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Authors: Mercedes Lackey

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Dragon's Teeth (65 page)

BOOK: Dragon's Teeth
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Time slowed down for John again.
He’s like me. That’s what they want from me. Some sort of obedient, Frankensteinian bastard.
Everything that John had been through in the last two days blurred through his mind in a tumble of jumbled images, all out of sequence. The training, the fighting, the running, the drugs, his escape . . .
her
. . . All the rage came swimming back to the surface, surging through him, overwhelming him. He didn’t notice the fire forming in his hands, crawling up his arms and shoulders. He was still too amped up from his enchancements, from all the fighting. He saw the man through a red haze, someone not unlike him. That only made him hate the suit even more, their similarities. John screamed once, and reached for the man. He knew he wanted the bastard dead, but he didn’t know how he was going to make it happen. The wanting was all it took, though. A giant stream of fire erupted from John’s hand; it engulfed the man, fanning over him and splaying against the wall behind him. Before John could even think to stop, the entire room was on fire. The man was a charred cinder on the ground, still twitching. The enhancements . . . they seemed to make it harder for John to control himself when he was amped up.

The scene around him resembled the Facility far too much for his liking.
I need to get out of here.
Less than two minutes had passed since the men had walked into the room. It felt like a lifetime. John opened the door that he had first entered to get into the office . . . and came face to face with the transit cop. John was faster on the draw, however; more practice, and more opportunity to put that practice to use. He had a bead on the cop’s center of mass before the cop had even cleared his holster. Behind him the office was on fire, flames licking across the ceiling tiles.

John slowly raised his aim from the cop’s chest to his forehead. “Just let me go. This isn’t a great day for either of us, right?”

They both had to choose. John desperately did not want to shoot. This wasn’t some Program goon, this was just a regular joe, an honest cop. The guy wasn’t in on the score. Hell he had wanted to
help
him. But, right now, he was an obstacle. The cop had to choose, between a dangerous man and the fire behind him. He couldn’t deal with both. And if he chose wrong, he might end up dead and able to deal with neither.

The fire alarms went off, and so did the sprinkler system, which didn’t seem to be doing anything to the fire in the office. “So? What’s your call? You’re decent. You tried to help an asshole like me, and that’s a lot more than most would’ve thought ’bout doing. I’m just tryin’ to get clear.” You could still see that there were bodies in the office, even through the flames. The cop’s eyes widened, shocked. Had he known the goons were in there? John had the feeling that he hadn’t. “Trust me,” he added impulsively, “this was way, way past yer pay-grade.”

There was another of those moments, when time got slower, or John got faster, and he could practically see thoughts flashing behind the cop’s eyes. Then the man reached out with an empty, open hand; John kept from reacting. The cop grabbed his shoulder and pulled him into the corridor, then shoved him towards the exit. “Get! And grab anybody you run into and get them out too!”

John nodded. There wasn’t anything that he could say. He’d had two decent people go above and beyond to help him in less than a day. There just weren’t words for something like that. So, without another word, John disappeared into the station, and out, pulling a couple of random strangers who were reacting to the alarm with bewilderment out with him. Looked like he’d have to find another way out of town.

“YO! Daydreamer!” Vickie’s voice in his ear kicked him out of memory. “I’ve got incoming CCCP in less than an hour. Uh . . . just to remind you, one of ’em’s The Bear. I have a food delivery service showing at your door in fifteen, booze in thirty.”

John shook his head to clear it. “Christ. I’m not sure that there’s enough vodka in this dry little town. Not to mention Chef Boyardee.” He thought for a moment. “If you can get some diesel and noodles with ketchup delivered, I think it’ll suffice; not sure Ol’ Pavel could tell the difference twixt any of ’em.”

Vickie chuckled. “Hell if I know . . . but you’re the one that’s gonna have to stow the case of cans.”

John sobered. “Hey, Vic?”

“Roger?”

“You know everything in that file. An’, I suppose any other files you’ve dug up on me. Are we still cool? This Overwatch only works if we’re both in on it, after all.”

Vickie’s voice softened. “Cool as a cucumber, bonehead. It’s not just what’s in your file. It’s what you
are.

“ . . . and what am I?” John’s voice had the barest hint of pain in it, longing to be understood. Save for Sera, no one knew him the way Vick did.

“A helluva man, and my friend. The guy I trust at my back. More, the guy I trust at Bell’s. Now get ready for incoming food and universit, in that order.”

“Roger, dodger. And . . . thanks, Vic.”

He heard unaccustomed warmth in her voice. “Da nada, big guy.” There was a buzz of a doorbell at the door of the unit. “Huh. Early. Twenty-buck tip. Don’t be a cheapskate.”

“Oh, don’t worry. This is comin’ outta the ‘operational budget.’ Just another thing for Nat to yell at me for. I’m pretty sure she has a list, by now.”

Vicke laughed in his ear all the way to the door.

Valse Triste

Mercedes Lackey

My name is Triste Steinmann. I am fifteen years old. I have been a prisoner for two years, three days, and six hours. I have been an orphan for two years, two days, and twelve hours.

Triste always began her journal entries with the record of her imprisonment. It amused Gruppenführer Bruenner when he read it. And he did read it. She had to leave her journal in a drawer in a little desk in his big office, and she had to write in it every day. She had thought he would be angry the first time, but he laughed uproariously. He would never say why, but by this point she knew. Gruppenführer Bruenner was a sadist, like all of the SS, and a narcissist like many of them. She knew what both of these things were, because she had read about them in the works of Herr Doktor Sigmund Freud, which were in French translation in the library of this stolen mansion
.
Gruppenführer Bruenner did not know this, because he never bothered to read anything that was not related to the war, much less anything in French. His lover did not bother to read at all. As for Frau Gruppenführer Bruenner, well, she was back in Munich, with the half-dozen little Bruenners, so Triste did not know what she did, other than produce babies nine months after Der Gruppenführer made a visit.

Today I began the piano works of Schumann. Gruppenführer Bruenner wishes me to particularly learn the
Lieder,
since the
Ubermensch
—though perhaps that should be
Uberfräulein
—Brunnhilde is to perform a concert here tonight. There was a piece of Jan Sibelius mixed in with the others, a “Valse Triste,” and I learned it quite by accident. I think I will play it when the Gruppenführer requires music for his guests to mingle by. It . . . speaks to me.

Triste closed her journal and put it in the drawer of the desk where, of course, the Gruppenführer would find it and laugh. There was a little time before the party, a few hours. She would go upstairs to her room, eat when food was brought to her, and wait until she was told to put on the black gown and come down to entertain. She would not need to look at the scores she had studied today. They were in her head, in her fingers, already.

As soon as Triste had been old enough to walk, she had played—first on the little toy piano, to her parents’ bewildered astonishment, then on the piano in her teacher’s studio, where she could not even reach the pedals. As soon as she had connected the black notes on the page with the keys on the keyboard, she had only to read a score through once, and it was in her fingers. At first, she had been a mere prodigy, a freak, a kind of player-piano in child form. It had been her teacher who had taught her to make her music sing. Her teacher, who was now dead, or in a concentration camp, along with the other Jews of the Lorraine.

Triste had escaped that fate, because of Gruppenführer Bruenner. Not because he was kind. Not because he particularly cared for music, even. But because the music of the German Reich was displayed at every occasion, like draping a beautiful pall over a rotting corpse, and it was easy and cheap to keep her about. She did not argue, did not disobey, was fundamentally invisible; she was nearly as good as a music-playing robot, and rather better than a gramophone. She would be relatively safe, she hoped, as long as she was amusing and useful. She really did not want to die.

She reached her little attic room, which had once been the provenance of one of the housemaids. There was a bed with many worn blankets and a bright white coverlet, a white-painted wardrobe, a white-painted wash-stand. Her gown for the evening hung on the back of the door, newly cleaned and perfumed with lavender. It was plain and black, made of heavy, dull satin, with the yellow
magen David
discreetly embroidered like a brooch on the left side. She did not touch it. She went instead to the white-painted, wooden wardrobe, and made sure that her coat was still there, still untouched. She ran her hands over the inside. The tough little packets of franc-notes were still there, sewn into the false lining she had hung between the wool outside and the real lining. The hair she had tied across the front of the coat, from button to button, was intact. No one had touched her coat. She, and it, were still safe from discovery.

Whenever she got a chance, she stole money from Didi, Bruenner’s lover. Didi had been a nude at the Folies Bergere. Didi never kept track of the money the Gruppenführer gave her; she tipped lavishly, bought whatever she cared to, sent money accidentally down in the clothing to be laundered, and when she ran out of money, the Gruppenführer gave her more. Triste was often in Didi’s rooms, especially when she was tipsy; that was part of her job too, to amuse Didi, playing popular tunes, sentimental German songs, and pieces from operettas, while Didi drank or danced or sang to them. All she had to do was play and tell Didi how beautiful she was. This was easy. Didi did not have a bad temper, even when drunk. Didi had a magnificent body, long, wavy hair that was really, truly golden blond without any help, and the face of a goddess. The Gruppenführer never allowed Didi out except to shop with one of his men, and Didi was exceptionally stupid as well as exceptionally beautiful; she didn’t know what else to do with her time but drink and dance alone, and sing. When Didi finally slept, Triste would prowl briefly about the room, steal money, and slip back to her own room to sew another packet into oilcloth, and then into the lining of her coat. She prayed nightly that God would send her a chance to escape—perhaps when the Gruppenführer was away, or perhaps the English would even bomb Paris.

She knew where she would go. She could see it from her window. Montmartre, the artist’s quarter. There had been musicians from there who had visited with her before the war and made a pet of her. If any of them were still alive, and still there, perhaps for enough money they could help her escape France altogether. Triste no longer believed in the kindness of people—but money, especially now, when the only place you could get anything good was on the black market, meant you didn’t have to trust to anyone’s kindness or lack of it.

She sat back in the little window seat, her fingers moving restlessly against the sill as she gazed out at the Basilique du Sacre-Coeur on the top of the hill. Her fingers played the notes she had learned today, and she let them move without thinking about it. They always did this; it was as if her hands had a mind of their own. When she was not doing something with her hands, they played, and played and played. Unless she clasped them, they played on top of the bedcovers at night. Sometimes she wondered if they would keep playing when she was dead. She hoped this idea never occurred to Gruppenführer Bruenner. He might try the experiment. He would find it terribly amusing to have a couple of disembodied, piano-playing hands he could keep in a box. But of course, without her head, they could never learn anything new, so perhaps that would not be as amusing as he would like.

Then, suddenly, her hands paused. This was unusual enough that she broke out of her reverie to look at them. It was as if they were waiting for her to look at them; they lifted gently off the sill, and the fingers came down, slowly, and she knew what they were playing.

The piece by Sibelius. It had had her name. And it had spoken to her in a way no other piece of music had until this moment. It had called to her. There had been a power in it—she had almost run to the piano to
hear
it, but fear and caution had kept her at her task. Brunnhilde would decide what
Lieder
to sing on the spur of the moment, and Triste had been told in no uncertain terms that she must learn them all.

But she had never seen a piece that she had desired to hear more, never in her entire life. It had been so strong, that she had studied the entire score, hungry to know more. Luckily, there had been notes on the score, telling what it was about.

It is night. The son, who has been watching beside the bedside of his sick mother, has fallen asleep from sheer weariness. Gradually a ruddy light is diffused through the room: there is a sound of distant music: the glow and the music steal nearer until the strains of a valse melody float distantly to our ears. The sleeping mother awakens, rises from her bed and, in her long white garment, which takes the semblance of a ball dress, begins to move silently and slowly to and fro. She waves her hands and beckons in time to the music, as though she were summoning a crowd of invisible guests. And now they appear, these strange visionary couples, turning and gliding to an unearthly valse rhythm. The dying woman mingles with the dancers; she strives to make them look into her eyes, but the shadowy guests one and all avoid her glance. Then she seems to sink exhausted on her bed and the music breaks off. Presently she gathers all her strength and invokes the dance once more, with more energetic gestures than before. Back come the shadowy dancers, gyrating in a wild, mad rhythm. The weird gaiety reaches a climax; there is a knock at the door, which flies wide open; the mother utters a despairing cry; the spectral guests vanish; the music dies away. Death stands on the threshold.

She had almost cried, had crumpled the music in her hand, reminded so sharply of her own dying mother. Her mother had not risen from her sickbed to dance with spectral visitors, but she had kept asking for Triste to play so often in her last illness that Triste had sometimes fallen asleep at the piano.

“Triste,” her mother had named her. “Sorrow.” An odd name for a child, but her mother had insisted. Sometimes Triste wondered if her mother had somehow known what was coming, the war, the SS, the camps. Triste knew all about the camps, although they were still a secret to many, if not most. Bruenner made sure she knew about them. The woman with the cruel eyes had shown her pictures and a film before she brought Triste to Bruenner, properly schooled and obedient.
“You will obey. You will do everything the Gruppenführer wishes. Or you will go here.”
Sometimes those scenes of horror played behind her eyes at night, while her fingers danced on the bedclothes.

Now
Triste was glad that her mother had died when she had, for two months later the
boches
had come marching in, and two months after that, they had come for the Jews. The last she had seen of her father, as Gruppenführer Bruenner’s men carried her away screaming, was his body sprawled in front of the door in a pool of too much blood, his eyes staring sightlessly, his head caved in by the butt of a rifle. That was when she came to be part of Gruppenführer Bruenner’s household, and that two-week session with the cold woman with evil eyes convinced her to do and be everything the Gruppenführer wanted of her. It had not taken much. She was a timid child by nature. And despite all that had happened, she wanted very much to live.

There was a tap at the door. Triste opened it and accepted the tray from the maid. The servants here were contemptuous of her; she was always polite to them, and never gave them a reason to torment her. The Gruppenführer saw to it that the servants kept her fed; he wanted his music machine healthy. Tonight it was fish, with a little salad, vegetables, some fruit, bread. Coffee, to make sure she stayed awake. She ate it methodically, and put the tray outside the door. She went back to the window, to watch the sun set on the Basilique, and waited. She watched as the cloudless sky behind the Basilique turned a deep and translucent blue, and the white building became pink, then rose, then red. This was her favorite time of the day, and her favorite sight. Her fingers danced on the windowsill, the Basilique turned to ashes of roses, then a ghost floating over the city, against a sky spangled with stars. There were no lights, of course, nothing but what the stars and moon provided. No lights to guide the bombs of the English, for which she prayed nightly.

She was not provided a light in this room. It was not thought that she needed one.

Finally came the tap at her door, the brusque order, “Get ready.” She left the seat at the window, took off her plain dress, slipped on the black dress, brushed her hair and bound it at the back of her neck by touch, pulled on the satin slippers that went with the dress, and went downstairs.

By the servants’ stairs, of course. She must be unobtrusive, go like a shadow to the ballroom, slip into place at the piano and begin to play in such a way that no one would notice her coming. It was not hard; the piano stood at one end, in a kind of bulge in the room with windows all around it, and since she needed no light, no light was provided there. All the windows had been covered with thick, blue velvet drapes, and blackout covers behind them. The cover had already been lifted from the keys; she took her place at the bench and began to play, a mere whisper of sound, gradually increasing it as more and more people came into the room. Outside her bubble of shadow, the ballroom was brilliantly lit, the parquet floor shining, the chandeliers glowing with light and sparkling with crystal. There was a fountain of wine on a table, and white-gloved waiters with crystal goblets waiting to serve it. There was fruit, cheese, bonbons, little crystal plates and linen napkins on another table. At a third, waiters with boxes of cigarettes, cigars, and lighters. More and more people arrived, most of the men in the uniforms of the occupying army, the women like exotic birds in form-fitting gowns, spangled with beadwork, jewels at throat and ears. None—or very few—of these women were wives, of course. No respectable wife would be seen at a soiree presided over by a mistress, especially not one who had been a Folies Bergère nude.

BOOK: Dragon's Teeth
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