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Authors: S. M. Stirling

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BOOK: A Taint in the Blood
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“Who are you?” Ellen whispered; the calm was thinning, but it lay like melting ice across panic. Her breath came faster. “What are you?”
“Well, on the
what
front, I don’t need to be afraid of perky cheer-leaders with sharpened broom handles,” she said. “And my name is Adrienne. Adrienne Brézé.”
That gave her mind something to grasp at. “You’re his
sister
?”
A peal of laughter. “I’m his evil twin!”
Adrian isn’t a monster
, she thought; the odd clarity still held her a little.
He’s an asshole, but he’s not a
monster
.
“Do you mean he actually never . . . Oh, the poor boy is even more troubled than I thought!”
Ellen screamed and tore at the door handle. It snapped in her hand; that was enough to jar her to silence, staring at the little curved shape of metal. She released it, and it fell to the carpeting with an almost inaudible thud.
“There’s always a possibility of that happening,” Adrienne said. “Fatigue in the crystalline structure. And you
were
pulling very hard. Now drive us to your place. We have
so
much to talk about. After all, we both want what’s best for Adrian, don’t we?”
“No! Get out, get out—”
The other’s hand gripped her jaw with brutal, astonishing strength and pulled their faces together until they almost touched. The velvet tone turned to a hiss:

Drive
, she-ape. Or I’ll peel you like a tangerine!”
 
 
“Thank you, Herr Müller,” Adrian Brézé said, in German. “Most comprehensive and detailed.”
Thank you for making me do this with a hangover
, he added mentally, blinking in the bright late-afternoon sunlight that poured through the great windows behind him and reflected off the pale stucco of the wall and the backs of the books.
One might argue it’s my fault, but it’s also far too painful for me to be fair
, he went on to himself as he hit the button and the drapes swept across to put the room in shadow.
The man on the other side of the video call was square-faced, with thinning blond hair and an immaculate suit. If he found Adrian’s bath-robe odd for what was technically a business meeting, he didn’t say a word. The commissions probably ensured that, even for an anal-retentive German broker in Frankfurt.
“I believe the quarterly report is satisfactory,” Müller went on. “Especially considering current market conditions.”
“It will stay satisfactory as long as my instructions are followed precisely,” Adrian said. “That was why I parted company with Willoughby’s in London. They took time arguing with me in ’09, and cost me a good deal.”
“There will be no problems of that nature with us, Herr Brézé.” A hesitation. “Although I would appreciate some idea of the procedure you use for your selections.”
“I look at the listings and flip a coin,” Adrian said succinctly. “It’s a subconscious process.”
A slight sour smile rewarded him. “As you wish, Herr Brézé.”
When the screen on the wall returned to its drifting colors he rose and walked down the long corridor to the pool room. It wasn’t large, but it did have a wave function that let you swim against an artificial current. And it was gratefully dim, which helped with his throbbing headache.
He’d tried to drown his sorrows in a bottle of Camus Cuvée 3.128. Getting drunk on that miracle of the Grande Champagne country was mildly blasphemous, and hadn’t solved his problems. It didn’t make the house less echoingly empty, or chase away the shadows of Ellen’s presence that would haunt it now.
Cognac didn’t make me feel less cold.
But at least the brandy had delayed having to think about it, and the pain did the same now.
I wouldn’t have been good for her in the long run, anyway. You shouldn’t be around real people, Adrian. You know that. You know why you didn’t try harder to make it up. Keep that thought in mind. Ellen . . . deserves better. All you can do for her is let her go, and make it plain it’s all your fault.
“Which evidently she does. Throwing a decanter at your head is a
hint,
Adrian.”
He drank four glasses of water, did some stretches and slipped into the pool. Tylenol, rehydration and exercise made him feel—
“Halfway human,” he said as he toweled off, laughed and swept back the drapes.
He was still hungry after scrambled eggs with chives, three rashers of Canadian bacon and pumpernickel-rye toast.
“But then, I’m always hungry,” he murmured to himself, the habit of a man much alone.
The hunger never went away, but you could learn to act as if it had; just as he could put aside the ache that he’d never be seeing Ellen again.
“You have experience with enduring cravings that can never be satisfied, eh?”
His mood was mellow enough after the second cup of Blue Mountain coffee and first cigarette that he only cursed mildly when the door-bell rang. It was someone who knew the code, too.
There was a screen over the sink in the kitchen. He looked at the man standing outside his front door and sighed; medium-tall, tanned, cropped white-and-brown hair, very fit for sixty, dressed in jeans and boots and windcheater, and holding up an elevated middle finger to the should-have-been-invisible video pickup. Adrian sighed again and stacked the dishes in the washer.
“Harvey!” he said, opening the door without standing aside. “How not glad I am to see you again after so long!”
“You’d rather have a giant pink rabbit on your doorstep?”
“I can do that. You can’t.”
“Stop being an asshole and let me in, Adrian,” Harvey said.
The gravelly voice held a hint of Texas, smoothed and overlain by a lifetime of travel. His eyes went up and down the younger man’s form, from silk polo shirt to handmade kidskin shoes.
“Still dressing like an Italian pimp, I see.”
“Like a very expensive French gigolo, actually. Come on in, and don’t stay as long as you like.
Mi casa es mi casa
.”
Harvey Ledbetter walked through and stopped for a moment to look at a gold-and-umber-toned painting of a woman in a long dress, sitting with her back to the viewer and reading before a dresser.
“Souvenir from the London thing in ’02?”
“They’d only take it again if I returned it to the museum,” Adrian said.
Harvey grunted agreement, then went on into the glass-walled living-room.
“Still living in this silicon-birdcage piece of sub-Corbusier shit,” he said. “I wouldn’t, if I had your money.”
Looking down his gaze swept over a steep tumbled wilderness of ravines and piñon and juniper and patches of old snow. In the middle distance two mule deer sprang out of bare cottonwoods along a creek, and a red-tailed hawk went by just below the retaining wall at the edge of the cliff. Beyond lay a ragged blue immensity, rising to the snow-capped Sangre del Cristo range.
“I send you a lot of my money. Besides, I’m a Shadowspawn, remember, Harvey? I’m evil. Of course I like Modernist architecture.”
“You bought it for the view. And you’re not evil, you just have a lot of relatives who are,” Harvey said.
A low table in rough-cast glass held a malachite box. Harvey opened it and took one of the slim brown-banded cigarettes within and lit it.
“And anyway,” he went on, sinking into a leather-cushioned chair.
“A lot of Shadowspawn
hate
Modernist stuff.”
“That’s the old Mustache Petes. Some of them still wear opera cloaks all the time. For God’s sake, Brâncuşi sleeps in a coffin!”
“You’re not keeping up with the war news,” Harvey grinned.
“No, I’m not. I told the Brotherhood I was resigning after that monumental cluster-fuck in Calcutta and made it stick when they threatened me.”
“As I recall, I backed you up on that.”
“You did. I thank you again. You’re still not going to
talk
me into coming back. What part of
retired
don’t you understand, Harv? We’ve had this argument before.”
“Thought you might want to know about Brâncuşi. He’s dead.”
Adrian raised an eyebrow. “He’s been dead since 1942, and it hasn’t slowed him down much.”
“No, I mean
really
dead, not just his birth-body. I took a team in there and we got some plutonium wedges into his coffin. That’ll teach him to use a mausoleum without an escape tunnel just because it’s authentic.”
Adrian froze for an instant. The ghost of a pain worse than silver shivered along his nerves.
“Christ. Now I’m impressed,” he said. “It’s been . . . a long time since the Brotherhood got one of the masters.”
“Since
we
got one, Brézé and Ledbetter, best team in the business. Remember Zhuge Jin? Good times, right?”
Adrian remembered naked terror, the pain of knives slashing at his body, the rage that could not be contained and the face of a killer beast staring at him from his own mirror.
“Not exactly,” he said dryly. “And it didn’t accomplish anything. The bad guys won a long time ago. If you don’t believe me, I can turn on CNN.”
“You’re even more optimistic than usual, Adrian. What happened, a truck run over your puppy?”
Adrian went to stand before the window, looking over the hills and letting smoke curl out of his nostrils as the sight soothed him.
“Well, my girlfriend left me last night.”
“She throw a bottle of brandy at your head, or did you just crawl into one?” Harvey said, his nostrils dilating. “Smells like good stuff.”
“Both.”
“She’s OK?” Harvey’s voice was careful.
Adrian’s mouth quirked up. “As far as I know, unless she went off a curve driving back to town. And the police would have contacted me if that happened. Call it a learning experience.”
The other man relaxed. “And what did you learn?”
“That masochists don’t really want to be treated badly. They just want to
play
at being treated badly. And that the more I knew Ellen, the more I liked her; and the more I liked her, the more I knew I was bad for her. It’s . . . not a problem with any solution that’s good for
me
. I hope she can be happy, but that meant letting her go. Driving her away.”
The banter dropped out of the other man’s voice. “You’re part human, Adrian. Never forget it. You’re not a bad person. You’ve got problems, but you try hard to work around them. Dammit, I raised you for ten years. I
know
.”
“I killed my foster-parents, Harvey. My egg hatched and I know what came out.”
Harvey shook his head. “I don’t think you did kill them, Adrian. I think that was your sister. And . . . she’s back in town. That’s what I came to tell you.”
Adrian whirled. His cigarette fell from his fingers to the rough flagstone of the floor.
“You’re sure?” he whispered. “Adrienne?”
“Pretty sure. We’ve got a hack on the face-recognition program Homeland Security is running on the surveillance cameras at Albuquerque Sunport. I can’t think of anywhere else in New Mexico she’d be interested in. She’s not one of their watchers at Los Alamos and they don’t have anyone that high-powered working the State government. Their renfields handle that.”
“Christ! I thought the Council were going to leave me alone if I stayed out of things!”
Harvey stared at him, his faded blue eyes steady. “Like, you
trust
them?”
“Well . . . no. More like trusted their self-interest in keeping me retired.”
“The Brotherhood don’t think she’s here on an official errand for them, anyway. She still has a major jones for you.”
“Tell me about it.”
He picked up the cigarette, crushed it out, tried to light another. That fell from his hands onto the floor. He forced himself to breathe, in and out, in and out.
Fear is natural. Let it pass without feeding on itself.
“And she might not give a damn what the masters thought. Shadowspawn . . .”
“Aren’t team players, yeah,” Adrian said, keeping the raw terror out of his voice by main strength. “Especially not us concentrated pure-strain types.”
He scrubbed his hands across his face, feeling his brains begin to work again.
I
hate
that deer-in-the-headlights feeling. Fuck, she hasn’t killed or turned me yet, and it’s not because she didn’t try! The honors were about even in Calcutta.
A little voice whispered at the back of his mind:
But since then she’s been practicing, growing stronger, and you’ve been trying to deny what you are. You both have the genes for the Power, but that only means so much. You were a warrior then. What are you now?
“I can’t very well appeal to the Council to call her off, either,” Adrian said. “Not if it’s a family matter—and they’d think it was.”
“She
is
your twin sister, biologically speaking,” Harvey pointed out.
Adrian turned and shook his head slowly. “No. She’s my anima. My own personal nightmare. She’s the mirror I can’t break. How long has she been here?”
“A little less than two days. Probably sniffing out the lay of the land.”
Then Adrian’s face went fluid; he could feel the blood draining from it, with a shock greater than fear for himself.

Ellen!

CHAPTER TWO
A
drienne Brézé liked the sun. Her Second Birth would come in less than a century, and then she wouldn’t be seeing sunlight ever again, not if she outlived the planet. Now she sat relaxed with her face to the sky on the park bench, legs crossed at the ankle and hands in the pockets of her long duster-style astrakhan coat. Pigeons cooed; there was a slight murmur of traffic, but the narrow streets around Santa Fe’s central plaza mostly held a pleasant smell of spicy local cooking from the restaurants.
People bustled around the little stretch of grass and cottonwoods centered on the Civil War memorial, parcels in their hands. More wandered down the long portico of the Palace of the Governors behind the pine-log pillars, looking at the jewelry the Indians in from the pueblos sold, or prowled the expensive shops on the other three sides; their emotions were almost as predatory as hers. Northward reared the towers of Bishop Lamy’s cathedral, tall Norman Romanesque-Gothic in a low-slung and obsessively Southwestern town, and beyond that the snow-capped peaks of the Sangres.
BOOK: A Taint in the Blood
6.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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