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Bleeding Dusk gvc-3

Page 31

by Колин Глисон


  Twenty-Three

  In Which There Occurs a Bedside Vigil

  “There’s nothing we can do.” Wayren looked around the room. The Consilium’s fountain rumbled behind her, all of its sparkling, blessed water of no help in this instance. “Do you not feel it? You can sense her, even here.”

  She knew they recognized the presence of an undead—a destroyed one of their own, brought into the sacred and secret halls of the Consilium; she knew because of the stark hopelessness on Sebastian’s handsome face, the self-loathing and guilt that certainly churned inside him.

  And the murmurs and exchanged glances of Michalas and Brim, who, though injured and knocked unconscious during their battle with the undead, still stood strong at the back of the room.

  And Max, whose face was devoid of expression. Who couldn’t sense it any longer himself, but who knew. Who kept in the dark alcove as if he would separate himself from them all.

  Perhaps it was best if he did, now that Victoria was gone.

  “I’ll wait with her until she awakens. Ylito, too. The rest of you”—Wayren glanced at Sebastian, and then Max—“can do as you wish. It won’t be sundown for hours.”

  She turned from them, from the dark, hopeless faces and the simmering undercurrent of rage. She hoped, prayed that it wouldn’t be directed at Sebastian—for as much as Max wanted to place the blame there, and as much as Sebastian himself did, Wayren knew it was not that simple.

  Sighing, she passed by the portrait gallery. There would be the need for more paintings, for Zavier would expire soon. And Stanislaus’s had not yet been completed. And Victoria…

  Footfalls drew her attention, and she turned to see Sebastian in her wake. “I want to be there when she wakes,” he said. Gone was the charm, the light, flirtatious manner. There was deep sorrow and angry regret, but determination as well.

  He would be a good Venator. His time had come at last.

  “Do you intend to fully join us now?” she asked, making way for him to walk abreast with her.

  “I have no reason not to. If I had…I’ve been foolish and irresponsible.”

  He had been, but she understood, as she was wont to do. He, as Max had done, would find his place here, and learn to grow beyond his faults and mistakes.

  “You dispatched your grandfather. Don’t think I don’t know how difficult that was for you. You will grieve.”

  Sebastian looked at her, his face set and haggard. Despite the weariness and pain there, he reminded her, as he always did, of the great Uriel—but with an extraordinary sensuality she didn’t think Uriel would appreciate. “Is there truly no hope? Nothing that can be done?” he asked.

  “There’s nothing.” Max’s voice was flat and sharp behind them, startling Wayren. “She drank from him.”

  She paused so that Max could join them, then replied, “He drained much of her blood—she was very weak, and by drinking from him she replaced hers with his. She’ll awaken and be an undead.”

  “Then why not stake her now and relieve us of the waiting?”

  “Because you must see her as she’s become so that you can say your farewells,” she told Sebastian. “And know that it is so, and irreversible.”

  They had reached the room where Victoria lay. No one had been allowed in since Max burst into the Consilium carrying her unconscious, blood-streaked body. He’d then relinquished it to Ylito and Ilias.

  The chamber was small, too small for five people, but Wayren knew it was futile to try to keep Max and Sebastian out. Victoria had been bathed and dressed as though she were a corpse, ready for burial. Her dark hair lay in a thick braid over her breast, and the crisp white lawn of her simple gown served only to show how pale she was. A blue-veined hand rested on her stomach, and another prominent vein lined her face from temple to jaw.

  When they came in, Ylito looked up from his examination of Victoria and met Wayren’s eyes.

  “She needs more blood,” he said quietly. “I don’t know that it will do any good, but Hannever wishes to try.”

  “Will she drink?” Max asked, a flash of metal in his hand. He had a knife at his wrist and would have sliced into it before Wayren grabbed his arm. She sensed a viciousness, a recklessness there that boded no good.

  “Wait. It must be Gardella blood,” Ylito said.

  Sebastian was already rolling up his sleeve to bare a muscular arm. “Give me the knife, Pesaro.”

  Max turned away and went to stand against the wall, watching. His arms hung at his sides, his shoulder against the wall in a deceptively casual stance. His face was expressionless.

  The tension in the room was heavy and solid, and even Wayren, who usually wasn’t affected by such energy, felt stifled and on edge.

  Hannever came in the door at that moment. “Blood. Now.” He was carrying a tray with a stack of cups on it, two small vials, and other accoutrements, and he put it down on a table. Next to the stake that lay there.

  Without another word he moved to Victoria and made a small cut on her arm, squeezing a drop of the dark blood into a small bowl. The room was still and silent and tight, nearly choking in its intensity.

  Anger, guilt, terror, madness…all simmered and swelled.

  When Hannever turned away from Victoria, Sebastian offered his arm, and Hannever made a small incision, forcing the blood into one of the bowls. Drip, drip, drip…The sound was like little explosions in the tiny room.

  “What good will it do?” Max’s voice was sudden and harsh.

  “No good, I think. But she needs it. We must try,” Hannever said, busy with one of the vials. He put a tiny drop of a liquid into Sebastian’s blood and used a slender reed to stir. “No. Not this.”

  “Try Max,” Wayren said. She met Ylito’s eyes.

  Max’s wasn’t right either, according to Hannever.

  “We have to get her some blood!” Sebastian said, his teeth tight around the words. He was already moving toward the door, opening it.

  “Zavier,” Max said. “Let Zavier try.”

  Their eyes met, and then Wayren looked at Ylito. Yes. It was fitting. He’d want to.

  “We must have his permission.”

  Wayren nodded. “He’ll give it. Let us go and I’ll ask him.”

  Twenty-Four

  In Which There Is a Chilling Draft

  Victoria murmured, shifting restlessly, moving for the first time since they’d come into the room. Sebastian brushed the hair away from her forehead, the soft, lush curls that had been captured in a braid that lay in a thick line past her breasts. Her skin was damp and clammy, and still so pale.

  This would be the last time he’d touch her.

  Sebastian looked at her lips, at the curve of her jaw, remembering how strong it could be—how defiant when she lifted it and pretended she didn’t want him as much as he wanted her. Now he would have no one to taunt in a carriage, no one to tease and tug and coax into his arms.

  His wound from her stake still ached, oozing blood, and he remembered again why she was lying there, and how she had found Beauregard’s lair. Who had led her there, and why. How Beauregard had manipulated them both.

  He’d sat there—it had been hours—since he and Pesaro had been allowed to enter after whatever Hannever and Ylito had done with Zavier’s blood. Somehow they’d fed it into Victoria using some sort of tube, but it hadn’t seemed to do any good. The back of his neck still prickled and chilled, and she still lay there, cold and pale.

  She moaned again, and Sebastian looked up. He met Pesaro’s eyes from across Victoria’s body. There was no hope there, nothing but grim determination. A stake sat on the table near Pesaro; Sebastian had no doubt he’d not hesitate to use it.

  A cold one, he was.

  Wayren and Ylito had found a small corner of the room where they both sat reading or studying some old text. The sight of them brought to Sebastian’s mind the fact that the page he’d stolen from the Consilium was still in Beauregard’s lair.

  He would have to go back and find it
once…once this was over.

  At that moment Victoria’s eyes fluttered, and the sensation in the room shifted. It became closer and smothering, and no one seemed to breathe.

  Wayren was suddenly standing at the foot of the small bed. Ylito took his place near the head, and before Sebastian knew what was happening he heard a soft whisk, and then a faint clink. Pesaro was doing something at his side of the bed, and Wayren and Ilias near the foot.

  Restraints.

  God, restraints.

  How demeaning for her.

  He felt and found the soft leather cuffs, the metal fastenings on the side, and let them drop. He wouldn’t do it.

  Victoria was breathing more stridently now, and her eyes were fluttering. One of her legs moved; her lips parted; she rolled her head. She tried to raise an arm, but it was held in place by…not a cuff, but Pesaro. His hand on her arm, around her wrist. Clamping it onto the edge of the bed.

  All of a sudden her eyes fluttered open. Wide. They opened wide, and she looked around. They weren’t red; they were the same brown-green they’d always been.

  The room seemed to hold its collective breath, waiting. Ylito shifted near the head of the bed, and Sebastian saw him reach for something on the table.

  No. Not the stake. Not yet.

  But when he glanced over, he saw that it was still on the table, held in place by Pesaro’s hand.

  “What…” Victoria said, looking around, her eyes moving slowly from face to face. “Beauregard!” She tried to move, and a confused look passed over her.

  Ylito moved, and something splashed through the air, sprinkled down on her face before Sebastian could stop him. Not her face!

  But instead of screaming and tearing at the spray of holy water, Victoria twisted around, merely turning her face to get away from it as if it were nothing more than a summer rain shower.

  “Why did you do that?” she asked, her voice stronger now.

  Something in the room changed. It was as if a sudden light had come on. They all looked at one another, afraid to hope….

  “Is it possible?” Ylito asked, looking at Wayren.

  “I don’t know how it can be,” she replied. She’d moved next to Sebastian, and he felt her palpable…was it relief? Could it be? She reached down, smoothing her hands over Victoria’s face, over her shoulders, her eyes closed, a low hum coming from the back of her throat.

  “The two vis bullae.”

  They all looked at Pesaro, who’d removed his hand from the stake. Whose face actually bore an expression now. “She wears two of them, does she not?”

  Sebastian stared at him. How the bloody hell could Pesaro know that…when he himself didn’t?

  Wayren straightened, her hands continuing to move in soft, rhythmic gestures over Victoria’s body as if to soothe it…or to somehow measure it. “It must be. There can be no other explanation. The strength of the two overpowered Beauregard’s blood, and she was not turned.”

  “And so that is why she needed blood,” added Ylito. “When the tainted vampire blood did not take hold, it had to be replaced with mortal blood.”

  “What are you talking about?” demanded Victoria. “Why am I here?”

  Sebastian looked down at her, a sudden jubilance rushing over him. For the first time in a long while he felt something other than doom and guilt. Thank God.

  But then, as he took her cool fingers into his hand, he realized something horrible.

  His neck was still cold.

  Epilogue

  Wherein We Are Reminded That Hell Hath No Fury

  Sarafina Regalado walked boldly into the chamber where Lilith the Dark awaited.

  Her journey from Roma to these mountains in the depths of Romania had been long, and she was exhausted. But she refused to be cowed by the powerful undead who stood before her. What was the worst that could happen?

  The queen of the vampires could bite her.

  And Sara would rather enjoy that.

  “Do I know you?” Lilith asked after a moment. “Why have you braved my guards to speak to me?”

  “My father was Conte Regalado, but he is dead. The woman Venator killed him.”

  The blue-red eyes narrowed. “Ah, so you are the one. What do you want?”

  “I bring you news,” Sara told her, looking around at the sumptuous furnishings, and examining the vampire’s gown. Out of style, wrong fabric…but somehow it suited her. “Akvan is destroyed. The Door of Alchemy has been opened.”

  “That is no news to me.” The queen was watching her hungrily. “Beauregard is dead, too, at last. Although his armband is missing again.”

  From under her cloak Sara pulled a sheet of paper, brittle with age and from the thin wax that covered it. “Perhaps you would find this interesting. I obtained it from one of Beauregard’s minions—the one who brought me to you.”

  Lilith took it lazily, but Sara saw the way her gaze sharpened when she looked at the drawing of the plant and the instructions, written in a language that Sara didn’t understand. But she didn’t need to. She’d brought it to someone who would know how to read it.

  “And what do you wish from me?”

  “How did Max kill Akvan?” asked Sara. “He should not have been able to.”

  The queen looked at her, and before Sara’s eyes she became even paler than before, nearly translucent, so that more ribbons of blue veins showed through her white skin. “Maximilian. No.”

  She rounded on Sara, who was suddenly taken aback by the fury in the vampire’s eyes. They burned in her skull, burned as they looked at her, burned as though they touched her skin. “Did he slay Akvan with his own hand? With his own hand? Tell me!”

  Sara nodded. “He did.”

  “No. I cannot—No.” Her mouth compressed; her hair swirled about her in a cloud of copper. “No! He has betrayed me!”

  “And you are not the only one,” Sara told her. “Although,” she added hastily as the vampire spun back to her, fangs bared as though to tear into her, “his betrayal of you—whatever it was—must be much more important than what he did to me.”

  “Max. How dare he!” Lilith was shrieking now, her chest heaving with anger and malevolence. “After all of the graces I’ve bestowed on him, all of the freedoms! And he betrays me.” Her voice had dropped now, steadied. “I shall have my vengeance.”

  She looked at Sara. Lilith’s eyes glowed, but no longer burned. All but one of the veins under her skin had faded. Her lips curved invitingly. “Both of us shall. Now come closer, my dear, and give me your pretty little neck.”

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