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Authors: Freda Warrington

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BOOK: The Dark Blood of Poppies
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* * *

Charlotte and Karl still went their separate ways to seek blood, as if their mutual feast on the peasant woman had never happened. The incident went unmentioned. On her own after Violette’s visit, however, Charlotte delayed her hunt. Instead she travelled through the Crystal Ring to Vienna, in search of a friend.

She found him quickly. He was on his way home, strolling alone through one of the public gardens. She went ahead, and waited under a tree. Tall and slim with thick grey hair, his face still leanly attractive at sixty, he had the melancholy, self-contained look she remembered.

Josef.

As he drew level, Charlotte stepped into his path. He stopped, raising a hand to his chest; for a moment, she thought the shock had stopped his heart. Then he breathed out and smiled. His grey eyes, behind black-rimmed spectacles, gleamed with wry pleasure.

He was in no danger from her. Josef was her only mortal friend.

“I’m sorry,” she said. “I always startle you to death.”

“That’s uncomfortably close to the truth,” said Josef. “You never knock on my front door, like a normal visitor. But, my dear Charlotte…” He kissed her hand, then held it between his palms. “Such a sweet death I would welcome.”

“No, you wouldn’t.”

“Maybe not, but let me dream. Then you frighten me less.” He tucked her hand through his arm, and they walked together. Light from the street wove green webs in the foliage.

“I never mean to alarm you, Josef, truly.”

“But you can’t help it. I still see you as the little daughter of my good friend, George Neville, yet here you are, a ghost…”

Josef knew what she was: an unholy creature in a human shell. When they’d met by chance last year, he’d recognised her because she looked so like her mother: deep-lidded expressive eyes, sombre mouth, warm brown hair that turned to gold leaf in the light. Learning the truth about her had shocked him, naturally; that behind the veil of feminine softness, she now lived beyond death, watching humans with the radiant eyes of a goddess and the red tip of her tongue poised in hunger.

Josef had watched Charlotte end his sister’s life. Lisl had been desperately ill, dying, and he’d wanted her suffering to end. Charlotte knew the memory would never leave him. No haze of illusion shielded Josef from the horror of what Charlotte was.

And yet he murmured, “Men would give their souls to be haunted by such a dear and beautiful ghost.”

“They say vampires can’t befriend humans without causing disaster, but we keep trying. I’ve something to ask you, but your soul is safe, I promise.” They passed through an arbour of honeysuckle. The scent filled her head, making the world timeless for a lovely moment. “It’s a friend of mine.”

“Your vampire friend, Lilith? I remember.”

“I’m still worried. She’s so disturbed, I’m afraid she’ll harm herself.”

“Don’t vampires harm others? I don’t see what I can do.”

“But you know the mythology and how to interpret it. You’ve studied psychology.”

“Charlotte, after I moved from the science of physics to that of the mind, I worked as a psychoanalyst for a time, until I retired to nurse Lisl. Yes, I study and write, but I’ve had no practical experience for years.”

“You don’t forget, though. If you could observe her, perhaps talk to her if she’d permit it, you might gain some insight that would help.”

He halted, a light breeze blowing his coat and scarf. Lights through the bushes made a silver mosaic around him. “Charlotte, my friendship with you is one thing. But to give help to another of your kind… I don’t know.”

“I know it’s a lot to ask, but it means everything to me. I don’t know what else to do.” He was shaking his head, troubled. Out of desperation she added, “Josef… It’s Violette Lenoir.”

His head came up and he stared. “
The
Lenoir – the ballerina? You wouldn’t joke about such a thing, would you? Of course you wouldn’t.”

“It goes without saying that you mustn’t tell anyone.”

“Who would believe me? But I’ve seen her dance many times.” He waved vaguely in the direction of the theatres. “And now you tell me she’s –?”

“Disturbed. Unhappy,” Charlotte said quietly. “Perhaps this will help you to understand. What if I said that the ‘collective unconscious’ is perceived as a real place by vampires?”

“Is it?” He looked sceptical.

“Well, there is an otherworld that only we can enter. Some believe it’s the mind of God, and that we are his angels of punishment.”

“Do you?” Josef raised his thick grey eyebrows.

“No. I believe it’s the subconscious of mankind. I mean the massed electrical impulses of all their thought-waves and dream-waves. Energy becomes matter and vice versa. This is a question of perception. Vampires perceive thought-impulses as matter, an ethereal double of this world; and I mean
ether
literally, as a medium through which we can move like fish through water…”

“Charlotte, stop,” he exclaimed. “This sounds almost scientific, but…”

“I was a scientist,” she said tightly. “I didn’t just make my father cups of tea and type his notes. I understood and participated in his work.”

“Forgive me, I didn’t mean to sound condescending. It’s hard to conceive of such a place, though.” He took her arm and they walked onwards.

“I know, but please suspend disbelief for me. I’m telling the truth. We call this otherworld the Crystal Ring, or Raqia.”

“Ah, I know that word!” said Josef. “A Hebrew word from the Bible, meaning firmament, or expanse, or heaven, or simply the sky… An appropriate word to borrow.”

“And Raqia creates vampires. If a human is taken there on the point of death by other vampires, he or she becomes a vampire too.”

“Rebirth,” said Josef thoughtfully, “not from the energy of the real world but from that of the collective mind. Is that what you’re saying?”

“Yes. I’ve no proof. It’s what I feel to be true.”

“But then… Why vampires? Why not – oh, anything the human mind can conjure? Monsters, dream lovers, figures from mythology? Archetypes, as we Jungians say.”

She laughed. “But we are monsters and dream lovers, Josef. And what is Lilith but a mythical figure? But we must be vampires, we couldn’t be anything else, because we represent the very extremity of human fears and hopes.”

“The fear of death and the hope of eternal life,” said Josef, nodding. “Yes, you are almost making sense!”

“Thank you,” she said wryly. “But you’ve left one out: fear of the dead coming back to life and feeding on the living. Isn’t that the deepest terror of all? The breaking of nature’s laws. We can’t be defined scientifically, because the laws of physics, chemistry and biology break down around us. We come from the lawless realm of dreams.”

Josef was quiet for a while. “So vampires have theories and theologies,” he said. “Amazing.”

“And we argue about them as much as humans do.”

He was fascinated now. She saw the glow in his face. “Let me propose a theory,” he said. “Archetypes are motifs that crop up everywhere. Lilith appears in every mythology under many names; a primordial image. It sounds as if Violette has absorbed an archetype that has particular resonance for her. It may be a complex – that is, a fragment of the psyche that’s broken away due to some past trauma.”

“I’d say she’s had her share of those,” Charlotte murmured. “So if she thinks she’s wicked and destructive, she separates that part of herself and calls it Lilith?”

“Possibly. In the voices heard by the pathologically insane, the complex can take on a separate character. Does Lilith talk to her?”

“I don’t know.” The words
pathologically insane
reverberated. “She speaks of Lilith
compelling
her… But Josef, I’m convinced you could help her. We’re vampires, but we are still – well, human, in a way. If I can persuade her to speak to you. That’s the difficulty.”

“I’m not sure.” Josef looked at the ground. His hands were in his pockets, shoulders hunched. “I’m tempted. It would be fascinating. But if she won’t talk to me…”

“Surely you could learn something from observing her? Don’t turn me down flat! Wait, before you answer, here’s an enticement in return. The Ballet Janacek will be touring America soon. Karl and I are going. We’re patrons, of a sort. There’s a spare berth on the ship, so it would cost you nothing to come with us.”

His face softened, and he smiled. “Why would I want to go to America?”

“The tour opens in Boston.”

“Ah.” His eyebrows rose.

“I’ve seen photographs of your niece Roberta on your desk. You said she lives in Boston and that you haven’t seen her for years…?”

“Oh,” he said, moisture filling his eyes. “Oh, this is quite a bribe. My little Roberta. I called her Robyn, with a ‘why’, because she was always asking questions.”

“And wouldn’t she love to see her uncle?”

His face was tender, lined with old sorrows. “Extraordinary, that a vampire should care for the happiness of a mere mortal.”

She shrugged. “Most don’t. Yes, it’s a bribe, but please say yes.”

He tried to look grave, but couldn’t keep the joy from his expression. “Yes, I’ll come. Dear God, I am going to see my Robyn! Thank you.” He bent and kissed her cheek. A kiss of friendship – but the kiss lingered a moment too long. She had to suppress sudden, treacherous thirst.

Time to end the meeting before it went too far.

She knew that the words she’d spoken earlier had already come true.
Vampires cannot befriend humans without causing disaster.
Josef was in love with Charlotte, even though he knew they could never be together. But that was keeping him from finding someone else.

She had never taken his blood, never would. But still she was insidiously picking his soul apart.

CHAPTER FIVE
ANGELS FALLING

S
ebastian avoided other vampires, as he had done for decades. They had nothing he desired or needed. He wanted the citadel of night entirely to himself.

He loved America for its size and grandeur. Forests, lakes and mountains where he might track a single victim across the wilderness. Cities, seething with the rich and poor of all nations, where he could pass from slum to glittering skyscraper like a chameleon.

Sebastian loved his ability to go unnoticed by humans. He would leave them with no memory of his presence, with only a feeling of unease as if shadow wings had brushed them. He could even pass unseen by other vampires, a rare gift. Immortals usually sensed each other, but they never noticed Sebastian unless he willed them to.

This confirmed his sense of being unique, superior.

Over two hundred and twenty years had passed since Simon and his companions had drawn Sebastian into their dark world. He hadn’t seen them since. Sometimes he wondered why they’d chosen him. The fair folk, it seemed, had a grim sense of humour.

You will make a wonderful immortal
, Rasmila had said. Sebastian knew from the start that he was an orphan in the darkness. Yes, it was purgatory, but his only possible fate: the natural extension of his solitary, dark character. He relished both his own pain and the evil he visited on others. His revenge against the faithless Mary had only been the beginning.

How very far away that night seemed now. Meaningless.
I didn’t love Mary as I sucked out her life. I loved only her blood…
And yet, on a deeper level, the act hadn’t been meaningless at all, but the profound sealing of his vampire nature.

After he left Blackwater Hall – as later occupiers named it – he’d taken ship to America. He wanted no more of Ireland’s shadowy magic, its religions and superstitions, war and the endless struggle to hold onto his birthright. In the early years of his new existence he was savage, bitter and self-absorbed. As time passed, though, he discovered that vampires were not frozen in one mood forever. Bitterness passed. He gained control of his blood thirst and his fear of eternity. Then he began to think of the house again.

Eventually, some sixty years after he’d left Ireland, curiosity drew him back. He discovered that the scandal of the landowner who’d murdered his wife and her lover, then vanished, was local legend; a folk tale told by old men in their cups. The estate had passed to the Crown, then been awarded to a Protestant family in gratitude for their loyal service to William of Orange. Sebastian felt no resentment. He simply wanted to see who the family were, how they kept the place. Blackwater Hall: a good, plain name stating that the house belonged to the river and the land. Self-important noblemen came and went, but the land endured forever. And the family was pleasant enough, fair to their tenants. Sebastian approved of the way they looked after his demesne.

Yet he owed it to the house, and to himself, to haunt them a little. To frighten the old men, to feed on the young and strong. To turn a capable wife into a crazed neurotic, or seduce a virgin and ruin her for marriage, to kill a first-born son here, a beloved small daughter there. Just to darken their lives once in a while, as generations came and went. America remained his hunting ground, but every few years he would revisit Ireland and listen with pleasure when people said, “That Blackwater Hall is haunted; it’s cursed the family!” And he would slip silently into the house and torment the hapless inhabitants a little more.

BOOK: The Dark Blood of Poppies
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