If I Should Die (11 page)

Read If I Should Die Online

Authors: Amy Plum

“So that's why he was itching to join the hunt for Violette this morning,” I said, putting two and two together.

“That and the possibility of a good fight.” Charlotte smiled.

“Has he said anything else to you about her?” I asked.

“No, only that one time after we arrived in Villefranche-sur-Mer. He must have spilled everything during that confession, because he hasn't mentioned her since.”

I threw my arm around Charlotte in a side hug as we approached my street.

“But you know, Kate,” she said as we stopped in front of my door, “I'm doing okay about it. And I'm not just saying that flippantly. When I saw you and Vincent get together after he had been alone for so long . . . well, that gave me hope. And watching the way he treats you made me realize that maybe I had set my sights too low. After chasing someone who didn't give me the time of day . . .”

I raised my eyebrows.

“Okay, that's not exactly true,” Charlotte confessed. “Ambrose loves me . . . but like a sister. I just see how Vincent anticipates your every desire and tries to make it come true for you. How, when he sees you walk into a room, it's like he's transformed into this person who is bigger and better than the one he was just minutes before. I want to be that for someone. I think I deserve it. And I'm not going to pine away for a guy who feels that for someone else.”

The weight in my chest and the razor-sharp pangs of sadness returned full force with Charlotte's reminder of what things used to be like with Vincent.
And could be again
, I reminded myself. I couldn't give up hope, especially now.

“So until my own chivalrous knight shows up,” she continued. “I've decided to live a full life and be happy with my lot. Which is already pretty damn good: It's not like every girl is granted immortality and charged with saving human lives.”

She winked at me with this last comment, and I could tell that it wasn't just bravado. She really meant it. I threw both arms around her and kissed her cheek. “Fate's brought you this far, Charlotte. I don't see why it wouldn't end up giving you your heart's desire.”

EIGHTEEN

PAPY WAS SETTING THE TABLE WHEN I GOT HOME.
Hearing me close the front door, he glanced up anxiously. “Oh, good, you're home,
princesse
,” he said.

My grandmother popped her head out from the kitchen. “Has the healer discovered anything?” she asked. “Georgia caught us up on today's goings-on.”

“No,” I said, shaking my head. “Bran is studying his family records. It's a lot of material, and he won't let anyone else look at it.”

“Understandable,” Papy said, nodding sagely to himself. “Are there still guards outside?” he asked.

“Yep. There are two bardia sitting in the park across the street, watching the building,” I confirmed. “And Charlotte walked me home.”

“It feels like we're under lockdown,” Papy commented a bit begrudgingly. “A couple of them followed me home from work today, too. I'm not actually sure we need all of this security. You girls do, of course, but it's not like they have any interest in me or your grandmother.”

“Just be glad for it. With all of this strangeness, one can't take too many precautions. And whatever is going on, we still have to eat,” said Mamie from the kitchen, before yelling, “Georgia. Your sister's home. Time for dinner!” She appeared carrying a tray with a huge steaming puff pastry shaped like a fish. “
Saumon en croûte,
served with carrots in curried butter,” she announced.

“Mamie, that's gorgeous! Did you make it?” I asked, the combined odors of the baked pastry and steaming salmon making me realize how hungry I was.

Mamie made her tutting sound. “I worked all day, dear Katya. This was made by Monsieur Legrande,” she said, referring to the fine food boutique down the street. “But I'm sure he made it with love.” She winked.

“I'd eat it even if he made it with lust,” announced Georgia as she entered the room, “although picturing a lustful Monsieur Legrande . . . ick.” She wrinkled her nose.

Papy rolled his eyes. “
À table
, everyone.”

“Any word on the research, Katie-Bean?” Georgia asked as she sat down, but it was just a formality. She knew I would have phoned if anything important had happened.

I shook my head.

“Well, even though a solution hasn't been found, you must be relieved that Vincent is free for a few days, at least,” Mamie said, setting the dish down and skirting around the table to wrap me in her arms. “And that healer seems to know a lot about the revenants. He'll find a solution, I'm sure,” she said soothingly.

We took our places around the table, and after Mamie wished us a
bon appétit
, everyone tucked into the delicious food.

“I was actually wondering if you had come across the topic of re-embodiment,” I mentioned, hoping that Papy would latch on to the topic without much prompting. My bet paid off. I could see his thoughts racing.

“Re-embodiment,” he said. “Infusing a spirit into an inanimate object. Now that's an interesting idea.” He tapped his chin. “I mean, there is the symbolic re-embodiment in the Christian Eucharist—transforming the communion wafer and wine into the actual body and blood of Christ. Which was probably based on the Egyptian ‘divine bread' ritual performed by the priests of Osiris. But I can't think of an example where there was a re-invention of a body and then possession with a soul.”

“How about Frankenstein?” suggested Georgia with a helpful expression.

“Georgia. Shush,” urged Mamie, spearing a carrot and placing it delicately in her mouth as if demonstrating for Georgia what she should be doing instead of spouting out disturbing ideas.

“No, I mean it. That's an example of a body that was created pretty much from scratch, and then electrocuted to give it a spirit.”

“I think that the electrocution part just animated the reassembled body parts,” debated Papy. “It didn't give the monster a soul.”

“I distinctly remember him playing by a river with a little girl and crying,” insisted Georgia. “You can't cry if you don't have a soul.”

“Um, can we pull the conversation away from horror movies and back to real life?” I asked, posing my silverware on my plate as I watched Georgia pop more salmon in her mouth. The idea of sewn-together body parts apparently didn't affect her appetite. “I doubt the revenants are going to reassemble a Vincent-shaped body and then wait for a lightning storm to shock him into existence,” I said.

“Wouldn't have to,” responded Georgia, holding her fork up to make her point. “Nowadays you could probably do it with defibrillators.”

I squeezed my eyes shut in frustration.

“Georgia?” Mamie asked.

“Yes?”

“Please shut up.”

“Okay.” My sister shrugged as if to say we would regret not having listened to her.

I turned to my grandfather. “Although Monsieur Tândorn remembers his family's records mentioning something on the topic, I thought I'd ask you anyway, since you're my resident expert on every strange bit of mythical lore under the sun.”

Papy nodded at me, acknowledging my words, but still lost in his own thoughts. “There is the whole concept of the golem in Jewish folklore . . .” And he was off throwing out bizarre stories that he theorized might have fact buried within the fiction. The rest of us listened—me rapt, Mamie and Georgia trying to follow but losing interest before we finished dessert.

After dinner, I followed Papy to his study, where he sat down behind his desk and began stuffing tobacco into the bowl of his pipe. He waved at me to close the door—ostensibly so that Mamie wouldn't know that he was smoking, but we both knew she was fully aware. This charade was a symbol of his gratefulness that she allowed him to carry on with his not-so-secret vice.

“So tell me more about what this
guérisseur
said about ‘re-embodiment,'” he requested.

“Well, the way he mentioned it, it was as if he expected the revenants to know about it. He said it was used for revenants who had been destroyed against their will and who were trapped as wandering souls.”

“It must be an extremely rare occurrence, since you would think that if numa attacked a bardia, they would burn them immediately in order to destroy both body and spirit.” He lit the pipe and puffed on it until the flame caught. “Unless they had some nefarious plot like Violette's.”

“That's exactly what Gaspard said.”

Papy thought for a moment. “How old is the oldest of the Paris revenants?”

“Jean-Baptiste is Napoleonic. Jeanne said he was two hundred and thirty. But Arthur, the one who was Violette's protector, is something like five hundred.”

“And he wasn't aware of this re-embodiment possibility?”

“No,” I responded.

“So, if none of the revenants are aware of it, that must mean that the story predates the year 1500. How long is Bran's lineage?”

“Well, the book that the numa stole from your gallery—
Immortal Love
—mentioned his family, and that dated from the tenth century.”

“Hmm. This line of
guérisseurs
, who happen to be specialists on revenants, have been passing down their family secrets since at least the Middle Ages. No wonder both the numa and the bardia wanted to get their hands on them. They must possess a veritable wealth of information.”

He puffed on his pipe for a few seconds, and then leaned back in his chair and eyed me. “What we can deduce is that if this process of re-embodying wandering bardia souls actually exists, it fell out of revenant lore and oral history well before the sixteenth century. So we are looking for ancient examples, which falls within my area of specialty. I certainly don't recall coming across anything like this in direct reference to revenants, but I will begin to put my mind to it.”

I watched my grandfather jot down a couple of notes onto his leather-edged blotter, and felt overwhelmed with gratefulness. I hadn't specifically asked him to help. But he had jumped right in and taken on the task. Because he loved me.

And he also loved a good treasure hunt, his treasure of choice being esoteric knowledge of ancient things. Like revenants. Whatever it was, I was glad he was on board.

“Thank you, Papy,” I said, walking around the desk to hug him.

“Don't worry yourself,
ma princesse
. But tell me as soon as you know what is in the
guérisseurs'
account so I can start my research with as much information as possible.”

“I will,” I promised, and left my grandfather alone in a cloud of pipe smoke and musings about immortality.

NINETEEN

I SAT IN BED, WAITING TO FALL ASLEEP BUT
unable to keep my mind from wandering back to La Maison and the library where Bran searched for a way to give Vincent a body. I wondered if he would look the same, and quickly decided that I didn't care. To be able to touch him, see him, have him back . . . I didn't care what he looked like as long as he was flesh and blood.

I distractedly picked up a book from the stack next to my bed, and seeing the title, I smiled.
The Princess Bride
. I had read it three or four times. Minimum. I had gotten it out a couple of weeks ago for a certain reason. And stuck here with no other recourse but to obsess about something that was out of my hands, any distraction was welcome. I let the words of “S. Morgenstern” draw me away from my reality into someone else's fairy tale.

I had gotten to the sword fight with Inigo Montoya, which contains my favorite-ever fight-scene repartee, when my thoughts were suddenly interrupted by the words,
What are you reading?

I snapped my book shut and sat up in bed. “Holy cow, you scared me,” I said.

I'm sorry,
mon ange
. I thought you'd be expecting me.

“Well, I was hoping you'd come, but wasn't sure if you'd remembered that promise—after all of the archives excitement,” I admitted, squirming.

How could I forget wanting to see you?
he asked, and his words were like a hug.
Um, Kate—why are you shoving that book under your blanket?

I sighed and pulled it out, holding it up to the air and flapping it around since I didn't know where he was.

He laughed.
Don't tell me you're still trying to win our longest-running argument.

“The book
is
better than the movie, Vincent. I just think that because you read it in English, you didn't get the irony or the dry humor.”

Don't tell me we're going to argue about this while I'm volant and you've got the book in your hand. Talk about an unfair advantage
.

I ignored his plea for a time-out. “The movie doesn't have Fezzik's and Inigo's backstories,” I insisted.

The book doesn't have Billy Crystal playing Miracle Max,
he rebutted.

“Touché,” I mumbled, unable to argue with that point, “but this debate is not over.”

It's a date.

I smiled. Placing the book on my bedside table, I sat up on the bed and crossed my legs, as if I were having a chat with a real person who sat right in front of me. At least I could pretend.

I focused on a framed picture on my dresser taken of me and Vincent on my last birthday. In it, we're about to leave for our rowboat date, and the two of us are smiling like idiots. Something pinged painfully in my chest like a snapped rubber band.

“I can't believe we're even talking about this,” I said wistfully, “when this morning I didn't know if I would ever talk to you again.”

I know what you mean
, he responded.
But talking books with you is actually one of my favorite activities.

I smiled, remembering the epic book conversations we used to have. We agreed on almost everything except book-to-film adaptations, in which case I almost always preferred the book and Vincent the movie. “I am guessing that if you are here arguing with me about twentieth-century fiction, there hasn't been any progress back at La Maison?” I asked.

Nope
, Vincent said.
Bran's going through the books, page by page, to make sure we don't miss anything important. There is just as much, or probably more, about cases of migraines and fetus gender prediction than there is about revenants. But he's worked his way through two of the five books. Pity he has to sleep, but I took the opportunity to pay my love a visit
.

I leaned back against my headboard. “Vincent, do you think that this re-embodiment thing has a chance of working?”

Honestly, I think that if it actually existed, we would have heard of it before.

I nodded, outwardly agreeing, but inwardly determined to search every possibility. I agreed with what Mamie had said. My story with Vincent wasn't going to end this way.

You should sleep
, Vincent said.

I lay down and pulled the covers high over my shoulders, closing my eyes. “Tell me a story,” I said.

You want a bedtime story?
Vincent asked, laughing.

“Yes. Something that will keep me from worrying. To distract me.”

Okay
, he said.
There's a story my mother used to tell me when I was a little boy. It changed a bit with each telling, but I can give you the essentials.

“Perfect,” I said, already feeling sleep creep over me. Today had been exhausting, and I had no clue what tomorrow would bring.

It starts with a knight who has a dream in which he sees a beautiful lady dressed in blue, lying asleep in a boat traveling down a river. A voice tells him that the lady exists, that she is his true love, and that if he searches long and far he will find her. It also warns that if he attempts this journey, he will face danger and possible death on the way. When he awakes, the knight saddles up his horse and begins his quest to find her.

And with Vincent's story materializing word by word in my head, I fell into a deep and dreamless sleep.

 

I was awakened the next morning by the same voice that had lulled me to sleep.

Bonjour,
mon amour
.

“Mmm,” I said, rolling from my side to my back and attempting to open my eyes. “Did you leave or have you been here this whole time?” I asked.

I went back home. And I know it's early, but I thought you should know . . . Bran has found something.

My eyes popped wide-open and I sat straight up in bed. “What? What did he find?”

A story. You should come over and hear it for yourself. It's a really old story, but it sounds credible and may give us some clues.

As he spoke I had clambered out of bed, put my jeans on, and was struggling with a wadded-up top.

You have time to find some clean clothes, my love
, came Vincent's words.

“No time!” I said, and then dashing over to my dresser, swiped my deodorant stick under each arm. “Okay, time for complete necessities,” I allowed. “And this shirt is clean, just not folded.”

Right
, Vincent said, laughing.

Mamie was already up and having her coffee. “Bran, the healer, has found something. I need to go.”

“Okay, Katya,” she said, looking worried but bustling to the hall closet and grabbing her coat. “Just let me see you downstairs and make sure someone's there to accompany you.” I didn't tell her that Vincent was already here. It would have taken too long to explain, and maybe even freaked her out that he had been in my bedroom, invisible.

Two revenants I had seen at the New Year's party appeared out of nowhere when we stepped through the door. Mamie kissed my cheeks and said, “You be on your way. Your Papy left early for his shop. Let him know what was discovered as soon as you can. He really wants to help.” She tried to look hopeful.

When we arrived, Gaspard was waiting for me at the door of the library. “Come on in,” he said excitedly. “Vincent told me you were on your way.” He led me to where Jean-Baptiste sat with Bran, who was pointing to a section written in a tiny scratching script in black ink.

“Ah, here's Kate,” Bran said, as Jean-Baptiste stood and pulled out a chair for me. The
guérisseur
looked up at me and did the painful squint he had been doing ever since the numa punched him. I had begun to get used to it, but it still made me feel uncomfortable. “I've already given a summary of this to Messieurs Tabard and Grimod,” he said, “but I can read it to you word for word if you wish.”

“Please do,” Gaspard said, picking up a pencil and taking notes.

Bran began speaking in a spooky monotone—as if he were reading a spell—and followed along with his finger as he read.

“‘The Tale of the Thymiaterion, as recounted by a member of a group of flame-fingered
guérisseurs
—'”

“What's that mean?” interrupted Gaspard.

Bran peered up at him, confused. “A thymiaterion? I have no idea.”

“No, no. I know what a thymiaterion is. It's a type of ancient incense burner. What does ‘flame-fingered' refer to?”

“Flame-fingers. It's what our kind are called, the
guérisseurs
who deal with revenants.”

That explains all the hand paintings in the cave!
I thought.

Bran continued, “‘
Guérisseurs
from Byzantium who fled the Plague and were now itinerant.'” He looked back up at us. “From the order that these tales were transcribed, I would suspect this refers to the Black Plague. Which means the mid-fourteenth century.”

“Yes, yes,” said Jean-Baptiste impatiently. “Please continue.”

“‘Just before the Plague, a group of bardia from Italy moved to Constantinople, bringing a valuable Etruscan treasury with them. Soon after, a powerful numa named Alexios killed the bardia chieftain, Ioanna, and bound her to him. Ioanna's kindred destroyed Alexios, thus freeing her spirit from its bond to her numa captor.'

“‘Ioanna's kindred sought out the flame-finger Georgios, to conduct a re-embodiment, telling him that the process had been conducted several times, ages before. He resisted, not knowing what he could possibly do. They instructed him that a giant bronze thymiaterion in their treasury was to be used, and that the object itself held enlightenment. Instructed by ancient symbols carved into the object, Georgios conducted the ceremony and reunited the wandering soul with a man-made body that became as her own.'”

My heartbeat accelerated. This meant there
was
hope for Vincent! I felt light-headed and had to restrain myself from leaping up and hugging everyone in the room. Instead, I calmed myself and listened harder. I didn't want to miss a single word.

“‘We asked the travelers what became of the magical object. They told us that during the siege of their city the thymiaterion was smuggled out with the rest of the bardia's trove, which had since been plundered and scattered throughout the land.'

“‘Thus was the story given us by flame-finger Nikephorus—previously of Constantinople but now a wanderer—transcribed as it came from his very mouth. We marveled at the fantastical story, and some disbelieved it. But my grandfather, who had not yet passed his gift to my mother, said that he sensed it was true. That this power was one of our own.'”

Bran carefully placed a piece of paper on the book to save his place. “So you see, my memory did not fail me. I knew I had heard of re-embodiment.”

And?
I thought. I glanced at the others, who seemed to have the same reaction. We were all waiting for more.

Jean-Baptiste lowered his face to his hand and massaged his temples. Then, clearing his throat, he said, “And just to reconfirm. This is definitely your only record of re-embodiment—the fourteenth-century account of a band of itinerant bardia.”

Bran wrinkled his brow and looked defensive. “Well, my family seemed to think it had merit, because this was one of the tales that was kept and passed along, and one which my own mother pointed out to me as describing one of our powers, even if it was rarely used. But it seems that the instrument itself—the thy . . . whatever it is—is essential for the task we would be undertaking.”

My heart plunged. “So, just to clarify, we are looking for a giant incense burner that was lost over six hundred years ago,” I said, trying not to sound incredulous.

“I would suppose that more than one of these objects existed,” Gaspard responded carefully. “If it was, in fact, an important magical tool in the ancient times, I would guess that several were created. It wasn't as easy to fly across the globe to a convocation of kindred, but there was communication between widespread revenant cultures. Information did manage to spread globally between revenants.”

An ancient legend about a magical incense burner. That wasn't exactly what I had hoped for, but at least it was something. Determined not to let my disappointment show, I took my notebook from my bag and jotted down some notes, asking Bran a couple of questions to clarify. Gaspard gave me a curious look.

“I thought my grandfather could follow up on any leads you find with his own resources,” I said.

Gaspard frowned. “Not to disrespect your grandfather, my dear, but I doubt he would be in possession of anything that our extensive library would not already have.”

“Well, I found the copy of
Immortal Love
in his gallery, which is what led me to finding Bran and his family in the first place,” I countered.

“That is true,” Gaspard conceded, “but I honestly don't think you should trouble your grandfather with this. With our resources here we should be able to turn up the information needed, if it exists at all.” He waved his hand to indicate the size of the library.

“Why are you reluctant to have me include my grandfather in this research?” I asked him point-blank.

Gaspard umm-ed and ah-ed for a second, and then Jean-Baptiste cut in to save him. “We aren't used to including humans in our dealings except on a support level,” he said in an apologetic tone. “Maybe that is shortsighted on our part, but our insularity has a purpose: survival. It's just what we're used to. This isn't to say we don't respect your grandparents and value their trust.”

I nodded. “But now we're in a race against time to find the information, right?” I stood and tucked my notebook into my bag.

Gaspard nodded.

I grabbed my coat. “So, with your permission, I'll work with my grandfather to see what we can find.” I began walking out the door, and then turning, gave them a competitive grin and said, “Beat you to it!”

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