"That is not our desire," she said coolly. "In fact, we have other matters in mind.
The archduke and his seneschal have discussed certain tasks that you might profitably carry out. Instructions will be communicated to you in due time, I have no doubt."
"Thank you, my lady," said Edmund.
"The ladies of the court were pleased with the drawings that I showed to them,"
said the Lady Carmilla, turning to look at Noell. "They marveled at the thought that a cupful of Thames water might contain thousands of tiny living creatures. Do you think that our bodies, too, might be the habitation of countless invisible insects?"
Noell opened his mouth to reply, because the question was addressed to him, but Edmund interrupted smoothly.
"There are creatures that may live upon our bodies," he said, "and worms that may live within. We are told that the macrocosm reproduces in essence the microcosm of human beings; perhaps there is a small microcosm within us, where our natures are reproduced again, incalculably small. I have read..."
"I have read, Master Cordery," she cut in, "that the illnesses that afflict humankind might be carried from person to person by means of these tiny creatures."
"The idea that diseases were communicated from one person to another by tiny seeds was produced in antiquity," Edmund replied, "but I do not know how such seeds might be recognized, and I think it very unlikely that the creatures we have seen in river water could possibly be of that character."
"It is a disquieting thought," she insisted, "that our bodies might be inhabited by creatures of which we can know nothing, and that every breath we take might be carrying into us seeds of all kinds of change, too small to be seen or tasted. It makes me feel uneasy."
"But there is no need," Edmund protested. "Seeds of corruptibility take root in human flesh, but yours is inviolate."
"You know that is not so, Master Cordery," she said levelly. "You have seen me ill yourself."
"That was a pox that killed many humans, my lady*yet it gave to you no morethan a mild fever."
"We have reports from the imperium of Byzantium, and from the Moorish enclave, too, that there is plague in Africa, and that it has now reached the southern regions of the imperium of Caul. It is said that this plague makes little distinction between human and vampire."
"Rumors, my lady," said Edmund soothingly. "You know how news becomes blacker as it travels."
The Lady Carmilla turned again to Noell, and this time addressed him by name so that there could be no opportunity for Edmund to usurp the privilege of answering her. "Are you afraid of me, Noell?" she asked.
The boy was startled, and stumbled slightly over his reply, which was in the negative.
"You must not lie to me," she told him. "You are afraid of me, because I am a vampire. Master Cordery is a skeptic, and must have told you that vampires have less magic than is commonly credited to us, but he must also have told you that I can do you harm if I will. Would you like to be a vampire yourself, Noell?"
Noell was still confused by the correction, and hesitated over his reply, but he eventually said: "Yes, I would."
"Of course you would," she purred. "All humans would be vampires if they could, no matter how they might pretend when they bend the knee in church. And men can become vampires; immortality is within our gift. Because of this, we have always enjoyed the loyalty and devotion of the greater number of our human subjects. We have always rewarded that devotion in some measure. Few have joined our ranks, but the many have enjoyed centuries of order and stability. The vampires rescued Europe from a Dark Age, and as long as vampires rule, barbarism will always be held in check. Our rule has not always been kind, because we cannot tolerate defiance, but the alternative would have been far worse. Even so, there are men who would destroy us*did you know that?"
Noell did not know how to reply to this, so he simply stared, waiting for her to continue. She seemed a little impatient with his gracelessness, and Edmund deliberately let the awkward pause go on. He saw a certain advantage in allowing Noell to make a poor impression.
"There is an organization of rebels," the Lady Carmilla went on. "A secret society, ambitious to discover the secret way by which vampires are made. They put about the idea that they would make all men immortal, but this is a lie, and foolish.
The members of this brotherhood seek power for themselves."
The vampire lady paused to direct the clearing of one set of dishes and the bringing of another. She asked for a new wine, too. Her gaze wandered back and forth between the gauche youth and his self-a.s.sured father.
"The loyalty of your family is, of course, beyond question," she eventually continued. "No one understands the workings of society like a mechanician, whoknows well enough how forces must be balanced and how the different parts of a machine must interlock and support one another. Master Cordery knows well how the cleverness of rulers resembles the cleverness of dockmasters, do you not?"
"Indeed, I do, my lady," replied Edmund.
There might be a way," she said, in a strangely distant tone, "that a good mechanician might earn a conversion to vampirism."
Edmund was wise enough not to interpret this as an offer or a promise. He accepted a measure of the new wine and said: "My lady, there are matters that it would be as well for us to discuss in private. May I send my son to his room?"
The Lady Carmilla"s eyes narrowed Just a little, but there was hardly any expression in her finely etched features. Edmund held his breath, knowing that he had forced a decision upon her that she had not intended to make so soon.
"The poor boy has not quite finished his meal," she said.
"I think he has had enough, my lady," Edmund countered. Noell did not disagree, and, after a brief hesitation, the lady bowed to signal her permission. Edmund asked Noell to leave, and, when he was gone, the Lady Carmilla rose from her seat and went from the dining room into an inner chamber. Edmund followed her.
"You were presumptuous, Master Cordery," she told him.
"I was carried away, my lady. There are too many memories here."
"The boy is mine," she said, "if I so choose. You do know that, do you not?"
Edmund bowed.
"I did not ask you here tonight to make you witness the seduction of your son.
Nor do you think that I did. This matter that you would discuss with me-does it concern science or treason?"
"Science, my lady. As you have said yourself, my loyalty is not in question."
Carmilla laid herself upon a sofa and indicated that Edmund should take a chair nearby. This was the antechamber to her bedroom, and the air was sweet with the odor of cosmetics.
"Speak," she bade him.
"I believe that the archduke is afraid of what my little device might reveal," he said. "He fears that it will expose to the eye such seeds as carry vampirism from one person to another, just as it might expose the seeds that carry disease. I think that the man who devised the instrument may have been put to death already, but I think you know well enough that a discovery once made is likely to be made again and again.
You are uncertain as to what course of action would best serve your ends, because you cannot tell whence the greater threat to your rule might come. There is the Fraternity, which is dedicated to your destruction; there is plague in Africa, from which even vampires may die, and there is the new sight, which renders visible what previously lurked unseen. Do you want my advice, Lady Carmilla?""Do you have any advice, Edmund?"
"Yes. Do not try to control by terror and persecution the things that are happening. Let your rule be unkind now, as it has been before, and it will open the way to destruction. Should you concede power gently, you might live for centuries yet, but if you strike out... your enemies will strike back."
The vampire lady leaned back her head, looking at the ceiling. She contrived a small laugh.
"I cannot take advice such as that to the archduke," she told him flatly.
"I thought not, my lady," Edmund replied very calmly.
"You humans have your own immortality," she complained. "Your faith promises it, and you all affirm it. Your faith tells you that you must not covet the immortality that is ours, and we do no more than agree with you when we guard it so jealously.
You should look to your Christ for fortune, not to us. I think you know well enough that we could not convert the world if we wanted to. Our magic is such that it can be used only sparingly. Are you distressed because it has never been offered to you?
Are you bitter? Are you becoming our enemy because you cannot become our kin?"
"You have nothing to fear from me, my lady," he lied.
Then he added, not quite sure whether it was a lie or not: "I loved you faithfully. I still do."
She sat up straight then, and reached out a hand as though to stroke his cheek, though he was too far away for her to reach.
"That is what I told the archduke," she said, "when he suggested to me that you might be a traitor. I promised him that I could test your loyalty more keenly in my chambers than his officers in theirs. I do not think you could delude me, Edmund.
Do you?"
"No, my lady," he replied.
"By morning," she told him gently, "I will know whether or not you are a traitor."
"That you will," he a.s.sured her. "That you will, my lady."
He woke before her, his mouth dry and his forehead burning. He was not sweating-indeed, he was possessed by a feeling of desiccation, as though the moisture were being squeezed out of his organs. His head was aching, and the light of the morning sun that streamed through the unshuttered window hurt his eyes.
He pulled himself up to a half-sitting position, pushing the coverlet back from his bare chest.
So soon! he thought. He had not expected to be consumed so quickly, but he was surprised to find that his reaction was one of relief rather than fear or regret. He had difficulty collecting his thoughts, and was perversely glad to accept that he did not need to.He looked down at the cuts that she had made on his breast with her little silver knife; they were raw and red, and made a strange contrast with the faded scars whose crisscross pattern still engraved the story of unforgotten pa.s.sions. He touched the new wounds gently with his fingers, and winced at the fiery pain.
She woke up then, and saw him inspecting the marks.
"Have you missed the knife?" she asked sleepily. "Were you hungry for its touch?"
There was no need to lie now, and there was a delicious sense of freedom in that knowledge. There was a joy in being able to face her, at last, quite naked in his thoughts as well as his flesh.
"Yes, my lady," he said with a slight croak in his voice. "I had missed the knife.
Its touch... rekindled flames in my soul."
She had closed her eyes again, to allow herself to wake slowly. She laughed. "It is pleasant, sometimes, to return to forsaken pastures. You can have no notion how a particular taste may stir memories. I am glad to have seen you again, in this way. I had grown quite used to you as the gray mechanician. But now..."
He laughed, as lightly as she, but the laugh turned to a cough, and something in the sound alerted her to the fact that all was not as it should be. She opened her eyes and raised his head, turning toward him.
"Why, Edmund," she said, "you"re as pale as death!"
She reached out to touch his cheek, and s.n.a.t.c.hed her hand away again as she found it unexpectedly hot and dry. A blush of confusion spread across her own features. He took her hand and held it, looking steadily into her eyes.
"Edmund," she said softly. "What have you done?"
"I can"t be sure," he said, "and I will not live to find out, but I have tried to kill you, my lady."
He was pleased by the way her mouth gaped in astonishment. He watched disbelief and anxiety mingle in her expression, as though fighting for control. She did not call out for help.
"This is nonsense," she whispered.
"Perhaps," he admitted. "Perhaps it was also nonsense that we talked last evening.
Nonsense about treason. Why did you ask me to make the microscope, my lady, when you knew that making me a party to such a secret was as good as signing my death warrant?"
"Oh Edmund," she said with a sigh. "You could not think that it was my own idea? I tried to protect you, Edmund, from Girard"s fears and suspicions. It was because I was your protector that I was made to bear the message. What have you done, Edmund?"
He began to reply, but the words turned into a fit of coughing.She sat upright, wrenching her hand away from his enfeebled grip, and looked down at him as he sank back upon the pillow.
"For the love of G.o.d!" she exclaimed, as fearfully as any true believer. "It is the plague-the plague out of Africa!"
He tried to confirm her suspicion, but could do so only with a nod of his head as he fought for breath.
"But they held the Freemartin by the Ess.e.x coast for a full fortnight"s quarantine," she protested. "There was no trace of plague aboard."
"The disease kills men," said Edmund in a shallow whisper. "But animals can carry it, in their blood, without dying."
"You cannot know this!"
Edmund managed a small laugh. "My lady," he said, "I am a member of that Fraternity that interests itself in everything that might kill a vampire. The information came to me in good time for me to arrange delivery of the rats-though when I asked for them, I had not in mind the means of using them that I eventually employed. More recent events..." Again he was forced to stop, unable to draw sufficient breath even to sustain the thin whisper.
The Lady Carmilla put her hand to her throat, swallowing as if she expected to feel evidence already of her infection.
"You would destroy me, Edmund?" she asked, as though she genuinely found it difficult to believe.
"I would destroy you all," he told her. "I would bring disaster, turn the world upside down, to end your rule... We cannot allow you to stamp out learning itself to preserve your empire forever. Order must be fought with chaos, and chaos is come, my lady."
When she tried to rise from the bed, he reached out to restrain her, and though there was no power left in him, she allowed herself to be checked. The coverlet fell away from her, to expose her b.r.e.a.s.t.s as she sat upright.
"The boy will die for this, Master Cordery," she said. "His mother, too."
"They"re gone," he told her. "Noell went from your table to the custody of the society that I serve. By now they"re beyond your reach. The archduke will never catch them."
She stared at him, and now he could see the beginnings of hate and fear in her stare.
"You came here last night to bring me poisoned blood," she said. "In the hope that this new disease might kill even me, you condemned yourself to death. What did you do, Edmund?"
He reached out again to touch her arm, and was pleased to see her flinch and draw away: that he had become dreadful."Only vampires live forever," he told her hoa.r.s.ely. "But anyone may drink blood, if they have the stomach for it. I took full measure from my two sick rats... and I pray to G.o.d that the seed of this fever is raging in my blood... and in my s.e.m.e.n, too. You, too, have received full measure, my lady... and you are in G.o.d"s hands now like any common mortal. I cannot know for sure whether you will catch the plague, or whether it will kill you, but I-an unbeliever-am not ashamed to pray.
Perhaps you could pray, too, my lady, so that we may know now the Lord favors one unbeliever over another."
She looked down at him, her face gradually losing the expressions that had tugged at her features, becoming masklike in its steadiness.
"You could have taken our side, Edmund. I trusted you, and I could have made the archduke trust you, too. You could have become a vampire. We could have shared the centuries, you and I."
This was dissimulation, and they both knew it. He had been her lover, and had ceased to be, and had grown older for so many years that now she remembered him as much in his son as in himself. The promises were all too obviously hollow now, and she realized that she could not even taunt him with them.
From beside the bed she took up the small silver knife that she had used to let his blood. She held it now as if it were a dagger, not a delicate instrument to be used with care and love.
"I thought you still loved me," she told him. "I really did."
That, at least, he thought, might be true.