized that the faintest smell of les
Innocents lingered here. And I saw very distinct naked footprints in the spilled powder. Yes,
they'd come in. And they had lighted candles, too, hadn't they? Because the smell of the wax
was too fresh.
Whatever the case, they hadn't entered my old dressing room, the room that Nicki and I
had shared before every performance. It was locked still. And when I broke open the door, I
got an ugly shock. The room was exactly the way I'd left it.
It was clean and orderly, even the mirror polished, and it was filled with my belongings as
it had been on the last night I had been here. There was my old coat on the hook, the castoff
I'd worn from the country, and a pair of wrinkled boots, and my pots of paint in perfect order,
and my wig, which I had worn only at the theater, on its wooden head. Letters from Gabrielle
in a little stack, the old copies of English and French newspapers in which the play had been
mentioned, and a bottle of wine still half full with a dried cork.
And there in the darkness beneath the marble dressing table, partly covered by a bundled
black coat, lay a shiny violin case. It was not the one we'd carried all the way from home with
us. No. It must hold the precious gift I'd bought for him with the "coin of the realm" after, the
Stradivarius violin.
I bent down and opened the lid. It was the beautiful instrument all right, delicate and darkly
lustrous, and lying here among all these unimportant things.
I wondered whether Eleni and the others would have taken it had they come into this room.
Would they have known what it could do?
I set down the candle for a moment and took it out carefully, and I tightened the horsehair
of the bows as I'd seen Nicki do a thousand times. And then I brought the instrument and the
candle back to the stage again, and I bent down and commenced to light the long string of
candle footlights.
Gabrielle watched me impassively. Then she came to help me. She lit one candle after
another and then lighted the sconce in the wings.
It seemed Nicki stirred. But maybe it was only the growing illumination on his profile, the
soft light that emanated out from the stage into the darkened hall. The deep folds of the velvet
came alive everywhere; the ornate little mirrors affixed to the front of the gallery and the
loges became lights themselves.
Beautiful this little place, our place. The portal to the world for us as mortal beings. And
the portal finally to hell.
When I was finished, I stood on the boards looking at the gilded railings, the new
chandelier that hung from the ceiling, and up at the arch overhead with its masks of comedy
and tragedy like two faces stemming from the same neck.
It seemed so much smaller when it was empty, this house. No theater in Paris seemed
larger when it was full.
Outside was the low thunder of the boulevard traffic, tiny human voices rising now and
then like sparks over the general hum. A heavy carriage must have passed then because
everything within the theater shivered slightly: the candle flames against their reflectors, the
giant stage curtain gathered to right and left, the scrim behind of a finely painted garden with
clouds overhead.
I went past Nicki, who had never once looked up at me, and down the little stairs behind
him, and came towards him with the violin.
Gabrielle stood back in the wings again, her small face cold but patient. She rested against
the beam beside her in the easy manner of a strange long-haired man.
I lowered the violin over Nicki's shoulder and held it in his lap. I felt him move, as if he
had taken a great breath. The back of his head pressed against me. And slowly he lifted his
left hand to take the neck of the violin and he took the bow with his right.
I knelt and put my hands on his shoulders. I kissed his cheek. No human scent. No human
warmth. Sculpture of my Nicolas.
"Play it," I whispered. "Play it here just for us."
Slowly he turned to face me, and for the first time since the moment of the Dark Trick, he
looked into my eyes. He made some tiny sound. It was so strained it was as if he couldn't
speak anymore. The organs of speech had closed up. But then he ran his tongue along his lip,
and so low I scarcely heard him, he said:
"The devil's instrument."
"Yes," I said. If you must believe that, then believe it. But play.
His fingers hovered above the strings. He tapped the hollow wood with his fingertip. And
now, trembling, he plucked at the strings to tune them and wound the pegs very slowly as if
he were discovering the process with perfect concentration for the first time.
Somewhere out on the boulevard children laughed. Wooden wheels made their thick clatter
over the cobblestones. The staccato notes were sour, dissonant, and they sharpened the
tension.
He pressed the instrument to his ear for a moment. And it seemed to me he didn't move
again for an eternity, and then he slowly rose to his feet. I went back out of the pit and into
the benches, and I stood staring at his black silhouette against the glow of the lighted stage.
He turned to face the empty theater as he had done so many times at the moment of the
intermezzo, and he lifted the violin to his chin. And in a movement so swift it was like a flash
of light in my eye, he brought the bow down across the strings.
The first full-throated chords throbbed in the silence and were stretched as they deepened,
scraping the bottom of sound itself. Then the notes rose, rich and dark and shrill, as if
pumped out of the fragile violin by alchemy, until a raging torrent of melody suddenly
flooded the hall.
It seemed to roll through my body, to pass through my very bones.
I couldn't see the movement of his fingers, the whipping of the bow; all I could see was the
swaying of his body, his tortured posture as he let the music twist him, bend him forward,
throw him back.
It became higher, shriller, faster, yet the tone of each note was perfection. It was execution
without effort, virtuosity beyond mortal dreams. And the violin was talking, not merely
singing, the violin was insisting. The violin was telling a tale.
The music was a lamentation, a future of terror looping itself into hypnotic dance rhythms,
jerking Nicki even more wildly from side to side. His hair was a glistening mop against the
footlights. The blood sweat had broken out on him. I could smell the blood.
But I too was doubling over; I was backing away from him, slumping down on the bench
as if to cower from it, as once before in this house terrified mortals had cowered before me.
And I knew, knew in some full and simultaneous fashion, that the violin was telling
everything that had happened to Nicki. It was the darkness exploded, the darkness molten,
and the beauty of it was like the glow of smoldering coals; just enough illumination to show
how much darkness there really was.
Gabrielle too was straining to keep her body still under the onslaught, her face constricted,
her hands to her head. Her lion's mane of hair had shaken loose around her, her eyes were
closed.
But another sound was coming through the pure inundation of song. They were here. They
had come into the theater and were moving towards us through the wings.
The music reached impossible peaks, the sound throttled for an instant and then released
again. The mixture of feeling and pure logic drove it past the limits of the bearable. And yet it
went on and on.
And the others appeared slowly from behind the stage curtain-first the stately figure of
Eleni, then the boy Laurent, and finally Mix and Eugenie. Acrobats, street players, they had
become, and they wore the clothes of such players, the men in white tights beneath dagged
harlequin jerkins, the women in full bloomers and ruffled dresses and with dancing slippers
on their feet. Rouge gleamed on their immaculate white faces; kohl outlined their dazzling
vampire eyes.
They glided towards Nicki as if drawn by a magnet, their beauty flowering ever more fully
as they came into the glare of the stage candles, their hair shimmering, their movements agile
and feline, their expressions rapt.
Nicki turned slowly to face them as he writhed, and the song went into frenzied
supplication, lurching and climbing and roaring along its melodic path.
Eleni stared wide-eyed at him as if horrified and enchanted. Then her arms rose straight up
above her head in a slow dramatic gesture, her body tensing, her neck becoming ever more
graceful and long. The other woman had made a pivot and lifted her knee, toe pointed down,
in the first step of a dance. But it was the tall man who suddenly caught the pace of Nicki's
music as he jerked his head to the side and moved his legs and arms as if he were a great
marionette controlled from the rafters above by four strings.
The others saw it. They had seen the marionettes of the boulevard. And suddenly they all
went into the mechanical attitude, their sudden movements like spasms, their faces like
wooden faces, utterly blank.
A great cool rush of delight passed through me, as if I could breathe suddenly in the
blasted heat of the music, and I moaned with pleasure watching them flip and flop and throw
up their legs, toes to the ceiling, and twirl on their invisible strings.
But it was changing. He was playing to them now even as they danced to him.
He took a stride towards the stage, and leapt up over the smoky trough of the footlights,
and landed in their midst. The light slithered off the instrument, off his glistening face.
A new element of mockery infected the never ending melody, a syncopation that staggered
the song and made it all the more bitter and-all the more sweet at the same time.
The jerking stiff-jointed puppets circled him, shuffling and bobbing along the floorboards.
Fingers splayed, heads rocking from side to side, they jigged and twisted until all of them
broke their rigid form as Nicki's melody melted into harrowing sadness, the dance becoming
immediately liquid and heartbroken and slow.
It was as if one mind controlled them, as if they danced to Nicki's thoughts as well as his
music, and he began to dance with them as he played, the beat coming faster, as he became
the country fiddler at the Lenten bonfire, and they leapt in pairs like country lovers, the skirts
of the women flaring, the men bowing their legs as they lifted the women, all creating
postures of tenderest love.
Frozen, I stared at the image: the preternatural dancers, the monster violinist, limbs moving
with inhuman slowness, tantalizing grace. The music was like a fire consuming us all.
Now it screamed of pain, of horror, of the pure rebellion of the soul against all things. And
they again carried it into the visual, faces twisted in torment, like the mask of tragedy graven
on the arch above them, and I knew that if I didn't turn my back on this I would cry.
I didn't want to hear any more or see any more. Nicki was swinging to and fro as if the
violin were a beast he could no longer control. And he was stabbing at the strings with short
rough strokes of the bow.
The dancers passed in front of him, in back of him, embraced him, and caught him
suddenly as he threw up his hands, the violin held high over his head.
A loud piercing laughter erupted from him. His chest shivered with it, his arms and legs
quaking with it. And then he lowered his head and he fixed his eyes on me. And at the top of
his voice he screamed:
"I GIVE YOU THE THEATER OF THE VAMPIRES! THE THEATER OF THE
VAMPIRES! THE GREATEST SPECTACLE OF THE BOULEVARD!"
Astonished, the others stared at him. But again, all of one mind, they "clapped" their hands
and roared. They leapt into the air, giving out shrieks of joy. They threw their arms about his
neck and kissed him. And dancing around him in a circle, they turned him with their arms.
The laughter rose, bubbling out of all of them, as he brought them close in his arms and
answered their kisses, and with their long pink tongues they licked the blood sweat off his
face.
"The Theater of the Vampires!" They broke from him and bawled it to the nonexistent
audience, to the world. They bowed to the footlights, and frolicking and screaming they leapt
up to the rafters and then let themselves drop down with a stoma of reverberation of the
boards.
The last shimmer of the music was gone, replaced by this cacophony of shrieking and
stomping and laughter, like the clang of bells.
I do not remember turning my back on them. I don't remember walking up the steps to the
stage and going past them. But I must have.
Because I was suddenly sitting on the low narrow table of my little dressing room, my
back against the corner, my knee crooked, my head against the cold glass of the mirror, and
Gabrielle was there.
I was breathing hoarsely and the sound of it bothered me. I saw things-the wig I'd worn on
the stage, the pasteboard shield-and these evoked thundering emotions. But I was suffocating.
I could not think.
Then Nicki appeared in the door, and he moved Gabrielle to the side with a strength that
astonished her and astonished me, and he pointed his finger at me:
"Well, don't you like it, my lord patron?" he asked, advancing, his words flowing in an
unbroken stream so that they sounded like one great word. "Don't you admire its splendor, its
perfection? Won't you endow the Theater of the Vampires with the coin of the realm which
you possess in such great abundance?- How was it now, 'the new evil, the canker in the heart
of the rose, death in the very midst of things' . . ."
From a mute he had passed into mania, and even when he broke off talking, the low
senseless frenzied sounds still issued from his lips like water from a spring. His face was
drawn and hard and glistening with the blood droplets clinging to it, and staining the white
linen at his neck.
And behind him there came an almost innocent laughter from the others, except for Eleni,
who watched over his shoulder, trying very hard to comprehend what was really happening
between us.
He drew closer, half laughing, grinning, stabbing at my chest with his finger:
"Well, speak. Don't you see the splendid mockery, the genius?" He struck his own chest
with his fist. "They'll come to our performances, fill our coffers with gold, and never guess
what they harbor, what flourishes right in the comer of the Parisian eye. In the back alleys we
feed on them and they clap for us before the lighted stage.. ."
Laughter from the boy behind him. The tink of a tambourine, the thin sound of the other
woman singing. A long streak of the man's laughter-like a ribbon unfurling, charting his
movement as he rushed around in a circle through the rattling scrims.
Nicki drew in so that the light behind him vanished. I couldn't see Eleni.
"Magnificent evil!" he said. He was full of menace and his white hands looked like the
claws of a sea creature that could at any given moment move to tear me to bits. "To serve the
god of the dark wood as he has not been served ever and here in the very center of
civilization. And for this you saved the theater. Out off your gallant patronage this sublime
offering is born."
"It is petty!" I said. "It is merely beautiful and clever and nothing more."
My voice had not been very loud but it brought him to silence, and it brought the others to
silence. And the shock in me melted slowly into another emotion, no less painful, merely
easier to contain.
Nothing but the sounds again from the boulevard. A glowering anger flowed out of him,
his pupils dancing as he looked at me.
"You're a liar, a contemptible liar," he said.
"There is no splendor in it," I answered. "There is nothing sublime. Fooling helpless
mortals, mocking them, and then going out from here at night to take life in the same old
petty manner, one death after another in all its inevitable cruelty and shabbiness so that we
can live. And man can kill another man! Play your violin forever. Dance as you wish. Give
them their money's worth if it keeps you busy and eats up eternity! It's simply clever and
beautiful. A grove in the Savage Garden. Nothing more."
"Vile liar!" he said between his teeth. "You are God's fool, that's what you are. You who
possessed the dark secret that soared above everything, rendered everything meaningless, and
what did you do with it, in those months when you ruled alone from Magnus's tower, but try
to live like a good man! A good man!"
He was close enough to kiss me, the blood of his spittle hitting my face.
"Patron of the arts," he sneered. "Giver of gifts to your family, giver of gifts to us!" He
stepped back, looking down on me contemptuously.
"Well, we will take the little theater that you painted in gold, and hung with velvet," he
said, "and it will serve the forces of the devil more splendidly than he was ever served by the
old coven." He turned and glanced at Eleni. He glanced back at the others. "We will make a
mockery of all things sacred. We will lead them to ever greater vulgarity and profanity. We
will astonish. We will beguile. But above all, we will thrive on their gold as well as their
blood and in their midst we will grow strong."
"Yes," said the boy behind him. "We will become invincible." His face had a crazed look,
the look of the zealot as he gazed at Nicolas. "We will have names and places in their very
world."
"And power over them," said the other woman, "and a vantage point from which to study
them and know them and perfect our methods of destroying them when we choose."
"I want the theater," Nicolas said to me. "I want it from you. The deed, the money to
reopen it. My assistants here are ready to listen to me."
"You may have it, if you wish," I answered. "It is yours if it will take you and your malice
and your fractured reason off my hands."
I got up off the dressing table and went towards him and I think that he meant to block my
path, but something unaccountable happened. When I saw he wouldn't move, my anger rose
up and out of me like an invisible fist. And I saw him moved backwards as if the fist had
struck him. And he hit the wail with sudden force.
I could have been free of the place in an instant. I knew Gabrielle was only waiting to
follow me. But I didn't leave. I stopped and looked back at him, and he was still against the
wall as if he couldn't move. And he was watching me and the hatred was as pure, as undiluted
by remembered love, as it had been all along.
But I wanted to understand, I wanted really to know what had happened. And I came
towards him again in silence and this time it was I who was menacing, and my hands looked
like claws and I could feel his fear. They were all, except for Eleni, full of fear.
I stopped when I was very close to him and he looked directly at me, and it was as if he
knew exactly what I was asking him.
"All a misunderstanding, my love," he said. Acid on the tongue. The blood sweat had
broken out again, and his eyes glistened as if they were wet. "It was to hurt others, don't you
see, the violin playing, to anger them, to secure for me an island where they could not rule.
They would watch my ruin, unable to do anything about it."
I didn't answer. I wanted him to go on.
"And when we decided to go to Paris, I thought we would starve in Paris, that we would go
down and down and down. It was what I wanted, rather than what they wanted, that I, the
favored son, should rise for them. I thought we would go down! We were supposed to go
down."
"Oh, Nicki..." I whispered.
"But you didn't go down, Lestat," he said, his eyebrows rising. "The hunger, the cold-none
of it stopped you. You were a triumph!" The rage thickened his voice again. "You didn't
drink yourself to death in the gutter. You turned everything upside down! And for every
aspect of our proposed damnation you found exuberance, and there was no end to your
enthusiasm and the passion coming out of you-and the light, always the light. And in exact
proportion to the light coming out of you, there was the darkness in me! Every exuberance
piercing me and creating its exact proportion of darkness and despair! And then, the magic,
when you got the magic, irony of ironies, you protected me from it! And what did you do
with it but use your Satanic powers to simulate the actions of a good man!"
I turned around. I saw them scattered in the shadows, and farthest away, the figure of
Gabrielle. I saw the light on her hand as she raised it, beckoning for me to come away.
Nicki reached up and touched my shoulders. I could feel the hatred coming through his
touch. Loathsome to be touched in hate.
"Like a mindless beam of sunlight you routed the bats of the old coven!" he whispered.
"And for what purpose? What does it mean, the murdering monster who is filled with light!"
I turned and smacked him and sent him hurtling into the dressing room, his right hand
smashing the mirror, his head cracking against the far wall.
For one moment he lay like something broken against the mass of old clothing, and then
his eyes gathered their determination again, and his face softened into a slow smile. He
righted himself and slowly, as an indignant mortal might, he smoothed his coat and his
rumpled hair.
It was like my gestures under les Innocents when my captors had sent me down in the dirt.
And he came forward with the same dignity, and the smile was as ugly as any I had ever
seen.
"I despise you," he said. "But I am done with you. I have the power from you and I know
how to use it, which you do not. I am in a realm at last where I choose to triumph! In
darkness, we're equal now. And you will give me the theater, that because you owe it to me,
and you are a giver of things, aren't you-a giver of gold coins to hungry children-and then I
won't ever look upon your light again."
He stepped around me and stretched out his arms to the others:
"Come, my beauties, come, we have plays to write, business to attend to. You have things
to learn from me. I know what mortals really are. We must get down to the serious invention
of our dark and splendid art. We will make a coven to rival all covens. We will do what has
never been done."
The others looked at me, frightened, hesitant. And in this still and tense moment I heard
myself take a deep breath. My vision broadened. I saw the wings around us again, the high
rafters, the walls of scenery transecting the darkness, and beyond, the little blaze along the
foot of the dusty stage. I saw the house veiled in shadow and knew in one limitless
recollection all that had happened here. And I saw a nightmare hatch another nightmare, and I
saw a story come to an end.
"The Theater of the Vampires," I whispered. "We have worked the Dark Trick on this little
place." No one of the others dared to answer. Nicolas only smiled.
And as I turned to leave the theater I raised my hand in a gesture that urged them all
towards him. I said my farewell.
We were not far from the lights of the boulevard when I stopped in my tracks. Without
words a thousand horrors came to me-that Armand would come to destroy him, that his
newfound brothers and sisters would tire of his frenzy and desert him, that morning would
find him stumbling through the streets unable to find a hiding place from the sun. I looked up
at the sky. I couldn't speak or breathe.
Gabrielle put her arms around me and I held her, burying my face in her hair. Like cool
velvet was her skin, her face, her lips. And her love surrounded me with a monstrous purity
that had nothing to do with human hearts and human flesh.
I lifted her off her feet embracing her. And in the dark, we were like lovers carved out of
the same stone who had no memory of a separate life at all.
"He's made his choice, my son," she said. "What's done is done, and you're free of him
now."
"Mother, how can you say it?" I whispered. "He didn't know. He doesn't know still..."
"Let him go, Lestat," she said. "They will care for him."
"But now I have to find that devil, Armand, don't I?" I said wearily. "I have to make him
leave them alone."
The following evening when I came into Paris, I learned that Nicki had already been to
Roget.
He had come an hour earlier pounding the doors like a madman. And shouting from the
shadows, he had demanded the deed to the theater, and money that he said I promised to him.
He had threatened Roget and his family. He had also told Roget to write to Renaud and his
troupe in London and to tell them to come home, that they had a new theater awaiting them,
and he expected them back at once. When Roget refused, he demanded the address of the
players in London, and began to ransack Roget's desk.
I went into a silent fury when I heard this. So he would make them all vampires, would he,
this demon fledgling, this reckless and frenzied monster?
This would not come to pass.
I told Roget to send a courier to London, with word that Nicolas de Lenfent had lost his
reason. The players must not come home.
And then I went to the boulevard du Temple and I found him at his rehearsals, excited and
mad as he had been before. He wore his fancy clothes again and his old jewels from the time
when he had been his father's favorite son, but his tie was askew, his stockings crooked, and
his hair was as wild and unkempt as the hair of a prisoner in the Bastille who hadn't seen
himself in a mirror in twenty years.
Before Eleni and the others I told him he would get nothing from me unless I had the
promise that no actor or actress of Paris would ever be slain or seduced by the new coven,
that Renaud and his troupe would never be brought into the Theater of the Vampires now or
in the years to come, that Roget, who would hold the purse strings of the theater, must never
come to the slightest harm.
He laughed at me, he ridiculed me as he had before. But Eleni silenced him. She was
horrified to learn of his impulsive designs. It was she who gave the promises, and exacted
them from the others. It was she who intimidated him and confused him with jumbled
language of the old ways, and made him back down.
And it was to Eleni finally that I gave control of the Theater of the Vampires, and the
income, to pass through Roget, which would allow her to do with it what she pleased.
Before I left her that night, I asked her what she knew of Armand. Gabrielle was with us.
We were in the alleyway again, near the stage door.
"He watches," Eleni answered. "Sometimes he lets himself be seen." Her face was very
confusing to me. Sorrowful. "But God only knows what he will do," she added fearfully,
"when he discovers what is really going on here."
Part V
The Vampire Armand
1
Spring rain. Rain of light that saturated every new leaf of the trees in the street, every
square of paving, drift of rain threading light through the empty darkness itself.
And the ball in the Palais Royal.
The king and queen were there, dancing with the people. Talk in the shadows of intrigue.
Who cares? Kingdoms rise and fall. Just don't burn the paintings in the Louvre, that's all.
Lost in a sea of mortals again; fresh complexions and ruddy cheeks, mounds of powdered
hair atop feminine heads with all manner of millinery nonsense in them, even minute ships
with three masts, tiny trees, little birds. Landscapes of pearl and ribbon. Broad-chested men
like cocks in satin coats like feathered wings. The diamonds hurt my eyes.
The voices touched the surface of my skin at times, the laughter the echo of unholy
laughter, wreaths of candles blinding, the froth of music positively lapping the walls.
Gusts of rain from the open doors.
Scent of humans gently stoking my hunger. White shoulders, white necks, powerful hearts
running at that eternal rhythm, so many gradations among these naked children hidden in
riches, savages laboring beneath a swaddling of chenille, encrustations of embroidery, feet
aching over high heels, masks like scabs about their eyes.
The air comes out of one body and is breathed into another. The music, does it pass out of
one ear and into another, as the old expression goes? We breathe the light, we breathe the
music, we breathe the moment as it passes through us.
Now and then eyes settled on me with some vague air of expectation. My white skin made
them pause, but what was that when they let blood out of their veins themselves to keep their
delicate pallor? (Let me hold the basin for you and drink it afterwards.) And my eyes, what
were those, in this sea of paste jewels?
Yet their whispers slithered around me. And those scents, ah, not a one was like another.
And as clearly as if spoken aloud it came, the summons from mortals here and there, sensing
what I was, and the lust.
In some ancient language they welcomed death; they ached for death as death was passing
through the room. But did they really know? Of course they didn't know. And I did not know!
That was the perfect horror! And who am I to bear this secret, to hunger so to impart it, to
want to take that slender woman there and suck the blood right out of the plump flesh of her
round little breast.
The music rushed on, human music. The colors of the room flamed for an instant as if the
whole would melt. The hunger sharpened. It was no longer an idea. My veins were throbbing
with it. Someone would die. Sucked dry in less than a moment. I cannot stand it, thinking of
it, knowing it's about to happen, fingers on the throat feeling the blood in the vein, feeling the
flesh give, give it to me! Where? This is my body, this is my blood.
Send out your power, Lestat, like a reptile tongue to gather in a flick the appropriate heart.
Plump little arms ripe for the squeezing, men's faces on which the close-shaven blond
beard all but glitters, muscle struggling in my fingers, you haven't got a chance!
And beneath this divine chemistry suddenly, this panorama of the denial of decay, I saw
the bones!
Skulls under these preposterous wigs, two gaping holes peering from behind the uplifted
fan. A room of wobbling skeletons waiting only for the tolling of the bell. Just as I had seen
the audience that night in the pit of Renaud's when I had done the tricks that terrified them.
The horror should be visited upon every other being in this room.
I had to get out. I'd made a terrible miscalculation. This was death and I could get away
from it, if I could just get out! But I was tangled in mortal beings as if this monstrous place
were a snare for a vampire. If I bolted, I'd send the entire ballroom into panic. As gently as I
could I pushed to the open doors.
And against the far wall, a backdrop of satin and filigree, I saw, out of the corner of my
eye, like something imagined, Armand.
Armand.
If there had been a summons, I never heard it. If there was a greeting, I didn't sense it now.
He was merely looking at me, a radiant creature in jewels and scalloped lace. And it was
Cinderella revealed at the ball, this vision, Sleeping Beauty opening her eyes under a mesh of
cobwebs and wiping them all away with one sweep of her warm hand. The sheer pitch of
incarnate beauty made me gasp.
Yes, perfect mortal raiment, and yet he seemed all the more supernatural, his face too
dazzling, his dark eyes fathomless and just for a split second glinting as if they were windows
to the fires of hell. And when his voice came it was low and almost teasing, forcing me to
concentrate to hear it: All night you've been searching for me, he said, and here I am, waiting
for you. I have been waiting for you all along.
I think I sensed even then, as I stood unable to look away, that never in my years of
wandering this earth would I ever have such a rich revelation of the true horror that we are.
Heartbreakingly innocent he seemed in the midst of the crowd.
Yet I saw crypts when I looked at him, and I heard the beat of the kettledrums. I saw
torchlit fields where I had never been, heard vague incantations, felt the heat of raging fires
on my face. And they didn't come out of him, these visions. Rather I drew them out on my
own.
Yet never had Nicolas, mortal or immortal, been so alluring. Never had Gabrielle held me
so in thrall.
Dear God, this is love. This is desire. And all my past amours have been but the shadow of
this.
And it seemed in a murmuring pulse of thought he gave me to know that I had been very
foolish to think it would not be so.
Who can love us, you and I, as we can love each other, he whispered and it seemed his lips
actually moved.
Others looked at him. I saw them drifting with a ludicrous slowness; I saw their eyes pass
over him, I saw the light fall on him at a rich new angle as he lowered his head.
I was moving towards him. It seemed he raised his right hand and beckoned and then he
didn't, and he had turned and I saw the figure of a young boy ahead of me, with narrow waist
and straight shoulders and high firm calves under silk stockings, a boy who turned as he
opened a door and beckoned again.
A mad thought came to me.
I was moving after him, and it seemed that none of the other things had happened. There
was no crypt under les Innocents, and he had not been that ancient fearful fiend. We were
somehow safe.
We were the sum of our desires and this was saving us, and the vast untasted horror of my
own immortality did not lie before me, and we were navigating calm seas with familiar
beacons, and it was time to be in each other's arms.
A dark room surrounded us, private, cold. The noise of the ball was far away. He was
heated with the blood he'd drunk and I could hear the strong force of his heart. He drew me
closer to him, and beyond the high windows there flashed the passing lights of the carriages,
with dim incessant sounds that spoke of safety and comfort, and all the things that Paris was.
I had never died. The world was beginning again. I put out my arms and felt his heart
against me, and calling out to my Nicolas, I tried to warn him, to tell him we were all of us
doomed. Our life was slipping inch by inch from us, and seeing the apple trees in the orchard,
drenched in green sunlight, I felt I would go mad.
"No, no, my dearest one," he was whispering, "nothing but peace and sweetness and your
arms in mine."
"You know it was the damnedest luck!" I whispered suddenly. "I am an unwilling devil. I
cry like some vagrant child. I want to go home."
Yes, yes, his lips tasted like blood, but it was not human blood. It was that elixir that
Magnus had given me, and I felt myself recoil. I could get away this time. I had another
chance. The wheel had turned full round.
I was crying out that I wouldn't drink; I wouldn't, and then I felt the two hot shafts driven
hard through my neck and down to my soul.
I couldn't move. It was coming as it had come that night, the rapture, a thousandfold what
it was when I held mortals in my arms. And I knew what he was doing! He was feeding upon
me! He was draining me.
And going down on my knees, I felt myself held by him, the blood pouring out of me with
a monstrous volition I couldn't stop.
"Devil!" I tried to scream. I forced the word up and up until it broke from my lips and the
paralysis broke from my limbs. "Devil!" I roared again and I caught him in his swoon and
hurled him backwards to the floor.
In an instant, I had my hands upon him and, shattering the French doors, had dragged him
out with me into the night.
His heels were scraping on the stones, his face had become pure fury. I clutched his right
arm and swung him from side. to side so that his head snapped back and he could not see nor
gauge where he was, nor catch hold of anything, and with my right hand I beat him and beat
him, until the blood was running out of his ears and his eyes and his nose.
I dragged him through the trees away from the lights of the Palais. And as he struggled, as
he sought to resurrect himself with a burst of force, he shot his declaration at me that he
would kill me because he had my strength now. He'd drunk it out of me and coupled with his
own strength it would make him impossible to defeat.
Maddened, I clutched at his neck, pushing his head down against the path beneath me. I
pinned him down, strangling him, until the blood in great gushes poured out of his open
mouth.
He would have screamed if he could. My knees drove into his chest. His neck bulged under
my fingers and the blood spurted and bubbled out of him and he turned his head from side to
side, his eyes growing bigger and bigger, but seeing nothing, and then when I felt him weak
and limp, I let him go.
I beat him again, turning him this way and that. And then I drew my sword to sever his
head.
Let him live like that if he can. Let him be immortal like that if he can. I raised the sword
and when I looked down at him, the rain was pelting his face, and he was staring up at me, as
one half alive, unable to plead for mercy, unable to move.
I waited. I wanted him to beg. I wanted him to give me that powerful voice full of lies and
cunning, the voice that had made me believe for one pure and dazzling instant that I was alive
and free and in the state of grace again. Damnable, unforgivable lie. Lie I'd never forget for as
long as I walked the earth. I wanted the rage to carry me over the threshold to his grave.
But nothing came from him.
And in this moment of stillness and misery for him, his beauty slowly returned.
He lay a broken child on the gravel path, only yards from the passing traffic, the ring of
horses' hooves, the rumble of the wooden wheels.
And in this broken child were centuries of evil and centuries of knowledge, and out of him
there came no ignominious entreaty but merely the soft and bruised sense of what he was.
Old, old evil, eyes that had seen dark ages of which I only dream.
I let him go, and I stood up and sheathed my sword.
I walked a few paces from him, and collapsed upon a wet stone bench.
Far away, busy figures labored about the shattered window of the palace.
But the night lay between us and those confused mortals, and I looked at him listlessly as
he lay still.
His face was turned to me, but not by design, his hair a tangle of curls and blood. And with
his eyes closed, and his hand open beside him, he appeared the abandoned offspring of time
and supernatural accident, someone as miserable as myself.
What had he done to become what he was? Could one so young so long ago have guessed
the meaning off any decision, let alone the vow to become this?
I rose, and walking slowly to him, I stood over him and looked at him, at the blood that
soaked his lace shirt and stained his face.
It seemed he sighed, that I heard the passage of his breath.
He didn't open his eyes, and to mortals perhaps there would have been no expression there.
But I felt his sorrow. I felt its immensity, and I wished I didn't feel it, and for one moment I
understood the gulf that divided us, and the gulf that divided his attempt to overpower me
from my rather simple defense of myself.
Desperately he had tried to vanquish what he did not comprehend.
And impulsively and almost effortlessly I had beaten him back.
All my pain with Nicolas came back to me and Gabrielle's words and Nicolas's
denunciations. My anger was nothing to his misery, his despair.
And this perhaps was the reason that I reached down and gathered him up. And maybe I
did it because he was so exquisitely beautiful and so lost, and we were after all of the same
ilk.
Natural enough, wasn't it, that one of his own should take him away from this place where
mortals would sooner or later have approached him, driven him stumbling away.
He gave no resistance to me. In a moment he was standing on his own feet. And then he
walked drowsily beside me, my arm about his shoulder, bolstering him and steadying him
until we were moving away from the Palais Royal, towards the rue St. Honor.
I only half glanced at the figures passing us, until I saw a familiar shape under the trees,
with no scent of mortality coming from it, and I realized that Gabrielle had been there for
some time.
She came forward hesitantly and silently, her face stricken when she saw the blooddrenched
lace and the lacerations on his white skin, and she reached out as if to help me with
the burden of him though she did not seem to know how.
Somewhere far off in the darkened gardens, the others were near. I heard them before I saw
them. Nicki was there too.
They had come as Gabrielle had come, drawn over the miles, it seemed, by the tumult, or
what vague messages I could not imagine, and they merely waited and watched as we moved
away.
2
We took him with us to the livery stables, and there I put him on my mare. But he looked
as if he would let himself fall off at any moment, and so I mounted behind him, and the three
of us rode out.
All the way through the country, I wondered what I would do. I wondered what it meant to
bring him to my lair. Gabrielle didn't give any protest. Now and then she glanced over at him.
I heard nothing from him, and he was small and self-contained as he sat in front of me, light
as a child but not a child.
Surely he had always known where the tower was, but had its bars kept him out? Now I
meant to take him inside it. And why didn't Gabrielle say something to me? It was the
meeting we had wanted, it was the thing for which we had waited, but surely she knew what
he had just done.
When we finally dismounted, he walked ahead of me, and he waited for me to reach the
gate. I had taken out the iron key to the lock and I studied him, wondering what promises one
exacts from such a monster before opening one's door. Did the ancient laws of hospitality
mean anything to the creatures of the night?
His eyes were large and brown and defeated. Almost drowsy they seemed. He regarded me
for a long silent moment and then he reached out with his left hand, and his fingers curled
around the iron crossbar in the center of the gate. I stared helplessly as with a loud grinding
noise the gate started to rip loose from the stone. But he stopped and contented himself with
merely bending the iron bar a little. The point had been made. He could have entered this
tower anytime that he wished.
I examined the iron bar that he'd twisted. I had beaten him. Could I do what he had just
done? I didn't know. And unable to calculate my own powers, how could I ever calculate his?
"Come," Gabrielle said a little impatiently. And she led the way down the stairs to the
dungeon crypt.
It was cold here as always, the fresh spring air never touching the place. She made a big
fire in the old hearth while I lighted the candles. And as he sat on the stone bench watching
us, I saw the effect of the warmth on him, the way that his body seemed to grow slightly
larger, the way that he breathed it in.
As he looked about, it was as if he were absorbing the light. His gaze was clear.
Impossible to overestimate the effect of warmth and light on vampires. Yet the old coven
had forsworn both.
I settled on another bench, and I let my eyes roam about the broad low chamber as his eyes
roamed.
Gabrielle had been standing all this while. And now she approached him. She had taken
out a handkerchief and she touched this to his face.
He stared at her in the same way that he stared at the fire and the candles, and the shadows
leaping on the curved ceiling. This seemed to interest him as simply as anything else.
And I felt a shudder when I realized the bruises on his face were now almost gone! The
bones were whole again, the shape of the face having been fully restored, and he was only a
little gaunt from the blood he had lost.
My heart expanded slightly, against my will, as it had on the battlements when I had heard
his voice.
I thought of the pain only half an hour ago in the Palais when the lie had broken with the
stab of his fangs into my neck.
I hated him.
But I couldn't stop looking at him. Gabrielle combed his hair for him. She took his hands
and wiped the blood from them. And he seemed helpless as all this was done. And she had
not so much the expression of a ministering angel as an expression of curiosity, a desire to be
near him and to touch him and examine him. In the quavering illumination they looked at one
another.
He hunched forward a little, eyes darkening and full of expression now as they turned
again to the grate. Had it not been for the blood on his lace ruff, he might have looked human.
Might...
"What will you do now?" I asked. I spoke to make it clear to Gabrielle. "Will you remain
in Paris and let Eleni and the others go on?"
No answer from him. He was studying me, studying the stone benches, the sarcophagi.
Three sarcophagi.
"Surely you know what they're doing," I said. "Will you leave Paris or remain?"
It seemed he wanted to tell me again the magnitude of what I had done to him and the
others, but this faded away. For one moment his face was wretched. It was defeated and
warm and full of human misery. How old was he, I wondered. How long ago had he been a
human who looked like that?
He heard me. But he didn't give an answer. He looked to Gabrielle, who stood near the fire,
and then to me. And silently, he said, Love me. You have destroyed everything! But if you
love me, it can all be restored in a new form. Love me.
This silent entreaty had an eloquence, however, that I can't put into words.
"What can I do to make you love me?" he whispered. "What can I give? The knowledge of
all I have witnessed, the secrets of our powers, the mystery of what I am?"
It seemed blasphemous to answer. And as I had on the battlements, I found myself on the
edge of tears. For all the purity of his silent communications, his voice gave a lovely
resonance to his sentiments when he actually spoke.
It occurred to me as it had in Notre Dame that he spoke the way angels must speak, if they
exist.
But I was awakened from this irrelevant thought, this obviating thought, by the fact that he
was now beside me. He was closing his arm round me, and pressing his forehead against my
face. He gave that summons again, not the rich, thudding seduction of that moment in the
Palais Royal, but the voice that had sung to me over the miles, and he told me there were
things the two of us would know and understand as mortals never could. He told me that if I
opened to him and gave him my strength and my secrets that he would give me his. He had
been driven to try to destroy me, and he loved me all the more that he could not.
That was a tantalizing thought. Yet I felt danger. The word that came unbidden to me was
Beware.
I don't know what Gabrielle saw or heard. I don't know what she felt.
Instinctively I avoided his eyes. There seemed nothing in the world I wanted more at this
moment than to look right at him and understand him, and yet I knew I must not. I saw the
bones under les Innocents again, the flickering hellfires I had imagined in the Palais Royal.
And all the lace and velvet in the eighteenth century could not give him a human face.
I couldn't keep this from him, and it pained me that it was impossible for me to explain it
to Gabrielle. And the awful silence between me and Gabrielle was at that moment almost too
much to bear.
With him, I could speak, yes, with him I could dream dreams. Some reverence and terror in
me made me reach out and embrace him, and I held him, battling my confusion and my
desire.
"Leave Paris, yes," he whispered. "But take me with you. I don't know how to exist here
now. I stumble through a carnival of horrors. Please. . ."
I heard myself say: "No."
"Have I no value to you?" he asked. He turned to Gabrielle. Her face was anguished and
still as she looked at him. I couldn't know what went on in her heart, and to my sadness, I
realized that he was speaking to her and locking me out. What was her answer?
But he was imploring both of us now. "Is there nothing outside yourself you would
respect?"
"I might have destroyed you tonight," I said. "It was respect which kept me from that."
"No." He shook his head in a startlingly human fashion. "That you never could have done."
I smiled. It was probably true. But we were destroying him quite completely in another
way.
"Yes," he said, "that's true. You are destroying me. Help me," he whispered. "Give me but
a few short years of all you have before you, the two of you. I beg you. That is all I ask."
"No," I said again.
He was only a foot from me on the bench. He was looking at me. And there came the
horrible spectacle again of his face narrowing and darkening and caving in upon itself in rage.
It was as if he had no real substance. Only will kept him robust and beautiful. And when the
flow of his will was interrupted, he melted like a wax doll.
But, as before, he recovered himself almost instantly. The "hallucination" was past.
He stood up and backed away from me until he was in front of the fire.
The will coming from him was palpable. His eyes were like something that didn't belong to
him, nor to anything on earth. And the fire blazing behind him made an eerie nimbus around
his head.
"I curse you!" he whispered.
I felt a jet of fear.
"I curse you," he said again and came closer. "Love mortals then, and live as you have
lived, recklessly, with appetite for everything and love for everything, but there will come a
time when only the love of your own kind can save you." He glanced at Gabrielle. "And I
don't mean children such as this!"
This was so strong that I couldn't conceal its effect on me, and I realized I was rising from
the bench and slipping away from him towards Gabrielle.
"I don't come empty-handed to you," he pressed, his voice deliberately softening. "I don't
come begging with nothing to give of my own. Look at me. Tell me you don't need what you
see in me, one who has the strength to take you through the ordeals that lie ahead."
His, eyes flashed on Gabrielle and for one moment he remained locked to her and I saw her
harden and begin to tremble.
"Let her be!" I said.
"You don't know what I say to her," he said coldly. "I do not try to hurt her. But in your
love of mortals, what have you already done?"
He would say something terrible if I didn't stop him, something to wound me or Gabrielle.
He knew all that had happened with Nicki. I knew that he did. If, somewhere deep down in
my soul, I wished for the end of Nicki, he would know that too! Why had I let him in? Why
had I not known what he could do?
"Oh, but it's always a travesty, don't you see?" he said with that same gentleness. "Each
time the death and the awakening will ravage the mortal spirit, so that one will hate you for
taking his life, another will run to excesses that you scorn. A third will emerge mad and
raving, another a monster you cannot control. One will be jealous of your superiority, another
shut you out." And here he shot his glance to Gabrielle again and half smiled. "And the veil
will always come down between you. Make a legion. You will be, always and forever,
alone!"
"I don't want to hear this. It means nothing," I said.
Gabrielle's face had undergone some ugly change. She was staring at him with hatred now,
I was sure of it.
He made that bitter little noise that is a laugh but isn't a laugh at all.
"Lovers with a human face," he mocked me. "Don't you see your error? The other one
hates you beyond all reason, and she-why, the dark blood has made her even colder, has it
not? But even for her, strong as she is, there will come moments when she fears to be
immortal, and who will she blame for what was done to her?"
"You are a fool," Gabrielle whispered.
"You tried to protect the violinist from it. But you never sought to protect her."
"Don't say any more," I answered. "You make me hate you. Is that what you want?"
"But I speak the truth and you know it. And what you will never know, either of you, is the
full depth of each other's hatreds and resentments. Or suffering. Or love."
He paused and I could say nothing. He was doing exactly what I feared he would, and I
didn't know how to defend myself.
"If you leave me now with this one," he continued, "you will do it again. Nicolas you never
possessed. And she already wonders how she will ever get free of you. And unlike her, you
cannot stand to be alone."
I couldn't answer. Gabrielle's eyes became smaller, her mouth a little more cruel.
"So the time will come when you will seek other mortals," he went on, "hoping once more
that the Dark trick will bring you the love you crave. And of these newly mutilated and
unpredictable children you'll try to fashion your citadels against time. Well, they will be
prisons if they last for half a century. I warn you. It is only with those as powerful and wise as
yourself that the true citadel against time can be built."
The citadel against time. Even in my ignorance the words had their power. And the fear in
me expanded, reached out to compass a thousand other causes.
He seemed distant for a moment, indescribably beautiful in the firelight, the dark auburn
strands of his hair barely touching his smooth forehead, his lips parted in a beatific smile.
"If we cannot have the old ways, can't we have each other?" he asked, and now his voice
was the voice of the summons again. "Who else can understand your suffering? Who else
knows what passed through your mind the night you stood on the stage of your little theater
and you frightened all those you had loved?"
"Don't speak about that," I whispered. But I was softening all over, drifting into his eyes
and his voice. Very near to me was the ecstasy I'd felt that night on the battlements. With all
my will I reached out for Gabrielle.
"Who understands what passed through your mind when my renegade followers, reveling
in the music of your precious fiddler, devised their ghastly boulevard enterprise?" he asked.
I didn't speak.
"The Theater of the Vampires!" His lips lengthened in the saddest smile. "Does she
comprehend the irony of it, the cruelty? Does she know what it was like when you stood on
that stage as a young man and you heard the audience screaming for you? When time was
your friend, not your enemy as it is now? When in the wings, you put out your arms and your
mortal darlings came to you, your little family, folding themselves against you. . ."
"Stop, please. I ask you to stop."
"Does anyone else know the size of your soul?"
Witchcraft. Had it ever been used with more skill? And what was he really saying to us
beneath this liquid flow of beautiful language: Come to me, and I shall be the sun round
which you are locked in orbit, and my rays shall lay bare the secrets you keep from each
other, and I, who possess charms and powers of which you have no inkling, shall control and
possess and destroy you!
"I asked you before," I said. "What do you want? Really want?"
"You!" he said. "You and her! That we become three at this crossroads!"
Not that we surrender to you?
I shook my head. And I saw the same wariness and recoiling in Gabrielle.
He was not angry; there was no malice now. Yet he said again, in the same beguiling
voice:
"I curse you," and I felt it as if he'd declaimed it.
"I offered myself to you at the moment you vanquished me," he said. "Remember that
when your dark children strike out at you, when they rise up against you. Remember me."
I was shaken, more shaken even than I had been in the sad and awful finish with Nicolas at
Renaud's. I had never once known fear in the crypt under les Innocents. But I had known it in
this room since we came in.
And some anger boiled in him again, something too dreadful for him to control.
I watched him bow his head and turn away. He became small, light, and held his arms
close to himself as he stood before the blaze and he thought of threats now to hurt me, and I
heard them though they died before they ever reached his lips.
But something disturbed my vision for a fraction of a second. Maybe it was a candle
guttering. Maybe it was the blink of my eye. Whatever it was, he vanished. Or he tried to
vanish, and I saw him leaping away from the fire in a great dark streak.
"No!" I cried out. And lunging at something I couldn't even see, I held him, material again,
in my hands.
He had only moved very fast, and I had moved faster, and we stood facing each other in
the doorway of the crypt, and again I said that single negation and I wouldn't let him go.
"Not like this, we can't part. We can't leave each other in hatred, we can't." And my will
dissolved suddenly as I embraced him and held tight to him so that he couldn't free himself
nor even move.
I didn't care what he was, or what he had done in that doomed moment of lying to me, or
even trying to overpower me, I didn't care that I was no longer mortal and would never be
again.
i wanted only that he should remain. I wanted to be with him, what he was, and all the
things he had said were true. Yet it could never be as he wished it to be. He could not have
this power over us. He could not divide Gabrielle from me.
Yet I wondered, did he himself really understand what he was asking? Was it possible that
he believed the more innocent words he spoke?
Without speaking, without asking his consent, I led him back to the bench by the fire. I felt
danger again, terrible danger. But it didn't really matter. He had to remain here with us now.
Gabrielle was murmuring to herself. She was walking back and forth and her cloak hung
from one shoulder and she seemed almost to have forgotten we were there.
Armand watched her, and when she turned to him, quite suddenly and unexpectedly, she
spoke aloud.
"You come to him and you say; 'Take me with you.' You say, 'Love me,' and you hint of
superior knowledge, secrets, yet you give us nothing, either of us, except lies."
"I showed my power to understand," he answered in a soft murmur.
"No, you did tricks with your understanding," she replied. "You made pictures. And rather
childish pictures. You have done this all along. You lure Lestat in the Palais with the most
gorgeous illusions only to attack him. And here, when there is a respite in the struggle, what
do you do but try to sow dissension between us..."
"Yes, illusions before, I admit it," he answered. "But the things I've spoken here are true.
Already you despise your son for his love of mortals, his need to be ever near them, his
yielding to the violinist. You knew the Dark Gift would madden that one, and that it will
finally destroy him. You do wish for your freedom, from all the Children of Darkness. You
can't hide that from me."
"Ah, but you're so simple," she said. "You see, but you don't see. How many mortal years
did you live? Do you remember anything of them? What you've perceived is not the sum total
of the passion I feel for my son. I have loved him as I have never loved any other being in
creation. In my loneliness, my son is everything to me. How is it you can't interpret what you
see?"
"It's you who fail to interpret," he answered in the same soft manner. "If you had ever felt
real longing for any other one, you would know that what you feel for your son is nothing at
all."
"This is futile," I said, "to talk like this."
"No," she said to him without the slightest wavering. "My son and I are kin to each other in
more ways than one. In fifty years of life, I've never known anyone as strong as myself,
except my son. And what divides us we can always mend. But how are we to make you one
of us when you use these things like wood for fire! But understand my larger point: what is it
of yourself that you can give that we should want you?"
"My guidance is what you need," he answered. "You've only begun your adventure and
you have no beliefs to hold you. You cannot live without some guidance..."
"Millions live without belief or guidance. It is you who cannot live without it," she said.
Pain coming from him. Suffering.
But she went on, her voice so steady and without expression it was almost a monologue:
"I have my questions," she asked. "There are things I must know. I cannot live without
some embracing philosophy, but it has nothing to do with old beliefs in gods or devils." She
started pacing again, glancing to him as she spoke.
"I want to know, for example, why beauty exists," she said, "why nature continues to
contrive it, and what is the link between the life of a lightning storm with the feelings these
things inspire in us? If God does not exist, if these things are not unified into one
metaphorical system, then why do they retain for us such symbolic power? Lestat calls it the
Savage Garden, but for me that is not enough. And I must confess that this, this maniacal
curiosity or call it what you will, leads me away from my human victims. It leads me into the
open countryside, away from human creation. And maybe it will lead me away from my son,
who is under the spell of all things human."
She came up to him, nothing in her manner suggesting a woman now, and she narrowed
her eyes as she looked into his face.
"But that is the lantern by which I see the Devil's Road," she said. "By what lantern have
you traveled it? What have you really learned besides devil worship and superstition? What
do you know about us, and how we came into existence? Give that to us, and it might be
worth something. And then again, it might be worth nothing."
He was speechless. He had no art to hide his amazement.
He stared at her in innocent confusion. Then he rose and he slipped away, obviously trying
to escape her, a battered spirit as he stared blankly before him.
The silence closed in. And I felt for the moment strangely protective for him. She had
spoken the unadorned truth about the things that interested her as had been her custom ever
since I could remember, and as always, there was something violently disregarding about it.
She spoke of what mattered to her with no thought of what had befallen him.
Come to a different plane, she had said, my plane. And he was stymied and belittled. The
degree of his helplessness was becoming alarming. He was not recovering from her attack.
He turned and he moved towards the benches again, as if he would sit, then towards the
sarcophagi, then towards the wall. It seemed these solid surfaces repelled him as though his
will confronted them first in an invisible field and he was buffeted about.
He drifted out of the room and into the narrow stone stairwell and then he turned and came
back.
His thoughts were locked inside himself or, worse, there were no thoughts!
There were only the tumbling images of what he saw before him, simple material things
glaring back at him, the ironstudded door, the candles, the fire. Some full-blown evocation of
the Paris streets, the vendors and the hawkers of papers, the cabriolets, the blended sound of
an orchestra, a horrid din of words and phrases from the books he had so recently read.
I couldn't bear this, but Gabrielle gestured sternly that I should stay where I was.
Something was building in the crypt. Something was happening in the very air itself.
Something changed even as the candles melted, and the fire crackled and licked at the
blackened stones behind it, and the rats moved in the chambers of the dead below.
Armand stood in the arched doorway, and it seemed hours had passed though they hadn't
and Gabrielle was a long distance away in the corner of the room, her face cool in its
concentration, her eyes as radiant as they were small.
Armand was going to speak to us, but it was no explanation he was going to give. There
was no direction even to the things he would say, and it was as if we'd cut him open and the
images were coming out like blood.
Armand was just a young boy in the doorway, holding the backs of his own arms. And I
knew what I felt. It was a monstrous intimacy with another being, an intimacy that made even
the rapt moments of the kill seem dim and under control. He was opened and could no longer
contain the dazzling stream of pictures that made his old silent voice seem thin and lyrical
and made up.
Had this been the danger all along, the trigger of my fear? Even as I recognized it, I was
yielding, and it seemed the great lessons of my life had all been learned through the
renunciation of fear. Fear was once again breaking the shell around me so that something else
could spring to life.
Never, never in all my existence, not mortal or immortal, had I been threatened with an
intimacy quite like this.
THE STORY OF ARMAND
3
The chamber had faded. The walks were gone.
Horsemen came. A gathering cloud on the horizon. Then screams of terror. And an auburnhaired
child in crude peasant's clothes running on and on, as the horsemen broke loose in a
horde and the child fighting and kicking as he was caught and thrown over the saddle of a
rider who bore him away beyond the end of the world. Armand was this child.
And these were the southern steppes of Russia, but Armand didn't know that it was Russia.
He knew Mother and Father and Church and God and Satan, but he didn't even understand
the name of home, or the name of his language, or that the horsemen who carried him away
were Tartars and that he would never see anything that he knew or loved again.
Darkness, the tumultuous movement of the ship and its never ending sickness, and
emerging out of the fear and the numbing despair, the vast glittering wilderness of impossible
buildings that was Constantinople in the last days of the Byzantine Empire, with her
fantastical multitudes and her slave-auction blocks. The menacing babble of foreign tongues,
threats made in the universal language of gesture, and all around him the enemies he could
not distinguish or placate or escape.
Years and years would pass, beyond a mortal lifetime, before Armand would look back on
that awesome moment and give them names and histories, the Byzantine officials of the
courts who would have castrated him and the harem keepers of Islam who would have done
the same, and the proud Mameluke warriors of Egypt who would have taken him to Cairo
with them had he been fairer and stronger, and the radiant softspoken Venetians in their
leggings and velvet doublets, the most dazzling creatures of all, Christians even as he was a
Christian, yet laughing gently to one another as they examined him, as he stood mute, unable
to answer, to plead, even to hope.
I saw the seas before him, the great rolling blue of the Aegean and the Adriatic, and his
sickness again in the hold and his solemn vow not to live.
And then the great Moorish palaces of Venice rising from the gleaming surface of the
lagoon, and the house to which he was taken, with its dozens and dozens of secret chambers,
the light of the sky glimpsed only through barred windows, and the other boys speaking to
him in that soft strange tongue that was Venetian and the threats and the cajoling as he was
convinced, against all his fear and superstitions, of the sins that he must commit with the
endless procession of strangers in this landscape of marble and torchlight, each chamber
opening to a new tableau of tenderness that surrendered to the same ritual and inexplicable
and finally cruel desire.
And at last one night when, for days and days he had refused to submit and he was hungry
and sore and would not speak any longer to anyone, he was pushed through one of those
doors again, just as he was, soiled and blind from the dark room in which he'd been locked,
and the creature standing there to receive him, the tall one in red velvet, with the lean and
almost luminous face, touched him so gently with cool fingers that, half dreaming, he didn't
cry as he saw the coins exchange hands. But it was a great deal of money. Too much money.
He was being sold off. And the face, it was too smooth, it might have been a mask.
At the final moment, he screamed. He swore he would obey, he wouldn't fight anymore.
Will someone tell him where he's being taken, he won't disobey anymore, please, please. But
even as he was pulled down the stairs towards the dank smell of the water, he felt the firm,
delicate fingers of his new Master again, and on his neck cool and tender lips that could
never, never hurt him, and that first deadly and irresistible kiss.
Love and love and love in the vampire kiss. It bathed Armand, cleansed him, this is
everything, as he was carried into the gondola and the gondola moved like a great sinister
beetle through the narrow stream into the sewers beneath another house.
Drunk on pleasure. Drunk on the silky white hands that smoothed back his hair and the
voice that called him beautiful; on the face that in moments of feeling was suffused with
expression only to become as serene and dazzling as something made of jewels and alabaster
in repose. Like a pool of moonlit water it was. Touch it even with the fingertip and all its life
rises to the surface only to vanish in quiet once again.
Drunk in the morning light on the memory of those kisses as, alone, he opened one door
after another upon books and maps and statues in granite and marble, the other apprentice
finding him and leading him patiently to his work-letting him watch as they ground the
brilliant pigments, teaching him to blend the pure color with the yellow egg yolk, and how to
spread the lacquer of the egg yolk over the panels, and taking him up on the scaffolding as
they worked with careful strokes on the very edges of the vast depiction of sun and clouds,
showing him those great faces and hands and angels' wings which only the Master's brush
would touch.
Drunk as he sat at the long table with them, gorging himself on the delicious foods that he
had never tasted before, and the wine which never ran out.
And falling asleep finally to wake at that moment of twilight when the Master stood beside
the enormous bed, gorgeous as something imagined in his red velvet, with his thick white
hair glistening in the lamplight, and the simplest happiness in his brilliant cobalt blue eyes.
The deadly kiss.
"Ah, yes, never to be separated from you, yes, . . . not afraid."
"Soon, my darling one, we will be truly united soon."
Torches blazing throughout the house. The Master atop the scaffolding with the brush in
his hand: "Stand there, in the light, don't move," and hours and hours frozen in the same
position, and then before dawn, seeing his own likeness there in the paint, the face of the
angel, the Master smiling as he moved down the endless corridor...
"No, Master, don't leave me, let me stay with you, don't go...
Day again, and money in his pockets, real gold, and the grandeur of Venice with her dark
green waterways walled in palaces, and the other apprentices walking arm in arm with him,
and the fresh air and the blue sky over the Piazza San Marco like something he had only
dreamed in childhood, and the palazzo again at twilight, and the Master coming, the Master
bent over the smaller panel with the brush, working faster and faster as the apprentices gazed
on half horrified, half fascinated, the Master looking up and seeing him and putting down the
brush, and taking him out of the enormous studio as the others worked until the hour of
midnight, his face in the Master's hands as, alone in the bedchamber again, that secret, never
tell anyone, kiss.
Two years? Three years? No words to recreate it or embrace it, the glory that was those
times-the fleets that sailed away to war from that port, the hymns that rose before those
Byzantine altars, the passion plays and the miracle plays performed on their platforms in the
churches and in the piazza with their hell's mouth and cavorting devils, and the glittering
mosaics spreading out over the walls of San Marco and San Zanipolo and the Palazzo Ducale,
and the painters who walked those streets, Giambono, Uccello, the Vivarini and the Bellini;
and the endless feast days and processions, and always in the small hours in the vast
torchlighted rooms of the palazzo, alone with the Master when the others slept safely locked
away. The Master's brush racing over the panel before it as if uncovering the painting rather
than creating it-sun and sky and sea spreading out beneath the canopy of the angel's wings.
And those awful inevitable moments when the Master would rise screaming, hurling the
pots of paint in all directions, clutching at his eyes as if he would pull them out of his head.
"Why can I not see? Why can I not see better than mortals see?"
Holding tight to the Master. Waiting for the rapture of the kiss. Dark secret, unspoken
secret. The Master slipping out of the door sometime before dawn.
"Let me go with you, Master."
"Soon, my darling, my love, my little one, when you're strong enough and tall enough, and
there is no flaw in you anymore. Go now, and have all the pleasures that await you, have the
love of a woman, and have the love of a man as well in the nights that follow. Forget the
bitterness you knew in the brothel and taste of these things while there is still time."
And rarely did the night close that there wasn't that figure come back again, just before the
rising sun, and this time ruddy and warm as it bent over him to give him the embrace that
would sustain him through the daylight hours until the deadly kiss at twilight again.
He learned to read and write. He took the paintings to their final destinations in the
churches and the chapels of the great palaces, and collected the payments and bargained for
the pigments and the oils. He scolded the servants when the beds weren't made and the meals
weren't ready. And beloved by the apprentices, he sent them to their new service when they
were finished, with tears. He read poetry to the Master as the Master painted, and he learned
to play the lute and to sing songs.
And during those sad times when the Master left Venice for many nights, it was he who
governed in the Master's absence, concealing his anguish from the others, knowing it would
end only when the Master returned.
And one night finally, in the small hours when even Venice slept:
"This is the moment, beautiful one. For you to come to me and become like me. Is it what
you wish?"
"Yes."
"Forever to thrive in secret upon the blood of the evildoer as I thrive, and to abide with
these secrets until the end of the world."
"I take the vow, I surrender, I will . . . to be with you, my Master, always, you are the
creator of all things that I am. There has never been any greater desire."
The Master's brush pointing to the painting that reached to the ceiling above the tiers of
scaffolding.
"This is the only sun that you will ever see again. But a millennium of nights will be yours
to see light as no mortal has ever seen it, to snatch from the distant stars as if you were
Prometheus an endless illumination by which to understand all things."
How many months were there after? Reeling in the power of the Dark Gift.
This nighttime life of drifting through the alleyways and the canals together-at one with the
danger of the dark and no longer afraid of it-and the age-old rapture of the killing, and never,
never the innocent souls. No, always the evildoer, the mind pierced until Typhon, the slayer
of his brother, was revealed, and then the drinking up of the evil from the mortal victim and
the transmuting of it into ecstasy, the Master leading the way, the feast shared.
And the painting afterwards, the solitary hours with the miracle of the new skill, the brush
sometimes moving as if by itself across the enameled surface, and the two of them painting
furiously on the triptych, and the mortal apprentices asleep among the paint pots and the wine
bottles, and only one mystery disturbing the serenity, the mystery that the Master, as in the
past, must now and then leave Venice for a journey that seemed endless to those left behind.
All the more terrible now the parting. To hunt alone without the Master, to lie alone in the
deep cellar after the hunt, waiting. Not to hear the ring of the Master's laughter or the beat of
the Master's heart.
"But where do you go? Why can't I go with you?" Armand pleaded. Didn't they share the
secret? Why was this mystery not explained?
"No, my lovely one, you are not ready for this burden. For now, it must be, as it has been
for over a thousand years, mine alone. Someday you will help me with what I have to do, but
only when you are ready for the knowledge, when you have shown that you truly wish to
know, and when you are powerful enough that no one can ever take the knowledge from you
against your will. Until then understand I have no choice but to leave you. I go to tend to
Those Who Must Be Kept as I have always done."
Those Who Must Be Kept.
Armand brooded upon it; it frightened him. But worst of all it took the Master from him,
and only did he learn not to fear it when the Master returned to him again and again.
"Those Who Must Be Kept are in peace, or in silence," he would say as he took the red
velvet cloak from his shoulders. "More than that we may never know."
And to the feast again, the stalking of the evildoer through the alleys of Venice, he and the
Master would go.
How long might it have continued-through one mortal lifetime? Through a hundred?
Not a half year in this dark bliss before the evening at twilight when the Master stood over
his coffin in the deep cellar just above the water, and said:
"Rise, Armand, we must leave here. They have come!"
"But who are they, Master? Is it Those Who Must Be Kept?"
"No, my darling. It is the others. Come, we must hurry!"
"But how can they hurt us? Why must we go?"
The white faces at the windows, the pounding at the doors. Glass shattering. The Master
turning this way and that as he looked at the paintings. The smell of smoke. The smell of
burning pitch. They were coming up from the cellar. They were coming down from above.
"Run, there is not time to save anything." Up the stairs to the roof.
Black hooded figures heaving their torches through the doorways, the fire roaring in the
rooms below, exploding the windows, boiling up the stairway. All the paintings were
burning.
"To the roof, Armand. Come!"
Creatures like ourselves in these dark garments! Others like ourselves. The Master
scattered them in all directions as he raced up the stairway, bones cracking as they struck the
ceiling and the walls.
"Blasphemer, heretic!" the alien voices roared. The arms caught Armand and held him, and
above at the very top of the stairway the Master turned back for him:
"Armand! Trust your strength. Come!"
But they were swarming behind the Master. They were surrounding him. For each one
hurled into the plaster, three more appeared, until fifty torches were plunged into the Master's
velvet garments, his long red sleeves, his white hair. The fire roared up to the ceiling as it
consumed him, making of him a living torch, even as with flaming arms he defended himself,
igniting his attackers as they threw the blazing torches like firewood at his feet.
But Armand was being borne down and away, out of the burning house, with the
screaming mortal apprentices. And over the water and away from Venice, amid cries and
wailing, in the belly of a vessel as terrifying as the slave ship, to an open clearing under the
night sky.
"Blasphemer, blasphemer!" The bonfire growing, and the chain of hooded figures around
it, and the chant rising and rising, "Into the fire."
"No, don't do it to me, no!"
And as he watched, petrified, he saw brought towards the pyre the mortal apprentices, his
brothers, his only brothers, roaring in panic as they were hurled upwards and over into the
flames.
"No . . . stop this, they're innocent! For the love of God, stop, innocent!..." He was
screaming, but now his time had come. They were lifting him as he struggled, and he was
flung up and up to fall down into the blast.
"Master, help me!" Then all words giving way to one wailing cry.
Thrashing, screaming, mad.
But he had been taken out of it. Snatched back into life. And he lay on the ground looking
at the sky. The flames licked the stars, it seemed, but he was far away from them, and
couldn't even feel the heat anymore. He could smell his burnt clothing and his burnt hair. The
pain in his face and hands was the worst and the blood was leaking out of him and he could
scarcely move his lips . . .
". . . All thy Master's vain works destroyed, all the vain creations which he made among
mortals with his Dark Powers, images of angels and saints and living mortals! Wilt thou, too,
be destroyed? Or serve Satan? Make thy choice. Thou hast tasted the fire, and the fire waits
for thee, hungry for thee. Hell waits for thee. Wilt thou make thy choice?"
"...yes..."
". . . to serve Satan as he is meant to be served."
"Yes... "
". . . That all things of the world are vanity, and thou shalt never use thy Dark Powers for
any mortal vanity, not to paint, not to create music, not to dance, nor to recite for the
amusement of mortals but only and forever in the service of Satan, thy Dark Powers to
seduce and to terrify and to destroy, only to destroy. . ."
"Yes... "
". . . consecrated to thy one and only master, Satan, Satan forever, always and forever. . . to
serve thy true master in darkness and pain and in suffering, to surrender thy mind and thy
heart. . ."
"Yes."
"And to keep from thy brethren in Satan no secret, to yield all knowledge of the
blasphemer and his burden..."
Silence.
"To yield all knowledge of the burden, child! Come now, the flames wait."
"I do not understand you..."
"Those Who Must Be Kept. Tell."
"Tell what? I do not know anything, except that I do not wish to suffer. I am so afraid."
"The truth, Child of Darkness. Where are they? Where are Those Who Must Be Kept?"
"I do not know. Look into my mind if you have that same power. There is nothing I can
tell."
"But what, child, what are they? Did he never tell you? What are Those Who Must Be
Kept?"
And so they did not understand it either. It was no more than a phrase to them as it was to
him. When you are powerful enough that no one can ever take the knowledge from you
against your will. The Master had been wise.
"What is its meaning! Where are they? We must have the answer."
"I swear to you, I do not have it. I swear on my fear which is all I possess now, I do not
know!"
White faces appearing above him, one at a time. The tasteless lips giving hard, sweet
kisses, hands stroking him, and from their wrists the glittering droplets of blood. They wanted
the truth to come out in the blood. But what did it matter? The blood was the blood.
"Thou art the devil's child now."
"Yes."
"Don't weep for thy master, Marius. Marius is in hell where he belongs. Now drink the
healing blood and rise and dance with thine own kind for the glory of Satan! And immortality
will be truly thine!"
"Yes"-the blood burning his tongue as he lifted his head, the blood filling him with
torturous slowness. "Oh, please."
All around him Latin phrases, and the low beat of drums. They were satisfied. They knew
he had spoken the truth. They would not kill him and the ecstasy dimmed all considerations.
The pain in his hands and his face had melted into this ecstasy "Rise, young one, and join the
Children of Darkness."
"Yes, I do." White hands reaching for his hands. Horns and lutes shrilling over the thud of
the drums, the harps plucked into an hypnotic strumming as the circle commenced to move.
Hooded figures in mendicant black, robes flowing as they lifted their knees high and bent
their backs.
And breaking hands, they whirled, leapt, and came down again, spinning round and round,
and a humming song rose louder and louder from their closed lips.
The circle swept on faster. The humming was a great melancholy vibration without shape
or continuity and yet it seemed to be a form of speaking, to be the very echo of thought.
Louder and louder it came like a moan that could not break into a cry.
He was making the same sound with it, and then turning, and dizzy with turning, he leapt
high into the air. Hands caught him, lips kissed him, he was whirling about and pulled along
by the others, someone crying out in Latin, another answering, another crying louder, and
another answer coming again.
He was flying, no longer bound to the earth and the awful pain of his Master's death, and
the death of the paintings, and death of the mortals he loved. The wind sailed past him, and
the heat blasted his face and eyes. But the singing was so beautiful that it didn't matter that he
didn't know the words, or that he couldn't pray to Satan, didn't know how to believe or make
such a prayer. No one knew that he didn't know and they were all in a chorus together and
they cried and lamented and tamed and leapt again and then, swaying back and forth, threw
their heads back as the fire blinded them and licked them and someone shouted "Yes, YES!"
And the music surged. A barbarous rhythm broke loose all around him from drums and
tambourines, voices in lurid rushing melody at last. The vampires threw up their arms,
howled, figures flickering past him in riotous contortions, backs arched, heels stomping. The
jubilation of imps in hell. It horrified him and it called to him, and when the hands clutched at
him and swung him around, he stomped and twisted and danced like the others, letting the
pain course through him, bending his limbs and giving the alarm to his cries.
And before dawn, he was delirious, and he had a dozen brothers around him, caressing him
and soothing him, and leading him down a staircase that had opened in the bowels of the
earth.
It seemed that some time in the months that followed Armand dreamed his Master had not
been burnt to death.
He dreamed his Master had fallen from the roof, a blazing comet, into the saving waters of
the canal below. And deep in the mountains of northern Italy, his Master survived. His
Master called to him to come. His Master was in the sanctuary of Those Who Must Be Kept.
Sometimes in the dream his Master was as powerful and radiant as he had ever been;
beauty seemed his raiment. And at others he was burnt black and shriveled, a breathing
cinder, his eyes huge and yellow, and only his white hair as lustrous and full as it had been.
He crept along the ground in his weakness, pleading for Armand to help him. And behind
him, warm light spilled from the sanctuary of Those Who Must Be Kept; there came the
smell of incense, and there seemed some promise of ancient magic there, some promise of
cold and exotic beauty beyond all evil and all good.
But these were vain imaginings. His Master had told him that fire and the light of the sun
could destroy them, and he himself had seen his Master in flames. It was like wishing for his
mortal life to come again to have these dreams.
And when his eyes were open on the moon and the stars, and the still mirror of the sea
before him, he knew no hope, and no grief, and no joy. All those things had come from the
Master, and the Master was no more.
"I am the devil's child." That was poetry. All will was extinguished in him, and there was
nothing but the dark confraternity, and the kill was now of the innocent as well as the guilty.
The kill was above all cruel.
In Rome in the great coven in the catacombs, he bowed before Santino, the leader, who
came down the stone steps to receive him with outstretched arms. This great one had been
Born to Darkness in the time of the Black Death, and he told Armand of the vision that had
come to him in the year 1349 when the plague raged, that we were to be as the Black Death
itself, a vexation without explanation, to cause man to doubt the mercy and intervention of
God.
Into the sanctum lined with human skulls Santino took Armand, telling him of the history
of the vampires.
From all times we have existed, as wolves have, a source of mortals. And in the coven of
Rome, dark shadow of the Roman Church, lay our final perfection.
Armand already knew the rituals and common prohibitions; now he must learn the great
laws:
One-that each coven must have its leader and only he might order the working of the Dark
Trick upon a mortal, seeing that the methods and the rituals were properly observed.
Two-that the Dark Gifts must never be given to the crippled, the maimed, or to children, or
to those who cannot, even with the Dark Powers, survive on their own. Be it further
understood that all mortals who would receive the Dark Gifts should be beautiful in person so
that the insult to God might be greater when the Dark Trick is done.
Three-that never should an old vampire work this magic lest the blood of the fledgling be
too strong. For all our gifts increase naturally with age, and the old ones have too much
strength to pass on. Injury, burning-these catastrophes, if they do not destroy the Child of
Satan, will only increase his powers when he is healed. Yet Satan guards the flock from the
power of old ones, for almost all, without exception, go mad.
In this particular, let Armand observe that there was no vampire then living who was more
than three hundred years old. No one alive then could remember the first Roman coven. The
devil frequently calls his vampires home.
But let Armand understand here also that the effect of the Dark Trick is unpredictable,
even when passed on by the very young vampire and with all due care. For reasons no one
knows, some mortals when Born to Darkness become as powerful as Titans, others may be
no more than corpses that move. That is why mortals must be chosen with skill. Those with
great passion and indomitable will should be avoided as well as those who have none.
Four-that no vampire may ever destroy another vampire, except that the coven master has
the power of life and death over all of his flock. And it is, further, his obligation to lead the
old ones and the mad ones into the fire when they can no longer serve Satan as they should. It
is his obligation to destroy all vampires who are not properly made. It is his obligation to
destroy those who are so badly wounded that they cannot survive on their own. And it is his
obligation finally to seek the destruction of all outcasts and all who have broken the laws.
Five-that no vampire shall ever reveal his true nature to a mortal and allow that mortal to
live. No vampire must ever reveal the history of the vampires to a mortal and let the mortal
live. No vampire must commit to writing the history of the vampires or any true knowledge
of vampires lest such a history be found by mortals and believed. And a vampire's name must
never be known to mortals, save from his tombstone, and never must any vampire reveal to
mortals the location of his or any other vampire's lair.
These then were the great commandments, which all vampires must obey. And this was the
condition of existence among all the Undead.
Yet Armand should know that there had always been stories of ancient ones, heretic
vampires of frightening power who submitted to no authority, not even that of the devilvampires
who had survived for thousands of years. Children of the Millennia, they were
sometimes called. In the north of Europe there were tales of Mael, who dwelt in the forests of
England and Scotland; and in Asia Minor the legend of Pandora. And in Egypt, the ancient
tale of the vampire Ramses, seen again in this very time.
In all parts of the world one found such tales. And one could easily dismiss them as
fanciful save for one thing. The ancient heretic Marius had been found in Venice, and there
punished by the Children of Darkness. The legend of Marius had been true. But Marius was
no more.
Armand said nothing to this last judgment. He did not tell Santino of the dreams he had
had. In truth the dreams had dimmed inside Armand as had the colors of Marius's paintings.
They were no longer held in Armand's mind or heart to be discovered by others who might
try to see.
When Santino spoke of Those Who Must Be Kept, Armand again confessed that he did not
know the meaning of it. Neither did Santino, nor any vampire that Santino had ever known.
Dead was the secret. Dead was Marius. And so consign to silence the old and useless
mystery. Satan is our Lord and Master. In Satan, all is understood and all is known.
Armand pleased Santino. He memorized the laws, perfected his performance of the
ceremonial incantations, the rituals, and the prayers. He saw the greatest Sabbats he was ever
to witness. And he learned from the most powerful and skillful and beautiful vampires he was
ever to know. He learned so well that he became a missionary sent out to gather the vagrant
Children of Darkness into covens, and guide others in the performance of the Sabbat, and the
working of the Dark Trick when the world and the flesh and the devil called for it to be done.
In Spain and in Germany and in France, he had taught the Dark Blessings and Dark
Rituals, and he had known savage and tenacious Children of Darkness, and dim flames had
flared in him in their company and in those moments when the coven surrounded him,
comforted by him, deriving its unity from his strength.
He had perfected the act of killing beyond the abilities of all the Children of Darkness that
he knew. He had learned to summon those who truly wished to die. He had but to stand near
the dwellings of mortals and call silently to see his victim appear.
Old, young, wretched, diseased, the ugly or the beautiful, it did not matter because he did
not choose. Dazzling visions he gave, if they should want to receive, but he did not move
towards them nor even close his arms around them. Drawn inexorably towards him, it was
they who embraced him. And when their warm living flesh touched him, when he opened his
lips and felt the blood spill, he knew the only surcease from misery that he could know.
It seemed to him in the best of these moments that his way was profoundly spiritual,
uncontaminated by the appetites and confusions that made up the world, despite the carnal
rapture of the kill.
In that act the spiritual and the carnal came together, and it was the spiritual, he was
convinced, that survived. Holy Communion it seemed to him, the Blood of the Children of
Christ serving only to bring the essence of life itself into his understanding for the split
second in which death occurred. Only the great saints of God were his equals in this
spirituality, this confrontation with mystery, this existence of meditation and denial.
Yet he had seen the greatest of his companions vanish, bring destruction upon themselves,
go mad. He had witnessed the inevitable dissolution of covens, seen immortality defeat the
most perfectly made Children of Darkness, and it seemed at times some awesome punishment
that it never defeated him.
Was he destined to be one of the ancient ones? The Children of the Millennia? Could one
believe those stories which persisted still?
Now and then a roaming vampire would speak of the fabled Pandora glimpsed in the faroff
Russian city of Moscow, or of Mael living on the bleak English coast. The wanderers told
even of Marius-that he had been seen again in Egypt, or in Greece. But these storytellers had
not themselves laid eyes upon the legendary ones. They knew nothing really. These were
often-repeated tales.
They did not distract or amuse the obedient servant of Satan. In quiet allegiance to the
Dark Ways, Armand continued to serve.
Yet in the centuries of his long obedience, Armand kept two secrets to himself. These were
his property, these secrets, more purely his than the coffin in which he locked himself by day,
or the few amulets he wore.
The first was that no matter how great his loneliness, or how long the search for brothers
and sisters in whom he might find some comfort, he never worked the Dark Trick himself. He
wouldn't give that to Satan, no Child of Darkness made by him.
And the other secret, which he kept from his followers for their sake, was simply the extent
of his ever deepening despair.
That he craved nothing, cherished nothing, believed nothing finally, and took not one
particle of pleasure in his ever increasing and awesome powers, and existed from moment to
moment in a void broken once every night of his eternal life by the kill-that secret he had kept
from them as long as they had needed him and it had been possible to lead them because his
fear would have made them afraid.
But it was finished.
A great cycle had ended, and even years ago he had felt it closing without understanding it
was a cycle at all.
From Rome there came the garbled travelers' accounts, old when they were told to him,
that the leader, Santino, had abandoned his flock. Some said he had gone mad into the
countryside, others that he had leapt into the fire, others that "the world" had swallowed him,
that he had been borne off in a black coach with mortals never to be seen again.
"We go into the fire or we go into legend," said a teller of the tale.
Then came accounts of chaos in Rome, of dozens of leaders who put on the black hood and
the black robes to preside over the coven. And then it seemed there were none.
Since the year 1700 there had been no word anymore from Italy. For half a century
Armand had not been able to trust to his passion or that of the others around him to create the
frenzy of the true Sabbat. And he had dreamed of his old Master, Marius, in those rich robes
of red velvet, and seen the palazzo full of vibrant paintings, and he had been afraid.
Then another had come.
His children rushed down into the cellars beneath les Innocents to describe to him this new
vampire, who wore a furlined cloak of red velvet and could profane the churches and strike
down those who wore crosses and walk in the places of light. Red velvet. It was mere
coincidence, and yet it maddened him and seemed an insult to him, a gratuitous pain that his
soul couldn't bear.
And then the woman had been made, the woman with the hair of a lion and the name of an
angel, beautiful and powerful as her son.
And he had come up the stairway out of the catacomb, leading the band against us, as the
hooded ones had come to destroy him and his Master in Venice centuries before.
And it had failed.
He stood dressed in these strange lace and brocade garments. He carried coins in his
pockets. His mind swam with images from the thousands of books he had read. And he felt
himself pierced with all he had witnessed in the places of light in the great city called Paris,
and it was as if he could hear his old Master whispering in his ear:
But a millennium of nights will be yours to see light as no mortal has ever seen it, to snatch
from the distant stars as if you were Prometheus an endless illumination in which to
understand all things.
"All things have eluded my understanding," he said. "I am as one whom the earth has given
back, and you, Lestat and Gabrielle, are like the images painted by my old Master in cerulean
and carmine and gold."
He stood still in the doorway, his hands on the backs of his arms, and he was looking at us,
asking silently:
What is there to know? What is there to give? We are the abandoned of God. And there is
no Devil's Road spinning out before me and there are no bells of hell ringing in my ears.
4
An hour passed, perhaps more. Armand sat by the fire. No marks any longer on his face
from the long-forgotten battle. He seemed, in his stillness, to be as fragile as an emptied shell.
Gabrielle sat across from him, and she too stared at the flames in silence, her face weary
and seemingly compassionate. It was painful for me not to know her thoughts.
I was thinking of Marius. And Marius and Marius . . . the vampire who had painted
pictures in and of the real world. Triptychs, portraits, frescoes on the walls of his palazzo.
And the real world had never suspected him nor hunted him nor cast him out. It was this
band of hooded fiends who came to burn the paintings, the ones who shared the Dark Gift
with him-had he himself ever called it the Dark Gift?-they were the ones who said he couldn't
live and create among mortals. Not mortals.
I saw the little stage at Renaud's and I heard myself sing and the singing become a roar.
Nicolas said, "It is splendid." I said, "It is petty." And it was like striking Nicolas. In my
imagination he said what he had not said that night: "Let me have what I can believe in. You
would never do that."
The triptychs of Marius were in churches and convent chapels, maybe on the walls of the
great houses in Venice and Padua. The vampires would not have gone into holy places to pull
them down. So they were there somewhere, with a signature perhaps worked into the detail,
these creations of the vampire who surrounded himself with mortal apprentices, kept a mortal
lover from whom he took the little drink, went out alone to kill.
I thought of the night in the inn when I had seen the meaninglessness of life, and the soft
fathomless despair of Armand's story seemed an ocean in which I might drown. This was
worse than the blasted shore in Nicki's mind. This was for three centuries, this darkness, this
nothingness.
The radiant auburn-haired child by the fire could open his mouth again and out would
come blackness like ink to cover the world.
That is, if there had not been this protagonist, this Venetian master, who had committed the
heretical act of making meaning on the panels he painted-it had to be meaning-and our own
kind, the elect of Satan, had made him into a living torch.
Had Gabrielle seen these paintings in the story as I had seen them? Did they burn in her
mind's eye as they did in mine?
Marius was traveling some route into my soul that would let him roam there forever, along
with the hooded fiends who turned the paintings into chaos again.
In a dull sort of misery, I thought of the traveler's tales that Marius was alive, seen in Egypt
or Greece.
I wanted to ask Armand, wasn't it possible? Marius must have been so very strong . . . But
it seemed disrespectful of him to ask.
"Old legend," he whispered. His voice was as precise as the inner voice. Unhurriedly, he
continued without ever looking away from the flames. "Legend from the olden times before
they destroyed us both."
"Perhaps not," I said. Echo of the visions, paintings on the walls. "Maybe Marius is alive."
"We are miracles or horrors," he said quietly, "depending upon how you wish to see us.
And when you just know about us, whether it's through the dark blood or promises or
visitations, you think anything is possible. But that isn't so. The world closes tight around this
miracle soon enough; and you don't hope for other miracles. That is, you become accustomed
to the new limits and the limits define everything once again. So they say Marius continues.
They all continue somewhere, that's what you want to believe.
"Not a single one remains in the coven in Rome from those nights when I was taught the
ritual; and maybe the coven itself is no longer even there. Years and years have passed since
there was any communication from the coven. But they all exist somewhere, don't they?
After all, we can't die." He sighed. "Doesn't matter," he said.
Something greater and more terrible mattered, that this despair might crush Armand
beneath it. That in spite of the thirst in him now, the blood lost when we had fought together,
and the silent furnace of his body healing the bruises and the broken flesh, he could not will
himself into the world above to hunt. Rather suffer the thirst and the heat of the silent
furnace. Rather stay here and be with us.
But he already knew the answer, that he could not be with us.
Gabrielle and I didn't have to speak to let him know. We did not even have to resolve the
question in our minds. He knew, the way God might know the future because God is the
possessor of all the facts.
Unbearable anguish. And Gabrielle's expression all the more weary, sad.
"You know that with all my soul I do want to take you with us," I said. I was surprised at
my own emotion. "But it would be disaster for us all."
No change in him. He knew. No challenge from Gabrielle.
"I cannot stop thinking of Marius," I confessed.
I know. And you do not think of Those Who Must Be Kept, which is most strange.
"That is merely another mystery," I said. "And there are a thousand mysteries. I think of
Marius! And I'm too much the slave of my own obsessions and fascination. It's a dreadful
thing to linger so on Marius, to extract that one radiant figure from the tale."
Doesn't matter. If it pleases you, take it. I do not lose what I give.
"When a being reveals his pain in such a torrent, you are bound to respect the whole of the
tragedy. You have to try to comprehend. And such helplessness, such despair is almost
incomprehensible to me. That's why I think of Marius. Marius I understand. You I don't
understand."
Why?
Silence.
Didn't he deserve the truth?
"I've been a rebel always," I said. "You've been the slave of everything that ever claimed
you."
"I was the leader of my coven!"
"No. You were the slave of Marius and then of the Children of Darkness. You fell under
the spell of one and then the other. What you suffer now is the absence of a spell. I think I
shudder that you caused me so to understand it for a little while, to know it as if I were a
different being than I am."
"Doesn't matter," he said, eyes still on the fire. "You think too much in terms of decision
and action. This tale is no explanation. And I am not a being who requires a respectful
acknowledgment in your thoughts or in words. And we all know the answer you have given
is too immense to be voiced and we all three of us know that it is final. What I don't know is
why. So I am a creature very different from you, and so you cannot understand me. Why can't
I go with you? I will do whatever you wish if you take me with you. I will be under your
spell."
I thought of Marius with his brush and the pots of egg tempera.
"How could you have ever believed anything that they told you after they burned those
paintings?" I asked. "How could you have given yourself over to them?"
Agitation, rising anger.
Caution in Gabrielle's face, but not fear.
"And you, when you stood on the stage and you saw the audience screaming to get out of
the theater-how my followers described this to me, the vampire terrifying the crowd and the
crowd streaming into the boulevard du Temple-what did you believe? That you did not
belong among mortals, that's what you believed. You knew you did not. And there was no
band of fiends in hooded robes to tell you. You knew. So Marius did not belong among
mortals. So I did not."
"Ah, but it's different."
"No, it is not. That's why you scorn the Theater of the Vampires which is now at this very
moment working out its little dramas to bring in the gold from the boulevard crowds. You do
not wish to deceive as Marius deceived. It divides you ever more from mankind. You want to
pretend to be mortal, but to deceive makes you angry and it makes you kill."
"In that moment on the stage," I said, "I revealed myself. I did the very opposite of
deceiving. I wanted somehow in making manifest the monstrosity of myself to be joined with
my fellow humans again. Better they should run from me than not see me. Better they should
know I was something monstrous than for me to glide through the world unrecognized by
those upon whom I preyed."
"But it was not better."
"No. What Marius did was better. He did not deceive."
"Of course he did. He fooled everyone!"
"No. He found a way to imitate mortal life. To be one with mortals. He slew only the
evildoer, and he painted as mortals paint. Angels and blue skies, clouds, those are the things
you made me see when you were telling. He created good things. And I see wisdom in him
and a lack of vanity. He did not need to reveal himself. He had lived a thousand years and he
believed more in the vistas of heaven that he painted than in himself."
Confusion.
Doesn't matter now, devils who paint angels.
"Those are only metaphors," I said. "And it does matter! If you are to rebuild, if you are to
find the Devil's Road again, it does matter! There are ways for us to exist. If I could only
imitate life, just find a way. . .
"You say things that mean nothing to me. We are the abandoned of God."
Gabrielle glanced at him suddenly. "Do you believe in God?" she asked.
"Yes, always in God," he answered. "It is Satan-our master-who is the fiction and that is
the fiction which has betrayed me."
"Oh, then you are truly damned," I said. "And you know full well that your retreat into the
fraternity of the Children of Darkness was a retreat from a sin that was not a sin."
Anger.
"Your heart breaks for something you'll never have," he countered, his voice rising
suddenly. "You brought Gabrielle and Nicolas over the barrier to you, but you could not go
back."
"Why is it you don't hearken to your own story?" I asked. "Is it that you have never
forgiven Marius for not warning you about them, letting you fall into their hands? You will
never take anything, not example or inspiration, from Marius again? I am not Marius, but I
tell you since I set my feet on the Devil's Road, I have heard of only one elder who could
teach me anything, and that is Marius, your Venetian master. He is talking to me now. He is
saying something to me of a way to be immortal."
"Mockery."
"No. It wasn't mockery! And you are the one whose heart breaks for what he will never
have: another body of belief, another spell."
No answer.
"We cannot be Marius for you," I said, "or the dark lord, Santino. We are not artists with a
great vision that will carry you forward. And we are not evil coven masters with the
conviction to condemn a legion to perdition. And this domination-this glorious mandate-is
what you must have."
I had risen to my feet without meaning to. I had come close to the fireplace and I was
looking down at him.
And I saw, out of the comer of my eye, Gabrielle's subtle nod of approval, and the way that
she closed her eyes for a moment as if she were allowing herself a sigh of relief.
He was perfectly still.
"You have to suffer through this emptiness," I said, "and find what impels you to continue.
If you come with us we will fail you and you will destroy us."
"How suffer through it?" He looked up at me and his eyebrows came together in the most
poignant frown. "How do I begin? You move like the right hand of God! But for me the
world, the real world in which Marius lived, is beyond reach. I never lived in it. I push
against the glass. But how do I get in?"
"I can't tell you that," I said.
"You have to study this age," Gabrielle interrupted. Her voice was calm but commanding.
He looked towards her as she spoke.
"You have to understand the age," she continued, "through its literature and its music and
its art. You have come up out of the earth, as you yourself put it. Now live in the world."
No answer from him. Flash of Nicki's ravaged flat with all its books on the floor. Western
civilization in heaps.
"And what better place is there than the center of things, the boulevard and the theater?"
Gabrielle asked.
He frowned, his head turning dismissively, but she pressed on.
"Your gift is for leading the coven, and your coven is still there."
He made a soft despairing sound.
"Nicolas is a fledgling," she said. "He can teach them much about the world outside, but he
cannot really lead them. The woman, Eleni, is amazingly clever, but she will make way for
you."
"What is it to me, their games?" he whispered.
"It is a way to exist," she said. "And that is all that matters to you now."
"The Theater of the Vampires! I should rather the fire."
"Think of it," she said. "There's a perfection in it you can't deny. We are illusions of what
is mortal, and the stage is an illusion of what is real."
"It's an abomination," he said. "What did Lestat call it? Petty?"
"That was to Nicolas because Nicolas would build fantastical philosophies upon it," she
said. "You must live now without fantastical philosophies, the way you did when you were
Marius's apprentice. Live to learn the age. And Lestat does not believe in the value of evil.
But you do believe in it. I know that you do."
"I am evil," he said half smiling. He almost laughed. "It's not a matter of belief, is it? But
do you think I could go from the spiritual path I followed for three centuries to
voluptuousness and debauchery such as that? We were the saints of evil," he protested. "I will
not be common evil. I will not."
"Make it uncommon," she said. She was growing impatient. "If you are evil, how can
voluptuousness and debauchery be your enemies? Don't the world, the flesh, and the devil
conspire equally against man?"
He shook his head, as if to say he did not care.
"You are more concerned with what is spiritual than with evil," I interjected, watching him
closely. "Is that not so?"
"Yes," he said at once.
"But don't you see, the color of wine in a crystal glass can be spiritual," I continued. '"The
look in a face, the music of a violin. A Paris theater can be infused with the spiritual for all its
solidity. There's nothing in it that hasn't been shaped by the power of those who possessed
spiritual visions of what it could be."
Something quickened in him, but he pushed it away.
"Seduce the public with voluptuousness," Gabrielle said. "For God's sake, and the devil's,
use the power of the theater as you will."
"Weren't the paintings of your master spiritual?" I asked. I could feel a warming in myself
now at the thought of it. "Can anyone look on the great works of that time and not call them
spiritual?"
"I have asked myself that question," Armand answered, "many times. Was it spiritual or
was it voluptuous? Was the angel painted on the triptych caught in the material, or was the
material transformed?"
"No matter what they did to you after, you never doubted the beauty and the value of his
work," I said. "I know you didn't. And it was the material transformed. It ceased to be paint
and it became magic, just as in the kill the blood ceases to be blood and becomes life."
His eyes misted, but no visions came from him. Whatever road he traveled back in his
thoughts, he traveled alone.
"The carnal and the spiritual," Gabrielle said, "come together in the theater as they do in
the paintings. Sensual fiends we are by our very nature. Take this as your key."
He closed his eyes for a moment as if he would shut us out.
"Go to them and listen to the music that Nicki makes," she said. "Make art with them in the
Theater of the Vampires. You have to pass away from what failed you into what can sustain
you. Otherwise-there is no hope."
I wished she had not said it so abruptly, brought it so to the point.
But he nodded and his lips pressed together in a bitter smile.
"The only thing really important for you," she said slowly, "is that you go to an extreme."
He stared at her blankly. He could not possibly understand what she meant by this. And I
thought it too brutal a truth to say. But he didn't resist it. His face became thoughtful and
smooth and childlike again.
For a long time he looked at the fire. Then he spoke:
"But why must you go at all?" he asked. "No one is at war with you now. No one is trying
to drive you out. Why can't you build it with me, this little enterprise?"
Did that mean he would do it, go to the others and become part of the theater in the
boulevard?
He didn't contradict me. He was asking again why couldn't I create the imitation of life, if
that was what I wanted to call it, right in the boulevard?
But he was also giving up. He knew I couldn't endure the sight of the theater, or the sight
of Nicolas. I couldn't even really urge him towards it. Gabrielle had done that. And he knew
that it was too late to press us anymore.
Finally Gabrielle said:
"We can't live among our own kind, Armand."
And I thought, yes, that is the truest answer of all, and I don't know why I couldn't speak it
aloud.
"The Devil's Road is what we want," she said. "And we are enough for each other now.
Maybe years and years into the future, when we've been a thousand places and seen a
thousand things, we'll come back. We'll talk then together as we have tonight."
This came as no real shock to him. But it was impossible now to know what he thought.
For a long time we didn't speak. I don't know how long we remained quiet together in the
room.
I tried not to think of Marius anymore, or of Nicolas either. All sense of danger was gone
now, but I was afraid of the parting, of the sadness of it, of the feeling that I had taken from
this creature his astonishing story and given him precious little for it in return.
It was Gabrielle who finally broke the quiet. She rose and moved gracefully to the bench
beside him.
"Armand," she said. "We are going. If I have my way we'll be miles from Paris before
midnight tomorrow night."
He looked at her with calm and acceptance. Impossible to know now what he chose to
conceal.
"Even if you do not go to the theater," she said, "accept the things that we can give you.
My son has wealth enough to make an entrance into the world very easy for you."
"You can take this tower for your lair," I said. "Use it as long as you wish. Magnus found it
safe enough."
After a moment, he nodded with a grave politeness, but he didn't say anything.
"Let Lestat give you the gold needed to make you a gentleman," Gabrielle said. "And all
we ask in return is that you leave the coven in peace if you do not choose to lead it."
He was looking at the fire again, face tranquil, irresistibly beautiful. Then again he nodded
in silence. And the nod itself meant no more than that he had heard, not that he would
promise anything.
"If you will not go to them," I said slowly, "then do not hurt them. Do not hurt Nicolas."
And when I spoke these words, his face changed very subtly. It was almost a smile that
crept over his features. And his eyes shifted slowly to me. And I saw the scorn in them.
I looked away but the look had affected me as much as a blow.
"I don't want him to be harmed," I said in a tense whisper.
"No. You want him destroyed," he whispered back. "So that you need never fear or grieve
for him anymore." And the look of scorn sharpened hideously.
Gabrielle intervened.
"Armand," she said, "he is not dangerous to them. The woman alone can control him. And
he has things to teach all of you about this time if you will listen."
They looked at each other for some time in silence. And again his face was soft and gentle
and beautiful.
And in a strangely decorous manner he took Gabrielle's hand and held it firmly. Then they
stood up together, and he let her hand go, and he drew a little away from her and squared his
shoulders. He looked at both of us.
"I'll go to them," he said in the softest voice. "And I will take the gold you offer me, and I
will seek refuge in this tower. And I will learn from your passionate fledgling whatever he
has to teach me. But I reach for these things only because they float on the surface of the
darkness in which I am drowning. And I would not descend without some finer
understanding. I would not leave eternity to you without . . . without some final battle."
I studied him. But no thoughts came from him to clarify these words.
"Maybe as the years pass," he said, "desire will come again to me. I will know appetite
again, even passion. Maybe when we meet in another age, these things will not be abstract
and fleeting. I'll speak with a vigor that matches yours, instead of merely reflecting it. And
we will ponder matters of immortality and wisdom. We will talk about vengeance or
acceptance then. For now it's enough for me to say that I want to see you again. I want our
paths to cross in the future. And for that reason alone, I will do as you ask and not what you
want: I will spare your ill-fated Nicolas."
I gave an audible sigh of relief. Yet his tone was so changed, so strong, that it sounded a
deep silent alarm in me. This was the coven master, surely, this quiet and forceful one, the
one who would survive, no matter how the orphan in him wept.
But then he smiled slowly and gracefully, and there was something sad and endearing in
his face. He became the da Vinci saint again, or more truly the little god from Caravaggio.
And it seemed for a moment he couldn't be anything evil or dangerous. He was too radiant,
too full of all that was wise and good.
"Remember my warnings," he said. "Not my curses."
Gabrielle and I both nodded.
"And when you have need of me," he said, "I will be here."
Then Gabrielle did the totally surprising thing of embracing him and kissing him. And I
did the same.
He was pliant and gentle and loving in our arms. And he let us know without words that he
was going to the coven, and we could find him there tomorrow night.
The next moment he was gone, and Gabrielle and I were there alone together, as if he'd
never been in the room. I could hear no sound anywhere in the tower. Nothing but the wind in
the forest beyond.
And when I climbed the steps, I found the gate open and the fields stretching to the woods
in unbroken quiet.
I loved him. I knew it, as incomprehensible to me as he was. But I was so glad it was
finished. So glad that we could go on. Yet I held to the bars for a long time just looking at the
distant woods, and the dim glow far beyond that the city made upon the lowering clouds.
And the grief I felt was not only for the loss of him, it was for Nicki, and for Paris, and for
myself.
5
When I came back down to the crypt I saw her building up the fire again with the last of
the wood. In a slow, weary fashion, she stoked the blaze, and the light was red on her profile
and in her eyes.
I sat quietly on the bench watching her, watching the explosion of sparks against the
blackened bricks.
"Did he give you what you wanted?" I asked.
"In his own way, yes," she said. She put the poker aside and sat down opposite, her hair
spilling down over her shoulders as she rested her hands beside her on the bench. "I tell you, I
don't care if I never look upon another one of our kind," she said coldly. "I am done with their
legends, their curses, their sorrows. And done with their insufferable humanity, which may be
the most astonishing thing they've revealed. I'm ready for the world again, Lestat, as I was on
the night I died."
"But Marius-" I said excitedly. "Mother, there are ancient ones-ones who have used
immortality in a wholly different way."
"Are there?" she asked. "Lestat, you're too generous with your imagination. The story of
Marius has the quality of a fairy tale."
"No, that's not true."
"So the orphan demon claims descent not from the filthy peasant devils he resembles," she
said, "but from a lost lord, almost a god. I tell you any dirty-faced village child dreaming at
the kitchen fire can tell you tales like that."
"Mother, he couldn't have invented Marius," I said. "I may have a great deal of
imagination, but he has almost none. He couldn't have made up the images. I tell you he saw
those things..."
"I hadn't thought of it exactly that way," she admitted with a little smile. "But he could well
have borrowed Marius from the legends he heard..."
"No," I said. "There was a Marius and there is a Marius still. And there are others like him.
There are Children of the Millennia who have done better than these Children of Darkness
with the gifts given them."
"Lestat, what is important is that we do better," she said. "All I learned from Armand,
finally, was that immortals find death seductive and ultimately irresistible, that they fail to
conquer death or humanity in their minds. Now I want to take that knowledge and wear it like
armor as I move through the world. And luckily, I don't mean the world of change which
these creatures have found so dangerous. I mean the world that for eons has been the same."
She tossed her hair back as she looked at the fire again. "It's of snow-covered mountains I
dream," she said softly, "of desert wastes-of impenetrable jungles, or the great north woods of
America where they say white men have never been." Her face warmed just a little as she
looked at me. "Think on it," she said. "There is nowhere that we cannot go. And if the
Children of the Millennia do exist, maybe that is where they are-far from the world of men."
"And how do they live if they are?" I asked. I was picturing my own world and it was full
of mortal beings, and the things that mortal beings made. "It's man we feed on," I said.
"There are hearts that beat in those forests," she said dreamily. "There is blood that flows
for the one who takes it . . . I can do the things now that you used to do. I could fight those
wolves on my own..." Her voice trailed off as she was lost in her thoughts. "The important
thing," she said after a long moment, "is that we can go wherever we wish now, Lestat. We're
free."
"I was free before," I said. "I never cared for what Armand had to tell. But Marius-I know
that Marius is alive. I feel it. I felt it when Armand told the tale. And Marius knows things
and I don't mean just about us, or about Those Who Must Be Kept or whatever the old
mystery-he knows things about life itself, about how to move through time."
"So let him be your patron saint if you need it," she said.
This angered me, and I didn't say anything more. The fact was her talk of jungles and
forests frightened me. And all the things Armand said to divide us came back to me, just as
I'd known they would when he had spoken his well-chosen words. And so we live with our
differences, I thought, just as mortals do, and maybe our divisions are exaggerated as are our
passions, as is our love.
"There was one inkling..." she said as she watched the fire, "one little indication that the
story of Marius had truth."
"There were a thousand indications," I said.
"He said that Marius slew the evildoer," she continued, "and he called the evildoer Typhon,
the slayer of his brother. Do you remember this?"
"I thought that he meant Cain who had slain Abel. It was Cain I saw in the images, though
I heard the other name."
"That's just it. Armand himself didn't understand the name Typhon. Yet he repeated it. But
I know what it means."
"Tell me."
"It's from the Greek and Roman myths-the old story of the Egyptian god, Osiris, slain by
his brother Typhon, so that he became lord of the Underworld. Of course Armand could have
read it in Plutarch, but he didn't, that's the strange thing."
"Ah, you see then, Marius did exist. When he said he'd lived for a millennium he was
telling the truth."
"Perhaps, Lestat, perhaps," she said.
"Mother, tell me this again, this Egyptian story...
'Lestat, you have years to read all the old tales for yourself." She rose and bent to kiss me,
and I sensed the coldness and sluggishness in her that always came before dawn. "As for me,
I am done with books. They are what I read when I could do nothing else." She took my two
hands in hers. "Tell me that we'll be on the road tomorrow. That we won't see the ramparts of
Paris again until we've seen the other side of the world."
"Exactly as you wish," I said.
She started up the stairs.
"But where are you going?" I said as I followed her. She opened the gate and went out
towards the trees.
"I want to see if I can sleep in the raw earth itself," she said over her shoulder. "If I don't
rise tomorrow you'll know I failed."
"But this is madness," I said, coming after her. I hated the very idea of it. She went ahead
into a thicket of old oaks, and kneeling, she dug into the dead leaves and damp soil with her
hands. Ghastly she looked, as if she were a beautiful blondhaired witch scratching with the
speed of a beast.
Then she rose and waved a farewell kiss to me. And commanding all her strength, she
descended as the earth belonged to her. And I was left staring in disbelief at the emptiness
where she had been, and the leaves that had settled as if nothing had disturbed the spot.
I was away from the woods. I walked south away from the tower. And as my step
quickened, I started singing softly to myself some little song, maybe a bit of melody that the
violins had played earlier this night in the Palais Royal.
And the sense of grief came back to me, the realization that we were really going, that it
was finished with Nicolas and finished with the Children of Darkness and their leader, and I
wouldn't see Paris again, or anything familiar to me, for years and years. And for all my
desire to be free, I wanted to weep.
But it seems I had some purpose in my wandering that I hadn't admitted to myself. A half
hour or so before the morning light I was on the post road near the ruin of an old inn. Falling
down it was, this outpost of an abandoned village, with only the heavily mortared walls left
intact.
And taking out my dagger, I began to carve deep in the soft stone:
MARIUS, THE ANCIENT ONE: LESTAT IS SEARCHING FOR YOU.
IT IS THE MONTH OF MAY, IN THE YEAR 1780 AND I GO SOUTH FROM PARIS
TOWARDS LYONS. PLEASE MAKE YOURSELF KNOWN TO ME.
What arrogance it seemed when I stepped back from it. And I had already broken the dark
commandments, telling the name of an immortal, and putting it into written words. Well, it
gave me a wondrous satisfaction to do it. And after all, I had never been very good at obeying
rules.
Part VI
On The Devil's Road From Paris To Cairo
1
The last time we saw Armand in the eighteenth century, he was standing with Eleni and
Nicolas and the other vampire mummers before the door of Renaud's theater, watching as our
carriage made its way into the stream of traffic on the boulevard.
I'd found him earlier closeted in my old dressing room with Nicolas in the midst of a
strange conversation dominated by Nicki's sarcasm and peculiar fire. He wore a wig and a
somber red frock coat, and it seemed to me that he had already acquired a new opacity, as if
every waking moment since the death of the old coven was giving him greater substance and
strength.
Nicki and I had no words for each other in these last awkward moments, but Armand
politely accepted the keys of the tower from me, and a great quantity of money, and the
promise of more when he wanted it from Roget.
His mind was closed to me, but he said again that Nicolas would come to no harm from
him. And as we said our farewells, I believed that Nicolas and the little coven had every
chance for survival and that Armand and I were friends.
By the end of that first night, Gabrielle and I were far from Paris, as we vowed we would
be, and in the months that followed, we went on to Lyons, Turin, and Vienna, and after that
to Prague and Leipzig and St. Petersburg, and then south again to Italy, where we were to
settle for many years.
Eventually we went on to Sicily, then north into Greece and Turkey, and then south again
through the ancient cities of Asia Minor and finally to Cairo, where we remained for some
time.
And in all these places I was to write my messages to Marius on the walls.
Sometimes it was no more than a few words that I scratched with the tip of my knife. In
other places, I spent hours chiseling my ruminations into the stone. But wherever I was, I
wrote my name, the date, and my future destination, and my invitation: "Marius, make
yourself known to me."
As for the old covens, we were to come upon them in a number of scattered places, but it
was clear from the outset that the old ways were everywhere breaking down. Seldom more
than three or four vampires carried on the old rituals, and when they came to realize that we
wanted no part of them or their existence they let us alone.
Infinitely more interesting were the occasional rogues we glimpsed in the middle of
society, lone and secretive vampires pretending to be mortal just as skillfully as we could
pretend. But we never got close to these creatures. They ran from us as they must have from
the old covens. And seeing nothing more than fear in their eyes, I wasn't tempted to give
chase.
Yet it was strangely reassuring to know that I hadn't been the first aristocratic fiend to
move through the ballrooms of the world in search of my victims-the deadly gentleman who
would soon surface in stories and poetry and penny dreadful novels as the very epitome of
our tribe. There were others appearing all the time.
But we were to encounter stranger creatures of darkness as we moved on. In Greece we
found demons who did not know how they had been made, and sometimes even mad
creatures without reason or language who attacked us as if we were mortal, and ran
screaming from the prayers we said to drive them away.
The vampires in Istanbul actually dwelt in houses, safe behind high wall and gates, their
graves in their gardens, and dressed as all humans do in that part of the world, in flowing
robes, to hunt the nighttime streets.
Yet even they were quite horrified to see me living amongst the French and the Venetians,
riding in carriages, joining the gatherings at the European embassies and homes. They
menaced us, shouting incantations at us, and then ran in panic when we turned on them, only
to come back and devil us again.
The revenants who haunted the Mameluke tombs in Cairo were beastly wraiths, held to the
old laws by hollow-eyed masters who lived in the ruins of a Coptic monastery, their rituals
full of Eastern magic and the evocation of many demons and evil spirits whom they called by
strange names. They stayed clear of us, despite all their acidic threats, yet they knew our
names.
As the years passed, we learned nothing from all these creatures, which of course was no
great surprise to me.
And though vampires in many places had heard the legends of Marius and the other
ancient ones, they had never seen such beings with their own eyes. Even Armand had become
a legend to them, and they were likely to ask: "Did you really see the vampire Armand?"
Nowhere did I meet a truly old vampire. Nowhere did I meet a vampire who was in any way
a magnetic creature, a being of great wisdom or special accomplishment, an unusual being in
whom the Dark Gift had worked any perceivable alchemy that was of interest to me.
Armand was a dark god compared to these beings. And so was Gabrielle and so was I.
But I jump ahead of my tale.
Early on, when we first came into Italy, we gained a fuller and more sympathetic
knowledge of the ancient rituals. The Roman coven came out to welcome us with open arms.
"Come to the Sabbat," they said. "Come into the catacombs and join in the hymns."
Yes, they knew that we'd destroyed the Paris coven, and bested the great master of dark
secrets, Armand. But they didn't despise us for it. On the contrary, they could not understand
the cause of Armand's resignation of his power. Why hadn't the coven changed with the
times?
For even here where the ceremonies were so elaborate and sensuous that they took my
breath away, the vampires, far from eschewing the ways of men, thought nothing of passing
themselves off as human whenever it suited their purposes. It was the same with the two
vampires we had seen in Venice, and the handful we were later to meet in Florence as well.
In black cloaks, they penetrated the crowds at the opera, the shadowy corridors of great
houses during balls and banquets, and even sometimes sat amid the press in lowly taverns or
wine shops, peering at humans quite close at hand. It was their habit here more than
anywhere to dress in the costumes of the time of their birth, and they were often splendidly
attired and most regal, possessing jewels and finery and showing it often to great advantage
when they chose.
Yet they crept back to their stinking graveyards to sleep, and they fled screaming from any
sign of heavenly power, and they threw themselves with savage abandon into their horrifying
and beautiful Sabbats.
In comparison, the vampires of Paris had been primitive, coarse, and childlike; but I could
see that it was the very sophistication and worldliness of Paris that had caused Armand and
his flock to retreat so far from mortal ways.
As the French capital became secular, the vampires had clung to old magic, while the
Italian fiends lived among deeply religious humans whose lives were drenched in Roman
Catholic ceremony, men and women who respected evil as they respected the Roman Church.
In sum the old ways of the fiends were not unlike the old ways of people in Italy, and so the
Italian vampires moved in both worlds. Did they believe in the old ways? They shrugged.
The Sabbat for them was a grand pleasure. Hadn't Gabrielle and I enjoyed it? Had we not
finally joined in the dance?
"Come to us anytime that you wish," the Roman vampires told us.
As for this Theater of the Vampires in Paris, this great scandal which was shocking our
kind the world over, well, they would believe that when they saw it with their own eyes.
Vampires performing on a stage, vampires dazzling mortal audiences with tricks and
mimicry-they thought it was too terribly Parisian! They laughed.
Of course I was hearing more directly about the theater all the time. Before I'd even
reached St. Petersburg, Roget had sent me a long testament to the "cleverness" of the new
troupe:
They have gotten themselves up like giant wooden marionettes [he wrote]. Gold cords
come down from the rafters to their ankles and their wrists and the tops of their heads, and by
these they appear to be manipulated in the most charming dances. They wear perfect circles
of rouge on their white cheeks, and their eyes are wide as glass buttons. You cannot believe
the perfection with which they make themselves appear inanimate.
But the orchestra is another marvel. Faces blank and painted in the very same style, the
players imitate mechanical musicians-the jointed dolls one can buy that, on the winding of a
key, saw away at their little instruments, or blow their little horns, to make real music!
It is such an engaging spectacle that ladies and gentlemen of the audience quarrel amongst
themselves as to whether or not these players are dolls or real persons.
Some aver that they are all made of wood and the voices coming out of the actors' mouths
are the work of ventriloquists.
As for the plays themselves, they would be extremely unsettling were they not so beautiful
and skillfully done.
There is one most popular drama they do which features a vampire revenant, risen from the
grave through a platform in the stage. Terrifying is the creature with rag mop hair and fangs.
But lo, he falls in love at once with a giant wooden puppet woman, never guessing that she is
not alive. Unable to drink blood from her throat, however, the poor vampire soon perishes, at
which moment the marionette reveals that she does indeed live, though she is made of wood
and with an evil smile she performs a triumphant dance upon the body of the defeated fiend.
I tell you it makes the blood run cold to see it. Yet the audience screams and applauds.
In another little tableau, the puppet dancers make a circle about a human girl and entice her
to let herself be bound up with golden cords as if she too were a marionette. The sorry result
is that the strings make her dance till the life goes out off her body. She pleads with eloquent
gestures to be released, but the real puppets only laugh and cavort as she expires.
The music is unearthly. It brings to mind the gypsies of the country fairs. Monsieur de
Lenfent is the director. And it is the sound of his violin which often opens the evening fare.
I advise you as your attorney to claim some of the profits being made by this remarkable
company. The lines for each performance stretch a considerable length down the boulevard.
Roget's letters always unsettled me. They left me with my heart tripping, and I couldn't
help but wonder: What had I expected the troupe to do? Why did their boldness and
inventiveness surprise me? We all had the power to do such things. By the time I settled in
Venice, where I spent a great deal of time looking in vain for Marius's paintings, I was
hearing from Eleni directly, her letters inscribed with exquisite vampiric skill.
They were the most popular entertainment in nighttime Paris, she wrote to me. "Actors"
had come from all over Europe to join them. So their troupe had swelled to twenty in number,
which even that metropolis could scarce "support."
"Only the most clever artists are admitted, those who possess truly astonishing talent, but
we prize discretion above all else. We do not like scandal, as you can well guess."
As for their "Dear Violinist," she wrote of him affectionately, saying he was their greatest
inspiration, that he wrote the most ingenious plays, taking them from stories that he read.
"But when he is not at work, he can be quite impossible. He must be watched constantly so
that he does not enlarge our ranks. His dining habits are extremely sloppy. And on occasion
he says most shocking things to strangers, which fortunately they are too sensible to believe."
In other words, he tried to make other vampires. And he didn't hunt in stealth.
In the main it is Our Oldest Friend [Armand, obviously] who is relied upon to restrain him.
And that he does with the most caustic threats. But I must say that these do not have an
enduring effect upon our Violinist. He talks often of old religious customs, of ritual fires, of
the passage into new realms of being.
I cannot say that we do not love him. For your sake we would care for him even if we did
not. But we do love him. And Our Oldest Friend, in particular, bears him great affection. Yet
I should remark that in the old times, such persons would not have endured among us for very
long.
As for Our Oldest Friend, I wonder if you would know him now. He has built a great
manse at the foot of your tower, and there he lives among books and pictures very like a
scholarly gentleman with little care for the real world.
Each night, however, he arrives at the door of the theater in his black carriage. And he
watches from his own curtained box.
And he comes after to settle all disputes among us, to govern as he always did, to threaten
Our Divine Violinist, but he will never, never consent to perform on the stage. It is he who
accepts new members among us. As I told you, they come from all over. We do not have to
solicit them. They knock upon our door ....
Come back to us [she wrote in closing]. You will find us more interesting than you did
before. There are a thousand dark wonders which I cannot commit to paper. We are a
starburst in the history of our kind. And we could not have chosen a more perfect moment in
the history of this great city for our little contrivance. And it is your doing, this splendid
existence we sustain. Why did you leave us? Come home.
I saved these letters. I kept them as carefully as I kept the letter from my brothers in the
Auvergne. I saw the marionettes perfectly in my imagination. I heard the cry of Nicki's
violin. I saw Armand, too, arriving in his dark carriage, taking his seat in the box. And I even
described all of this in veiled and eccentric terms in my long messages to Marius, working in
a little frenzy now and then with my chisel in a dark street while mortals slept.
But for me, there was no going back to Paris, no matter how lonely I might become. The
world around me had become my lover and my teacher. I was enraptured with the cathedrals
and castles, the museums and palaces that I saw. In every place I visited, I went to the heart
of society: I drank up its entertainments and its gossip, its literature and its music, its
architecture and its art.
I could fill volumes with the things I studied, the things I struggled to understand. I was
enthralled by gypsy violinists and street puppeteers as I was by great castrati sopranos in
gilded opera houses or cathedral choirs. I prowled the brothels and the gambling dens and the
places where the sailors drank and quarreled. I read the newspapers everywhere I went and
hung about in taverns, often ordering food I never touched, merely to have it in front of me,
and I talked to mortals incessantly in public places, buying countless glasses of wine for
others, smelling their pipes and cigars as they smoked, and letting all these mortal smells get
into my hair and clothes.
And when I wasn't out roaming, I was traveling the realm of the books that had belonged
to Gabrielle so exclusively all through those dreary mortal years at home.
Before we even got to Italy, I knew enough Latin to be studying the classics, and I made a
library in the old Venetian palazzo I haunted, often reading the whole night long.
And of course it was the tale off Osiris that enchanted me, bringing back with it the
romance of Armand's story and Marius's enigmatic words. As I pored over all the old
versions, I was quietly thunderstruck by what I read.
Here we have an ancient king, Osiris, a man of unworldly goodness who turns the
Egyptians away from cannibalism and teaches them the art of growing crops and making
wine. And how is he murdered by his brother Typhon? Osiris is tricked into lying down in a
box made to the exact size of his body, and his brother Typhon then nails shut the lid. He is
then thrown into the river, and when his faithful Isis finds his body, he is again attacked by
Typhon, who dismembers him. All parts of his body are found save one.
Now, why would Marius make reference to a myth such as this? And how could I not think
on the fact that all vampires sleep in coffins which are boxes made to the size off their
bodies-even the miserable rabble of les Innocents slept in their coffins. Magnus said to me,
"In that box or its like you must always lie." As for the missing part of the body, the part that
Isis never found, well, there is one part of us which is not enhanced by the Dark Gift, isn't
there? We can speak, see, taste, breathe, move as humans move, but we cannot procreate.
And neither could Osiris, so he became Lord of the Dead.
Was this a vampire god?
But so much puzzled me and tormented me. This god Osiris was the god of wine to the
Egyptians, the one later called Dionysus by the Greeks. And Dionysus was the "dark god" of
the theater, the devil god whom Nicki described to me when we were boys at home. And now
we had the theater full of vampires in Paris. Oh, it was too rich.
I couldn't wait to tell all this to Gabrielle.
But she dismissed it indifferently, saying there were hundreds of such old stories.
"Osiris was the god of the corn," she said. "He was a good god to the Egyptians. What
could this have to do with us?" She glanced at the books I was studying. "You have a great
deal to learn, my son. Many an ancient god was dismembered and mourned by his goddess.
Read of Actaeon and Adonis. The ancients loved those stories."
And she was gone. And I was alone in the candlelighted library, leaning on my elbows
amid all these books.
I brooded on Armand's dream of the sanctuary of Those Who Must Be Kept in the
mountains. Was it a magic that went back to the Egyptian times? How had the Children of
Darkness forgotten such things? Maybe it had all been poetry to the Venetian master, the
mention of Typhon, the slayer of his brother, nothing more than that.
I went out into the night with my chisel. I wrote my questions to Marius on stones that
were older than us both. Marius had become so real to me that we were talking together, the
way that Nicki and I had once done. He was the confidant who received my excitement, my
enthusiasm, my sublime bewilderment at all the wonders and puzzles of the world.
But as my studies deepened, as my education broadened, I was getting that first awesome
inkling of what eternity might be. I was alone among humans, and my writing to Marius
couldn't keep me from knowing my own monstrosity as I had in those first Paris nights so
long ago. After all, Marius wasn't really there.
And neither was Gabrielle.
Almost from the beginning, Armand's predictions had proved true.
2
Before we were even out of France, Gabrielle was breaking the journey to disappear for
several nights at a time. In Vienna, she often stayed away for over a fortnight, and by the time
I settled in the palazzo in Venice she was going away for months on end. During my first
visit to Rome, she vanished for a half year. And after she left me in Naples, I returned to
Venice without her, angrily leaving her to find her way back to Veneto on her own, which
she did.
Of course it was the countryside that drew her, the forest or the mountains, or islands on
which no human beings lived.
And she would return in such a tattered state-her shoes worn out, her clothes ripped, her
hair in hopeless tangles-that she was every bit as frightening to look at as the ragged members
of the old Paris coven had been. Then she'd walk about my rooms in her dirty neglected
garments staring at the cracks in the plaster or the light caught in the distortions of the
handblown window glass.
Why should immortals pore over newspapers, she would ask, or dwell in palaces? Or carry
gold in their pockets? Or write letters to a mortal family left behind?
In this eerie, rapid undertone she'd speak of cliffs she had climbed, the drifts of snow
through which she had tumbled, the caves full of mysterious markings and ancient fossils that
she had found.
Then she would go as silently as she'd come, and I would be left watching for her and
waiting for her-and bitter and angry at her, and resenting her when she finally came back.
One night during our first visit to Verona, she startled me in a dark street.
"Is your father still alive?" she asked. Two months she'd been gone that time. I'd missed
her bitterly, and there she was asking about them as if they mattered finally. Yet when I
answered, "yes, and very ill," she seemed not to hear. I tried to tell her then that things in
France were bleak indeed. There would surely be a revolution. She shook her head and
waved it all away.
"Don't think about them anymore," she said. "Forget them." And once again, she was gone.
The truth was, I didn't want to forget them. I never stopped writing to Roger for news of
my family. I wrote to him more often than I wrote to Eleni at the theater. I'd sent for portraits
of my nieces and nephews. I sent presents back to France from every place in which I
stopped. And I did worry about the revolution, as any mortal Frenchman might.
And finally, as Gabrielle's absences grew longer and our times together more strained and
uncertain, I started to argue with her about these things.
"Time will take our family," I said. "Time will take the France we knew. So why should I
give them up now while I can still have them? I need these things, I tell you. This is what life
is to me!"
But this was only the half of it. I didn't have her any more than I had the others. She must
have known what I was really saying. She must have heard the recrimination behind it all.
Little speeches like this saddened her. They brought out the tenderness in her. She'd let me
get clean clothes for her, comb out her hair. And after that we'd hunt together and talk
together. Maybe she would even go to the casinos with me, or to the opera. She'd be a great
and beautiful lady for a little while.
And those moments still held us together. They perpetuated our belief that we were still a
little coven, a pair of lovers, prevailing against the mortal world.
Gathered by the fire in some country villa, riding together on the driver's seat of the coach
as I held the reins, walking together through the midnight forest, we still exchanged our
various observations now and then.
We even went in search of haunted houses together-a newfound pastime that excited us
both. In fact, Gabrielle would sometimes return from one of her journeys precisely because
she had heard of a ghostly visitation and she wanted me to go with her to see what we could.
Of course, most of the time we found nothing in the empty buildings where spirits were
supposed to appear. And those wretched persons supposed to be possessed by the devil were
often no more than commonly insane.
Yet there were times when we saw fleeting apparitions or mayhem that we couldn't
explain-objects flung about, voices roaring from the mouths of possessed children, icy
currents that blew out the candles in a locked room.
But we never learned anything from all this. We saw no more than a hundred mortal
scholars had already described.
It was just a game to us finally. And when I look back on it now, I know we went on with
it because it kept us together gave us convivial moments which otherwise we would not have
had.
But Gabrielle's absences weren't the only thing destroying our affection for each other as
the years passed. It was her manner when she was with me-the ideas she would put forth.
She still had that habit of speaking exactly what was on her mind and little more.
One night in our little house in the Via Ghibellina in Florence, she appeared after a month's
absence and started to expound at once.
"You know the creatures of the night are ripe for a great leader," she said. "Not some
superstitious mumbler of old rites, but a great dark monarch who will galvanize us according
to new principles."
"What principles?" I asked. Ignoring the question, she went on.
"Imagine," she said, "not merely this stealthy and loathsome feeding on mortals, but
something grand as the Tower of Babel was grand before it was brought down by the wrath
off God. I mean a leader set up in a Satanic palace who sends out his followers to turn brother
against brother, to cause mothers to kill their children, to put all the fine accomplishments of
mankind to the torch, to scorch the land itself so that all would die of hunger, innocent and
guilty! Make suffering and chaos wherever you turn, and strike down the forces of good so
that men despair. Now that is something worthy of being called evil. That is what the work of
a devil really is. We are nothing, you and I, except exotica in the Savage Garden, as you told
me. And the world of men is no more or less now than what I saw in my books in the
Auvergne years ago."
I hated this conversation. And yet I was glad she was in the room with me, that I was
speaking to somebody other than a poor deceived mortal. That I wasn't alone with my letters
from home.
"But what about your aesthetic questions?" I asked. "What you explained to Armand
before, that you wanted to know why beauty existed and why it continues to affect us?"
She shrugged.
"When the world of man collapses in ruin, beauty will take over. The trees shall grow
again where there were streets; the flowers will again cover the meadow that is now a dank
field of hovels. That shall be the purpose of the Satanic master, to see the wild grass and the
dense forest cover up all trace of the once great cities until nothing remains."
"And why call all this Satanic?" I asked. "Why not call it chaos? That is all it would be."
"Because," she said, "that is what men would call it. They invented Satan, didn't they?
Satanic is merely the name they give to the behavior of those who would disrupt the orderly
way in which men want to live."
"I don't see it."
"Well, use your preternatural brain, my blue-eyed one," she answered, "my golden-haired
son, my handsome wolfkiller. It is very possible that God made the world as Armand said."
"This is what you discovered in the forest? You were told this by the leaves?"
She laughed at me.
"Of course, God is not necessarily anthropomorphic," she said. "Or what we would call, in
our colossal egotism and sentimentality, 'a decent person.' But there is probably God. Satan,
however, was man's invention, a name for the force that seeks to overthrow the civilized
order of things. The first man who made laws-be he Moses or some ancient Egyptian king
Osiris-that lawmaker created the devil. The devil meant the one who tempts you to break the
laws. And we are truly Satanic in that we follow no law for man's protection. So why not
truly disrupt? Why not make a blaze of evil to consume all the civilizations of the earth?"
I was too appalled to answer.
"Don't worry." She laughed. "I won't do it. But I wonder what will happen in the decades
to come. Will not somebody do it?"
"I hope not!" I said. "Or let me put it this way. If one of us tries, then there shall be war."
"Why? Everyone will follow him."
"I will not. I will make the war."
"Oh, you are too amusing, Lestat," she said.
"It's petty," I said.
"Petty!" She had looked away, out into the courtyard, but she looked back and the color
rose in her face. "To topple all the cities of the earth? I understood when you called the
Theater of the Vampires petty, but now you are contradicting yourself."
"It is petty to destroy anything merely for the sake of the destroying, don't you think?"
"You're impossible," she said. "Sometime in the far future there may be such a leader. He
will reduce man to the nakedness and fear from which he came. And we shall feed upon him
effortlessly as we have always done, and the Savage Garden, as you call it, will cover the
world."
"I almost hope someone does attempt it," I said. "Because I would rise up against him and
do everything to defeat him. And possibly I could be saved, I could be good again in my own
eyes, as I set out to save man from this."
I was very angry. I'd left my chair and walked out into the courtyard.
She came right behind me.
"You have just given the oldest argument in Christendom for the existence of evil," she
said. "It exists so that we may fight it and do good."
"How dreary and stupid," I said.
"What I don't understand about you is this," she said. "You hold to your old belief in
goodness with a tenacity that is virtually unshakable. Yet you are so good at being what you
are! You hunt your victims like a dark angel. You kill ruthlessly. You feast all the night long
on victims when you choose."
"So?" I looked at her coldly. "I don't know how to be bad at being bad."
She laughed.
"I was a good marksman when I was a young man," I said, "a good actor on the stage. And
now I am a good vampire. So much for our understanding of the word 'good."'
After she had gone, I lay on my back on the flagstones in the courtyard and looked up at
the stars, thinking of all the paintings and the sculptures that I had seen merely in the single
city of Florence. I knew that I hated places where there are only towering trees, and the
softest and sweetest music to me was the sound of human voices. But what did it matter
really what I thought or felt?
But she didn't always bludgeon me with strange philosophy. Now and then when she
appeared, she spoke of the practical things she'd learned. She was actually braver and more
adventurous than I was. She taught me things.
We could sleep in the earth, she had ascertained that before we ever left France. Coffins
and graves did not matter. And she would find herself rising naturally out of the earth at
sunset even before she was awake.
And those mortals who did find us during the daylight hours, unless they exposed us to the
sun at once, were doomed. For example, outside Palermo she had slept in a cellar far below
an abandoned house, and when she had awakened, her eyes and face were burning as if they
had been scalded, and she had in her right hand a mortal, quite dead, who had apparently
attempted to disturb her rest.
"He was strangled," she said, "and my hand was still locked on his throat. And my face had
been burned by the little light that leaked down from the opened door."
"What if there had been several mortals?" I asked, vaguely enchanted with her.
She shook her head and shrugged. She always slept in the earth now, not in cellars or
coffins. No one would ever disturb her rest again. It did not matter to her.
I did not say so, but I believed there was a grace in sleeping in the crypt. There was a
romance to rising from the grave. I was in fact going to the very opposite extreme in that I
had coffins made for myself in places where we lingered, and I slept not in the graveyard or
the church, as was our most common custom, but in hiding places within the house.
I can't say that she didn't sometimes patiently listen to me when I told her these things. She
listened when I described to her the great works of art I had seen in the Vatican museum, or
the chorus I had heard in the cathedral, or the dreams I had in the last hour before rising,
dreams that seemed to be sparked by the thoughts of mortals passing my lair. But maybe she
was watching my lips move. Who could possibly tell? And then she was gone again without
explanation, and I walked the streets alone, whispering aloud to Marius and writing to him
the long, long messages that took the whole night sometimes to complete.
What did I want of her, that she be more human, that she be like me? Armand's predictions
obsessed me. And how could she not think of them? She must have known what was
happening, that we were growing ever farther apart, that my heart was breaking and I had too
much pride to say it to her.
"Please, Gabrielle, I cannot endure the loneliness! Stay with me."
By the time we left Italy I was playing dangerous little games with mortals. I'd see a man,
or a woman-a human being who looked perfect to me spiritually- and I would follow the
human about. Maybe for a week I'd do this, then a month, sometimes even longer than that.
I'd fall in love with the being. I'd imagine friendship, conversation, intimacy that we could
never have. In some magical and imaginary moment I would say: "But you see what I am,"
and this human being, in supreme spiritual understanding, would say: "Yes, I see. I
understand."
Nonsense, really. Very like the fairy tale where the princess gives her selfless love to the
prince who is enchanted and he is himself again and the monster no more. Only in this dark
fairy tale I would pass right into my mortal lover. We would become one being, and I would
be flesh and blood again.
Lovely idea, that. Only I began to think more and more of Armand's warnings, that I'd
work the Dark Trick again for the same reasons I'd done it before. And I stopped playing the
game altogether. I merely went hunting with all the old vengeance and cruelty, and it wasn't
merely the evildoer I brought down.
In the city of Athens I wrote the following message to Marius:
"I do not know why I go on. I do not search for truth. I do not believe in it. I hope for no
ancient secrets from you, whatever they may be. But I believe in something. Maybe simply in
the beauty of the world through which I wander or in the will to live itself. This gift was
given to me too early. It was given for no good reason. And already at the age of thirty mortal
years, I have some understanding as to why so many of our kind have wasted it, given it up.
Yet I continue. And I search for you."
How long I could have wandered through Europe and Asia in this fashion I do not know.
For all my complaints about loneliness, I was used to it all. And there were new cities as there
were new victims, new languages, and new music to hear. No matter what my pain, I fixed
my mind on a new destination. I wanted to know all the cities of the earth, finally, even the
far-off capitals of India and China, where the simplest objects would seem alien and the
minds I pierced as strange as those of creatures from another world. .
But as we went south from Istanbul into Asia Minor, Gabrielle felt the allure of the new
and strange land even more strongly, so that she was scarcely ever at my side.
And things were reaching a horrid climax in France, not merely with the mortal world I
still grieved for, but with the vampires of the theater as well.
3
Before I ever left Greece, I'd been hearing disturbing news from English and French
travelers of the troubles at home. And when I reached the European hostelry in Ankara there
was a large packet of letters waiting for me.
Roget had moved all of my money out of France, and into foreign banks. "You must not
consider returning to Paris," he wrote. "I have advised your father and your brothers to keep
out of all controversy. It is not the climate for monarchists here."
Eleni's letters spoke in their own way of the same things:
Audiences want to see the aristocracy made fools of. Our little play featuring a clumsy
queen puppet, who is trampled mercilessly by the mindless troop of puppet soldiers whom
she seeks to command, draws loud laughter and screams.
The clergy is also ripe for derision: In another little drama we have a bumptious priest
come to chastise a group of dancing-girl marionettes for their indecent conduct. But alas,
their dancing master, who is in fact a redhorned devil, turns the unfortunate cleric into a
werewolf who ends his days kept by the laughing girls in a golden cage.
All this is the genius of Our Divine Violinist, but we must now be with him every waking
moment. To force him to write we tie him to the chair. We put ink and paper in front of him.
And if this fails, we make him dictate as we write down the plays.
In the streets he would accost the passers-by and tell them passionately there are horrors in
this world of which they do not dream. And I assure you, if Paris were not so busy reading
pamphlets that denounce Queen Marie Antoinette, he might have undone us all by now.
Our Oldest Friend becomes more angry with every passing night.
Of course I wrote to her at once, begging her to be patient with Nicki, to try to help him
through these first years. "Surely he can be influenced," I said. And for the first time I asked:
"Would I have the power to alter things if I were to return?" I stared at the words for a long
time before signing my name. My hands were trembling. Then I sealed the letter and posted it
at once.
How could I go back? Lonely as I was, I couldn't bear the thought of returning to Paris, of
seeing that little theater again. And what would I do for Nicolas when I got there? Armand's
long-ago admonition was a din in my ears.
In fact, it seemed no matter where I was that Armand and Nicki were both with me,
Armand full of grim warnings and predictions, and Nicolas taunting me with the little miracle
of love turned into hate.
I had never needed Gabrielle as I did now. But she had gone ahead on our journey long
ago. Now and then I remembered the way it had been before we ever left Paris. But I didn't
expect anything from her anymore.
At Damascus, Eleni's answer was waiting for me.
He despises you as much as ever. When we suggest that perhaps he should go to you, he
laughs and laughs. I tell you these things not to haunt you but to let you know that we do our
utmost to protect this child who should never have been Born to Darkness. He is
overwhelmed by his powers, dazzled and maddened by his vision. We have seen it all and its
sorry finish before.
Yet he has written his greatest play this last month. The marionette dancers, sans strings
for this one, are, in the flower of their youth, struck down by a pestilence and laid beneath
tombstones and flower wreaths to rest. The priest weeps over them before he goes away. But
a young violinist magician comes to the cemetery. And by means of his music makes them
rise. As vampires dressed all in black silk ruffles and black satin ribbons, they come out of
the graves, dancing merrily as they follow the violinist towards Paris, a beautifully rendered
painting on the scrim. The crowd positively roars. I tell you we could feast on mortal victims
on the stage and the Parisians, thinking it all the most novel illusion, would only cheer.
There was also a frightening letter from Roget:
Paris was in the grip of revolutionary madness. King Louis had been forced to recognize
the National Assembly. The people of all classes were uniting against him as never before.
Roget had sent a messenger south to see my family and try to determine the revolutionary
mood in the countryside for himself.
I answered both letters with all the predictable concern and all the predictable feeling of
helplessness.
But as I sent my belongings on to Cairo, I had the dread that all those things upon which I
depended were in danger. Outwardly, I was unchanged as I continued my masquerade as the
traveling gentleman; inwardly the demon hunter of the crooked back streets was silently and
secretly lost.
Of course I told myself that it was important to go south to Egypt, that Egypt was a land of
ancient grandeur and timeless marvels, that Egypt would enchant me and make me forget the
things happening in Paris which I was powerless to change.
But there was a connection in my mind. Egypt, more than any other land the world over,
was a place in love with death.
Finally Gabrielle came like a spirit out of the Arabian desert, and together we set sail.
It was almost a month before we reached Cairo, and when I found my belongings waiting
for me in the European hostelry there was a strange package there.
I recognized Eleni's writing immediately, but I could not think why she would send me a
package and I stared at the thing for a full quarter of an hour, my mind as blank as it had ever
been.
There was not a word from Roget.
Why hasn't Roget written to me, I thought. What is this package? Why is it here?
At last I realized that for an hour I had been sitting in a room with a lot of trunks and
packing cases and staring at a package and that Gabrielle, who had not seen fit to vanish yet,
was merely watching me.
"Would you go out?" I whispered.
"If you wish," she said.
It was important to open this, yes, to open it and find out what it was. Yet it seemed just as
important for me to look around the barren little room and imagine that it was a room in a
village inn in the Auvergne.
"I had a dream about you," I said aloud, glancing at the package. "I dreamed that we were
moving through the world together, you and I, and we were both serene and strong. I
dreamed we fed on the evildoer as Marius had done, and as we looked about ourselves we felt
awe and sorrow at the mysteries we beheld. But we were strong. We would go on forever.
And we talked. 'Our conversation' went on and on."
I tore back the wrapping and saw the case of the Stradivarius violin.
I went to say something again, just to myself, but my throat closed. And my mind couldn't
carry out the words on its own. I reached for the letter which had slipped to one side over the
polished wood.
It has come to the worst, as I feared. Our Oldest Friend, maddened by the excesses of Our
Violinist, finally imprisoned him in your old residence. And though his violin was given him
in his cell, his hands were taken away.
But understand that with us, such appendages can always be restored. And the appendages
in question were kept safe by Our Oldest Friend, who allowed our wounded one no
sustenance for rave nights.
Finally, after the entire troupe had prevailed upon Our Oldest Friend to release N. and give
back to him all that was his, it was done.
But N., maddened by the pain and the starvation, for this can alter the temperament
completely, slipped into unbreakable silence and remained so for a considerable length of
time.
At last he came to us and spoke only to tell us that in the manner of a mortal he had put in
order his business affairs. A stack of freshly written plays was ours to have. And we must call
together for him somewhere in the countryside the ancient Sabbat with its customary blaze. If
we did not, then he would make the theater his funeral pyre.
Our Oldest Friend solemnly granted his wish and you have never seen such a Sabbat as
this, for I think we looked all the more hellish in our wigs and fine clothes, our black ruffled
vampire dancing costumes, forming the old circle, singing with an actor's bravado the old
chants.
"We should have done it on the boulevard," he said. "But here, send this on to my maker,"
and he put the violin in my hands. We began to dance, all of us, to induce the customary
frenzy, and I think we were never more moved, never more in terror, never more sad. He
went into the flames.
I know how this news will affect you. But understand we did all that we could to prevent
what occurred. Our Oldest Friend was bitter and grieved. And I think you should know that
when we returned to Paris, we discovered that N. had ordered the theater to be named
officially the Theater of the Vampires and these words had already been painted on the front.
As his best plays have always included vampires and werewolves and other such supernatural
creatures, the public thinks the new title very amusing, and no one has moved to change it. It
is merely clever in the Paris of these times.
Hours later when I finally went down the stairs into the street, I saw a pale and lovely
ghost in the shadows-image of the young French explorer in soiled white linen and brown
leather boots, straw hat down over the eyes.
I knew who she was, of course, and that we had once loved each other, she and I, but it
seemed for the moment to be something I could scarce remember, or truly believe.
I think I wanted to say something mean to her, to wound her and drive her away. But when
she came up beside me and walked with me, I didn't say anything. I merely gave the letter to
her so that we didn't have to talk. And she read it and put it away, and then she had her arm
around me again the way she used to long ago, and we were walking together through the
black streets.
Smell of death and cooking fires, of sand and camel dung. Egypt smell. Smell of a place
that has been the same for six thousand years.
"What can I do for you, my darling?" she whispered. "Nothing," I said.
It was I who did it, I who seduced him, made him what he was, and left him there. It was I
who subverted the path his life might have taken. And so in dark obscurity, removed from its
human course, it comes to this.
Later she stood silent as I wrote my message to Marius on an ancient temple wall. I told
about the end of Nicolas, the violinist of the Theater of the Vampires, and I carved my words
deep as any ancient Egyptian craftsman might have done. Epitaph for Nicki, a milestone in
oblivion, which none might ever read or understand.
It was strange to have her there. Strange to have her staying with me hour by hour.
"You won't go back to France, will you?" she asked me finally. "You won't go back on
account of what he's done?"
"The hands?" I asked her. "The cutting off of the hands?"
She looked at me and her face smoothed out as if some shock had robbed it of expression.
But she knew. She had read the letter. What shocked her? The way I said it perhaps.
"You thought I would go back to get revenge?"
She nodded uncertainly. She didn't want to put the idea in my head.
"How could I do that?" I said. "It would be hypocrisy, wouldn't it, when I left Nicolas there
counting on them all to do whatever had to be done?"
The changes in her face were too subtle to describe. I didn't like to see her feel so much. It
wasn't like her.
"The fact is, the little monster was trying to help when he did it, don't you think, when he
cut off the hands. It must have been a lot of trouble to him, really, when he could have burnt
up Nicki so easily without a backward glance."
She nodded, but she looked miserable, and as luck would have it, beautiful, too. "I rather
thought so," she said. "But I didn't think you would agree."
"Oh, I'm monster enough to understand it," I said. "Do you remember what you told me
years ago, before we ever left home? You said it the very day that he came up the mountain
with the merchants to give me the red cloak. You said that his father was so angry with him
for his violin playing that he was threatening to break his hands. Do you think we find our
destiny somehow, no matter what happens? I mean, do you think that even as immortals we
follow some path that was already marked for us when we were alive? Imagine it, the coven
master cut off his hands."
It was clear in the nights that followed that she didn't want to leave me alone. And I sensed
that she would have stayed on account of Nicki's death, no matter where we were. But it
made a difference that we were in Egypt. It helped that she loved these ruins and these
monuments as she had loved none before.
Maybe people had to be dead six thousand years for her to love them. I thought of saying
that to her, teasing her with it a little, but the thought merely came and went. These
monuments were as old as the mountains she loved. The Nile had coursed through the
imagination of man since the dawn of recorded time.
We scaled the pyramids together, we climbed into the arms of the giant Sphinx. We pored
over inscriptions of ancient stone fragments. We studied the mummies one could buy from
thieves for a pittance, bits of old jewelry, pottery, glass. We let the water of the river move
through our fingers, and we hunted the tiny streets of Cairo together, and we went into the
brothels to sit back on the pillows and watch the boys dance and hear the musicians play a
heated erotic music that drowned out for a little while the sound of a violin that was always in
my head.
I found myself rising and dancing wildly to these exotic sounds, imitating the undulations
of those who urged me on, as I lost all sense of time or reason in the wail of the horns, the
strumming of the lutes.
Gabrielle sat still, smiling, with the brim of her soiled white straw hat over her eyes. We
did not talk to each other anymore. She was just some pale and feline beauty, cheek smudged
with dirt, who drifted through the endless night at my side. Her coat cinched by a thick
leather belt, her hair in a braid down her back, she walked with a queen's posture and a
vampire's languor, the curve of her cheek luminous in the darkness, her small mouth a blur of
rose red. Lovely and soon to be gone again, no doubt.
Yet she remained with me even when I leased a lavish little dwelling, once the house of a
Mameluke lord, with gorgeously tiled floors and elaborate tentwork hanging from its ceilings.
She even helped me fill the courtyard with bougainvillea and palms and every kind of
tropical plant until it was a verdant little jungle. She brought in the caged parrots and finches
and brilliant canaries herself.
She even nodded now and then sympathetically when I murmured there were no letters
from Paris, and I was frantic for news.
Why hadn't Roget written to me? Had Paris erupted into riots and mayhem? Well, it would
never touch my distant provincial family, would it? But had something happened to Roget?
Why didn't he write?
She asked me to go upriver with her. I wanted to wait for letters, to question the English
travelers. But I agreed. After all, it was rather remarkable really that she wanted me to come
with her. She was caring for me in her own way.
I knew she'd taken to dressing in fresh white linen frock coats and breeches only to please
me. For me, she brushed out her long hair.
But it did not matter at all. I was sinking. I could feel it. I was drifting through the world as
if it were a dream.
It seemed very natural and reasonable that around me I should see a landscape that looked
exactly as it had thousands of years ago when artists painted it on the walls of royal tombs.
Natural that the palm trees in the moonlight should look exactly as they looked then. Natural
that the peasant should draw his water from the river in the same manner as he had done then.
And the cows he watered were the same too.
Visions of the world when the world had been new.
Had Marius ever stood in these sands?
We wandered through the giant temple of Ramses, enchanted by the millions upon millions
of tiny pictures cut into the walls. I kept thinking of Osiris, but the little figures were
strangers. We prowled the ruins of Luxor. We lay in the riverboat together under the stars.
On our way back to Cairo when we came to the great Colossi of Memnon, she told me in a
passionate whisper how Roman emperors had journeyed to marvel at these statues just as we
did now.
"They were ancient in the times of the Caesars," she said, as we rode our camels through
the cool sands.
The wind was not so bad as it could have been on this night. We could see the immense
stone figures clearly against the deep blue sky. Faces blasted away, they seemed nevertheless
to stare forward, mute witnesses to the passage of time, whose stillness made me sad and
afraid.
I felt the same wonder I had known before the pyramids. Ancient gods, ancient mysteries.
It made the chills rise. And yet what were these figures now but faceless sentinels, rulers of
an endless waste?
"Marius," I whispered to myself. "Have you seen these? Will any one of us endure so
long?"
But my reverie was broken by Gabrielle. She wanted to dismount and walk the rest of the
way to the statues. I was game for it, though I didn't really know what to do with the big
smelly stubborn camels, how to make them kneel down and all that.
She did it. And she left them waiting for us, and we walked through the sand.
"Come with me into Africa, into the jungles," she said. Her face was grave, her voice
unusually soft.
I didn't answer for a moment. Something in her manner alarmed me. Or at least it seemed I
should have been alarmed.
I should have heard a sound as sharp as the morning chime of Hell's Bells.
I didn't want to go into the jungles of Africa. And she knew I didn't. I was anxiously
awaiting news of my family from Roget, and I had it in my mind to seek the cities of the
Orient, to wander through India into China and on to Japan.
"I understand the existence you've chosen," she said. "And I've come to admire the
perseverance with which you pursue it, you must know that."
"I might say the same of you," I said a little bitterly.
She stopped.
We were as near to the colossal statues as one should get, I suppose. And the only thing
that saved them from overwhelming me was that there was nothing near at hand to put them
in scale. The sky overhead was as immense as they were, and the sands endless, and the stars
countless and brilliant and rising forever overhead.
"Lestat," she said slowly, measuring her words, "I am asking you to try, only once, to
move through the world as I do."
The moon shone full on her, but the hat shadowed her small angular white face.
"Forget the house in Cairo," she said suddenly, dropping her voice as if in respect for the
importance of what she said.
"Abandon all your valuables, your clothes, the things that link you with civilization. Come
south with me, up the river into Africa. Travel with me as I travel."
Still I didn't answer. My heart was pounding.
She murmured softly under her breath that we would see the secret tribes of Africa
unknown to the world. We would fight the crocodile and the lion with our bare hands. We
might find the source of the Nile itself.
I began to tremble all over. It was as if the night were full of howling winds. And there was
no place to go.
You are saying you will leave me forever if I don't come. Isn't that it?
I looked up at these horrific statues. I think I said:
"So it comes to this."
And this was why she had stayed close to me, this was why she had done so many little
things to please, this was why we were together now. It had nothing to do with Nicki gone
into eternity. It was another parting that concerned her now.
She shook her head as if communing with herself, debating on how to go on. In a hushed
voice she described to me the heat of tropical nights, wetter, sweeter than this heat.
"Come with me, Lestat," she said. "By day I sleep in the sand. By night I am on the wing
as if I could truly fly. I need no name. I leave no footprints. I want to go down to the very tip
of Africa. I will be a goddess to those I slay."
She approached and slipped her arm about my shoulder and pressed her lips to my cheek,
and I saw the deep glitter of her eyes beneath the brim of her hat. And the moonlight icing her
mouth.
I heard myself sigh. I shook my head.
"I can't and you know it," I said. "I can't do it any more than you can stay with me."
All the way back to Cairo, I thought on it, what had come to me in those painful moments.
What I had known but not said as we stood before the Colossi of Memnon in the sand.
She was already lost to me! She had been for years. I had known it when I came down the
stairs from the room in which I grieved for Nicki and I had seen her waiting for me.
It had all been said in one form or another in the crypt beneath the tower years ago. She
could not give me what I wanted of her. There was nothing I could do to make her what she
would not be. And the truly terrible part was this: she really didn't want anything of me!
She was asking me to come because she felt the obligation to do so. Pity, sadness-maybe
those were also reasons. But what she really wanted was to be free.
She stayed with me as we returned to the city. She did and said nothing.
And I was sinking even lower, silent, stunned, knowing that another dreadful blow would
soon fall. There was the clarity and the horror. She will say her farewell, and I can't prevent
it. When do I start to lose my senses? When do I begin to cry uncontrollably?
Not now.
As we lighted the lamps of the little house, the colors assaulted me-Persian carpets covered
with delicate flowers, the tentwork woven with a million tiny mirrors, the brilliant plumage of
the fluttering birds.
I looked for a packet from Roget but there was none, and I became angry suddenly. Surely
he would have written by now. I had to know what was going on in Paris! Then I became
afraid.
"What the hell is happening in France?" I murmured. "I'll have to go and find other
Europeans. The British, they always have information. They drag their damned Indian tea and
their London Times with them wherever they go."
I was infuriated to see her standing there so still. It was as if something were happening in
the room-that awful sense of tension and anticipation that I'd known in the crypt before
.Armand told us his long tale.
But nothing was happening, only that she was about to leave me forever. She was about to
slip into time forever. And how would we ever find each other again!
"Damn it," I said. "I expected a letter." No servants. They hadn't known when we would be
back. I wanted to send someone to hire musicians. I had just fed, and I was warm and I told
myself that I wanted to dance.
She broke her stillness suddenly. She started to move in a rather deliberate way. With
uncommon directness she went into the courtyard.
I watched her kneel down by the pond. There she lifted two blocks of paving, and she took
out a packet and brushed the sandy earth off it, and she brought it to me.
Even before she brought it into the light I saw it was from Roget. This had come before we
had ever gone up the Nile, and she had hidden it!
"But why did you do this!" I said. I was in a fury. I snatched the package from her and put
it down on the desk.
I was staring at her and hating her, hating her as never before. Not even in the egotism of
childhood had I hated her as I did now!
"Why did you hide this from me!" I said.
"Because I wanted one chance!" she whispered. Her chin was trembling. Her lower lip
quivered and I saw the blood tears. "But without this even," she said, "you have made your
choice."
I reached down and tore the packet apart. The letter slipped out of it, along with folded
clippings from an English paper. I unraveled the letter, my hands shaking, and I started to
read:
Monsieur, As you must know by now, on July 14, the mobs of Paris attacked the Bastille.
The city is in chaos. There have been riots all over France. For months I have sought in vain
to reach your people, to get them out of the country safely if I could.
But on Monday last I received the word that the peasants and tenant farmers had risen
against your father's house. Your brothers, their wives and children, and all who tried to
defend the castle were slain before it was looted. Only your father escaped.
Loyal servants managed to conceal him during the siege and later to get him to the coast.
He is, on this very day, in the city of New Orleans in the former French colony of Louisiana.
And he begs you to come to his aid. He is grief-stricken and among strangers. He begs for
you to come.
There was more. Apologies, assurances, particulars . . . it ceased to make sense.
I put the letter down on the desk. I stared at the wood and the pool of light made by the
lamp.
"Don't go to him," she said.
Her voice was small and insignificant in the silence. But the silence was like an immense
scream.
"Don't go to him," she said again. The tears streaked her face like clown paint, two long
streams of red coming from her eyes.
"Get out," I whispered. The word trailed off and suddenly my voice swelled again. "Get
out," I said. And again my voice didn't stop. It merely went on until I said the words again
with shattering violence: "GET OUT!"
4
I dreamed a dream of family. We were all embracing one another. Even Gabrielle in a
velvet gown was there. The castle was blackened, all burnt up. The treasures I had deposited
were melted or turned into ashes. It always comes back to ashes. But is the old quote actually
ashes to ashes or dust to dust?
Didn't matter. I had gone back and made them all into vampires, and there we were, the
House de Lioncourt, whitefaced beauties even to the bloodsucking baby that lay in the cradle
and the mother who bent to give it the wriggling longtailed gray rat upon which it was to
feed.
We laughed and we kissed one another as we walked through the ashes, my white brothers,
their white wives, the ghostly children chattering together about victims, my blind father,
who like a biblical figure had risen, crying:
"I CAN SEE!"
My oldest brother put his arm around me. He looked marvelous in decent clothes. I'd never
seen him look so good, and the vampiric blood had made him so spare and so spiritual in
expression.
"You know it's a damn good thing you came when you did with all the Dark Gifts." He
laughed cheerfully.
"The Dark Tricks, dear, the Dark Tricks," said his wife.
"Because if you hadn't," he continued, "why, we'd all be dead!"
5
The house was empty. The trunks had been sent on. The ship would leave Alexandria in
two nights. Only a small valise remained with me. On shipboard the son of the Marquis must
now and then change his clothes. And, of course, the violin.
Gabrielle stood by the archway to the garden, slender, longlegged, beautifully angular in
her white cotton garments, the hat on as always, her hair loose.
Was that for me, the long loose hair?
My grief was rising, a tide that included all the losses, the dead and the undead.
But it went away and the sense of sinking returned, the sense of the dream in which we
navigate with or without will.
It struck me that her hair might have been described as a shower of gold, that all the old
poetry makes sense when you look at one whom you have loved. Lovely the angles of her
face, her implacable little mouth.
"Tell me what you need of me, Mother," I said quietly. Civilized this room. Desk. Lamp.
Chair. All my brilliantly colored birds given away, probably for sale in the bazaar. Gray
African parrots that live to be as old as men. Nicki had lived to be thirty.
"Do you require money from me?"
Great beautiful flush to her face, eyes a flash of moving light-blue and violet. For a
moment she looked human. We might as well have been standing in her room at home.
Books, the damp walls, the fire. Was she human then?
The brim of the hat covered her face completely for an instant as she bowed her head.
Inexplicably she asked:
"But where will you go?"
"To a little house in the race Dumaine in the old French city of New Orleans," I answered
coldly, precisely. "And after he has died and is at rest, I haven't the slightest idea."
"You can't mean this," she said.
"I am booked on the next ship out of Alexandria," I said.
"I will go to Naples, then on to Barcelona. I will leave from Lisbon for the New World."
Her face seemed to narrow, her features to sharpen. Her lips moved just a little but she
didn't say anything. And then I saw the tears rising in her eyes, and I felt her emotion as if it
were reaching out to touch me. I looked away, busied myself with something on the desk,
then simply held my hands very still so they wouldn't tremble. I thought, I am glad Nicki took
his hands with him into the fire, because if he had not, I would have to go back to Paris and
get them before I could go on.
"But you can't be going to him!" she whispered.
Him? Oh. My father.
"What does it matter? I am going!" I said.
She moved her head just a little in a negative gesture. She came near to the desk. Her step
was lighter than Armand's.
"Has any of our kind ever made such a crossing?" she asked under her breath.
"Not that I know of. In Rome they said no."
"Perhaps it can't be done, this crossing."
"It can be done. You know it can." We had sailed the seas before in our cork-lined coffins.
Pity the leviathan who troubles me.
She came even nearer and looked down at me. And the pain in her face couldn't be
concealed anymore. Ravishing she was. Why had I ever dressed her in ball gowns or plumed
hats or pearls?
"You know where to reach me," I said, but the bitterness of my tone had no conviction to
it. "The addresses of my banks in London and Rome. Those banks have lived as long as
vampires already. They will always be there. You know all this, you've always known..."
"Stop," she said under her breath. "Don't say these things to me."
What a lie all this was, what a travesty. It was just the kind of exchange she had always
detested, the kind of talk she could never make herself. In my wildest imaginings, I had never
expected it to be like this-that I should say cold things, that she should cry. I thought I would
bawl when she said she was going. I thought I would throw myself at her very feet.
We looked at each other for a long moment, her eyes tinged with red, her mouth almost
quivering.
And then I lost my control.
I rose and I went to her, and I gathered her small, delicate limbs in my arms. I determined
not to let her go, no matter how she struggled. But she didn't struggle, and we both cried
almost silently as if we couldn't make ourselves stop. But she didn't yield to me. She didn't
melt in my embrace.
And then she drew back. She stroked my hair with both her hands, and leant forward and
kissed me on the lips, and then moved away lightly and soundlessly.
"All right, then, my darling," she said.
I shook my head. Words and words and words unspoken. She had no use for them, and
never had.
In her slow, languid way, hips moving gracefully, she went to the door to the garden and
looked up at the night sky before she looked back at me.
"You must promise me something," she said finally.
Bold young Frenchman who moved with the grace of an Arab through places in a hundred
cities where only an alleycat could safely pass.
"Of course," I answered. But I was so broken in spirit now I didn't want to talk anymore.
The colors dimmed. The night was neither hot nor cold. I wished she would just go, yet I was
terrified of the moment when that would happen, when I couldn't get her back.
"Promise me you will never seek to end it," she said, "without first being with me, without
our coming together again."
For a moment I was too surprised to answer. Then I said:
"I will never seek to end it." I was almost scornful. "So you have my promise. It's simple
enough to give. But what about you giving a promise to me? That you'll let me know where
you go from here, where I can reach you-that you won't vanish as if you were something I
imagined-"
I stopped. There had been a note of urgency in my voice, of rising hysteria. I couldn't
imagine her writing a letter or posting it or doing any of the things that mortals habitually did.
It was as if no common nature united us, or ever had.
"I hope you're right in your estimation of yourself," she said.
"I don't believe in anything, Mother," I said. "You told Armand long ago that you believe
you'll find answers in the great jungles and forests; that the stars will finally reveal a vast
truth. But I don't believe in anything. And that makes me stronger than you think."
"Then why am I so afraid for you?" she asked. Her voice was little more than a gasp. I
think I had to see her lips move in order to hear her.
"You sense my loneliness," I answered, "my bitterness at being shut out of life. My
bitterness that I'm evil, that I don't deserve to be loved and yet I need love hungrily. My
horror that I can never reveal myself to mortals. But these things don't stop me, Mother. I'm
too strong for them to stop me. As you said yourself once, I am very good at being what I am.
These things merely now and then make me suffer, that's all."
"I love you, my son," she said.
I wanted to say something about her promising, about the agents in Rome, that she would
write. I wanted to say . . .
"Keep your promise," she said.
And quite suddenly I knew this was our last moment. I knew it and I could do nothing to
change it.
"Gabrielle!" I whispered.
But she was already gone.
The room, the garden outside, the night itself, were silent and still.
Some time before dawn I opened my eyes. I was lying on the floor of the house, and I had
been weeping and then I had slept.
I knew I should start for Alexandria, that I should go as far as I could and then down into
the sand when the sun rose. It would feel so good to sleep in the sandy earth. I also knew that
the garden gate stood open. That all the doors were unlocked.
But I couldn't move. In a cold silent way I imagined myself looking throughout Cairo for
her. Calling her, telling her to come back. It almost seemed for a moment that I had done it,
that, thoroughly humiliated, I had run after her, and I had tried to tell her again about destiny:
that I had been meant to lose her just as Nicki had been meant to lose his hands. Somehow we
had to subvert the destiny. We had to triumph after all.
Senseless that. And I hadn't run after her. I'd hunted and I had come back. She was miles
from Cairo by now. And she was as lost from me as a tiny grain of sand in the air.
Finally after a long time I turned my head. Crimson sky over the garden, crimson light
sliding down the far roof. The sun coming-and the warmth coming and the awakening of a
thousand tiny voices all through the tangled alleyways of Cairo, and a sound that seemed to
come out of the sand and the trees and the patch of grass themselves.
And very slowly, as I heard these things, as I saw the dazzle of the light moving on the
roof, I realized that a mortal was near.
He was standing in the open gate of the garden, peering at my still form within the empty
house. A young fair-haired European in Arab robes, he was. Rather handsome. And by the
early light he saw me, his fellow European lying on the tile floor in the abandoned house.
I lay staring at him as he came into the deserted garden, the illumination of the sky heating
my eyes, the tender skin around them starting to burn. Like a ghost in a white sheet he was in
his clean headdress and robe.
I knew that I had to run. I had to get far away immediately and hide myself from the
coming sun. No chance now to go into the crypt beneath the floor. This mortal was in my lair.
There was not time enough even to kill him and get rid of him, poor unlucky mortal.
Yet I didn't move. And he came nearer, the whole sky flickering behind him, so that his
figure narrowed and became dark.
"Monsieur!" The solicitous whisper, like the woman years and years ago in Notre Dame
who had tried to help me before I made a victim of her and her innocent child. "Monsieur,
what is it? May I be of help?"
Sunburnt face beneath the folds of the white headdress, golden eyebrows glinting, eyes
gray like my own.
I knew I was climbing to my feet, but I didn't will myself to do it. I knew my lips were
curling back from my teeth. And then I heard a snarl rise out of me and saw the shock on his
face.
"Look!" I hissed, the fangs coming down over my lower lip. "Do you see!"
And rushing towards him, I grabbed his wrist and forced his open hand flat against my
face.
"Did you think I was human?" I cried. And then I picked him up, holding him off his feet
before me as he kicked and struggled uselessly. "Did you think I was your brother?" I
shouted. And his mouth opened with a dry rasping noise, and then he screamed.
I hurled him up into the air and out over the garden, his body spinning round with arms and
legs out before it vanished over the shimmering roof.
The sky was blinding fire.
I ran out of the garden gate and into the alleyway. I ran under tiny archways and through
strange streets. I battered down gates and doorways, and hurled mortals out of my path. I bore
through the very walls in front of me, the dust of the plaster rising to choke me, and shot out
again into the packed mud alley and the stinking air. And the light came after me like
something chasing me on foot.
And when I found a burnt-out house with its lattices in ruins, I broke into it and went down
into the garden soil, digging deeper and deeper and deeper until I could not move my arms or
my hands any longer.
I was hanging in coolness and in darkness.
I was safe.
6
I was dying. Or so I thought. I couldn't count how many nights had passed. I had to rise
and go to Alexandria. I had to get across the sea. But this meant moving, turning over in the
earth, giving in to the thirst.
I wouldn't give in.
The thirst came. The thirst went. It was the rack and the fire, and my brain thirsted as my
heart thirsted, and my heart grew bigger and bigger, and louder and louder, and still I
wouldn't give in.
Maybe mortals above could hear my heart. I saw them now and then, spurts of flame
against the darkness, heard their voices, babble of foreign tongue. But more often I saw only
the darkness. Heard only the darkness.
I was finally just the thirst lying in the earth, with red sleep and red dreams, and the slow
knowledge that I was now too weak to push up through the soft sandy clods, too weak,
conceivably, to turn the wheel again.
That's right. I couldn't rise if I wanted to. I couldn't move at all. I breathed. I went on. But
not the way that mortals breathe. My heart sounded in my ears.
Yet I didn't die. I just wasted. Like those tortured beings in the walls under les Innocents,
deserted metaphors of the misery that is everywhere unseen, unrecorded, unacknowledged,
unused.
My hands were claws, and my flesh was shrunk to the bones, and my eyes bulged from the
sockets. Interesting that we can go on like this forever, that even when we don't drink, don't
surrender to the luscious and fatal pleasure, we go on. Interesting that is, if each beat of the
heart wasn't such agony.
And if I could stop thinking: Nicolas de Lenfent is gone. My brothers are gone. Pale taste
of wine, sound of applause. "But don't you think it's good what we do when we are there, that
we make people happy?"
"Good? What are you talking about? Good?"
"That it's good, that it does some good, that there is good in it! Dear God, even if there is
no meaning in this world, surely there can still be goodness. It's good to eat, to drink, to laugh
. . . to be together. . ."
Laughter. That insane music. That din, that dissonance, that never ending shrill articulation
of the meaninglessness . . .
Am I awake? Am I asleep? I am sure of one thing. I am a monster. And because I lie in
torment in the earth, certain human beings move on through the narrow pass of life
unmolested.
Gabrielle may be in the jungles of Africa now.
Sometime or other mortals came into the burnt-out house above, thieves hiding. Too much
babble of foreign tongue. But all I had to do was sink deeper inside myself, withdraw even
from the cool sand around me not to hear them.
Am I really trapped?
Stink of blood above.
Maybe they are the last hope, these two camping in the neglected garden, that the blood
will draw me upwards, that it will make me turn over and stretch out these hideous-they must
be-claws.
I will frighten them to death before I even drink. Shameful. I was always such a beautiful
little devil, as the expression goes. Not now.
Now and then, it seems, Nicki and I are engaged in our best conversations. "I am beyond
all pain and sin," he says to me. "But do you feel anything?" I ask. "Is that what it means to
be free of this, that you no longer feel?" Not misery, not thirst, not ecstasy? It is interesting to
me in these moments that our concept of heaven is one of ecstasy. The joys of heaven. That
our concept of hell is pain. The fires of hell. So we don't think it very good not to feel
anything, do we?
Can you give it up, Lestat? Or isn't it true that you'd rather fight the thirst with this hellish
torment than die and feel nothing? At least you have the desire for blood, hot and delicious
and filling every particle of you-blood.
How long are these mortals going to be here, above in my ruined garden? One night, two
nights? I left the violin in the house where I lived. I have to get it, give it to some young
mortal musicians, someone who will...
Blessed silence. Except for the playing of the violin. And Nicki's white fingers stabbing at
the strings, and the bow streaking in the light, and the faces of the immortal marionettes, half
entranced, half amused. One hundred years ago, the people of Paris would have got him. He
wouldn't have had to bum himself. Got me too maybe. But I doubt it.
No, there never would have been any witches' place for me.
He lives on in my mind now. Pious mortal phrase. And what kind of life is that? I don't like
living here myself! What does it mean to live on in the mind of another? Nothing, I think.
You aren't really there, are you?
Cats in the garden. Stink of cat blood.
Thank you, but I would rather suffer, rather dry up like a husk with teeth.
7
There was a sound in the night. What was it like?
The giant bass drum beaten slowly in the street of my childhood village as the Italian
players announced the little drama to be performed from the back of their painted wagon. The
great bass drum that I myself had pounded through the street of the town during those
precious days when I, the runaway boy, had been one of them.
But it was stronger than that. The booming of a cannon echoing through valleys and
mountain passes? I felt it in my bones. I opened my eyes in the dark, and I knew it was
drawing nearer.
The rhythm of steps, it had, or was it the rhythm of a heart beating? The world was filled
with the sound.
It was a great ominous din that drew closer and closer. And yet some part of me knew
there was no real sound, nothing a mortal ear could hear, nothing that rattled the china on its
shelf or the glass windows. Or made the cats streak to the top of the wall.
Egypt lies in silence. Silence covers the desert on both sides of the mighty river. There is
not even the bleat of sheep or the lowing of cattle. Or a woman crying somewhere.
Yet it was deafening, this sound.
For one second I was afraid. I stretched in the earth. I forced my fingers up towards the
surface. Sightless, weightless, I was floating in the soil, and I couldn't breathe suddenly, I
couldn't scream, and it seemed that if I could have screamed, I would have cried out so loud
all the glass for miles about me would have been shattered. Crystal goblets would have been
blown to bits, windows exploded.
The sound was louder, nearer. I tried to roll over and to gain the air but I couldn't.
And it seemed then I saw the thing, the figure approaching. A glimmer of red in the dark.
It was someone coming, this sound, some creature so powerful that even in the silence the
trees and the flowers and the air itself did feel it. The dumb creatures of the earth did know.
The vermin ran from it, the felines darting out of its path.
Maybe this is death, I thought.
Maybe by some sublime miracle it is alive, Death, and it takes us into its arms, and it is no
vampire, this thing, it is the very personification of the heavens.
And we rise up and up into the stars with it. We go past the angels and the saints, past
illumination itself and into the divine darkness, into the void, as we pass out of existence. In
oblivion we are forgiven all things.
The destruction of Nicki becomes a tiny pinpoint of vanishing light. The death of my
brothers disintegrates into the great peace of the inevitable.
I pushed at the soil. I kicked at it, but my hands and legs were too weak. I tasted the sandy
mud in my mouth. I knew I had to rise, and the sound was telling me to rise.
I felt it again like the roar of artillery: the cannon boom.
And quite completely I understood that it was looking for me, this sound, it was seeking
me out. It was searching like a beam of light. I couldn't lie here anymore. I had to answer.
I sent it the wildest current of welcome. I told it I was here, and I heard my own miserable
breaths as I struggled to move my lips. And the sound grew so loud that it was pulsing
through every fiber of me. The earth was moving with it around me.
Whatever it was, it had come into the burnt-out ruined house.
The door had been broken away, as if the hinges had been anchored not in iron but in
plaster. I saw all this against the backdrop of my closed eyes. I saw it moving under the olive
trees. It was in the garden.
In a frenzy again I clawed towards the air. But the low, common noise I heard now was of
a digging through the sand from above.
I felt something soft like velvet brush my face. And I saw overhead the gleam of the dark
sky and the drift of the clouds like a veil over the stars, and never had the heavens in all their
simplicity looked so blessed.
My lungs filled with air.
I let out a loud moan at the pleasure of it. But all these sensations were beyond pleasure.
To breathe, to see light, these were miracles. And the drumming sound, the great deafening
boom seemed the perfect accompaniment.
And he, the one who had been looking for me, the one from whom the sound came, was
standing over me.
The sound melted; it disintegrated until it was no more than the aftersound of a violin
string. And I was rising, just as if I were being lifted, up out of the earth, though this figure
stood with its hands at its side.
At last, it lifted its arms to enfold me and the face I saw was beyond the realm of
possibility. What one of us could have such a face? What did we know of patience, of
seeming goodness, of compassion? No, it wasn't one of us. It couldn't have been. And yet it
was. Preternatural flesh and blood like mine.
Iridescent eyes, gathering the light from all directions, tiny eyelashes like strokes of gold
from the finest pen.
And this creature, this powerful vampire, was holding me upright and looking into my
eyes, and I believe that I said some mad thing, voiced some frantic thought, that I knew now
the secret of eternity.
"Then tell it to me," he whispered, and he smiled. The purest image of human love.
"O God, help me. Damn me to the pit of hell." This was my voice speaking. I can't look on
this beauty.
I saw my arms like bones, hands like birds' talons. Nothing can live and be what I am now,
this wraith. I looked down at my legs. They were sticks. The clothing was falling off me. I
couldn't stand or move, and the remembered sensation of blood flowing in my mouth
suddenly overcame me.
Like a dull blaze before me I saw his red velvet clothes, the cloak that covered him to the
ground, the dark red gloved hands with which he held me. His hair was thick, white and gold
strands mingled in waves fallen loosely around his face, and over his broad forehead. And the
blue eyes might have been brooding under their heavy golden brows had they not been so
large, so softened with the feeling expressed in the voice.
A man in the prime of life at the moment of the immortal gift. And the square face, with its
slightly hollowed cheeks, its long full mouth, stamped with terrifying gentleness and peace.
"Drink," he said, eyebrows rising slightly, lips shaping the word carefully, slowly, as if it
were a kiss.
As Magnus had done on that lethal night so many eons ago, he raised his hand now and
moved the cloth back from his throat. The vein, dark purple beneath the translucent
preternatural skin, offered itself. And the sound commenced again, that overpowering sound,
and it lifted me right off the earth and drew me into it.
Blood like light itself, liquid fire. Our blood.
And my arms gathering incalculable strength, winding round his shoulders, my face
pressed to his cool white flesh, the blood shooting down into my loins and every vessel in my
body ignited with it. How many centuries had purified this blood, distilled its power?
It seemed beneath the roar of the flow he spoke. He said again:
"Drink, my young one, my wounded one."
I felt his heart swell, his body undulate, and we were sealed against each other.
I think I heard myself say:
"Marius."
And he answered:
"Yes."
Part VII
Ancient Magic, Ancient Mysteries
1
When I awoke, I was on board a ship. I could hear the creak of the boards, smell the sea. I
could smell the blood of those who manned the ship. And I knew that it was a galley because
I could hear the rhythm of the oars under the low rumbling of the giant canvas sails.
I couldn't open my eyes, couldn't make my limbs move. Yet I was calm. I didn't thirst. In
fact, I experienced an extraordinary sense of peace. My body was warm as if I had only just
fed, and it was pleasant to lie there, to dream waking dreams on the gentle undulation of the
sea.
Then my mind began to clear.
I knew that we were slipping very fast through rather still waters. And that the sun had just
gone down. The early evening sky was darkening, the wind was dying away. And the sound
of the oars dipping and rising was as soothing as it was clear.
My eyes were now open.
I was no longer in the coffin. I had just come out of the rear cabin of the long vessel and I
was standing on the deck.
I breathed the fresh salt air and I saw the lovely incandescent blue of the twilight sky and
the multitude of brilliant stars overhead. Never from land do the stars look like that. Never
are they so near.
There were dark mountainous islands on either side of us, cliffs sprinkled with tiny
flickering lights. The air was full of the scent of green things, of flowers, of land itself.
And the small sleek vessel was moving fast to a narrow pass through the cliffs ahead.
I felt uncommonly clearheaded and strong. There was a moment's temptation to try to
figure out how I had gotten here, whether I was in the Aegean or the Mediterranean itself, to
know when we had left Cairo and if the things I remembered had really taken place.
But this slipped away from me in some quiet acceptance of what was happening.
Marius was up ahead on the bridge before the mainmast.
I walked towards the bridge and stood beside it, looking up.
He was wearing the long red velvet cloak he had worn in Cairo, and his full white blond
hair was blown back by the wind. His eyes were fixed on the pass before us, the dangerous
rocks that protruded from the shallow water, his left hand gripping the rail of the little deck.
I felt an overpowering attraction to him, and the sense of peace in me expanded.
There was no forbidding grandeur to his face or his stance, no loftiness that might have
humbled me and made me afraid. There was only a quiet nobility about him, his eyes rather
wide as they looked forward, the mouth suggesting a disposition of exceptional gentleness as
before.
Too smooth the face, yes. It had the sheen of scar tissue, it was so smooth, and it might
have startled, even frightened, in a dark street. It gave off a faint light. But the expression was
too warm, too human in its goodness to do anything but invite.
Armand might have looked like a god out of Caravaggio, Gabrielle a marble archangel at
the threshold of a church.
But this figure above me was that of an immortal man.
And the immortal man, with his right hand outstretched before him, was silently but
unmistakably piloting the ship through the rocks before the pass.
The waters around us shimmered like molten metal, flashing azure, then silver, then black.
They sent up a great white froth as the shallow waves beat upon the rocks.
I drew closer and as quietly as I could I climbed the small steps to the bridge.
Marius didn't take his eyes off the waters for an instant, but he reached out with his left
hand and took my hand, which was at my side.
Warmth. Unobtrusive pressure. But this wasn't the moment for speaking and I was
surprised that he had acknowledged me at all.
His eyebrows came together and his eyes narrowed slightly, and, as if impelled by his
silent command, the oarsmen slowed their stroke.
I was fascinated by what I was watching, and I realized as I deepened my own
concentration that I could feel the power emanating from him, a low pulse that came in time
with his heart.
I could also hear mortals on the surrounding cliffs, and on the narrow island beaches
stretching out to our right and to our left. I saw them gathered on the promontories, or
running towards the edge of the water with torches in their hands. I could hear thoughts
ringing out like voices from them as they stood in the thin evening darkness looking out to
the lanterns of our ship. The language was Greek and not known to me, but the message was
clear:
The lord is passing. Come down and look: the lord is passing. And the word "lord"
incorporated in some vague way the supernatural in its meaning. And a reverence, mingled
with excitement, emanated like a chorus of overlapping whispers from the shores.
I was breathless listening to this! I thought of the mortal I'd terrified in Cairo, the old
debacle on Renaud's stage. But for those two humiliating incidents, I'd passed through the
world invisibly for ten years, and these people, these dark-clad peasants gathered to watch the
passing of the ship, knew what Marius was. Or at least they knew something of what he was.
They were not saying the Greek word for vampire, which I had come to understand.
But we were leaving the beaches behind. The cliffs were closing on either side of us. The
ship glided with its oars above water. The high walls diminished the sky's light.
In a few moments, I saw a great silver bay opening before us, and a sheer wall of rock
rising straight ahead, while gentler slopes enclosed the water on either side. The rock face
was so high and so steep that I could make out nothing at the top.
The oarsmen cut their speed as we came closer. The boat was turning ever so slightly to the
side. And as we drifted on towards the cliff, I saw the dim shape of an old stone embankment
covered with gleaming moss. The oarsmen had lifted their oars straight towards the sky.
Marius was as still as ever, his hand exerting a gentle force on mine, as with the other he
pointed towards the embankment and the cliff that rose like the night itself, our lanterns
sending up their glare on the wet rock.
When we were no more than five or six feet from the embankment-dangerously close for a
ship of this size and weight it seemed-I felt the ship stop.
Then Marius took my hand and we went across the deck together and mounted the side of
the ship. A dark-haired servant approached and placed a sack in Marius's hand. And together,
Marius and I leapt over the water to the stone embankment, easily clearing the distance
without a sound.
I glanced back to see the ship rocking slightly. The oars were being lowered again. Within
seconds the ship was heading for the distant lights of a tiny town on the far side of the bay.
Marius and I stood alone in the darkness, and when the ship had become only a dark speck
on the glimmering water, he pointed to a narrow stairway cut into the rock.
"Go before me, Lestat," he said.
It felt good to be climbing. It felt good to be moving up swiftly, following the rough-cut
steps and the zigzag turns, and feeling the wind get stronger, and seeing the water become
ever more distant and frozen as if the movement of the waves had been stopped.
Marius was only a few steps behind me. And again, I could feel and hear that pulse of
power. It was like a vibration in my bones.
The rough-cut steps disappeared less than halfway up the cliff, and I was soon following a
path not wide enough for a mountain goat. Now and then boulders or outcroppings of stone
made a margin between us and a possible fall to the water below. But most of the time the
path itself was the only outcropping on the cliff face, and as we went higher and higher, even
I became afraid to look down.
Once, with my hand around a tree branch, I looked back and saw Marius moving steadily
towards me, the bag slung over his shoulder, his right hand hanging free. The bay, the distant
little town; and the harbor, all this appeared toylike, a map made by a child on a tabletop with
a mirror and sand and tiny bits of wood. I could even see beyond the pass into the open water,
and the deep shadowy shapes of other islands rising out of the motionless sea. Marius smiled
and waited. Then he whispered very politely:
"Go on."
I must have been spellbound. I started up again and didn't stop until I reached the summit. I
crawled over a last jut of rocks and weeds and climbed to my feet in soft grass.
Higher rocks and cliffs lay ahead, and seeming to grow out of them was an immense
fortress of a house. There were lights in its windows, lights on its towers.
Marius put his arm around my shoulder and we went towards the entrance.
I felt his grip loosen on me as he paused in front of the massive door. Then came the sound
of a bolt sliding back inside. The door swung open and his grip became firm again. He guided
me into the hallway where a pair of torches provided an ample light.
I saw with a little shock that there was no one there who could have moved the bolt or
opened the door for us. He turned and he looked at the door and the door closed.
"Slide the bolt," he said.
I wondered why he didn't do it the way he had done everything else. But I put it in place
immediately as he asked.
"It's easier that way, by far," he said, and a little mischief came into his expression. "I'll
show you to the room where you may sleep safely, and you may come to me when you
wish."
I could hear no one else in the house. But mortals had been here, that I could tell. They'd
left their scent here and there. And the torches had all been lighted only a short time ago.
We went up a little stairway to the right, and when I came out into the room that was to be
mine, I was stunned.
It was a huge chamber, with one entire wall open to a stonerailed terrace that hung over the
sea.
When I turned around, Marius was gone. The sack was gone. But Nicki's violin and my
valise of belongings lay on a stone table in the middle of the room.
A current of sadness and relief passed through me at the sight of the violin. I had been
afraid that I had lost it.
There were stone benches in the room, a lighted oil lamp on a stand. And in a far niche was
a pair of heavy wooden doors.
I went to these and opened them and found a little passage which turned sharply in an L.
Beyond the bend was a sarcophagus with a plain lid. It had been cleanly fashioned out of
diorite, which to my knowledge is one of the hardest stones on earth. The lid was immensely
heavy, and when I examined the inside of it I saw that it was plated in iron and contained a
bolt that could be slipped from within.
Several glittering objects lay on the bottom of the box itself.
As I lifted them, they sparkled almost magically in the light that leaked in from the room.
There was a golden mask, its features carefully molded, the lips closed, the eye holes
narrow but open, attached to a hood made up of layered plates of hammered gold. The mask
itself was heavy but the hood was very light and very flexible, each little plate strung to the
others by gold thread. And there was also a pair of leather gloves covered completely in tinier
more delicate gold plates like scales. And finally a large folded blanket of the softest red
wool with one side sewn with larger gold plates.
I realized that if I put on this mask and these gloves-if I laid over me the blanket-then I
would be protected from the light if anyone opened the lid of the sarcophagus while I slept.
But it wasn't likely that anyone could get into the sarcophagus. And the doors of this Lshaped
chamber were also covered with iron, and they too had their iron bolt.
Yet there was a charm to these mysterious objects. I liked to touch them, and I pictured
myself wearing them as I slept. The mask reminded me of the Greek masks of comedy and
tragedy.
All of these things suggested the burial of an ancient king.
I left these things a little reluctantly.
I came back out into the room, took off the garments I'd worn during my nights in the earth
in Cairo, and put on fresh clothes. I felt rather absurd standing in this timeless place in a
violet blue frock coat with pearl buttons and the usual lace shirt and diamond buckle satin
shoes, but these were the only clothes I had. I tied back my hair in a black ribbon like any
proper eighteenth-century gentleman and went in search of the master of the house.
2
Torches had been lighted throughout the house. Doors lay open. Windows were uncovered
as they looked out over the firmament and the sea.
And as I left the barren little stairs that led down from my room, I realized that for the first
time in my wandering I was truly in the safe refuge of an immortal being, furnished and
stocked with all the things that an immortal being might want.
Magnificent Grecian urns stood on pedestals in the corridors, great bronze statues from the
Orient in their various niches, exquisite plants bloomed at every window and terrace open to
the sky. Gorgeous rugs from India, Persia, China covered the marble floors wherever I
walked.
I came upon giant stuffed beasts mounted in lifelike attitudes-the brown bear, the lion, the
tiger, even the elephant standing in his own immense chamber, lizards as big as dragons,
birds of prey clutching dried branches made to look like the limbs of real trees.
But the brilliantly colored murals covering every surface from floor to ceiling dominated
all.
In one chamber was a dark vibrant painting of the sunburnt Arabian desert complete with
an exquisitely detailed caravan of camels and turbaned merchants moving over the sand. In
another room a jungle came to life around me, swarming with delicately rendered tropical
blossoms, vines, carefully drawn leaves.
The perfection of the illusion startled me, enticed me, but the more I peered into the
pictures the more I saw.
There were creatures everywhere in the texture of the jungle-insects, birds, worms in the
soil-a million aspects of the scene that gave me the feeling, finally, that I had slipped out of
time and space into something that was more than a painting. Yet it was all quite flat upon the
wall.
I was getting dizzy. Everywhere I turned walls gave out on new vistas. I couldn't name
some of the tints and hues I saw.
As for the style of all this painting, it baffled me as much as it delighted me. The technique
seemed utterly realistic, using the classical proportions and skills that one sees in all the later
Renaissance painters: da Vinci, Raphael, Michelangelo, as well as the painters of more recent
times, Wateau, Fragonard. The use of light was spectacular. Living creatures seemed to
breathe as I looked on.
But the details. The details couldn't have been realistic or in proportion. There were simply
too many monkeys in the jungle, too many bugs crawling on the leaves. There were
thousands of tiny insects in one painting of a summer sky.
I came into a large gallery walled on either side by painted men and women staring at me,
and I almost cried out. Figures from all ages these were-bedouins, Egyptians, then Greeks
and Romans, and knights in armor, and peasants and kings and queens. There were
Renaissance people in doublets and leggings, the Sun King with his massive mane of curls,
and finally the people of our own age.
But again, the details made me feel as if I were imagining them-the droplets of water
clinging to a cape, the cut on the side of a face, the spider half-crushed beneath a polished
leather boot.
I started to laugh. It wasn't funny. It was just delightful. I began to laugh and laugh.
I had to force myself out of this gallery and the only thing that gave me the willpower was
the sight of a library, blazing with light.
Walls and walls of books and rolled manuscripts, giant glistening world globes in their
wooden cradles, busts of the ancient Greek gods and goddesses, great sprawling maps.
Newspapers in all languages lay in stacks on tables. And there were strewn everywhere
curious objects. Fossils, mummified hands, exotic shells. There were bouquets of dried
flowers, figurines and fragments of old sculpture, alabaster jars covered with Egyptian
hieroglyphs.
And everywhere in the center of the room, scattered among the tables and the glass cases,
were comfortable chairs with footstools, and candelabra or oil lamps.
In fact, the impression was one of comfortable messiness, of great long hours of pure
enjoyment, of a place that was human in the extreme. Human knowledge, human artifacts,
chairs in which humans night sit.
I stayed a long time here, perusing the Latin and Greek titles. I felt a little drunk, as if I'd
happened on a mortal with a lot of wine in his blood.
But I had to find Marius. I went on out of this room, down a little stairs, and through
another painted hallway to an even larger room that was also full of light.
I heard the singing of the birds and smelled the perfume of the flowers before I even
reached this place. And then I found myself lost in a forest of cages. There were not only
birds of all sizes and colors here, there were monkeys and baboons, all of them gone wild in
their little prisons as I made my way around the room.
Potted plants crowded against the cages-ferns and banana trees, cabbage roses,
moonflower, jasmine, and other sweetly fragrant nighttime vines. There were purple and
white orchids, waxed flowers that trapped insects in their maw, little trees groaning with
peaches and lemons and pears.
When I finally emerged from this little paradise, it was into a hall of sculptures equal to
any gallery in the Vatican museum. And I glimpsed adjoining chambers full of paintings,
Oriental furnishings, mechanical toys.
Of course I was no longer lingering on each object or new discovery. To learn the contents
of this house would have taken a lifetime. And I pressed on.
I didn't know where I was going. But I knew that I was being allowed to see all these
things.
Finally I heard the unmistakable sound of Marius, that low rhythmic beat of the heart
which I had heard in Cairo. And I moved toward it.
3
I came into a brightly illuminated eighteenth Century salon. The stone walls had been
covered in fine rosewood paneling with framed mirrors rising to the ceiling. There were the
usual painted chests, upholstered chairs, dark and lush landscapes, porcelain clocks. A small
collection of books in the glass-doored bookcases, a newspaper of recent date lying on a
small table beside a brocaded winged chair.
High narrow French doors opened onto the stone terrace. where banks of white lilies and
red roses gave off their powerful perfume.
And there, with his back to me, at the stone railing stood an eighteenth-century man.
It was Marius when he turned around and gestured for me to come out.
He was dressed as I was dressed. The frock coat was red, not violet, the lace Valenciennes,
not Bruxelles. But he wore very much the same costume, his shining hair tied back loosely in
a dark ribbon just as mine was, and he looked not at all ethereal as Armand might have, but
rather like a superpresence, a creature of impossible whiteness and perfection who was
nevertheless connected to everything around him -the clothes he wore, the stone railing on
which he laid his hand, even the moment itself in which a small cloud passed over the bright
half moon.
I savored the moment: that he and I were about to speak, that I was really here. I was still
clearheaded as I had been on the ship. I couldn't feel thirst. And I sensed that it was his blood
in me that was sustaining me. All the old mysteries collected in me, arousing me and
sharpening me. Did Those Who Must Be Kept lie somewhere on this island? Would all these
things be known?
I went up to the railing and stood beside him, glancing out over the sea. His eyes were now
fixed on an island not a half mile off the shore below. He was listening to something that I
could not hear. And the side of his face, in the light from the open doors behind us, looked
too frighteningly like stone.
But immediately, he turned to me with a cheerful expression, the smooth face vitalized
impossibly for an instant, and then he put his arm around me and guided me back into the
room.
He walked with the same rhythm as a mortal man, the step light but firm, the body moving
through space in the predictable way.
He led me to a pair of winged chairs that faced each other and there we sat down. This was
more or less the center of the room. The terrace was to my right, and we had a clear
illumination from the chandelier above as well as a dozen or so candelabra and sconces on
the paneled walls.
Natural, civilized it all was. And Marius settled in obvious comfort on the brocade
cushions and let his fingers curl around the arms of the chair.
As he smiled, he looked entirely human. All the lines, the animation were there until the
smile melted again.
I tried not to stare at him, but I couldn't help it.
And something mischievous crept into his face.
My heart was skipping.
"What would be easier for you?" he asked in French. "That I tell you why I brought you
here, or that you tell me why you asked to see me?"
"Oh, the former would be easier," I said. "You talk."
He laughed in a soft ingratiating fashion.
"You're a remarkable creature," he said. "I didn't expect you to go down into the earth so
soon. Most of us experience the first death much later-after a century, maybe even two."
"The first death? You mean it's common-to go into the earth the way I did?"
"Among those who survive, it's common. We die. We rise again. Those who don't go into
the earth for periods of time usually do not last."
I was amazed, but it made perfect sense. And the awful thought struck me that if only
Nicki had gone down into the earth instead of into the fire- But I couldn't think of Nicki now.
I would start asking inane questions if I did. Is Nicki somewhere? Has Nicki stopped? Are
my brothers somewhere? Have they simply stopped?
"But I shouldn't have been so surprised that it happened when it did in your case," he
resumed as if he hadn't heard these thoughts, or didn't want to address them just yet. "You've
lost too much that was precious to you. You saw and learned a great deal very fast."
"How do you know what's been happening to me?" I asked.
Again, he smiled. He almost laughed. It was astonishing the warmth emanating from him,
the immediacy. The manner of his speech was lively and absolutely current. That is, he spoke
like a well-educated Frenchman.
"I don't frighten you, do I?" he asked.
"I didn't think that you were trying to," I said.
"I'm not." He made an offhand gesture. "But your selfpossession is a little surprising,
nevertheless. To answer your question, I know things that happen to our kind all over the
world. And frankly I do not always understand how or why I know. The power increases with
age as do all our powers, but it remains inconsistent, not easily controlled. There are moments
when I can hear what is happening with our kind in Rome or even in Paris. And when another
calls to me as you have done, I can hear the call over amazing distances. I can find the source
of it, as you have seen for yourself.
"But information comes to me in other ways as well. I know of the messages you left for
me on walls throughout Europe because I read them. And I've heard of you from others. And
sometimes you and I have been near to each other-nearer than you ever supposed-and I have
heard your thoughts. I can hear your thoughts now, of course, as I'm sure you realize. But I
prefer to communicate with words."
"Why?" I asked. "I thought the older ones would dispense with speech altogether."
"Thoughts are imprecise," he said. "If I open my mind to you I cannot really control what
you read there. And when I read your mind it is possible for me to misunderstand what I hear
or see. I prefer to use speech and let my mental facilities work with it. I like the alarm of
sound to announce my important communications. For my voice to be received. I do not like
to penetrate the thoughts of another without warning. And quite frankly. I think speech is the
greatest gift mortals and immortals share."
I didn't know what to answer to this. Again, it made perfect sense. Yet I found myself
shaking my head. "And your manner," I said. "You don't move the way Armand or Magnus
moved, the way I thought the ancient ones-"
"You mean like a phantom? Why should I?" He laughed again, softly, charming me. He
slumped back in the chair a little further and raised his knee, resting his foot on the seat
cushion just as a man might in his private study.
"There were times, of course," he said, "when all of that was very interesting. To glide
without seeming to take steps, to assume physical positions that are uncomfortable or
impossible for mortals. To fly short distances and land without a sound. To move objects by
the mere wish to do so. But it can be crude, finally. Human gestures are elegant. There is
wisdom in the flesh, in the way the human body does things. I like the sound of my foot
touching the ground, the feel of objects in my fingers. Besides, to fly even short distances and
to move things by sheer will alone is exhausting. I can do it when I have to, as you've seen,
but it's much easier to use my hands to do things."
I was delighted by this and didn't try to hide it.
"A singer can shatter a glass with the proper high note," he said, "but the simplest way for
anyone to break a glass is simply to drop it on the floor."
I laughed outright this time.
I was already getting used to the shifts in his face between masklike perfection and
expression, and the steady vitality of his gaze that united both. The impression remained one
of evenness and openness-of a startlingly beautiful and perceptive man.
But what I could not get used to was the sense of presence, that something immensely
powerful, dangerously powerful, was so contained and immediately there.
I became a little agitated suddenly, a little overwhelmed. I felt the unaccountable desire to
weep.
He leaned forward and touched the back of my hand with his fingers, and a shock coursed
through me. We were connected in the touch. And though his skin was silky like the skin of
all vampires, it was less pliant. It was like being touched by a stone hand in a silk glove.
"I brought you here because I want to tell you what I know," he said. "I want to share with
you whatever secrets I possess. For several reasons, you have attracted me."
I was fascinated. And I felt the possibility of an overpowering love.
"But I warn you," he said, "there's a danger in this. I don't possess the ultimate answers. I
can't tell you who made the world or why man exists. I can't tell you why we exist. I can only
tell you more about us than anyone else has told you so far. I can show you Those Who Must
Be Kept and tell you what I know of them. I can tell you why I think I have managed to
survive for so long. This knowledge may change you somewhat. That's all knowledge ever
really does, I suppose..."
"Yes-"
"But when I've given all I have to give, you will be exactly where you were before: an
immortal being who must find his own reasons to exist."
"Yes," I said, "reasons to exist." My voice was a little bitter. But it was good to hear it
spelled out that way.
But I felt a dark sense of myself as a hungry, vicious creature, who did a very good job of
existing without reasons, a powerful vampire who always took exactly what he wanted, no
matter who said what. I wondered if he knew how perfectly awful I was.
The reason to kill was the blood.
Acknowledged. The blood and the sheer ecstasy of the blood. And without it we are husks
as I was in the Egyptian earth.
"Just remember my warning," he said, "that the circumstances will be the same afterwards.
Only you might be changed. You might be more bereft than before you came here."
"But why have you chosen to reveal things to me?" I asked. "Surely others have gone
looking for you. You must know where Armand is."
"There are several reasons, as I told you," he said. "And probably the strongest reason is
the manner in which you sought me. Very few beings really seek knowledge in this world.
Mortal or immortal, few really ask. On the contrary, they try to wring from the unknown the
answers they have already shaped in their own minds-justifications, confirmations, forms of
consolation without which they can't go on. To really ask is to open the door to the
whirlwind. The answer may annihilate the question and the questioner. But you have been
truly asking since you left Paris ten years ago."
I understood this, but only inarticulately.
"You have few preconceptions," he said. "In fact, you astound me because you admit to
such extraordinary simplicity. You want a purpose. You want love."
"True," I said with a little shrug. "Rather crude, isn't it?"
He gave another soft laugh.
"No. Not really. It's as if eighteen hundred years of Western civilization have produced an
innocent."
"An innocent? You can't be speaking of me."
"There is so much talk in this century of the nobility of the savage," he explained, "of the
corrupting force of civilization, of the way we must find our way back to the innocence that
has been lost. Well, it's all nonsense really. Truly primitive people can be monstrous in their
assumptions and expectations.
They cannot conceive of innocence. Neither can children. But civilization has at last
created men who behave innocently. For the first time they look about themselves and say,
'What the hell is all this!"'
"True. But I'm not innocent," I said. "Godless yes. I come from godless people, and I'm
glad of it. But I know what good and evil are in a very practical sense, and I am Typhon, the
slayer of his brother, not the killer of Typhon, as you must know."
He nodded with a slight lift of his eyebrows. He did not have to smile anymore to look
human. I was seeing an expression of emotion now even when there were no lines
whatsoever in his face.
"But you don't seek any system to justify it either," he said. "That's what I mean by
innocence. You're guilty of killing mortals because you've been made into something that
feeds on blood and death, but you're not guilty of lying, of creating great dark and evil
systems of thought within yourself."
"True."
"To be godless is probably the first step to innocence," he said, "to lose the sense of sin and
subordination, the false grief for things supposed to be lost."
"So by innocence you mean not an absence of experience, but an absence of illusions."
"An absence of need for illusions," he said. "A love of and respect for what is right before
your eyes."
I sighed. I sat back in the chair for the first time, thinking this over, what it had to do with
Nicki and what Nicki said about the light, always the light. Had he meant this?
Marius seemed now to be pondering. He too was sitting back in his chair, as he had been
all along, and he was looking off at the night sky beyond the open doors, his eyes narrow, his
mouth a little tense.
"But it wasn't merely your spirit that attracted me," he said, "your honesty, if you will. It
was the way you came into being as one of us."
"Then you know all that, too."
"Yes, everything," he said, dismissing that. "You have come into being at the end of an era,
at a time when the world faces changes undreamed of. And it was the same with me. I was
born and grew to manhood in a time when the ancient world, as we call it now, was coming
to a close. Old faiths were worn out. A new god was about to rise."
"When was this time?" I asked excitedly.
"In the years of Augustus Caesar, when Rome had just become an empire, when faith in
the gods was, for all lofty purposes, dead."
I let him see the shock and the pleasure spread over my face. I never doubted him for a
moment. I put my hand to my head as if I had to steady myself a little.
But he went on:
"The common people of those days," he said, "still believed in religion just as they do now.
And for them it was custom, superstition, elemental magic, the use of ceremonies whose
origins were lost in antiquity, just as it is today. But the world of those who originated ideasthose
who ruled and advanced the course of history-was a godless and hopelessly
sophisticated world like that of Europe in this day and age."
"When I read Cicero and Ovid and Lucretius, it seemed so to me." I said.
He nodded and gave a little shrug.
"It has taken eighteen hundred years," he said, "to come back to the skepticism, the level of
practicality that was our daily frame of mind then. But history is by no means repeating itself.
That is the amazing thing."
"How do you mean?"
"Look around you! Completely new things are happening in Europe. The value placed
upon human life is higher than ever before. Wisdom and philosophy are coupled with new
discoveries in science, new inventions which will completely alter the manner in which
humans live. But that is a story unto itself. That is the future. The point is that you were born
on the cusp of the old way of seeing things. And so was I. You came of age without faith, and
yet you aren't cynical. And so it was with me. We sprang up from a crack between faith and
despair, as it were."
And Nicki fell into that crack and perished, I thought.
"That's why your questions are different," he said, "from those who were born to
immortality under the Christian god."
I thought of my conversation with Gabrielle in Cairo my last conversation. I myself had
told her this was my strength.
"Precisely," he said. "So you and I have that in common. We did not grow to manhood
expecting very much of others. And the burden of conscience was private, terrible though it
might be."
"But was it under the Christian god . . . in the very first days of the Christian god that you
were-born to immortality-as you said?"
"No," he said with a hint of disgust. "We never served the Christian god. That you can put
out of your mind right now."
"But the forces of good and evil behind the names of Christ and Satan?"
"Again, they have very little if anything to do with us."
"But the concept of evil in some form surely. . ."
"No. We are older than that, Lestat. The men that made me were worshipers of gods, true.
And they believed in things that I did not believe. But their faith hearkened back to a time
long before the temples of the Roman Empire, when the shedding of innocent human blood
could be done on a massive scale in the name of good. And evil was the drought and the
plague of the locust and the death of the crops. I was made what I am by these men in the
name of good."
This was too enticing, too enthralling.
All the old myths came to my mind, in a chorus of dazzling poetry. Osiris was a good god
to the Egyptians, a god of the corn. What has this to do with us? My thoughts were spinning.
In a flash of mute pictures, I recalled the night I left my father's house in the Auvergne when
the villagers had been dancing round the Lenten fire, and making their chants for the increase
of the crops. Pagan, my mother had said. Pagan, had declared the angry priest they had long
ago sent away.
And it all seemed more than ever the story of the Savage Garden, dancers in the Savage
Garden, where no law prevailed except the law of the garden, which was the aesthetic law.
That the crops shall grow high, that the wheat shall be green and then yellow, that the sun
shall shine. Look at the perfectly shaped apple that the tree has made, fancy that! The
villagers would run through the orchards with their burning brands from the Lenten bonfire,
to make the apples grow.
"Yes, the Savage Garden," Marius said with a spark of light in his eyes. "And I had to go
out of the civilized cities of the Empire to find it. I had to go into the deep woods of the
northern provinces, where the garden still grew at its lushest, the very land of Southern Gaul
in which you were born. I had to fall into the hands of the barbarians who gave us both our
stature, our blue eyes, our fair hair. I had it through the blood of my mother, who had come
from those people, the daughter of a Keltic chieftain married to a Roman patrician. And you
have it through the blood of your fathers directly from those days. And by a strange
coincidence, we were both chosen for immortality for the very same reason-you by Magnus
and I by my captors-that we were the nonpareils of our blood and blueeyed race, that we were
taller and more finely made than other men."
"Ooooh, you have to tell me all of it! You have to explain everything!" I said.
"I am explaining everything," he said. "But first, I think it is time for you to see something
that will be very important as we go on."
He waited for a moment for the words to sink in.
Then he rose slowly in human fashion, assisting himself easily with his hands on the arms
of the chair. He stood looking down at me and waiting.
"Those Who Must Be Kept?" I asked. My voice had gotten terribly small, terribly unsure
of itself.
And I could see a little mischief again in his face, or rather a touch of the amusement that
was never far away.
"Don't be afraid," he said soberly, trying to conceal the amusement. "It's very unlike you,
you know."
I was burning to see them, to know what they were, and yet I didn't move. I'd really
thought that I would see them. I'd never really thought what it would mean . . .
"Is it... is it something terrible to see?" I asked.
He smiled slowly and affectionately and placed his hand on my shoulder.
"Would it stop you if I said yes?"
"No," I said. But I was afraid.
"It's only terrible as time goes on," he said. "In the beginning, it's beautiful."
He waited, watching me, trying to be patient. Then he said softly:
"Come, let's go."
4
A stairway into the earth.
It was much older than the house, this stair way, though how I knew I couldn't say. Steps
worn concave in the middle from the feet that have followed them. Winding deeper and
deeper down into the rock.
Now and then a rough-cut portal to the sea, an opening too small for a man to climb
through, and a shelf upon which birds have nested, or where the wild grass grew out of the
cracks.
And then the chill, the inexplicable chill that you find sometimes in old monasteries, rained
churches, haunted rooms.
I stopped and rubbed the backs of my arms with my hands. The chill was rising through the
steps.
"They don't cause it," he said gently. He was waiting for me on the steps just below.
The semidarkness broke his face into kindly patterns of light and shadow, gave the illusion
of mortal age that wasn't there.
"It was here long before I brought them," he said. "Many have come to worship on this
island. Maybe it was there before they came, too."
He beckoned to me again with his characteristic patience. His eyes were compassionate.
"Don't be afraid," he said again as he started down.
I was ashamed not to follow. The steps went on and on.
We came on larger portals and the noise of the sea. I could feel the cool spray on my hands
and face, see the gleam of the damp on the stones. But we went on down farther and farther,
the echo of our shoes swelling against the rounded ceiling, the rudely finished walls. This
was deeper than any dungeon, this was the pit you dig in childhood when you brag to your
mother and father that you will make a tunnel to the very center of the earth.
Finally I saw a burst of light as we rounded another bend. And at last, two lamps burning
before a pair of doors.
Deep vessels of oil fed the wicks of the lamps. And the doors themselves were bolted by an
enormous beam of oak. It would have taken several men to lift it, possibly levers, ropes.
Marius lifted this beam and laid it aside easily, and then he stood back and looked at the
doors. I heard the sound of another beam being moved on the inside. Then the doors opened
slowly, and I felt my breathing come to a halt.
It wasn't only that he'd done it without touching them. I had seen that little trick before. It
was that the room beyond was full of the same lovely flowers and lighted lamps that I had
seen in the house above. Here deep underground were lilies, waxen and white, and sparkling
with droplets of moisture, roses in rich hues of red and pink ready to fall from their vines. It
was a chapel, this chamber with the soft flicker of votive candles and the perfume of a
thousand bouquets.
The walls were painted in fresco like the walls of ancient Italian churches, with gold leaf
hammered into the design. But these were not the pictures of Christian saints.
Egyptian palm trees, the yellow desert, the three pyramids, the blue waters of the Nile. And
the Egyptian men and women in their gracefully shaped boats sailing the river, the
multicolored fishes of the deep beneath them, the purple-winged birds of the air above.
And the gold worked into it all. Into the sun that shone from the heavens, and the pyramids
that gleamed in the distance, into the scales of the fishes and the feathers of the birds, and the
ornaments of the lithe and delicate Egyptian figures who stood frozen looking forward, in
their long narrow green boats.
I closed my eyes for a moment. I opened them slowly and saw the whole like a great
shrine.
Banks of lilies on a low stone altar which held an immense golden tabernacle worked all
over with fine engraving of the same Egyptian designs. And the air coming down through
deep shafts in the rock above, stirring the flames of the ever burning lamps, ruffling the tall
green bladelike leaves of the lilies as they stood in their vessels of water giving off their
heady perfume.
I could almost hear hymns in this place. I could hear chants and ancient invocations. And I
was no longer afraid. The beauty was too soothing, too grand.
But I stared at the gold doors of the tabernacle on the altar. The tabernacle was taller than I
was. It was broader by three times.
And Marius, too, was looking at it. And I felt the power moving out of him, the low heat of
his invisible strength, and I heard the inside lock of the tabernacle doors slide back.
I would have moved just a little closer to him had I dared. I wasn't breathing as the gold
doors opened completely, folding back to reveal two splendid Egyptian figures-a man and a
woman-seated side by side.
The light moved over their slender, finely sculpted white faces, their decorously arranged
white limbs; it flashed in their dark eyes.
They were as severe as all the Egyptian statues I had ever seen, spare of detail, beautiful in
contour, magnificent in their simplicity, only the open and childlike expression on the faces
relieving the feeling of hardness and cold. But unlike all the others, they were dressed in real
fabric and real hair.
I had seen saints in Italian churches dressed in this manner, velvet hung on marble, and it
was not always pleasing.
But this had been done with great care.
Their wigs were of long thick black locks, cut straight across the forehead and crowned
with circlets of gold. Round their naked arms were bracelets like snakes, and on their fingers
were rings.
The clothes were the finest white linen, the man naked to the waist and wearing only a skirt
of sorts, and the woman in a long, narrow, beautifully pleated dress. Both wore many gold
necklaces, some inlaid with precious stones.
Almost the same size they were, and they sat in the very same manner, hands laid flat
before them on their thighs. And this sameness astonished me somehow, as much as their
stark loveliness, and the jewellike quality of their eyes.
Not in any sculpture anywhere had I ever seen such a lifelike attitude, but actually there
was nothing lifelike about them at all. Maybe it was a trick of the accoutrements, the
twinkling of the lights on their necklaces and rings, the reflected light in their gleaming eyes.
Were they Osiris and Isis? Was it tiny writing I saw on their necklaces, on the circlets of
their hair?
Marius said nothing. He was merely gazing at them as I was, his expression unreadable,
perhaps sad.
"May I go near to them," I whispered.
"Of course," he said.
I moved towards the altar like a child in a cathedral, getting ever more tentative with each
step. I stopped only a few feet before them and looked directly into their eyes. Oh, too
gorgeous in depth and variegation. Too real.
With infinite care each black eyelash had been fixed, each black hair of their gently curved
brows.
With infinite care their mouths made partly open so that one could see the glimmer of
teeth. And the faces and the arms had been so polished that not the slightest flaw disturbed
the luster. And in the manner of all statues or painted figures who stare directly forward, they
appeared to be looking at me.
I was confused. If they were not Osiris and Isis, who were they meant to be? Of what old
truth were they the symbols, and why the imperative in that old phrase. Those Who Must Be
Kept?
I fell into contemplating them, my head a little to the side.
The eyes were really brown, with the black deep in their centers, the whites moist looking
as though covered with the clearest lacquer, and the lips were the softest shade of ashen rose.
"Is it permissible . . .?" I whispered, turning back to Marius, but lacking confidence I
stopped.
"You may touch them," he said.
Yet it seemed sacrilegious to do it. I stared at them a moment longer, at the way that their
hands opened against their thighs, at the fingernails, which looked remarkably like our
fingernails-as if someone had made them of inlaid glass.
I thought that I could touch the back of the man's hand, and it wouldn't seem so
sacrilegious, but what I really wanted to do was to touch the woman's face. Finally I raised
my fingers hesitantly to her cheek. And I just let my fingertips graze the whiteness there. And
then I looked into her eyes.
It couldn't be stone I was feeling. It couldn't . . . Why, it felt exactly like . . . And the
woman's eyes, something-
I jumped backwards before I could stop myself.
In fact I shot backwards, overturning the vases of lilies, and slammed against the wall
beside the door.
I was trembling so violently, my legs could hardly hold me.
"They're alive!" I said. "They aren't statues! They're vampires just like us!"
"Yes," Marius said. "That word, however, they wouldn't know."
He was just ahead of me and he was still looking at them, his hands at his sides, just as he
had been all along.
Slowly, he turned and came up to me and took my right hand.
The blood had rushed to my face. I wanted to say something but I couldn't. I kept staring at
them. And now I was staring at him and staring at the white hand that held mine.
"It's quite all right," he said almost sadly. "I don't think they dislike your touching them."
For a moment I couldn't understand him. Then I did understand. "You mean you . . . You
don't know whether... They just sit there and . . . Oooh God!"
And his words of hundreds of years ago, embedded in Armand's tale, came back to me:
Those Who Must Be Kept are at peace, or in silence. More than that we may never know.
I was shuddering all over. I couldn't stop the tremors in my arms and my legs.
"They're breathing, thinking, living, as we are," I stammered. "How long have they been
like this, how long?"
"Calm yourself," he said, patting my hand.
"Oh God," I said again stupidly. I kept saying it. No other words sufficed. "But who are
they?" I asked finally. My voice was rising hysterically. "Are they Osiris and Isis? Is that who
they are?"
"I don't know."
"I want to get away from them. I want to get out of here."
"Why?" he asked calmly.
"Because they . . . they are alive inside their bodies and they . . . they can't speak or move!"
"How do you know they can't?" he said. His voice was low, soothing as before.
"But they don't. That's the whole point. They don't-"
"Come," he said. "I want you to look at them a little more. And then I'll take you back up
and I'll tell you everything, as I've already said I would."
"I don't want to look at them anymore, Marius, honestly I don't," I said, trying to get my
hand free, and shaking my head. But he was holding on to me as firmly as a statue might, it
seemed, and I couldn't stop thinking how much like their skin was his skin, how he was
taking on the same impossible luster, how when his face was in repose, it was as smooth as
theirs!
He was becoming like them. And sometime in the great yawn of eternity, I would become
like him! If I survived that long.
"Please, Marius..." I said. I was beyond shame and vanity. I wanted to get out of the room.
"Wait for me then," he said patiently. "Stay here."
And he let my hand go. He turned and looked down at the flowers I had crushed, the
spilled water.
And before my eyes these things were corrected, the flowers put back in the vase, the water
gone from the floor.
He stood looking at the two before him, and then I heard his thoughts. He was greeting
them in some personal way that did not require an address or a title. He was explaining to
them why he had been away the last few nights. He had gone into Egypt. And he had brought
back gifts for them which he would soon bring. He would take them out to look at the sea
very soon.
I started to calm down a little. But my mind was now anatomizing all that had come clear
to me at the moment of shock. He cared for them. He had always cared for them. He made
this chamber beautiful because they were staring at it, and they just might care about the
beauty of the paintings and the flowers he brought.
But he didn't know. And all I had to do was look squarely at them again to feel horror, that
they were alive and locked inside themselves!
"I can't bear this," I murmured. I knew, without his ever telling me, the reason that he kept
them. He could not bury them deep in the earth somewhere because they were conscious. He
would not burn them because they were helpless and could not give their consent. Oh, God, it
was getting worse and worse.
But he kept them as the ancient pagans kept their gods in temples that were their houses.
He brought them flowers.
And now as I watched, he was lighting incense for them, a small cake that he had taken out
of a silk handkerchief. This he told them had come from Egypt. And he was putting it to burn
in a small bronze dish.
My eyes began to tear. I actually began to cry.
When I looked up, he was standing with his back to them, and I could see them over his
shoulder. He looked shockingly
like them, a statue dressed in fabric. And I felt maybe he was doing it deliberately, letting
his face go blank.
"I've disappointed you, haven't I?" I whispered.
"No, not at all," he said kindly. "You have not."
"I'm sorry that I-"
"No, you have not."
I drew a little closer. I felt I had been rude to Those Who Must Be Kept. I had been rude to
him. He had revealed to me this secret and I had shown horror and recoiling. I had
disappointed myself.
I moved even closer. I wanted to make up for what I'd done. He turned towards them again
and he put his arm around me. The incense was intoxicating. Their dark eyes were full of the
eerie movement of the flames of the lamps.
No ridge of vein anywhere in the white skin, no fold or crease. Not even the penstroke
lines in the lips which even Marius still had. They did not move with the rise and fall of
breath.
And listening in the stillness I heard no thought from them, no heartbeat, no movement of
blood.
"But it's there, isn't it?" I whispered.
"Yes, it's there."
"And do you-?" Bring the victims to them, I wanted to ask.
"They no longer drink."
Even that was ghastly! They had not even that pleasure. And yet to imagine it-how it
would have been-their firing with movement long enough to take the victim and lapsing back
into stillness, ah! No, I should have been relieved. But I was not.
"Long, long ago, they still drank, but only once in a year. I would leave the victims in the
sanctuary for them-evildoers who were weak and close to death. I would come back and find
that they had been taken, and Those Who Must Be Kept would be as they were before. Only
the color of the flesh was a little different. Not a drop of blood had been spilt.
"It was at the full moon always that this was done, and usually in the spring. Other victims
left were never taken. And then even this yearly feast stopped. I continued to bring victims
now and then. And once after a decade had passed, they took another. Again, it was the time
of the full moon. It was spring. And then no more for at least half a century. I lost count. I
thought perhaps they had to see the moon, that they had to know the change of the seasons.
But as it turned out, this did rot matter.
"They have drunk nothing since the time before I took them into Italy. That was three
hundred years ago. Even in the warmth of Egypt they do not drink."
"But even when it happened, you never saw it with your own eyes?"
"No," he said.
"You've never seen them move?"
"Not since . . . the beginning."
I was trembling again. As I looked at them, I fancied I saw them breathing, fancied I saw
their lips change. I knew it was illusion. But it was driving me wild. I had to get out of here. I
would start crying again.
"Sometimes when I come to them," Marius said, "I find things changed."
"How? What?"
"Little things," he said. He looked at them thoughtfully. He reached out and touched the
woman's necklace. "She likes this one. It is the proper kind apparently. There was another
which I used to find broken on the floor."
"Then they can move."
"I thought at first the necklace had fallen. But after repairing it three times I realized that
was foolish. She was tearing it off her neck, or making it fall with her mind."
I made some little horrified whisper. And then I felt absolutely mortified that I had done
this in her presence. I wanted to go out at once. Her face was like a mirror for all my
imaginings. Her lips curved in a smile but did not curve.
"It has happened with other ornaments, ornaments bearing the names of gods whom they
do not like, I think. A vase I brought from a church was broken once, blown to tiny fragments
as if by their glance. And then there have been more startling changes as well."
"Tell me."
"I have come into the sanctuary and found one or the other of them standing."
This was too terrifying. I wanted to tug his hand and pull him out of here.
"I found him once several paces from the chair. And the woman, another time, at the door."
"Trying to get out?" I whispered.
"Perhaps," he said thoughtfully. "But then they could easily get out if they wanted to.
When you hear the whole story you can judge. Whenever I've found them moved, I've carried
them back. I've arranged their limbs as they were before. It takes enormous strength to do it.
They are like flexible stone, if you can imagine it. And if I have such strength, you can
imagine what theirs might be."
"You say want . . . wanted to. What if they want to do everything and they no longer can?
What if it was the limit of her greatest effort even to reach the door!"
"I think she could have broken the doors, had she wanted to. If I can open bolts with my
mind, what can she do?"
I looked at their cold, remote faces, their narrow hollowed cheeks, their large and serene
mouths.
"But what if you're wrong. And what if they can hear every word that we are saying to
each other, and it angers them, outrages them.. ."
"I think they do hear," he said, trying to calm me again, his hand on mine, his tone
subdued, "but I do not think they care. If they cared, they would move."
"But how can you know that?"
"They do other things that require great strength. For example, there are times when I lock
the tabernacle and they at once unlock it and open the doors again. I know they are doing it
because they are the only ones who could be doing it. The doors fly back and there they are. I
take them out to look at the sea. And before dawn, when I come to fetch them, they are
heavier, less pliant, almost impossible to move. There are times when I think they do these
things to torment me as it were, to play with me."
"No. They are trying and they can't."
"Don't be so quick to judge," he said. "I have come into their chamber and found evidence
of strange things indeed. And of course, there are the things that happened in the
beginning..."
But he stopped. Something had distracted him.
"Do you hear thoughts from them?" I asked. He did seem to be listening.
He didn't answer. He was studying them. It occurred to me that something had changed! I
used every bit of my will not to turn and run. I looked at them carefully. I couldn't see
anything, hear anything, feel anything. I was going to start shouting and screaming if Marius
didn't explain why he was staring.
"Don't be so impetuous, Lestat," he said finally, smiling a little, his eyes still fixed on the
male. "Every now and then I do hear them, but it is unintelligible, it is merely the presence of
them-you know the sound."
"And you heard him just then."
"Yeeesss . . . Perhaps."
"Marius, please let us go out of here, I beg you. Forgive me, I can't bear it! Please, Marius,
let's go."
"All right," he said kindly. He squeezed my shoulder. "But do something for me first."
"Anything you ask."
"Talk to them. It need not be out loud. But talk. Tell them you find them beautiful."
"They know," I said. "They know I find them indescribably beautiful." I was certain that
they did. But he meant tell them in a ceremonial way, and so I cleared my mind of all fear
and all mad suppositions and I told them this.
"Just talk to them," Marius said, urging me on.
I did. I looked into the eyes of the man and into the eyes of the woman. And the strangest
feeling crept over me. I was repeating the phrases I find you beautiful, I find you
incomparably beautiful with the barest shape of real words. I was praying as I had when I was
very, very little and I would lie in the meadow on the side of the mountain and ask God
please please to help me get away from my father's house.
I talked to her like this now and I said I was grateful that I had been allowed to come near
her and her ancient secrets, and this feeling became physical. It was all over the surface of my
skin and at the roots of my hair. I could feel tension draining from my face. I could feel it
leaving my body. I was light all over, and the incense and the flowers were enfolding my
spirit as I looked into the black centers of her deep brown eyes.
"Akasha," I said aloud. I heard the name at the same moment of speaking it. And it
sounded lovely to me. The hairs rose all over me. The tabernacle became like a flaming
border around her, and there was only something indistinct where the male figure sat. I drew
close to her without willing it, and I leaned forward and I almost kissed her lips. I wanted to. I
bent nearer. Then I felt her lips.
I wanted to make the blood come up in my mouth and pass it to her as I had that time to
Gabrielle when she lay in the coffin.
The spell was deepening, and I looked right into the fathomless orbs of her eyes.
I am kissing the goddess on her mouth, what is the matter with me! Am I mad to think of
it!
I moved back. I found myself against the wall again, trembling, with my hands clamped to
the sides of my head. At least this time I had not upset the lilies, but I was crying again.
Marius closed the tabernacle doors. He made the bolt inside slip into place.
We went into the passage and he made the inner bolt rise and go into its brackets. He put
the outside bolt in with his hands.
"Come, young one," he said. "Let's go upstairs."
But we had walked only a few yards when we heard a crisp clicking sound, and then
another. He turned and looked back.
"They did it again," he said. And a look of distress divided his face like a shadow.
"What?" I backed up against the wall.
"The tabernacle, they opened it. Come. I'll return later and lock it before the sun rises. Now
we will go back to my drawing room and I will tell you my tale."
When we reached the lighted room, I collapsed in the chair with my head in my hands. He
was standing still just looking at me, and when I realized it, I looked up.
"She told you her name," he said.
"Akasha!" I said. It was snatching a word out of the whirlpool of a dissolving dream. "She
did tell me! I said Akasha out loud." I looked at him, imploring him for answers. For some
explanation of the attitude with which he stared at me.
I thought I'd lose my mind if his face didn't become expressive again.
"Are you angry with me?"
"Shhh. Be quiet," he said.
I could hear nothing in the silence. Except maybe the sea. Maybe a sound from the wicks
of the candles in the room. Maybe the wind. Not even their eyes had appeared more lifeless
than his eyes now seemed.
"You cause something to stir in them," he whispered.
I stood up.
"What does it mean?"
"I don't know," he said. "Maybe nothing. The tabernacle is still open and they are merely
sitting there as always. Who knows?"
And I felt suddenly all his long years of wanting to know. I would say centuries, but I
cannot really imagine centuries. Not even now. I felt his years and years of trying to elicit
from them the smallest signs and getting nothing, and I knew that he was wondering why I
had drawn from her the secret of her name. Akasha. Things had happened, but that had been
in the time of Rome. Dark things. Terrible things. Suffering, unspeakable suffering.
The images went white. Silence. He was stranded in the room like a saint taken down off
an altar and left in the aisle of a church.
"Marius!" I whispered.
He woke and his face warmed slowly, and he looked at me affectionately, almost
wonderingly.
"Yes, Lestat," he said and gave my hand a reassuring squeeze.
He seated himself and gestured for me to do the same, and we were once again facing each
other comfortably. And the even light of the room was reassuring. It was reassuring to see,
beyond the windows, the night sky.
His former quickness was returning, the glint of good humor in his eyes.
"It's not yet midnight," he said. "And all is well on the islands. If I'm not disturbed, I think
there is time for me to tell you the whole tale."
MARIUS'S STORY
5
"It happened in my fortieth year, on a warm spring night in the Roman Gallic city of
Massilia, when in a dirty waterfront tavern I sat scribbling away on my history of the world.
"The tavern was deliciously filthy and crowded, a hangout for sailors and wanderers,
travelers like me, I fancied, loving them all in a general sort of way, though most of them
were poor and I wasn't poor, and they couldn't read what I wrote when they glanced over my
shoulder.
"I'd come to Massilia after a long and studious journey that had taken me through all the
great cities of the Empire. To Alexandria, Pergamon, Athens I'd traveled, observing and
writing about the people, and now I was making my way through the cities of Roman Gaul.
"I couldn't have been more content on this night had I been in my library at Rome. In fact, I
liked the tavern better. Everywhere I went I sought out such places in which to write, setting
up my candle and ink and parchment at a table close to the wall, and I did my best work early
in the evening when the places were at their noisiest.
"In retrospect, it's easy to see that I lived my whole life in the midst of frenzied activity. I
was used to the idea that nothing could affect me adversely.
"I'd grown up an illegitimate son in a rich Roman household-loved, pampered, and allowed
to do what I wanted. My legitimate brothers had to worry about marriage, politics, and war.
By the age of twenty, I'd become the scholar and the chronicler, the one who raised his voice
at drunken banquets to settle historical and military arguments.
"When I traveled I had plenty of money, and documents that opened doors everywhere.
And to say life had been good to me would be an understatement. I was an extraordinarily
happy individual. But the really important point here is that life had never bored me or
defeated me.
"I carried within me a sense of invincibility, a sense of wonder. And this was as important
to me later on as your anger and strength have been to you, as important as despair or cruelty
can be in the spirits of others.
"But to continue . . . If there was anything I'd missed in my rather eventful life-and I didn't
think of this too much-it was the love and knowledge of my Keltic mother. She'd died when I
was born, and all I knew of her was that she'd been a slave, daughter of the warlike Gauls
who fought Julius Caesar. I was blond and blue-eyed as she was. And her people had been
giants it seemed. At a very young age, I towered over my father and my brothers.
"But I had little or no curiosity about my Gallic ancestors.
I'd come to Gaul as an educated Roman, through and through, and I carried with me no
awareness of my barbarian blood, but rather the common beliefs of my time-that Caesar
Augustus was a great ruler, and that in this blessed age of the Pax Romana, old superstition
was being replaced by law and by reason throughout the Empire. There was no place too
wretched for the Roman roads, and for the soldiers, the scholars, and the traders who
followed them.
"On this night I was writing like a madman, scribbling down descriptions of the men who
came and went in the tavern, children of all races it seemed, speakers of a dozen different
languages.
"And for no apparent reason, I was possessed of a strange idea about life, a strange concern
that amounted almost to a pleasant obsession. I remember that it came on me this night
because it seemed somehow related to what happened after. But it wasn't related. I had had
the idea before. That it came to me in these last free hours as a Roman citizen was no more
than coincidence.
"The idea was simply that there was somebody who knew everything, somebody who had
seen everything. I did not mean by this that a Supreme Being existed, but rather that there
was on earth a continual intelligence, a continual awareness. And I thought of it in practical
terms that excited me and soothed me simultaneously. There was an awareness somewhere of
all things i had seen in my travels, an awareness of what it had been like in Massilia six
centuries ago when the first Greek traders came, an awareness of what it had been like in
Egypt when Cheops built the pyramids. Somebody knew what the light had been like in the
late afternoon on the day that Troy fell to the Greeks, and someone or something knew what
the peasants said to each other in their little farmhouse outside Athens right before the
Spartans brought down the walls.
"My idea of who or what it was, was vague. But I was comforted by the notion that
nothing spiritual-and knowing was spiritual-was lost to us. That there was this continuous
knowing . . .
"And as I drank a little more wine, and thought about it, and wrote about it, I realized it
wasn't so much a belief of mine as it was a prejudice. I just felt that there was a continual
awareness.
"And the history that I was writing was an imitation of it.
I tried to unite all things I had seen in my history, linking my observations of lands and
people with all the written observations that had come down to me from the Greeks-from
Xenophon and Herodotus, and Poseidonius-to make one continuous awareness of the world
in my lifetime. It was a pale thing, a limited thing, compared to the true awareness. Yet I felt
good as I continued writing.
"But around midnight, I was getting a little tired, and when I happened to look up after a
particularly long period of unbroken concentration, I realized something had changed in the
tavern.
"It was unaccountably quieter. In fact, it was almost empty. And across from me, barely
illuminated by the sputtering light of the candle, there sat a tall fair-haired man with his back
to the room who was watching me in silence. I was startled, not so much by the way he
looked-though this was startling in itself-but by the realization that he had been there for
some time, close to me, observing me, and I hadn't noticed him.
"He was a giant of a Gaul as they all were, even taller than I was, and he had a long narrow
face with an extremely strong jaw and hawklike nose, and eyes that gleamed beneath their
bushy blond brows with a childlike intelligence. What I mean to say is he looked very, very
clever, but very young and innocent also. And he wasn't young. The effect was perplexing.
"And it was made all the more so by the fact that his thick and coarse yellow hair wasn't
clipped short in the popular Roman style, but was streaming down to his shoulders. And
instead of the usual tunic and cloak which you saw everywhere in those times, he wore the
old belted leather jerkin that had been the barbarian dress before Caesar.
"Right out of the woods this character looked, with his gray eyes burning through me, and
I was vaguely delighted with him. I wrote down hurriedly the details of his dress, confident
he couldn't read the Latin.
"But the stillness in which he sat unnerved me a little. His eyes were unnaturally wide, and
his lips quivered slightly as if the mere sight of me excited him. His clean and delicate white
hand, which casually rested on the table before him, seemed out of keeping with the rest of
him.
"A quick glance about told me my slaves weren't in the tavern. Well, they're probably next
door playing cards, I thought, or upstairs with a couple of women. They'll stop in any minute.
"I forced a little smile at my strange and silent friend, and went back to writing. But
directly he started talking.
"' You are an educated man, aren't you?' he asked. He spoke the universal Latin of the
Empire, but with a thick accent, pronouncing each word with a care that was almost musical.
"I told him, yes, I was fortunate enough to be educated, and I started to write again,
thinking this would surely discourage him. After all, he was fine to look at, but I didn't really
want to talk to him.
" 'And you write both in Greek and in Latin, don't you?' he asked, glancing at the finished
work that lay before me.
"I explained politely that the Greek I had written on the parchment was a quotation from
another text. My text was in Latin. And again I started scribbling.
" 'But you are a Keltoi, are you not?' he asked this time. It was the old Greek word for the
Gauls.
"'Not really, no. I am a Roman,' I answered.
" 'You look like one of us, the Keltoi,' he said. 'You are tall like us, and you walk the way
we do.'
"This was a strange statement. For hours I'd been sitting here, barely sipping my wine. I
hadn't walked anywhere. But I explained that my mother had been Keltic, but I hadn't known
her. My father was a Roman senator.
"'And what is it you write in Greek and Latin?' he asked. 'What is it that arouses your
passion?'
"I didn't answer right away. He was beginning to intrigue me. But I knew enough at forty
to realize that most people you meet in taverns sound interesting for the first few minutes and
then begin to weary you beyond endurance.
"'Your slaves say,' he announced gravely, 'that you are writing a great history.'
"'Do they?' I answered, a bit stiffly. 'And where are my slaves, I wonder!' Again I looked
around. Nowhere in sight. Then I conceded to him that it was a history I was writing.
" 'And you have been to Egypt,' he said. And his hand spread itself out flat on the table.
"I paused and took another good look at him. There was something otherworldly about
him, the way that he sat, the way he used this one hand to gesture. It was the decorum
primitive people often have that makes them seem repositors of immense wisdom, when in
fact all they possess is immense conviction.
"'Yes,' I said a little warily. 'I've been to Egypt.'
"Obviously this exhilarated him. His eyes widened slightly, then narrowed, and he made
some little movement with his lips as though speaking to himself.
"'And you know the language and the writing of Egypt?' he asked earnestly, his eyebrows
knitting. 'You know the cities of Egypt?'
" 'The language as it is spoken, yes, I do know it. But if by the writing you mean the old
picture writing, no, I can't read it. I don't know anyone who can read it. I've heard that even
the old Egyptian priests can't read it. Half the texts they copy they can't decipher.'
"He laughed in the strangest way. I couldn't tell whether this was exciting him or he knew
something I didn't know. He appeared to take a deep breath, his nostrils dilating a little. And
then his face cooled. He was actually a splendid-looking man.
" 'The gods can read it,' he whispered.
"'Well, I wish they'd teach it to me,' I said pleasantly.
"'You do!' he said in an astonished gasp. He leant forward over the table. 'Say this again!'
"'I was joking,' I said. 'I only meant I wished I could read the old Egyptian writing. If I
could read it, then I could know true things about the people of Egypt, instead of all the
nonsense written by the Greek historians. Egypt is a misunderstood land- I stopped myself.
Why was I talking to this man about Egypt?
"'In Egypt there are true gods still,' he said gravely, 'gods who have been there forever.
Have you been to the very bottom of Egypt?'
"This was a curious way to put it. I told him I had been up the Nile quite far, that I had
seen many wonders. 'But as for there being true gods,' I said, 'I can scarce accept the veracity
of gods with the heads of animals-'
"He shook his head almost a little sadly.
" 'The true gods require no statues of them to be erected,' he said. 'They have the heads of
man and they themselves appear when they choose, and they are living as the crops that come
from the earth are living, as all things under the heavens are living, even the stones and the
moon itself, which divides time in the great silence of its never changing cycles.'
" 'Very likely,' I said under my breath, not wishing to disturb him. So it was zeal, this
mixture of cleverness and youthfulness I had perceived in him. I should have known it. And
something came back to me from Julius Caesar's writings about Gaul, that the Keltoi had
come from Dis Pater, the god of the night. Was this strange creature a believer in these
things?
" 'There are old gods in Egypt,' he said softly, 'and there are old gods in this land for those
who know how to worship them. I do not mean in your temples round which merchants sell
the animals to defile the altars, and the butchers after sell the meat that is left over. I speak of
the proper worship, the proper sacrifice for the god, the one sacrifice to which he will
hearken.'
" 'Human sacrifice, you mean, don't you?' I said unobtrusively. Caesar had described well
enough that practice among the Keltoi, and it rather curdled my blood to think of it. Of course
I'd seen ghastly deaths in the arena in Rome, ghastly deaths at the places of execution, but
human sacrifice to the gods, that we had not done in centuries. If ever.
"And now I realized what this remarkable man might actually be. A Druid, a member of
the ancient priesthood of the Keltoi, whom Caesar had also described, a priesthood so
powerful that nothing like it existed, so far as I knew, anywhere in the Empire. But it wasn't
supposed to exist in Roman Gaul anymore either.
"Of course the Druids were always described as wearing long white robes. They went into
the forests and collected mistletoe off the oak trees with ceremonial sickles. And this man
looked more like a farmer, or a soldier. But then what Druid was going to wear his white
robes into a waterfront tavem? And it wasn't lawful anymore for the Druids to go about being
Druids.
" 'Do you really believe in this old worship?' I asked, leaning forward. 'Have you yourself
been down to the bottom of Egypt?'
"If this was a real live Druid, I had made a marvelous catch, I was thinking. I could get this
man to tell me things about the Keltoi that nobody knew. And what on earth did Egypt have
to do with it, I wondered?
" 'No,' he said. 'I have not been to Egypt, though from Egypt our gods came to us. It is not
my destiny to, go there. It is not my destiny to learn to read the ancient language. The tongue
I speak is enough for the gods. They give ear to it.'
"'And what tongue is that?'
" 'The tongue of the Keltoi, of course,' he said. 'You know that without asking.'
" 'And when you speak to your gods, how do you know that they hear you?'
"His eyes widened again, and his mouth lengthened in an unmistakable look of triumph.
" 'My gods answer me,' he said quietly.
"Surely he was a Druid. And he appeared to take on a shimmer, suddenly. I pictured him in
his white robes. There might have been an earthquake then in Massilia, and I doubt I would
have noticed it.
" 'Then you yourself have heard them,' I said.
"'I have laid eyes upon my gods,' he said. 'And they have spoken to me both in words and
in silence.'
"'And what do they say? What do they do that makes them different from our gods, I mean
aside from the nature of the sacrifice?'
"His voice took on the lilting reverence of a song as he spoke. 'They do as gods have
always done; they divide the evil from the good. They bring down blessings upon all who
worship them. They draw the faithful into harmony with all the cycles of the universe, with
the cycles of the moon, as I have told you. They fructify the land, the gods do. All things that
are good proceed from them.'
"Yes, I thought, the old old religion in its simplest forms, and the forms that still held a
great spell for the common people of the Empire.
" 'My gods sent me here,' he said. 'To search for you.'
" 'For me?' I asked. I was startled.
" 'You will understand all these things,' he said. 'Just as you will come to know the true
worship of ancient Egypt. The gods will teach you.'
"'Why ever would they do that?' I asked.
" 'The answer is simple,' he said. 'Because you are going to become one of them.'
"I was about to answer when I felt a sharp blow to the back of my head and the pain spread
out in all directions over my skull as if it were water. I knew I was going out. I saw the table
rising, saw the ceiling high above me. I think I wanted to say if it is ransom you want, take
me to my house, to my steward."
But I knew even then that the rules of my world had absolutely nothing to do with it.
"When I woke it was daylight and I was in a large wagon being pulled fast along an
unpaved road through an immense forest. I was bound hand and foot and a loose cover was
thrown over me. I could see to the left and right, through the wicker sides of the cart, and I
saw the man who had talked to me, riding beside me. There were others riding with him, and
all were dressed in the trousers and belted leather jerkins, and they wore iron swords and iron
bracelets. Their hair was almost white in the dappled sun, and they didn't talk as they rode
beside the cart together.
"This forest itself seemed made to the scale of Titans. The oaks were ancient and
enormous, the interlacing of their limbs blocked out most of the light, and we moved for
hours through a world of damp and dark green leaves and deep shadow.
"I do not remember towns. I do not remember villages. I remember only a crude fortress.
Once inside the gates I saw two rows of thatched-roof houses, and everywhere the leatherclad
barbarians. And when I was taken into one of the houses, a dark low place, and left there
alone, I could hardly stand for the cramps in my legs, and I was as wary as I was furious.
"I knew now that I was in an undisturbed enclave of the ancient Keltoi, the very same
fighters who had sacked the great shrine of Delphi only a few centuries ago, and Rome itself
not too long after, the same warlike creatures who rode stark naked into battle against Caesar,
their trumpets blasting, their cries affrighting the disciplined Roman soldiers.
"In other words, I was beyond the reach of everything I counted upon. And if all this talk
about my becoming one of the gods meant I was to be slain on some blood-stained altar in an
oak grove, then I had better try to get the hell out of here."
6
"When my captor appeared again, he was in the fabled long white robes, and his coarse
blond hair had been combed, and he looked immaculate and impressive and solemn. There
were other tall white-robed men, some old, some young, and all with the same gleaming
yellow hair, who came into the small shadowy room behind him.
"In a silent circle they enclosed me. And after a protracted silence, a riff of whispers
passed amongst them.
" 'You are perfect for the god,' said the eldest, and I saw the silent pleasure in the one who
had brought me here. 'You are what the god has asked for,' the eldest said. 'You will remain
with us until the great feast of Samhain, and then you will be taken to the sacred grove and
there you will drink the Divine Blood and you will become a father of gods, a restorer of all
the magic that has inexplicably been taken from us.'
" 'And will my body die when this happens?' I asked. I was looking at them, their sharp
narrow faces, their probing eyes, the gaunt grace with which they surrounded me. What a
terror this race must have been when its warriors swept down on the Mediterranean peoples.
No wonder there had been so much written about their fearlessness. But these weren't
warriors. These were priests, judges, and teachers. These were the instructors of the young,
the keepers of the poetry and the laws that were never written in any language.
"'Only the mortal part of you will die,' said the one who had spoken to me all along.
"'Bad luck,' I said. 'Since that's about all there is to me.'
"'No,' he said. 'Your form will remain and it will become glorified. You will see. Don't
fear. And besides, there is nothing you can do to change these things. Until the feast of
Samhain, you will let your hair grow long, and you will learn our tongue, and our hymns and
our laws. We will care for you. My name is Mael, and I myself will teach you.'
"'But I am not willing to become the god,' I said. 'Surely the gods don't want one who is
unwilling.'
"'The old god will decide,' said Mael. 'But I know that when you drink the Divine Blood
you will become the god, and all things will be clear to you.'
"Escape was impossible.
"I was guarded night and day. I was allowed no knife with which I might cut off my hair or
otherwise damage myself. And a good deal of the time I lay in the dark empty room, drunk
on wheaten beer and satiated with the rich roasted meats they gave to me. I had nothing with
which to write and this tortured me.
"Out of boredom I listened to Mael when he came to instruct me. I let him sing anthems to
me and tell me old poems and talk on about laws, only now and then taunting him with the
obvious fact that a god should not have to be so instructed.
"This he conceded, but what could he do but try to make me understand what would
happen to me.
"'You can help me get out of here, you can come with me to Rome,' I said. 'I have a villa
all my own on the cliffs above the Bay of Naples. You have never seen such a beautiful spot,
and I would let you live there forever if you would help me, asking only that you repeat all
these anthems and prayers and laws to me so that I might record them.'
"'Why do you try to corrupt me?' he would ask, but I could see he was tantalized by the
world I came from. He confessed that he had searched the Greek city of Massilia for weeks
before my arrival, and he loved the Roman wine and the great ships that he had seen in the
port, and the exotic foods he had eaten.
" 'I don't try to corrupt you,' I said. 'I don't believe what you believe, and you've made me
your prisoner:'
"But I continued to listen to his prayers out of boredom and curiosity, and the vague fear of
what was in store for me.
"I began waiting for him to come, for his pale, wraithlike figure to illuminate the barren
room like a white light, for his quiet, measured voice to pour forth with all the old melodious
nonsense.
"It soon came clear that his verses did not unfold continuous stories of the gods as we
knew them in Greek and Latin. But the identity and characteristics of the gods began to
emerge in the many stanzas. Deities of all the predictable sorts belonged to the tribe of the
heavens.
"But the god I was to become exerted the greatest hold over Mael and those he instructed.
He had no name, this god, though he had numerous titles, and the Drinker of the Blood was
the most often repeated. He was also the White One, the God of the Night, the God of the
Oak, the Lover of the Mother.
"This god took blood sacrifice at every full moon. But on Samhain (the first of November
in our present Christian calendar-the day that has become the Feast of All Saints or the Day
of the Dead) this god would accept the greatest number of human sacrifices before the whole
tribe for the increase of the crops, as well as speak all manner of predictions and judgments.
"It was the Great Mother he served, she who is without visible form, but nevertheless
present in all things, and the Mother of all things, of the earth, of the trees, of the sky
overhead, of all men, of the Drinker of the Blood himself who walks in her garden.
"My interest deepened but so did my apprehension. The worship of the Great Mother was
certainly not unknown to me. The Mother Earth and the Mother of All Things was worshiped
under a dozen names from one end of the Empire to the other, and so was her lover and son,
her Dying God, the one who grew to manhood as the crops grow, only to be cut down as the
crops are cut down, while the Mother remains eternal. It was the ancient and gentle myth of
the seasons. But the celebration anywhere and at any time was hardly ever gentle.
"For the Divine Mother was also Death, the earth that swallows the remains of that young
lover, the earth that swallows all of us. And in consonance with this ancient truth-old as the
sowing of seed itself-there came a thousand bloody rituals.
"The goddess was worshiped under the name of Cybele in Rome, and I had seen her mad
priests castrating themselves in the midst of their devoted frenzy. And the gods of myth met
their ends even more violently-Attis gelded, Dionysus rent limb from limb, the old Egyptian
Osiris dismembered before the Great Mother Isis restored him.
"And now I was to be that God of Growing Things-the vine god, the corn god, the god of
the tree, and I knew that whatever happened it was going to be something appalling.
"And what was there to do but get drunk and murmur these anthems with Mael, whose
eyes would cloud with tears from time to time as he looked at me.
"'Get me out of here, you wretch,' I said once in pure exasperation. 'Why the hell don't you
become the God of the Tree? Why am I so honored?'
"'I have told you, the god confided to me his wishes. I wasn't chosen.'
" 'And would you do it, if you were chosen?' I demanded.
"I was sick of hearing of these old rites by which any man threatened by illness or
misfortune must serve up a human sacrifice to the god if he wished to be spared, and all the
other sacrosanct beliefs that had to them the same childlike barbarity.
" 'I would fear but I would accept,' he whispered. 'But do you know what is so terrible
about your fate? It is that your soul will be locked in your body forever. It will have no
chance in natural death to pass into another body or another lifetime. No, all through time
your soul will be the soul of the god. The cycle of death and rebirth will be closed in you.'
"In spite of myself and my general contempt for his belief in reincarnation, this silenced
me. I felt the eerie weight of his conviction, I felt his sadness.
"My hair grew longer and fuller. And the hot summer melted into the cooler days of fall,
and we were nearing the great annual feast of Samhain. '
"Yet I wouldn't let up on the questions.
"'How many have you brought to be gods in this manner? What was it in me that caused
you to choose me?'
"'I have never brought a man to be a god,' he said. 'But the god is old; he is robbed of his
magic. A terrible calamity has befallen him, and I can't speak of these things. He has chosen
his successor.' He looked frightened. He was saying too much. Something was stirring the
deepest fears in him.
" 'And how do you know he will want me? Have you sixty other candidates stashed in this
fortress?'
"He shook his head and in a moment of uncharacteristic rawness, he said:
"'Marius, if you fail to Drink the Blood, if you do not become the father of a new race of
gods, what will become of us?'
" 'I wish I could care, my friend'" I said.
" 'Ah, calamity,' he whispered. And there followed a long
subdued observation of the rise of Rome, the terrible invasions of Caesar, the decline of a
people who had lived in these mountains and forests since the beginning of time, scorning the
cities of the Greek and the Etruscan and the Roman for the honorable strongholds of powerful
tribal leaders.
"'Civilizations rise and fall, my friend,' I said. 'Old gods give way to new ones.'
"'You don't understand, Marius,' he said. 'Our god was not defeated by your idols and those
who tell their frivolous and lascivious stories. Our god was as beautiful as if the moon itself
had fashioned him with her light, and he spoke with a voice that was as pure as the light, and
he guided us in that great oneness with all things that is the only cessation of despair and
loneliness. But he was stricken with terrible calamity, and all through the north country other
gods have perished completely. It was the revenge of the sun god upon him, but how the sun
entered into him in the hours of darkness and sleep is not known to us, nor to him. You are
our salvation, Marius. You are the mortal Who Knows, and is Learned and Can Learn, and
Who Can Go Down into Egypt.'
"I thought about this. I thought of the old worship of Isis and Osiris, and of those who said
she was the Mother Earth and he the corn, and Typhon the slayer of Osiris was the fire of the
sunlight.
"And now this pious communicator with the god was telling me that the sun had found his
god of the night and caused great calamity.
"Finally my reason gave out on me.
"Too many days passed in drunkenness and solitude.
"I lay down in the dark and I sang to myself the hymns of the Great Mother. She was no
goddess to me, however. Not Diana of Ephesus with her rows and rows of milk-filled breasts,
or the terrible Cybele, or even the gentle Demeter, whose mourning for Persephone in the
land of the dead had inspired the sacred mysteries of Eleusis. She was the strong good earth
that I smelled through the small barred windows of this place, the wind that carried with it the
damp and the sweetness of the dark green forest. She was the meadow flowers and the
blowing grass, the water I heard now and then gushing as if from some mountain spring. She
was all the things that I still had in this rude little wooden room where everything else had
been taken from me. And I knew only what all men know, that the cycle of winter and spring
and all growing things has within itself some sublime truth that restores without myth or
language.
"I looked through, the bars to the stars overhead, and it seemed to me I was dying in the
most absurd and foolish way, among people I did not admire and customs I would have
abolished. And yet the seeming sanctity of it all infected me. It caused me to dramatize and to
dream and to give in, to see myself at the center of something that possessed its own exalted
beauty.
"I sat up one morning and touched my hair, and realized it was thick and curling at my
shoulders.
"And in the days that followed, there was endless noise and movement in the fortress.
Carts were coming to the gates from all directions. Thousands on foot passed inside. Every
hour there was the sound of people on the move, people coming.
"At last Mael and eight of the Druids came to me. Their robes were white and fresh,
smelling of the spring water and sunshine in which they'd been washed and dried, and their
hair was brushed and shining.
"Carefully, they shaved all the hair from my chin and upper lip. They trimmed my
fingernails. They brushed my hair and put on me the same white robes. And then shielding
me on all sides with white veils they passed me out of the house and into a white canopied
wagon.
"I glimpsed other robed men holding back an enormous crowd, and I realized for the first
time that only a select few of the Druids had been allowed to see me.
"Once Mael and I were under the canopy of the cart, the flaps were closed, and we were
completely hidden. We seated ourselves on rude benches as the wagon started to move. And
we rode for hours without speaking.
"Occasional rays of sun pierced the white fabric of the tentlike enclosure. And when I put
my face close to the cloth I could see the forest-deeper, thicker than I remembered. And
behind us came an endless train, and great wagons of men who clung to wooden bars and
cried out to be released, their voices commingling in an awful chorus.
"'Who are they? Why do they cry like that?' I asked finally. I couldn't stand the tension any
longer.
"Mael roused himself as if from a dream. 'They are evildoers, thieves, murderers, all justly
condemned, and they shall perish in sacred sacrifice.'
"'Loathsome,' I muttered. But was it? We condemned our criminals to die on crosses in
Rome, to be burnt at the stake, to suffer all manner of cruelties. Did it make us more civilized
that we didn't call it a religious sacrifice? Maybe the Keltoi were wiser than we were in not
wasting the deaths.
"But this was nonsense. My head was light. The cart was creeping along. I could hear those
who passed us on foot as well as on horseback. Everyone going to the festival of Samhain. I
was about to die. I didn't want it to be fire. Mael looked pale and frightened. And the wailing
of the men in the prison carts was driving me to the edge of madness.
"What would I think when the fire was lighted? What would I think when I felt myself start
to burn? I couldn't stand this.
"'What is going to happen to me!' I demanded suddenly. I had the urge to strangle Mael.
He looked up and his brows moved ever so slightly.
" 'What if the god is already dead. . . ' he whispered.
" 'Then we go to Rome, you and I, and we get drunk together on good Italian wine!' I
whispered.
"It was late afternoon when the cart came to a stop. The noise seemed to rise like steam all
around us.
"When I went to look out, Mael didn't stop me. I saw we had come to an immense clearing
hemmed on all sides by the giant oaks. All the carts including ours were backed into the trees,
and in the middle of the clearing hundreds worked at some enterprise involving endless
bundles of sticks and miles of rope and hundreds of great rough-hewn tree trunks.
"The biggest and longest logs I had ever seen were being hefted upright in two giant X's.
"The woods were alive with those who watched. The clearing could not contain the
multitudes. Yet more and more carts wound their way through the press to find a spot at the
edges of the forest.
"I sat back and pretended to myself that I did not know what they were doing out there, but
I did. And before the sunset I heard louder and more desperate screams from those in the
prison carts.
"It was almost dusk. And when Mael lifted the flap for me to see, I stared in horror at two
gargantuan wicker figures-a man and a woman, it seemed, from the mass of vines that
suggested dress and hair-constructed all of logs and osiers and ropes, and filled from top to
bottom with the bound and writhing bodies of the condemned who screamed in supplication.
"I was speechless looking at these two monstrous giants. I could not count the number of
wriggling human bodies they held, victims stuffed into the hollow framework of their
enormous legs, their torsos, their arms, even their hands, and even into their immense and
faceless cagelike heads, which were crowned with ivy leaves and flowers. Ropes of flowers
made up the woman's gown, and stalks of wheat were stuffed into the man's great belt of ivy.
The figures shivered as if they might at any moment fall, but I knew the powerful cross
scaffolding of timbers supported them as they appeared to tower over the distant forest. And
all around the feet of these figures were stacked the bundles of kindling and pitch-soaked
wood that would soon ignite them.
" 'And all these who must die are guilty of some wrongdoing, you wish me to believe that?'
I asked of Mael.
"He nodded with his usual solemnity. This didn't concern him.
"'They have waited months, some years, to be sacrificed,' he said almost indifferently.
'They come from all over the land. And they cannot change their fate any more than we can
change ours. It is to perish in the forms of the Great Mother and her Lover.'
"I was becoming ever more desperate. I should have done anything to escape. But even
now some twenty Druids surrounded the cart and beyond them was a legion of warriors. And
the crowd itself went so far back into the trees that I could see no end to it.
"Darkness was falling quickly, and everywhere torches were being lighted.
"I could feel the roar of excited voices. The screams of the condemned grew ever more
piercing and beseeching.
"I sat still and tried to deliver my mind from panic. If I could not escape, then I would meet
these strange ceremonies with some degree of calm, and when it came clear what a sham they
were, I would with dignity and righteousness pronounce my judgments loud enough for
others to hear them. That would be my last act-the act of the god-and it must be done with
authority, or else it would do nothing in the scheme of things.
"The cart began to move. There was much noise, shouting, and Mael rose and took my arm
and steadied me. When the flap was opened we had come to a stop deep in the woods many
yards from the clearing. I glanced back at the lurid sight of the immense figures, torchlight
glinting on the swarm of pathetic movement inside them. They seemed animate, these
horrors, like things that would suddenly start to walk and crush all of us. The play of light and
shadow on those stuffed into the giant heads gave a false impression of hideous faces.
"I couldn't make myself turn away from it, and from the sight of the crowd gathered all
around, but Mael tightened his grip on my arm and said that I must come now to the
sanctuary of the god with the elect of the priesthood.
"The others closed me in, obviously trying to conceal me. I realized the crowd did not
know what was happening now. In all likelihood they knew only that the sacrifices would
soon begin, and some manifestation of the god would be claimed by the Druids.
"Only one of the band carried a torch, and he led the way deeper into the evening darkness,
Mael at my side, and other white-robed figures ahead of me, flanking me, and behind me.
"It was still. It was damp. And the trees rose to such dizzying heights against the vanishing
glow of the distant sky that they seemed to be growing even as I looked up at them.
"I could run now, I thought, but how far would I get before this entire race of people came
thundering after me?
"But we had come into a grove, and I saw, in the feeble light of the flames, dreadful faces
carved into the barks of the trees and human skulls on stakes grinning in the shadows. In
carved-out tree trunks were other skulls in rows, piled one row upon another. In fact, the
place was a regular charnel house, and the silence that enclosed us seemed to give life to
these horrid things, to let them speak suddenly.
"I tried to shake the illusion, the sense that these staring skulls were watching.
"There is no one really watching, I thought, there is no continuous awareness of anything.
"But we had paused before a gnarled oak of such enormous girth that I doubted my senses.
How old it must have been, this tree, to have grown to such width I couldn't imagine. But
when I looked up I saw that its soaring limbs were still alive, it was still in green leaf, and the
living mistletoe everywhere decorated it.
"The Druids had stepped away to right and left. Only Mael remained near me. And I stood
facing the oak, with Mael at my far right, and I saw that hundreds of bouquets of flowers had
been laid at the base of the tree, their little blooms barely showing any color anymore in the
gathering shadows.
"Mael had bowed his head. His eyes were closed. And it seemed the others were in the
same attitude, and their bodies were trembling. I felt the cool breeze stir the green grass. I
heard the leaves ail around us carry the breeze in a loud and long sigh that died away as it had
come in the forest.
"And then very distinctly, I heard words spoken in the dark that had no sound to them!
"They came undeniably from within the tree itself, and they asked whether or not all the
conditions had been met by him who would drink the Divine Blood tonight.
"For a moment I thought that I was going mad. They had drugged me. But I had drunk
nothing since morning! My head was clear, too painfully clear, and I heard the silent pulse of
this personage again and it was asking questions:
"He is a man of learning?
"Mael's slender form seemed to shimmer as surely he expressed the answer. And the faces
of the others had become rapt, their eyes fixed on the great oak, the flutter of the torch the
only movement.
"Can he go down into Egypt?
"I saw Mael nod. And the tears rose in his eyes, and his pale throat moved as he
swallowed.
"Yes, I live, my faithful one, and I speak, and you have done well, and I shall make the
new god. Send him in to me.
"I was too astonished to speak, and I had nothing to say either. Everything had changed.
Everything that I believed, depended upon, had suddenly been called into question. I hadn't
the slightest fear, only paralyzing amazement. Mael took me by the arm. The other Druids
came to assist him, and I was led around the oak, clear of the flowers heaped at its roots, until
we stood behind it before a huge pile of stones banked against it.
"The grove had its carved images on this side as well, its troves of skulls, and the pale
figures of Druids whom I had not seen before. And it was these men, some with long white
beards, who drifted forward to lay their hands on the stones and start to remove them.
"Mael and the others worked with them, silently lifting these great rocks and casting them
aside, some of the stones so heavy that three men had to lift them.
"And finally there was revealed in the base of the oak a heavy doorway of iron with huge
locks over it. Mael drew out an iron key and he said some long words in the language of the
Keltoi, to which the others gave responses. Mael's hand was shaking. But he soon had all the
locks undone, and then it took four of the Druids to pull back the door. And then the
torchbearer lighted another brand for me and placed it in my hands and Mael said:
"'Enter, Marius.'
"In the wavering light, we glanced at each other. He seemed a helpless creature, unable to
move his limbs, though his heart brimmed as he looked at me. I knew now the barest glimpse
of the wonder that had shaped him and enflamed him, and was utterly humbled and baffled
by its origins.
"But from within the tree, from the darkness beyond this rudely cut doorway, there came
the silent one again:
"Do not be afraid, Marius. I wait for you. Take the light and come to me."
7
"When I stepped through the doorway, the Druids closed it. And I realized that I stood at
the top of a long stone stairs. It was a configuration I was to see over and over again in the
centuries that followed, and you have already seen it twice and you will see it again, the steps
leading down into the Mother Earth, into the chambers where Those Who Drink the Blood
always hide.
"The oak itself contained a chamber, low and unfinished, the light off my torch glinting on
the rude marks left everywhere in the wood by the chisels, but the thing that called me was at
the bottom of the stairs. And again, it told me that I must not be afraid.
"I was not afraid. I was exhilarated beyond my wildest dreams. I was not going to die as
simply as I had imagined. I was descending to a mystery that was infinitely more interesting
than I had ever thought it would be.
"But when I reached the bottom of the narrow steps and stood in the small stone chamber
there, I was terrified by what I saw-terrified and repelled by it, the loathing and fear so
immediate that I felt a lump rising to suffocate me or make me uncontrollably sick.
"A creature sat on a stone bench opposite the foot of the stairway, and in the full light of
the torch I saw that it had the face and limbs of a man. But it was burnt black all over,
horribly burnt, its skin shriveled to its very bones. In fact it appeared a yellow-eyed skeleton
coated in pitch, only its flowing main of white hair untouched. It opened its mouth to speak
and I saw its white teeth, its fang teeth, and I gripped the torch firmly, trying not to scream
like a fool.
" 'Do not come too close to me,' it said. 'Stand there where I may really see you, not as they
see you, but as my eyes can still see.'
"I swallowed, tried to breathe easily. No human being could have been burnt like that and
survived. And yet the thing lived-naked and shrunken and black. And its voice was low and
beautiful. It rose, and then moved slowly across the chamber.
"It pointed its finger at me, and the yellow eyes widened slightly, revealing a blood red
tinge in the light.
"'What do you want of me?' I whispered before I could stop myself. 'Why have I been
brought here?'
" 'Calamity,' he said in the same voice, colored with genuine feeling-not the rasping sound
I had expected from such a thing. 'I will give you my power. Marius, I will make you a god
and you will be immortal. But you must leave here when it is finished. You must somehow
escape our faithful worshipers, and you must go down into Egypt to find why this . . . this . . .
has befallen me.'
"He appeared to be floating in the darkness, his hair a mop of white straw around him, his
jaws stretching the blackened leathery skin that clung to his skull as he spoke.
" 'You see, we are the enemies of light, we gods of darkness, we serve the Holy Mother
and we live and rule only by the light of the moon. But our enemy, the sun, has escaped his
natural path and sought us out in darkness. All over the north country where we worshiped, in
the sacred groves from the lands of snow and ice, down into this fruitful country, and to the
east, the sun has found its way into the sanctuary by day or the world by night and burned the
gods alive. The youngest of these perished utterly, some exploding like comets before their
worshipers! Others died in such heat that the sacred tree itself became a funeral pyre. Only
the old ones-the ones who have long served the Great Mother-continued to walk and to talk
as I do, but in agony, affrighting the faithful worshipers when they appeared.
" 'There must be a new god, Marius, strong and beautiful as I was, the lover of the Great
Mother, but more truly there must be one strong enough to escape the worshipers, to get out
of the oak somehow, and to go down into Egypt and seek out the old gods and find why this
calamity has occurred. You must go to Egypt, Marius, you must go into Alexandria and into
the older cities, and you must summon the gods with the silent voice that you will have after I
make you, and you must find who lives still and who walks still, and why this calamity has
occurred.'
"It closed its eyes now. It stood still, its light frame wavering uncontrollably as if it were a
thing made of black paper, and I saw suddenly, unaccountably, a spill of violent images-these
gods of the grove bursting into flame. I heard their screams. My mind, being rational, being
Roman, resisted these images. It tried to memorize and contain them, rather than yield to
them, but the maker of the images-this thing-was patient and the images went on. I saw the
country that could only be Egypt, the burnt yellow look to all things, the sand that overlies
everything and soils it and dusts it to the same color, and I saw more stairways into the earth
and I saw sanctuaries . . .
"'Find them,' he said. 'Find why and how this has come to pass. See to it that it never
comes to pass again. Use your powers in the streets of Alexandria until you find the old ones.
Pray the old ones are there as I am still here.'
"I was too shocked to answer, too humbled by the mystery. And perhaps there was even a
moment when I accepted this destiny, accepted it completely, but I am not sure.
"'I know,' he said. 'From me you can keep no secrets. You do not wish to be the God of the
Grove, and you will seek to escape. But you see, this disaster may seek you out wherever you
are unless you discover the cause and the prevention of it. So I know you will go into Egypt,
else you too in the womb of the night or the womb of the dark earth may be burnt by this
unnatural sun.'
"It came towards me a little, dragging its dried feet on the stone floor. 'Now mark my
words, you must escape this very night,' it said. 'I will tell the worshipers that you must go
down into Egypt, for the salvation of all of us, but having a new and able god, they will be
loath to part with him. But you must go down. And you must not let them imprison you in the
oak after the festival. You must travel fast. And before sunrise, go into the Mother Earth to
escape the light. She will protect you. Now come to me. I will give you The Blood. And pray
I still have the power to give you my ancient strength. It will be slow. It will be long. I will
take and I will give, and I will take and I will give, but I must do it, and you must become the
god, and you must do as I have said.'
"Without waiting for my compliance, it was suddenly on me, its blackened fingers
clutching at me, the torch falling from my hands. I fell backwards on the stairs, but its teeth
were already in my throat.
"You know what happened, you know what it was to feel the blood being drawn, to feel
the swoon. I saw in those moments the tombs and temples of Egypt. I saw two figures,
resplendent as they sat side by side as if on a throne. I saw and heard other voices speaking to
me in other languages. And underneath it all, there came the same command: serve the
Mother, take the blood of the sacrifice, preside over the worship that is the only worship, the
eternal worship of the grove.
"I was struggling as one struggles in dreams, unable to cry out, unable to escape. And
when I realized I was free and no longer pinned to the floor, I saw the god again, black as he
had been before, but this time he was robust, as if the blaze had only baked him and he
retained his full strength. His face had definition, even beauty, features well formed beneath
the cracked casing of blackened leather that was his skin. The yellow eyes had round them
now tire natural folds of flesh that made them portals of a soul. But he was still crippled, still
suffering, almost unable to move.
" 'Rise, Marius,' he said. 'You thirst and I will give you to drink. Rise and come to me.'
"And you know then the ecstasy I felt when his blood came into me, when it worked its
way into every vessel, every limb. But the horrid pendulum had only begun to swing.
"Hours passed in the oak, as he took the blood out of me and gave it back over and over
again. I lay sobbing on the floor when I was drained. I could see my hands like bones in front
of me. I was shriveled as he had been. And again he would give me the blood to drink and I
would rise in a frenzy of exquisite feeling, only to have him take it out of me again.
"With every exchange there came the lessons: that I was immortal, that only the sun and
the fire could kill me, that I would sleep by day in the earth, that I should never know illness
or natural death. That my soul should never migrate from my form into another, that I was the
servant of the Mother, and that the moon would give me strength.
"That I would thrive on the blood of the evildoers, and even of the innocent who were
sacrificed to the Mother, that I should remain in starvation between sacrifices, so that my
body would become dry and empty like the dead wheat in the fields at winter, only to be
filled with the blood of the sacrifice and to become full and beautiful like the new plants of
the spring.
"In my suffering and ecstasy there would be the cycle of the seasons. And the powers of
my mind, to read the thoughts and intentions of others, these I should use to make the
judgments for my worshipers, to guide them in their justice and their laws. Never should I
drink any blood but the blood of the sacrifice. Never should I seek to take my powers for my
own.
"These things I learned, these things I understood. But what was really taught to me during
those hours was what we all learn at the moment of the Drinking of the Blood, that I was no
longer a mortal man-that I had passed away from all I knew into something so powerful that
these old teachings could barely harness or explain it, that my destiny, to use Mael's words,
was beyond all the knowledge that anyone-mortal or immortal-could give.
"At last the god prepared me to go out off the tree. He drained so much blood from me
now that I was scarcely about to stand. I was a wraith. I was weeping from thirst, I was seeing
blood and smelling blood, and would have rushed at him and caught him and drained him had
I the strength. But the strength, of course, was his.
" 'You are empty, as you will always be at the commencement of the festival,' he said, 'so
that you may drink your fill of the sacrificial blood. But remember what I have told you.
After you preside, you must find a way to escape. As for me, try to save me. Tell them that
I must be kept with you. But in all likelihood my time has come to an end.'
"'Why, how do you mean?' I asked.
"'You will see. There need be only one god here, one good god,' he said. 'If I could only go
with you to Egypt, I could drink the blood of the old ones and it might heal me. As it is, I will
take hundreds of years to heal. And I shall not be allowed that time. But remember, go into
Egypt. Do all that I have said.'
"He turned me now and pushed me towards the stairs. The torch lay blazing in the corner,
and as I rose towards the door above, I smelled the blood of the Druids waiting, and I almost
wept.
" 'They will give you all the blood that you can take,' he said behind me. 'Place yourself in
their hands."'
8
"You can well imagine how I looked when I stepped from the oak. The Druids had waited
for my knock upon the door, and in my silent voice, I had said:
"Open. It is the god.
"My human death was long finished, I was ravenous, and surely my face was no more than
a living skull. No doubt my eyes were bulging from their sockets, and my teeth were bared.
The white robe hung on me as on a skeleton. And no clearer evidence of my divinity could
have been given to the Druids, who stood awestruck as I came out of the tree.
"But I saw not merely their faces, I saw into their hearts. I saw the relief in Mael that the
god within had not been too feeble to create me. I saw the confirmation in him of all that he
believed.
"And I saw the other great vision that is ours to see-the great spiritual depth of each man
buried deep within a crucible of heated flesh and blood.
"My thirst was pure agony. And summoning all my new strength, I said. 'Take me to the
altars. The Feast of Samhain is to begin.'
"The Druids let out chilling screams. They howled in the forest. And far beyond the sacred
grove there came a deafening roar from the multitudes who had waited for that cry.
"We walked swiftly, in procession towards the clearing, and more and more of the whiterobed
priests came out to greet us and I found myself pelted with fresh and fragrant flowers
from all sides, blossoms I crushed under my feet as I was saluted with hymns.
"I need not tell you how the world looked to me with the new vision, how I saw each tint
and surface beneath the thin veil of darkness, how these hymns and anthems assaulted my
ears.
"Marius, the man, was disintegrated inside this new being.
"Trumpets blared from the clearing as I mounted the steps of the stone altar and looked out
over the thousands gathered there-the sea of expectant faces, the giant wicker figures with
their doomed victims still struggling and caging inside.
"A great silver caldron of water stood before the altar, and as the priests sang, a chain of
prisoners was led to this caldron, their arms bound behind their backs.
"The voices were singing in concert around me as the priests placed the flowers in my hair,
on my shoulders, at my feet.
"'Beautiful one, powerful one, god of the woods and the fields, drink now the sacrifices
offered to you, and as your wasted limbs fill with life, so the earth will renew itself. So you
will forgive us for the cutting of the corn which is the harvest, so you will bless the seed we
sow.'
"And I saw before me those selected to be my victims, three stout men, bound as the others
were bound, but clean and dressed also in white robes, with flowers on their shoulders and in
their hair. Youths they were, handsome and innocent and overcome with awe as they awaited
the will of the god.
"The trumpets were deafening. The roaring was ceaseless. I said:
"'Let the sacrifices begin!' And as the first youth was delivered up to me, as I prepared to
drink for the very first time from that truly divine cup which is human life, as I held the warm
flesh of the victim in my hands, the blood ready for my open mouth, I saw the fires lighted
beneath the towering wicker giants, I saw the first two prisoners forced head down into the
water of the silver caldron.
"Death by fire, death by water, death by the. piercing teeth of the hungry god.
"Through the age-old ecstasy, the hymns continued: 'God of the waning and waxing moon,
god of the woods and fields, you who are the very image of death in your hunger, grow
strong with the blood of the victims, grow beautiful so that the Great Mother will take you to
herself.'
"How long did it last? I do not know. It was forever-the blaze of the wicker giants, the
screaming of the victims, the long procession of those who must be drowned. I drank and
drank, not merely from the three selected for me, but from a dozen others before they were
returned to the caldron, or forced into the blazing giants. The priests cut the heads from the
dead with great bloody swords, stacking them in pyramids to either side of the altar, and the
bodies were borne away.
"Everywhere I turned I saw rapture on sweating faces, everywhere I turned I heard the
anthems and cries. But at last the frenzy was dying out. The giants were fallen into a
smoldering heap upon which men poured more pitch, more kindling.
"And it was now time for the judgments, for men to stand before me and present their
cases for vengeance against others, and for me to look with my new eyes into their souls. I
was reeling. I had drunk too much blood, but I felt such power in me I could have leapt up
and over the clearing and deep into the forest. I could have spread invisible wings, or so it
seemed.
"But I carried out my 'destiny' as Mael would have called it. I found this one just, that one
in error, this one innocent, that one deserving of death.
"I don't know how long it went on because my body no longer measured time in weariness.
But finally it was finished, and I realized the moment of action had come.
"I had somehow to do what the old god had commanded me, which was to escape the
imprisonment in the oak. And I also had precious little time in which to do it, no more than
an hour before dawn.
"As for what lay ahead in Egypt, I had not made my decision yet. But I knew that if I let
the Druids enclose me in the sacred tree again, I would starve in there until the small offering
at the next full moon. And all of my nights until that time would be thirst and torture, and
what the old one had called 'the god's dreams' in which I'd learn the secrets of the tree and the
grass that grew and the silent Mother.
"But these secrets were not for me.
"The Druids surrounded me now and we proceeded to the sacred tree again, the hymns
dying to a litany which commanded me to remain within the oak to sanctify the forest, to be
its guardian, and to speak kindly through the oak to those of the priesthood who would come
from time to time to ask guidance of me.
"I stopped before we reached the tree. A huge pyre was blazing in the middle of the grove,
casting ghastly light on the carved faces and the heaps off human skulls. The rest of the
priesthood stood round it waiting. A current of terror shot through me with all the new power
that such feelings have for us.
"I started talking hastily. In an authoritative voice I told them that I wished them all to
leave the grove. That I should seal myself up in the oak at dawn with the old god. But I could
see it wasn't working. They were staring at me coldly and glancing one to the other, their eyes
shallow like bits of glass.
"'Mael!' I said. 'Do as I command you. Tell these priests to leave the grove.'
"Suddenly, without the slightest warning, half the assemblage of priests ran towards the
tree. The other took hold of my arms.
"I shouted for Mael, who led the siege on the tree, to stop. I tried to get loose but some
twelve of the priests gripped my arms and my legs.
"If I had only understood the extent of my strength, I might easily have freed myself. But I
didn't know. I was still reeling from the feast, too horrified by what I knew would happen
now. As I struggled, trying to free my arms, even kicking at those who held me, the old god,
the naked and black thing, was borne out of the tree and heaved into the fire.
"Only for a split second did I see him, and all I beheld was resignation. He did not once lift
his arms to fight. His eyes were closed and he did not look at me, nor at anyone or anything,
and I remembered in that moment what he had told me, of his agony, and I started to cry.
"I was shaking violently as they burned him. But from the very midst of the flames I heard
his voice. 'Do as I commanded you, Marius. You are our hope.' That meant Get Out of Here
Now.
"I made myself still and small in the grip of those who held me. I wept and wept and acted
like I was just the sad victim of all this magic, just the poor god who must mourn his father
who had gone into the flames. And when I felt their hands relax, when I saw that, one and all,
they were gazing into the pyre, I pivoted with all my strength, tearing loose from their grip,
and I ran as fast as I could for the woods.
"In that initial sprint, I learned for the first time what my powers were. I cleared the
hundreds of yards in an instant, my feet barely touching the ground.
"But the cry rang out immediately: 'THE GOD HAS FLOWN!' and within seconds the
multitude in the clearing was screaming it over and over as thousands of mortals plunged into
the trees.
"How on earth did this happen, I thought suddenly, that I'm a god, full of human blood,
and running from thousands of Keltic barbarians through this damned woods!
"I didn't even stop to tear the white robe off me, but ripped it off while I was still running,
and then I leapt up to the branches overhead and moved even faster through the tops of the
oaks.
"Within minutes I was so far away from my pursuers that I couldn't hear them anymore.
But I kept running and running, leaping from branch to branch, until there "was nothing to
fear anymore but the morning sun.
"And I learned then what Gabrielle learned so early in your wanderings, that I could easily
dig into the earth to save myself from the light.
"When I awoke the heat of my thirst astonished me. I could not imagine how the old god
had endured the ritual starvation. I could think only of human blood.
"But the Druids had had the day in which to pursue me. I had to proceed with great care.
"And I starved all that night as I sped through the forest, not drinking until early morning
when I came upon a band of thieves in the woods which provided me with the blood of an
evildoer, and a good suit of clothes.
"In those hours just before dawn, I took stock of things. I had learned a great deal about my
powers, I would learn more.
And I would go down to Egypt, not for the sake of the gods or their worshipers, but to find
out what this was all about.
"And so even then you see, more than seventeen hundred years ago, we were questing, we
were rejecting the explanations given us, we were loving the magic and the power for its own
sake.
"On the third night of my new life, I wandered into my old house in Massilia and found my
library, my writing table, my books all there still. And my faithful slaves overjoyed to see me.
What did these things mean to me? What did it mean that I had written this history, that I had
lain in this bed?
"I knew I could not be Marius, the Roman, any longer. But I would take from him what I
could. I sent my beloved slaves back home. I wrote my father to say that a serious illness
compelled me to live out my remaining days in the heat and dryness of Egypt. I packed off
the rest of my history to those in Rome who would read it and publish it, and then I set out for
Alexandria with gold in my pockets, with my old travel documents, and with two dull-witted
slaves who never questioned that I traveled by night.
"And within a month of the great Samhain Feast in Gaul, I was roaming the black crooked
nighttime streets of Alexandria, searching for the old gods with my silent voice.
"I was mad, but I knew the madness would pass. I had to find the old gods. And you know
why I had to find them. It was not only the threat of the calamity again, the sun god seeking
me out in the darkness of my daytime slumber, or visiting me with obliterating fire in the full
darkness of the night.
"I had to find the old gods because I could not bear to be alone among men. The full horror
of it was upon me, and though I killed only the murderer, the evildoer, my conscience was
too finely tuned for self-deception. I could not bear the realization that I, Marius, who had
known and enjoyed such love in his life, was the relentless bringer of death."
9
"Alexandria was not an old city. It had existed for just a little over three hundred years. But
it was a great port and the home of the largest libraries in the Roman world. Scholars from all
over the Empire came to study there, and I had been one of them in another lifetime, and now
I found myself there again.
"Had not the god told me to come, I would have gone deeper into Egypt, 'to the bottom,' to
use Mael's phrase, suspecting that the answers to all riddles lay in the older shrines.
"But a curious feeling came on me in Alexandria. I knew the gods were there. I knew they
were guiding my feet when I sought the streets of the whorehouses and the thieves' dens, the
places where men went to lose their souls.
"At night I lay on my bed in my little Roman house and I called to the gods. I grappled
with my madness. I puzzled just as you have puzzled over the power and strength and
crippling emotions which I now possessed. And one night just before morning, when the light
of only one lamp shone through the sheer veils of the bed where I lay, I turned my eyes
towards the distant garden doorway and saw a still black figure standing there.
"For one moment it seemed a dream, this figure, because it carried no scent, did not seem
to breathe, did not make a sound. Then I knew it was one of the gods, but it was gone and I
was left sitting up and staring after it, trying to remember what I had seen: a black naked
thing with a bald head and red piercing eyes, a thing that seemed lost in its own stillness,
strangely diffident, only marshaling its strength to move at the last moment before complete
discovery.
"The next night in the back streets I heard a voice telling me to come. But it was a less
articulate voice than that which had come from the tree. It made known to me only that the
door was near. And finally there came the still and silent moment when I stood before the
door.
"It was a god who opened it for me. It was a god who said Come.
"I was frightened as I descended the inevitable stairway, as I followed a steeply sloping
tunnel. I lighted the candle I had brought with me, and I saw that I was entering an
underground temple, a place older than the city of Alexandria, a sanctuary built perhaps
under the ancient pharaohs, its walls covered with tiny colored pictures depicting the life of
old Egypt.
"And then there was the writing, the magnificent picture writing with its tiny mummies and
birds and embracing arms without bodies, and coiling snakes.
"I moved on, coming into a vast place of square pillars and a soaring ceiling. The same
paintings decorated every inch of stone here.
"And then I saw in the comer of my eye what seemed at first a statue, a black figure
standing near a pillar with one hand raised to rest against the stone. But I knew it was no
statue. No Egyptian god made out of diorite ever stood in this attitude nor wore a real linen
skirt about its loins.
"I turned slowly, bracing myself against the full sight of it, and saw the same burnt flesh,
the same streaming hair, though it was black, the same yellow eyes. The lips were shriveled
around the teeth and the gums, and the breath came out of its throat full of pain.
" 'How and whence did you come?' he asked in Greek.
"I saw myself as he saw me, luminous and strong, even my blue eyes something of an
incidental mystery, and I saw my Roman garments, my linen tunic gathered in gold buckles
on my shoulders, my red cloak. With my long yellow hair, I must have looked like a
wanderer from the north woods, 'civilized' only on the surface, and perhaps this was now
true.
"But he was the one who concerned me. And I saw him more fully, the seamed flesh burnt
to his ribs and molded to his collarbone and the jutting bones of his hips. He was not starved,
this thing. He had recently drunk human blood. But his agony was like heat coming from
him, as though the fire still cooked him from within, as though he were a self-contained hell.
"'How have you escaped the burning?' he asked. 'What saved you? Answer!'
"'Nothing saved me,' I said, speaking Greek as he did.
"I approached him holding the candle to the side when he shied from it. He had been thin
in life, broad-shouldered like the old pharaohs, and his long black hair was cropped straight
across the forehead in that old style.
" 'I wasn't made when it happened,' I said, 'but afterwards, by the god of the sacred grove in
Gaul.'
" 'Ah, then he was unharmed, this one who made you.'
" 'No, burned as you are, but he had enough strength to do it. He gave and took the blood
over and over again. He said, "Go into Egypt and find why this has happened." He said the
gods of the wood had burst into flames, some in their sleep and some awake. He said this had
happened all over the north.'
"'Yes.' He nodded, and he gave a dry rasping laugh that shook his entire form. 'And only
the ancient had the strength to survive, to inherit the agony which only immortality can
sustain. And so we suffer. But you have been made. You have come. You will make more.
But is it justice to make more? Would the Father and the Mother have allowed this to happen
to us if the time had not come?'
" 'But who are the Father and the Mother?' I asked. I knew he did not mean the earth when
he said Mother.
" 'The first of us,' he answered, 'those from whom all of us descend.'
"I tried to penetrate his thoughts, feel the truth of them, but he knew what I was doing, and
his mind folded up like a flower at dusk.
" 'Come with me,' he said. And he commenced to walk with a shuffling step out of the
large room and down a long corridor, decorated as the chamber had been.
"I sensed we were in an even older place, something built before the temple from which
we'd just come. I do not know how I knew it. The chill you felt on the steps here on the island
was not there. You don't feel such things in Egypt. You feel something else. You feel the
presence of something living in the air itself.
"But there was more palpable evidence of antiquity as we walked on. The paintings on
these walls were older, the colors fainter, and here and there was damage where the colored
plaster had flaked and fallen away. The style had changed. The black hair of the little figures
was longer and fuller, and it seemed the whole was more lovely, more full of light and
intricate design.
"Somewhere far off water dripped on stone. The sound gave a songlike echo through the
passage. It seemed the walls had captured life in these delicate and tenderly painted figures, it
seemed that the magic attempted again and again by the ancient religious artists had its tiny
glowing kernel of power. I could hear whispers of life where there were no whispers. I could
feel the great continuity of history even if there was no one who was aware.
"The dark figure beside me paused as I looked at the walls. He made an airy gesture for me
to follow him through a doorway, and we entered a long rectangular chamber covered
entirely with the artful hieroglyphs. It was like being encased in a manuscript to be inside it.
And I saw two older Egyptian sarcophagi placed head to head against the wall.
"These were boxes carved to conform to the shape of the mummies for which they were
made, and fully modeled and painted to represent the dead, with faces of hammered gold, the
eyes of inlaid lapis lazuli.
"I held the candle high. And with great effort my guide opened the lids of these cases and
let them fall back so that I might see inside.
"I saw what at first appeared to be bodies, but when I drew closer I realized that they were
heaps of ash in manly form. Nothing of tissue remained to them except a white fang here, a
chip of bone there.
" 'No amount of blood can bring them back now,' said my guide. 'They are past all
resurrection. The vessels of the blood are gone. Those who could rise have risen, and
centuries will pass before we are healed, before we know the cessation of our pain.'
"Before he closed the mummy cases, I saw that the lids inside were blackened by the fire
that had immolated these two. I wasn't sorry to see them shut up again.
"He turned and moved towards the doorway again, and I followed with the candle, but he
paused and glanced back at the painted coffins.
" 'When the ashes are scattered,' he said, 'their souls are free.'
"'Then why don't you scatter the ashes!' I said, trying not to sound so desperate, so undone.
"'Should I?' he asked of me, the crisped flesh around his eyes widening. 'Do you think that
I should?'
"'You ask me!' I said.
"He gave one of those dry laughs again, that seemed to carry agony with it, and he led on
down the passage to a lighted room.
"It was a library we entered, where a few scattered candles revealed the diamond-shaped
wooden racks of parchment and papyrus scrolls.
"This delighted me, naturally, because a library was something I could understand. It was
the one human place in which I still felt some measure of old sanity.
"But I was startled to see another one-another one of us sitting to the side behind the
writing table, his eyes on the floor.
"This one had no hair whatsoever, and though he was pitch black all over, his skin was full
and well-modeled and gleamed as if it had been oiled. The planes of his face were beautiful,
the hand that rested in the lap of his white linen kilt was gracefully curled, all the muscles of
his naked chest well defined.
"He turned and looked up at me. And something immediately passed between us,
something more silent than silence, as it can be with us.
"'This is the Elder,' said the weaker one who'd brought me here. 'And you see for yourself
how he withstood the fire. But he will not speak. He has not spoken since it happened. Yet
surely he knows where are the Mother and the Father, and why this was allowed to pass.'
"The Elder merely looked forward again. But there was a curious expression on his face,
something sarcastic and faintly amused, and a little contemptuous.
" 'Even before this disaster,' the other one said. 'the Elder did not often speak to us. The fire
did not change him, make him more receptive. He sits in silence, more and more like the
Mother and the Father. Now and then he reads. Now and then he walks in the world above.
He's the Blood, he listens to the singers. Now and then he will dance. He speaks to mortals in
the streets of Alexandria, but he will not speak to us. He has nothing to say to us. But he
knows.... He knows why this happened to us.'
" 'Leave me with him,' I said.
"I had the feeling that all beings have in such situations. I will make the man speak. I will
draw something out of him, as no one else has been able to do. But it wasn't mere vanity that
impelled me. This was the one who had come to me in the bedroom of my house, I was sure
of it. This was the one who had stood watching me in my door.
"And I had sensed something in his glance. Call it intelligence, call it interest, call it
recognition of some common knowledge-there was something there.
"And I knew that I carried with me the possibilities of a different world, unknown to the
God of the Grove and even to this feeble and wounded one beside me who looked at the
Elder in despair.
"The feeble one withdrew as I had asked. I went to the writing table and looked at the
Elder.
"'What should I do?' I asked in Greek.
"He looked up at me abruptly, and I could see this thing I call intelligence in his face.
" 'Is there any point,' I asked, 'to questioning you further?'
"I had chosen my tone carefully. There was nothing formal in it, nothing reverential. It was
as familiar as it could be.
"'And just what is it you seek?' he asked in Latin suddenly, coldly, his mouth turning down
at the ends, his attitude one of abruptness and challenge.
"It relieved me to switch to Latin.
" 'You heard what I told the other,' I said in the same informal manner, 'how I was made by
the God of the Grove in the country of the Keltoi, and how I was told to discover why the
gods had died in flames.'
"'You don't come on behalf of the Gods of the Grove!' he said, sardonic as before. He had
not lifted his head, merely looked up, which made his eyes seem all the more challenging and
contemptuous.
" 'I do and I don't,' I said. 'If we can perish in this way, I would like to know why. What
happened once can happen a second time. And I would like to know if we are really gods,
and if we are, then what are our obligations to man. Are the Mother and the Father true
beings, or are they legend? How did all this start? I would like to know that, of course.'
" 'By accident,' he said.
"'By accident?' I leaned forward. I thought I had heard wrong.
"'By accident it started,' he said coolly, forbiddingly, with the clear implication that the
question was absurd. 'Four thousand years ago, by accident, and it has been enclosed in
magic and religion ever since.'
" 'You are telling me the truth, aren't you?'
" 'Why shouldn't I? Why should I protect you from the truth? Why should I bother to lie to
you? I don't even know who you are. I don't care.'
"'Then will you explain to me what you mean, that it happened by accident,' I pressed.
" 'I don't know. I may. I may not. I have spoken more in these last few moments than I
have in years. The story of the accident may be no more true than the myths that delight the
others. The others have always chosen the myths. It's what you really want, is it not?' His
voice rose and he rose slightly out of the chair as if his angry voice were impelling him to his
feet.
"'A story of our creation, analogous to the Genesis of the Hebrews, the tales in Homer, the
babblings of your Roman poets Ovid and Virgil-a great gleaming morass of symbols out of
which life itself is supposed to have sprung.' He was on his feet and all but shouting, his
black forehead knotted with veins, his hand a fist on the desk. 'It is that kind of tale that fills
the documents in these rooms, that emerges in fragments from the anthems and the
incantations. Want to hear it? It's as true as anything else.'
"'Tell me what you will,' I said. I was trying to keep calm. The volume of his voice was
hurting my ears. And I heard things stirring in the rooms near us. Other creatures, like that
dried-up wisp of a thing that had brought me in here, were prowling about.
"'And you might begin,' I said acidly, 'by confessing why you came to me in my rooms
here in Alexandria. It was you who led me here. Why did you do that? To rail at me? To
curse me for asking you how it started?'
" 'Quiet yourself.'
" 'I might say the same to you.'
"He looked me up and down calmly, and then he smiled. He opened both his hands as if in
greeting or offering, and then he shrugged.
" 'I want you to tell me about the accident,' I said. 'I would beg you to tell me if I thought it
would do any good. What can I do for you to make you tell?'
"His face underwent several remarkable transformations. I could feel his thoughts, but not
hear them, feel a high-pitched humor. And when he spoke again, his voice was thickened as
if he were fighting back sorrow, as if it were strangling him.
" 'Hearken to our old story,' he said. 'The good god, Osiris, the first pharaoh of Egypt, in
the eons before the invention of writing, was murdered by evil men. And when his wife, Isis,
gathered together the parts of his body, he became immortal and thereafter ruled in the realm
of the dead. This is the realm of the moon, and the night, in which he reigned, and to him
were brought the blood sacrifices for the great goddess which he drank. But the priests tried
to steal from him the secret of his immortality, and so his worship became secret, and his
temples were known only to those of his cult who protected him from the sun god, who might
at any time seek to destroy Osiris with the sun's burning rays. But you can see the truth in the
legend. The early king discovered something-or rather he was the victim of an ugly
occurrence-and he became unnatural with a power that could be used for incalculable evil by
those around him, and so he made a worship of it, seeking to contain it in obligation and
ceremony, seeking to limit The Powerful Blood to those who would use it for white magic
and nothing else. And so here we are.'
" 'And the Mother and Father are Isis and Osiris?'
"'Yes and no. They are the first two. Isis and Osiris are the names that were used in the
myths that they told, or the old worship onto which they grafted themselves.'
"'What was the accident, then? How was this thing discovered?'
"He looked at me for a long period of silence, and then he sat down again, turning to the
side and staring off as he'd been before.
"'But why should I tell you?' he asked, yet this time he put the question with new feeling,
as though he meant it sincerely and had to answer it for himself. 'Why should I do anything?
If the Mother and the Father will not rise from the sands to save themselves as the sun comes
over the horizon, why should I move? Or speak? Or go on?' Again he looked up at me.
" 'This is what happened, the Mother and the Father went out into the sun?'
"'Were left in the sun, my dear Marius,' he said, astonishing me with the knowledge of my
name. 'Left in the sun. The Mother and the Father do not move of their own volition, save
now and then to whisper to each other, to knock those of us down who would come to them
for their healing blood. They could restore all of us who were burned, if they would let us
drink the healing blood. Four thousand years the Father and Mother have existed, and our
blood grows stronger with every season, every victim. It grows stronger even with starvation,
for when the starvation is ended, new strength is enjoyed. But the Father and the Mother do
not care for their children. And now it seems they do not care for themselves. Maybe after
four thousand nights, they merely wished to see the sun!
"'Since the coming of the Greek into Egypt, since the perversion of the old art, they have
not spoken to us. They have not let us see the blink of their eye. And what is Egypt now but
the granary of Rome? When the Mother and the Father strike out to drive us away from the
veins in their necks, they are as iron and can crush our bones. And if they do not care
anymore, then why should I?'
"I studied him for a long moment.
" 'And you are saying,' I asked, 'that this is what caused the others to burn up? That the
Father and Mother were left out in the sun?'
"He nodded.
"'Our blood comes from them!' he said. 'It is their blood. The line is direct, and what befalls
them befalls us. If they are burnt, we are burnt.'
"'We are connected to them!' I whispered in amazement.
" 'Exactly, my dear Marius,' he said, watching me, seeming to enjoy my fear. 'That is why
they have been kept for a thousand years, the Mother and the Father, that is why victims are
brought to them in sacrifice, that is why they are worshiped. What happens to them happens
to us.'
"'Who did it? Who put them in the sun?'
"He laughed without making a sound.
"'The one who kept them,' he said, 'the one who couldn't endure it any longer, the one who
had had this solemn charge for too long, the one who could persuade no one else to accept the
burden, and finally, weeping and shivering, took them out into the desert sands and left them
like two statues there.'
" 'And my fate is linked to this,' I murmured.
" 'Yes. But you see, I do not think he believed it any longer, the one who kept them. It was
just an old tale. After all, they were worshiped as I told you, worshiped by us, as we are
worshiped by mortals, and no one dared to harm them. No one held a torch to them to see if it
made the rest of us feel pain. No. He did not believe it. He left them in the desert, and that
night when he opened his eyes in his coffin and found himself a burnt and unrecognizable
horror, he screamed and screamed.'
" 'You got them back underground.'
"'Yes.'
"'And they are blackened as you are...'
" 'No.' He shook his head. 'Darkened to a golden bronze, like the meat turning on the spit.
No more than that. And beautiful as before, as if beauty has become part of their heritage,
beauty part and parcel of what they are destined to be. They stare forward as they always
have, but they no longer incline their heads to each other, they no longer hum with the
rhythm of their secret exchanges, they no longer let us drink their blood. And the victims
brought to them, they will not take, save now and then, and only in solitude. No one knows
when they will drink, when they will not.'
"I shook my head. I moved back and forth, my head bowed, the candle fluttering in my
hand, not knowing what to say to all this, needing time to think it out.
"He gestured for me to take the chair on the other side of the writing table, and without
thinking of it, I did.
" 'But wasn't it meant to happen, Roman?' he asked. 'Weren't they meant to meet their
death in the sands, silent, unmoving, like statues cast there after a city is sacked by the
conquering army, and were we not meant to die too? Look at Egypt. What is Egypt, I ask you
again, but the granary of Rome? Were they not meant to burn there day after day while all of
us burned like stars the world over?'
"'Where are they?' I asked.
"'Why do you want to know?' he sneered. 'Why should I give you the secret? They cannot
be hacked to pieces, they are too strong for that, a knife will barely pierce their skin. Yet cut
them and you cut us. Burn them and you burn us. And whatever they make us feel, they feel
only a particle of it because their age protects them. And yet to destroy every one of us, you
have merely to bring them annoyance! The blood they do not even seem to need! Maybe their
minds are connected to ours as well. Maybe the sorrow we feel, the misery, the horror at the
fate of the world itself, comes from their minds, as locked in their chambers they dream! No.
I cannot tell you where they are, can I? Until I decide for certain that I am indifferent, that it
is time for us to die out.'
"'Where are they?' I said again.
"'Why should I not sink them into the very depths of sea?' he asked. 'Until such time as the
earth herself heaves them up into the sunlight on the crest of a great wave?'
"I didn't answer. I was watching him, wondering at his excitement, understanding it but in
awe of it just the same.
"'Why should I not bury them in the depths of the earth, I mean the darkest depths beyond
the faintest sounds of life, and let them lie in silence there, no matter what they think and
feel?'
"What answer could I give? I watched him. I waited until he seemed calmer. He looked at
me and his face became tranquil and almost trusting.
" 'Tell me how they became the Mother and the Father,' I said.
" 'Why?,
"'You know damn good and well why. I want to know! Why did you come into my
bedroom if you didn't mean to tell me?' I asked again.
"'So what if I did?' he said bitterly. 'So what if I wanted to see the Roman with my own
eyes? We will die and you will die with us. So I wanted to see our magic in a new form. Who
worships us now, after all? Yellow-haired warriors in the northern forests? Old old Egyptians
in secret crypts beneath the sands? We do not live in the temples of Greece and Rome. We
never did. And yet they celebrate our myth-the only myth they call the names of the Mother
and the Father. . .'
" 'I don't give a damn,' I said. 'You know I don't. We are alike, you and I. I won't go back to
the northern forests to make a race of gods for those people! But I came here to know and
you must tell me!'
" 'All right. So that you can understand the futility of it, so that you can understand the
silence of the Mother and the Father, I will tell. But mark my words, I may yet bring us all
down. I way yet burn the Mother and the Father in the heat of a kiln! But we will dispense
with lengthy initiations and high-blown language. We will do away with the myths that died
in the sand the day the sun shone on the Mother and the Father. I will tell you what all these
scrolls left by the Father and the Mother reveal. Set down your candle. And listen to me. ' "
9
" 'What the scrolls will tell you' he said, 'if you could decipher them, is that we have two
human beings, Akasha and Enkil, who had come into Egypt from some other, older land.
This was in the time long before the first writing, before the first pyramids, when the
Egyptians were still cannibals and hunted for the bodies of enemies to eat.
" 'Akasha and Enkil directed the people away from these practices. They were worshipers
of the Good Mother Earth and they taught the Egyptians how to sow seed in the Good
Mother, and how to herd animals for meat and milk and skins.
"'In all probability, they were not alone as they taught these things, but rather the leaders of
a people who had come with them from older cities whose names are now lost beneath the
sands of Lebanon, their monuments laid waste.
"'Whatever is the truth, these were benevolent rulers, these two, in whom the good of
others was the commanding value, as the Good Mother was the Nourishing Mother and
wished for all men to live in peace, and they decided all questions of justice for the emerging
land.
" 'Perhaps they would have passed into myth in some benign form had it not been for a
disturbance in the house of the roval steward which began with the antics of a demon that
hurled the furniture about.
"'Now this was no more than a common demon, the kind one hears of in all lands at all
times. He devils those who live in a certain place for a certain while. Perhaps he enters into
the body of some innocent and roars through her mouth with a loud voice. He may cause the
innocent one to belch obscenities and carnal invitations to those around her. Do you know of
these things?'
"I nodded. I told him you always heard such stories. Such a demon was supposed to have
possessed a vestal virgin in Rome. She made lewd overtures to all those around her, her face
turning purple with exertion, then fainted. But the demon had somehow been driven out. 'I
thought the girl was simply mad,' I said. 'That she was, shall we say, not suited to be a vestal
virgin. . .'
"'Of course!' he said with a note of rich irony. 'And I would assume the same thing, and so
would most any intelligent man walking the streets of Alexandria above us. Yet such stories
come and go. And if they are remarkable for any one thing, it is that they do not affect the
course of human events. These demons rather trouble some household, some person, and then
they are gone into oblivion and we are right where we started again.'
"'Precisely,' I said.
"'But you understand this was old old Egypt. This was a time when men ran from the
thunder, or ate the bodies of the dead to absorb their souls.'
" 'I understand,' I said.
" 'And this good King Enkil decided that he would himself address the demon who had
come into his steward's house. This thing was out of harmony, he said. The royal magicians
begged, of course, to be allowed to see to this, to drive the demon out. But this was a king
who would do good for everyone. He had some vision of all things being united in good, of
all forces being made to go on the same divine course. He would speak to this demon, try to
harness its power, so to speak, for the general good. And only if that could not be done would
he consent to the demon's being driven out.
" 'And so he went into the house of his steward, where furniture was being flung at the
walls, and jars broken, and doors slammed. And he commenced to talk to this demon and
invite it to talk to him. Everyone else ran away.
"'A full night passed before he came out of the haunted house and he had amazing things to
say:
"
"'These demons are mindless and childlike," he told his magicians, "but I have studied their
conduct and I have learned from all the evidence why it is that they rage. They are maddened
that they do not have bodies, that they cannot feel as we feel. They make the innocent scream
filth because the rites of love and passion are things that they cannot possibly know.
They can work the body parts but not truly inhabit them, and so they are obsessed with the
flesh that they cannot invade. And with their feeble powers they bump upon objects, they
make their victims twist and jump. This longing to be carnal is the origin of their anger, the
indication of the suffering which is their lot." And with these pious words he prepared to lock
himself in the haunted chambers to learn more.
" 'But this time his wife came between him and his purpose. She would not let him stay
with the demons. He must look into the mirror, she said. He had aged remarkably in the few
hours that he had remained in the house alone.
" 'And when he would not be deterred, she locked herself in with him, and all those who
stood outside the house heard the crashing and banging of objects, and feared for the moment
when they would hear the King and the Queen themselves screaming or raging in spirit
voices. The noise from the inner chambers was alarming. Cracks were appearing in the walls.
" 'All fled as before, except for a small party of interested men. Now these men since the
beginning of the reign had been the enemies of the King. These were old warriors who had
led the campaigns of Egypt in search of human flesh, and they had had enough of the King's
goodness, enough of the Good Mother and farming and the like, and they saw in this spirit
adventure not only more of the King's vain nonsense, but a situation that nevertheless
provided a remarkable opportunity for them.
"'When night fell, they crept into the haunted house. They were fearless of spirits, just as
the grave robbers are who rifle the tombs of the pharaohs. They believe, but not enough to
control their greed.
" 'And when they saw Enkil and Akasha together in the middle of this room full of flying
objects, they set upon them and they stabbed the King over and over, as your Roman senators
stabbed Caesar, and they stabbed the only witness, his wife.
" 'And the King cried out, "No, don't you see what you have done? You have given the
spirits a way to get in! You have opened my body to them! Don't you see!" But the men fled,
sure of the death of the King and the Queen, who was on her hands and knees, cradling her
husband's head in her hands, both bleeding from more wounds than one could count.
"'Now the conspirators stirred up the populace. Did everyone know that the King had been
killed by the spirits? He should have left the demons to his magicians as any other king
would have done. And bearing torches, all flocked to the haunted house, which had grown
suddenly and totally quiet.
"'The conspirators urged the magicians to enter, but they were afraid. "Then we will go in
and see what's happened," said the evil ones, and they threw open the doors.
" 'There stood the King and the Queen, staring calmly at the conspirators, and all of their
wounds were healed. And their eyes had taken on an eerie light, their skin a white shimmer,
their hair a magnificent gleam. Out of the house they came as the conspirators ran in terror,
and they dismissed all the people and the priests and went back to the palace alone.
" 'And though they confided in no one, they knew what had happened to them.
" 'They had been entered through their wounds by the demon at the point when mortal life
itself was about to escape. But it was the blood that the demon permeated in that twilight
moment when the heart almost stopped. Perhaps it was the substance that he had always
sought in his ragings, the substance that he had tried to bring forth from his victims with his
antics, but he had never been able to inflict enough wounds before his victim died. But now
he was in the blood, and the blood was not merely the demon, or the blood of the King and
Queen, but a combination of the human and the demon which was an altogether different
thing.
" 'And all that was left of the King and Queen was what this blood could animate, what it
could infuse and claim for its own. Their bodies were for all other purposes dead. But the
blood flowed through the brain and through the heart and through the skin, and so the
intelligence of the King and Queen remained. Their souls, if you will, remained, as the souls
reside in these organs, though why we do not know. And though the demon blood had no
mind of its own, no character of its own that the King and Queen could discover, it
nevertheless enhanced their minds and their characters, for it flowed through the organs that
create thought. And it added to their faculties its purely spiritual powers, so that the King and
Queen could hear the thoughts of mortals, and sense things and understand things that
mortals could not.
" 'In sum, the demon had added and the demon had taken away, and the King and Queen
were New Things. They could no longer eat food, or grow, or die, or have children, yet they
could feel with an intensity that terrified them. And the demon had what it wanted: a body to
live in, a way to be in the world at last, a way to feel.
"'But then came the even more dreadful discovery, that to keep their corpses animate, the
blood must be fed. And all it could convert to its use was the selfsame thing of which it was
made: blood. Give it more blood to enter, give it more blood to push through the limbs of the
body in which it enjoyed such glorious sensations, of blood it could not get enough.
"'And oh, the grandest of all sensations was the drinking in which it renewed itself, fed
itself, enlarged itself. And in that moment of drinking it could feel the death of the victim, the
moment it pulled the blood so hard out of the victim that the victim's heart stopped.
"'The demon had them, the King and Queen. They were Drinkers of the Blood; and
whether or not the demon knew of them, we will never be able to tell. But the King and
Queen knew that they had the demon and could not get rid of it, and if they did they would
die because their bodies were already dead. And they learned immediately that these dead
bodies, animated as they were entirely by this demonic fluid, could not withstand fire or the
light of the sun. On the one hand, they seemed as fragile white flowers that can be withered
black in the daytime desert heat. On the other, it seemed the blood in them was so volatile
that it would boil if heated, thereby destroying the fibers through which it moved.
" 'It has been said that in these very early times, they could withstand no brilliant
illumination, that even a nearby fire would cause their skin to smoke.
"'Whatever, they were of a new order of being, and their thoughts were of a new order of
being, and they tried to understand the things that they saw, the dispositions that afflicted
them in this new state.
" 'All discoveries are not recorded. There is nothing in writing or in the unwritten tradition
about when they first chose to pass on the blood, or ascertained the method by which it must
be done-that the victim must be drained to the twilight moment of approaching death, or the
demonic blood given him cannot take hold.
"'We do know through the unwritten tradition that the King and Queen tried to keep secret
what had happened to them, but their disappearance by day aroused suspicions. They could
not attend to the religious duties in the land.
" 'And so it came to pass that even before they had formed their clearest decisions, they
had to encourage the populace to a worship of the Good Mother in the light of the moon.
" 'But they could not protect themselves from the conspirators, who still did not understand
their recovery and sought to do away with them again. The attack came despite all
precautions and the strength of the King and the Queen proved overwhelming to the
conspirators, and they were all the more frightened by the fact that those wounds they
managed to inflict upon the King and the Queen were miraculously and instantly healed. An
arm was severed from the King and this he put back on his shoulder and it came to life again
and the conspirators fled.
"'And through these attacks, these battles, the secret came into the possession not only of
the King's enemies but the priests as well.
" 'And no one wanted to destroy the King and the Queen now; rather they wanted to take
them prisoner and gain the secret of immortality from them, and they sought to take the blood
from them, but their early attempts failed.
"'The drinkers were not near to death; and so they became hybrid creatures-half god and
half human-and they perished in horrible ways. Yet some succeeded. Perhaps they emptied
their veins first. It isn't recorded. But in later ages, this has always proved a way to steal the
blood.
" 'And perhaps the Mother and the Father chose to make fledglings. Maybe out of
loneliness and fear, they chose to pass on the secret to those of good mettle whom they could
trust. Again we are not told. Whatever the case, other Drinkers of the Blood did come into
being, and the method of making them was eventually known.
" 'And the scrolls tell us that the Mother and the Father sought to triumph in their adversity.
They sought to find some reason in what had happened, and they believed that their
heightened senses must surely serve some good. The Good Mother had allowed this to
happen, had she not?
" 'And they must sanctify and contain. what was done by mystery, or else Egypt might
become a race of blood-drinking demons who would divide the world into Those Who Drink
the Blood and those who are bred only to give it, a tyranny that once achieved might never be
broken by mortal men alone.
" 'And so the good King and Queen chose the path of ritual, of myth. They saw in
themselves the images of the waning and waxing moon, and in their drinking of the blood the
god incarnate who takes unto himself his sacrifice, and they used their superior powers to
divine and predict and judge. They saw themselves as truly accepting the blood for the god,
which otherwise would run down the altar. They girded with the symbolic and the mysterious
what could not be allowed to become common, and they passed out of the sight of mortal
men into the temples, to be worshiped by those who would bring them blood. They took to
themselves the most fit sacrifices, those that had always been made for the good of the land.
Innocents, outsiders, evildoers, they drank the blood for the Mother and for the Good.
"'They set into motion the tale of Osiris, composed in part of their own terrible sufferingthe
attack of the conspirators, the recovery, their need to live in the realm of darkness, the
world beyond life, their inability to walk anymore in sun. And they grafted this upon the
older stories of the gods who rise and fall in their love of the Good Mother, which were
already there in the land from which they came.
"'And so these stories came down to us; these stories spread beyond the secret places in
which the Mother and the Father were worshiped, in which those they made with the blood
were installed.
" 'And they were already old when the first pharaoh built his first pyramid. And the earliest
texts record them in broken and strange form.
"'A hundred other gods ruled in Egypt, just as they rule in all lands. But the worship of the
Mother and Father and Those Who Drink the Blood remained secret and powerful, a cult to
which the devoted went to hear the silent voices of the gods, to dream their dreams.
" 'We are not told who were the first fledglings of the Mother and Father. We know only
that they spread the religion to the islands of the great sea, and to the lands of the two rivers,
and to the north woods. That in shrines everywhere the moon god ruled and drank his blood
sacrifices and used his powers to look into the hearts of men. During the periods between
sacrifice, in starvation, the god's mind could leave his body; it could travel the heavens; he
could learn a thousand things. And those mortals of the greatest purity of heart could come to
the shrine and hear the voice of the god, and he could hear them.
"'But even before my time, a thousand years ago, this was all an old and incoherent story.
The gods of the moon had ruled in Egypt for maybe three thousand years. And the religion
had been attacked again and again.
" 'When the Egyptian priests turned to the sun god Amon Ra, they opened the crypts of the
moon god and let the sun burn him to cinders. And many of our kind were destroyed. The
same happened when the first rude warriors rode down into Greece and broke open the
sanctuaries and killed what they did not understand.
"'Now the babbling oracle of Delphi rules where we once ruled, arid statues stand where
we once stood. Our last hour is enjoyed in the north woods whence you came, among those
who still drench our altars with the blood of the evildoer, and in the shah villages of Egypt,
where one or two priests tend the god in the crypt and allow the faithful to bring to him the
evildoers; for they cannot take the innocent without arousing suspicion, and of evildoers and
outsiders there are always some to be had. And down in the jungles of Africa, near the ruins
of old cities that no one remembers, there, too, we are still obeyed.
"'But our history is punctuated by tales of rogues-the, Drinkers of the Blood who look to
no goddess for guidance and have always used their powers as they chose.
" 'In Rome they live, in Athens, in all cities of the Empire, these rogues hearken to no laws
of right and wrong and use their powers for their own ends.
"'Ana they died horribly in the heat and the flame just as did the gods in the groves and the
sanctuaries, and if any have survived they probably do not even guess why they were
subjected to the killing flame, of how the Mother and the Father were put into the sun.'
"He had stopped."
" He was studying my reaction. The library was quiet and if the others prowled behind the
walls, I couldn't hear them anymore.
" 'I don't believe a word of it,' I said.
"He stared at me in stupefied silence for a moment and then he laughed and laughed.
"In a rage, I left the library and went out through the temple rooms and up through the
tunnel and into the street."
11
"This was very uncharacteristic of me, to leave in temper, to break off abruptly and depart.
I had never done that sort of thing when I was a mortal man. But as I've said, I was on the
edge of madness, the first madness many of us suffer, especially those who have been
brought into this by force.
"I went back to my little house near the great library of Alexandria, and I lay down on my
bed as if I could really let myself fall asleep there and escape from this thing.
"'Idiot nonsense,' I murmured to myself.
"But the more I thought about the story, the more it made sense. It made sense that
something was in my blood impelling me to drink more blood. It made sense that it
heightened all sensations, that it kept my body-a mere imitation now of a human bodyfunctioning
when it should have come to a stop. And it made sense that this thing had no
mind of its own but was nevertheless a power, an organization of force with a desire to live
all its own.
"And then it even made sense that we could all be connected to the Mother and the Father
because this thing was spiritual, and had no bodily limits except the limits of the individual
bodies in which it had gained control. It was the vine, this thing, and we were the flowers,
scattered over great distances, but connected by the twining tendrils that could reach all over
the world.
"And this was why we gods could hear each other so well, why I could know the others
were in Alexandria, even before they called to me. It was why they could come and find me
in my house, why they could lead me to the secret door.
"All right. Maybe it was true. And it was an accident, this melding of an unnamed force
and a human body and mind to make the New Thing as the Elder had said.
"But still-I didn't like it.
"I revolted against all of it because if I was anything, I was an individual, a particular
being, with a strong sense of my own rights and prerogatives. I could not realize that I was
host to an alien entity. I was still Marius, no matter what had been done to me.
"I was left finally with one thought and one thought only: if I was connected to this Mother
and Father then I must see them, and I must know that they were safe. I could not live with
the thought that I could die at any moment on account of some alchemy I could neither
control nor understand.
"But I didn't return to the underground temple. I spent the next few nights feasting on
blood until my miserable thoughts were drowned in it, and then in the early hours I roamed
the great library of Alexandria, reading as I had always done.
"Some of the madness dissolved in me. I stopped longing for my mortal family. I stopped
being angry at that cursed thing in the cellar temple, and I thought rather of this new strength
I possessed. I would live for centuries: I would know the answers to all kinds of questions. I
would be the continual awareness of things as time passed! And as long as I slew only the
evildoer, I could endure my blood thirst, revel in it, in fact. And when the appropriate time
came, I would make my companions and make them well.
"Now what remained? Go back to the Elder and find out where he had put the Mother and
the Father. And see these creatures for myself. And do the very thing the Elder had
threatened, sink them so deep into the earth that no mortal could ever find them and expose
them to the light.
"Easy to think about this, easy to imagine them as so simply dispatched.
"Five nights after I'd left the Elder, when all these thoughts had had time to develop in me,
I lay resting in my bedroom, with the lamps shining through the sheer bed curtains as before.
In filtered and golden light, I listened to the sounds of sleeping Alexandria, and slipped into
thin and glittering waking dreams. I wondered if the Elder would come to me again,
disappointed that I had not returned-and as the thought came clear to me, I realized that
someone was standing in the doorway again.
"Someone was watching me. I could feel it. To see this person I had but to turn my head.
And then I would have the upper hand with the Elder. I would say, 'So you've come out of
loneliness and disillusionment and now you want to tell me more, do you? Why don't you go
back and sit in silence to wound your wraithlike companions, the brotherhood of the cinders?'
Of course I wouldn't say such a thing to him. But I wasn't above thinking about it and letting
him-if he was the one in the doorway-hear these thoughts.
"The one who was there did not go away.
"And slowly I turned my eyes in the direction of the door, and it was a woman I saw
standing there. And not merely a woman, but a magnificent bronze-skinned Egyptian woman
as artfully bejeweled and dressed as the old queens, in fine pleated linen, with her black hair
down to her shoulders and braided with strands of gold. An immense force emanated from
her, an invisible and commanding sense of her presence, her occupation of this small and
insignificant room.
"I sat up and moved back the curtains, and the lamps in the room went out. I saw the
smoke rising from them in the dark, gray wisps like snakes coiling towards the ceiling and
then gone. She was still there, the remaining light defining her expressionless face, sparkling
on the jewels around her neck and in her large almond-shaped eyes. And silently she said:
"Marius, take us out of Egypt.
"And then she was gone.
"My heart was knocking in me uncontrollably. I went into the garden looking for her. I
leapt over the wall and stood alone listening in the empty unpaved street.
"I started to run towards the old section where I had found the door. I meant to get into the
underground temple and find the Elder and tell him that he must take me to her, I had seen
her, she had moved, she had spoken, she had come to me! I was delirious, but when I reached
the door, I knew that I didn't have to go down. I knew that if I went out of the city into the
sands I could find her. She was already leading me to where she was.
"In the hour that followed I was to remember the strength and the speed I'd known in the
forests of Gaul, and had not used since. I went out from the city to where the stars provided
the only light, and I walked until I came to a ruined temple, and there I began to dig in the
sand. It would have taken a band of mortals several hours to discover the trapdoor, but I
found it quickly, and I was able to lift it, which mortals couldn't have done.
"The twisting stairs and corridors I followed were not illuminated. And I cursed myself for
not bringing a candle, for being so swept off my feet by the sight of her that I had rushed after
her as if I were in love.
"'Help me, Akasha,' I whispered. I put my hands out in front of me and tried not to feel
mortal fear of the blackness in which I was as blind as an ordinary man.
"My hands touched something hard before me. And I rested, catching my breath, trying to
command myself. Then my hands moved on the thing and felt what seemed the chest of a
human statue, its shoulders, its arms. But this was no statue, this thing, this thing was made of
something more resilient than stone. And when my hand found the face, the lips proved just a
little softer than all the rest of it, and I drew back.
"I could hear my heart beat. I could feel the sheer humiliation of cowardice. I didn't dare
say the name Akasha. I knew that this thing I had touched had a man's form. It was Enkil.
"I closed my eyes, trying to gather my wits, form some plan of action that didn't include
turning and running like a madman, and I heard a dry, crackling sound, and against my closed
lids saw fire.
"When I opened my eyes, I saw a blazing torch on the wall beyond him, and his dark
outline looming before me, and his eyes animate, and looking at me without question, the
black pupils swimming in a dull gray light. He was otherwise lifeless, hands limp at his sides.
He was ornamented as she had been, and he wore the glorified dress of the pharaoh and his
hair too was plaited with gold. His skin was bronze all over, as hers had been, enhanced, as
the Elder had said. And he was the incarnation of menace in his stillness as he stood staring at
me.
"In the barren chamber behind him, she sat on a stone shelf, with her head at an angle, her
arms dangling, as if she were a lifeless body flung there. Her linen was smeared with sand,
her sandaled feet caked with it, and her eyes were vacant and staring. Perfect attitude of
death.
"And he like a stone sentinel in a royal tomb blocked my path.
"I could hear no more from either of them than you heard from them when I took you
down to the chamber here on the island. And I thought I might expire on the spot from fear.
" Yet there was the sand on her feet and on her linen. She'd come to me! She had!
"But someone had come into the corridor behind me. Someone was shuffling along the
passage, and when I turned, I saw one of the burnt ones-a mere skeleton, this one, with black
gums showing and the fangs cutting into the shiny black raisin skin of his lower lip.
"I swallowed a gasp at the sight of him, his bony limbs, feet splayed, arms jiggling with
every step. He was plowing towards us, but he did not seem to see me. He put his hands up
and shoved at Enkil.
"'No, no, back into the chamber!' he whispered in a low, crackling voice. 'No, no!' and each
syllable seemed to take all he had. His withered arms shoved at the figure. He couldn't budge
it.
"'Help me!' he said to me. 'They have moved. Why did they move? Make them go back.
The further they move, the harder it is to get them back.'
"I stared at Enkil and I felt the horror that you felt to see this statue with life in it,
seemingly unable or unwilling to move. And as I watched the spectacle grew even more
horrible, because the blackened wraith was now screaming and scratching at Enkil, unable to
do anything with him. And the sight of this thing that should have been dead wearing itself
out like this, and this other thing that looked so perfectly godlike and magnificent just
standing there, was more than I could bear.
" 'Help me!' the thing said. 'Get him back into the chamber. Get them back where they
must remain.'
"How could I do this? How could I lay hands on this being? How could I presume to push
him where he did not wish to go?
"'They will be all right, if you help me,' the thing said. 'They will be together and they will
be at peace. Push on him. Do it. Push! Oh, look at her, what's happened to her. Look.'
" 'All right, damn it!' I whispered, and overcome with shame, I tried. I laid my hands again
on Enkil and I pushed at him, but it was impossible. My strength meant nothing here, and the
burnt one became all the more irritating with his useless ranting and shoving.
"But then he gasped and cackled and threw his skeletal arms up in the air and backed up.
"'What's the matter with you!' I said, trying not to scream and run. But I saw soon enough.
"Akasha had appeared behind Enkil. She was standing directly behind him and looking at
me over his shoulder, and I saw her fingertips come round his muscular arms. Her eyes were
as empty in their glazed beauty as they had been before. But she was making him move, and
now came the spectacle of these two things walking of their own volition, he backing up
slowly, feet barely leaving the ground, and she shielded by him so that I saw only her hands
and the top of her head and her eyes.
"I blinked, trying to clear my head.
"They were sitting on the shelf again, together, and they had lapsed into the same posture
in which you saw them downstairs on this island tonight.
"The burnt creature was near to collapse. He had gone down on his knees, and he didn't
have to explain to me why. He had found them many a time in different positions, but he had
never witnessed their movement. And he had never seen her as she had been before.
"I was bursting with the knowledge of why she had been as she was before. She had come
to me. But there was a point at which my pride and exhilaration gave way to what it should
have been: overwhelming awe, and finally grief.
"I started to cry. I started to cry uncontrollably as I had not cried since I had been with the
old god in the grove and my death had occurred, and this curse, this great luminous and
powerful curse, had descended on me. I cried as you cried when you first saw them. I cried
for their stillness and their isolation, and this horrible little place in which they stared forward
at nothing or sat in darkness while Egypt died above.
"The goddess, the mother, the thing, whatever she was, the mindless and silent or helpless
progenitor was looking at me. Surely it wasn't an illusion. Her great glossy eyes, with their
black fringe of lashes, were fixed upon me. And there came her voice again, but it had
nothing of its old power, it was merely the thought, quite beyond language, inside my head.
"Take us out of Egypt, Marius. The Elder means to destroy us. Guard us, Marius. Or we
perish here.
" 'Do they want blood?' the burnt one cried. 'Did they move because they would have
sacrifice?' the dried one begged.
" 'Go get them a sacrifice,' I said.
"
"I cannot now. I haven't the strength. And they won't give their healing blood to me.
Would they but allow me a few drops, my burnt flesh might restore itself, the blood in me
would be replenished, and I should bring them glorious sacrifices. . . "
"But there was an element of dishonesty in this little speech, because they didn't desire
glorious sacrifices anymore.
" 'Try again to drink their blood,' I said and this was horribly selfish of me. I just wanted to
see what would happen.
"Yet to my humiliation, he did approach them, bent over and weeping, begging them to
give their powerful blood, their old blood, so that his burns might heal faster, saying that he
was innocent, he had not put them in the sand-it had been the Elder-please, please, would
they let him drink from the original fount.
"And then ravenous hunger consumed him. And convulsing, he distended his fangs as a
cobra might and he shot forward, his black claws out, to the neck of Enkil.
"Enkil's arm rose as the Elder said it would, and it flung the burnt one across the chamber
on his back before it returned to its proper place.
"The burnt one was sobbing and I was even more ashamed. The burnt one was too weak to
hunt for victims or bring victims. I had urged him on to this to see it. And the gloom of this
place, the gritty sand on the floor, the barrenness, the stink of the torch, and the ugly sight of
the burnt one writhing and crying, all this was dispiriting beyond words.
" 'Then drink from me,' I said, shuddering at the sight of him, the fangs distended again,
the hands out to grasp me. But it was the least I could do."
"As soon as I was done with that creature, I ordered him to let no one enter the crypt. How
the hell he was supposed to keep anyone out I couldn't imagine, but I told him this with
tremendous authority and I hurried away.
"I went back into Alexandria, and I broke into a shop that sold antique things and I stole
two fine painted and gold-plated mummy cases, and I took a great deal of linen for wrapping,
and I went back to the desert crypt.
"My courage and my fear were at their peak.
"As often happens when we give the blood or take it from another of our kind, I had seen
things, dreamed things as it were, when the burnt one had his teeth in my throat. And what I
had seen and dreamed had to do with Egypt; the age of Egypt, the fact that for four thousand
years this land had known little change in language, religion, or art. And for the first time this
was understandable to me and it put me in profound sympathy with the Mother and the Father
as relics of this country, as surely as the pyramids were relics. It intensified my curiosity and
made it something more akin to devotion.
"Though to be honest, I would have stolen the Mother and the Father just in order to
survive.
"This new knowledge, this new infatuation, inspired me as I approached Akasha and Enkil
to put them in the wooden mummy cases, knowing full well that Akasha would allow it and
that one blow from Enkil could probably crush my skull.
"But Enkil yielded as well as Akasha. They allowed me to wrap them in linen, to make
mummies of them, and to place them into the shapely wooden coffins which bore the painted
faces of others, and the endless hieroglyph instructions for the dead, and to take them with me
into Alexandria, which I did.
"I left the wraith being in a terrible state of agitation as I went off dragging a mummy case
under each arm.
"When I reached the city I hired men to carry these coffins properly to my house, out of a
sense of fittingness, and then I buried them deep beneath the garden, explaining to Akasha
and Enkil all the while aloud that their stay in the earth would not be long.
"I was in terror to leave them the next night. I hunted and killed within yards of my own
garden gate. And then I sent my slaves to purchase horses and a wagon for me, and to make
preparations for a journey around the coast to Antioch, on the Orontes River, a city I knew
and loved, and in which I felt I would be safe.
"As I feared, the Elder soon appeared. I was actually waiting for him in the shadowy
bedroom, seated on my couch like a Roman, one lamp beside me, as old copy of some
Roman poem in my hand. I wondered if he would sense the location of Akasha and Enkil,
and deliberately imagined false things -that I had shut them up in the great pyramid itself.
"I still dreamed the dream of Egypt that had come to me from the burnt one: a land in
which the laws and the beliefs had remained the same for longer than we could imagine, a
land that had known the picture writing and the pyramids and the myths of Osiris and Isis
when Greece had been in darkness and when there was no Rome. I saw the river Mile
overflowing her banks. I saw the mountains on either side which created the valley. I saw
time with a wholly different idea of it. And it was not merely the dream of the burnt one-it
was all I had ever seen or known in Egypt, a sense of things beginning there which I had
learned from books long before I had become the child of the Mother and the Father, whom I
meant now to take.
"'What makes you think that we would entrust them to you!' the Elder said as soon as he
appeared in the doorway.
"He appeared enormous as, girded only in the short linen kilt, he walked around my room.
The lamplight shone on his bald head, his round face, his bulging eyes. 'How dare you take
the Mother and the Father! What have you done with them!' he said.
" 'It was you who put them in the sun,' I answered. 'You who sought to destroy them. You
were the one who didn't believe the old story. You were the guardian of the Mother and the
Father, and you lied to me. You brought about the death of our kind from one end of the
world to the other. You, and you lied to me.'
"He was dumbfounded. He thought me proud and impossible beyond words. So did I. But
so what? He had the power to burn me to ashes if and when he burnt the Mother and the
Father. And she had come to me! To me!
" 'I did not know what would happen!' he said now, his veins cording against his forehead,
his fists clenched. He looked like a great bald Nubian as he tried to intimidate me. 'I swear to
you by all that is sacred, I didn't know. And you cannot know what it means to keep them, to
look at them year after year, decade after decade, century after century, and know that they
could speak, they could move, and they will not!'
"I had no sympathy for him and what he said. He was merely an enigmatic figure poised in
the center of this small room in Alexandria railing at me of sufferings beyond the
imagination. How could I sympathize with him?
"'I inherited them,' he said. 'They were given to me! What was I to do?' he declared. 'And I
must contend with their punishing silence, their refusal to direct the tribe they had loosed into
the world. And why came this silence? Vengeance, I tell you. Vengeance on us. But for
what? Who exists who can remember back a thousand years now? No one. Who understands
all these things? The old gods go into the sun, into the fire, or they meet with obliteration
through violence, or they bury themselves in the deepest earth never to rise again. But the
Mother and the Father go on forever, and they do not speak. Why don't they bury themselves
where no harm can come to them? Why do they simply watch and listen and refuse to speak?
Only when one tries to take Akasha from Enkil does he move, does he strike out and then
batter down his foes as if he were a stone colossus come to life. I tell you when I put them in
the sand they did not try to save themselves! They stood facing the river as I ran!'
" 'You did it to see what would happen, if it would make them move!'
" 'To free myself! To say, "I will keep you no longer. Move. Speak." To see if it was true,
the old story, and if it was true, then let us all die in flames.'
"He had exhausted himself. In a feeble voice he said finally, 'You cannot take the Mother
and the Father. How could you think that I would allow you to do this! You who might not
last out the century, you who ran from the obligations of the grove. You don't really know
what the Mother and the Father are. You have heard more than one lie from me.'
" 'I have something to tell you,' I said. 'You are free now. You know that we're not gods.
And we're not men, either. We don't serve the Mother Earth because we do not eat her fruits
and we do not naturally descend to her embrace. We are not of her. And I leave Egypt
without further obligation to you, and I take them with me because it is what they have asked
me to do and I will not suffer them or me to be destroyed.'
"He was again dumbfounded. How had they asked me? But he couldn't find words, he was
so angry, and so full of hatred suddenly, and so full of dark wrathful secrets that I could not
even glimpse. He had a mind as educated as mine, this one, but he knew things about our
powers that I didn't guess. I had never slain a man when I was mortal. I did not know how to
kill any living thing, save in the tender and remorseless need for blood.
"He knew how to use his supernatural strength. He closed his eyes to slits, and his body
hardened. Danger radiated from him.
"He approached me and his intentions went before him, and in an instant I had risen off my
couch, and I was trying to ward off his blows. He had me by the throat and he threw me
against the stone wall so that the bones of my shoulder and right arm were crushed. In a
moment of exquisite pain, I knew he would bash my head against the stone and crush all my
limbs, and then he would pour the oil of the lamp over me and burn me, and I would be gone
out of his private eternity as if I had never known these secrets or dared to intrude.
"I fought as I never could have before. But my battered arm was a riot of pain, and his
strength was to me what mine would be to you. But instead of clawing at his hands as they
locked round my throat, instead of trying to free my throat as was instinctive, I shot my
thumbs into his eyes. Though my arm blazed with pain, I used all my strength to push his
eyes backwards into his head.
"He let go of me and he wailed. Blood was pouring down his face. I ran clear of him and
towards the garden door. I still could not breathe from the damage he'd done to my throat,
and as I clutched at my dangling arm, I saw things out of the comer of my eye that confused
me, a great spray of earth flying up from the garden, the air dense as if with smoke. I bumped
the door frame, losing my balance, as if a wind had moved me, and glancing back I saw him
coming on, eyes still glittering, though from deep inside his head. He was cursing me in
Egyptian. He was saying that I should go into the netherworld with the demons, unmourned.
"And then his face froze in a mask of fear. He stopped in his tracks and looked almost
comical in his alarm.
"Then I saw what he saw-the figure of Akasha, who moved past me to my right. The linen
wrapping had been ripped from around her head, and her arms were torn free, and she was
covered with the sandy earth. Her eyes had the same expressionless stare they always had,
and she bore down on him slowly, drawing ever closer because he could not move to save
himself.
"He went down on his knees, babbling to her in Egyptian, first with a tone of astonishment
and then with incoherent fright. Still she came on, tracking the sand after her, the linen falling
off her as each slow sliding step ruptured the wrappings more violently. He turned away and
fell forward on his hands and started to crawl as if, by some unseen force, she prevented him
from rising to his feet. Surely that was what she was doing, because he lay prone finally, his
elbows jutting up, unable to move himself.
"Quietly and slowly, she stepped on the back of his right knee, crushing it flat beneath her
foot, the blood squirting from under her heel. And with the next step she crushed his pelvis
just as flat while he roared like a dumb beast, the blood gushing from his mangled parts. Then
came her next step down upon his shoulder and the next upon his head, which exploded
beneath her weight as if it had been an acorn. The roaring ceased. The blood spurted from all
his remains as they twitched.
"Turning, she revealed to me no change in expression, signifying nothing of what had
happened to him, indifferent even to the lone and horrified witness who shrank back against
the wall. She walked back and forth over his remains with the same slow and effortless gait,
and crushed the last of him utterly.
"What was left was not even the outline of a man, but mere blood-soaked pulp upon the
floor, and yet it glittered, bubbled, seemed to swell and contract as if there were still life in it.
"I was petrified, knowing that there was life in it, that this was what immortality could
mean.
"But she had come to a stop, and she turned to her left so slowly it seemed the revolution
of a statue on a chain, and her hand rose and the lamp beside the couch rose in the air and fell
down upon the bloody mass, the flame quickly igniting the oil as it spilled.
"Like grease he went up, flames dancing from one end of the dark mass to the other, the
blood seeming to feed the fire, the smoke acrid but only with the stench of the oil.
"I was on my knees, with my head against the side of the doorway. I was as near to losing
consciousness from shock as I have ever been. I watched him burn to nothing. I watched her
standing there, beyond the flames, her bronze face giving forth not the slightest sign of
intelligence or triumph or will.
"I held my breath, expecting her eyes to move to me. But they didn't. And as the moment
lengthened, as the fire died, I realized that she had ceased to move. She had returned to the
state of absolute silence and stillness that all the others had come to expect of her.
"The room was dark now. The fire had gone out. The smell of burning oil sickened me.
She looked like an Egyptian ghost in her torn wrappings, poised there before the glittering
embers, the gilded furnishings glinting in the light from the sky, bearing, for all their Roman
craftsmanship, some resemblance to the elaborate and delicate furnishings of a royal burial
chamber.
"I rose to my feet, and the pain in my shoulder and in my arm throbbed. I could feel the
blood rushing to heal it, but the damage was considerable. I did not know how long I would
have this.
"I did know, of course, that if I were to drink from her, the healing would be much faster,
perhaps instantaneous, and we could start our journey out of Alexandria tonight. I could take
her far far away from Egypt.
"Then I realized that she was telling me this. The words, far far away, were breathed in by
me sensuously.
"And I answered her: I have been all through the world and I will take you to safe places.
But then again perhaps this dialogue was all my doing. And the soft, yielding sensation of
love for her was my doing. And I was going completely mad, knowing this nightmare would
never, never end except in fires such as that, that no natural old age or death would ever quiet
my fears and dull my pains, as I had once expected it to do.
"It ceased to matter. What mattered was that I was alone with her, and in this darkness she
might have been a human woman standing there, a young god woman full of vitality and full
of lovely language and ideas and dreams.
"I moved closer to her and it seemed then that she was this pliant and yielding creature,
and some knowledge of her was inside me; waiting to be remembered, waiting to be enjoyed.
Yet I was afraid. She could do to me what she had done to the Elder. But that was absurd.
She would not. I was her guardian now. She would never let anyone hurt me. No. I was to
understand that. And I came closer and closer to her, until my lips were almost at her bronze
throat, and it was decided when I felt the firm cold press of her hand on the back of my
head."
13
"I won't try to describe the ecstasy. You know it. You knew it when you took the blood
from Magnus. You knew it when I gave you the blood in Cairo. You know it when you kill.
And you know what it means when I say it was that, but a thousand times that.
"I neither saw nor heard nor felt anything but absolute happiness, absolute satisfaction.
"Yet I was in other places, other rooms from long ago, and voices were talking and battles
were being lost. Someone was crying in agony. Someone was screaming in words I knew and
didn't know: I do not understand. l do not understand. A great pool of darkness opened and
there came the invitation to fall and to fall and to fall and she sighed and said: I can fight no
longer.
"Then I awoke, and found myself lying on my couch. She was in the center of the room,
still as before, and it was late in the night, and the city of Alexandria murmured around us in
its sleep.
"I knew a multitude of other things.
"I knew so many things that it would have taken hours if not nights for me to learn them if
they'd been confided in mortal words. And I had no inkling of how much time had passed.
"I knew that thousands of years ago there had been great battles among the Drinkers of the
Blood, and many of them after the first creation had become ruthless and profane bringers of
death. Unlike the benign lovers of the Good Mother who starved and then drank her
sacrifices, these were death angels who could swoop down upon any victim at any moment,
glorying in the conviction that they were part of the rhythm of all things in which no
individual human life matters, in which death and life are equal-and to them belonged
suffering and slaughter as they chose to mete it out.
"And these terrible gods had their devoted worshipers among men, human slaves who
brought victims to them, and quaked in fear of the moment when they themselves might fall
to the god's whim.
"Gods of this kind had ruled in ancient Babylon, and in Assyria, and in cities long
forgotten, and in far-off India, and in countries beyond whose names I did not understand.
"And even now, as I sat silent and stunned by these images, I understood that these gods
had become part of the Oriental world which was alien to the Roman world to which I'd been
born. They were part of the world of the Persians whose men were abject slaves to their king,
while the Greeks who had fought them had been free men.
'No matter what our cruelties and our excesses, even the lowliest peasant had value to us.
Life had value. And death was merely the end of life, something to be faced with bravery
when honor left no choice. Death was not grand to us. In fact, I don't think death was
anything really to us. It certainly was not a state preferable to life.
"And though these gods had been revealed to me by Akasha in all their grandeur and
mystery, I found them appalling. I could not now or ever embrace them and I knew that the
philosophies that proceeded from them or justified them would never justify my killing, or
give me consolation as a Drinker of the Blood. Mortal or immortal, I was of the West. And I
loved the ideas of the West. And I should always be guilty of what I did.
"Nevertheless I saw the power of these gods, their incomparable loveliness. They enjoyed
a freedom I would never know. And I saw their contempt for all those who challenged them.
And I saw them wearing in the pantheon of other countries their glittering crowns.
"And I saw them come to Egypt to steal the original and all-powerful blood of the Father
and the Mother, and to ensure that the Father and the Mother did not burn themselves to bring
an end to the reign of these dark and terrible gods for whom all the good gods must be
brought down.
"And I saw the Mother and the Father imprisoned. I saw them entombed with blocks of
diorite and granite pressed against their very bodies in an underground crypt, only their heads
and their necks free. In this manner the dark gods could feed the Mother and the Father the
human blood they could not resist, and take from their necks the powerful blood against their
will. And all the dark gods of the world came to drink from this oldest of founts.
"The Father and the Mother screamed in torment. They begged to be released. But this
meant nothing to the dark gods, who relished such agony, who drank it as they drank human
blood. The dark gods wore human skulls dangling from their girdles; their garments were
dyed with human blood. The Mother and the Father refused sacrifice, but this only increased
their helplessness. They did not take the very thing that might have given them the strength to
move the stones, and to affect objects by mere thought.
"Nevertheless their strength increased.
"Years and years of this torment, and wars among the gods, wars among the sects that held
to life and those who held to death.
"Years beyond counting, until finally the Mother and the Father became silent, and there
were none in existence who could even remember a time when they begged or fought or
talked. Years came when nobody could remember who had imprisoned the Mother and the
Father, or why the Mother and the Father must not ever be let out. Some did not believe that
tile Mother and the Father were even the originals or that their immolation would harm
anyone else. It was just an old tale.
"And all the while Egypt was Egypt and its religion, uncorrupted by outsiders, finally
moved on towards the belief in conscience, the judgment after death of all beings, be they
rich or poor, the belief in goodness on earth and life after death.
"And then the night came when the Mother and the Father were found free of their prison,
and those who tended them realized that only they could have moved the stones. In silence,
their strength had grown beyond all reckoning. Yet they were as statues, embracing each
other in the middle of the dirty and darkened chamber where for centuries they had been kept.
Naked and shimmering they were, all their clothing having long ago rotted away.
"If and when they drank from the victims offered, they moved with the sluggishness of
reptiles in winter, as though time had taken on an altogether different meaning for them, and
years were as nights to them, and centuries as years.
"And the ancient religion was strong as ever, not of the East and not really of the West.
The Drinkers of the Blood remained good symbols, the luminous image of life in the
afterworld which even the lowliest Egyptian soul might come to enjoy.
"Sacrifice could only be the evildoer in these later times. And by this means the gods drew
the evil out of the people, and protected the people, and the silent voice of the god consoled
the weak, telling the truths learned by the god in starvation: that the world was full of abiding
beauty, that no soul here is really alone.
"The Mother and the Father were kept in the loveliest of all shrines and all the gods came
to them and took from them, with their will, droplets of their precious blood.
"But then the impossible was happening. Egypt was reaching its finish. Things thought to
be unchangeable were about to be utterly changed. Alexander had come, the Ptolemies were
the rulers, Caesar and Antony-all rude and strange protagonists of the drama which was
simply The End of All This.
"And finally the dark and cynical Elder, the wicked one, the disappointed one, who put the
Mother and Father in the sun.
"I got up off the couch and I stood in this room in Alexandria looking at the motionless and
staring figure of Akasha and the soiled linen hanging from her seemed an insult. And my
head swam with old poetry. And I was overcome with love. '
"There was no more pain in my body from the battle with the Elder. The bones were
restored. And I went down on my knees, and I kissed the fingers of the right hand that hung
at Akasha's side. I looked up and I saw her looking down at me, her head tilted, and the
strangest look passed over her; it seemed as pure in its suffering as the happiness I had just
known. Then her head, very slowly, inhumanly slowly, returned to its position of facing
forward, and I knew in that instant that I had seen and known things that the Elder had never
known.
"As I wrapped her body again in linen, I was in a trance. More than ever I felt the mandate
to take care of her and Enkil, and the horror of the Elder's death was flashing before me every
second, and the blood she had given me had increased my exhilaration as well as my physical
strength.
"And as I prepared to leave Alexandria, I suppose I dreamed of waking Enkil and Akasha,
that in the years to come they would recover all the vitality stolen from them, and we would
know each other in such intimate and astonishing ways that these dreams of knowledge and
experience given me in the blood would pale.
"My slaves had long ago come back with the horses and the wagons for our journey, with
the stone sarcophagi and the chains and locks I had told them to procure. They waited outside
the walls.
"I placed the mummy cases with the Mother and the Father in the sarcophagi side by side
in the wagon, and I covered them with locks and chains and heavy blankets, and we set out,
heading towards the door to the underground temple of the gods on our way to the city gates.
"When I reached the door, I left my slaves with firm orders to give a loud alarm if anyone
approached, and then I took a leather sack and went down into the temple, and into the library
of the Elder, and I put all the scrolls I could find into the sack. I stole every bit of portable
writing that was in the place. I wished I could have taken the writing off the walls.
"There were others in the chambers, but they were too terrified to come out. Of course they
knew I had stolen the Mother and the Father. And they probably knew of the Elder's death.
"It didn't matter to me. I was getting out of old Egypt, and I had the source of all our
power with me. And I was young and foolish and enflamed.
"When I finally reached Antioch on the Orontes-A great and wonderful city that rivaled
Rome in population and wealth-I read these old papyri and they told of all the things Akasha
had revealed to me.
"And she and Enkil had the first of many chapels I would build for them all over Asia and
Europe, and they knew that I would always care for them and I knew that they would let no
harm come to me.
"Many centuries after, when I was set afire in Venice by the band of the Children of
Darkness, I was too far from Akasha for rescue, or again, she would have come. And when I
did reach the sanctuary, knowing full well the agony that the burnt gods had known, I drank
of her blood until I was healed.
"But by the end of the first century of keeping them in Antioch I had despaired that they
would ever 'come to life,' as it were. Their silence and stillness was almost continuous as it is
now. Only the skin changed dramatically with the passing years, losing the damage of the sun
until it was like alabaster again.
"But by the time I realized all this I was powerfully engaged in watching the goings-on of
the city and the changing of the times. I was madly in love with a beautiful brown-haired
Greek courtesan named Pandora, with the loveliest arms I have ever beheld on a human
being, who knew what I was from the first moment she set eyes on me and bided her time,
enchanting me and dazzling me until I was ready to bring her over into the magic, at which
time she was allowed the blood from Akasha and became one of the most powerful
supernatural creatures I have ever known. Two hundred years I lived and fought and loved
with Pandora. But that is another tale.
"There are a million tales I could tell of the centuries I have lived since then, of my
journeys from Antioch to Constantinople, back to Alexandria and on to India and then to Italy
again and from Venice to the bitter cold highlands of Scotland and then to this island in the
Aegean, where we are now.
"I could tell you of the tiny changes in Akasha and Enkil over the years, of the puzzling
things they do, and the mysteries they leave unsolved.
"Perhaps some night in the far distant future, when you've returned to me, I'll talk of the
other immortals I've known, those who were made as I was made by the last of the gods who
survived in various lands-some the servants of the Mother and others of the terrible gods out
of the East.
"I could tell you how Mael, my poor Druid priest, finally drank from a wounded god
himself and in one instant lost all his belief in the old religion, going on to become as
enduring and dangerous a rogue immortal as any of us. I could tell you how the legends of
Those Who Must be Kept spread through the world. And of the times other immortals have
tried to take them from me out of pride or sheer destructiveness, wanting to put an end to us
all.
"I will tell you of my loneliness, of the others I made, and how they met their ends. Of how
I have gone down into the earth with Those Who Must Be Kept, and risen again, thanks to
their blood, to live several mortal lifetimes before burying myself again. I will tell you of the
other truly eternal ones whom I meet only now and then. Of the last time I saw Pandora in the
city of Dresden, in the company of a powerful and vicious vampire from India, and of how
we quarreled and separated, and of how I discovered too late her letter begging me to meet
her in Moscow, a fragile piece of writing that had fallen to the bottom of a cluttered traveling
case. Too many things, too many stories, stories with and without lessons . . .
"But I have told you the most important things-how I came into possession of Those Who
Must Be Kept, and who we really were.
"What is crucial now is that you understand this:
"As the Roman Empire came to its close, all the old gods of the pagan world were seen as
demons by the Christians who rose. It was useless to tell them as the centuries passed that
their Christ was but another God of the Wood, dying and rising, as Dionysus or Osiris had
done before him, and that the Virgin Mary was in fact the Good Mother again enshrined.
Theirs was a new age of belief and conviction, and in it we became devils, detached from
what they believed, as old knowledge was forgotten or misunderstood.
"But this had to happen. Human sacrifice had been a horror to the Greeks and Romans. I
had thought it ghastly that the Keltoi burned for the god their evildoers in the wicker colossi
as I described. And so it was to the Christians. So how could we, gods who fed upon human
blood, have been seen as 'good'?
"But the real perversion of us was accomplished when the Children of Darkness came to
believe they served the Christian devil, and like the terrible gods of the East, they tried to
give value to evil, to believe in its power in the scheme of things, to give it a just place in the
world.
"Hearken to me when I say: There has never been a just place for evil in the Western
world. There has never been an easy accommodation of death.
"No matter how violent have been the centuries since the fall of Rome, no matter how
terrible the wars, the persecutions, the injustices, the value placed upon human life has only
increased.
"Even as the Church erected statues and pictures of her bloody Christ and her bloody
martyrs, she held the belief that these deaths, so well used by the faithful, could only have
come at the hands of enemies, not God's own priests.
"It is the belief in the value of human life that has caused the torture chambers and the
stake and the more ghastly means of execution to be abandoned all over Europe in this time.
And it is the belief in the value of human life that carries man now out of the monarchy into
the republics of America and France.
"And now we stand again on the cusp of an atheistic agean age where the Christian faith is
losing its hold, as paganism once lost its hold, and the new humanism, the belief in man and
his accomplishments and his rights, is more powerful than ever before.
"Of course we cannot know what will happen as the old religion thoroughly dies out.
Christianity rose on the ashes of paganism, only to carry forth the old worship in new form.
Maybe a new religion will rise now. Maybe without it, man will crumble in cynicism and
selfishness because he really needs his gods.
"But maybe something more wonderful will take place: the world will truly move forward,
past all gods and goddesses, past all devils and angels. And in such a world, Lestat, we will
have less of a place than we have ever had.
"All the stories I have told you are finally as useless as all ancient knowledge is to man and
to us. Its images and its poetry can be beautiful; it can make us shiver with the recognition of
things we have always suspected or felt. It can draw us back to times when the earth was new
to man, and wondrous. But always we come back to the way the earth is now.
"And in this world the vampire is only a Dark God. He is a Child of Darkness. He can't be
anything else. And if he wields any lovely power upon the minds of men, it is only because
the human imagination is a secret place of primitive memories and unconfessed desires. The
mind of each man is a Savage Garden, to use your phrase, in which all manner of creatures
rise and fall, and anthems are sung and things imagined that must finally be condemned and
disavowed.
"Yet men love us when they come to know us. They love us even now. The Paris crowds
love what they see on the stage of the Theater of the Vampires. And those who have seen
your like walking through the ballrooms of the world, the pale and deadly lord in the velvet
cloak, have worshiped in their own way at your feet.
"They thrill at the possibility of immortality, at the possibility that a grand and beautiful
being could be utterly evil, that he could feel and know all things yet choose willfully to feed
his dark appetite. Maybe they wish they could be that lusciously evil creature. How simple it
all seems. And it is the simplicity of it that they want.
"But give them the Dark Gift and only one in a multitude will not be as miserable as you
are.
"What can I say finally that will not confirm your worst fears? I have lived over eighteen
hundred years, and I tell you life does not need us. I have never had a true purpose. We have
no place."
14
Marius paused.
He looked away from me for the first time and towards the sky beyond the windows, as if
he were listening to island voices I couldn't hear.
"I have a few more things to tell you," he said, "things which are important, though they
are merely practical things. . ." But he was distracted. "And there are promises," he said,
finally, "which I must exact.. ."
And he slipped into quiet, listening, his face too much like that of Akasha and Enkil.
There were a thousand questions I wanted to ask. But more significant perhaps there were
a thousand statements of his I wanted to reiterate, as if I had to say them aloud to grasp them.
If I talked, I wouldn't make very good sense.
I sat back against the cool brocade of the winged chair with my hands together in the form
of a steeple, and I just looked ahead of me, as if his tale were spread out there for me to read
over, and I thought of the truth of his statements about good and evil, and how it might have
horrified me and disappointed me had he tried to convince me of the rightness of the
philosophy of the terrible gods of the East, that we could somehow glory in what we did.
I too was a child of the West, and all my brief life I had struggled with the Western
inability to accept evil or death.
But underneath all these considerations lay the appalling fact that Marius could annihilate
all of us by destroying Akasha and Enkil. Marius could kill every single one of us in
existence if he were to burn Akasha and Enkil and thereby get rid of an old and decrepit and
useless form of evil in the world. Or so it seemed.
And the horror of Akasha and Enkil themselves.. . What could I say to this, except that I
too had felt the first glimmer of what he once felt, that I could rouse them, I could make them
speak again, I could make them move. Or more truly, I had felt when I saw them that
someone should and could do it. Someone could end their open-eyed sleep.
And what would they be if they ever walked and talked again? Ancient Egyptian monsters.
What would they do?
I saw the two possibilities as seductive suddenly-rousing them or destroying them. Both
tempted the mind. I wanted to pierce them and commune with them, and yet I understood the
irresistible madness of trying to destroy them. Of going out in a blaze of light with them that
would take all our doomed species with it.
Both attitudes had to do with power. And some triumph over the passage of time.
"Aren't you ever tempted to do it?" I asked, and my voice had pain in it. I wondered if
down in their chapel they heard.
He awakened from his listening and turned to me and he shook his head. No.
"Even though you know better than anyone that we have no place?"
Again he shook his head. No.
"I am immortal," he said, "truly immortal. To be perfectly honest, I do not know what can
kill me now, if anything. But that isn't the point. I want to go on. I do not even think of it. I
am a continual awareness unto myself, the intelligence I longed for years and years ago when
I was alive, and I'm in love as I've always been with the great progress of mankind. I want to
see what will happen now that the world has come round again to questioning its gods. Why,
I couldn't be persuaded now to close my eyes for any reason."
I nodded in understanding.
"But I don't suffer what you suffer," he said. "Even in the grove in northern France, when I
was made into this, I was not young. I have been lonely since, I have known near madness,
indescribable anguish, but I was never immortal and young. I have done over and over what
you have yet to do the thing that must take you away from me very very soon."
"Take me away? But I don't want-"
"You have to go, Lestat," he said. "And very soon, as I said. You're not ready to remain
here with me. This is one of the most important things I have left to tell you and you must
listen with the same attention with which you listened to the rest."
"Marius, I can't imagine leaving now. I can't even..." I felt anger suddenly. Why had he
brought me here to cast me out? And I remembered all Armand's admonitions to me. It is
only with the old ones that we find communion, not with those we create. And I had found
Marius. But these were mere words. They didn't touch the core of what I felt, the sudden
misery and fear of separation.
"Listen to me," he said gently. "Before I was taken by the Gauls, I had lived a good
lifetime, as long as many a man in those days. And after I took Those Who Must Be Kept out
of Egypt, I lived again for years in Antioch as a rich Roman scholar might live. I had a house,
slaves, and the love of Pandora. We had life in Antioch, we were watchers of all that passed.
And having had that lifetime, I had the strength for others later on. I had the strength to
become part of the world in Venice, as you know. I had the strength to rule on this island as I
do. You, like many who go early into the fire or the sun, have had no real life at all.
"As a young man, you tasted real life for no more than six months in Paris. As a vampire,
you have been a roamer, an outsider, haunting houses and other lives as you drifted from
place to place.
"If you mean to survive, you must live out one complete lifetime as soon as you can. To
forestall it may be to lose everything, to despair and to go into the earth again, never to rise.
Or worse. . ."
"I want it. I understand," I said. "And yet when they offered it to me in Paris, to remain
with the Theater, I couldn't do it."
"That was not the right place for you. Besides, the Theater of the Vampires is a coven. It
isn't the world any more than this island refuge of mine is the world. And too many horrors
happened to you there.
"But in this New World wilderness to which you're headed, this barbaric little city called
New Orleans, you may enter into the world as never before. You may take up residence there
as a mortal, just as you tried to do so many times in your wanderings with Gabrielle. There
will be no old covens to bother you, no rogues to try to strike you down out of fear. And
when you make others-and you will, out of loneliness, make others-make and keep them as
human as you can. Keep them close to you as members of a family, not as members of a
coven, and understand the age you live in, the decades you pass through. Understand the style
of garment that adorns your body, the styles of dwellings in which you spend your leisure
hours, the place in which you hunt. Understand what it means to feel the passage of time!"
"Yes, and feel all the pain of seeing things die..." All the things Armand advised against.
"Of course. You are made to triumph over time, not to run from it. And you will suffer that
you harbor the secret of your monstrosity and that you must kill. And maybe you will try to
feast only on the evildoer to assuage your conscience, and you may succeed, or you may fail.
But you can come very close to life, if you will only lock the secret within you. You are
fashioned to be close to it, as you yourself once told the members of the old Paris coven. You
are the imitation of a man."
"I want it, I do want it-"
"Then do as I advise. And understand this also. In a real way, eternity is merely the living
of one human lifetime after another. Of course, there may be long periods of retreat; times of
slumber or of merely watching. But again and again we plunge into the stream, and we swim
as long as we can, until time or tragedy brings us down as they will do mortals."
"Will you do it again? Leave this retreat and plunge into the stream?"
"Yes, definitely. When the right moment presents itself. When the world is so interesting
again that I can't resist it. Then I'll walk city streets. I'll take a name. I'll do things."
"Then come now, with me!" Ah, painful echo of Armand. And of the vain plea from
Gabrielle ten years after.
"It's a more tempting invitation than you know," he answered, "but I'd do you a great
disservice if I came with you. I'd stand between you and the world. I couldn't help it."
I shook my head and looked away, full of bitterness.
"Do you want to continue?" he asked. "Or do you want Gabrielle's predictions to come
true?"
"I want to continue," I said.
"Then you must go," he said. "A century from now, maybe less, we'll meet again. I won't
be on this island. I will have taken Those Who Must Be Kept to another place. But wherever I
am and wherever you are, I'll find you. And then I'll be the one who will not want you to
leave me. I'll be the one who begs you remain. I'll fall in love with your company, your
conversation, the mere sight of you, your stamina and your recklessness, and your lack of
belief in anything-all the things about you I already love rather too strongly."
I could scarcely listen to this without breaking down. I wanted to beg him to let me remain.
"Is it absolutely impossible now?" I asked. "Marius, can't you spare me this lifetime?"
"Quite impossible," he said. "I can tell you stories forever, but they are no substitute for
life. Believe me, I've tried to spare others: I've never succeeded. I can't teach what one
lifetime can teach. I never should have taken Armand in his youth, and his centuries of folly
and suffering are a penance to me even now. You did him a mercy driving him into the Paris
of this century, but I fear for him it is too late. Believe me, Lestat, when I say this has to
happen. You must have that lifetime, for those who are robbed of it spin in dissatisfaction
until they finally live it somewhere or they are destroyed."
"And what about Gabrielle?"
"Gabrielle had her life; she had her death almost. She has the strength to reenter the world
when she chooses, or to live on its fringes indefinitely."
"And do you think she will ever reenter?"
"I don't know," he said. "Gabrielle defies my understanding. Not my experience-she's too
like Pandora. But I never understood Pandora. The truth is most women are weak, be they
mortal or immortal. But when they are strong, they are absolutely unpredictable."
I shook my head. I closed my eyes for a moment. I didn't want to think of Gabrielle.
Gabrielle was gone, no matter what we said here.
And I still could not accept that I had to go. this seemed an Eden to me. But I didn't argue
anymore. I knew he was resolute, and I also knew that he wouldn't force me. He'd let me start
worrying about my mortal father, and he'd let me come to him and say I had to go. I had a
few nights left.
"Yes," he answered softly. "And there are other things I can tell you."
I opened my eyes again. He was looking at me patiently, affectionately. I felt the ache of
love as strongly as I'd ever felt it for Gabrielle. I felt the inevitable tears and did my best to
suppress them.
"You've learned a great deal from Armand," he said, his voice steady as if to help me with
this little silent struggle. "And you learned much more on your own. But there are still some
things I might teach you."
"Yes, please," I said.
"Well, for one thing," he said, "your powers are extraordinary, but you can't expect those
you make in the next fifty years to equal you or Gabrielle. Your second child didn't have half
Gabrielle's strength and later children will have even less. The blood I gave you will make
some difference. If you drink . . . if you drink from Akasha and Enkil, which you may choose
not to do . . . that will make some difference too. But no matter, only so many children can be
made by one in a century. And new offspring will be weak. However, this is not necessarily a
bad thing. The rule of the old covens had wisdom in it that strength should come with time.
And then again, there is the old truth: you might make titans or imbeciles, no one knows why
or how.
"Whatever will happen will happen, but choose your companions with care. Choose them
because you like to look at them and you like the sound of their voices, and they have
profound secrets in them that you wish to know. In other words, choose them because you
love them. Otherwise you will not be able to bear their company for very long."
"I understand," I said. "Make them in love."
"Exactly, make them in love. And make certain they have had some lifetime before you
make them; and never never make one as young as Armand. That is the worst crime I have
ever committed against my own kind, the taking of the young boy child Armand. "
"But you didn't know the Children of Darkness would come when they did, and separate
him from you."
"No. But still, I should have waited. It was loneliness that drove me to it. And Armand's
helplessness, that his mortal life was so completely in my hands. Remember, beware of that
power, and the power you have over those who are dying. Loneliness in us, and that sense of
power, can be as strong as the thirst for blood. If there were not an Enkil there might be no
Akasha, and if there were not an Akasha, then there would be no Enkil."
"Yes. And from everything you said, it seems Enkil covets Akasha. That Akasha is the one
who now and then..."
"Yes, that's true." His face became very somber suddenly, and his eyes had a confidential
look in them as if we were whispering to each other and fearful another might hear. He
waited for a moment as if thinking what to say. "Who knows what Akasha might do if there
were no Enkil to hold her?" he whispered. "And why do I pretend that he can't hear this even
when I think it? Why do I whisper? He can destroy me anytime that he likes. Maybe Akasha
is the only thing keeping him from it. But then what would become of them if he did away
with me?"
"Why did they let themselves be burnt by the sun?" I asked.
"How can we know? Perhaps they knew it wouldn't hurt them. It would only hurt and
punish those who had done it to them. Perhaps in the state they live in they are slow to realize
what is going on outside them. And they did not have time to gather their forces, to wake
from their dreams and save themselves. Maybe their movements after it happened-the
movements of Akasha I witnessed-were only possible because they had been awakened by
the sun. And now they sleep again with their eyes open. And they dream again. And they do
not even drink."
"What did you mean . . . if I choose to drink their blood?" I asked. "How could I not
choose?"
"That is something we have to think on, both of us," he said. "And there is always the
possibility that they won't allow you to drink."
I shuddered thinking of one of those arms striking out at me, knocking me twenty feet
across the chapel, or perhaps right through the stone floor itself.
"She told you her name, Lestat," he said. "I think she will let you drink. But if you take her
blood, then you will be even more resilient than you are now. A few droplets will strengthen
you, but if she gives you more than that, a full measure, hardly any force on earth can destroy
you after that. You have to be certain you want it."
"Why wouldn't I want it?" I said.
"Do you want to be burnt to a cinder and live on in agony? Do you want to be slashed with
knives a thousand times over, or shot through and through with guns, and yet live on, a
shredded husk that cannot fend for itself? Believe me, Lestat, that can be a terrible thing. You
could suffer the sun even, and live through it, burnt beyond recognition, wishing as the old
gods did in Egypt that they had died."
"But won't I heal faster?"
"Not necessarily. Not without another infusion of her blood in the wounded state. Time
with its constant measure of human victims or the blood of old ones-these are the restoratives.
But you may wish you had died. Think on this. Take your time."
"What would you do if you were I?"
"I would drink from Those Who Must Be Kept, of course. I would drink to be stronger,
more nearly immortal. I would beseech Akasha on my knees to allow it, and then I would go
into her arms. But it's easy to say these things. She has never struck out at me. She has never
forbidden me, and I know that I want to live forever. I would endure the fire again. I would
endure the sun. And all manner of suffering in order to go on. You may not be so sure that
eternity is what you want."
"I want it," I said. "I could pretend to think about it, pretend to be clever and wise as I
weigh it. But what the hell? I wouldn't fool you, would I? You knew what I would say."
He smiled.
"Then before you leave we will go into the chapel and we will ask her, humbly, and we
will see what she says."
"And for now, more answers?" I asked.
He gestured for me to ask.
"I've seen ghosts," I said. "Seen the pesty demons you described. I've seen them possess
mortals and dwellings."
"I know no more than you do. Most ghosts seem to be mere apparitions without knowledge
that they are being watched. I have never spoken to a ghost nor been addressed by one. As for
the pesty demons, what can I add to Enkil's ancient explanation, that they rage because they
do not have bodies. But there are other immortals that are more interesting."
"What are they?"
"There are at least two in Europe who do not and have never drunk blood. They can walk
in the daylight as well as in the dark, and they have bodies and they are very strong. They
look exactly like men. There was one in ancient Egypt, known as Ramses the Damned to the
Egyptian court, though he was hardly damned as far as I can tell. His name was taken off all
the royal monuments after he vanished. You know the Egyptians used to do that, obliterate
the name as they sought to kill the being. And I don't know what happened to him. The old
scrolls didn't tell."
"Armand spoke of him," I said. "Armand told of legends, that Ramses was an ancient
vampire."
"He is not. But I didn't believe what I read of him till I'd seen the others with my own eyes.
And again, I have not communicated with them. I have only seen them, and they were
terrified of me and fled. I fear them because they walk in the sun. And they are powerful and
bloodless and who knows what they might do? But you may live centuries and never see
them."
"But how old are they? How long has it been?"
"They are very old, probably as old as I am. I can't tell. They live as wealthy, powerful
men. And possibly there are more of them, they may have some way of propagating
themselves, I'm not sure. Pandora said once that there was a woman too. But then Pandora
and I couldn't agree upon anything about them. Pandora said they had been what we were,
and they were ancient, and had ceased to drink as the Mother and the Father have ceased to
drink. I don't think they were ever what we are. They are something else without blood. They
don't reflect light as we do. They absorb it. They are just a shade darker than mortals. And
they are dense, and strong. You may never see them, but I tell you to warn you. You must
never let them know where you lie. They can be more dangerous than humans."
"But are humans really dangerous? I've found them so easy to deceive."
"Of course they're dangerous. Humans could wipe us out if they ever really understood
about us. They could hunt us by day. Don't ever underestimate that single advantage. Again,
the rules of the old covens have their wisdom. Never, never tell mortals about us. Never tell a
mortal where you lie or where any vampire lies. It is absolute folly to think you can control
mortals."
I nodded, though it was very hard for me to fear mortals. I never had.
"Even the vampire theater in Paris," he cautioned, "does not flaunt the simplest truths about
us. It plays with folklore and illusions. Its audience is completely fooled."
I realized this was true. And that even in her letters to me Eleni always disguised her
meanings and never used our full names.
And something about this secrecy oppressed me as it always had.
But I was racking my brain, trying to discover if I'd ever seen the bloodless things . . . The
truth was, I might have mistaken them for rogue vampires.
"There is one other thing I should tell you about supernatural beings," Marius said.
"What is it?"
"I am not certain of this, but I'll tell you what I think. I suspect that when we are burntwhen
we are destroyed utterly-that we can come back again in another form. I don't speak of
man now, of human reincarnation. I know nothing of the destiny of human souls. But we do
live forever and I think we come back."
"What makes you say this?" I couldn't help but think of Nicolas.
"The same thing that makes mortals talk of reincarnation. There are those who claim to
remember other lives. They come to us as mortals, claiming to know all about us, to have
been one of us, and asking to be given the Dark Gift again. Pandora was one of these. She
knew many things, and there was no explanation for her knowledge, except perhaps that she
imagined it, or drew it, without realizing it, out of my mind. That's a real possibility, that they
are merely mortals with hearing that allows them to receive our undirected thoughts.
"Whatever the case, there are not many of them. If they were vampires, then surely they
are only a few of those who have been destroyed. So the others perhaps do not have the
strength to come back. Or they do not choose to do so. Who can know? Pandora was
convinced she had died when the Mother and the Father had been put in the sun."
"Dear God, they are born again as mortals and they want to be vampires again?"
Marius smiled.
"You're young, Lestat, and how you contradict yourself. What do you really think it would
be like to be mortal again? Think on this when you set eyes on your mortal father."
Silently I conceded the point. But what I had made of mortality in my imagination I didn't
really want to lose. I wanted to go on grieving for my lost mortality. And I knew that my love
of mortals was all bound up with my not being afraid of them.
Marius looked away, distracted once more. The same perfect attitude of listening. And then
his face became attentive to me again.
"Lestat, we should have no more than two or three nights," he said sadly.
"Marius!" I whispered. I bit down on the words that wanted to spill out.
My only consolation was the expression on his face, and it seemed now he had never
looked even faintly inhuman.
"You don't know how I want you to stay here," he said. "But life is out there, not here.
When we meet again I'll tell you more things but you have all you need for now. You have to
go to Louisiana and see your father to the finish of his life and learn from that what you can.
I've seen legions of mortals grow old and die. You've seen none. But believe me, my young
friend, I want you desperately to remain with me. You don't know how much. I promise you
that I will find you when the time comes."
"But why can't I return to you? Why must you leave here?"
"It's time," he said. "I've ruled too long over these people as it is. I arouse suspicions, and
besides, Europeans are coming into these waters. Before I came here I was hidden in the
buried city of Pompeii below Vesuvius, and mortals, meddling and digging up those ruins,
drove me out. Now it's happening again. I must seek some other refuge, something more
remote, and more likely to remain so. And frankly I would never have brought you here if I
planned to remain."
"Why not?"
"You know why not. I can't have you or anyone else know the location of Those Who
Must Be Kept. And that brings us now to something very important: the promises I must have
from you."
"Anything," I said. "But what could you possibly want that I could give?"
"Simply this. You must never tell others the things that I have told you. Never tell of Those
Who Must Be Kept. Never tell the legends of the old gods. Never tell others that you have
seen me."
I nodded gravely. I had expected this, but I knew without even thinking that this might
prove very hard indeed.
"If you tell even one part," he said, "another will follow, and with every telling of the
secret of Those Who Must Be Kept you increase the danger of their discovery."
"Yes," I said. "But the legends, our origins . . . What about those children that I make?
Can't I tell them-"
"No. As I told you, tell part and you will end up telling all. Besides, if these fledglings are
children of the Christian god, if they are poisoned as Nicolas was with the Christian notion of
Original Sin and guilt, they will only be maddened and disappointed by these old tales. It will
all be a horror to them that they cannot accept. Accidents, pagan gods they don't believe in,
customs they cannot understand. One has to be ready for this knowledge, meager as it may
be. Rather listen hard to their questions and tell them what you must to make them contented.
And if you find you cannot lie to them, don't tell them anything at all. Try to make them
strong as godless men today are strong. But mark my words, the old legends never. Those are
mine and mine alone to tell."
"What will you do to me if I tell them?" I asked.
This startled him. He lost his composure for almost a full second, and then he laughed.
"You are the damnedest creature, Lestat," he murmured. "The point is I can do anything I
like to you if you tell. Surely you know that. I could crush you underfoot the way Akasha
crushed the Elder. I could set you ablaze with the power of my mind. But I don't want to utter
such threats. I want you to come back to me. But I will not have these secrets known. I will
not have a band of immortals descend upon me again as they did in Venice. I will not be
known to our kind. You must never-deliberately or accidentally-send anyone searching for
Those Who Must Be Kept or for Marius. You will never utter my name to others."
"I understand," I said.
"Do you?" he asked. "Or must I threaten you after all? Must I warn you that my vengeance
can be terrible? That my punishment would include those to whom you've told the secrets as
well as you? Lestat, I have destroyed others of our kind who came in search of me. I have
destroyed them simply because they knew the old legends and they knew the name of Marius,
and they would never give up the quest."
"I can't bear this.," I murmured. "I won't tell anyone, ever, I swear. But I'm afraid of what
others can read in my thoughts, naturally. I fear that they might take the images out of my
head. Armand could do it. What if-"
"You can conceal the images. You know how. You can throw up other images to confuse
them. You can lock your mind. It's a skill you already know. But let's be done with threats
and admonitions. I feel love for you."
I didn't respond for a moment. My mind was leaping ahead to all manner of forbidden
possibilities. Finally I put it in words:
"Marius, don't you ever have the desire to tell all of it to all of them! I mean, to make it
known to the whole world of our kind., and to draw them together?"
"Good God, no, Lestat. Why would I do that?" He seemed genuinely puzzled.
"So that we might possess our legends, might at least ponder the riddles of our history, as
men do. So that we might swap our stories and share our power-
"And combine to use it as the Children of Darkness have done, against men?"
"No . . . Not like that."
"Lestat, in eternity, covens are actually rare. Most vampires are distrustful and solitary
beings and they do not love others. They have no more than one or two well-chosen
companions from time to time, and they guard their hunting grounds and their privacy as I do
mine. They wouldn't want to come together, and if they did overcome the viciousness and
suspicions that divide them, their convocation would end in terrible battles and struggles for
supremacy like those revealed to me by Akasha, which happened thousands of years ago. We
are evil things finally. We are killers. Better that those who unite on this earth be mortal and
that they unite for the good."
I accepted this, ashamed of how it excited me, ashamed of all my weaknesses and all my
impulsiveness. Yet another realm of possibilities was already obsessing me.
"And what about to mortals, Marius? Have you never wanted to reveal yourself to them,
and tell them the whole story?"
Again, he seemed positively baffled by the notion.
"Have you never wanted the world to know about us, for better or for worse? Has it never
seemed preferable to living in secret?"
He lowered his eyes for a moment and rested his chin against his closed hand. For the first
time I perceived a communication of images coming from him, and I felt that he allowed me
to see them because he was uncertain of his answer. He was remembering with a recall so
powerful that it made my powers seem fragile. And what he remembered were the earliest
times, when Rome had still ruled the world, and he was still within the range of a normal
human lifetime.
"You remember wanting to tell them all," I said. "To make it known, the monstrous
secret."
"Perhaps," he said, "in the very beginning, there was some desperate passion to
communicate."
"Yes, communicate," I said, cherishing the word. And I remembered that long-ago night on
the stage when I had so frightened the Paris audience.
"But that was in the dim beginning," he said slowly, speaking of himself. His eyes were
narrow and remote as if he were looking back over all the centuries. "It would be folly, it
would be madness. Were humanity ever really convinced, it would destroy us. I don't want to
be destroyed. Such dangers and calamities are not interesting to me."
I didn't answer.
"You don't feel the urge yourself to reveal these things," he said to me almost soothingly.
But I do, I thought. I felt his fingers on the back of my hand. I was looking beyond him,
back over my brief past-the theater, my fairy-tale fantasies. I felt paralyzed in sadness.
"What you feel is loneliness and monstrousness," he said. "And you're impulsive and
defiant."
"True."
"But what would it matter to reveal anything to anyone? No one can forgive. No one can
redeem. It's a childish illusion to think so. Reveal yourself and be destroyed, and what have
you done? The Savage Garden would swallow your remains in pure vitality and silence.
Where is there justice or understanding?"
I nodded.
I felt his hand close on mine. He rose slowly to his feet, and I stood up, reluctantly but
compliantly.
"It's late," he said gently. His eyes were soft with compassion. "We've talked enough for
now. And I must go down to my people. There's trouble in the nearby village, as I feared
there would be. And it will take what time I have until dawn, and then more tomorrow
evening. It may well be after midnight tomorrow before we can talk-"
He was distracted again, and he lowered his head and listened.
"Yes, I have to go," he said. And we embraced lightly and very comfortably.
And though I wanted to go with him and see what happened in the village-how he would
conduct his affairs there-I wanted just as much to seek my rooms and look at the sea and
finally sleep.
"You'll be hungry when you rise," he said. "I'll have a victim for you. Be patient till I
come."
"Yes, of course . . ."
"And while you wait for me tomorrow," he said, "do as you like in the house. The old
scrolls are in the cases in the library. You may look at them. Wander all the rooms. Only the
sanctuary of Those Who Must Be Kept should not be approached. You must not go down the
stairs alone."
I nodded.
I waited to ask him one thing more. When would he hunt? When would he drink? His
blood had sustained me for two nights, maybe more. But whose blood sustained him? Had he
taken a victim earlier? Would he hunt now? I had a growing suspicion that he no longer
needed the blood as much as I did. That, like Those Who Must Be Kept, he had begun to
drink less and less. And I wanted desperately to know if this was true.
But he was leaving me. The village was definitely calling him. He went out onto the
terrace and then he disappeared. For a moment I thought he had gone to the right or left
beyond the doors. Then I came to the doors and saw the terrace was empty. I went to the rail
and I looked down and I saw the speck of color that was his frock coat against the rocks far
below.
And so we have all this to look forward to, I thought: that we may not need the blood, that
our faces will gradually lose all human expression, that we can move objects with the
strength of our minds, that we can all but fly. That some night thousands of years hence we
may sit in utter silence as Those Who Must Be Kept are sitting now? How often tonight had
Marius looked like them? How long did he sit without moving when no one was here?
And what would half a century mean to him, during which time I was to live out that one
mortal life far across the sea?
I turned away and went back through the house to the bedchamber I'd been given. And I
sat looking at the sea and the sky until the light started to come. When I opened the little
hiding place of the sarcophagus, there were fresh flowers there. I put on the golden mask
headdress and the gloves and I lay down in the stone coffin, and I could still smell the flowers
as I closed my eyes.
The fearful moment was coming. The loss of consciousness. And on the edge of dream, I
heard a woman laugh. She laughed lightly and long as though she were very happy and in the
midst of conversation, and just before I went into darkness, I saw her white throat as she bent
her head back.
15
When I opened my eyes I had an idea. It came full blown to me, and it immediately
obsessed me so that I was scarcely conscious of the thirst I felt, of the sting in my veins.
"Vanity," I whispered. But it had an alluring beauty to it, the idea.
No, forget about it. Marius said to stay away from the sanctuary, and besides he will be
back at midnight and then you can present the idea to him. And he can . . . what? Sadly shake
his head.
I came out in the house and all was as it had been the night before, candles burning,
windows open to the soft spectacle of the dying light. It didn't seem possible that I would
leave here soon. And that I would never come back to it, that he himself would vacate this
extraordinary place.
I felt sorrowful and miserable, And then there was the idea.
Not to do it in his presence, but silently and secretly so that I did not feel foolish, to go all
alone.
No. Don't do it. After all, it won't do any good. Nothing will happen when you do it.
But if that's the case, why not do it? Why not do it now?
I made my rounds again, through the library and the galleries and the room full of birds
and monkeys, and on into other chambers where I had not been.
But that idea stayed in my head. And the thirst nagged at me, making me just a little more
impulsive, a little more restless, a little less able to reflect on all the things Marius had told
me and what they might mean as time went on.
He wasn't in the house. That was certain. I had been finally through all the rooms. Where
he slept was his secret, and I knew there were ways to get in and out of the house that were
his secret as well.
But the door to the stairway down to Those Who Must Be Kept, that I discovered again
easily enough. And it wasn't locked.
I stood in the wallpapered salon with its polished furniture looking at the clock. Only seven
in the evening, five hours till he came back. Five hours of the thirst burning in me. And the
idea . . . The idea.
I didn't really decide to do it. I just turned my back on the clock and started walking back
to my room. I knew that hundreds of others before me must have had such ideas. And how
well he had described the pride he felt when he thought he could rouse them. That he might
make them move.
No. I just want to do it, even if nothing happens, which is exactly how it will go. I just
want to go down there alone and do it. It has something to do with Nicki maybe. I don't
know. I don't know!
I went into my chamber and in the incandescent light rising from the sea, I unlocked the
violin case and I looked at the Stradivarius violin.
Of course I didn't know how to play it, but we are powerful mimics. As Marius said, we
have superior concentration and superior skills. And I had seen Nicki do it so often.
I tightened the bow now and rubbed the horsehair with the little piece of resin, as I had
seen him do.
Only two nights ago, I couldn't have thought of the idea of touching this thing. Hearing it
would have been pure pain.
Now I took it out of its case and I carried it through the house, the way I'd carried it to
Nicki through the wings of the Theater of the Vampires, and not even thinking of vanity, I
rushed faster and faster towards the door to the secret stairs.
It was as if they were drawing me to them, as if I had no will. Marius didn't matter now.
Nothing much mattered, except to be going down the narrow damp stone steps faster and
faster, past the windows full of sea spray and early evening light.
In fact, my infatuation was getting so strong, so total that I stopped suddenly, wondering if
it was originating with me. But that was foolishness. Who could have put it in my head?
Those Who Must Be Kept? Now that was real vanity, and besides, did these creatures know
what this strange, delicate little wooden instrument was?
It made a sound, did it not, that no one had ever heard in the ancient world, a sound so
human and so powerfully affecting that men thought the violin the work of the devil and
accused its finest players of being possessed.
I was slightly dizzy, confused.
How had I gotten so far down the steps, and didn't I remember that the door was bolted
from inside? Give me another five hundred years and I might be able to open that bolt, but
not just now.
Yet I went on down, these thoughts breaking up and disintegrating as fast as they'd come. I
was on fire again, and the thirst was making it worse, though the thirst had nothing to do with
it.
And when I came round the last turn I saw the doors to the chapel were open wide. The
light of the lamps poured out into the stairwell. And the scent of the flowers and incense was
suddenly overwhelming and made a knot in my throat.
I drew nearer, holding the violin with both hands to my chest, though why I didn't know.
And I saw that the tabernacle doors were open, and there they sat.
Someone had brought them more flowers. Someone had laid out the incense in cakes on
golden plates.
And I stopped just inside the chapel, and I looked at their faces and they seemed as before
to look directly at me.
White, so white I could not imagine them bronzed, and as hard, it seemed, as the jewels
they wore. Snake bracelet around her upper arm. Layered necklace on her breast. Tiniest lip
of flesh from his chest covering the top of the clean linen shirt he wore.
Her face was narrower than his face, her nose just a little longer. His eyes were slightly
longer, the folds of flesh defining them a little thicker. Their long black hair was very much
the same.
I was breathing uneasily. I felt suddenly weak and let the scent of the flowers and the
incense fill my lungs.
The light of the lamps danced in a thousand tiny specks of gold in the murals.
I looked down at the violin and tried to remember my idea, and I ran my fingers along the
wood and wondered what this thing looked like to them.
In a hushed voice I explained what it was, that I wanted them to hear it, that I didn't really
know how to play it but that I was going to try. I wasn't speaking loud enough to hear myself,
but surely they could hear it if they chose to listen.
And I lifted the violin to my shoulder, braced it under my chin, and lifted the bow. I closed
my eyes and I remembered music, Nicki's music, the way that his body had moved with it
and his fingers came down with the pressure of hammers and he let the message travel to his
fingers from his soul.
I plunged into it, the music suddenly wailing upwards and rippling down again as my
fingers danced. It was a song, all right, I could make a song. The tones were pure and rich as
they echoed off the close walls with a resounding volume, creating the wailing beseeching
voice that only the violin can make. I went madly on with it, rocking back and forth,
forgetting Nicki, forgetting everything but the feel of my fingers stabbing at the soundboard
and the realization that I was making this, this was coming out of me, and it plummeted and
climbed and overflowed ever louder and louder as I bore down upon it with the frantic
sawing of the bow.
I was singing with it, I was humming and then singing loudly, and all the gold of the little
room was a blur. And suddenly it seemed my own voice became louder, inexplicably louder,
with a pure high note which I knew that I myself could not possibly sing. Yet it was there,
this beautiful note, steady and unchanging and growing even louder until it was hurting my
ears. I played harder, more frantically, and I heard my own gasps coming, and I knew
suddenly that I was not the one making this strange high note!
The blood was going to come out of my ears if the note did not stop. And I wasn't making
the note! Without stopping the music, without giving in to the pain that was splitting my
head, I looked forward and I saw Akasha had risen and her eyes were very wide and her
mouth was a perfect O. The sound was coming from her, she was making it, and she was
moving off the steps of the tabernacle towards me with her arms outstretched and the note
pierced my eardrums as if it were a blade of steel.
I couldn't see. I heard the violin hit the stone floor. I felt my hands on the sides of my head.
I screamed and screamed, but the note absorbed my screaming.
"Stop it! Stop it!" I was roaring. But all the light was there again and she was right in front
of me and she was reaching out.
"O God, Marius!" I turned and ran towards the doors. And the doors flew shut against me,
knocking my face so hard I fell down on my knees. Under the high shrill continuum of the
note I was sobbing.
"Marius, Marius, Marius!"
And turning to see what was about to happen to me, I saw her foot come down on the
violin. It popped and splintered under her heel. But the note she sang was dying. The note
was fading away.
And I was left in silence, deafness, unable to hear my own screams for Marius which were
going on and on, as I scrambled to my feet.
Ringing silence, shimmering silence. She was right in front of me, and her black eyebrows
came together delicately, barely creasing her white flesh, her eyes full of torment and
questioning and her pale pink lips opened to reveal her fang teeth.
Help me, help me, Marius, help me, I was stammering, unable to hear myself except in the
pure abstraction of intention in my mind. And then her arms enclosed me, and she drew me
closer, and I felt the hand as Marius had described it, cupping my head gently, very gently,
and I felt my teeth against her neck.
I did not hesitate. I did not think about the limbs that were locked around me, that could
crush the life out of me in a second. I felt my fangs break through the skin as if through a
glacial crust, and the blood came steaming into my mouth.
Oh, yes, yes . . . oh, yes. I had thrown my arm over her left shoulder, I was clinging to her,
my living statue, and it didn't matter that she was harder than marble, that was the way it was
supposed to be, it was perfect, my Mother, my lover, my powerful one, and the blood was
penetrating every pulsing particle of me with the threads of its burning web. But her lips were
against my throat. She was kissing me, kissing the artery through which her own blood so
violently flowed. Her lips were opening on it, and as I drew upon her blood with all my
strength, sucking, and feeling that gush again and again before it spread itself out into me, I
felt the unmistakable sensation of her fangs going into my neck.
Out of every zinging vessel my blood was suddenly drawn into her, even as hers was being
drawn into me.
I saw it, the shimmering circuit, and more divinely I felt it because nothing else existed but
our mouths locked to each other's throats and the relentless pounding path of the blood. There
were no dreams, there were no visions, there was just this, this-gorgeous and deafening and
heated-and nothing mattered, absolutely nothing, except that this never stop. The world of all
things that had weight and filled space and interrupted the flow of light was gone.
And yet some horrid noise intruded, something ugly, like the sound of stone cracking, like
the sound of stone dragged across the floor. Marius coming. No, Marius, don't come. Go
back, don't touch. Don't separate us.
But it wasn't Marius, this awful sound, this intrusion, this sudden disruption of everything,
this thing grabbing hold of my hair an
Public Last updated: 2012-05-29 08:41:14 PM
