Evolution (Demon's Grail Book 2) (15 page)

Absalom

 

Ten thousand years ago

 

“More drink!” Makho shouts, holding his tankard up so it can be refilled by one of the servers. “This might be our last mortal night! I was drunk when I arrived at this dinner hall and I'll damn well be drunk when I leave!”

“Not
too
drunk, I hope,” Edgar replies. “We must all be up at dawn to face the spiders.” He turns to me. “What about you, Absalom? You seem uncharacteristically quiet tonight.”

Realizing that I've been silent for some time, I turn to him. “I was just thinking about -”

“About Cerulesis?” He smiles. “I know that look. It's love, isn't it?”

“This is no time for love,” I mutter, taking a sip of beer even though I hate the stuff. I'd rather be drinking tea. “This is the time for war.”

“Love and war
can
co-exist,” he points out. “Maybe they even need one another.”

“Have you heard anything?” I ask, unable to hold back a moment longer. “About Cerulesis, I mean... The last news I received was that...” I pause for a moment, realizing that maybe it's better not to know at all, especially if the rumors are true. “They say she has been driven mad by her search for a perfect strategy to use against the spiders. They say she is considered dangerous now, that the council barely even dares approach her, but I can't believe that.”

He doesn't reply instantly, but I can tell from the look in his eyes that he has heard the same stories. When he looks down at his tankard, it's clear that he's hoping I'll change the subject, but I feel as if I have to know the truth. After all, like the other soldiers in this hall, I will most likely die tomorrow.

“She would never lose her mind,” I continue finally, trying to convince myself as much as anyone else. “She's too strong and too intelligent. Her strategies so far have helped us repel the spiders on several occasions, why would she suddenly let her sanity slip? Unless...” Pausing, I realize that I already know the answer. “Unless she has twisted her mind to such lengths,” I mutter, “that there is no way for her to recover.”

“Perhaps you should ask her directly.”

“I must not disturb her,” I reply, despite the great temptation I feel. “We spoke about it once, long ago. She said that I distract her too much, that I must keep away.”

“And you don't think she might have changed her mind? How many years has it been since you were last in the same room with her, Absalom? Tonight of all nights, as she tries to decide how best to deploy our armies to face the spider onslaught, she might welcome a familiar face. Especially if, as the rumors say, she is mostly left alone.” He pauses, waiting for me to reply. “The woman you love, and who loves you in return, told you to keep away from her. Are you really going to take that at face value?”

I take another sip of beer, as Makho pounds his fist against the table in a drunken call for yet more alcohol. Maybe the fool has got the right idea after all, maybe it would be as well to drink tonight, to chase away these troubled thoughts. That's certainly a strategy I've used a few times before, but tonight – with our armies preparing for the great battle tomorrow – I find that I simply
can't
get drunk. I raise my tankard to take another sip, but at the last moment Edgar reaches out to stop me.

“Go to her, Absalom.”

“Edgar -”

“Go to her!” he says firmly. “By all that's holy, you know full well that I am not a man who understands the ways of love, but even
I
can see that you must visit her at least one -”

He stops himself just in time.

“At least one more time?” I ask, feeling a shiver of fear in my chest. “You think we'll all die in battle tomorrow, don't you?” Sighing, I push my tankard away. “Don't bother to deny it. Everyone's thinking it. Look around, there's fear in the eyes of every vampire in this hall. Even if by some miracle we win, the cost will be enormous.”

“All I know,” he continues, “is that Cerulesis has a crumbling mind. She has spent so long trying to devise a strategy to defeat the spiders once and for all, and she has achieved great wonders, but there has been a terrible price to pay. I saw her recently, shuffling along a corridor near the central chamber.” He pauses again, and I can see the sadness in his eyes. “Again, I'm no expert, but she looked like someone who needs a friend. Even if you are no longer lovers, can you not put aside your pain and go to her as that? For her sake?”

“More drink!” Makho yells, slamming his fist against the table again, causing it to shudder. “By the name of Gothos,” he continues, turning to us, “what is wrong with these servers? Why does everything take so long?”

Getting to my feet, I slide my tankard toward him. “Here,” I mutter, “you can finish mine while you wait. I have somewhere else to be.”

 

***

 

She's in the strategy room.

Of course she is.

Where else would she be at a time like this?

When I reach the doorway, I look through and see that the room is in darkness, save for a solitary candle flickering on a shelf at the far end. The great circular map table, hewn from rocks carved out of the underground sun of Narm, is covered in markers and symbols, and I'm just about able to make out a dark, thin figure hunched over the table's far side, furiously scribbling notes and muttering to herself. She reaches out a bony arm to move some counters across one of the maps, and I feel a shiver as I realize that all this time alone must have taken a heavy toll.

She hasn't noticed me yet.

I'm tempted to turn back, to let her work alone, but Edgar's words still ring in my ears. It has been a long time since Cerulesis and I were in the same room together, and even though time has not healed the wounds at all, I still believe that I can offer her friendship. Unfortunately, as she scurries over to another section of the map, I can already tell from the way she moves that many of the rumors were true. This is not the young, happy, energetic and brilliant woman I knew all those years ago; this is someone who has spent far too long alone in darkness, disappearing into her own mind, twisted by her own genius and now, finally, coming up against a challenge that might yet prove insurmountable.

Some battles just can't be won, not even by the greatest tactical mind in the history of the eight worlds. I always wondered how she might react if she faced certain defeat. Now I know.

“You look busy,” I tell her finally. “I hope I'm not interrupting.”

She doesn't reply, not at first. She simply hurries around to another section of the map and leans down, making more notes. This time, however, I'm able to see a line of flickering candlelight on the side of her face, and I'm struck by how gaunt she looks now, and how tired.

And there is madness in her eyes.

True madness.

Yet still she is the most beautiful woman I have ever seen in my life.

“Cerulesis -”

“I heard you,” she snaps, her voice sounding old and tired. “Wait. I'm in the middle of something.”

Making my way over to the huge table, I look down at the map and see that she has covered the surface in her usual notes and annotations. Long ago, Cerulesis developed her own highly complex language designed specifically for expressing military possibilities; that language has served her well and has allowed her to perform brilliant calculations to seal her strategies, but no-one else has ever been able to understand the scribbles she leaves behind. That was fine in the old days, when she could explain her ideas to us lesser creatures, but lately it is said that she can barely communicate at all, and that there is little point in her coming up with these strategies if she can't convey them to anyone else.

She might win the war in her head, but the rest of us will die on the battlefield.

“What do you want?” she mutters after a moment. “Who are you, anyway?”

“Who -” Pausing, I realize that she's so lost in her work, she doesn't recognize me. Either that, or madness has erased her memories. “It's me,” I tell her.

“I don't have time to play games. Who are you and what do you want?”

“My name is Absalom,” I reply, “and I have come to see Cerulesis one final...” I take a deep breath. “One final time.”

She pauses, and then slowly she turns to me. From the tears that have suddenly gathered in her eyes, I can tell that I've managed to get through to her.

“I know you wanted me to stay away,” I continue, “but... Well, to be honest I was persuaded by Edgar Le Compte and a few others that I should come to see you again. The idea made sense at the time, although now I'm starting to think it was a mistake. The last thing I wanted was to trouble you.”

I wait for an answer, but she simply stares at me until a tear starts trickling down her cheek. At that, she turns away and reaches up to her face, wiping the tear away.

“Did you come for some
useful
purpose?” she asks finally, leaning over the table and making more notes. “Do you have a message for me? Word from a scout, perhaps, or news about the spiders having been spotted? Any kind of message at all?”

“No,” I reply, before realizing that maybe that's not quite true. “Well, I suppose... A message from myself, perhaps.”

“No time.”

“But -”

“I'm close,” she continues, hurrying around the table and physically pushing me out of the way so she can add yet more notes. “I can still do this. I've run the possibilities and I think we can defeat the spiders tomorrow, but I need -” Suddenly she lets out a gasp and leans forward, squeezing her eyes tight shut as if she's in pain. She tries to speak, but all she can manage is a few garbled sounds.

“Cerulesis -”

“Leave me!” she gasps, bending over until a trickle of blood runs from her lips. Opening her mouth, she wipes the blood away and makes more notes. “I'm so close. There's a way for us to win this, no matter how many spiders come at us, but I need to close down all their routes of attack and all chances of retreat. I need to think like them, but that's not easy. They're nothing like us, their minds are completely different, they view the world through a kind of matrix. I think so, anyway. I took apart a spider corpse and examined its brain, I ate...”

She pauses for a moment, as if she's horrified by something.

“I ate a mouthful,” she whispers finally. “I thought maybe the taste would help me to understand it better.”

“Did it?” I ask, shocked to find that she has fallen so far into madness.

She stares ahead for a moment, before shaking her head. “I just need to keep working. I need to view the battlefield from a spider's perspective, and then I can find a way to destroy them all.”

“Perhaps I should leave you to work, then,” I mutter.

She doesn't reply; instead, she makes more notes on the map, while whispering under her breath.

“Just one thing, though,” I continue, figuring that I might yet get her to listen to me. In the distance, Makho and the other drunk soldiers can be heard reveling, but right now they might as well be another world away. “Cerulesis, would you like to come with me and get a cup of tea?”

She pauses, before slowly turning to me, and I swear the madness has lifted a little from her eyes.

Jonathan

 

Today

 

Stopping suddenly, I watch as the woman looks up at me.

“I'm sorry,” I stammer, taking a step back, “I didn't mean to -”

“It's okay,” she says with a smile. “You can come in and say hello. If you'd like, at least.”

Looking across the stone room, I watch as half a dozen children play on the floor. Most of them look to be only five or six years old, with a couple maybe around the nine or ten mark, and they're playing like normal children, happy and free, just like... For a moment, I think back to the side-room at the library in New York, where children would come to spend a few hours with their parents on Saturday mornings. Still, even as I watch the children here in Gothos, I feel a slow sense of concern as I realize that despite appearances, they're not human.

They're...

“Vampires,” the woman says after a moment.

I turn to her, shocked.

“Don't worry,” she continues, wiping some clay from her hands and coming over to join me in the doorway. “I can't read your mind. Word travels fast. I simply guessed that you must be Jonathan, Abby Hart's brother, and I realized that all of this must seem very new to you. My name is Clarissa, I'm... Well, for want of a better word, I'm managing the kindergarten here at Gothos.”

“Kindergarten?” I watch the children for a moment longer. “Why would anyone bring children to a place like this?”

“They have to be near their parents,” she replies. “Where else should they go?”

“Somewhere safe.”

“This is the safest room in the whole building.”

“But there's a war coming!”

“So you'd rather they were separated?” She pauses. “You'd rather they were sent away, the way you and your sister were sent away?”

“At least they'd be safe.”

“And alone.”

“You could find them other families, other people to raise them.” I turn to her. “By having them here at Gothos, don't you risk... I mean, they could be killed.”

“You overestimate our ability to protect them from afar,” she replies. “Consideration
was
given to transporting the children to some other place, many leagues from here, but the fear was that this would make it easier for the spiders to go after them. If they were anywhere but in this house right now, they might well be dead already. At least here they have a chance, albeit a very slender one.” She pauses. “The spiders have spies everywhere. Everywhere except here, anyway. If these children were sent away, they'd be found and slaughtered.”

I continue to watch the children. One of them, a little girl with golden hair, is sitting slightly apart from the others, playing with some wooden bricks.

“They look so...”

My voice trails off for a moment.

“Normal?” Clarissa suggests.

“I didn't mean it like that...”

“Just because they're vampires, that doesn't mean they're monsters.” She smiles. “Why don't you go and talk to them? See for yourself what a vampire child is like. I think you might be surprised.”

I shake my head.

“Why not?”

“I...” Pausing, I realize that something about these children makes me feel nauseous. Yes, they seem perfectly normal right now, but I have no doubt that they're hiding sharp little fangs in their mouths, and that they have a nascent form of the same blood-lust and anger that I've seen in all other vampires, the same qualities that I keep expecting to feel burst through in my own body. I know I'm like them, I know I should welcome them as brethren, but the truth is...

Maybe it's wrong, but right now these children disgust me.

Suddenly the little girl glances up and sees me and offers a faint, cautious smile.

“She's something of a loner,” Clarissa explains, lowering her voice to a whisper. “I've tried encouraging her to play properly with the others, but she... Well, she had a difficult time recently, and I think she feels as if she's somehow separate from the others. To be honest, I've run out of ideas and I genuinely don't know how to get her to join in. I'm worried that the rest of the children will come to see her as an outsider, and then it'll just be a vicious circle until she's completely ostracized.”

“I -”

Before I can finish, I sense something nearby, just over my shoulder. Turning, I wait for someone to appear, but the corridor is empty. Still, I swear there was a presence behind me just now.

“I was thinking,” Clarissa says after a moment, “that maybe
you
could help her.”

I turn back to her. “Me?”

“You know what it's like to be the loner, don't you? The outcast?”

“You don't have a clue what my childhood was like.”

“I'm not talking about your childhood.” She pauses. “I'm talking about right now.”

I want to tell her to go to hell, but I know deep down that she's right. Glancing over at the little girl, I realize that maybe, just maybe, we have a few things in common after all.

“What's her name?” I ask finally.

“Ask her yourself.”

Taking a deep breath, I briefly consider turning and leaving before, finally, I make my way over to where the girl is sitting alone. Every fiber in my body is screaming at me to get out of here, to leave these monsters alone, but finally I kneel next to the girl and watch as she plays. She's focusing on the wooden blocks, not daring to look at me, and I'm struck by how normal she seems. How can a monster look so ordinary?

Damn it, I was bad enough with human children. How the hell am I going to talk to a little vampire?

I look over at Clarissa, but she simply smiles and nods at me, as if she senses my discomfort. After a moment, she goes to help some of the other children.

Turning back to the little girl, I try to think of some way to break the ice.

“Hi,” I say finally. “Are you... My name is Jonathan. What's yours?”

She pauses, before glancing at me. When she replies, her voice is so quiet, I can't make out what she says.

“Can you repeat that?” I ask. “A little louder?”

“Lilith,” she says cautiously, her voice sounding low and soft.

“Lilith?” I pause. “That's an odd name for a -”

I catch myself just in time.

“For a what?” she asks, frowning.

“For a... Well, for a vampire.”

“My parents chose it,” she replies. “I suppose.”

“Why aren't you playing with the others?” I ask.

“I don't know.” She fiddles with the wooden blocks for a moment. “I don't think they like me much. I tried once, but they didn't really let me join in and I didn't want to play with them after I realized they felt like that. Anyway, my belly hurts.”

“It does?”

She nods.

I look at Clarissa, but she's busy helping some of the other children. Turning back to Lilith, I can't help but notice that there's a hint of discomfort on her face; maybe it's new, or maybe I just didn't notice it before, but she seems to be genuinely in pain.

“Did you eat something bad?” I ask.

She shakes her head.

“Have you told anyone?”

She pauses, and then she nods.

I glance at Clarissa again, and this time I can see that she's helping a little boy who seems to be having similar pains. In the distance, I can hear a faint rumbling sound, as if the others are continuing to get Gothos ready for war.

“I'm sure it's nothing,” I continue, turning back to Lilith. “Everyone gets little pains every so often. It's part of life.”

She pauses, before leaning closer to me until her lips are almost against my left ear.

“Can I tell you something?” she whispers.

“Of course.”

Another pause. “I'm scared.”

“There's no need to be,” I lie.

“Clarissa keeps telling us there's nothing wrong,” she continues, “but I can tell she's scared too. My father's scared, my mother's scared,
everyone
I see here at Gothos is scared. Even you.”

“I'm not -”

“You are,” she adds. “I can tell.”

“How?”

“A million ways. And every time another adult tells me not to be scared, I get a little bit
more
scared.”

Staring at her, I'm struck by a sense of wisdom in her eyes. Yes, she's a child, but there's something else in there too, a kind of knowledge that seems far deeper than anything I've ever seen in a human. She's an old child, and with the way thing are going right now, I don't even know if she'll ever get the chance to grow up.

“How old are you?” I ask.

She hesitates before answering. “Two hundred and ninety,” she tells me finally. “And a half.”

“Two hundred and ninety?”

She nods. “And a half.”

“And a half.” I feel a shiver pass through my chest. “But you still... I mean, you still
look
like a child.”

“That's because I am. I'm a type of vampire that has a long...” She frowns. “I can't remember what Daddy called it now, I think it was a long... gesti...gestinal...”

“Gestation period?” I suggest.

She nods again, and for the first time a faint smile crosses her lips.

“Well, I can believe that,” I tell her. “Still, it's hard to believe that anyone can be a child after being alive for almost three hundred years. You must have seen so much.”

“I'll grow up eventually,” she says proudly. “Clarissa says I'll be pretty, too, and -” She gasps suddenly, clutching her belly, but the pain seems to pass within just a fraction of a second. “It's coming back more and more,” she whispers. “I've never felt anything like it before, I hope it stops soon.”

“It will,” I reply, putting a hand on her shoulder, hoping to reassure her. “I promise. Wait here.”

Getting to my feet, I head over to Clarissa, and I can tell that she's worried.

“See?” she says, as if she hopes that I've changed my mind. “They're not monsters after all. Just children. Do you understand that now?”

“Do they all have these pains?” I ask, sidestepping the question.

“It's stress.”

“There's no -”

“They're scared,” she says firmly, “and they've been uprooted from their homes, they've been brought to a strange place, and despite our best efforts they all sense that something's wrong. It manifests differently in each of them, but it's simply a reminder that we can't protect them from everything.” She pauses. “At some point, if Gothos is attacked, they're going to hear the sound of a battle being waged outside these walls. They'll hear the screams of dying soldiers, maybe even their own parents, and I'll have to sit in here with them, lying and telling them that everything's going to be okay. They won't believe me, but I'll have to do it anyway.” Another pause, before she forces a smile. “Then again, what do I know? The council says Gothos isn't in imminent danger, and they must be right, mustn't they? It's not possible that they could be fooled.”

“There has to be another option,” I reply, turning and watching the children for a moment longer. “Can't we negotiate and ask the spiders to spare the children?”

“Are you serious? They'd never agree. The spiders are monsters, they wouldn't hesitate to kill every child in this room. They probably won't attack Gothos anyway, the council members assure us that such a thing is impossible. In the long-run, however, there's only one way we can save Lilith and the others now.”

“And how's that?”

“Simple. We have to win the war.”

Spotting Lilith staring at me, I suddenly feel as if I can't bear to see her face. I mutter something to Clarissa and turn, hurrying out of the room. These children are so clearly going to be slaughtered when the battle starts, and I'm filled with a sense of panic as I realize that there's nothing I can do to help.

“It's okay,” I hear Clarissa telling them. “There's no need to be scared.”

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