Those Who Hunt the Night(26)
“I remember,” Anthea said slowly. “The first time I touched silver—it was bullion lace on the sleeve of one of my old gowns, I think—it not only hurt me at the time, but it made me very ill. I remember being desperately thirsty and unable to hunt. Charles had to hunt for me—bring me…” She broke off suddenly and looked away, her beautiful face impassive. Thinking about it, Asher realized that the logical prey to capture and bring back alive to Ernchester House had to be something human—since it was the death of the human psyche as much as the physical blood that the vampires seemed to crave—but small enough to be easily transportable.
“Kiddies?” Chloé laughed, cold and tingling, like shaken silver bells. “God, you could have had the lot of my brothers and sisters—puking little vermin. Dear God, and the youngest of ’em has brats of her own now…” She paused and turned her face away suddenly, her mouth pressing tight; a delicate, beautiful face that would never grow old. She took a deep breath, a conscious gesture, to steady herself, then went on evenly. “Funny—I see girls who was in the Opera ballet with me back then, years too old to dance now—years too old to get anythin’ on the streets but maybe a real nearsighted sailor. I could go into the Opera right now and get my old job back in the ballet, you know? Old Harry the stage man would even recognize me, from bein’ the prop boy then.”
She fell silent again, staring before her with her great dark eyes, as if seeing into that other time—like Anthea, Asher thought, standing on Harrow Hill and feeling the furnace heat of burning London washing over her mortal flesh. After a moment, Chloé said in a strange voice, “It’s queer, that’s all.” Asher felt the pressure of her mind on his, as she made her swift, sudden exit from the room.
Anthea glanced quickly at her husband; Ernchester, much more quietly, almost invisibly, followed the girl out.
“It becomes easier,” the Countess said softly, turning back to Asher, “once those we knew in life are all—gone. One is not—reminded. One can—pretend.” Her dark brows drew down again, that small gesture making her calm face human again. “Even when one is for all practical purposes immortal, age is unsettling.” And getting to her feet, she followed her husband in a whisper of dark taffeta from the room.
For a long time Asher stood where he had been by the fireplace, his arms folded, regarding Ysidro by the pink and amber glow of the shaded lights. The vampire remained standing by the vacated chair, his gaze still restingthoughtfully on the door, and Asher had the impression he listened to the lady’s retreating footfalls blending away into the other sounds of London, the rattle of traffic in Salisbury Place and the nocturnal roar of Fleet Street beyond, the deep vibration of the Underground, the sough of the river below the Embankment, and the voices of those who crowded its flagways in the night.
At length Ysidro said, “It is a dangerous time in Chloé’s life.” The enigmatic gaze returned to him, still remote, without giving anything away. “It happens to vampires. There are stages—I have seen them myself, passed through them myself, some of them … When a vampire has existed thirty, forty years, and sees all his friends dying, growing senile, or changing unrecognizably from what they were in the sweetness of a shared youth. Or at a hundred or so, when the whole world mutates into something other than what he grew up with; when all the small things that were so precious to him are no longer even remembered. When there is no one left who recalls the voices of the singers which so inextricably formed the warp and weft of his days. Then it is easy to grow careless, and the sun will always rise.”
He glanced over at Asher, and that odd ghost of what had once been a half-rueful, bittersweet smile flicked back onto the thin lines of his face. “Sometimes I think Charles and Anthea are becoming—friable—that way. They change with the times, as we all must, but it becomes more and more difficult. I still become enraged when shopkeepers are impertinent to me, when these grubby hackney cabs dart out in front of me in the street, or when I see the filth of factory soot fouling the sky. We are, like Dr. Swift’s Struldbruggs, old people, and we tend to the unreasonable conservatism of the old. Very little is left of the world as it was in King Charles’ day, and nothing, I fear, remains of the world I knew. Except Grippen, of course.”The smile turned sardonic. “What a companion for one’s immortality.”
He strolled over to the fireplace where Asher stood and prodded with one well-shod toe at the cold debris within, a millefeuille of white paper ash, like that which had decorated Neddy Hammersmith’s long-cold hearth. “That is, provided, of course,” he added ironically, “one survives the first few years, the terrible dangers of simply learning how to be a vampire.”
“Did Rhys the Minstrel teach you?”
“Yes.” It was the first softening Asher had seen in those gleaming eyes. “He was a good master—a good teacher. It was, you understand, more dangerous in those days, for in those days folk believed in us.”
It was on the tip of Asher’s tongue to ask about that, but instead he asked, “Did you know Calvaire created a fledgling?”
The cold eyes seemed to widen and harden, the long, thin nostrils flared. “He what?”
“He created a fledgling,” Asher said.
“How do you know this?”
“I’ve spoken to him,” Asher said. “A man named Bully Joe Davies, from Lambeth or thereabouts—he said he’d break my neck if I told anyone of it, particularly yourself. You seem,” he added dryly, “to enjoy a certain reputation among your peers.”
“Do you refer,” the vampire asked coldly, “to that rabble of stevedores, sluts, and tradesmen as my peers? The Farrens come close, but, when all’s said, his grandfather was no more than a jumped-up baron…”
“Your fellows, then,” Asher amended. “And in any case, I trust you’ll protect me. He says he’s being followed—stalked. I’m supposed to meet him later tonight, to go to another of Calvaire’s safe houses.”
Ysidro nodded; Asher could see the thought moving in the pale labyrinth of his eyes.
He walked over to the cabinet again, ran a finger, idly questing, through its emptied pigeonholes, every scrap of evidence of contacts burned by the cautious Grippen lest any should do what Asher had done—trace a name, a shop, an address, that would lead him to another cellar where a vampire might sleep. He glanced back at the vampire, standing quietly in the molten halo of the lamplight.
“I hadn’t intended on telling you that,” he went on after a moment. “But I’ve been finding out some things tonight about Calvaire, a little, and about vampires. I understand now why you’ve been lying to me all along. In a way, Grippen is right. You’d be an absolute fool to hire a human to track down your killer, much less tell him who and what you are—if your killer is human. But you don’t think he is.
“In fact, you think the killer is another vampire.”
NINE
“I DON’T SEE HOW that could be.” As she walked, Lydia folded her arms across her chest against the chill that dampened even the changeable sunlight of the autumn forenoon. Beside the dull purple-brown of her coat, her red hair, pinned under the only unobtrusive hat in her vast collection, seemed blazingly bright; her spectacles winked like a heliograph when she turned her head. In spite of them, she looked absurdly young, with a delicate prettiness which would have seemed touchingly vulnerable to anyone who had never seen her in the dissection rooms.
Asher, at her side, kept a weather eye out across the sepia vistas of lawn and copse to both sides of the walk, but saw few other strollers. It had rained late in the night, and Hyde Park bore a slightly dispirited air; scudding clouds were collecting again overhead. A few black-clothed nannies hustled their charges at double time through a rapid constitutional before the rain should commence again; that was all.
“Neither does Ysidro,” Asher said. “But he suspectedall along that the killer wasn’t human. It’s why he had to hire a human and, moreover, find one who could or would believe in vampires, who could operate to some degree independently—why he had to tell me what he was, in spite of the opposition from the other vampires. I think the others might have suspected they were dealing with a vampire, too. No human could stalk a vampire unseen—a human would be lucky to see one in the first place, let alone either recognize it for what it is or keep it in sight.”
“You did,” she pointed out.
Asher shook his head. “A fledgling, and an untrained one, at that.” His glance skimmed the borders of the trees that half hid the steely gleam of the Serpentine, off to their left. Like Bully Joe Davies, he found himself wondering all the time now about shadows, noises, bent blades of grass …
“Did Bully Joe Davies ever turn up?”
“No. Ysidro and I waited until almost dawn. He just might have seen Ysidro and sheered off, but I doubt it. However, I think we’ll be able to locate Calvaire’s rooms in Lambeth—if he has them, and I’m virtually certain he does—by tracking property purchases since February, which was when Calvaire came here from Paris. If Calvaire was attempting to establish a power base in London—which he seems to have been doing, since he made a fledgling—he’d have bought property. Since Grippen didn’t know about it, either, we may find something there.”