Read The Parliament of Blood Online
Authors: Justin Richards
âSo,' George said as he finished his story, âwhat are they planning and how do we stop them?'
âWhy not let them get on with it and keep out of the way?' Eddie said.
âI doubt if that is an option,' Sir William said quietly.
âFirst, they know that for all their secrecy we three are aware of their existence. And second, I know from my own discussions with Lord Ruthven that matters are coming to a head. The status quo â even if it were acceptable â can no longer be maintained. The waking of this Orabis seems to be a pivotal moment.'
âIt was horrific,' George recalled with a shudder. âThe way he was plumbed into the pipes. The way they seemed to be keeping him alive.'
âUndead,' Eddie remembered. â
Lord of the Undead
that Coachman called him.'
âVampires are said to be undead,' Sir William explained. âOur problem will be separating the real truth from the myths and stories that have grown up â that they have fostered and encouraged.'
âWe can start with Orabis,' George said. âMaybe Xavier Hemming knew the truth. Maybe that's why he had the mummy here in the first place.'
âAn excellent notion, and a good theory. But we know from the catalogue that Hemming did not commit himself to paper.'
âWhat do you mean?' Eddie asked.
âThere's no notes of any use about the mummy,' George said.
âDoesn't mean he didn't write something down. Somewhere else,' Eddie said. âWhat about those jars and stuff in the crate? Maybe he wrote about them.'
âNo, he didn't.'
âBut Eddie is right,' Sir William said thoughtfully. âWe
may simply be looking in the wrong place. You say that Orabis was hailed by the others as Lord of the Undead? Lord Ruthven mentioned several possible sources of information, including the Book of the Undead.'
âAnd what's that when it's at home?'
Sir William rubbed absently at the scar on his neck. âI have no idea. There is an Egyptian Book of the Dead. So perhaps it relates to Orabis in some way.'
âThey've been around a long time, these vampires,' Eddie said.
âIndeed.'
âThis fifth casket they're after,' George said. âIs that connected too?'
âIn what way?'
âYou said Lord Ruthven was after a fifth jar, from the mummy.'
âBut there isn't one,' Sir William pointed out.
âUnless it's hidden,' Eddie said. âLike whatever this Hemming knew about the mummy.'
âHe hid it all,' Sir William realised. His eyes were sparkling behind his glasses. âXavier Hemming
knew
. And he planned for this. He kept the mummy here, hidden.'
âOnly somehow they found it,' George said.
âAnd he concealed the fifth jar or casket, whatever it is. He knew they needed that too.'
âBut why? What's in it?'
âIf we knew that, Eddie my friend, then we would be in a lot stronger position than we are now.'
âSo, let's find out.'
âIt isn't that easy,' George said sternly.
âOh but it may be,' Sir William declared, standing up. âIf we find the Book of the Undead, that may be the clue we need to bring it all together. It's certainly important.'
âAnd where do we find that?' George asked.
âIn Hemming's meticulous catalogues â where else?'
They found the entry in the catalogue of
Writings, Ancient
. Sir William led the way down into the archive beneath the Museum.
âDoes either of you read ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics?' he asked as they made their way through the mass of crates and cabinets, shelves and cupboards.
âEr, not me,' George confessed. âEddie?' he asked with a wink.
âHaven't got to that yet in school.'
âPity, pity. I have a smattering, but we may need more than that. I wonder if we can trust that fool Mason in Egyptology. Or our old friend Brinson, come to that.'
The cupboard was full of rolled parchment scrolls. There was a list of them glued on the inside of the wooden door, complete with the catalogue numbers.
âAS-931,' Sir William murmured as he traced his finger along the scrolls. Each had a small tag attached by string. âAS-931 ⦠Does not appear to be here,' he announced at last.
Eddie leaned past him, reaching into the cupboard. âThere's something jammed at the back here,' he said. He pulled out a dusty book bound in cracked leather.
âHardly ancient Egyptian,' George said.
âNo, no, let me see.' Sir William took it from Eddie.
The spine creaked as he opened the book. It was a notebook, the pages filled with the distinctive copperplate handwriting that George knew belonged to Xavier Hemming.
âOh yes,' Sir William breathed. âWell done, Eddie. We may not have the original â perhaps Lord Ruthven found that when he had the mummy itself removed. But this is Hemming's own translation of the scrolls stored in this section of the archive.'
âDoes it include â¦?' George's voice tailed off. He could see his answer in Sir William's smile.
âExtracts from the Book of the Undead, translated by Xavier Hemming himself. And look â he has drawn a line down the margin of one passage in particular. I think, my friends, that this is the section he would want us to look at.'
Eddie's voice was little more than a whisper. âGo on, then. Tell us what it says.'
Sir William adjusted his glasses, cleared his throat, and began to read.
And a third time they buried Orabis deep in the ground, covering his grave with sand of the desert and stones from the mountain. But again he rose, clawing his way through the earth with his bare hands. And this time the suffering was even greater and his vengeance was meted out on all of the people.
The vengeance of Orabis was so great that Pharaoh himself lost his first-born to the blood-sickness. And great was the lamentation of mighty Pharaoh who called on the gods of Egypt to rise against the usurper Orabis, so-called Lord of the Undead.
And so Anubis, it is said, gave power and wisdom to Pharaoh's daughter Heba who lured Orabis to the place of death. For even an Undead Lord can be killed here if his very heart be taken from him. Or else when Thoth weighed the heart of the Undead, the god would find him lacking and send him back to the World of Men, and Orabis would return.
The soldiers and priests fell upon Orabis and did bind him, like an embalmed mummy. They wrapped sand from his homeland between the bandages that he might sleep. They wrapped the herb that some call garlic round his limbs that he might not move. They hid from his sight behind polished silver to avoid his retribution should the Lord of the Undead rise again to visit the blood-sickness on them.
Anubis spake to Pharaoh's daughter. He told her that Thoth would receive the immortal soul of Orabis and would bind him for ever in sleep if his heart be cut out. For only when his heart no longer beats
and is destroyed or separated from his body can a creature such as Orabis truly die.
They embalmed him according to ancient lore. They prepared Canopic Jars as is the custom. But as well as the lungs and the liver and the intestines and the stomach being placed in jars fashioned after the sons of Horus, a fifth jar was prepared. And this was in the form of Nehebkau the Scorpion, Guardian of the Gates to the Underworld. And into this jar was placed the heart of Orabis, removed from his chest by Heba daughter of Pharaoh even as it still beat and pumped the lifeblood.
The jar was sealed and buried. And Orabis was also sealed, in a sarcophagus lined with silver, and he was buried unmarked in the desert sand from which â as Pharaoh and his people prayed â he would never return unless his heart be restored and the blood once more flow through his wicked veins â¦
Eddie sat on one of the sealed crates, kicking his legs as he and George listened to Sir William.
âThere the translation ends.'
âGood story,' Eddie said. âGuess we know what's in that fifth jar now.'
âThe vampire's heart,' George said. âDo we believe that? It sounds incredible.'
âBut it would explain why he is plumbed into a system
of pipes and pumps. To replace the heart he no longer has beating in his chest.'
âAnd they're after this jar so they can give him his heart back?' Eddie asked.
âIt would seem so.'
Eddie grimaced. âMaybe we should let them have it.'
âAbsolutely not,' Sir William insisted. âWe can only begin to guess at the horrors Orabis would visit upon this city â possibly the world â if he were made whole again. For the moment he is weakened and ineffective. Which gives us time.'
âBut time for what?' Eddie wondered.
âWhat indeed. Now, this Book of the Undead tells us several things. It was written by someone who had direct experience of dealing with Orabis, and whose motivation in writing must have been to warn others. So this isn't propaganda and lies. It is the truth, at least so far as the author understood it.'
âAnd that helps?' George wondered.
âIt helps because it describes how Orabis was defeated. Now, we don't know where or what this place of death might be. But we do know that a vampire needs earth from his home close by when he sleeps. Possibly in actual contact. Ruthven told me that also.'
âAnd there's mention of the silver that lines the coffin,' George realised.
âMore than that. It says they hid behind silver. Behind mirrors, perhaps?'
âAnd vampires have no reflection,' Eddie said. âCharlie
didn't show in the window, but my reflection was there. Right creepy, it was.'
âThey have a special relationship with silver, and with light. Again, Ruthven mentioned this and the translation seems to confirm it. No reflection, an aversion to silver and to bright light â especially sunlight.'
George snapped his fingers as something else occurred to him. âAnd they don't appear in photographs!'
Sir William smiled and nodded. âYes, well done.'
âSo, we've got the evidence,' Eddie said. âLet's go to the coppers. Let the police handle it.'
âA possible course of action,' Sir William admitted. âBut one which I fear is doomed to failure.'
âAnd why's that, then?'
âBecause we know from George here, that the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Sir Harrison Judd, is a member of the Damnation Club. And Sir Harrison was at the Unwrapping, remember. It was he who nudged Brinson so he cut himself and the blood fell on the mummy.'
âBut then, who can we trust?' George asked. âWe know some of the people. We saw some at the ceremony in the catacombs. But the Damnation Club has members from the highest ranks of society. There are rumours that the Home Secretary â¦' He broke off, shaking his head. âWe can't do anything, can we? They have people everywhere.'
âEven in the Museum and the Royal Society,' Sir William said quietly. âLike Lord Ruthven. I am afraid we have no way of even knowing who is our enemy.'
âCourse we do,' Eddie said. âWe take photographs and see who shows up in them.'
âYes, that might work,' Sir William agreed. âA good idea, young man. Don't you think so, George?'
But George was looking anxious. âI just thought â Eddie said the Coachman mentioned that Liz was not a threat to them. And when I was at the ball at the Damnation Club â I thought I saw her there. You don't think â¦?'
Eddie almost laughed at the suggestion. âNah â course not. Liz? She couldn't be.'
âUnlikely, I agree. But we should make certain immediately that she is all right,' Sir William said. âAnd we'll take a mirror.'
As soon as Liz opened the door, George could see there was something wrong. The early morning sun had struggled through the London smog and Liz blinked as she stood in its full glare.
Sir William had a small mirror concealed in his hand, and angled it to look briefly at Liz's reflection. He nodded with relief at George and Eddie, and pocketed the mirror.