Read The Watchtower Online

Authors: Lee Carroll

Tags: #Women Jewelers - New York (State) - New York, #Magic, #Vampires, #Women Jewelers, #Fantasy Fiction, #Horror, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #New York, #General, #New York (State), #Good and Evil

The Watchtower (20 page)

BOOK: The Watchtower
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As if it had taken several seconds for
immortality
and
dark
to register, Dee now stood and leaned dramatically toward Will across the table, seeming to elongate an elastic torso halfway along the table length as if he had serpentine powers.
"Silence!"
Dee shouted, pointing an adamant finger at Will. Will obeyed.

"It's no dark affair as you blasphemously put it," Dee said in a tense voice, as though trying to restrain himself from violence. "Immortality is like an alp in perpetual sunshine, a summit to which all of us alchemists aspire. Unfortunately I have not been able to personally reach it, no matter the numbers, incantations, geometries, seances, and charms I have tried, and you will note the mix of methods I cite. But I have not failed for lack of trying." The force of Dee's personality was such, Will noted, that he seemed to brag when speaking about failure as much as when referring to success. Then Dee's expression turned wistful.

"Alas," he went on, in barely more than a whisper, "in such immortal research, I have recently happened to learn by accident the year of my physical death. Sixteen oh eight, a year even a novice like you can count to meaningfully. So I don't have forever to work on this intractable problem. Sadly, as you've no doubt inferred, I have little to offer you, lad. But innate kindness compels me to query
you
. How have you wandered into such an interest, which usually arises in the aging, not in reckless youth?"

Will had not planned to convey this information unless absolutely necessary, but he reflected now on how unrealistic a hope anonymity had been.

"Sir, I have had the strange fortune to fall in love with a woman who is of the fey and immortal. Tragically, she can't or won't give me the means to transform myself so we can be together forever. I have decided to seek my remedy elsewhere. Without a solution I will go mad!"

Dee retracted slowly to his previous posture, somewhat like a serpent uncoiling back to being at rest. Or a new striking position. Will shook his head, trying to clear the webwork of unnatural impressions from his eyes.

"Who is the woman?" Dee asked sharply.

"I'd prefer not to say." Will rose from his chair, nerves on guard against a sudden lunge by Dee. "Now that I've learned my quest is futile, I'll--"

"Halt!" Dee commanded. Once again, something in his voice made Will do so. "I said
I
have sought it in vain, young man. I said nothing of someone else's quest being futile. All lives and all circumstances are different. I have no way dismissed your entreaty. But we are helpless without a name. The fey are rare now in England, at this late day. I know of only a couple of possible candidates, and they merely rumored. And I cannot make a mundane person immortal, any more than a pigeon, or the wind. I need context, circumstance. Provide that, Will Hghes, and perhaps there's a glimmer of hope. We'll see...." Dee made an attempt at a smile, one so suffused with calculation that it made Will shrink back.

But he asked himself what choice he had except to go along with this conniver. Still, he had a dread of mentioning Marguerite by name that he neither understood nor seemed able to conquer. So he started to turn away again, trembling.

"I must go, sir. I--" But glancing back just once, Will froze, as the look the sorcerer (irrespective of his claims to logic) speared him with was as terrible yet magnetic a look as he'd ever beheld.

Dee screamed, in a way that filled Will's mind and veins until he couldn't breathe,
"What is her name, foul maggot?"

Will gasped for breath and thought he felt his body beginning to decay as if he'd just been murdered, maybe by the knife-edge of the scimitar moon above, he thought feverishly. He felt his body start to turn liquid, then ashen, then foul as a sewer. This sensation forced him to his knees, and he lay full out on the floor as if in imitation of a rancid corpse. He couldn't help it.
Capitulation.
The word popped into his thoughts as if a hot sword point inserted there. Only capitulation could bring relief, stop the death spiral. Whatever was left of his reason knew it was all a spell. But this conjurer's horror, writhed of worm and stench, was too much.

"Marguerite D'Arques," he whispered, still lying stretched out on the cold and grimy floor.

Then he managed his body back up and into the chair, quivering with a suppressed sob he would not let escape his lips, lest Dee obtain such satisfaction. Will sat in the chair with the self-esteem of a worm. Maybe the king of worms, he thought despondently, maybe the Charlemagne of worms. But still a worm.

"Oh,
that's
the name," Dee said simply, with a calm that infuriated Will. "In that case, all is not lost. No. A simple plan may do. But before I reveal it, let me confess my surprise. I'm not up on the latest news. Isn't she still entangled with that lout of a poet from Stratford-on-Avon? Which makes you a victim, even one more time over, it would appear? Heh heh. Though your taste in loose women is, of course, no business of mine."

Will tried not to take too much offense at Dee's leering tone. After all, he was offering a sliver of hope now.

"That's over, with the poet," Will replied calmly enough. "Destiny has brought Marguerite and me together. And I'll make sure it's for her entire lifetime, not just mine, if it's the last thing I do."

"Yes, of course you will, my boy," Dee clucked sympathetically. "And I'm going to do my utmost to help. I cannot provide any guarantees, but these are more promising circumstances than I initially perceived. Promising!"

Will allowed himself to wonder why, but then he was suddenly beside himself with elation. His emotions were those of a man first told he had a month to live and then told he wasn't ill. "How soon?"

"Soon enough," Dee said soothingly. "First there are a couple of practical tasks you must accomplish for me."

"Such as?"

"I will need a couple of the good lady's possessions. Her silver box and her gold ring. With them worlds will open. Without them, I'm afraid, all is lost. Do you know them?"

"Just the ring. It has a tower emblem on it. I have seen her wear it, though not often. I don't know any box."

"The box will be unmistakable once it's brought into your presence. It's silver, with a swirling design, but I don't need to describe it. You'll
feel
it. It opens onto other worlds; it surges with an energy most people never get anywhere near experiencing in their lifetimes. Once you've felt the box, you'll never regret having been in its presence, nor coming to see me tonight either. And possibly your immortality will be just one more meeting with me away!"

"But how will I get these things? Are you asking me to steal them?"

"Well, that's your challenge. If Marguerite wanted you to be immortal, she'd have already given them to you. Perhaps--I don't know the woman or what's inside her psyche--perhaps you're all the more delectable to her for being fleeting. That would be typical, from a fey point of view."

Will bristled, but endured the innuendo. What was crucial for him was to get these things and live on forever with his beloved--not to respond to taunts.

"It strikes me, Mr. Will Hughes--and by no means am I asking you to steal or commit any other crime--that if you've had the singular fate to be this close to an immortal, and if you've made such an impression on me, the great John Dee, that I am willing to try the door to immortality on your behalf, that you'll have the intrepidness to bring me these items. Otherwise I will be disappointed in you, promising youth that you otherwise seem to be."

"What will I owe you," Will asked curtly, put off by such flattery while not being certain of its motive, "for this profound service of yours, if it happens?"

"Owe?" Dee raised his eyebrows. "The joy of immortal love is more than enough coinage for me, I assure you. I would not dream of something so crass as charging for your transformation!"

Will was not clear as to motive here either, but when he saw the opportunity to seal such a bargain, he took it. He walked to Dee's end of the long table and shook his hand. Dee's grip felt feeble, but the expression in his eyes crackled with intensity, as if he were flush with a lightninglike excitement. Will waited for Dee to escort him back to the front door, but then Dee indicated that Will should exit alone. "I'm feeling a bit old tonight," he told Will. "Mentally, your visit has been a tonic for me, but physically I'm afraid it has been no help. But I look forward to your return with those items." Dee turned away and vanished into the dark interior of the se.

Will, feeling a vague dread despite his new hope, perhaps at the idea that he had uplifted the likes of John Dee even for a moment, walked back out into a night in which the chill sharpness of moonlight was making the carriage horses shiver. Or maybe they were feeling the same dread he was. But after waking the driver with a firm clasp of his shoulder, and climbing back in the carriage, renewed hope bloomed again and distracted Will from dread. The hope was a dark flower, petals of black, but it seemed to be irrigated by his blood and to grow straight toward the moon. And toward all the immortal days to come.

15

The Wild Hunt

The hounds herded me down onto a long, wide path bordered on the right by a canal and on the left by a straight line of trees, and then they left me, bounding down the avenue as if they'd sensed prey. I could hear their baying long after they vanished in a cloud of dust at the end of the long path. Then I was alone in the moonlit woods.

At least it wasn't as dark as it had been in the Luxembourg. No fairy shroud lay over the forest. Instead, bright moonlight illumined everything, turning the dusty footpath into a long, broad silver ribbon. Nor had the trees broken rank like the ones in the Luxembourg had. They stood like sentinels alongside the allee, straight and dispassionate as palace guards. The wind that now came bowling down the path barely rustled their leaves.

That was strange, I thought, stopping to listen. I could hear the wind, but the sound it made wasn't the thrashing of leaves; it was hoofbeats approaching fast, coming straight toward me even though I couldn't see anything ahead but a flurry of dust ...

I scrabbled to the side just as the dust rushed past me, the sound of hoofbeats hammering in my ears. Then they were gone. I followed the path to the end and crossed to another path that ran parallel. The whole woodland was cut into long, straight avenues--not a trackless wilderness at all. When I was halfway down the next path, I heard the hoofbeats again, welling up behind me. I turned and tried to stand my ground, but at the last minute I ducked to the side again, my heart racing to the staccato beat of the pounding hooves. Instead of retreating this time the sound stayed with me, as if it had lodged in my brain, a maddening tattoo.

I took off into the trees, trying to stay off the paths, which I saw now were just great big runways for the hunt to barrel down. But I wasn't alone under the trees. Something--or
some things
--were moving along the ground, stirring the dry leaves with soft, padded paws and hot breath.
Hounds
. And their prey. People were in the woods, stragglers from the square who hadn't returned to their hotels when the bells tolled midnight, but who had instead been lured into the woods ... and into the hunting grounds. The woman in Breton shirt and capris ran past me, leaves and twigs clinging to her disarrayed hair and a wild, unseeing look in her eyes. She was pursued by the invisible hounds out onto the broad path where she took off running on bare feet. A cloud of dust pursued her. I stared at it, trying to make out what was inside it ... and then wished I hadn't.

Amid the horses and hounds were creatures with cloven feetiv> horns that were not quite human and not quite beast. Hair covered their haunches and long tails, but their chests and faces were bronzed bare. Most awful were the expressions on their faces. They grinned and grimaced and salivated, leering after the woman in capris in a way that combined hunger and lust in a queasy mix. Their pupils were vertical, oblong slits--like goats' eyes.
Satyrs
. I recognized them from pictures and statues, but these obscene creatures were nothing like the prancing goatmen of classical art. These were monsters.

When the dust ball caught up with the woman, I lost sight of the individual creatures inside it. Cries came from the melee that sounded like a mix of the peacock calls I'd heard earlier that night and snarling dogs. When the dust cleared, nothing was left. Not the horrible creatures of the hunt or the innocent woman who had fallen victim to it.

Okay,
I thought, trying to keep panic at bay,
don't run.
They like it when you run. I had Sylvianne's branch. I'd come to
stop
the hunt and ask its leader for passage to the Summer Country, not
become
the hunt's prey. All I had to do was step out onto the path when I heard the hunt approaching again. I crouched beside the path and listened ... and heard someone weeping.

Was it another trick of the hunt? A sound to frighten me into breaking cover? But, no--this sound was only too real. I followed it to its source and found, crouched behind a boulder, Sarah. Her pretty yellow sundress was torn, her bare feet were dirty and bleeding, her hair tangled into knots. In the hour or so since I'd seen her sketching in the square she'd been transformed from a plucky teenager to ... helpless prey.

"Sarah, honey," I cooed, coaxing her balled fists away from her face. "You have to walk straight back to your hotel.
Walk
, don't run. Do you understand?"

She shook her head. "It wants me to run," she gibbered.

"Yes, it does," I answered, feeling a chill at the truth of what she said. "But you have to walk. I'll stop it and you keep walking. Okay?"

BOOK: The Watchtower
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