The Pyramids of London
Page 4
He took an envelope from the table, handing it to her. Heavy with some object, it was addressed in a loose, looping scrawl. It took Rian several blinks to decipher the word 'Wednesday'.
Tugging the flap open, she tipped out a key: heavy, tarnished, and as large as her hand. A faded paper tag was tied to it with fine cotton thread, the writing tiny and exact. An address in London. There was nothing else in the envelope, no note or explanation.
"I don't feel any particular compulsion," she remarked. "I could simply not go to this place, couldn't I?"
"I do not recommend that course. Although it is common for a colony to decline and the bond to fade if it is not maintained, there is always some slight chance of a neglected symbiont spontaneously separating from the original colony's will. In your case, because both your blood and ka had been drained so heavily, the Amon-Re symbiont was able to completely dominate your system. If Heriath does not affirm his control of it—and soon—your colony will achieve independence and finish raising you."
She would become a vampire. There would be no going back from that after ten years. No strawberries forever.
"And he—I take it he's no longer here?"
"The attack was two days ago, and the party from London returned the morning after. The key was forwarded when I sent word to the palace that you appeared likely to survive."
A little cough of laughter escaped Rian. "He's not going to make this easy for me, is he?"
Her reaction brought an answering smile to Lord Msrah's boyish face. "Very likely not. But I have a suspicion you are equal to the challenge. You are at least alive to face it, and for that I am very grateful. There is a variety of etiquette involved in dealing with another's Bound, but do not hesitate to apply to me if you are in need. I will not forget—"
A quiet tap interrupted the Nomarch, and the room's blue haze brightened by several degrees as the door opened. Evelyn looked in, and Rian realised that she'd felt the approach of another living river before he'd even knocked.
"My Lord? Mayor Desh-aht has arrived."
Lord Msrah rose. "Thank you, Evelyn. Please assist Dama Seaforth with anything she requires." The vampire bowed to Rian, repeated his apologies and regrets, and left.
"How are your eyes?" Evelyn asked, as the door closed. He crossed to grip Rian's hands. "And the rest of you, of course. I am so sorry, Arianne. What a mess this has become."
"It's certainly not what I was expecting," Rian managed to say, struggling with a sudden rush of sensation. Concern mixed with a deep note of grief, and then cutting through it a spike of straightforward desire, reminding her of the thin cloth of her gown and making her almost sorry when he released her. "I feel...unexpectedly good, actually. The candle was a challenge, but I can't remember the last time I felt so physically well." She touched her throat again.
"One step toward godhood," Evelyn murmured, sitting in the chair Lord Msrah had vacated.
Rian gave him a startled glance for his tone. "Don't tell me you're a Marculist?" The argument that those who Answered were not gods, merely 'powers' feeding on souls, enjoyed an increasing popularity, but Rian hadn't expected to find a proponent at Sheerside House.
"No. Gods are gods. That our understanding of them is limited and contradictory is far from surprising. Still, I've met dozens of vampires, and many more Bound, and though they—we—are certainly god-touched, thanks to whatever strain is living in our blood, there's no sign that even Hatshepsu was able to use rept as a stepping stone to transcendence. Like all other mortal-born souls in the Egyptian field of influence, vampires become ba, and then ready themselves for the journey to their Otherworld. Vampirism doesn't even require allegiance."
He leaned forward then, and brushed fingers to the back of her hand, making Rian realise she'd raised it once again to explore her throat. Notes of sympathy and concern showed her that that first flood of outside emotion had not been imagination—and that a conversation about Marculism did little to ease certain memories.
"I knew another Bound who had come to the role through a near-exsanguincy," Evelyn told her. "He found much to be pleased about in his position, but it took him years before he did not need to brace himself, just a little, before his Master fed. To train his mind not to expect pain and terror and death come far too early. I truly am sorry, Arianne."
"Were…were they at least able to kill those sphinx things?" Rian asked, because the idea of being bitten again did seem to be something she was not ready to think about.
"No. Both of them were successfully driven out of the building, where Princess Leodhild could call upon larger triskelion to defend her. A sight not usually seen outside the solstices, and cause enough for any attacker to retreat." Evelyn chuckled. "Or it could have been the vision of Prince Gustav bounding about naked and waving an axe of prodigious proportions. No-one's venturing a guess as to where he produced that from."
Rian shook her head, trying to fit these events into her own personal puzzle. "So it was definitely an attack against the Sulevia Leoth? The sphinx I saw didn't look like an automaton. Some kind of living statue."
"Yes. You can imagine how all this is being received. Egypt was already a favoured suspect for the windstorm problem—weather vampires, after all—and while Egypt and her client nations aren't unique in producing statues resembling our night visitors, the probable link is hard to overlook. The reactions have been—" A grimace competed with a bubble of laughter. "Wrong of me to react with fascinated interest, I know, but the whole world is shifting in response to the possibilities. Is Egypt attempting to annex Prytennia? Will it move on other client nations? Are local vampires to be trusted, or do their pilgrimages, and the jot they're required to send to Thebes, make them automatically suspect? It's a tremendous mess right now, and so exhilarating. All of which is beside the point. Are you hungry?"
"A little. Less than I'd expect if it really has been two days."
"We poured enough diluted honey down your throat to make the difference, I expect," Evelyn said. "I'll fetch you a tray. There's a water closet through that door."
Honey for the hive, Rian thought, as he departed. Binding her to the line of the pharaoh, and to the Wind's Dog: someone considered amoral and deadly, and who had sat in a library hurting himself and thinking about photography.
Her infiltration of Sheerside House had lasted less than twelve hours, and she was left not only with the ongoing problem of the children's maintenance, and the prospect of travelling urgently to London while avoiding light, but a state of thraldom to someone she suspected she would find very annoying. Every plan undone, the destruction neat for its completeness. Lips curving in sour appreciation, Rian shook her head to clear it, then began putting the situation in order.
Lord Msrah had not told her what he knew about the sphinxes, and she had not told him that the Wind's Dog had made a last-ditch effort to save her life because one sphinx had appeared specifically interested in her. There were few enough reasons such a creature would be determined to kill Arianne Seaforth. She had annoyed the occasional person, but owned little intrinsic significance, and no reputation beyond notable parents. Only her presence at Sheerside House, combined with a connection to a double murder, seemed likely to produce an attempt to remove her from play.
The vampire Heriath had saved Rian so he could question her, because the sphinxes had also targeted Princess Leodhild. If they had—somehow!—been sent by Aedric and Eiliff's murderers, then she would be able to put the Wind's Dog to good use. He, presumably, would be less eager to accept the easiest solution than the Caerlleon authorities, who'd shown no interest in looking beyond the surface of the deaths. And, after centuries spent as the Suleviae's personal agent, Heriath would have both experience and the resources of the Crown at his disposal. So, the wrong vampire might not be such a disaster after all.
By the time Evelyn returned, Rian had settled a rough course of action, and was ready to be interested in food. She looked over the well-appointed tray with rising anticipation,
then paused to pick up two thin blue envelopes. Telegrams. She would not put it past her three enterprising charges to be demanding updates.
"Lyle asked me to pass on his considerable distress and to request the honour of taking you to lunch," Evelyn said. "Since this Makepeace fellow apparently resides in London, and Prince Gustav is in residence at Alba Place, Lyle will at least be on hand if you find yourself in need of assistance."
"What do you know of Makepeace?" Rian asked, slitting an envelope to distract from her surprise at what he plainly didn't know. Then she frowned at her first telegram, attention stolen almost completely from Evelyn's response.
HEARD GOOD NEWS STOP, it read. TEMPORARILY RETURNING ALBA BUT INSIST LUNCH SOONEST STOP HAVE EVELYN PASS ON ADDRESS STOP UNTIL RETURN LYNSEY LOVE TO HELP STOP LYLE
"...been down several times before," Evelyn was saying. "My mother remembers him showing up early in her service, so he's at least a century-passed vampire. A sun-seeker too, from what I've seen of him, which tends to suggest age, though it apparently can come on quite early in some of the strains."
"All vampires do that then?" Rian asked, handing him the telegram in order to stop herself from reacting to a sought-after name. "Lord Msrah was telling me a little about it."
"Relatively rare behaviour, from what I understand. While the rept state is several steps up from mortal decay, most stone-blood don't seek it prematurely." He smiled down at the telegram. "Prince Gustav must have whirled himself back to Din Eidyn and dragged poor Lyle in his wake. But Lynsey will definitely be glad to do anything she can for you. She lives for rescues and grand causes."
"I have no idea who Lynsey is," Rian said, quite as if she hadn't come to Sheerside House specifically to find a 'Lyndsey' somehow connected to the place.
"Lyle's little sister. Very active in the United Albion League, and thoroughly redoubtable. I'll give you her London address, and pass on yours. And, if you permit, come to visit myself, when I'm free to do so. Currently our usual schedules are completely disarranged."
"Of course," Rian said, the warmth of her response not simply because she had found a breadcrumb to lead her through the maze around Aedric's death. "I'll have to apologise to Dama Hackett. I suppose this will delay all her plans until another replacement is found."
He looked away. "Delia…her room was opposite Princess Leodhild's. The sphinx crashed right through it."
"She—? I didn't know. How awful." For a moment Rian felt a distress disproportionate to the death of a kind stranger, a jolt to make the room swim. Realising she'd put her hand to her throat yet again, she forced it down and added: "I'm sorry Evelyn."
"I was teasing her only a week ago, about her long list of frivolous things to do. And now the most I can do is rationalise death, tell myself Delia had lived a long and comfortable life, that it was quick, and she wouldn't have known or suffered. She is seeing Annwn now, and is surely a strong enough soul to travel on a grand tour of the Twilight Islands. But that is what my head says, while my heart shouts 'unfair' and tells me I failed her."
"Dance in the snow." In response to his startled glanced Rian went on: "It's what Dama Hackett told me she planned to do. You can't undo what happened, but you can dance in the snow for her."
Evelyn shook his head, but then his lips shifted to a reluctant curve. "That sounds like Delia. And she would enjoy the idea, very much. She always made fun of my attempts at dignity. Will you dance for her with me? Some time after Midwinter?"
Rian agreed readily to this, and watched a part of Evelyn ease as he told several fond anecdotes of a woman who had been part of the extended family he'd known growing up, and who had obviously been an early crush, words never spoken making her loss doubly regretted.
Sampling breakfast, she tried a segment of peach, then opened her second telegram and read it in silence.
"It's Wednesday at the moment, yes?" she asked.
"Thursday morning."
Rian read the telegram over, and said: "Then I need to check some train schedules. A late afternoon express to London would be ideal, to minimise the amount of sunlight I have to deal with, and also to leave after meeting a train arriving at four."
"And you need to do that—?"
"To collect an express delivery from Retwold School. My nephew and both nieces have managed to get themselves expelled."
Five
Nine hours. A thousand stations. A window that opened a bare few inches, and only let in Saharan gusts and an excess of smuts. Long before the final approach to Sheerside Station, Eluned, Eleri and Griff Tenning had been reduced to puddles on the seats.
"Nothing Aunt Arianne can do to us will match the trip here," Eluned said, easing a finger beneath the sweaty itch of straps holding on her right arm.
"Could stand us in the sun another hour," Eleri replied, tilting her head back as she considered the possibilities. "Give us more liver paste sandwiches."
"Don't talk about those sandwiches." Eluned swallowed a bubble of oily gas, and checked on Griff, lying on the opposite seat. He never travelled well.
"She should be glad," Griff said. "And she doesn't get to punish us."
He'd said the same thing, hours earlier, but the defiance had been worn down by the long day, and he sounded half his thirteen years.
Aunt Arianne didn't seem the type to hand out strict punishments, but it was hard to be sure. They knew so little about her, and Eluned hadn't been in a state to pay much attention in the first days after their Aunt had brought the news, or during the funeral. Since then, one of the few things Eluned had been able to remember from before had been her mother's reaction to one of Aunt Arianne's rare letters: pure exasperation. "Your sister flits around the Continent as if the world was arranged for her entertainment. Never doing anything of value, or caring to take a true interest."
And Aunt Arianne hadn't seemed to care, not deeply and properly. She hadn't cried at all, or even hugged them more than once—not that they would have welcomed it if she'd pretended they were close, like real family.
Her endless calm was infuriating, but finding the truth too important for Eluned to jeopardise by giving in to anger. And at least Aunt Arianne had believed them when they'd insisted it couldn't be an accident, had become an ally, and not drawn back on finding a way to get into Sheerside.
"Suppose they have monster attacks very often?" Eleri asked, fanning Griff with the newspaper they'd spent their last hoarded coin on that morning. "Only make a fuss about them if Princess Leodhild is involved?"
Griff didn't even respond.
"I can see the Nomal House pyramid." Eluned pressed her face to the compartment window to improve the angle of her view. Vampires used pyramids to intensify their powers, and since Shu vampires controlled the weather, the home of the Southern Nomarch was sure to need one as large as this.
Eleri paused in fanning. "The Aquae Sulis one in the distance again?"
"The capping stone is a different colour. It's very close. We must be right on the station."
As if in response, the train commenced the series of clanks that signalled a halt, and Eleri joined Eluned at the window. Griff put his arms over his face and breathed deeply. Not a good sign. Griff, for all the enormous energy he could expend, was not robust or resilient, and the past few months had strained his nerves to a high pitch. Too much upset produced fevers, and Eluned couldn't guess how the hot day and uncertainty would mix with the more ordinary travel sickness.
"It will be something to stay at a house that has its own station," she said, dividing her attention between her brother and the first glimpse of platform. "I wonder how far it is from the station to the main building?"
"A mile and a quarter," Griff said immediately. "There's a service village around the station. Twenty-two structures. The village is on a hill, and there's a view of Sheerside House from the station."
He'd told them so at the beginning of the journey, and the reminder of the architectural treat waiting for him was enough to make him sit up and study ag
ain the rough map he'd already drawn up of the locale.
"Look at that peculiar woman with the umbrella and veil," Eluned said. "In this heat! She...oh."
"It's the Aunt. Recognise the dress."
Eleri's flat pronouncement brought Griff to the window, but the slowing train had already juddered past.
"Check you haven't left anything under the seats," Eluned said, moving briskly on from this oddity. "And straighten your shendy, Griff."
Griff tugged his knee-length red and blue skirt so the blue panels once again faced front and back, then swiped a foot under the seats in search of dropped valuables, collecting the pencil and rubber band the action produced. There was little else—they'd been ready since Aquae Sulis, failing to anticipate how long the last few stations would take in an unexpectedly strong afternoon wind storm. At least the final leg had lacked the couple who had shared their compartment most of the way from Caerlleon, all surreptitious stares and whispers.
"Tennings Together," Eluned muttered, and unlatched the compartment door as the train jerked to a halt. The remaining traces of the afternoon's hot wind whisked around them, not exactly pleasant, but an improvement by several degrees on the heat of the compartment.
A rambling pink-and-white rose smothered the stone fence immediately in front of them, most of the petals missing or scorched brown by the winds. Eluned contemplated it for a moment of disappointment and fellow feeling, then turned to face the aunt who—for the next few years at least—had far too much say in their choices. Shaded by a sturdy black umbrella, a wide-brimmed summer hat, and a draping of opaque veil that hung past her shoulders, she presented a bizarre picture, especially compared to the tall, beautifully dressed man leading her toward them.
"I see," Eleri said. "Newly bound. Sensitive to light."
"This is certainly not a fashion statement," their aunt said. "You three look thoroughly cooked, and well past done. We'd best fix that first. Evelyn will make sure your luggage has arrived. Anything other than the three school trunks?"