Bllod and Gold

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by Anne Rice


  "What did you see in the blood?" I whispered.

  "Your pure love," she answered.

  "Was there any doubt?" I asked. I was growing stronger by the moment. Her face was radiant with the blood flush and her eyes were fierce as they had always been when we quarreled.

  "No, no doubt," she said. "But you must leave me now."

  I said nothing.

  "Go on, Marius. If you don't, I can't bear it."

  I stared at her as if I were staring at a wild thing of the wood, and so she seemed to be, this creature whom I had loved with all my heart.

  And once again, I knew it to be finished.

  I left the room.

  In the grand hallway of the house, I stood stunned, and there Arjun was standing in the corner, staring at me.

  "I am so sorry, Marius," he said, as if he meant it.

  I looked at him, wondering if anything could work me into a rage to destroy him. Were I to do that, she would have to stay with me. And oh, how the thought of it blazed in my mind. Yet I knew she would utterly and completely hate me for it. And I would hate myself. For what did I have against this creature who wasn't her vile master as I'd always supposed, but her child!—a fledgling vampire of some five

  hundred years or less, young in the Blood and full of love for her.

  I was far far from such a possibility. And what a sublime being he was as he surely read these thoughts in my desperate and unveiled mind and yet stood his ground with such poise, merely looking at me.

  "Why must we part!" I whispered.

  He shrugged. He gestured eloquently with his hands.

  "I don't know," he said, "except she wants it so. It is she who wants ever to be on the move; it is she who draws designs upon the map. It is she who draws the circles in which we travel, now and then making Dresden the center of our roamings, now and then choosing some other city, such as Paris or Rome. It is she who says we must go on and on. It is she. And what can I say, Marius, except that it delights me."

  I went towards him and for one moment he thought I meant to harm him and he stiffened.

  I took his wrist before he could move. I studied him. What a noble being he was, his grand white wig in sharp contrast to his lustrous brown skin, his black eyes staring at me with such earnestness and seeming comprehension.

  "Stay with me here," I said. "Both of you. Remain with me. Stay with me and my companion, Bianca."

  He smiled and shook his head. There was no contempt in his eyes. We were male to male and there was no contempt. He told me only No.

  "She will not have it," he said, his voice very placating and calm. "I know her. I know all her ways. She brought me to herself because I worshiped her. And once having her blood I have never ceased in that worship."

  I stood there, clutching his wrist still, and staring about me as if I were ready to cry out to the gods. And it seemed my cry would break the very walls of this house if I let it loose.

  "How can this be!" I whispered. "That I should find her and know her only for one night, one precious night of quarreling."

  "You and she are equals," he said. "I am but an instrument."

  I closed my eyes.

  Quite suddenly I could hear her weeping, and when this sound came to my ears, Arjun gently freed himself from me and said in his soft gentle voice that he must go to her.

  I walked slowly out of the hallway, and down the marble steps and into the night, ignoring my carriage.

  I walked home through the forest.

  When I reached my house, I went into my library, took off the wig which I had worn to the ball, threw it across the room and sat in a chair at my writing table.

  I put my head down on my folded arms and silently wept as I had not wept since the death of Eudoxia. I wept. And the hours passed, and at last I realized that Bianca was standing beside me.

  She was stroking my hair with her hand, and then I heard her whisper.

  "Time to come down the steps to our cold grave, Marius. It is early for you, but I must go and I can't leave you this way."

  I rose to my feet. I took her in my arms and gave way to the most awful tears, and all the while she held me silently and warmly.

  And then we went down to our coffins together.

  The following night, I went immediately to the house where I'd left Pandora.

  I found it deserted and then I searched all of Dresden and the many palaces or schlosses around it.

  She and Arjun were gone, there was no doubt of it. And going up to the Ducal Palace where there was a little concert in progress I soon learned the "official" news of it, of how the handsome black coach of the Marquis and the Marquisa De Malvrier had left before dawn for Russia.

  Russia.

  Being in no mood for the music, I soon made my apologies to those gathered in the salon and I went home again, as miserable as I have ever been in my existence. As heartbroken.

  I sat down at my desk. I looked out over the river. I felt the warm spring breeze.

  I thought of all the many things she and I should have said to each other, all the many things I might have said in a calmer spirit to persuade her. I told myself she wasn't gone beyond reach. I told myself that she knew where I was, and that she could write to me. I told

  myself anything I needed to keep my sanity.

  And I did not hear it when Bianca came into the room. I did not hear it when she sat down in a large tapestried armchair quite near to me.

  I saw her as if she were a vision when I looked up—a flawless young boy with porcelain cheeks, her blond hair pulled back in a black ribbon, her frock coat embroidered in gold, her shapely legs in spotless white hose, her feet in ruby buckled shoes.

  Oh, what a divine guise it was—Bianca as the young nobleman, known to the few mortals who mattered as her own brother. And how sad were her peerless blue eyes, as she looked at me.

  "I feel sorry for you," she said quietly.

  "Do you?" I asked. I said these words with my broken heart. "I hope you do, my precious darling, because I love you, I love you more than I have ever loved you, and I need you."

  "But that's just the point, you see," she said in a low compassionate voice. "I heard the things you said to her. And I'm leaving you."

  33

  FOR THREE EONG NIGHTS I pleaded with her not to go as she made her preparations. I went down on my knees. I swore to her that I had said only what needed to be said to make Pandora remain with me.

  I told her in every way I knew how that I loved her, and would never have abandoned her.

  I told her that she would never be able to survive alone, and that I feared for her.

  But nothing would turn her from her decision.

  Only on the beginning of the third night did I realize that she was really going. Up until then, I had thought that such was absolutely inconceivable. I couldn't lose her. No, such a thing could not happen.

  At last, I begged her to sit down and listen to me as I poured out my honest heart, confessing every bad thing which I had said, every cheap denial of her which had come from my lips, every desperate foolish thing I'd said to Pandora.

  "But what I want now is to talk of you and me," I said, "and how it's always been between us."

  "Yes, you may do that if you wish," she said, "if it makes the pain less for you, but Marius, I am going."

  "You know how it was with me and Amadeo," I said. "I took him into my house when he was very young and gave him the Blood when mortality gave me no quarter. We were Master and pupil always, and there was mockery and a dark division. Perhaps you never saw this, but it was there, I assure you."

  "I saw it," she said. "But I knew your love was greater."

  "And so it was," I said. "But he was a child, and my man's heart always knew there was something finer and greater. Much as I cherished him, much as the mere sight of him delighted me, I could not confide to him my worst fears or pains. I could not tell him the tales of my life. They were too big for him."

  "I understand you, Mari
us," she said gently. "I always have."

  "And Pandora. You saw it with your own eyes. The bitter quarrel again, just as it had been so many centuries ago, the bitter fighting in which no real truth can be discovered."

  "I saw it," she said in her quiet way. "I follow your meaning."

  "You saw her fear of the Mother and the Father," I pleaded. "You heard her say that she couldn't come into the house. You heard her speak of her fear of everything."

  "I did," she answered.

  "And what was this one night between me and Pandora but misery, as it had been long ago, misery and misunderstanding."

  "I know, Marius," she answered.

  "But Bianca, what has it always been with you and me but harmony?

  Think of our long years when we dwelt in the shrine, and went out on the night winds where I could carry us. Think of the quiet between us, or the long conversations in which I talked of so many things and you listened. Could two beings have been closer than we were?"

  She bowed her head. She didn't answer.

  "And these last years," I pleaded. "Think of all the pleasures we have shared, our secretive hunting in the forests, our visits to the country festivals, our quiet attendance in the great cathedrals when the candles burn and the choirs sing, our dancing at the Court Balls. Think of all of it."

  "I know, Marius," she said. "But you lied to me. You didn't tell me why we were coming to Dresden."

  "I confess, it's true. Tell me what I can do to make up for it?"

  "Nothing, Marius," she answered. "I'm going."

  "But how will you live? You can't live without me. This is madness."

  "No, I shall live quite well," she said. "And I must go now. I must travel many miles before dawn."

  "And where will you sleep? "

  "That is my worry now."

  I was almost on the point of frenzy.

  "Don't follow me, Marius," she said, as if she could read my mind which she could not.

  "I can't accept this," I responded.

  A silence fell between us, and I realized she was looking at me, and I looked at her, unable to hide a particle of my unhappiness.

  "Bianca, don't do this," I pleaded.

  "I saw your passion for her," she whispered, "and I knew that in a moment you would cast me aside. Oh, don't deny it. I saw it. And something in me was crushed. I couldn't protect that thing. I couldn't prevent its destruction. We were too close, you and I. And though I have loved you with my whole soul, so I believed I knew you completely, I didn't know the being you were with her. I didn't know the being whom I saw in her eyes."

  She rose from the chair and moved away from me. She looked out the window.

  "I wish I had not heard all those many words," she said, "but we have such gifts, we blood drinkers. And do you think I don't realize that you would never have made me your child except for the fact that you needed me? Had you not been burnt and helpless, you would never have given me the Blood."

  "Will you listen to me when I tell you that's not so? When first I saw you I loved you. It was only out of respect for your mortal life that I didn't share these cursed gifts with you! It was you who filled my eyes and heart before I ever found Amadeo. I swear this to you. Don't you remember the portraits I painted of you? Do you remember the hours I spent in your rooms? Think now on all that we've given each other."

  "You deceived me," she said.

  "Yes, I did," I said. "And I admit it, and I swear that I shall never do it again. Not for Pandora or for anyone."

  On and on I pleaded.

  "I can't stay with you," she said. "I must go now."

  She turned around and looked at me. She seemed wrapped in quiet and resolution.

  "I'm begging you," I said again. "Without pride, without reserve, I'm begging you, don't leave me."

  "I must go," she said. "And now, please, let me go down to take my leave of the Mother and the Father. I would do this alone if you would allow it."

  I nodded.

  It was a long time before she came up from the shrine. She told me quietly that she would leave on the following sunset.

  And true to her word, she did, her coach and four pulling out of the gates, as she began her journey.

  I stood at the top of the stairs watching her go. I stood listening until the coach was deep into the forest. I stood unbelieving and unable to accept that she was gone from me.

  How could this horrid disaster have occurred—that I lose Pandora and Bianca both? That I should be alone? And I was powerless to stop it.

  For many months after that, I could scarcely believe what had befallen me.

  I told myself that a letter would soon come from Pandora, or that she herself would return with Arjun, that Pandora would will it so.

  I told myself that Bianca would realize that she could not exist without

  me. She would come home, eager to forgive me, or she would send some hasty letter asking me to come to her.

  But these things did not happen.

  A year passed and these things did not happen.

  And another year and then fifty. And these things did not happen.

  And all the while, though I moved deeper into the woods surrounding

  Dresden, in another more fortified castle, I remained near at hand in the hopes that one or both of my loves would come back to me.

  For a half century I remained, waiting, not believing, and weighed down with a sorrow I couldn't share with anyone.

  I think I had ceased to pray in the shrine though I tended it faithfully.

  And I had begun, in a confidential manner, to talk to Akasha. I had begun to tell her my woes in a more informal manner than before, to tell her of how I had failed with those whom I had loved.

  "But I shall never fail with you, my Queen," I said, and I said it often.

  And then as the 17008 commenced, I prepared to make a daring move to an island where I would rule supreme in the Aegean Sea, surrounded by mortals who would easily accept me as their lord, in a stone house which I had prepared for me by a host of mortal servants.

  All who have read The Vampire Lestat's tale of his life know of this immense and unusual place because he vividly described it. It far exceeded in grandeur any other palace in which I had ever lived, and its remoteness was a challenge to my ingenuity.

  But I was most purely alone now, alone as I had ever been before the love of Amadeo, or Bianca, and I had no hope of an immortal companion. And perhaps in truth I wanted none.

  It had been centuries since I had heard of Mael. I knew nothing of Avicus or Zenobia. I knew nothing of any other Child of the Millennia.

  I wanted only a great and gorgeous shrine for the Mother and Father, and as I have said, I spoke to Akasha constantly.

  But before I go on to describe this last and most important of all my European dwellings, I must include one last tragic detail in the story of those who were lost to me.

  As my many treasures were moved to this Aegean palace, as my books, my sculptures, my fine tapestries and rugs and other such were shipped and uncrated by unsuspecting mortals, there came to light one final piece of the story of my beloved Pandora.

  In the bottom of a packing case, one of the workers discovered a letter, written on parchment, and folded in half, and addressed quite simply to Marius.

  I was on the terrace of this new house, gazing out at the sea and over the many small islands that surrounded me, when the letter was brought to me.

  The page of parchment was thick with dust, and as soon as I opened it, I read a date inscribed in old ink which affirmed that it had been written the night I parted with Pandora.

  It was as if the fifty years separating me from that pain meant nothing.

  My beloved Marius,

  It is almost dawn and I have only a few moments in which to write to you. As we have told you, our coach will leave within the hour carrying us away and towards the eventual destination of Moscow.

  Marius, I want nothing more than to come to you now, but
I cannot do it. I cannot seek shelter in the same house with the Ancient Ones.

  But I beg you, my beloved, please come to Moscow. Please come and help me to free myself from Arjun. Later you can judge me and condemn me.

  I need you, Marius. I shall haunt the vicinity of the Czar's palace and the Great Cathedral until you come.

 

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