Image by Jennifer Herd © 2007
Transcription
Image by Jennifer Herd © 2007
Image by Jennifer Herd © 2007 The Mary Sue Checklist By J.M. Frey 1) The Mary Sue is sexually attractive to all canon characters, regardless of their established sexual orientation or availability. 2) The Mary Sue often has violet eyes, or eyes that change colours, or are a biological impossibility. Sometimes the same goes for ear shape. 3) The Mary Sue is adept at any sort of fighting or magic wielded by the canonical characters, often surpassing the canonical characters in ability with little to no practice or previous experience. 4) The Mary Sue is the centre of the plot, the key player in any battle, and is the only one who can 'save the day'. 5) The Mary Sue is often the reason for the main conflict in the plot, whether inadvertently or as a central figure. 6) The Mary Sue is immediately accepted into the canonical character's inner circle of friends and confidants, no matter how unsociable or closely guarded said circle of friends is in the canon. 7) The Mary Sue character exists for the Suethor's wish fulfillment. The Sue looks like the author wishes she looked, acts like the way she wishes she could, says what the author wishes she could say, and creates an environment within the canon in which things that the Suethor wishes would have happened in the canon does (The Sue is the Id). 8) The Mary Sue is a character either previously unrecognized by the fandom's central protagonists and antagonists, or drops in from 'reality'. 9) The Mary Sue is often ardently desired by the villain despite there being no advantage or reason for the villain to want said Mary Sue. 10) The Mary Sue is witty and snarkish, and no matter how lame said wittisisms are, the canonical characters akin the Sue's sense of humour to that of a Comedy God. 11) The Mary Sue is often able to shift shapes, or has a friend or magical pet that can shift shapes. 12) If the Mary Sue is related to a major character that is not the romantic interest, then said relation is often used as a haphazard excuse to introduce the Sue to the canonical characters/ future romantic interest. 13) The Mary Sue has a tragic past that they 'get over' cheerily, suffering neither post-traumatic stress, Stolkholm syndrome, or other disorders or phobias brought on by their past experiences. Any scars or marks that result from the trauma are 'cool', or are interesting places or shapes. Sues are rarely ashamed by said scars or marks, or associate them only lightly with the trauma. 14) Mary Sues mope, brood, or pout, but only for as long as it takes for the canonical characters to distract her. Long-term guilt or pain is rare in a Sue. 15) The surrounding canon characters are made to act out of character by the Mary Sue’s presence. 16) Somehow the Mary Sue character 'saves the day' in unlikely ways that leave the canon characters stunned and amazed. 17) The Mary Sue often was given a name with a hidden or relevant meaning, or that simply “sounds cool”, with no regard for ethnic tradition or likelihood. Book One: Dracula The Series Chapter One: "Slider" Sometimes I pray that I could just wake up from this bloody nightmare. Always a nightmare. Sometimes, I think if I can breathe deeply enough, the residual terror will fade faster, and I won't realize what it is that I was fighting against in my dream. I won't realize I was flailing, tangling myself in the sheets, screaming, “Get off me!” It never works, of course. I usually scare who ever is in the room with me, if anyone. I shrug it off and pretend go back to sleep, or I tell them I'm okay and it was a one-shot deal. Usually they believe me. Then I lay back down, because sleep will not come, and pray to wake from this bloody nightmare. ===== This is a story. Whether you choose to believe in it as truth or not is your prerogative. I am merely telling it. I, of course, know it to be truth. I am a Mary Sue in the strangest sense of the word. Let me explain: If you were to fall into your favourite fandom, I mean, really do it, would you tell people? Would you be scared of that character that you are fond of, knowing that he or she really has the power to hurt you for real? Would you pursue the silly crush? Would you warn the heroes of the future? Would you even tell them who and what you are? Odds are, you've answered 'yes' to these questions. Once upon a time, I answered 'yes' too. Now, my answer is 'no.' The less I get involved with them, the better. The faster I can get out of that reality, the faster I can get into a new one. The faster I can leave. The closer I am to home. Gods, my new life is like a bad episode or two of “Sliders”. I was never a fan. ===== In the middle of one of the poorer districts of the city of Luxembourg, in a certain warehouse filled with gadgets and potions ingredients, a strange mix of technology and alchemy, a thirtysomething blond man in a very tasteful business suit was waiting patiently with his hands folded behind his back as men and women in lab coats scrambled to write something on the dusty cement floor in blood. The man is a Vampire. The people in lab coats are not. I was not there when this happened, but I was told the story later. I figure you may appreciate knowing this part. It helps. The warehouse is on the easterly side of the city, off a small stretch of road that connects to the Rue Jules Willhelm. If one was to follow the road, one would pass at least three churches before reaching the city centre. This is important information. Don't forget it. In reality, my reality –your reality- there is no castle on a hill, overlooking the downtown area. Here, there is. In my reality, the Castle is called Castle Vianden, and is located outside of Luxembourg City near the actual town on Vianden. In this reality, the Castle is also called Vianden, but those in the know laughingly call it “Castle Dracula”. In my reality, Castle Vianden is a tourist attraction, where, over ten years ago, a television program called “Dracula: The Series” was filmed at night with a mostly Canadian crew. In this reality, it is owned by a wealthy philanthropist and the CEO of Lucard Industries International, Alexander Vladisvus Lucard. In my reality, the actors of the show moved on, joined the Stratford or Shaw Festival Theatres, did guest spots on television and in film, became the stars of other TV shows. Here, the world has stopped in the early nineties. Gustav Helsing has rescued his son Klaus from the vampire Lucard, and he and his nephews, Maximillion (“call me Max, please”) and Christopher Townsend, and Gustav's ward, Sophie Metternich, wage the ever-lasting battle against the darkness. They are Vampire hunters, the only ones in town, and, in my estimation, not as good as the great-grandfather from whom the Helsings inherit their name. Actually, Abraham was a bit of a bungler himself, if I recall. 'Child-brain' my ass. Well, in this strange television reality, Alexander Lucard stood in the warehouse waiting for the people in the lab coats to finish painting archaic designs on the cement floor, trying very hard to be patient. Which was difficult. Alexander Lucard was fed up. He was sick to death (undeath?) of Helsings. He had lost more money in the last decade trying to avoid the damned vampire hunters than he cared to admit. Loss was not acceptable. No more avoiding them. He'd had his fun, strung them along, had a few wonderful nights of bloodsucking and laughs. It was time to kill them. The only problem was getting to them. They had the Cross of the Magyars protecting their home. Any Vampire passing into the house was immediately vaporized by its holy power. They knew who he was and knew what to look for in an ambush. The twentieth century had provided them with UV Flashlights, internet searches, the ability to hack into his private cellular phone signals and stock portfolios. The kids had gotten smarter in the past few years. Stronger. Faster. They were almost a threat. Almost. Given enough time, they would be a threat. He had to get rid of them. Now. But he couldn't get to them. The best solution seemed to be the simplest. Bring them to him. Only problem, it was a hard thing to do. If he kidnapped any of them, the police would know. He had many of the police in his pocket, but he couldn't afford to be openly accused of anything. Too expensive to pay people to keep their mouths shut; more money out of his pocket. Missing people reports would be filed. It was no secret that the Helsings and Mr. Lucard had a very stormy relationship, and soon people would start to point fingers. He didn't dare hire assassins for fear of their blackmailing him later. He couldn't even get them drummed out of town. The most he could do was get the Townsend boy's student visas revoked and thus the boys deported to America, and that would do nothing to get rid of the rest of them. Lucard had to get them to come to him, meet him on his own ground on his own terms, in a way that would keep him free of all blame and suspicions. Long gone were the days when the Helsings randomly broke into his castle to harass him, and long gone, too, were the nights when he enjoyed the game so much that he let them escape afterwards. It was time to end it. He had to do it in a way that was discreet and infallible - a way that couldn't be traced back to him. Hence, Magic. It was a summoning circle. Alexander Lucard wasn't sure exactly what kind. One of the members on his staff was a priest of some sort and had offered this solution. Lucard was to the point where he was willing to try anything once. The annoying thing was the lack of specificity in the spell. The circle could summon a person, but it was nearly impossible to make it a specific person. Lucard couldn't just nudge the blood on the floor with his foot and say, “Hey, you, circle-thingy. Bring me Gustav Helsing.” He had to try to narrow it down, or it would just summon the nearest human being. So they had incorporated some specifications into the summoning charm. The person had to know that Alexander Lucard was Dracula. The person had to be alive. The person had to be in possession of a University education, and had to have studied Vampires during the time of that education. The person had to have studied Alexander Lucard. The person had to be human. The presence of the person had to be advantageous to Lucard. They thought that was specific enough to bring them only Gustav Helsing. I can tell you from personal experience that they were damned wrong. ===== This is the part of the story where I come in. I had nothing with me. I was sitting in a café, sipping coffee, wearing my glasses and a nice pair of pinstriped pants. I had on dark blue sneakers; a pair of grapey-rust coloured legwarmers and a matching mock-turtleneck knit tee-shirt. Over that was an olive green button up blouse. Fake suede. My hair was loose and un-gelled for once, a rusty red in colour and hanging limply around my face, just over jaw-length. I had been lazy that morning and failed to curl it outwards. I'd just spent three hours that morning discussing Performative Gender, Interior Gender, and Physical Sex in Drag Queens. I was in university. I study Canadian theatre and television. I had written papers on “Dracula: The Series”, and how Alexander Lucard was Dracula. I was reading a book on Literary Theory, trying to figure out how to apply Jung’s theories of the Ego and Id to Mary Sue Fanfiction. And suddenly, I blinked out of existence. ===== It is shocking to the body to be sitting one second, and then suddenly have the chair yanked out from under it. It is shocking to the mind to be one place, and then suddenly another. I flailed, fell onto my arse onto cold, dusty concrete, and clutched my textbook and coffee mug in panicking hands. I looked up and around. I dropped the coffee mug and it shattered on the ground. I didn't think Rob, the owner of the café, would mind. I wasn't in the café. I was sitting in a warehouse, in the middle of circle of people in lab coats. Around the walls, and on tables, stood bits of unrecognizable technology. Slowly, warily, I pulled myself to my feet. Nobody offered to help me. I gripped my textbook hard and stared. There was blood on the ground. Fresh blood. It looked like writing. It smelled like rotting meat. From behind the people a cultured, accented voice asked, “Who the Hell are you?” The crowd parted and a handsome man in an expensive suit came forward to stare openly at me. One golden eyebrow was arched over unimpressed grey eyes. “Geordie Johnson?” I said softly. The man didn't blink. “You are Geordie Johnson?” I shook my head. “No, you are.” I let myself smile. Yes, that was the answer. I recognized the put-on accent. “Are you filming something? Did I sleep walk without realizing it?” I looked around. I saw no cameras. The smile faltered, but I persisted. “I'm sorry, I didn't know this was a closed set. I'll see myself out.” Grasping for straws. Dumb excuse. Get out. I started for the exit behind the crowd, but someone grabbed my elbow and stopped me. The someone was very strong, and I winced. Hired Bruiser. The blond man - he had to be Mr. Johnson, I knew. I was a fan came to stare down into my face. “Are you a university student?” he hissed softly. I nodded, swallowing hard. I didn't like the ice in his gaze, the way he appraised me as if I was… dinner. “Do you know who I am?” I nodded again. “Who?” “Geordie Johnson… right?” “No.” My voice made a squeaking sound. My voice, not me. No, I was in control. I wasn't scared. Ri-ight. “Alexander Lucard?” “Yes. And?” I looked around the room. The people in the coats looked hungry, too. “Dracula?” He nodded, a cat's predatory smile stretching his lips back away from his teeth. I had a friend once with lots of money and a warped sense of humour. He had spent thousands of dollars on these contact lenses that could turn his eyes red. They were double layered - in between the layers of glass was a strange substance that was clear. However, if a certain electromagnetic field interfered with the gel, it turned a cloudy red colour. There was a hand-held device that went with the contacts, and he kept it in his pocket. When he flipped the switch, his eyes appeared to turn red. He used to wear them when he went to McDonald's to scare the employees. Alexander Lucard's hands were free of hand-held devices. When his eyes flushed a predatory golden, I knew it was for real. My guts twisted, my reaction visceral. Suddenly, I knew I was prey. It was the single most terrifying feeling in my life. My heart leapt up into my throat and I could taste my pulse. He laughed slowly, and I saw the sharp white fangs. He turned to his left and swatted at a man caked in drying blood. He looked like he'd been finger-painting, only he smelled like a hot butcher's shop. The man flew back and smashed into the wall. But it looked like Lucard had only tapped him. I wasn't sure if he was going to get back up. “You botched it!” he hissed. I cowered, even though his ire was not directed at me. He returned his gaze to my face. “But the specifications of the spell made certain that your arrival would be advantageous.” He leaned in close, and I could feel his hot breath on the skin of my neck. I tried to back up but the bruiser who held my elbow quickly snatched the other one and held me still. “I wonder how… Who are you?” I swallowed hard and shook my head. This wasn't happening. “Who are you?” he asked again, obviously unhappy with having to repeat himself. I threw my book at him. 'Threw', maybe, isn't the correct adjective. I swung my arm up from the elbow and bashed his aristocratic nose with the spine of my Literary Theory text. Finally, the damn thing made itself worth the seventy dollars I had been forced to shell out for it. Lucard reeled back, howling in pain and anger, clutching at his nose. It was gushing blood. I remembered Miss Congeniality's advice - SING - and did. Solar plexus - the bruiser got my elbow in the gut. He doubled over. Instep - I stomped hard on his foot. Nose - I tried to crunch the bridge of his nose with the heel of my hand and didn't really succeed. But I managed to shove him away. Groin - I kneed him hard, darted around his body, and aimed for the fire exit on the far wall. The lab coats were in chaos. One had picked up my book, dabbing the blood off it uncertainly. Another five or so were fawning over Lucard. Two were holding up the groaning bruiser. “Stop her!” the Vampire snarled and they all turned their attention to me. I ran hell-for-leather out of the door and found myself on the Rue Julien Willems. That's what the sign said. Left or right? I turned right and ignored their shouts to stop. They hadn't asked nicely enough. I am not a very fast runner. But I had enough of a head start to get to the building with the spire I saw in the distance. Church. Old one. My lucky day. I hammered up the steps, slammed back the doors, and skidded to a halt in the back of the building. It was filled with dust, old wooden pews, worn red carpeting, and not much else. The important thing was that it kept out the lab coats. They must have been zombies, all of them. I thanked my luck again and walked away from the door, where I could hear them hissing and spitting and banging against the invisible barrier that kept them at bay. I had never been a big one for church. Usually, I thought that I'd had better things to do on Sunday mornings. I was starting to think that I had been wrong. ===== Alexander Lucard never ran. It was undignified. He took his time. I was leaning back against the closest pew, my eyes on the door and the mingling people. I wondered if someone who worked at the church would come and see what the racket was about soon. There was a small house beside the weed-broken walkway that had lead up to the front steps, but so far no lights had gone on. Even if a priest, or father, or reverend, or whatever came out of the house, what good would it do anyone? Better to let him sleep. The zombies couldn't get into his house without an invitation. My head was reeling. I shoved away the non-reality feeling, the nausea, and adrenaline after-shakes and the dizziness, and kept my attention on the empty door. If one of them found a way in, I wanted to see them doing it. The muscles in my calves and thighs were burning from the spurt of athletic exertion followed by cold inactivity. I am definitely not an athlete. I thought I could probably back up to the altar at the front of the church and still keep my eyes on them. I had read a fanfic once where someone being chased by a Vampire had drunk Holy Water to keep the undead predator away. It seemed blasphemous, but it may work. I was just starting to move when an honest to God bat landed at the feet of one of the lab technicians. There was a flare of shadow and suddenly Lucard stood on the other side of the invisible barrier, scowling at me. If I hadn't seen it with my own eyes, I wouldn't have believed it. This revelation hit me like a sledge hammer between the eyes. This was real. I had just seen that. But Lucard couldn't get into the church any more than his zombies could. He pressed a palm against the open air and was rewarded with a sparking crackle of energy forcing him back a few steps. Yay. “Come out this instant!” he snarled, his eyes glowing golden. The sky behind his head was fully dark, and I wondered how close to dawn we were. I was warm and safe inside the church. I could play at a contest of wills all night if need be. “No,” I said. Lucard sniffed, annoyed, and I noticed that his nose was healed. The front of his immaculately white shirt, however, was stained with crimson droplets. “Come out here, now,” he said again, his voice losing patience. “Are you deaf or stupid?” I said, edging around to put a few rows of pews between him and me. “I said no.” He frowned. “You are a very brazen young lady.” “And you're a very rich snob guy. So?” “I won't hurt you.” “Do I look stupid?” I shook my head. “I know who you are and I'm staying right here until dawn, thank you very much.” Lucard grinned. He looked like he was trying very hard to be sincere. “I'm rather hurt. My manners are not all that bad." The gold leeched away from his eyes, leaving them an attentive gray. His fangs retracted. He put on a sort of charmingly hurt look, slightly seductive and all mock innocence. I felt my heart leap into my throat. I had always thought Geordie Johnson was attractive. He had been at his most attractive when he had been playing Mr. Lucard. I had to close my eyes and shake my head and remind myself that this was not Geordie Johnson. This was not an act. “I know what kind of manners you have,” I shot back. It was kinda lame, but it's hard to be witty when you're terrified. Bugger all, he had me cornered and we both knew it. I would have to leave the church sometime. He tipped his head to the side, smiling gently. "That's a little biased on your part, don't you think?" “Biased? Jeeze, you're Dracula.” I've never been a hardcore Christian, but it sure felt good to clutch the Bible I found sitting on the seat of the pew. His voice faded slightly as he walked in a confidently slow manner off to the side. The techies in the lab coats dispersed at the demure wave of his hand. They were going to circle the building. Two remained at the door, watching me with glittering eyes. I swallowed. I wanted to keep him in sight. "And you're going to believe a mad and vulgar Irishman over the state of my character?” His voice echoed eerily in the night. “Come now." “Stoker nothing, I've seen 'Dracula: The Series.' I know how Alexander Lucard works.” I felt nervous. Caged in. I was. “Come back where I can see you, dammit!” A sudden crash sent me reeling out of the pew and into the aisle, covering my head with my arms. How had he just broken the window?! The coloured glass was like shrapnel and I screamed as one piece dug into the flesh of my forearm. I stared at my arm, at the thin stream of blood. The glass was blue. I sucked on my lip and yanked it out. There was more blood - not a lot, but enough - and I pulled off my green shirt. I hated doing it, but I ripped at the hem of it and used the strip I tore off to bind the wound. It wasn't deep, but it stung like a bitch. "You know, now that we're on the topic of manners, I believe yours might need some adjusting…" He voice rang through the church, a stage whisper that echoed. I looked around - no, he wasn't inside. He was outside of the broken window. “My manners?” I repeated, tugging the knot on the bandage with my teeth. “Hello, just broke a window.” A soft chuckling danced across the rafters of the church. I shivered. If he was trying to freak me out, it was working. The windows began to smash, one by one, all around me. I ran into the center of the room and jumped as each one exploded inwards. I managed to avoid all the other flying glass. I didn't want him to smell the blood from my cut. “That's getting old!” I shouted over the busting glass. I just wanted him to stop. It was scary. I scrubbed at my eyes - no, no crying allowed. The last window was not broken by a mysterious force. A body was flung through it. It was a man. Dead. Throat torn out. Eyes wide in shock. A passerby? I didn't recognize him. I screamed, loud and shrill, like a good slasher-movie queen, and put as much distance between myself and the corpse as possible. I ended up pressing myself against the wall by the open door. I resisted the urge to slam it shut. If he came back to the door, I wanted to see him. To be able to read his face. “You were saying?” I swallowed hard. I would not vomit. I would not. Any thoughts of Lucard as Johnson fled my head. He was not harmless. He was a murderer. “Why are you doing this?” My voice sounded weak and pathetic, and terrified. Even to me. There was no answer. A long pause. “Answer me!” I called out, pushing away from the wall. I turned my back on the body, tried to block out the smell. I craned my head to peer around in the darkness, trying to see him. The two techies had moved to the bottom of the stairs. I ignored them. There was a rushing roaring sound, a sudden burst of heat and light at my back. I turned on my heel to stare at the massive wooden crucifix that hung behind the altar. It was on fire. It came tumbling down and hit the altar. The linen cover-cloth lit quickly, and the flames raced across the floor as if it were slicked with oil. “Stop it!” I screamed, taking a fearful step or two backwards. I was mindful of the door, though, and its invisible barrier. The old pews began to burn. I still held the Bible in my hand and I clutched it close to my chest. I began to cough. The smoke was thick. Surely the fire department or the police or someone would be coming soon. I just had to hold on. Stay in the building as long as possible. They would chase Lucard away. He wouldn't dare with all those flashing lights around… right? The smoke made my eyes water. My lungs felt like they were burning. If I passed out, I would burn to death. If I ran from the church, he'd kill me. Or worse. A pillar of wood burnt away from the ceiling rafters. Plaster crumbled, raining down in a shower of embers. It landed practically at my feet. I screamed again. The fucker was aiming for me! I stared out of the door. The zombies were staring back hungrily. Maybe I could shove them aside and run for the rectory. They couldn't get in. But I bet the door is locked. I couldn't get in either. I was going to burn to death. Or suffocate. Or get crushed. Or have my throat torn out by a Vampire. How the hell had this happened? I was just sitting in a café reading a theory book, sipping coffee! The scent of burning meat suddenly filled my nose. The dead man was on fire. The flames were jumping from pew to pew, skipping around the Stations of the Cross along the wall. The confessional suddenly began to glow from within, orange against its worn and patched paisley brown curtains. “Stop it!” I shrieked. I covered my head. Suddenly, the fire was gone. I looked up. The church was whole. The windows weren't smashed. I tore at the makeshift bandage on my arm - no cut. I took a deep shuddering breath. A burning lump pressed against my adam's apple. I let the tears drip out, slowly. The world went silent and calm. The breeze that had been coming in the doors died. “How did you do that?” My voice was shaky, small. I backed away from the door. The Zombies looked disappointed. I kept touching my arm, to make sure it really wasn't bleeding. Silence. “Answer me! Where are you?!” No answer. “I know you're still here.” Nothing. Had he given up? Cautiously I moved to the door. I didn't believe he would give up, but I didn't see him. I eyed the rectory carefully. The zombies on the steps had melted back into the shadows. If they were still there, I couldn't see them. No, too inviting. He wasn’t gone. It was a trap. Maybe there was an office somewhere in the church? With a phone? God, and what would I say? 'Gee, officer, I'm being held captive by Count Dracula. Little help?' Besides, more than half of the cops in the city were Lucard’s boys anyway. I suddenly wondered if Gustav Helsing's phone number was listed. I didn't move. I wanted to go find the office. Find a phone. I didn't want to let him out of my proverbial sight, though. I looked at the rectory. Still no lights on. Come on, what the Hell kind of priest are you, buddy? A Vampire is stalking an innocent victim in your sanctuary and you're having tea with the Sandman. Maybe I could get to the house. It was just a few steps. Maybe he didn't lock his door. But what would the point of leaving the church be? I was safe here. Lucard may have been fucking with my head, but I was safe here. Behind me, there was a small sputtering noise and one of the cold candles suddenly was adorned with a bright tongue of flame. “No,” I said firmly, closing my eyes. “No, stop it.” The flame merely danced amiably. I walked over to it quickly, staring down at it. It looked like a regular candle. I looked around. Nobody. Nothing. I licked my thumb and pinched the flame. It died. I sat down slowly on the stairs by the fount of Holy Water. I took a deep breath. “What do you want?” No answer. The flame flickered back to life. I was suddenly very cold. “Stop it.” I stood and pinched the flame again. The flame went out. “Stop playing games and answer me!” I set down the Bible and cupped my hands above the fount. “I'm going to drink the Holy Water.” I wasn't sure if it was a threat. I wasn't exactly sure why I told him. “What will happen if I do?” Silence. I stomped my foot angrily. “Answer me!” There was a strange sizzling sound under my hands, and I jumped back from the fount. The water was boiling away! “No!” I dove for the metal bowl but it was dry and slightly warm when I managed to touch it. Not a drop left. I shouldn't have said anything, dammit! I flopped down onto the steps and pressed the heels of my hands against my eyelids, resting my forehead on my knees. I had a headache, sudden and consuming. I could wait if I had to. I wondered if I should bother looking for a phone. He'd probably already cut the line. I bit back a sob. Not allowed. I wondered how long it would be before he wised up and sent a human in after me. Or would it be a matter of pride to flush me out on his own? I waited for something to happen. Anything. “You're a really sick fuck,” I said under my breath. I knew he'd hear it. That got him talking. I had hoped it would. “Such a mouth my dear. I'm not very -aaargh!” His words bit off into a roar of pain. I jumped to my feet. I grabbed the Bible. It wouldn't be a great weapon, but it was heavy and throw-able. Bernard Behren's welcome voice rang out, “It's safe! He's gone!” I rushed to the door. I was almost outside before I remembered that I should probably be careful. “Mr. Helsing…?” I said tentatively. “Over here!” he called from somewhere to the right. “He managed to take a swing at me. I need your help. I’ve thrown out my back again.” I bit my lip. I peeked my head around the frame. “Mr. Helsing? Are you okay? How did you know I was here?” Strong hands grabbed the collar of my olive shirt and I was yanked out of the doorway, onto the step. Aw, fuck! Oldest trick in the book. Even Captain Hook had figured it out when Peter had done it. Dammit. Long fingers wrapped around my throat and I found myself staring evenly into the golden eyes of Dracula. This was a bit of a problem, as he was at least two heads taller than me. My toes dangled above the stone steps. “Predictable,” he said softly. “And you had seemed so clever up until now.” I kicked at him feebly. I had the pleasure of bashing the spine of the Bible into his nose, breaking it again, hearing him howl, before the lack of oxygen tumbled me into waves of sickening blackness. Book One: Dracula: The Series Chapter Two: "Darkness" My own coughing woke me up. I laid a hand over my throat. I swallowed and the inside felt like it was raw and burning. The outside felt tender and aching. I fought back a mewl of pain. I knew there would be a bruise. I also knew that it would be in the shape of an adult male's hand. I sat up slowly, my head spinning, eyes wide to try to suck in any light I could. The room was pitch black. The only indication of colour came from set of thick curtains. Golden sun streamed through the cracks at the bottom and in the middle. The fabric was lightened. I think it was brown. Or red. The silhouette of a man was a dark shape against the curtains. Three guesses at who it was. I couldn't tell if he was looking at me or not. I'd bet even money that he was. It was unnerving, so I decided to figure out where I was instead. It was a room. It was very dark. There was one window; he was standing in front of it. From the slant of the sunlight, I'd guess it was the late afternoon, close to sunset. I was lying on a bed - soft, clean-smelling, lots of pillows. I was warm, still in my own clothing. My shoes were missing. My guess was a well-appointed room in his castle. It made me shiver. I really don't like the idea of the Bad Guys and me in a bedroom together. Alone... as far as I could tell. God, I hoped we were alone. I'm not big on the whole 'gang bang' idea either. “You're still a sick fuck,” I said softly, facing the window. He chuckled softly under his breath, and the silhouette took a step closer. “And you're still a brazen young lady.” “Don't come near me,” I warned, groping along the cover (was that real brocade?) for something to throw. I found the bedside table and closed my fingers around a heavy, hard-cover book. He chuckled again, and the sound gave me something to aim at. He yelped as the book glanced off the side of his head and I could see his shadow move as he raised his hand to the new bruise. “Why do you insist on throwing books at me?!” he snarled, and two dots of gold appeared in the shadow. His eyes were glowing. I flicked my eyes to the curtains - they were no longer backlit. The sun had set. The light from his eyes cast sharp angles of shadow on the planes of his face, and he looked pissed. The glare of the sun receded from the window, and the shadows finally softened in the twilight. I could just barely make out his face. He was smiling. But he looked hungry. “Why do you insist on trying to hurt me when you know I will throw books at you?” I snipped back, sounding far more confident than I felt. He snarled and I felt the bed sink and sway. I crab-walked backwards until I hit the headboard. I could only see the feral glow of his eyes, but they were coming closer, skimming towards me over the bed. Christ, he was crawling. I pulled myself into a ball and clamped my arms around my neck, hiding my face in my knees, in an effort to protect the vulnerable stuff. I felt his long fingers prying at my arm and I went stiff. I could feel his thighs on either side of my legs, his other arm brushing my shoulder. He had me pinned to the headboard. He laughed softly and his breath whispered along my ear, hot and smelling of rotted meat. Old blood. “I have never tried to harm you,” he said softly into my ear. I shied away from that side, and the movement gave his hand the leverage needed to pull my other arm away from my neck. He grabbed my forearm and slowly yanked it upwards and back, pinning my wrist against the wall. I couldn't fight him. He was moving slowly, deliberately, and I couldn't fight him. He switched his face to the other side of my neck, the side that was free now, and nuzzled. I could hear him snuffling against my skin like a dog, taking in scents. His tongue shot out and lapped briefly, then vanished. It appeared again, pressing down, searching for the pulse. He found it and nipped once, no fangs. Not a bite, but a reminder; a warning to be a Good Girl. I struggled briefly, but there was no point. “You shattered the glass. You tried to burn down the church. You almost strangled me to death!” “Just mind tricks.” His face was so close to my skin. I felt him smile. “I would not have done that if you had come out of the church when I had told you to.” “You tried to bite me,” I countered, feeling foolish. “I would not have hurt you. I was merely searching for information. It would have felt good.” I shook my head minutely. He nipped again and I quashed the urge to scream and struggle. “You are going to hurt me.” I felt him sigh against my skin and it caused goosebumps to rise. “That was a nasty trick I played on you. My apologies. I have gone about this all the wrong way - we are enemies and I do not intend us to be. I really am an amiable man, once you get to know me.” I felt him sit back. Suddenly the lights sprang to life. It hurt my eyes briefly and I blinked a lot. He was sitting on the foot of the bed, blazer missing, shirt sleeves rolled up, tie missing. The picture of the concerned gentleman. Riight. He had done all of that stuff in the dark on purpose. He was trying to terrify me. Throw my off balance by this abrupt change of attitude. It was working. I dove for the door. Screw my shoes, I could run away without them. It was, of course, locked. I yanked on the handle. It didn't even so much as rattle. “Let me go!” I whirled around to face him, intending to death-glare him, and found him right in front of me. “No,” he whispered softly. He lifted his arms, probably intending to grab mine and I ducked under them. He turned to face me. “I don't want to.” He took a step towards me. “And I always…” I took a step back. “Get what I…” He took another step. So did I. “Want.” I knew where this was going. I threw up my arms to keep the space between us and he grinned. His fangs were out - long, terrifying. I felt like prey again. I was prey. He grabbed my wrists and pulled my arms straight until my fingers were curled against his chest. What the hell was he doing? Alexander Lucard didn't seduce people. He took what he wanted and killed what he couldn't have. So why the kissy feely in the dark? Why this macabre tango? Why the subtle swing of his hips as he advanced on me, backing me, god help me, into the bed? One good shove and I would be on my back, he would be on top, and I'd be dead. Or would wish I was. “I'm not playing this stupid game with you,” I said softly, even as he did push me onto the bed. “Kill me or not. But don't lay on the charm.” He scowled for one brief second. “As you wish.” I felt myself being lifted bodily and slammed back into the center of the mattress. I yelped in pain. My wrists were still in his hands, and he was straddling my hips. I swallowed hard enough for it to hurt, and coughed again. “Who are you?” I smiled on one side of my mouth. “I almost liked you better when you were trying to seduce me.” He squeezed and something in my left wrist popped. I screamed. “It wasn't working. I only use methods that work. Now, who are you?” He was smiling as he said it. I think it was more of a show of teeth. “N-Nobody.” He snarled. “You realize that if you do not volunteer this information, I will hurt you. Possibly kill you. Then I will raise your corpse as a Zombie and command you to tell me.” That did give me pause. I closed my eyes. “Please… don't.” Yes, I was scared shitless. Wouldn't you be? He sat back slightly, some of the pressure on my wrists easing off. “Your name.” “…” He squeezed again. “Your REAL name.” “Marie!” “Hn. You've studied me in university?” “Yes.” “For what?” I shook my head. No, it was absurd. It was unreal. This wasn't happening. I expected a sound of exasperation from him. For him to brake my other wrist. I did not expect the gentle caress of his thumb on my throat. He gathered my hands in one of his and gently ran his knuckles along my neck. I was surprised, confused. Like he wanted. Suddenly he was pressing down. He was going to crush my windpipe! I coughed once, flailed my head desperately. I eased up only long enough to rear up and strike. His fangs tore into my flesh and I screamed again, bucking against his body, ineffectual. I felt him smile against my skin, the fangs horribly slick with blood. He pulled back just enough for me to be able to see him. A light splash of crimson on his upper lip made his smile even more sinister. "Tell me..." I whimpered, immobile on the bed. "No. Stop." He wiped his mouth, arched up over my prone form, bent down and whispered in my ear. "Tell me. I can make the pain stop." “I can't.” He pressed his fingers against the ragged tear in my throat. I cried out, red-hot pain lancing through the nerve endings in my neck. "Tell. Me." “You wouldn't believe me!” The tears had come and I couldn't stop them. It hurt so damn much. It hurt. “You'll think I'm lying!” He chuckled again, his breath wafting in my hair. His free hand came down and skimmed across my breasts, down to the waistband of my pants. “No, please no,” I sobbed, but it only seemed to encourage him. “I can hurt you in so many ways,” he whispered, scratching lightly. “I can make you beg to tell me.” “No.” His fingers clenched and I screamed again as his fingernails ripped into the soft flesh of my belly. He withdrew and deliberately wrapped his hand over my mouth. I felt my own blood against my lips. I tried to yank my head away, but his grip was like steel. I breathed hard through my nose against the back of his hand as he pushed my head to the side, stretching the wound open. “Enough,” he hissed. “If you will not co-operate, I will learn this way, instead.” He tore a new hole. I tried to fight him off, but he was too strong. He was sucking, his tongue thrusting into the wound to widen it. The length of his body was pressed against me, and he shoved one of his knees down between mine. He was stealing my life, one gulping mouthful at a time. This wasn't happening. Alexander Lucard isn't real. My heart pounded in my ear and a sudden flare of searing pain filled my chest. My brain was shocking my heart to keep it from stopping. I'd had heart palpitations before. They always hurt like a bitch because every nerve ending available screams so your heart is shocked into beating again. This was a hundred times worse. Bullshit he wasn't going to hurt me. God, it felt like rape. When he was certain that I was unable to scream in his ear anymore because I was too hurt, my neck was so much raw meat, and I didn't have the breath or energy to take in the necessary breath, his tongue probing the ever-widening wound, he skimmed his hand back down along my body and went to work on my fly. There's nothing more terrifying than the human imagination. This is why my nightmares are so bad. I never saw him rape me, if he did. I never watched as he stole the last of my blood and forced his own down my throat. I didn't even feel his sharp fingernails deftly shredding my two shirts. He killed me, and resurrected me, and I never even knew it. I blacked out. ===== For the second time that night, I woke myself coughing. This time the sound was wet and gurgling. Something was in my mouth. I swallowed heavily and something hot and bitter and thick burned a path to my stomach. I gagged, tried to sit up, and found my legs pinned. Alexander Lucard was sitting on my knees. His lips and chin were smeared with blood. One of his hands was also dripping red, blood under the fingernails. His shirt was missing, and there were thin rivers of red stuff making paths down his chest. His pants were undone, but not off. They were open and riding low on his hips. He could have pulled them back up. My own pants were open, and my thigh felt warm and sticky. I gagged and he put a hand over my mouth to stop me from vomiting. The weight of it pushed me back into the pillows. I could taste blood on my tongue, could see the gash above his right nipple. Oh, god. His expression didn't change, though, and that was the most terrifying of all. In the whole of the twenty-one episodes of “Dracula: the Series” I had seen, I'd never quite seen Lucard looking so… incredulous. His eyes were perfectly round, his mouth slightly open. He was staring at me. He looked dumbstruck. Finally he blinked, cleared his throat, and looked down at me. He sort of jumped. Had he known he was half smothering me? He lifted his hand away and I propped myself up on my elbows slowly. “You… were right,” he admitted slowly, his voice low and rasping. “I … don't believe it.” ===== I was sitting in one of the well-loved leather chairs by the fireplace in his sitting room. My fingers were flexing on the arms, and I was pressed back as far as I could go. I didn't want to be anywhere near him. He had dragged me here bodily when I refused to follow his command to get up and walk. He was sitting opposite in a matching chair. There was a small glass-topped table between our armrests. He was smiling gently, charming once more. He had his knees crossed and was nursing a glass of something red and expensive. It smelled like wine. It could have been blood. The stench of it had made my stomach roil. I had not picked up the glass he had poured for me. The burning on my face from the slaps, in my broken wrist, the punctures in my stomach and on my neck… all had vanished. I felt whole. I felt well. I felt better than I had in years. No knots in my back. No carpel tunnel. I didn't even need my glasses. That was good, considering I had no idea where they were. Back on the steps of the church, maybe? I felt terrified. I felt like I should have a headache, at least. Nope. Fine. All in one piece. Not breathing. I think the not breathing scared me the most. I was a Vampire now. Holy shit. He was smiling. I was waiting for him to say something. Anything. To accuse me of being a liar. To start asking me questions. To demand to know what the Hell it was he had seen in my head, in my blood. He just stared at me. It was damned unnerving. I avoided his eyes, looking around the familiar sitting room. Quite a few important things had happened in this room in the show. I wondered where the Van Gogh was portrait, Lucard's most treasured possession, was. Then I remembered that Gustav Helsing had put a torch to it. To my left was the fireplace, large and crackling with orange flames. Beside that, a door leading to what I assumed was the dining room. Behind him were four large loophole windows with expensive leadmullioned panes. A lone suit of armour inhabited the corner, held upright on a lonely wooden stand. The wall to my right was broken up by a jutting stone staircase that ran its length. At the top was another door, and below it, a third. The wall behind me held a fourth door that lead into a hallway. The floor was covered with red and brown rugs that couldn't have been anything but expensive. My eyes kept jumping back to the fireplace. I squinted. If I looked hard enough, would I see what was hiding behind the flames? It had been so long ago that I had seen that last episode, I hardly remembered it but… maybe… I forced my eyes away from the fireplace and back at him. He was still staring. “Say something,” I finally hissed. He blinked, and a sudden malicious look flitted across his eyes. I should have stayed quiet. “Geordie Johnson?” he asked, one eyebrow raised. “I was played by a … Canadian?” His lip curled in distaste. I sucked briefly on my lower lip. “I'm Canadian,” I said, so softly that I thought he may not have heard me. And what was wrong with being Canadian? He snorted. “And such a horribly campy show. I am not as incompetent as all that! Or is that just how you remembered it?” “It was supposed to be a comedy,” I said softly, not sure why I was trying to defend it. It was campy. He resumed studying me. I think he was angry. For all his speeches about being glad that 'Dracula' was a fun-house figure, as it made it easier for the real Dracula if people don't believe in him, I think he was genuinely pissed off by the portrayal. He snorted again and drained off the last of the wine. “And you've written papers on that show, I gather? That is why the stipulations of the spell thought…” he trailed off with a snarl. I waited him out. “I have no use for you.” I shrunk back in my seat, hands flexing on the arms of the chair. “…what?” “What you know has already passed. I have taken your knowledge of this embarrassing excuse for a television show, vague and needlessly academic as it is, and what you know ends at events which took place years ago.” I frowned, and for a moment a flare of anger replaced the terror and confusion I'd been wallowing in. “Wait a sec… you… you did this to me, and now you're just going to… to send me back?” One corner of his lip turned down slightly. “Send you back? Did I say I would send you back?” The flames of the hot anger were doused in a sudden crashing wave of freezing fear. I shrank into the chair, a small, frightened rabbit with a small, frightened voice. “You're going to kill me.” He smiled. This time, it held no charm. He set aside the empty wine glass and sat forward slightly. “I'm going to kill you.” He uncrossed his knees and set his feet firmly on the floor. He was wearing shiny dress shoes. I was still in stock feet and two ripped shirts. The fire beside me popped, a log shifting. I decided to take a gamble. In the last episode of the series, Klaus Helsing is sent through a vortex, a mystical portal into a sort of glowy blue Void thing, which is hidden behind Lucard's fireplace. I didn't know where it went, but I did know that Lucard was reluctant to enter it himself. I don't know if he saw my intention. I didn't bother to spring to my feet. I launched myself over the arm of the chair and dove headfirst into the fire, praying that the Vortex was there and open, that I wouldn’t crack my head on the hearth-stone and burn to death. A wash of cool blue light poured over me as I passed through the torturously hot flames and I was suddenly floating in airy silence. Prayers answered. I felt a tug on my ankle and looked down to see Lucard's hand reaching out of a coalesced section of whiter light, grasping at my pant leg. I could hear him shrieking in anger, but it was a muffled sound, as if I was wrapped in many layers of cotton. I kicked his hand away and the momentum launched me towards a different spinning white ball of coalesced light. I wondered briefly if this is how it felt to Floo, falling through random fireplaces. If it was, then J.K. Rowling was a sadistic bitch. My head was spinning, I couldn't get my bearings, and my stomach was still back in the chair by the fire. I could taste my pulse. I hit the light and threw up my arms in a futile attempt to block out its blinding brightness. The shouts and roars of an unseen crowd rose around me, the screaming whistle of the wind, and then a flat cracking sound, like a gun shot. I sucked in air, even though as one of the newly dead, I didn't need it. I meant to use it to scream with. I never got the chance. I was suddenly falling. I hit the ground with a bone-crunching, teeth rattling jar. I had to have broken at least one rib. I coughed and felt blood spatter my lips. Oh, perfect. I decided to lie where I was until the nausea passed. Or until I drowned in my own blood. You know, whichever came first. Book Two: Harry Potter Chapter Three: "Interrupted Game" I sat up slowly. The sounds had all faded. Everything was eerily still. I climbed to my feet, holding my side, and looked around. My ribs didn't hurt anymore. The pain had passed into a dull throbbing ache and the last whispers of the discomfort were easing away, even as I raised my hand to shade my eyes. If I ever need proof of my new-found Vampirism, it was that. I was standing in a field of some sort. The ground was smooth, even, the grass under my feet lush and well cared for, like the green of a golf tee. A hot sun shone above me and I blinked up at it. The sun? Shouldn't I be burning to death by now or something? No, the “Dracula: The Series” Vampires had the ability to walk around in the daylight. They didn't have their powers until after sunset. Then their eyes changed colours, fangs extended, they could shift shapes into a bat or a wolf, or command zombies. During the day they walked about, could eat real food (but had to regurgitate it later), and had reflections, when it suited them to. It hit me suddenly that I was dead. I was damned. I was a fucking Vampire. I leaned over and puked my guts out onto the nicely manicured lawn. It was all red. I reeled back away from the pool of crimson gore at my feet, trying not to think about what it was. I felt too perfect, too healthy to be well. My carpel tunnel wasn't making my wrists slightly numb for once. The knots in my back were gone. The dull ache in my foot and knee from the break a few years ago had vanished. I could see perfectly without my glasses. I didn't like it. It didn't feel like my body. That's it. I was someone else. With a perfect body. Someone inhuman, too perfect to be real. Something inhuman. My gorge rose again and I forced the feeling of nausea and the horrified panic away. Something whizzed by my head. I stood up quickly and wiped the back of my hand across my lips. I saw no birds which might have dive bombed me. What the hell? I looked around. To my left was a dark expanse of gloomy forest, about thirty paces away. To my right, a good five or six minutes' walk, was a rocky outcropping of a hill overlooking a shimmering calm lake. In the distance, I could see misty grey mountains. Where the Hell was I? Was this the Vortex that Klaus Helsing had stumbled into? He had come out human again. Was I human again already? No, I felt too… perfect, still. This was all so fucking frustrating! Where the hell was I? What was going on!? I just wanted to go home! I took a step towards the outcropping, thinking that maybe from there I could get some high ground. I could look around and try to recognize something or find a building or a plume of smoke or signs of human life, anything, and was struck with a wave of … something. It was as thick as a wall and it was a compulsion of some sort. It nagged at me. I was forgetting something. There was something I was supposed to do today, something important. An appointment, yes, that's what it was. Only… I didn't have any appointments. I was god-only-knows-where, dead, and wandering around in the sunshine like a friggin' moron. What the hell appointment could I have? The something buzzed my head again and I whipped around, trying to follow it. I couldn't see it! I closed my eyes and tried to listen carefully, see if I could hear the flap of wings. I heard a voice, faintly, nearby. It shouted something. There were other voices, but I couldn't make them out. I opened my eyes. Nobody. “I can hear you!” I called out. I paused, listening again. Nothing. “Show yourself, who ever you are! I've had it up to my eyeballs with this mind-fucking crap!” The sound of feet hitting the turf behind me made me whirl around. I found myself staring at a tall, pale man with a hooked nose and greasy black hair. He was dressed in wide, flapping black robes of some sort. He looked like a priest. He raised a thin wooden stick and pointed it at my nose. “I don't know how you got in here, Muggle,” he said and I took a stumbling step backwards. “But you are trespassing on private property. Stupefy!” There was a flash of red light, and then blackness. I was really getting sick of loosing consciousness. Really. ===== I was told later that I was indeed on private property. I had somehow ended up in a very private school in the North of Scotland. The Headmaster swept onto the pitch shortly after the impatient and suspicious priest-look-alike sent me sprawling in the grass with a flick of his wrist and an uttered word. The students were rounded up and sent back to the school to have some down time before lunch while the staff scoured the area for signs of other intruders. They found none. The Medical Wing of the school has its own private entrance, and it was there that they tried to bring me inside. An invisible barrier rose between be and my unconscious body and no matter how hard he pushed, the hook-nosed man carrying me could not get through it. Another Professor, a younger man who looked like an old one and had a proficient understanding of potentially dangerous creatures, was called to examine me. He was a guest that day, there to watch the game. I was not breathing, but I had a pulse - albeit a very faint and very slow one. He thought for a moment, then whispered in my ear: “Enter, Stranger, and welcome.” The invisible barrier vanished and I was brought inside and settled in a bed. The matronly nurse was sent away for the moment, and the headmaster, the priest, and the other professor held a brief counsel over my stunned body. “She is not breathing," the Headmaster said softly, "but she has a faint pulse. Tell me, Remus, what sort of Muggle appears out of thin air, cannot penetrate our spells and yet can hear us, does not breathe yet has a pulse, and cannot enter the school?" The one called Remus raised his eyes to the Headmaster's “I don't know how safe this is, sir.” The other one was standing there with his arms crossed across his chest, looking thoroughly unimpressed. The Headmaster smiled slightly. "We shall see when she awakens.” Remus shot a glance up. "Shall I awaken her, Headmaster?" The priest leant over me, the thin stick pointing at my face. “In this case, no matter how harsh, the most efficient means must be used, Headmaster.” The Headmaster thought about the obvious offer to torture for a brief moment. "I agree with the caution, Severus. But there is no need to be suspicious yet. Remus, if you'd come take this side of the bed?" Remus did, and they were now surrounding me. The Headmaster retrieved his own pointy stick from a pocket in his purple robes, and aimed at me. Softly, under his breath, he cast a charm. ===== “Ennervate!” I heard someone say in the darkness, and suddenly I was wide awake. Unsettling, to say the least. I was staring straight up at a gold-brown ceiling of ancient looking brick. And three faces. One enraged, and I recognized him as the man from the field. Another was concerned looking, and shrouded with white hair. The third looked wary and weary and scarred. I sat up slowly, rubbing my eyes. A headache was starting, but it faded just as quickly. I wondered if that was the Vampirism at work. “I am getting so sick of strange ceilings,” I said softly, under my breath. The greasy-haired man was immediately in my face, the stick pointed right between my eyes. “Don't move, Stranger. What are you doing here?” I crossed my eyes to look at his face, to really see him for the first time, and gasped. I knew him… I think. I shook my head, suppressing a groan. No, this wasn't happening. But I had said that about Lucard, hadn't I? And look what it had gotten me. Dead, that’s what. I sat up slowly and pulled the blankets of the bed up around my shoulders, partially for the false sense of security it provided, and partially to cover the bloody tears in my shirts. A second, kinder voice said to my other side: “For the love of Merlin, Severus - excuse me, miss, but … who are you?” I didn't answer. Instead, I took a good long look at 'Severus', then turned my eyes towards the second speaker. He was standing on the other side of the bed, wearing patched but warm looking brown robes and a gentle smile. His eyes looked tired but sparkling. “My name is Marie,” I offered slowly. “Who are you?” I made an obvious point of ignoring the other, rude man. The tawny-haired man smiled soothingly. “My name is Remus Lupin. I'm a guest here. And this--” he gestured at the older man in purple standing beside him, “is Professor Dumbledore, the Headmaster, Madame Pomfrey, the nurse, and Professor Snape, my… peer. “ Professor Snape grimaced. I stared at him for a moment, then allowed my eyes to rove over all of them. Involuntarily, I made a makes a sound somewhere between a yip of delight and a groan. Dumbledore exchanged a glance with Lupin and gestured for him to continue. Lupin cast a worried look at him, but went on: “Well, I am a guest today, and my colleges are staff here at Hogwarts, which is where you arrived - abruptly. This is a school, and while you're welcome here, you don't... ahem. Fit. But our first concern is your health.” He dug into his pocket for a piece of chocolate and proffered it. The sickly sweet smell made my stomach heave and I closed my eyes and turned my face away from it, not breathing on purpose. If I didn't inhale, I couldn't smell it. The mere scent of food made me want to hurl. I must have hit my head when I was stunned. Yes. That was it. I was concussed. It had nothing to do with... with that. “Thank you, no,” I said as politely as I could. “I don't take candy from strangers. And I know what Hogwarts is.” Snape made an angry sound and the wand by my face moved a few millimetres closer. I looked him in the eyes and added, “And if you don't get that goddamned wand out of my face, Snivellus, I'll snap it.” Snape's eyes widened in shock and anger. He was half-way through an immobilization spell before he was stopped by Lupin. I cowered back on the bed. “Order, please!” Lupin cried as he wrestled unseemingly with Professor Snape over the end of my bed. He succeeded on throwing the other man off, and turned to look at me, a faint smile on his lips as he smoothed out his robes. “I wouldn't be quick to anger Professor Snape, as he's got quite the volatile temper.” Snape glared at Lupin, then lowered his wand, but didn't put it away. I bet he was just itching to use it on me. Lupin cleared his throat and quickly changed the subject. “Did you say you know what Hogwarts is?” The headache was threatening to return, and I ducked my head and rubbed my temples with my fingers. “I'm sorry, Professor Snape,” I said slowly, eyes aimed at my lap. “I shouldn't have said that. It was out of place.” And, not because it was an excuse, but because I felt like adding it, “I've had a ...trying two days.” Snape crossed his arms, still mightily displeased. “Your actions are still inexcusable-” “So!” Lupin said quickly, and a bit too loudly. Dumbledore almost looked as if he was trying not to smile. “Would you like to tell us how you came to be here, Ms...? “Just Marie is fine,” I said. No need to give away my whole name. “I...” I paused and shrugged, knowing how ridiculous I was about to sound. “I jumped into a fire.” Snape snorted. Lupin raised his eyebrows. “In your situation, that was not the wisest of decisions.” I laughed gently, amused by his perplexed state, and smiled for the first time in over twenty-four hours. It felt longer than that, like I hadn't smiled in years. It felt damn good. “It was that or be ripped into little pieces by Count Dracula. He is a scary, scary bastard who wouldn't think twice about tearing someone apart, physically or mentally. I shudder to think of what would happen to anyone who deliberately crossed him. I gambled that he still kept an interreality vortex behind his fireplace, and won the gamble.” Dumbledore's face scrunched in confusion. “Inter-reality?” I turned and looked at him for the first time, really looked at him, and was awe-struck. There was a lively energy to the man unlike I'd ever felt in anyone before. His eyes truly were twinkling. He exuded an aura of… fatherliness. Of whimsy and safety all at once. “Are you really Albus Dumbledore?” I was whispering and I didn't care. Slightly shocked by the genuine awe in my voice, he nodded slowly. A sudden rush of relief poured over me. “Oh, thank God.” I was at Hogwarts, and Albus Dumbledore was here. The only Wizard Voldemort had ever feared. I was safe. If Voldemort couldn't get to anyone here, Dracula sure wouldn't be able to. Lupin seemed even more confused by my relief, and Snape even more annoyed. “Excuse me, Miss, but - how do you know about us again?” Lupin asked in that perfect gentlemanly manner he had. He was trying very hard to be non-threatening. He was also as relentless at his questions as a dog worrying at a bone… or a wolf, for that matter. Snape added bitterly, “And if you don't mind, a straight answer would be a pleasant surprise.” I spared a moment to glare at him. I was not one of his potions students. He had no right to try to brow-beat me into guilt. Of course, I had called him 'Snivellus.' I suppose I did feel slightly guilty for that. “If I told you that you wouldn't believe me, you promise you won't try to rip out my throat? I've already had that happen today, and it's getting a bit old.” Lupin smiled, warm and promising protection and comfort. “I can guarantee you nobody in this room will try to rip out your throat. Wait, no - Severus, if you would leave the room?” I couldn't help it. I laughed. That's what Remus had been aiming for - lightening the mood. Snape raised his eyebrows, hooked nose wrinkling with distaste. “Very funny, Lupin, but in your case--” I waved him to silence and got my giggles under control. They were threatening to boarder on hysterics and I clamped down on them. It was no good going to pieces now. The scary stuff was over, right? Ri-ight. “No, no, I know we can trust him.” “Do you, now?” he said, in a perfect imitation of the Alan Rickman drawl. Or was it Mr. Rickman who was imitating Severus Snape? No, can't think about that. Thoughts like that could drive a girl crazy. Heh. In answer to Snape's question, I looked pointedly at his left forearm. Right about where the Dark Mark should be. He narrowed his eyes and crossed his arms, staring down at me menacingly. “You can tell me directly or suffer the consequences.” Lupin made a dismissive gesture. “I think we'd rather just hear the story, Severus.” I smiled sweetly, never taking my eyes off the annoyed Potions Master. He would be a fun one to bait. Oh, yes. And he couldn't take points off me. “Fine. I am from an alternate reality where you are all a characters in a children's novel series.” Dumbledore's eyebrows shot into his hairline. Remus made a funny dog-like sound deep in his chest. Madam Pomfrey was pointedly ignoring the conversation like a good nurse. Snape laughed. Actually laughed, and it made me shiver. It was not a pleasant laugh. “Headmaster, we are wasting our time here. I say we obliviate the girl, and send her back to whatever godforsaken land she came from.” I scowled at him. Lupin shook his head. “Marie, you should know that makes no sense.” “Oh, no?” I challenged, suddenly feeling like I was on the defensive. Maybe I was. “Ask me anything, then. Anything about you. I could tell you almost anything. I know about The-Boy-Who-Lived. I know who was under Quirrel's turban. I know about Baby Norbert. I know what's on your arm,” I pointed at Severus and he sneered, “and I know who wrote the Marauder's Map.” Lupin shifted uncomfortably at the mention of the map, and tried to hide it. I made a point of looking all four of the adults in the eye. “It's all in the books.” Dumbledore was stroking his beard, watching me closely. The twinkle had faded in his eyes, but not gone out completely. I took it as a good sign. “Is this… true? There are... books about ... Hogwarts?” I nodded slowly. “But not here. They're not available here. Riddle won't get a hold of any of them.” Dumbledore blanched at Voldemort's real name, and I cussed at myself inwardly. Sure, great way to make them trust you. Lupin looked away quickly, trying to gauge the Headmaster's reaction. His hands were in his pockets and his face carefully neutral. “I believe we should give the girl some rest - she's obviously had a trying day.” Lupin said softly. “And then,” Snape added, acid on his tongue, “I suggest we check our fireplaces.” I shook my head. “I've had the rest I want, Thank you. And I didn't come out of your fireplace. I went thru his vortex and showed up on your Quidditch pitch.... probably because I was thinking about flooing.” I shrugged again. “I won't tell anyone, I promise. Not even that dunderhead Fudge. The only place to access any of this information is right here.” I tapped the side of my head to emphasize my point. “And I would rather die than...” I trailed off. Oh, my god. Oh, my God. And then it hit me. It hit me. I was dead. There was a silence, horrified, and Snape stared at me for an uncomfortably long period of time. I hardly noticed. I slowly covered my face with my hands, breathing heavily but not crying. I was shuddering with terror, with residual shock. The reality of the situation was hitting home and I was struggling to shove it away. I didn't want to know. I didn't. It wasn't real. “Miss?” Lupin asked quietly, concerned. I shook my head. “No, no I... this isn't happening. This isn't real.” Snape made an unimpressed clicking sound with his tongue and looked away. Suddenly, I hated him. I really, really hated him. “I am not talking to you,” I continued to tell myself. “You are not real. You are in a book. I am not... I am in a cafe, drinking coffee, and reading Critical Literary Theory. I am not... dead...” “Of course you're not,” Lupin said, and set a kind hand down on my shoulder. He leaned in to speak to me soothingly. “Technically.” He coughed gently, slightly uncomfortable. Dumbledore suddenly said, “Severus. Let's us give Miss Marie some time to sort out her thoughts. Professor Lupin, would you mind terribly remaining here with her? She's had a bad shock and I'm sure she wouldn't mind talking to a handsome young man like yourself.” I knew what he really meant. The vampire girl is nutters, let's leave her alone until she calms down, but we'll keep the werewolf here to make sure she doesn't hurt anyone or herself. Good to know he cared. Ri-ight. “I'll send a house elf in with supper for you both soon,” the Headmaster promised as he closed the heavy door behind him. Madam Pomfrey removed herself discreetly to her office. Snape sneered and swept out of the room. And Lupin and I were left alone for a little monster-to-monster talk. Book Two: Harry Potter Chapter Four: "Secrets" As soon as Snape and Dumbledore were out the door, Remus turned to the bedside table and clutched it, coughing heavily. He'd obviously been trying to hold it in. “Are you okay?” I asked gently, raising my hands to keep him from tumbling over if he couldn't keep his balance. I didn't touch him, but I was ready, just in case. Instinct made me want to thump his back. “It's not close to a full moon here, is it?” Lupin looked up sharply, the last cough dying in his chest. “I don't know how exactly you get your information, miss, but I would greatly appreciate you not mentioning that so obviously, when you don't know who's around.” I jerked my hands back, as if he'd thrown hot water at them. I looked down and away, ashamed. In my enthusiasm I had forgotten that his lycanthropy was supposed to be a secret. “... sorry.” Lupin shook his head slightly and turned to lean back against the night-stand. “I'm sorry. But you have to consider what a shock this is - to all of us. I'm a little on edge.” He smiled half-heartedly, trying to apologize without actually apologizing. “Yeah. Ditto.” Apology accepted. There was a slightly uncomfortable pause. “You can sit, if you want.” I gestured to the foot of the bed. It was empty, as I was now sitting up in the lotus position with the top blanket wrapped around myself. I had it over my shoulders and around my neck, more for protection than warmth. And shame - I didn't know if my shirts were still bloody, or my skin livid with suck-marks or teeth punctures. The thought of a mark left on my skin made me feel dirty. He hesitated, unsure of whether he wanted to take the invitation or not. I was still a strange person who knew entirely too much about things I shouldn’t. To try to get him to feel at ease, I added: “I know Madam Pomfrey well enough to guess that she'll make us be quiet, try to shoo you out, try to make me eat chocolate, and try to make me sleep. I don't want to sleep.” The thought of sleep - and the inevitable nightmares - suddenly made me feel horrible and filthy. I looked away. I wanted a shower. I couldn't meet his eyes. “I don't really want to sleep ever again. I'd rather... talk.” “Alright.” Lupin sat himself delicately on the edge of the foot of the bed, hands folded in his lap. I think he was grateful to be sitting, because he sagged slightly, relaxing. But not too much. I was still an unknown quantity. He couldn't afford to relax just yet. “Would you mind if I asked you a few questions?” “No,” I said quickly. “I mean, sorry - no, go ahead.” He nodded, the gentle smile returning for a brief instant. “We'll start simply. How old are you, Marie?” “Twenty-two.” Lupin looked mildly surprised. “Twenty-two years in total, or in life only?” Ah. Right. “In total... You... know what I am?” The smile broke through his weariness like the sun through clouds. “We couldn't get you through the door. I had to invite you.” I felt the colour drain from my face, lips twisting and quivering for a moment before I could compose myself. I took a deep breath and wiped casually at my eyes, trying to make it look like I wasn't about to cry. I had to be invited. Obviously, my acting needed improvement. He reached out, concerned, and touched my shoulder gently. I had to fight not to flinch. “Miss Marie…? Nobody knows but the four of us.” I nodded slowly, appreciating his concern. But that wasn't what I was worried about. People knowing didn't bother me. The truth of it bothered me. He ventured another morale boosting phrase: “I'll trust you with my secret if you'll trust me with yours.” I nodded again, my eyes on my knees beneath the blankets. I still had no shoes. I don't know why that bothered me. Of all the things, the fucker had taken my shoes. It was like he had tried to prevent me from running away. It was more subtle then, oh, say, tying me up, but it was effective. No one wanted to run down the street or through a forest in nothing but socks. People always hesitated when they had no shoes. For a vampire, that hesitation, the moment of indecision, would be as good as waving a neon banner over your head and screaming, 'Here I am! I bet I'm tasty!' It nagged at me, made me slightly angry. I fixated on my shoes. Or lack of them. Better than thinking of other things that were wrong, right? “I...” I began slowly, the words having trouble getting around the lump in my throat. If I said what I wanted to, then I would be admitting the truth of it. I didn't want it to be true. “I… have been what I...” I swallowed hard enough for it to hurt. “ ... what I am... for maybe ten hours. Maybe less. “Ten hours? Oh, dear.” I nodded again. “Marie - how did this happen?” I shrugged, appearing a lot more nonchalant than I felt. I wasn't feeling much of anything, actually. Numb was a nice place to be. “I don't know. I was sipping coffee, trying not to fall asleep over my Literary Theory text book and then I was... somewhere else. A warehouse. And then ... there was a vampire there. Alexander Lucard. I don't know how I got there, or why, I ran. I ran into a church and he... he...” I shook my head. I don't know what I was denying, the truth of it, or the outcome of the situation? My hands clenched the blanket tight. “He was a fictional character, too. I used to watch 'Dracula: The Series' when I was a kid, and... there I was, getting my neck chewed on by Lucard himself.” Lupin frowned. “Wait. Dracula? I'm sorry, but you're making very little sense.” I supposed I wasn't. “Yup. A. Lucard. Dracula backwards. You'd think the people on the show would figure it out, eh?” “So, who did this to you - Alexander, or this... 'Dracula?'” “Yes.” He didn't get it either. “I mean. Yes to both. He's the same. Just... Lucard is what he called himself in the early 1990s. In that TV show. Here...” I shrugged. “The vampires are different here. He said he was going to kill me. I mean, kill me, kill me. The spell was wrong, the one that brought me to him. It wasn't supposed to be me. And I remembered the vortex from the last episode, and I took a nose-dive.” I sighed heavily and rubbed my palms over my face, scrubbing away the frustration. “And now I'm in a different fictional world talking to a different fictional character...” I paused and took a good long look at him. He looked very very perplexed. “You don't look much like Daniel Thewlis. He was too... old.” Lupin was slightly taken aback. I didn't blame him one bit. I would be too. “Pardon?” I laughed slightly, wondering how obvious it was that I was trying desperately to change the topic of conversation. “In the movie. They did a movie version of the third book and Daniel Thewlis played Professor Remus J. Lupin.” Lupin stared at me for a long time with honey-coloured eyes. It was eerie. “...I see.” was all he finally said, making it obvious that he didn't see at all. “It was okay casting,” I offered, wanting to keep the conversation rolling. The silences were awkward, and they gave me time to think. I didn't want to have time to think. “I liked most of the casting. The Dumbledore wasn't carefree enough, though. But Madam Pomfrey and Professor Trelawney were perfect. Snape looks just like Alan Rickman. God, even sounds right. Gave me shivers up my spine. Until I imagined him as Metatron with his pants around his ankles.” Lupin didn't take the bait. Honestly, if it had been me, I would have asked about Snape and no pants. Instead he very eloquently bypassed the topic entirely and said, “If I may ask - exactly how much do you know about me? About us?” For the first time I offered him a serious answer. Something in his voice said 'no more mucking around.' The glibness was just masking my pain, and furthering his confusion. “There are seven books. Five fiction books and two guide books. I've read all of them, and more than once. And seen all three of the movies more than once too. They're filming the fourth movie now, and the sixth book is due out this summer. Though if you said you're a guest here, I have a guess that I'm in the sixth book.” “I see,” he said again, and again not seeing. He pinched the bridge of his nose, warding off a headache. It was a lot to take in, I know. And seven books is a lot. “I'm sorry,” I suddenly said, and meant it. “This must be damned inconvenient for you.” He chuckled slightly. “Inconvenient. No, I'm interested, frankly.” “If it would make you feel better, you're not the main character,” I blurted. He turned an interested eye my way, and abruptly I regretted saying it. I would have to tell him. And he would know that I knew much more than I was letting on. But just telling him the names of the books, it would be obvious what they were about, where my knowledge was centered. I could be in danger. What if they did try to obliviate me? I would be stuck in this world forever with no memory of who I was, where I was really from. No friends, no family, no money, nothing. Just a fucked up Muggle alone in a world that hated Muggles. “Who is the main character, then?” I hesitated. Suddenly, I didn't want to tell him. Suddenly I knew how dangerous this whole situation was - for Remus, for Harry, for me, for everyone who would ever try to stand between Voldemort and Harry… or if Voldemort ever found out about me, Voldemort and me. I could be come a target, and fast, if I didn't start cutting the babble down. Or worse, I could say something that could get Harry or any of the other members of the Order of the Phoenix killed. But if I didn't, and it came out eventually… I thought about all the good I could do, too. The way I could help. It was dangerous, but to help fight against a psycho like Voldemort, I think I was willing to take the risk. I took a deep breath and let it out again. “... Harry.” All the blood drained immediately from Remus' face. I decided to press on, regardless. “Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone,” I said softly, almost a whisper. I counted off on my fingers. “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Harry Potter and the P-Priz...Prisoner of Azkaban.” I didn't stumble over the name. Not because of Sirius. Nope. I'm the Queen of De Nile, sometimes. “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Harry Potter and the ...ermm…” I lowered my voice even more. “Order of the Phoenix. And the Guide to Fantastical Beasts and Quidditch Through the Ages.” Lupin narrowed his eyes, staring off into space. “You realize,” he said slowly, “if this were ever to become public knowledge…” “I know.” “The consequences would be dire.” “I swear, I swear, I won't tell anybody,” I said softly. “I'll kill myself before Voldemo-- He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named ever finds out.” “Also,” he added, chagrin crossing his face, “I believe your discretion would be appreciated. There are those of us who have far too many skeletons in our closet.” Ouch. Well, I deserved it. “I was stupid. I won't mention the moon or Snivellus or ... the ...um... OoP anymore. I'm sorry. But... can I ask...” I paused. Could I really say it out loud? “... is ... is Sirius really...?” Lupin blinked, staring with surprise and horror at my face. Then he looked away, into the shadows cast on the far wall, at nothing really. He remained quiet for a few minutes. That was all the answer I needed. “I'm so, so sorry.” I reached out and placed one hand over his. “... I cried, too.” It seemed a simple, silly thing to say, but it was the best I could come up with. Maybe he needed to hear it. Maybe I needed to say it. Lupin bowed his head. He lifted his fingers and twined them around mine, accepting the hand holding as a form of sympathy. “He was a… a wonderful person. I--” I squeezed once, suddenly sorry I'd brought it up. “I know.” An awkward and melancholy silence descended on the hospital room. In a very quiet voice I added, “He was innocent.” Remus looked at me from under tear-dotted lashes. “You… you know?” I smiled. “The whole world knows. Everyone who's ever heard of Sirius Black knows he's innocent.” Remus smiled. “I… suppose that's something, then.” I thought about Sirius, and the day I'd read that chapter. It had never really hit me then, that Sirius Black was gone. Maybe not dead, but definitely gone. I had never really thought about where the Veil lead before, but if Lucard's Vortex had led to the Harry Potter-verse, then would the Veil lead to…? We both jumped when a sudden popping sound rang out in the vaulted room, and a house elf with socks on and way too many knit caps appeared carrying a tray of food covered by a silver bell dome. I shrieked and tried to scramble backwards up the wall. Damn gravity, anyway. The Elf dropped the tray and clamped his hands over his huge ears. Lupin dove and caught the tray before it hit the floor. He bowed quickly and Lupin shushed both of us. “H-Headmaster said that Miss and Professor Lupin might be hungry?” Lupin thanked him and set the tray on the empty bed opposite. “We are, Dobby, thank you very much,” he said briskly. “Dobby?” I repeated. Dobby paused. “Does Miss …know Dobby?” I couldn't help but smile at his uncertainty. Lupin was watching us carefully. I had promised him not to say anything else that could be dangerous, but I'm sure he was still fascinated that I knew so much about his life. “Miss does. I think you're wonderful, Dobby. Nice socks.” Dobby returned my grin and 'poofed' out of existence. The smile on my face remained pasted on, looking increasingly fake. “ ... was that really a really real house elf?” Lupin grinned cheekily. “I thought you'd read the books.” “Yes,” I dared a feeble backhanded swat at his arm. “But I've never seen a House Elf before.” “For really real.” His smile faded slightly, gentle still, though looking far-off. In the silence the dark thoughts came again. Am I really here? What am I? What did he do to me? Am I dirty now? Am I dead? Will I ever get home? And I shivered once, all over. Let's change the subject, now! “What's on the menu?” Lupin sat down on the bed opposite and lifted the silver cover on the tray. The wafting scent of French onion soup, filled the air, and I saw a few cold cuts and a baguette. “And for you...” he said softly, “Mm. Are you against cow?” I felt the blood drain from my face immediately. My stomach twisted and the universe swirled. He misinterpreted the sudden horrified paleness. “I could… donate,” he said softly. “If you need. If you prefer. It wouldn't be the first time.” I covered my mouth with a palm shook my head. I could smell it. It was tantalizing, steaming in a white bowl on the side of the tray. I could smell it and it made my veins burn. I wondered if this is what hunger would feel like from here on. I wanted it and that made me sick. I felt nauseated because I knew that I wanted to drink blood. Lupin studied my face carefully. “...this wouldn't be your first time feeding, would it?” I squeezed my eyes shut. I didn't want to see it. Seeing it made me want it. Very firmly I said, “I am not a Vampire.” God, I wanted it to be true. How I wanted it to be true, if only it could erase… He reached out slowly, probably to keep from startling me, and tilted my chin up to meet his eyes. “Shall I check for you?” I didn't want to be touched, but I didn't back away. “What do you mean?” He rubbed the pad of his thumb over the line of my jaw. I doubt he was aware of doing it. “I highly doubt our barriers were malfunctioning, but a look at your incisors would give it away. Or perhaps, there is a scar? That sometimes happens here.” I jerked away from him. “No.” He pulled his hands away and folded them in his lap. Very softly he said, “Alright.” He let that hang for a moment, then added, “But eventually, you'll have to eat.” I shook my head. No, I didn't. I would never drink blood. Never. I would never let Lucard do that to me; force me into that. “No.” I let my eyes wander to the blood. Then at the wall. Very, very still and calmly, I felt the tears fall down my cheeks. I ignored them. If I acknowledged them I would have to admit that they were a terrifying and vibrant bloody red. He risked me yelling at him again and wiped the tears away with a kind knuckle. “It's never easy. But at some point, we must embrace the beast in each of us - some more literally than others, hm?” One side of his mouth quirked up at his joke. I sniffled and choked on a chuckle. I coughed once. “... yeah.” I let myself look at the blood again. Did it look appetizing? Yes. Did I want to drink it? ... no. The body was willing, but the mind was revolting. “I'm not hungry.” I wasn't sure if it was a lie or not. Another round of light coughing wracked Lupin's frame. When it was over he spat discreetly into a handkerchief and tucked it back into his pocket. I could smell the blood on it, too. I wanted to ask him if he was okay. If he needed anything. He had asked me to be discreet, so I didn't. There was another uncomfortable silence. “Well... this is ....” I began slowly. “Awkward?” he finished, licking his lips free of anything else that might have come up. “Well. Do you have any questions?” I jumped on the topic change. “How did James Potter finally get Lily to date him?” Lupin threw back his head and laughed freely. “I'm not quite certain, but I know it involved swallowing a lot of blood and pride. All I know is that when he was out of the infirmary, they were... Close.” “She break his nose? Oh, tell me she broke his nose. I would win ten dollars.” Lupin cocked his head and looked at me out of the side of his eyes. He looked at me oddly. “What?” I asked. “It is curious, knowing that people know so much about us.” I let that slide. I sat, staring at his food for a bit. “You gonna eat?” I ignored my hands. They were shivering slightly. The bugger noticed. “Dear, you'll have to eat soon, or you'll faint. Shock does not go hand in hand with malnourishment.” “No, I don't. I'm fine.” He eyed me incredulously. “I doubt that.” I fisted my hands in the sheets. “I'm fine,” I said, maybe a bit too loudly. Very calmly he said, “Marie.” He pulled back his arm and rolled up his robe sleeves slightly, exposing the vein to my gaze. “You'll have to face this eventually.” I shook my head. “I'm not a Vampire. It was a nightmare. He... he strangled me and I... I woke up. And nothing in between happened. Nothing happened.” God, I sounded like a bad Mary Sue. But I couldn't help it. “Then you won't mind showing me your throat? If that makes you uncomfortable, I could call Madame Pomfrey, but I daresay I'd make less of a scene.” He leaned towards me, hand up to pull at the blanket. I recoiled. “No.” He rolled his eyes. “Miss Marie, don't you think I should check? These theatrics have gone on long enough.” “Theatrics?! I… I…” I was flabbergasted. “I am not one of your students, Mr. Lupin. You can't tell me to… to just…!” He grabbed my jaw. I tried to pull back but the wolf in him lent him strength. He dug his fingers into the hinge of my jaw and forced my lips back. I snarled at him for a moment, then stopped. I went limp. It was inevitable. He lets his hands drop in his lap and sighed softly. “ ... I'm sorry.” “It's not real,” I said softly. “It's not possible. It's not real because if it's real then everything else he...” I took a hiccupping breath, covering my face with my hands. “... he did... was ... real...” “... Marie?” he said gently, making my name a question. He laid a gentle hand on my knee and I let him. He didn't mean any harm. “Is there something else we should know about?” I shook my head slowly, stiffly. “Ask me more questions. Different questions. I want to talk. Or ... you should eat. Your soup's getting cold.” “I've never been one for French Onion, and I shouldn't eat this soon before my appointment anyways.” “Appointment?” “With Professor Snape. You're changing the subject.” “I am not. What appointment?” he looked at me pointedly from under those tawny bangs. “Could I…” I shivered again. “Could I have a shower?” Professor Lupin looked at me. “Yes, I don't think that will be a problem. Can you wait until the students are finished their lunch?” I nodded slowly. We passed the rest of the afternoon in amiable, nothing, waffy talk. He did not pressure me about feeding; I didn't press him about his appointment with Snape. He knew, I know he knew, about the other things. Things I wanted to forget but couldn’t remember. We both knew the other was paddling just upstream of the River De Nile. Book Two: Harry Potter Chapter Five: “Victim” The shower was hot. I tried to burn my skin off. I know that's the sign of a rape victim: someone trying to burn the filth away. I was burning, but… was I … had I been…? I wasn't sure. Had he raped me? Or was I over-reacting? Even if he hadn't touched me sexually, he had kidnapped me. Scared the hell out of me. Murdered me. I felt disgusting. I felt violated. I felt worse than a rape victim. I was a homicide victim. I had been murdered. I should have been a corpse. I should have been a rotting hunk of meat and bone, splayed out on the ground, with a chalk outline passing by my eyes and a yellow police tape flapping in the wind around me like some sort of twisted mourning banner. My pale, bloodless face should be turning alternately red and blue in the light of the cop cars. Instead I was walking, talking… standing here having a shower. I was thinking. I doubled over onto my hands and knees in the water, choking on bile. I couldn't help it, and vomited again. It was reddish, but mostly clear. Whatever I'd had in my stomach that had been red when I had first been sick on the Quidditch Pitch had been absorbed into my body. All that came up now was the thin bitter fluid of the stomach. I let the spray wash it away and curled up in the corner, folding my legs in front of me and wrapping my arms around myself. I rest my forehead on my knees and told myself that the tears were from the force of the puking, not because I was crying. I wasn't crying. Couldn’t be crying because that would mean I had been hurt, and I wasn’t hurt because he hadn’t done anything. But of course he had. I reached up and turned the hot-water handle, opening it up. The water grew instantly scalding and closed my eyes. I would burn away the dirt. I would burn away his touch. I didn't care if I had to take a layer of skin with it. Maybe it would kill me. I would be dead like I was supposed to be. That sounded nice. I didn't feel violated about being killed so much as I felt violated for being alive. He had taken my life, yes, but then he had given me a new one. I didn't want a new one. I would have been content dead, I thought. I could rest. I wouldn't be staring at Remus J. Lupin's veins in his wrist and licking my lips. I wouldn't be imagining over and over what Lucard could have done with my prone body. I screamed. Before I could help myself I heard the scream ripping out of my throat, echoing off the tile in the student washroom. I was in the last of a line of showers with privacy curtains. I clamped my hands over my mouth and the screaming stopped. I heard someone throw open the door, feet banging along the walkway. Someone threw back the privacy curtain and hissed as the hot water touched their skin. A hand reached around the water carefully and turned the whole shower off. A cold breeze suddenly hit my skin and I shivered. I kept my eyes closed and did not look up. The person sloshed into the water at the bottom of the shower and sat down quickly right beside me. Strong arms wrapped around my shoulders and I was pulled into a comforting embrace. I stiffened, trying to push the person away, but I didn't want to hurt them so I didn't push very hard. “It's okay, it's okay, it's over…” a man's voice said soothingly. One hand was running over my head, through my hair, petting. It was soothing, and his words made something inside of me break. I buried my face in his chest and let myself cry. A few minutes (a few hours?) later I ran out of tears. I was dry sobbing and eventually was too sore to continue even that. I looked up into the face of the man who held me and found a very damp, very mussed Remus Lupin smiling gently back. I was glad it was him. I don't know what I'd do if I'd found myself crying undignified-ly in the arms of Snape. “Are you feeling better now?” he asked gently, and I nodded, sniffling. I tried to pull back away from him, but a sudden bout of dizziness swept over me and I swayed. I had to close my eyes. I felt rather than saw him frown. “Marie,” he said gently, his voice slightly coaxing “You can't delude yourself forever.” He leaned closer and whispered into my ear. “I have to drink the wolfsbane potion. You have to drink blood.” I shook my head weakly. “I am not a Vampire.” “You are. And you only hurt yourself by denying it.” “No.” He sighed. “Do you realize what will happen if you keep denying yourself? You will grow weaker. You won't be able to control yourself. You will either die a slow agonizing death, your body eating itself from the inside out, or you will attack one of the students and probably kill them.” I felt his hand running gently through my short, wet hair. “I can't let you hurt a student. You would force our hand.” I didn't open my eyes, but I shuddered once. “Force your ha-hand?” “I would have to kill you.” I shoved myself away from him, maybe harder than necessary. He sagged into the corner and I sprawled on the floor of the shower, all elbows and knees. I shook my head. “You're just like him.” He sat up and came towards me. “Marie…” “Don't you fucking touch me!” I shrieked. “You're just like him!” Lupin pulled himself to his feet and stared down at me. His hands were fisted at his sides. “Marie, I have no desire to harm you. But you must understand that you must take responsibility for your monster. If you continue to deny what you are, what he did to you, you will hurt yourself. Worse, you will hurt another person, and I cannot allow that. Not when all you have to do is accept.” I sat up slowly. “I …don't want to accept.” I sounded like a petulant child. “He… murdered me.” Remus knelt in front of me, slowly, carefully, as if afraid he'd scare me off. “He did a horrible thing to you, Marie. But you can't punish yourself because he hurt you. You didn't choose to have this done to you. If you continue to hurt yourself, then you've let him win. You've made yourself his victim.” I heard Lupin’s words, but I wasn’t listening. I squeezed my eyes shut and pressed the heels of my hands against the lids. My eyes burned from crying, and from unshed tears. In the darkness behind my eyes I saw him, my blood on his fingertips as he dug his nails into my stomach, the cut above his nipple, the crimson-stained grin and the golden predator eyes. He had stolen me. Then he had stolen my life. He had forced this new life on me and I didn't want it. I wanted to be myself again. “I want my life back.” I heard him kneel in the shallow water beside me. “I can't give you that. Not even here can we give you that. There are no spells to reverse Vampirism. None that anybody but the Darkest of Wizards knows.” God help me, I could smell Lupin. He smelled like warm spice and leather-bound books, ink and parchment and pine trees at night, and the orange he must have had with lunch and the foul wolfsbane potion on his breath, covered only slightly by peppermint, and under that something warm and tantalizing and thick, pulsing, pulsing, glowing in my brain, hot and absolutely perfect, absolutely necessary— “Yes, that's it,” I heard him whisper and I jerked back, my eyes flashing open. I realized that I had been reaching for him. My lips were slack, partially open. Lupin had his arm extended towards me, the cuff of his sleeve rolled back. I could see the veins on his skin, perfectly, as if they had been painted on. “No,” I said. “Marie, please.” I closed my eyes. I shook my head. Nausea, dizziness swept over me. I had to put my hand out against the wall to steady myself. My skin itched. My stomach clenched in hunger, but so did every vein in my body. The pain wrung a pathetic, whimpering half-scream from my lips. The smell of blood was suddenly thick in the air, spilling into existence. It touched my nose and my stomach, my whole body, writhed in agony. Feed the monster! something inside of me screamed, something that sounded like Geordie Johnson but eviller. Do it or you'll hurt yourself. You'll attack someone. He offers himself freely. Take him! Something burned my eyes. I looked up at him and I watched as he gasped. But all colour bled away, fading. All I could see of Remus Lupin was the blood under his skin. There was a knife in his hands, and it shone deadly silver in my vision. The blade was stained with red. His arm was awash in the thick fluid that I craved. I felt my incisors scraping against my other teeth, not painfully but jarringly, as the fangs slid out of pockets in my gums. I knew without having to be told that my eyes had turned yellow, like Lucard’s did, that nightmare predatory gold of night-time beasts and monsters. I reached out carefully to Lupin's arm and he didn't resist as I crawled over to him. I hesitated over the wound, resisting the urge to drive my teeth into his skin, to bite down to the bone, to tear the meat from him and open his arm up into a delicious spurting fount. He had already made a cut for me; all I had to do was suck. I bent my lips to the blood, bubbling up across his skin like lava from a volcanic offshoot. I licked up the blood that had spilled down his arm, lapping at it as a kitten with cream. It hit my tongue with the jarring shock of kissing an electrical outlet. I craved more. I knew that I would never taste blood like this again. Deep inside me I knew - this was the blood of a werewolf. It was thick, heady, like drinking a rich desert wine when I had been expecting a cheap bottle of homemade. I sealed my lips over the cut and sucked. I waited until I had a mouthful before swallowing. The warmth slithered down my throat and into my stomach, spreading outwards. It hit the bottom of my belly like an iron rod. I didn't realize how cold I'd been until I felt the blood slide through my veins, outward from my gut, into my fingertips. They tingled, like frost bitten extremities finally thawing by the fire. I pulled on the wound again, probing with my tongue to widen the tear in his skin. He gasped in pain and it was, oh, such a sensual sound. The gasp did it. I wanted him. I wanted all of him. I would take his blood. I would take his life and cradle it in my arms and kiss him until his soul flickered out of his eyes and I then would kiss that soul out and swallow it. I would be the best lover he'd ever had, and the last. He gasped again and, oh, oh, how I wanted him. I swallowed the next mouthful, and the next. I sucked harder. I wanted all of him. I would make Remus Lupin mine, and mine alone. I slid one hand down his chest. I caressed his neck gently, pressing delicately to find that hopping life-vein. I slid my fingers downward, across his collarbone, down between his pectorals, and across his not-quite-flat stomach. I found the soft layer of academic's fat enticing, sexy. I envisioned his brain, filled with knowledge, with purpose, with sweet blood. I swallowed another mouthful and my body felt like a fever had descended. I felt strong. I felt invincible and giddy. I felt drunk. I slipped one finger into his belly button, still covered with fabric. I found where his robe parted without having to look and made quick work of his buttons. His skin was cool and slightly damp from earlier, soft and vulnerable. I resisted the urge to drive my nails into the flesh of his belly and contented myself with sucking with more force at the wound. He groaned this time, a throaty sound of mingled pain and lust and I smiled against his skin. I slipped my fingers into the waistband of his trousers and that brought him out of his heady haze. He jerked back from me and it was so unexpected that I was unable to maintain my grip on him. I hissed, not pleased. I glared at him. How dare he deny me my pleasure? “Marie,” he said sternly and I scowled. “Marie, come out of it. Marie.” I shook my head. No. I was drunk and I was warm and I was content. “Marie, look at me. Look at me with your eyes.” I licked my lips free of the clinging blood and swallowed. I felt the heat in my gaze receding, willed my fangs to retract. When I looked back at Remus Lupin, it was with a human gaze. He was sitting in the corner of the shower, his hurt arm cradled against his chest. Blood still dripped from the cut, but he had his other hand clamped over it. He was pale and shivering slightly. But he also looked half-ravished. His robe was undone over his shirt and trousers, and somehow without realizing it I had managed to work open his fly. His shirt was riding high over his stomach, his pants riding low over his undergarments, and he was flushed, panting. His hair was mussed and looked like he'd been running his hand through it. He looked absolutely delectable. I forced myself to look away. “I'm sorry.” I heard him swallowing hard, trying to pull himself away from the wall. “No, I…” he sighed deeply. “I didn't… I mean… I've never felt anything like that.” I heard some scuffling against the tiles of the shower as he climbed to his feet. “I… need to go to the infirmary.” I looked up at him. “You… hate me now. I almost… did to you what… what he did to me.” There was a pause, then the sound of a soft sigh. “I don't hate you, Marie. You were very hungry. I don't doubt that your control will be better once you've begun to feed regularly.” I turned to look up at his face, to apologize sincerely. “But I… I … I almost raped you.” He smiled, a quirky half-curl of his lips that I'd never seen on him before. It was … slightly naughty. “Trust me, you didn't do anything that I didn't… enjoy.” I looked away, embarrassed, down at my hands. They were pale, but rosier than they had been before. I still felt warm all over. I felt… alive. I felt alive again. It was wonderful. I knew, though, that this warmth, this feeling of a beating heart, came with a price. It would always come with a price. And I would pay it, again, and again, if I wanted this warmth back. “Come,” he said and I watched as he re-buttoned his fly and pulled down his shirt. It was awkward because he was trying to keep one hand over the cut on his arm. He tugged his robes closed. “I need to go see Madam Pomfrey, and you, my dear, really need to get dressed.” Dressed? I looked down at myself. Oh my god. I had been in the shower. I was… naked. Remus J. Lupin had seen me naked. I curled into a ball around myself and glared at him as he laughed. He peeled off his robe and dropped it over me. “I'll wait outside of the bathroom for you,” he said, chuckling, and walked out of the shower stall. I had enough blood in my body now to blush with mortification. Book Two: Harry Potter Chapter Six: “Potion” With a burning face, I donned the clothing that had been left outside of the shower for me. My own pants were there, but the House Elves had replaced my destroyed shirts with a nice red turtleneck and a thick dark blue robe. I tried not to think of whose undergarments and socks they had pilfered for me as I slipped them on. Possibly one of the students. Not McGonagall’s, I prayed. There were boots, too, a nice pair of butter-soft leather anklebooks in a light brown that fit surprisingly well. I didn't have a comb or anything so I finger-picked my hair as best I could. That was the nice thing about having short hair - no styling time required. When I emerged from the washroom, Lupin was waiting for me. His hand was still clamped over the cut his arm. We walked back to the hospital wing together, and I ogled everything on the way. The moving portraits fascinated me the most, and when we all but literally ran into him, I made a point of not asking Sir Nicholas how he could be 'nearly headless'. When we arrived in the medical wing, Madam Pomfrey shooed us both onto beds to sit while she dealt with some people who were there ahead of us. Apparently, somebody hadn't been listening to Professor Flitwick properly and had accidentally incinerated a whole box of pillows in Charms class. Three of the students had firstdegree burns, and another five were suffering from smoke inhalation. Madam Pomfrey got through them in short order, and they left the Hospital wing, all burn-free and smiles and a few “G'bye, Professor Lupin”s. I asked Lupin if he was supposed to be teaching a class instead of babysitting me. He told me that he wasn't a teacher anymore. He had just come to watch Ron and Harry play the Quidditch game. I felt suddenly guilty. “That's okay? I mean, you don't mind staying with me?” I asked and he nodded. “Professor Dumbledore lets me visit every once and a while.” “And he felt that you'd be the best person to look after me, right?” I looked down at my hands in my lap. I still felt bad for hurting Lupin. The werewolf sighed. “He felt that I would be the person you would respond to the most. We've had a … shared experience.” I wrinkled my nose. I could still smell his blood, but the scent was fainter. I assumed this meant that the cut was starting to clot. “That's a pleasant way of putting it.” “Indeed.” The matronly nurse swept over, scolded Lupin for his rashness and performed a charm that took care of the cut. It healed instantly, as if it had never been there. Then she took my pulse, pressed a hand to my forehead, and made some notes on a chart. “Well, you're both fine and dandy,” she said with a gentle smile. “Although, I would advise you to go to the kitchens the next time you're peckish, Ms. Marie. Professor Lupin can't be loosing that much blood every day. Nice to see some colour to you, though.” She looked at me hard for a moment. “If it's not too invasive, I would like a sample of your blood. I've never seen one of your kind who can walk about during daylight hours.” I hesitated, then agreed. She hadn't been around for the 'I'm from an alternate reality with an alternate form of Vampirism' talk that Lupin and I'd had. What harm could it do? And maybe she could, just maybe, find a way to... But, no. Lupin had said there was no cure, here. I closed my eyes as she took the blood from the bend in my elbow. I wasn't afraid of needles, I just hated watching them go into the skin. She released us both to the world and Lupin said that he had just enough time to rush to a classroom before the start of the lecture of the day. He said that someone whom I’d never read about named Professor Slughhorn had been wanting to talk to me, (and the tone which he said it with did not make it seem like a desirable thing) which is why we were going now. I didn’t mind if Lupin didn’t seem to like this Slughorn - anything was better than having the time to think. The way was more convoluted than I thought it would be, and we reached the potions classroom just as the last of the students were settling into their seats. “Isn't this Snape's class?” I asked softly. Just as softly, Lupin shook his head and said, “Not anymore it's not.” “Huh, so Snape finally got DADA?” “Yes.” I hung back as Lupin knocked on the open door and exchanged a few brief words with the rotund professor at the front of the class. Some of the students noticed. I realized how acute my hearing had grown when it hit me that I could understand their whispers. “… Muggle from Quidditch this morning…” “Who do you think she is?” “I dunno… spy for You-Know-Who?” I deliberately stopped eavesdropping. Eavesdroppers never heard anything good about themselves. A thin hand suddenly touched my shoulder, and I jumped and spun around. Dumbledore drew his hand back and smiled kindly over the rim of his glasses. “Feeling better, my dear?” I nodded. “Loads.” “Good to hear. Why don't we have chat up in my office, hm?” His eyes were sparkling behind his glasses and I took it to be a good sign. I nodded. “My apologies, Professor Slughorn,” he said. He didn’t shout, but his voice carried to the front of the hall nonetheless. “I'm afraid that this was bad timing for you. I am going to steal her away for the afternoon.” Slughorn looked disgruntled but said nothing. Lupin bid us both goodbye and excused himself. Where he would go, I didn't know. Dumbledore began to walk, and followed him through the twisting halls. I could well believe that first years could get lost easily in this maze. He hummed as he walked, his hands folded gently behind his back, and I smiled at this. It was a comforting sound. “Doo da doo do dooo do doo, do do do do da doooo….” I sang softly when he had reached something in the same key and he turned to look at me. “I'm afraid I don't know that one.” “It's the theme for the movies,” I said. “I couldn't help myself.” His smile was visible for a split second under his whiskers. Then, “Ah, here we are.” We stopped in front of a giant statue of a Phoenix and I held my breath. “Icy Mice” he said softly and the statue began to turn. It moved upwards in its recess, revealing a flight of spiral stairs, and I hoped on and rode them up right after the Headmaster. We reached his office and he puttered about making himself a cup of tea. He mentioned that he'd offer me one, but that I was looking fresh and healthy, so I was probably full up. The off-hand comment made me slightly queasy, so I merely nodded and smiled with my lips closed. We sat to the side of his desk, by his fireplace. The large, comfortable wing backed chair loomed over me, almost too much like the one in Lucard’s castle to be comfortable. But that was silly, chairs were chairs, all over the world, and I couldn’t let a silly thing like sitting get to me. Dumbledore took a long sip of his tea, then set aside the cup and looked at me. “Are you feeling much improved, Miss Marie?” “I am, thank you.” “Professor Lupin told me that you are newly as you are.” I tried to fight back a grimace. “That's a tactful way of putting it. When did he get the chance?” “He stepped out while you were bathing.” “Ah.” He nodded gently. “Would you care to tell me about how you came to be what you are and in my school?” “I don't know,” I started softly. “One minute I was reading a textbook in a café, the next I was standing in the middle of a group of scientist-alchemist-zombie things. I… I realized that I was in an alternate reality, one where a television show I used to watch as a kid was real. I mean, not right away, but… yeah. And then…Well, I ran.” “Why did you run?” “Because Count Dracula was there and he was going to have me for lunch.” I shivered once, all over, and curled myself up into a ball in the chair. “In a nut shell, he caught me. And he did… this…” I looked down at my feet on the lip of the chair and fought back the panic, the nausea, the feelings of guilt and betrayal and horror. I'd had my breakdown for the day back up in the showers. Dumbledore, when he spoke, was gentle and kind. “Do you know why he did it?” I thought about it for a moment, worrying my bottom lip with my teeth. I knew the straightforward answer. But, had there been other reasons…? I decided to give the straightforward one. “He wanted information. Wanted to know how it was that I knew who he was. How it was that his carefully prepared spell had backfired so terribly as to bring me to him instead of his rival.” “Could you describe what you know of the spell?” I did. I told him about the man covered in blood, about the writing on the floor in gore, and I tried to draw a picture of it on a loose sheaf of parchment. I told him about the requirements that Lucard had grilled me on. Dumbledore studied it, one hand stroking his beard. “I am not familiar with such Dark magics, but I will try to figure out how it is that you were able to cross the dimensional barrier thus.” I looked up. “Then you believe me?” He met my eyes solemnly. “With what you've said, how can I not?” I looked down at my lap for a moment, and then an idea suddenly hit me. It was a revelation in the best sense of the word. “I… I know where Lord Voldemort is hiding!” Dumbledore's eyebrows rose slowly into his hairline. “You do?” “Yes! I… I totally… I should have said something earlier. I'm such an idiot. The whole beginning of book four is… He's at the Riddle House. The place where he murdered his father and his family.” Dumbledore closed his eyes slowly, as if this information was painful for him to hear. Dumbledore was the one who had been Voldemort's chief rival before the birth of Harry Potter, but he had also been Voldemort's mentor and professor when the boy had been at Hogwarts. He held himself partially responsible for Tom Riddle's transformation into the Dark Lord Voldemort, and every time something went wrong because of Voldemort, or people were hurt, Dumbledore always secretly blamed himself. “I never thought…” he said slowly. “The place is abandoned. Are you certain?” “Was abandoned. I know that's where he was living before he kidnapped Harry at the end of the Tri-Wizard Tournament. Pettigrew was looking after him. I don't know if he's still there.” Dumbledore nodded and swallowed hard. “Thank you. I shall… look into this information.” “Not with Fudge, I hope,” I said before I could help myself. He looked at me askance and I pressed on. Oh, well, I had one foot in my mouth anyway, right? “C'mon, the bungler wouldn't believe you when you up-and-up told him that Voldemort was back. He tried to kill an innocent hippogriff just because Draco Malfunction is a Drama Queen, and he sent Sirius to Azkaban without a trial!” Dumbledore was silent for a long moment. Then he said, his voice quivering and low, “There is indeed a great deal that you know about us, and our world. If you are willing to be discreet, you could be a very useful weapon in the future war.” I worried my hands in my lap. “I… I'll tell you all I know, anything I think will help. But… I'd rather… I mean…” I looked up at met his eyes, and I felt the tears burning in a lump in my throat. “I want to go home.” “Of course,” he said softly. “For tonight, join us at the Head Table for dinner. We will speak more of it afterwards. I must write some letters and consider what you have told me about how you got here. Hopefully by this evening I will be able to help you return.” “Thank you,” I said earnestly, meaning every syllable. He showed me out and asked a House Elf to escort me to Hagrid's Hut, where I spent the rest of the afternoon in idle conversation with the Giant and Remus, watching Remus Lupin sip his tea and remembering how badly I had wanted him. ===== At dinner I sat between the Headmaster and Severus Snape. Not exactly the most wonderful of dining or conversation companions Albus was always engaged in chatter with other professors, and Snape did nothing but glare. If the students were commenting on my presence at the Head Table, I didn't hear anything. I had learned my lesson while eavesdropping in the potions class that afternoon - I didn't want to know what they were saying. I ate nothing and breathed less. The scent of cooked food was slightly nauseating and I tried to breathe it in as little as possible. I would have preferred to sit beside Remus Lupin, but I didn't trust my 'inner monster' to behave. Something inside of me still wanted him, and wanted him badly. Something wanted me to finish what we'd started… either by taking all his blood and killing him or by consummating what my touches had promised. This was a new and disturbing sensation for me. At twenty-two I was not innocent, but I hadn't really ever lusted after anyone before. I'd dated guys, but never did anything more serious than some tonsil hockey in darkened bar with a guy with curious hands. I was both thrilled and terrified by the strength of my desire to haul him into a random broom closet. I'm sure it would terrify him, too. And I couldn't help but wonder if it was real emotion, or if it was something brought on by the blood-lust. Steadfastly ignoring my desire to look at him, I turned to Snape instead. “I'm sorry,” I said. He blinked and set down his fork. “For?” he drawled. “For calling you names, earlier. It wasn't right of me.” He raised an eyebrow, and one corner of his lip. “Fine,” he said, and went back to his meal. Well, that was abrupt. I was hoping at least to goad him into conversation. “So,” I tried again. “How long have you been teaching?” He set down his fork again and turned to glare at me. For a brief second I really pitied Neville Longbottom. “Miss Marie,” he said, “if you truly insist on dragging me into foolish conversation, I suggest that you cut to the point.” I blinked, taken aback. “The point?” “Yes. You obviously wish to ask me something. Ask it and leave me to my meal.” “Wha… no, I just… thought that… you'd want to--” “I don't want to.” He resumed eating and I stared at him, openmouthed and wide-eyed. Okay, now that was just rude. “Listen, you punk-ass little snit,” I hissed under my breath at him, “I said I was sorry, okay? Don't take your issues out on me. So you hate Lupin, despise Longbottom, and resent Potter. Get the fuck over yourself. You chose your life. Deal with it. And wash your hair every once and a while.” The sound of his chair scraping back startled most of the Great Hall into silence. He stared down at me with narrowed black eyes, his lips a quivering knife-slice. There was colour high on his cheeks, and his anger was an almost tangible thing. His arms were straight at his sides, his hands balled into white-knuckled fists. “Professor Snape?” McGonagall asked gently and he sneered, without turning to look at her. “I have suddenly lost my appetite.” He turned on his heel and billowed out of the Hall. I'd say he stormed, or stalked, but Snape doesn't 'storm', he 'billows'. Dumbledore and Lupin both fixed me with unamused eyes and I leaned back in my chair, arms crossed over my chest defensively. “What?” I asked petulantly. “I apologized.” ===== An hour later found me once again in Dumbledore's office, only this time I was getting bitched out. “…completely inappropriate behaviour for a guest at my table, don't you think?” he said, turning those disappointed blue eyes to me. I wish he wouldn't look at me like that, like a kicked puppy. I bit back my 'but he started it' and said, “Yes. I'm sorry, Headmaster.” He sighed and took a seat in the chair opposite the desk from me. The twinkle returned to his eyes and he smiled slightly. “Although, I can understand the urge to…ah… retaliate against Severus'… unique form of conversation.” I smiled slightly and relaxed into my chair. Requisite bitching-out complete. “Now,” he said, turning his attention to a pile of papers on his desktop. He flipped through some of them, then handed me one. “Did the drawing on the floor of the warehouse look like this?” I stared at the yellowed sheaf of parchment with wide eyes. “Yes,” I said softly. He nodded as if he had expected this answer. “Then we are in luck. There is record of this spell in our archives. A man who accidentally crossed over into our reality approximately seven centuries ago reportedly used it. Many have tried to re-create it, but without success.” I felt my heart drop to my toes as I let the parchment fall back onto his desk. “Then why are we in luck? There's no way for me to get home.” “On the contrary.” He opened an ancient looking spell-tome and turned it to me so I could read the text. The writing was so loopy, the spelling so 'foul-papers Shakespearian' that I could barely read it. “What is it?” “A potion,” he clarified. “This potion was discovered by a Potions Master trying to recreate the man's experience. One… ah,” he turned the book back around so he could read it, “Sheldon Snape.” I nearly choked on my teeth. “A po-potion?” Dumbledore stroked his beard as he looked it over. “It's a very interesting mix, my dear. From what I can tell, it has the ability to cast those people nearby during its activation into a neighbouring reality.” “A neighbouring one,” I echoed. “But… not necessarily mine?” He shook his head. “No, I'm afraid it's a gamble.” The damned annoying burning lump returned to my throat. “So, I mean… I could just… slip through dimension after dimension and just… never ever get home?” Dumbledore looked up, and this time there was comfort in his eyes. “Possibly. But there are a finite number of realities. Yours among them. According to this, once you've visited one reality, you can 'key' a potion phial to recognize that plane and return you to it. It should keep you from repeating. And, much as I hate to suggest it, perhaps Mr. Lucard has done you a favour.” I sniffled and at the bastard's name the crying began in earnest. “Oh,” I said, seething hatred and sarcasm, hiccoughing on tears. “Pray, tell, explain to me how his rape is helpful.” Dumbledore came around the desk to take my hand. I was shaken. It was the first time I had admitted it out loud. “Lucard has given you a weapon, a means to travel alone with the power to protect yourself, to be resistant to most harm. You will never need to fear starving as long is there is another living thing nearby, nor will you need money. And when you return to your home reality, you will appear exactly as you are - unchanged.” I looked at him with wide, wet eyes, and bizarrely, saw his reasoning. I wasn’t happy, but it was comforting to know that I could probably take care of myself. I squeezed his hand once and scrubbed at my face with the cuff of my other hand. “Thank you.” “You're welcome my dear. The least we can do after you agreeing to help us with the war.” I nodded and accepted his offered handkerchief. I dabbed my eyes dry and watched as he circled back to his chair and sat. “According to the spell, it will take Severus at least a month to complete the brewing process.” “Snape?” I questioned. “But--” Dumbledore held up a hand. “He is the most skilful Potions Master in the area. Including Slughorn. I trust him completely. Would you begrudge him simply because of a personality clash?” “That's putting it mildly,” I muttered, shaking my head. “No, I'll take his help, if he's willing to give it… he may not be.” Dumbledore leaned forward over the desk and lowered his voice. “If you can help to free him from the Dark Lord, then Severus will gladly do it.” “Yes, yes, okay. Thank him for me?” “Why don't you thank him yourself?” “Myself?” The Headmaster smiled, and there was something devious in it. “Yes, yourself. I feel it would be very helpful to you to brew the potion along side him, and learn how it's done so that you may make it yourself later.” “But… but!” I sputtered. “We'll kill each other!” Dumbledore laughed. “Try not to.” ===== Several days later I tapped gently on Dumbledore's office door. I heard the muffled “Come in!” and opened the door, peeking around the frame. “Ah, Miss Marie,” he said, looking up from a sheaf of important looking letters. They all had the Ministry of Magic letterhead on them. It was all glowy and multi-coloured and cool. “What can I do for you?” “I... I've been thinking,” I said slowly, stepping around the door and closing it behind me. “About Sirius Black.” “Oh?” He set down the letters. “Do, come have a seat by the fire. Tea?” I shook my head, my stomach rolling once. “No, thank you.” I knew my reality's sort of Vampires could consume mortal food, but I had yet to be able to make myself accomplish it. Yesterday I had sat down and had a long talk with Madam Pomfrey about all the 'Dracula: The Series' kind's of Vampires were capable of and apparently she had passed the information onto the Headmaster, as he had just offered me tea. I was dreading the day they asked me to turn into a bat. I hadn't had the guts to try that one yet. And I wasn't sure I could do it without being taught, anyway. I assumed it was a lot like an animagus transformation, but I was honestly too chicken shit to try. What if I fell out of the air? What if I tumbled down the stairs? Dumbledore and I sat together by the fire and he sipped a cup of tea he prepared for himself. “How are your potions lessons going?” he asked, a smile playing around the corner of his lips. I grimaced. “As well as can be expected. We're being… civil.” I sighed with exasperation. “I don't know what his deal is. I've said I'm sorry.” “Severus is very good at holding grudges,” Dumbledore said fondly. “Don't I know it. I was thinking… don't you think he's a little overloaded? I mean, between my potion, and the wolfsbane, and the DADA lessons…” Dumbledore shook his head. “Severus thrives on a full schedule. It keeps him from… thinking about other things.” I couldn’t fault Severus that. It was the same reason I was taking potions lessons, and had just begun charms lessons on the side, and spent long hours in frivolous conversation with Lupin or Pomfrey. I shrugged and crossed my arms to hold in the warmth from the fire at our knees. I relished the warmth of the blaze, as the rest of the castle was drafty despite the turtleneck and robe I wore. One thing I'd found about my condition was that I got very cold very easily if I hadn't fed from a living body in the past few hours. Of course, the cold wasn’t the only reason I wore the turtleneck. Like Remus had warned, my neck bore a puffed, white ridge of scar tissue. It was in the shape of Lucard’s upper jaw, bisected by a line that I assumed was torn when he thrust his tongue into my flesh. I hadn’t seen it, I had no reflection unless I consciously summoned it, and I hadn’t learned how to do that yet. I wasn’t sure if I wanted to see what I looked like, anyway. Lupin had drawn the scar for me in the margin of a letter he’d been reading. Wanting to take my mind off my neck, I said “You really know him well. Snape, I mean.” Dumbledore smiled and sipped. “Severus was my student for seven years before he became my colleague. I have known him for almost twenty-five years. I should hope I know him well.” I nodded and thought about it for a moment. Twenty-five years was a long time to know somebody. A long time to watch somebody struggle with nightmares and regrets. I couldn't fault Dumbledore for his protectiveness. “So, what were you thinking about Mr. Black?” he asked, startling me out of my thoughts. “Oh,” I said, rubbing my hands up and down my arms. “Well, I was thinking… if the Vortex sent me here, to your reality, then… I wondered where the Veil lead to.” He regarded me with slightly surprised eyes for a moment. “You are thinking that the Veil may lead to an alternate reality as well?” “Well, why not?” I asked. “It's as good a theory as any.” He regarded me carefully, then set aside his teacup to steeple his fingers. He laced them in front of his face, resting his elbows on the armrests of his chair, studying me seriously. “Are you offering what I think you are offering?” I nodded. “I think so Brain, but how are we going to get all of the Spice Girls into rubber pants?” He blinked at me, open-mouthed with shock. “Sorry,” I giggled. “I couldn't help myself. Yes, I'm offering what you think I'm offering.” He coughed once, shook his head in wonder, and smiled. “You certainly are… eclectic, Miss Marie.” “I pride myself on it.” He picked up his tea and sipped again. He licked his moustache free of any clinging droplets and said. “Are you aware of the possible dangers?” “That I might not come back? That I could die? That some beastie in there could eat me?” “Something along those lines… yes.” I shrugged. “We won't know 'till we know, right? And if Sirius is alive then I… I want to bring him back. Harry… has suffered too much already. You all have. If I can return Sirius to you then I… I want to be able to try.” “Such noble self-sacrifice.” “Self-sacrifice, nothing,” I smiled gently. “Sirius Black is my favourite character. I want to be able to go home and tell my friends I got to kiss him.” Dumbledore laughed at this, and I think it was a needed laugh. When he returned his gaze to me, the tension that had been lingering around the corners of his eyes and his mouth had vanished. “Very well. We will wait until the potion is complete, and then key two of the phials to this reality. If you do, indeed, find Sirius, you can return him to us that way. If you find yourself in danger there, you may also return.” “I'd like a copy of his 'Wanted' poster and a sketch of Padfoot, too, if that's possible,” I added. Dumbledore blinked. I honestly thought I'd never get sick of surprising him. “You know Sirius is an animagus?” I nodded. “I know how he escaped Azkaban, remember? And I know about the Marauder's Map.” “Ah, yes. It had slipped my mind.” He finished his tea and pulled himself shakily to his feet. It was only when he stood up or sat down that I got the sense that he really was an old man. Otherwise, he exuded a boundless energy that belayed his physical appearance. “If you'll forgive me, my dear, I have mountains of owls to send replies back with, and they'll scratch up my windowsill if I don't attend to them soon.” “Have fun,” I said, and he grimaced. “As much as I can. Ah, and before I forget, I wanted to talk to you about the Secret Keeper spell, sometime tonight. See if there's any way to prove that it was Pettigrew from what you've read.” I had been meeting with him every evening after dinner these past few days to have long conversations about what I knew. I didn't doubt more than half of those Ministry owls were due to what I'd said to him. I knew he was also keeping record of our conversations in his Pensive. “Short of dragging Pettigrew in here with a Veritus charm on him, I don't think I can help you, but I'll be here.” “My thanks.” “No problem.” I left his office and headed downstairs for my private tutoring lesson with Professor Flitwick. It had been Lupin's idea that I learn as many offensive and defensive charms as I could while I was here. There was no telling what I would run into during my travels. I had agreed with him, and the diminutive charms professor had returned from Diagon Alley the next day with a wand that was almost a perfect fit for me. It would have been just right if I had gone to Mr. Olivander's myself, but we were all scared that Voldemort or one of the Death Eaters would kidnap me or something if I left the Castle grounds, so he’d gone instead with my measurements. Word had to have gotten around by now that someone strange had appeared on Hogwarts property - the Death Eaters weren't stupid (most of them), and I didn't put it past them to put two and two together. I bet the Aurors and the Order were starting to give them grief right about now. As I practiced my 'swish and flick', my mind strayed once more to Remus Lupin. He hadn't let me be alone in a room with him since the incident in the shower. Two: Harry Potter Chapter Seven: “Month” I'm sure you're asking how it is that a Muggle like me can use a wand and perform charms. My answer: “Hell if I know.” I supposed it was because I was a magical creature now, a thing of magic myself. I never really asked, no one ever really told. I'm an original character with a canonical weapon; of course it was going to work. ===== Spending the two hours after classes and before dinner with Snape was really starting to irk me. And that was a nice way of putting it. I couldn't bloody do anything right, according to him - my butterfly wings were cut too thick and uneven, my green goo too green, my flame too banked. Arg! It was driving me nuts! I could understand the need to be so particular, but did he have to be so goddamned rude? “Miss Marie,” he drawled, standing directly over my shoulder and lifting a mangled batch of smoked dandelion (thank god there wasn't anything too 'weird' in the potion, like kappa spleen or something, or I would never be able to make it in another reality) and let it dangle before my face. “Does this look properly blackened to you?” It didn't, but enough was enough. I snatched it out of the air faster than he could pull back (yay Vampiric reflexes) and slapped it down on the table. I stood abruptly, the stool scraping back and bashing into his kneecaps, and turned to glare up at him. He sneered down his nose at me, trying not to nurse his new hurts. “Listen, buster,” I said, pointing a finger in his face. “I may not be your favourite person in the world right now, but you have no right to get off treating me like some idiot first year. This is the first time I've ever been around a Bunsen burner, let alone brewing a magic potion, so just get the fuck off my back, okay? Would it kill you to be nice when you give me criticism?” He raised an eyebrow. His voice, when it came out, did so in a high and nasal falsetto. “Oh, then, forgive me Miss Marie, but I am ever so regretful to inform you that your hard work, darling and heartfelt as it has been, has terribly been for nothing. It's such a shame, really, that although I told you the proper method of smudging this delightful and aromatic herb, you clearly misunderstood me and have done it all wrong. How silly of me.” I glowered. “I get the point.” The falsetto and the fake smile ceased to exist. “Then do it correctly next time.” “Yeah, fuck you, too.” I slumped back into the stool. He sputtered but said nothing. We both knew that the faster I learned how to do this right, the faster I'd be out of his greasy hair. ===== I found Remus Lupin sitting alone on the roof of the Astronomy tower shortly after sunset. Dinner had already been done and over with. I had sat and ate nothing. He had finished and fled the room quickly. He was staring up at the waning moon, chin on his knees and arms around his calves. It was late autumn and he was bundled up, but had neglected gloves. His hands were shoved into his sleeves. For a long moment I just watched him. He was beautiful in the moonlight. Not the type of beautiful that ended up in Playgirl magazines, or as Cosmo's 'Shirt-less Hunk of the Month'. His face was expressive and gentle, his eyes warm and honey coloured. His hair was like spun pearl in the soft light and he was in decent shape, even though he did have that soft and endearing laying of fat that seemed to collect on people who spend too much time writing essays and articles and not enough time playing outside. I peeled off my own scarf as I had little need for it. I liked the comfort of the cloth protecting my neck, but I didn't really feel outside temperature like normal people anymore. I felt a cold lump in my gut if I hadn't fed in twelve or so hours, and the longer I held off on a feeding, the further into my extremities the cold would spread. When I fed, I felt like I had the first time, the tingle of limbs thawing out and fire rushing through my blood stream. My feedings had not been so blatantly sexual since, but I wasn't feeding off a warm body then. Now I only took what the House Elves gave me. I made a point of making sound as I walked up behind him so as not to startle. He turned to look at me, then jumped slightly. He moved to get to his feet and I shook my head. “Stay sitting.” He watched me warily, then settled back into his position. I knelt beside him and pulled his hands from his sleeves and wrapped them in my scarf like an improvised muff. “Thank you,” he said softly. I sat beside him, pulling the cloak I had borrowed around me to block out the wind and settled my own chin on my knees. “So,” I said softly, “If Snape is the DADA prof, why are you still staying at Hogwarts?” He watched me for a long moment before licking his lips and saying, “The books didn't say?” I shook my head and kept my eyes on the night sky. The night wasn't nearly as dark as I remembered it being. Between the stars and the moon it was as bright as a pale dusk. “They only go up to where you dropped him off with the Dursley's this past summer. The sixth book is due out soon. Hm. I haven't pre-ordered mine yet.” He shook his head minutely, closed his eyes for a moment, and then turned his pale eyes to the moon as well. “After… Sirius … vanished,” he said softly, “Dumbledore and I agreed that I… shouldn't be, you know… alone. The Death Eaters could start to pick us off if we're not careful. And, I wanted to… to be near Harry. I'm his Godfather now. He couldn't get me reinstated, but he offered me a place for those times when I was... between tasks.” Between spy-work, I read between the lines. “Oh?” I raised an eyebrow. “I'm glad of that. Dumbledore's a good man, and Harry needs you.” There was another long moment of silence. I was enjoying the ease of it, the contemplation, the relaxing break from the bustle of the school and the students below. I didn't blame him for sneaking up here to the quiet. “Dumbledore told me,” he began softly. His voice was unsteady. Unsure. “Are you really going into the Veil?” “Yup.” Another silence. “I wish I could go, too.” I shook my head and turned to look at him. I found myself staring directly into his honey eyes without meaning to. He was looking at me, too. “Hogwarts needs you. The war needs you.” “I know.” “Harry needs you.” “I know.” He sighed and tucked his chin under the scarf, resting his forehead on his knees. “I just… I miss him so much. I miss Sirius and James and Lily and… I miss the real Peter. I just feel so… abandoned.” I reached out and wrapped one arm around his shoulders. He stiffened, and then accepted the comforting gesture for what it was. “Miss Marie,” he began slowly. I cut him off. “Just Marie is fine, if I can call you just Remus.” I felt rather than saw him smile. “Yes, okay. Marie… I think… I feel we should talk about what happened in the shower.” The lust inside me flared, but I couldn't tell if it was for flesh or blood. I shoved it back down. “Yes?” He pulled himself away from me to study my face. He folded his hands in his impromptu muff in his lap. “I am… uncertain what … signals this encounter sent you.” “That's why you're avoiding me?” He blushed and the smell of his blood was suddenly thick and tantalizing in my nose, so close to the surface. But I had fed once that day already, and probably would again soon, before I retired. It was not hunger that made the smell prominent. “Yes. I… I wish to apologize to you.” “Apologize?” I blinked. “To me? But I was the one who nearly… I mean… the bloodlust…” He held up his hand to silence me and I trailed off. “I should not have provoked you by cutting my arm. It was foolish and … rash of me. I had no right to force you to taste me and I should not have let your… ahem… hand wander.” So that was it. He hadn't liked it after all. Suddenly I felt like a monster. “No, I'm sorry. I didn't know that you were so uncomfortable with it and-” “Uncomfortable?” he asked, his eyebrows arching. “Me? I … no…. I mean… it was so stupid of me to get you into a sexual situation so … so soon after you were… well…” I stared at him as the rest of the sentence died in his throat. “I didn't mean to take advantage of you,” he finished lamely. I smiled gently and shook my head. “You didn't. Totally consensual.” His lips curved upwards slightly, hopeful. “You're not upset with me, then?” “No.” “Oh, good.” He resumed staring at the moon, suddenly relieved and uncomfortable at the same time. A sliver of flesh was visible between the folds of his scarf and I licked my lips. Would I… could I dare to suggest a repeat performance? I decided not to. The thing inside of me wanted Remus Lupin, his blood or his body, it didn't care which. Preferably both. I, on the other hand, didn't want to hurt him. I rose to my feet with way more grace than I could have accomplished in life and said, softly. “I'm going to head in, now. See you in the morning?” He nodded and I took my leave. ===== That night was when the nightmares started. Up until then, I hadn't really suffered from the nightmares. I'd spent the first few nights in the Hospital Wing, where Madam Pomfrey had sluiced Dreamless Sleep Potion down my throat. When I had moved into a small, unused room that I suspected was a vacant teacher's apartment, I was at first too scared or disoriented or distracted to sleep. Now I had been at Hogwarts for just a little over a week, and I was settling into a sleep pattern. Also, I was thinking a lot about Remus and Vampirism, and blood and sex. I knew by my watch that when I woke up screaming, trying to shove off the phantom Lucard, I had only been asleep for about twenty minutes. The unfortunate thing about being a Vampire is that when we sleep, we sleep heavily. I once awoke to Madam Pomfrey freaking out because she couldn't wake me up and thought I was dead. When I had been human, I had slept restlessly, rolling, turning, and clutching at the pillows or anything else within reach. As a Vampire I lay back on the bed and closed my eyes and was gone. Sleep of the dead. This makes the nightmares worse because it's harder for me to struggle upwards out of sleep into wakefulness. It was easier if I slept at night, but when the sun rode the sky everything about me was a little more cold, a little more sluggish. A little more human. When I slept during the day it was deeply and almost dreamlessly, total and complete. The thought of being trapped in my daytime stupor with the nightmares has often induced me to keep day-walker's bedtime habits. I wanted to sleep when it was easy to wake up. I woke up three more times that night, screaming, clutching the covers, crying. Lucard haunted me. The thought of what he'd done, could have done, might still do… they plagued me. They were mixed with visions of Death Eaters and Voldemort. After I woke the fourth time, a mere three hours after I had first gone to sleep, I just stayed up. There was no point. ===== The next three weeks passed quickly. I had nightmares nearly every night, but got better and waking myself out of them. I would never be able to sleep with anyone beside me, though, for fear of clocking them in my frantic struggling. I quickly learned to avoid Slughorn like the plague. Before I knew it I had memorized the potion and held five phials of it in my hands. The potion made approximately six to seven phials, depending on the size of them, but Snape had kept two for his own research. I didn't begrudge him that. Things had never improved between us, but I hadn't torn his eyes out and he hadn't driven a stake through my heart, so all in all I thought we did a good job. Two of the phials were 'keyed' to Hogwarts. Two were blank, so I could shift to another reality if necessary. One had a label with the thick black lettering 'Lucard' on it. We had picked his hair off my purple shirt before I had burned both of them. You never knew. The way a phial was keyed was this: The active ingredient of the potion was oxygen. After the twenty-seventh day, the cauldron it was brewing in had to be sealed. A lid and duct tape would do in a pinch, but a pressure cooker top was the best option. The cauldron or brewing pot had to have a spigot in the bottom. When the phials were 'keyed,' it was a complicated process. First, a bit of tangible material from the realm you wanted to return to was placed in the bottom of the phial. A few hairs, some carpet fibres, a blade of grass - whatever it was, the potion user would reappear close to it when they returned. To keep the oxygen out we jammed a cork into the top of it tightly and sealed it with candle wax. Then a long needle was poked through the wax and cork. A thin tube was attached to the end of the spigot and the needle. The potion was slightly watery, and a rich burgundy colour. I couldn't tell you what it smelled like. Once the phials were filled, the needle was pulled out slowly as more candle wax was dripped onto top surface of the cork to seal off the hole. I thought it was a two-person operation, but Snape made me practice with plain water for weeks before letting me bottle the potion, and I learned to do it carefully and slowly with something propping up the phial. We carefully labelled each one with a white sticker and black marker, and Snape immediately cleaned out the cauldron and began the potion all over again. He said that he knew it was only a matter of time before I was back and begging for more. Which I resented but couldn’t quite deny. To activate the potion, all I had to do was smash it at my feet. Whomever the potion touched, and whomever that person was holding onto, would be transported into the next reality over. The next morning I said good-bye and thank you to Hogwarts, the staff, the students, and especially Professors Snape, Flitwick, Lupin, and Dumbledore. The Great Hall applauded. They thought I was a visiting Potions Master who was doing a research project with Snape. That's what we had told them. I don't think Harry even knew the truth. They had decided not to tell him, just in case Voldemort went for a wander through his mind. The good-byes in order, Remus, Dumbledore and I headed for the Ministry of Magic. Remus and I had become good friends in the month I had been there, and although we had shared one wonderful afternoon in Hogsmede, which ended in an even more wonderful kiss, we had not pursued our romantic (or bloodlusty) inclinations. I was going away. He was a werewolf. Bad all around. On his full moon night he had vanished. I knew where he would be and didn't seek him out. I wouldn't have been welcome and it would have been dangerous. The next morning I was immediately in his rooms with fresh blankets, hot water to clean himself up with and chicken noodle soup. He had laughed and told me I was a Mother Hen. I met Cornelius Fudge at the Ministry and disliked him even more in person. He shook my hand and made a speech and was all in all ignorant and annoying. He had greeted us in the foyer with several important ministry members. Among them were Arthur Weasley, Kingsley Shaklebolt and Nymph Tonks, and a very sour looking Lucious Malfoy. They followed us to the Department of Mysteries and I made it clear that I only wanted Dumbledore and Remus in the room with me. I totally didn't trust Malfoy or Fudge, but I didn't want to say, “Oh, only Order of the Phoenix Members please. You two losers stay here.” They agreed and Fudge speeched some more before we could escape into the quiet of the amphitheatre-like room. As I walked passed him into the room I winked at Malfoy and under my breath hissed, “How's being a Death Eater treating you, Malfunction? Dark Mark itchy at all?” He stared at me, wide-eyed and angry as hell, but then I was through the door. I hope Fudge had heard me. Not that it would matter at all if he had. When the door closed I stopped at the top of a set of stairs carved out of stone. The benches were carved as well, and they all faced a pit orchestra-style stage. In the middle of the stage sat a dormant, unimpressive stone archway from which mouldy and cobwebby brown curtains were hung. It looked very harmless. I knew better. Lupin and Dumbledore began to descend the stairs and I followed after them, head high and jaw set. To tell you the truth, I was scared as all Hell. What if I was wrong and I died permanently? Well, too late for that now. I approached the Veil with single-minded determination, and paused at its edge. Around my waist, under my shirt, was a buttersoft light brown leather pouch. It was wide and flat and contained all five phials and my magic wand, and a small piece a paper with a copy of just the ingredients of the potion, but not the instructions in case someone unpleasant got their hands on it. There was also a copy of Sirius' 'Wanted' poster and a pen sketch of Padfoot. Remus came up beside me and put a hand on my shoulder. “You can still back out,” he said softly. I shook my head. “Alright. Then take this.” He slipped something thin and hard into my hand and I lifted it to see what it was. It was dagger in a beautiful dark brown sheath with a matching hilt. It was just the right size for my hand. I slipped it out of the sheath and was amazed at how sharp and new it looked. “The highest quality mix of silver, iron, and steel I could get. Should be good against shape-changers and magics.” I hugged him warmly and kissed him on the cheek in thanks. I put the dagger in my pouch. “Bring him home,” he whispered into my ear as we parted. “I will.” I said my goodbyes to Dumbledore and took a deep breath. I was going to do it. I was going to step through the Veil. I closed my eyes and walked forward. A cold wind smashed against my body, freezing the blood in my veins instantly. I was sucked forward and I could feel the rotted slither of the moulding curtains against my face, my arms, my legs, my whole body. It felt like they were trying to wrap around me, cocoon me, strangle me. I shrieked and batted them away. I saw a flash of white light behind my eyes, like a flash bulb, and heard a flat crack like a gunshot on an open plain. I was suddenly free of the curtains, free of the crushing cold and the howling wind. I was in free air, warmish, smelling faintly of harbour. I was falling. I managed to twist my legs and arms under me and landed on hard cobblestones, skinning the heels of my hand and almost tearing a hole in the knee of my pants. I stood up slowly, warily, made sure everything was still in my pouch. It was night time here. I looked around. It looked like a city. Sure enough, when I turned around, I saw the skyline across the water, the smell of ripe fish and boats and factories strong in the air. Riverfront district of something, somewhere. I didn't recognize anything, anyone. Where the Hell was I? And where would I even begin to look for Sirius? Book Three: Anita Blake Chapter Eight: “Stripper” I took a room in a cheap dive of a motel with the Muggle money that Dumbledore had provided me with. I covered the window with the filthy duvet to keep out the neon glow of the adult theatre across the alley and tried to sleep through most of the night. I managed a good few hours before the nightmare woke me. I slept for another few after that, was woken up again, and irritated, took a long bath in a tub I had to scrub myself, and thoroughly with the tiny bar of complimentary soap (repackaged after the last user - ick ) until the sun peeked over the horizon. I washed my underthings in the sink and dried them with the provided sparking hairdryer (at least I couldn’t get electrocuted to death), and resolved to buy more to carry with me. When it hit nine o'clock in the morning, what I considered a decent hour, I set out to peruse the town. From the maps, postcards, American flags, and the names on signs, I eventually realized that I was in St. Louis, but being Canadian I knew jack about the city, except for the silly arch thingy. The first night and day was spent in fruitless effort. I walked into every place I could and waved about Sirius' poster, and nobody recognized him or the dog. I went into coffee places, hotels, bars, tourist traps, fast food joints, greasy spoons, everywhere. I walked until my feet were sore. Sometime around noon I bought an icecream cone and forced myself to eat all of it, toeing off my brown boots and resting on a park bench. The ice-cream was really cool and actually very nice. I had been working on my ability to ingest food back at Hogwarts, and I appreciated it. At first I used to gag a lot and have trouble swallowing. The worst part, of course, was the still the vomiting, but the food really had no where else to go. P.N. Elrod, in her books “The Vampire Files”, notes (and truthfully) through the mouth of her vampire character Jack Flemming, that the important thing about re-learning how to eat was the social factor - so much of the world's business was done over food. To not eat was strange and usually considered an insult, pretty much everywhere. It drew attention that would be, in my case, unwanted. So I ate. When I was finished the ice-cream, I had to find a public washroom and did so at a crowded McDonald's. The grease smell made my stomach roil, which helped. I went into the restroom and puked up every last bit of the desert. I could not digest it, but had enjoyed it going down. It sucked coming back up and I decided never to eat mortal food ever again unless I absolutely had to in order to save face. I don't know how Lucard did it everyday. He must have been masochistic. Or bulimic. An elderly lady looked worried for me as I came out of the stall and washed my face and hands. I gave her an earnest smile and patted my stomach. “Morning sickness,” I said weakly. She congratulated me and I went on my way. By mid afternoon my eyes hurt and my veins itched. I was just praying for sunset. I wanted to feed. I wanted to fucking sleep goddamn it. I wanted even just one clue of Sirius. This was a Muggle city, though. Where would he be in a Muggle city? Was he even here? It's not like I could stand on the top of the arch and scream “Sirius Black?! Where are you?! I’m not a Deatheater!” Irritated, I waited out the sunset under the shade of a tree, frowning. When I felt the tingle of release that came with the darkness, of my powers returning to me, settling into my skin, I got up and wandered until I found a nightclub suitably sleazy for my purposes. I had never hunted before and was very nervous. I had never picked up in a bar before, either, which made me even more nervous. I waited until some boy, barely old enough to shave, offered to buy me a drink. I let him and listened to his drabble as he drooled and was drunk. I sipped at the drink, but didn't swallow. It reeked of pineapples and rum. I hate pineapples and rum. Around ten I finally screwed up my courage to suggest that we go to his car. He grinned and paid his tab, and my veins screamed in relief. My eyes and eyeteeth were itching, burning. I wanted to rub at them like I sleepy child and refrained. We got into the backseat of his car and he damn near pounced. His tongue was so far down my throat so fast that I knew he would have suffocated me had I been living. I licked and nipped my way to his neck, trying not to gag on the taste of cheap beer and sweat. I felt my eyes burn, the yellow bleeding away the blue, my vision turning into a predator's look. I saw the blood under his skin, pulsing, rushing, so hot and thick and warm and enticing. I had never gone this long without a feeding before and didn't hesitate. It was heaven. Not anywhere as good as Remus, and it tasted of cheap beer and too many cigarettes, but blood was blood was blood. I took several long swallows and felt my limbs thaw, my own lust fluttering though my veins, my power tingling along my skin. The painful clenching of my stomach relaxed and my head was soon spinning with the boy's booze. He groaned, arched into me, and I could feel his arousal against my thigh. It made me gag and pull away. He groaned again, eyes fluttering. “Damn, bitch. You're hot,” he slurred, and I think he meant it to be a compliment. Gross. I slid out of the car, satisfied he would recover from the blood loss just fine, and walked away before he could get his bearings. I hoped he thought I was just kinky when he saw the mark and didn't report me to the police as some crazy psycho. It'd be hard to search for Sirius from behind the bars of a jail cell. ===== I felt revitalized. I felt fresh. I hit up all the bars and cafes that were open on the way back to the motel, and had no luck. I refused to be frustrated. I took a shower when I got in, climbed into the provided terrycloth robe, washed my clothes in the tub and hung them to dry, cussing silently for forgetting to buy new undies and socks today, and went to bed. I was only woken by the nightmares twice. An improvement. ===== I was spent. I may be a Vampire, one of the strongest of bloodlines in the reality I was from, but all this talking and footwork was exhausting. I had spent most of the second day slipping in and out of bars as inconspicuously as possible, flashing Sirius' “Have You Seen This Wizard?” poster and sketch of his animagi form all over town. I had started near my hotel and headed in the opposite direction of the day before, gone down the streets and up the avenues, back and forth, left and right. Every place that was open I went into. Everyone said the same thing: nope, haven't seen him. We'll let him know you’re here if we do. Eventually I entered an area of town the signs called “The Riverfront District.” It was cut off from any sort of traffic more complex than pedestrian, and the streets were cobbled. The roads, filled with tourists and pale locals, were lined with faux antique gas lamps that flared to life with the coming twilight. Jeeze, dusk already? I ran a hand through my hair and puffed out a sigh. It'd been close to noon when I'd left the hotel. Wondering if it was about time to be heading back (I could pick up here tomorrow night), I sort of spaced out, staring at the first pin pricks of stars in the pale pink sky. Suddenly, my space-ness was interrupted by a bright flash of light bare feet from my nose. I snarled at the source, irritable and annoyed. “Sorry - it's just a picture!” the man behind the camera said and I forced my lips back down over my teeth. It wasn't close enough to full dark for me to be able to sprout fangs and glowy eyes, so I was thankful enough for that. “Bug off!” I snipped at him. “I'm not a tourist attraction.” He shrugged. He had a wife and an unimpressed pre-teenaged daughter trailing behind him. “You look pale enough.” “Pale…” I shook my head. “Listen, buddy, I have no bloody clue what you're on about. Take off.” He hesitated. “Do you want the film?” I shook my head. “It's a wasted shot anyway. I don't show up.” Let him puzzle about what that meant. I turned on my heel and kept walking. I didn't see many open places on the strip. They must all be waiting for full nightfall. I chose a bar with the catchy and nigglingly familiar name Dead Dave's, and ducked in. Where did I know it from? The name nagged at me. There was a large - not tall or fat, but definitely barrel-chested black man behind the bar, and I choose a stool. A titter went through the crowd behind my back as I approached the bar, and I steadfastly ignored it. There was a mirror above the alcohol shelf, and I took a moment of pleasure watching as the tender flicked his eyes back and forth between it and me, wondering where the Hell I was. I waved him over, forcing him to forget it for now, and ordered a double shot of Bailey's over ice. He complied. He set it down before me and watched very closely as I took a sip, a cigarette dangling from the corner of his lips as if it was surgically grafted there. He seemed amazed when I swallowed the Irish Cream and kept it down. I knew I'd have to bring it up, but I really wanted a drink. Even if it couldn't give me a buzz, I wanted the psychological effects of alcohol. More tittering, and the hair-raising feeling of being watched by the people in the booths. What the fuck was with all these people? I unfolded the picture of Sirius - it was behaving and keeping still for once - and set it on the bar. “I'm looking for this guy. Have you seen him?” The tender shook his head. He stepped away to fill another order, and then came back. He glanced a few more times at the mirror, then outside. I could feel the sunset, mere seconds away. The glass of the windows went navy blue, and the darkness tingled over my skin, washing me with its power. Ah. Felt damn good. I tapped the picture again, pulling his attention away from the window, and he looked at it obediently. “If you see him, tell him someone from the Order of the Phoenix is looking for him, right?” He nodded again. I pulled out the sketch of Padfoot. “I'm also looking for this dog - answers to Padfoot. Really smart for a mutt.” The bartender shook his large head. “Hell,” I hissed under my breath. “C'n I ask you a question, girlie?” he said with a slight southern drawl. I bristled at 'girlie', but let it pass. He probably called everyone 'girlie'. I nodded. “How you doin' that?” “Doing what?” “Drinking the drink. No reflection. And it's not full dark.” I narrowed my eyes at him. “What?” “I thought people like you couldn't--” He was cut off by someone snatching the picture of Sirius out from under my hand. I turned to look at the woman - severely cut black hair, nice suit, high collar - who was staring at it. “I know him,” she said. “Where from?” I asked, snatching the dog picture up and shoving it into my pocket. I let her keep staring at the poster. She smiled and looked over the paper at me. “He's the new guy.” ===== I stood on the street, staring at the sign above the bar across the road with wide eyes. I must have looked like a moron. I sure as Hell felt like it. The lurid red neon arched over the roof, spelling out the words “Guilty Pleasures.” I realized suddenly why “Dead Dave's” had sounded familiar, why the tourist had snapped my photo, why people kept staring at me and wondering why I had no reflection and was out before full dark. I was in Laurell K. Hamilton's books. This was the world of Anita Blake. I shook my head. Trust me to fall into a fandom where Vampires were legal citizens under the law, had reflections, and The Executioner, the woman hired to put to death the undead, was shorter and spunkier than me. In this world, the Riverfront district of St. Louis was also called “Blood Square”. It was filled with bars, strip joints, restaurants, and any other sort of tourist attraction that a major metropolitan city would want to offer its tourists. Except here they were run by the Vampires. There were lycans of sorts here too - wererats, wolves, snakes, leopards, etc. The Master of the City, the Vampire in charge, was named JeanClaude. He was a beautiful blue-eyed, black haired aristocrat who hated being told 'no.' The person telling him 'no' currently was The Executioner herself, a woman with a license to kill Vampires, who was the paranormal advisor to the Regional Preternatural Incidents Team, and worked as a Zombie Animator as her night-job, Anita Blake. I had always liked Anita Blake. She was witty, brave, and like me, short. Well, she had one inch on me. I wouldn't begrudge her one inch. Us short people have to stick together, you know. I was currently standing out front of “Guilty Pleasures”, a strip club where lots of non-humans worked, taking it off for the good human women of the world. It was owned by Jean-Claude and many of its employees were his denizens and servants. He protected them and gave them steady work and pay-cheques. They did what he told them to. And Sirius was supposed to be working here? I shook my head and went in. Buzz the bouncer (I remembered his name from the three books I'd read) asked for my ID. A vampire named Buzz. Honestly. When I couldn't provide any, I flashed my fangs instead, and he let me in. Oh, joy. ===== I was stopped by the Holy Items check girl. I had nothing to give over, though she puzzled at the leather pouch hanging off my belt. In contained the list of ingredients for the slider-potion, a knife, my wand, and four phials of the potion itself. Two had labels reading “HP - Hogwarts” on them. The third was blank as I had yet to 'key' it to any one place. The last's label read “Lucard”. Just in case. Hey, you never know. She let me keep everything but the knife, which was fine by me. It was the least dangerous thing in there, anyway. But I wasn't going to tell her that. I wove my way through the crowd and took a seat by the stage. The woman at “Dead Dave's” had said that Sirius Black was the new stripper at Guilty Pleasures, going by the name 'The Wiz'. She said his show was filled with magic. I just hoped he was attentive enough to the crowd for me to be able to flash his poster at him while he danced, and have him see it. He was not the first act. I nursed a rum and coke that a very handsome man in very little clothing had brought for me, and never took a sip of it. I won't lie and say that I didn't enjoy the first act. Hey, I may be undead, but I'm not frozen. When the second act started, it began with a large black dog padding out into the center of the thrust stage and rearing up on his hind legs. There was a crashing downbeat in the heavy music and a flash of light. Suddenly, Sirius Black stood dead center in nothing but black jeans, a tight black tee-shirt, leather wrist guards, and an obvious dog collar. His grey eyes were lined with thick black kohl. Great gimmick. Woof. He scanned the crowd for women with money upheld, pulled his wand out of his back pocket with an obscene hip gesture, and with my Vampiric hearing I heard him whisper 'accio'. The bills went flying across the room and into his hands. He grinned, rubbed them down along his torso, and tucked them into the fly of his pants. The women screamed. I swallowed hard. I had always been a fan of Sirius Black. As his grey eyes roved over mine, his teeth sparkling in a charming smile, I realized why. Hot damn. He gyrated close to me, and I suddenly felt stupid for taking a seat right next to the stage. The plan was starting to backfire. He pulled at his shirt. In a flash of harmless red sparks it tore, and he tugged at the sides, ripping it off. I felt my heart in the back of my mouth and swallowed it. He fell gracefully onto his hands and knees and began to crawl right for me, mouth open, tongue lolling to the side like a big puppy. I sat perfectly still. He pressed the side of his face up against my cheek and I was amazed to feel his hot, wet tongue slide up my neck. Good doggie. I shivered. Before he could pull away I whispered, “Dumbledore sent me.” He faltered. The music went on without him and he stared at my face, eyes wide. Someone in the crowd whistled and he suddenly remembered himself. He struggled to catch up, but he was flustered, I could tell. The dance was filled with harmless puffs of smoke and flashes of meaningless light. No real magic. He finished his routine by ripping at his black thong undies, but tumbling into his dog form before anyone saw anything more than a smooth flash of his flank. He Apparated off stage and the music finished. I was about to rise and try to talk my way back stage when someone slid into the chair next to me. I turned to tell the stripper that I was not interested in a body shot or lap dance, and froze. This was no stripper. Perfect, oval shaped pale face. Blue eyes so dark they were like a night-time sapphire. Dark hair that hung in shoulder-length curls. A white shirt that frothed lace and yet remained masculine. Paintedon black jeans. Peeking above the collar of the shirt was a dark brown scar in the unmistakable shape of a cross. Fuck me all to hell. It was the Master of the City, Jean-Claude. I smiled amiably as I could, swallowing my fear. If he was half as powerful as Ms. Hamilton had written him, he could kill me with barely a thought. He returned the smile and reached into my jacket pocket without asking for permission. He plucked the poster out and unfolded it, studying it carefully. The Sirius I had seen on stage was definitely better looking than the one in the poster. His hair was trimmed and washed, a sexy, villainous goatee on his chin, and he looked like he'd had a good dozen square meals. He was healthy. But he was unmistakably the same man. “You are looking for my Mr. Black,” Jean-Claude said. His voice was so thick with The Blood that it was an almost tangible thing. It slid down my spine and made me shudder with unexpected desire. This was his power - the seduction. I suddenly wondered how it was that Anita Blake could resist him. “You've been all over town, looking for him. Why?” “I've come to bring him home.” Jean-Claude sneered and caught my eyes with his own. “I don't think so.” His mind rolled over mine and I was sent spinning into the blackness. ===== I was really, really getting sick of waking up in strange places. When I sat up, I found myself on the bed in a blue room. The walls were swathed in blue, and there were black leather chairs, and a glass-topped coffee table to one side. I was lying on a large bed with a black coverlet, gauzy curtains encircling the bed. Jean-Claude was sitting on the foot of the bed, staring at me. His eyes were impenetrable ice, his face carefully blank. I was in deep shit. He had turned out the contents of my pockets and pouch. On the bed between us sat my wand, the recipe, the phials, the poster and the dog sketch. My knife was even there. Bully for him. I looked around and found the rest of the room empty. I half expected Richard, his werewolf familiar, or Anita Blake herself to be there, and was slightly surprised that they were not. Apparently I wasn't enough of a threat to warrant the attentions of anyone else besides the Master. I wasn't sure if I was insulted or pleased. He pointed deliberately at the poster (it was moving again) and said, “Mr. Black is mine. Why are you searching for him?” I shook my head slowly. “I don't mean to contradict you, Messier Jean-Claude, but Mr. Black is not a werewolf. You can't Call him.” His eyebrows rose slowly and he pursed his lips. “You are aware of my name and that my animal to Call is a wolf. Who are you?” I shrugged. “You wouldn't believe me if I told you. Suffice it to say, I am not an enemy.” He narrowed his eyes until all the whites vanished. Not a good sign. The last time I had been on a bed with a Vampire he had raped me. I suddenly wondered if it was going to happen again. I shrank back in the covers and waited for his response. “I have nothing to trust on that but your word.” I tried to shrug casually, tried to win back my bravado. “Call Mr. Black in here. I'll talk to him. You'll see.” Jean-Claude shook his head. “I do not think so. I am not yet willing to give up Mr. Black.” It was my turn to narrow my eyes. “Give up?” The Master Vampire tilted his head to one side, a very human gesture, and slightly startling coming from him. Oh, we were both Vampires, but I still moved like I was a human, like I was alive. He was so comfortable in his unmoving dead body that he seemed unreal. Any human-like movement from him was startling. “There is something… strange about Mr. Black. He claims he is without a home, without money. His magics are strange. He came to me for a job, I gave it to him. He realizes that other werewolves work in the club, he tells me he is a weredog. I believe him. He transforms too easily and too often to be a were-anything, but he has… a strangeness to him. I do not know what he is, but I do not wish to let him out of my sight lest he… prove dangerous. I will not turn him over to you.” “He won't be in St. Louis anymore, so he won't be your problem. I'm taking Sirius back to his family,” I said stubbornly. “He was lost, I was sent to find him.” Jean-Claude stared at me for a long moment with those unfathomable blue eyes. “You are strange as well. I hear no heartbeat. Yet you walk about in the sun. You drink alcohol. You are pale, as I am. But you are not what I am.” I debated how much to tell him. I had learned from the books that Jean-Claude preferred honesty. He tended to get bloody when he was lied to. “I'm not,” I admitted slowly. He sat back slightly, as if settling in for a long story. He was going to be disappointed. I wasn't in the mood to tell long stories. “I am … a kind of a Vampire. Not your kind of Vampire. A different kind.” His eyebrows rose a little more. Otherwise, his expression remained perfectly neutral. It was damned unnerving. “A kind that may walk about in daylight and consume mortal food?” I shrugged. “Among other things, yes.” “An advantage…” he murmured. “Not really - I can't do those nifty mind tricks you can. And I can't make Human Servants, or Call or control animals.” “No?” “No.” He hummed to himself, thinking. “May I see Mr. Black?” He asked, “How did he get… lost?” I assumed that was a 'no.' “To be perfectly honest,” I said, sitting forward on the bed. “It's really not my place to tell you. If Mr. Black chooses to tell you, then he will. Otherwise, I'm just going to collect him and get him home.” Jean-Claude picked up one of the precious “HP” phials. “With this?” I tensed and tried to look like I hadn’t. Like I wasn’t terrified he’d take it away, or worse, break it. He turned it slowly in the light, allowing the thin burgundy liquid to sparkle. He lifted the recipe. “I've never seen anything like it. What is it?” Decision time again. Truth? Or not? “It's none of your business.” I guess 'not'. He set down the phial and leered, leaning in towards me. He was trying to intimidate me, and it was working. His voice was back on full power, sending little flutters of magic-induced lust running through my veins. The pupils had vanished from his eyes, leaving them a drowning midnight blue. “On the contrary. Everything that happens in my City is my concern. You are in my City. You are a strange Vampire. Mr. Black can perform magics that I have never seen before. And you search for him with a 'wanted' poster.” He let me chew on that for a moment before closing the space between us. I backed up quickly, but he was older, faster. His lips hovered above mine as he deliberately invaded my personal space. Anita always called him an 'invasive bastard'. I was inclined to agree. “I think you are a bounty hunter, or a law officer of some sort. Mr. Black suffers from nightmares. I have heard him scream at night. I think you are hunting him.” I snarled and ducked under his head and slipped out of the bed with a burst of my own preternatural speed. He wasn't the only one with undead-tricks. “Call Mr. Black in here and ask him what I said to him. He'll believe me.” Jean-Claude sat back and considered this option. I stood by the side of the bed and glared. Our impasse was filled with tension as tangible as the Master vampire's laughter. It was solved by an explosion. Book Three: Anita Blake Chapter Nine: “Hunter” The force of the explosion rocked the room, and Jean-Claude and I both braced ourselves with the bed. I clapped my hands over my ears against the loud boom and crashes of scattering cement. It sounded like it had gone off in the hallway! Once the room shopped moving, Jean-Claude swung a deadly glare at me, his eyes entirely midnight blue and a snarl on his lips. “It wasn't me!” I said quickly, hands up by my shoulders, palm out, in a gesture of innocence. “We shall see!” I climbed to his feet faster than I could see him move, and grabbed me by the wrist. He hauled me out of the room and we paused to stare at the debris at the far end of the dimly lit cement the corridor. “Richard!” Jean-Claude shouted and I saw a tanned man with long brown hair barrelling down what was left of the stairs at the far end of the hall. The air was filled with dust motes and powdered cement and he had to artfully leap over a pile of rubble at the bottom. Some of the stairs were smashed out, probably from the chunks of concrete rolling down them. “We don't know yet!” the man shouted back, answering the furious question in the summons. “A bomb at the top of the stairs!” Jean-Claude's grip on my wrist tightened painfully and I stumbled after him as he stormed down the hall to meet Richard. We stopped directly in front of the brunette man, and I could see, could smell the dirt and blood on his face and arms. He'd been close to the blast-site, probably hit by cement fragments turned to shrapnel. His green and brown sweater was ripped and burnt. I knew who Richard was. At this point of the story, if he was coming to Jean-Claude's call so readily, he was the Master's werewolf 'pet', his consort and servant, and probably his pomme du sang, his blood apple. The pomme du sang was the person from which a Vampire fed regularly. He or she was like a walking fridge. “Send someone to get the guests calmed, and out safely,” JeanClaude said, his usually mystical voice just this side of a barking order, “and start going through the rooms on the second level. Make sure everyone is present and well.” Richard nodded once, his eyes flicking over me in a clear question: Who the Hell are you? He didn't have the right or time to ask, though, so he didn't. Then he was leaping over the debris, up the stairs, and was gone. Jean-Claude redoubled the painful grip on m arm and hauled me up the stairs after him. He managed to walk on top of the cement debris, toes lighting with Vampire prowess on impossibly jagged edges with no wobble. Following after him, led by the elbow with my shoulder wrenched up and forward, I felt like a five year old who couldn't keep her balance. I kept nearly tumbling over, and only my free hand on the wall and his constant tugging kept me more or less on my feet. We reached the second level and I saw that it was a second concrete corridor filled with doors. Bedrooms? Private chambers for strippers to 'entertain' customers in? Storage? Who knew? Our end was totally littered with bits of wall, the cement dust and ash thick in the air, blotting out the far end of the hall. Several of the lights on this side had been blown out, one halfway down the hall was flickering and giving off sparks intermittedly. I stopped breathing to keep the crap in the air out of my lungs. Richard was running back to us from the far side of the hall, worry on his face, neck craning so he could look into each room he passed. All of the doors had been flung open. “Have you seen Black?” he panted as he got closer. “He should have been in his room, but he's the only one I can't find!” My eyes widened. Oh, no. No, not Sirius. Had he been killed in the explosion? Had it been his fault? Jean-Claude yanked hard on my arm and I cried out. He swung me around viciously and wrapped both hands around my shoulders, gripping painfully. “Where is he?!” he snarled, and there was something in his voice that made me absolutely terrified. His magical voice held pure rage. “I don't know!” He roared, actually roared, and slipped one arm around my shoulders to crush me to his chest. My feet came off the ground. He grabbed a great fistful of my hair and wrenched my head to the side to expose my neck. I yelped. It was the same side the Lucard had chosen. I wondered fleetingly if Jean-Claude saw the scars from Lucard's bite there. “Liar! You come and inquire about Black and now he is missing!” “It wasn't me!” Richard was trying to play peacekeeper, his brown eyes wide and slightly panicky. “Jean-Claude, I don't smell a lie.” Jean-Claude snarled again and shoved me backwards. I crashed into Richard's chest and he hastily caught me under the arms to keep me upright. “Allez, Richard,” he snapped and turned on his heel. “Bring her.” We strode up another flight of stairs, Richard's hand wrapped around my arm to keep me from running. The blood on his face was tickling my nose and my stomach. I hadn't fed yet this evening. We came to a heavy steel door whose whole handle had been neatly blown away by a gunshot. A guard was just as neatly blown away, what was left of his head splattered on the floor and walls. I clamped down on my gag reflex. Then on my hunger. “Silver bullets,” Richard hissed, eyes narrowed and I watched the anger fill his face. Somebody knew what they had been shooting. Jean-Claude stared at the body, expressionless, then walked through the door. We followed. We emerged in the back of a large, open building filled with panicking and screaming humans. The press of sweaty and desperate humanity was surging towards the doors, knocking over everything and everyone it could. A mass of Vampires and werewolves in suits and security uniforms were trying to get people out safely. It was surreal, to see the monsters shepherding the humans. All around us were carnival booths, rides, but all neon and grotesque. We weren't under Guilty Pleasures, like I had first thought. This was the Circus of the Damned, I realized. The Circus of the Damned was a tourist locale run by Jean-Claude and filled with the disgusting, the abject, the macabre. It was an indoor fair and the aim was to scare you with real monsters. Jean-Claude and Richard were scanning the crowd for something. I lifted my nose, trying to scent out Sirius. I caught a waft of his scent, familiar to me now because he had been so close to me earlier in Guilty Pleasures. I scratched me neck guiltily. “Sirius is that way!” I shouted and pointed to the Ferris Wheel. Richard swung his head around and followed my pointing finger. “He is!” Jean-Claude growled. “There is an emergency exit that way. Come.” The three of us ran, pushing past the press of panicked bodies. Richard's grip on my arm was jostled and he was forced to let go. He reached for me again but I sped ahead of him to leap over the railing. Jean-Claude had reached the door before me and he was making a grab for a fleeing man. The man was thin, but looked athletic. He had pale ruddy-brown hair and a very large and lethal looking gun strapped to his back. Sirius, unconscious and bleeding from the head, lay on the cement on the other side of the threshold, outside. Jean-Claude dove and the man swung the gun up and fired at him point-blank. The Master Vampire managed to twist in mid-air and the bullet - silver! I guess I know what happened to the door and the guard - just grazed his cheek. But he was airborne and the majority of his body was horizontal with his head. It slammed into his shoulder and Jean-Claude went down. Even a master Vampire can be felled by a silver bullet. I heard Richard snarling behind me and really didn’t want to be in the middle of anything. The desperate wish to be out of the way triggered something deep inside my psyche and suddenly I was not running on two legs, but flapping in mid air. I was a bat! The transformation was disorienting and I cart-wheeled through the air, chittering in terror. I swung around and got my equilibrium, happy at what I had just discovered. Now that I had done it, I knew it. I could do it again. I could become a bat. It could be useful, I realized, really useful. It gave me increased mobility and made me a hard target. I heard the gun go off again and I flew straight at the man's face. I spread my toes and scratched at his eyes. He batted me away with a swat and I spiralled and tumbled out into the night sky. I got my bearings and turned back to him in time to watch him put a slug in Richard's hip. The Werewolf screamed and fell to the floor, hands over the wound, trying to hold everything in. The man slammed the door shut and slung the gun over his back. Then he hefted Sirius up into a fireman's carry and quickly moved him into the back of a very nearby waiting van. I could see a cage and some very heavy manacles in the back, bolted to the floor of the van. Sirius was being kidnapped! I flew down, squeaking madly and scraping at the kidnapper's pinched face with my claws. He howled and slapped me down, driving me into the pavement. The shock of the fall and the pain of hitting the ground forced my body back into my human shape. I looked up and found him staring down at me with wonder in his eyes. The wonder quickly bled away into a hungry expression and he grinned. I didn't like the grin. He reached down and tried to grab my shoulders and I kicked him hard in the knee. He howled and dropped me and I jumped up to my feet. “What the fuck are you doing!?” I snarled. He came up with the gun pointing directly between my eyes. “Get in the van,” he said, not hint of humour in his voice. “or I'll blow your fucking head off.” “I don't think so.” He grinned again and it was a terrifying grin. It was a dead grin. “Get in the van. I will kill you.” “No. Let Sirius go.” He shook his head. “Mr. Black is the only weredog I have ever encountered. He will fetch a pretty penny on the auction block.” “Auction block?” I repeated, dumbfounded. “There are people out there willing to pay for… exotic pets. Now get in the fucking van. I've never seen a werebat before and you're going to make me enough to retire on.” I lashed out with preternatural speed and knocked the gun up. He went with the momentum of the hit, pivoted on the ball of his foot, and came back around to kick me solidly in the gut. I doubled over. I heard the gun click and the flat crack of the explosion in the barrel and suddenly my arm was burning. Silver bullets! I shrieked and fell and my shriek was answered by the snarl of a wolf. Through my pain I saw the door fly open and a large brown wolf lunge at the kidnapper. He fired again and the wolf was hit in a foreleg. It gave the man enough time to climb into his van and drive away. The silver burned and I writhed on the sidewalk, howling, hating, cursing. I would get Sirius back! I would! I heard someone call my name, and then the pain became too much. ===== Another unfamiliar ceiling. I had the sinking feeling as I realized that I was waking up somewhere, once more, that was not my own bed and was not anywhere I was acquainted with, that this was going to be a running theme. At least when I was knocked unconscious instead of falling asleep, I didn't suffer from the nightmares. I groaned and covered my eyes with my forearm. Well, the one that wasn't wrapped in bandages, at least. That's right. I remembered now. I had been shot. Bastard. “This isn't real,” I told myself very firmly. “I will close my eyes and when I open them I will be at home, in my bed.” “I think that is not what will happen, cherie,” a voice beside me said. I cracked an eye and glared hatefully at Jean-Claude. He smiled pleasantly back. I noted with some satisfaction that there was a long red welt on his cheek where the bullet had grazed him. Although he was a Master Vampire, he couldn't heal that fast. His shoulder was as swathed in bandages as mine. I bet the wererat nurse from book one had tended to us both. The thought of little clawed hands digging around in my flesh to extract a bullet made me feel suddenly queasy so I stopped thinking about it. I distracted myself by sitting up carefully and looking at JeanClaude. He was seated in a chair by my bedside. He was reading a book. “White Fang”. He closed it gently and set it aside. He'd been waiting for me to wake up. I was not in his blue bedroom under the Circus. I didn't know where I was, I didn't recognize the décor from any of the books I'd read. Maybe another safe place? Under 'Guilty Pleasures' or another business he owned? I know he owed almost half of the Riverfront District, under the managing name JC Enterprises. Yeah, really original. The room was done in tasteful earth tones and greens. A bed, rather Spartan by Jean-Claude's standards, made of oak, was flanked by matching night tables. It was only a double, not like Jean-Claude's massive King. The coverlet was a deep rich brown that looked like good soil. The floors were hardwood with sporadic throw rugs and there was a closet and a desk opposite the foot of the bed. The closet looked a mess and the desk was piled high with papers and a rainbow assortment of file folders and pens. The chair Jean-Claude was sitting on was definitely the one from the desk set, rather hard and cramped looking. He was trying his best to be imposingly-casual, lounging dangerously in the rickety chair and failing. “How's Richard?” I asked. He sat forward, balancing his elbows on his knees and lacing his fingers. He rested his chin on his knuckles. “Where is Messier Black?” I shook my head. “I told you, I don't know. The guy - said he was collecting expensive pets.” Jean-Claude's face became suddenly blank. I knew that he did that when he didn't want someone to read his expression. He was like an eerie, life-sized china doll, perfect and lifeless. It usually meant that he was startled or angry and was hiding it. I hoped his anger wasn't directed at me. He regarded me thoughtfully for a moment before saying, his face remaining perfectly and disturbingly passive, “Richard is in fine health. The bullets were removed, and none of the wounds were fatal.” I settled myself back into the pillows. I obviously wasn't going anywhere soon. I wondered if Sirius was all right. “You heal … remarkably fast,” Jean-Claude observed, “Faster than any Vampire who is not a master, and yet… you are not a master.” “I told you, I'm different.” He didn't outwardly react to that, so I added. “Can I have my stuff back?” The corners of Jean-Claude's lips turned upwards at this. “I will return your … stuff… to you when you have proven yourself suitably loyal.” I blinked. “Excuse me?” Jean-Claude shifted from the chair to the bed, faster than I could see. He was just suddenly straddling my knees, arching over me, one hand on my cheek, his thumb under my chin. I yelped, shocked, and he put pressure under my jaw to tilt my face up to his. He leaned in close and whispered against my lips, “You are a puzzle, cherie, and one which I am loath to give up before I can solve you.” He ran one finger of his other hand along the raised scar tissue that Lucard's fatal bite had left me with. “Like this… such a lovely scar. Whose teeth are these, cherie?” I tried to turn my head away and couldn't. My heart wasn’t beating, but the adrenaline wash made it feel like it was pounding, the rush of blood deafening in my ears. I squeezed my eyes shut against his hungry blue gaze. Not again, I pleaded silently, Please, not again, never again… “Once he has been retrieved, you, ma cherie, and your Mr. Black will be my guests for an… extended period of time, am I clear?” “No, please…” He chuckled and his laugher was like a hundred silken-clad fingers lightly running all over my body all at once. I tried to shake my head, try to deny him his power over me. He leaned close, closing the gap. His lips settled over mine and his Power made lust flutter through my stomach. I didn't want the lust. I reached towards the nightstand with my bandaged arm as his tongue slipped past my lips, and I found the book he had been reading. My fingers closed around it. I swung it hard, and cracked it against the side of this head. He pulled back, startled, confused slightly. I backed up as far as I could against the head board, glowering angrily. Jean-Claude looked at the book and I did too - there was a spatter of blood on the spine. I must have nailed his scalp with a corner. Good for me. He grabbed my wrist and yanked the book away and tossed it at the wall. “That is inappropriate behaviour for my pet,” he said, and his voice was even and calm. “Behave.” The word 'pet' made my hackles rise. I knew what a pet was in this fandom - a gopher, a bodyguard, a driver, a dolly to dress up and parade around, an available fuck, a pomme du sang, anything. I was not Jean-Claude's anything. He leaned in for another kiss and I ducked under him. This only succeeded in getting me flat on my back and he pressed his torso against mine to pin me in place. He grinned. “Am I not beautiful, cherie? Am I not powerful? I can smell your lust. Give in to me.” I was about to tell him to go screw himself when a gentle 'ahem' came from the doorway. We both looked up to find Richard, extremely pale and haggard and almost mummified in bandages from his waistband to his collarbone. “If she's awake, I'd like my bed back. If that's not too much trouble.” Jean-Claude didn't move. I feared he wouldn't, would deny Richard his own bed in his own house (for I realized now that this was where we had to be), or worse, invite Richard to 'join' him. Instead he slipped gracefully off of me and onto his feet. There was still blood running down the side of his head, just past the front of his ear, down his neck and into the collar of his poufy white shirt. I watched a drop follow along the path and had to forcefully prevent myself from licking my lips. It had to have been at least ten hours since I had last fed. My stomach and veins clenched with this realization. Jean-Claude helped me to my own feet. I tried to stay where I was, so it was less 'helping' and more 'lifting me out of the bed by my elbows and setting me on the floor.' He prodded me out of the doorway and into a relatively comfy but very cluttered living room. Richard lived in a bachelor apartment that still contained some university-student-days throwbacks like a shabby couch and a bookshelf made of random planks of lumber and dirty broken bricks. I heard Richard climb into bed, even as Jean-Claude forced me to sit beside him on the couch. “You hit me with a book,” he said and his voice was somewhere between anger and an amused whisper. “I tend to do that a lot to Vampires I don't like.” He tilted his head and pursed his lips. “You do not like me? I am hurt.” He waited for me to apologize. When I didn't, he added, “Which other Vampires, ma cherie?” He gestured to the mark on my neck. I buttoned my lips. “Do not make me force you to tell me.” “…Dracula,” I said grudgingly. “C'est impossible,” he dismissed. “He is truly dead. The truth, please.” I hesitated. “Not the Dracula,” I said softly, hoping he wouldn't be able to smell this lie. “A Dracula. He… was from the line. Now I am, too.” He stared at me for a moment, and for a moment I feared he wouldn't believe me. His eyebrows raised, and I think the blank expression was supposed to hide extreme amusement. “So you are now a Dracul as well?” “Not by choice.” He laughed here and I couldn't suppress the shudder it caused. His damn voice! “I will enjoy having you about, Mademoiselle Dracul,” he whispered seductively, lowering his head to look at me through the black lacework of his eyelashes. His voice was husky and promised long languid sessions of lovemaking on a soft rug by a fireplace. “You will succumb to me yet.” “I won't be your pet, Jean-Claude.” I glared at him, but made a point of not meeting his eyes. I wouldn't let him roll my mind again. “And don't call me that ever again.” The thought of me being a part of Dracula's clan, something that belonged to or with him in anyway made me feel very ill all of a sudden. It was a terrifying and disgusting notion. “I shall call you what I wish. I am your Master.” He touched my fist, clenched on my thigh, with a light caress and I tried to repress the seductive shudder. “You will be overjoyed when I take you, make you mine.” I knew that Jean-Claude fed on sexual energy as much he fed on blood, so I did my best to keep the mind-tricks-induced lust out of my mind and out of the way. It’s just that he was just so damned beautiful, so good at the seduction. I pulled my hand away from him. “Not willingly, I won't be. I'll fight you every step of the way, you know I will.” He sighed. “I do not understand you women. You want me. It is plain to my nose that you wish to use my body. Why do you not submit?” I shook my head. “I can make it very pleasurable, ma cherie,” he leaned forward to whisper in my ear, fingertips trailing up my arms to take hold of the sides of my face and hold me still. He placed an almost chaste kiss on my lips. “Like you've never had before. I will keep you safe, warm, well fed. Why deny yourself that?” “I don't want to be kept.” My voice was like a low hiss. “You may have anything you desire, as my pet.” He slipped one hand into my hair, cradling the back of my skull gently, guiding my lips to the line of blood that was lingering on his neck from the head wound. I turned my face away. I was starting to get really hungry, but I would not drink his blood. “I desire to rescue Sirius and get him home.” Jean-Claude sat back to study my face. “No. Describe the van.” The non sequiter threw me for a second and I blinked at him stupidly. “If you wish to rescue Messier Black, describe the van. It had pulled away by the time I came outside to retrieve you.” “Uh…” I shook my head for a moment. Had it been Jean-Claude I had heard call my name before I passed out? No, think of the van. “White, but dirty. Um… scuffed and muddy plates. Full sized van, with a ladder - maybe like an electrical van or a plumber or something? There was writing on the side, but I don't… it could be…a business or something. God, how many vans like that exist in the city?” “Many.” His tone was not meant to encourage. “Anything else?” “There was a cage in the back, with manacles screwed into the floor of the van. To... collect people in.” Jean-Claude considered this. “Perhaps this man is also responsible for some other… disappearances in the city among the … preternatural communities.” I perked up. This sounded like a pattern - maybe one Jean-Claude was familiar with. Patterns lead to evidence. Evidence lead to rescues. If I could find Sirius, he may have his wand still. We could accio my pouch and stuff and then get out of there. Or he could Apparate into the building. Something to get us away from JeanClaude. I know I had no desire to live the rest of my unlife under the thumb of the Master of St. Louis. I wanted to go home. I knew Sirius would want to, too. “You've heard of this collector, then?” I fished, warily. Jean-Claude stopped pondering and looked at me. Really looked at me. “I do not know,” Jean-Claude finally admitted, with that infuriating tilt of his head. “You don't--!” I stopped myself and closed my eyes. I took a deep breath and let it out again. “You don't know? You've never heard of him?” “No, or I would have killed him already.” He smiled. It was both charming and wicked all at once. “Perhaps ma chere petite will have heard of him, however.” I rolled my eyes. “She doesn't like it when you call her that, you know.” ===== Watching Anita Blake work was like watching yourself get drunk. From the shadows in the tree line we observed as she and a younger man with hair the colour of a 'surprised carrot' circled a gravestone. The family of the deceased stood outside of the circle they described with their footfalls, dressed mostly in black, clinging to one another. A suit stood off to one side, and I assumed he was the lawyer. I did not try to run from Jean-Claude. I knew that right now, I was powerless to escape him. Still weak from the gunshot, and the lack of feeding, without my pouch and wand. I was trapped… for now. Efficiently, Ms. Blake anointed her eyelids, forehead and cheeks with a greenish ointment that smelled so strongly of rosemary that I could scent it even this far away. It was in a large mason jar, the kind my mother used to make pickles in. She opened the top few buttons of a dark green blouse and dabbed it over her heart, and I pretended not to notice when Jean-Claude's breath hitched in his throat. The Big-Bad-Master-Vampire was not as calm and detached as he liked to pretend to be. With almost no hesitation, she put the jar away and her helper Lawrence, I remembered his name was, but he preferred 'Larry' held a chicken firmly by its wings. Ms. Blake lifted a machete and with a clean slice took off the animal's head. The scent of blood wafted across the wind to us and my veins burned hotter, screaming with need. I dug my fingers deeper into the bark of the tree, using its bite to clear my head. Ms. Blake caught the chicken’s blood in a silver bowl and the instant the hot red liquid touched the silver I felt a shiver of power spread out from the grave like a cold wind. It blew back my hair and made my skin tingle. The family seemed unaffected, but Larry was shivering too. With the bowl and the ridiculously large knife, Ms. Blake made a circle around the grave in chicken blood. Her long dark curly hair was also fluttering in the wind. I guessed her hair-tie broke, because I knew fluttering hair annoyed the hell out of her. When the chicken body had ceased to struggle, Larry set it aside on the grass and stepped close to the circle, but not across it. Once the circle was closed, no one could enter. Or exit. Anita called a name, and I felt my insides roil. It felt like I had consumed a whole mickey of tequila, and it hit me fast. The world spun yet my feet were planted solidly. I had to grab a tree to remain upright. She called the name again and I watched Jean-Claude as he closed his eyes, a lazy smile curling his lips. He was getting off on this. The power that was making me feel like I really needed to get my Sea Legs was giving him his jollies. I shook my head. As a friend used to say, 'Whatever fluffs your Garfield.' The third time Ms. Blake called the name, a pale hand shot from the freshly turned grave soil and a young lady with dirt-flecked yellow hair pulled herself from her grave, looking very confused. Anita broke the circle and the Family surged around her. From what I could tell, the girl had been hit by a drunk driver. This was her family's way of getting closure. An hour passed of tearful goodbyes and I politely turned my back on their private grief. Some things were not meant for prying or public eyes. Then Ms. Blake laid the young lady to rest and the family went home. She and Larry buried the chicken corpse in the loose dirt over the grave, cleaned themselves up with some Wet-Wipes from her car, and packed away their gear. Only then did Jean-Claude stroll out of the shadows towards them. I followed behind. To them it probably looked like I was yet another of his 'pets', part of his entourage. The thought annoyed me and I sped up so I was walking a few steps in front of him. I was not his pet. They felt us coming before they saw us. Or rather, Ms. Blake felt me, and Larry turned to follow her gaze. They were both surprised to see the Master of the City bringing up the rear. “Ms. Anita Blake?” I said, trying to sound as amiable and harmless as possible. I stuck out my hand in what I thought was a friendly manner and she took it hesitantly, glaring at Jean-Claude over my shoulder. I had removed my bandages before coming out to the cemetery. So had he. Both of our wounds were healed, though it had freaked me out. I wasn't used to healing like this. Anita shivered and goose bumps crawled up her arm from where she touched my skin, but she did not let go. Brownie points for her. “Yes,” she said warily, cutting her soft brown eyes from JeanClaude to me and back again. “What do you want, now?” That was not directed at me. She let go of my hand slowly. Jean-Claude laughed, and it was like warm fur that slid down my spine. I know the brunt of it was meant for Anita, but I saw Larry shiver just as easily as I did. “Me, ma petite? You know what it is that I want. But I am not here for that.” Oh, he sounded so innocent. I knew she was dating Richard right now, the Master Werewolf of the city, and that Jean-Claude hated it. “I have merely come to bring Miss Dracul to you. She so wanted to meet you.” “Dracul?” her eyes narrowed at me, as if she were really seeing me for the first time. “I told him not to call me that,” I grumbled and managed a smile in her direction. It was hard to do without flashing the tips of my incisors, which were pointy now. I knew she considered fangflashing a mark of the young ones, the newly dead. I didn't want her to think I was one of the newly-dead. Dracula was supposed to be long gone here. “But you are?” Larry asked, blue eyes eager. He was excited. Heh, I guess I didn't blame him. Not every day you get to meet the daughter of Dracula. I shrugged. “I prefer just Marie.” “Alright, Marie,” Anita said, taking charge of the situation. I knew she carried a Browning with silver bullets in a shoulder holster, even if I couldn't see it against the black jacket. I could smell the gunpowder. “Why did you want to meet me?” “Would you believe me if I said I just wanted your autograph?” Her eyes narrowed even more. Jean-Claude threw back his head and full out laughed. Even Larry chuckled. “No, huh.” She shook her head. I sighed and pulled Sirius' wanted poster out of my pocket and unfolded it. I handed it to her. She watched for a moment, amazed as Sirius raged in the portrait, shaking his fist, laughing hysterically, and trying to throw off the number board. “I'm not hunting him for you,” she said, and I admired her strength of will. It's dangerous to tell the Master of the City 'no', or the Master's guest, and she did it repeatedly. “I'm not asking you to,” I replied. “I'm not after Sirius. I've come to … bring him home, for want of better terminology. He has been… cleared of his crimes, but he was exiled here,” I gestured around me to indicate her world. I think she got it. “I found him, working in 'Guilty Pleasures',” Anita's gaze flicked to Jean-Claude as she suddenly realized why he was there, “but he was stolen out from under our noses.” Anita allowed herself a small smile. “Stolen? Out from under JeanClaude's pretty little nose?” Jean-Claude sniffed. “No need to tease, ma petite.” “What took him?” she said, turning her attention back to me. “Not ‘who’?” Larry asked over her shoulder, staring at the manyfolded poster. “He's a Wizard, this poster says, and a powerful one, I'd wager,” she said. He gaze remained on me. “It would have to be something more than human.” “I'm not sure what he was,” I admitted. “He smelled human, but…” I shrugged. “He was strong.” “Why should I help you?” she asked, all business. I smiled back, equally all business. “I could pay your boss Bert and then you'd have to help me.” “But you won't or you would have already.” “Touché.” Behind us Jean-Claude watched our repartee with silent, glittering blue eyes. She shoved her hands into her pockets. Knowing what I did of her, she wouldn't like not having her hands free to reach for her gun, but they looked cold. “So why haven't you? Paid Bert, I mean.” “I have no money.” She looked momentarily startled and I grinned. “Besides, I don't want to force you to help me. Sirius Black is an innocent man and I have been sent to bring him home. I would prefer it if you did it as a favour to me - I would do what I could to repay you.” Larry looked at his watch. “Anita, we have an appointment in half an hour.” If he heard him she didn't acknowledge it. There was a long moment of her studying me, followed by her studying Jean-Claude. “Okay,” she finally said. Larry looked antsy. “Anita…” “You can handle this last one on your own, yeah?” “Yeah,” he said. She tossed him her car keys. “Bring it back in one piece. I'll see you at work tomorrow.” Larry was caught between joy at being able to go to the appointment alone in Anita's car, and fear for her. “I won't let anything happen to Ms. Blake,” I said to him. “I swear.” He nodded and left us alone. When he was in the car and halfway to the gates of the cemetery I sighed. “Well, that's fabu. How do we get you back to town?” Anita looked at me. “Didn't you come in a car?” “I flew.” “Flew?” I couldn't resist the opening and slipped down into my bat-shape. I’d done it a handful of times in Richard’s apartment, to get the feel for it. Jean-Claude could fly on his own, so I had clung to him with batty fingers on the way to the cemetery. She squawked and I laughed and resumed human form. She looked startled. Jean-Claude looked hungry. I couldn't forget. Finding Sirius was one thing. Extricating him and myself from JeanClaude's grip would be another thing entirely. He still had my sliderphials, my wand, and my knife. He had plans, and I'm certain we both figured in them. I didn't want to figure in them. Jean-Claude looked up as another car, this time sleek and black, slid almost silently into the cemetery, like a great black shark. “Ah, there is our ride, now,” he said, smiling. When it pulled up beside us I saw that a man in leather with a dog collar on was behind the wheel, and I knew it was one of the Master's pet werewolves. Anita and I exchanged a glance and, having nothing else to do, got in. Book Three: Anita Blake Chapter Ten: “Plans" We drove in silence. Jean-Claude and the driver only exchanged a glace or two. Anita and I sat in the back. She was doing her best not to touch me, scrunching herself up against the door while trying to look like she wasn’t. I didn't blame her. It was uncomfortable and eerie. Her powers told me I was undead, but I was different, strange. Unknown. “So,” I asked, by way of trying to start a conversation to fill the tense silence, “What is it with werewolves being furry pedagogues?” Jean-Claude looked at me sharply in the rear-view mirror. Anita turned a puzzled expression my way. I shrugged. “It just occurred to me that one of the werewolves in the city is a lot like the last werewolf I met - they're both school teachers.” She looked at me with wide brown eyes. “My guess is that it's a pack thing. You know, wanting to protect and guide the cubs.” Anita swallowed. “It is possible, cherie,” Jean-Claude whispered, and silence descended once more, the conversation effectively killed. “Right.” I shrugged. “Down to business it is, then. Sirius black was kidnapped by a man with reddish-rusty-brown hair and a sort of thin face. He had a huge freaking gun that spat silver bullets and a white van that had a yellow ladder on top and some sort of business logo on the side. He said he was collecting 'rare' preternatural creatures to sell as exotic pets.” Again Jean-Claude looked at me in the rear-view mirror – or rather, tried, because I wasn’t in the mirror – and finally turned in his seat to look at me. The look was easy to read: Don’t say anything about our relationship. Because I liked all my bits where they were, I said nothing. “Collecting pets?” Anita repeated. “That’s what he said.” “Okay, start at the beginning, explain everything.” Anita listened carefully as, between us, Jean-Claude and I recounted what had happened from the explosion onward. I noted that the Master Vampire was reluctant to admit that he was holding me hostage at the moment. He also chose not to mention Richard, and I took the hint and left him out as well. There was enough strife between Jean-Claude and I. There was no need to add more by talking about what he chose not to mention. Yet. When we were all finished, Anita was silent for a long moment, then said, “But why Sirius?” “What do you mean?” I asked. “Why Sirius, why take him?” Anita clarified. “From what I understand, he's just a witch. There's other, stronger witches out there. Other witches that can do niftier tricks – surely they’d be worth more to sell.” I watched the reflection of Jean-Claude's eyes looked between the two of us in the rear-view mirror. He was expressionless again. “Sirius Black has the ability to turn into a large black dog,” I said, and pulled the drawing of Padfoot out of my back pocket to show her. “He's a weredog?” she asked, studying the paper. “I've never heard of anything like that. Lycanthropes aren’t usually domesticated animals.” “It is a first for me, as well, ma petite,” Jean-Claude admitted. The driver made a sound as if to add his disbelief without actually contributing to the conversation. His ears were open, but he was professionally deaf. I shook my head. “He's not a weredog.” Jean-Claude turned in the seat to glare at me. His long, slim fingers dug into the fabric of the seat, and that was the only indication of his extreme unhappiness. “He's not?” “No, it's just more magic. It’s just another spell. Sirius is an Animagus.” Jean-Claude was silent, and I could feel his anger thick in the air, like it was a tangible thing. “But our kidnapper doesn't know that it's just a magic trick,” Anita said, either unaware or totally ignoring the pissed-off-vibes of the Vampire in the front seat. She folded up the drawing and pocketed it, and I let her. “Okay, I'll call Dolph, see what he knows.” “I have also put the word out,” Jean-Claude said and none of the anger I felt from him was in his voice. “I expect to have some news when we return to the Circus.” Anita narrowed her eyes. “I want to go home, first.” Jean-Claude eyes widened in mock shock. “But, ma petite, we have already passed your turn off.” Anita swung her head around to look out the window. She cussed. Jean-Claude smiled charmingly. “We will go to the Circus. You may use my phone, ma petite, and Miss Dracul and I will …talk.” I didn't like the sound of that. By the sour look on Anita's face, she didn't either. He truly was a manipulative bastard. ===== As soon as we arrived at the Circus we were ushered downstairs through a private door. I didn't like being flanked by Jean-Claude and his werewolf driver, like I was a prisoner. But that's what I was, wasn't I? A prisoner. We entered an all white sitting room, white couches, white walls, white chairs. It was set up to be cozy, but only looked cold. It was sitting room of sorts, another one I didn't recognize from the books. I wondered how many sequestered lairs Jean-Claude had. The carpet was black, actually black, and the trim on the furniture matched. The driver showed Anita into a small office on the far side of the room, and she closed the door between us and her. Don't leave me alone with him! I wanted to shout, but didn't. I was a big Vampire. I could take care of myself… right? I removed my Hogwarts robe, which I had worn to the cemetery, and draped it over the back of a chair. I had noticed both Anita and Jean-Claude puzzling at the school crest that sat just above my heart, wracking their brains for its meaning, but neither had asked about it. I'm sure Jean-Claude had already asked his cronies to get the word around that he was looking for a place called “Hogwarts”. It was a personal satisfaction to know that he wouldn't find it. Jean-Claude steered me onto the couch with a firm grip on my upper arm and made me sit, facing him. He got right in my face. “You knew that he wasn't a weredog,” he said right away, not tiptoeing around his displeasure. It wasn't a question. I sighed. “I knew.” “Why did you not tell me?” “You didn't ask.” “You should have volunteered the information. It is irresponsible of you. Why will you not help?” “Because you're determined to hold us both hostage!” “Hostage?” he sat back a little. I crossed my arms over my chest. “I won't be your pet,” I spat. “I know what being a Master Vampire's pet entails, and I won't do it. Neither will Sirius. He's needed at home. His godson and his friends miss him terribly. They think he's dead. He's important there and I promised I'd get him home.” He raised an eyebrow, eyes sparkling. “There is far more to this than you are telling me.” I kept my gaze away from his so he couldn't play his mind games. “Yes, there is,” I said honestly, because it was obvious that a denial would be a blatant lie. “But I won't explain it to you.” He thought for a moment, and then hit upon a realization. “You're doing this as a favour to someone, cherie, that is why you're so determined.” It was disturbingly close to home. I changed the subject. I looked at my hands folded in my lap. “Give me my wand back and I can make this whole process faster. A map and a locus alio charm and we'll know where Sirius is in seconds.” He shook his head. “I do not think so, cherie. I will not give you such power.” He lifted a hand and brushed it across the scars on my neck. I tried to jerk backwards and his other hand grabbed my wrist and pulled me towards him. I turned my face away, but unfortunately that ended up presenting the skin of my throat. He pressed soft, cool lips over the scar, his tongue tasting, mapping the ridges of white scar tissue. “Is it so terrible a thing to be with me?” he whispered against my skin and I shivered. “What… Anita's in the… stop it…” He chuckled and the vibration of his chest traveled up my arm. “Anita knows that my heart is hers.” “Then let go of me, you philandering jerk!” He pressed his teeth down against my neck, the hand on my wrist sliding up to press against my ribcage, then circle around my back. He pulled me onto his lap; our chests crushed together, one hand on the small of my back, the other on the back of my neck. I kept my face turned away. I didn't want him to be able to roll my mind, and there was something disgustingly invasive about his being able to kiss me when I didn’t want it. It was far more intimate than being able to bite my neck and drink my blood, in my mind, so I went with the lesser of two evils. “Is it so terrible a thing to be with me?” he asked again. He had let go with his teeth and gone back to kissing and licking. “I am the Master of St. Louis. I control the werewolves. I could give you anything and everything you want. All you would have to do is obey me - use your magic, your strange skills to my advantage.” The hand on my lower back slipped down inside the waistband of my pants. “I could make you very happy.” “What would make me very happy is you letting go of me.” He made an unimpressed snarling sound that made my whole body shiver, and used his grip on my hair to turn my face to his. I squeezed my eyes shut. I could feel his breath wafting over my lips as he spoke. “Let us bargain, then. I shall work with you to help you find your Sirius Black. You are returning him home to replay someone for something, so I will not deny you that. He is of no use to me if he is merely a witch, at any rate. I will deign to release him. You, however… in payment, you will remain here, with me, as my pet willingly.” “No.” “Would you prefer it if I did not allow Sirius to go free? I could keep you both here, seal you in a coffin, chain him to the wall until you are both acquiescent.” “No.” “Then be my pet. Come to me of your own accord and it will not be such a terrible thing.” I shook my head, trying to pull away. His grip was strong and I couldn't. “Why would you even want me as a pet? I can't be your pomme du sang. I'm a Vampire, too. I won't use my spells to kill anyone for you. I refuse to hurt anyone for you. And I'm probably a lousy lay, anyway.” He laughed. “Oh, you are too modest my dear. As long as you feed before you feed me, I will only grow stronger on your blood. Perhaps I will gain your ability to walk in daylight and consume mortal food. I do miss blackberries.” I felt his lips so close to mine that they were brushing me as he spoke. “And we are Vampires, cherie. You will kill for me and like it.” “No.” “As for whether or not you are… ah… a skilled lover…” his hand in my hair slid down to cup a breast, “these things can be taught.” I tried to shove him away, and the struggling made my veins burn, the hunger suddenly flaring to life. I had been able to suppress it all night because there had been no blood so temptingly close. Anita and the driver both smelled strange, of moonlight and grave dust, and they hadn’t made me hungry. But now I could smell the blood under his skin and it made my stomach clench. I gasped, my hands balling into fists in his shirt, and tried to bend double to ease the sudden consuming pain. I pressed my forehead against his collarbone and whined. I hadn't hurt this badly since I had been in the shower with Remus. “Ma cherie?” Jean-Claude said gently, and I felt his hands circle my shoulders tenderly. He pushed me back a little to look into my face. His own was a mask of concern. I wondered if it was genuine. He frowned slightly. “When was the last time you fed?” I shook my head. “Last night… sunset.” He frowned deeper. “Why did you not say something?” I snarled. “We were a little busy, eh?” He stood gracefully, taking me with him, and lay me back down on the couch. He was touching me as if I were a fragile china doll. “I will have someone sent in.” I shook my head and sat up. The world swam and I put a hand over my eyes. The fire shot through my veins again and I groaned. “Do not argue with me, cherie,” he said, and then he was gone. I lay back down and stared at the ceiling. I could hear the soft murmur of Anita's voice in the other room. I could smell her blood. Hunger surpassed the strange scent, and now I wanted it. No. I forced myself to stay where I was. Maybe I could attack JeanClaude? Yeah, right. I couldn't even break his grip - how could I subdue him? I could seduce him, but the thought was unpleasant. He'd like it too much, and consider it a sign of my acceptance of his bargain. I would not be his pet. Maybe, I thought, waiting for him to return, maybe I should accept. I mean, it would get Sirius home. And I was a Vampire - I had literally forever. I could play along just long enough for him to give me my things back, and then I could take off, keep going, finish my journey. But what if he broke my wand? What if he destroyed the phials? And could I really allow myself to be kept? I'd go nuts. I had the potion memorized, but would I ever escape his eyes long enough to brew it in secret? No, I had to escape. I had to rescue Sirius, and then myself. The door opened and I could smell a living person with him. The scent of live blood ticked the underside of my stomach, and I closed my eyes and bit my lip to keep from pouncing. The scuffling sound of denim on the carpet told me that the person had knelt beside me. “Cherie,” Jean-Claude said softly “This is Jason. He is training to be a pomme du sang. Be gentle.” I sat up slowly and stared at the blonde boy in front of me. He couldn't have been older than twenty. He reeked of werewolf. He was wearing a tank top, so his shoulders and neck were bare. I could see faint marks on his neck from other Vampire's fangs, but they didn't look like they'd scar. His left shoulder was ravaged, most of the wound covered with bandages but not all of it. I reached out and touched a gauze pad gently. “I was bit last week,” he said softly. “On the full moon.” I wanted to weep for him. Twenty years old, just bitten by a werewolf. He'd survived, but that meant he would change with the next full moon. And now, because the Master Vampire of the city could Call wolves, he was also under the control of Jean-Claude. What did it mean, to be trained to be a pomme du sang? Would Jason feed every Vampire in the area, now? Would he be rented out, like some sort of whore? Did he even have a choice in this? What had happened to his former life? Had Jason even been given the choice as to whether or not he wanted to be a pomme du sang? I suddenly hated Jean-Claude very much. I shook my head. I had to feed. Jason was offering. Indeed, he had his head back, to the side, exposing a vein. I was too hungry to worry about morals just now. I would rant later. Later. Gently I allowed my fangs to slide out and felt my eyes flush golden. Jean-Claude made a murmur when he saw the colour of my eyes his kind of vampire's eyes didn't do this, nor did their fangs lengthen or retract. I kissed the skin of Jason's neck before slipping my fangs in. I didn't want to shock him. I did it as quickly as possible, to spare him the pain, and retracted just as quick. The blood welled up and I waited until I had a mouthful before I swallowed. The red heat burnt a path down to my stomach, spreading outward, warming me. I sighed and Jason echoed it. I sucked the second mouthful and tried to think of warm, lazy summer afternoons and soft sensual kisses to make it pleasurable for Jason. His hands slid up my thighs and I realized that he was getting off on this all on his own. I swallowed a few more mouthfuls and was satisfied enough to let go. There was no need to glut myself on the boy. I lingered over the cuts, lapping at them, until the blood flow slowed, then stopped. I pulled away, sitting up, and Jason let out one last shuddering groan, his head thrown back, his eyes little slivers of white under his lids. He looked sexy, ravaged, satisfied. Not nearly as scrumptious as Remus had, all damp and tousled, but enough that I couldn't resist giving him a small kiss. He groaned into my mouth, trying to deepen the kiss, his hands coming up to cup the sides of my face. I pulled backwards and he pressed forwards, following me. “Jason,” I heard Jean-Claude say. “Enough.” The boy sighed and sat back on his heels. He smiled at me, a sexy smirk. A thin stream of blood was trailing from the wound down his chest. I wanted to lick it away. Instead I looked at my lap. “Thank you,” I said softly. “Any time,” he purred. “You ever want me again, I'm yours.” He was sent away, and I moved to the chair. I curled into a ball and rested my face in my hands, just breathing. Lust filled my every vein. Jason's desire thrummed in my veins, and Jean-Claude's presence, his powerful seductive voice wasn't helping. I took some time to calm myself, breathing in great lungfulls of air that I didn’t need in a rhythmic pattern, before I looked up. Jean-Claude was lounging on the couch, his shirt deliberately open, framing his smooth, beautifully sculpted chest and the brown scar that was appealing rather than marring. He was wearing a wanton smile. “No,” I said. “Come, cherie, I can smell your desire. Why deny yourself?” “No,” I said again, and meant it. He grinned and ran a hand through his hair. Erg. It was going to be a long night. ===== It was well past three in the morning by the time Anita came into the sitting room and flopped down on the couch. She had been on the phone for at least two hours, calling everyone she knew. She looked exhausted but triumphant. She waved a piece of paper under Jean-Claude's nose. “No supernatural powers,” she said, grinning, “No bribes. No death threats. Just good old fashioned detective work and a few white lies.” Jean-Claude raised his eyebrows. “I am impressed, ma petite,” he said softly and scooched closer to her on the couch. “Come, let me give you a victory kiss.” “Buzz off, I'm too tired for this crap,” she growled and Jean-Claude shrugged and stood. He plucked the scrap of paper from her hand. I saw that it had a phone number written on it. “What is this?” “The answering machine that you leave a message on,” Anita said wearily. She yawned and we both waited her out. “Just leave your name, contact info, and the type of pet you're looking for. Oh, and a price quote. If he likes your offer, he'll contact you.” “Wait,” I said, from my chair to the side. “Does this mean that someone specifically requested Sirius?” Anita looked at me and I could see the disgust registering on her face. “Yeah, probably.” She glared at Jean-Claude. “Which makes this all your fault.” “Moi, ma petite?” he said, one hand pressed over his heart. “Yeah, you. You're the one who put him on display at Guilty Pleasures, aren't you?” I frowned, touching the side of my neck where Sirius had licked me during his routine. The skin tingled at the remembered contact. Had it really been only eight or so hours ago? Sirius had looked so …well, so sexy. I didn't really blame anyone for requesting him. Still. Abduction and slavery were wrong, human or not. Jean-Claude did not dignify Anita's accusation with an answer. Instead he slipped the paper into his pocket and said, “I will take care of this part. Thank you, ma petite. You are very tired. Take my bed for this evening.” Anita sat forward, scowling. She had a very pretty scowl. “I'd rather go home.” Jean-Claude shook his head. “I would rather that you were here, just in case I need you,” he said, smooth as silk. “I will be a perfect gentleman.” Anita threw up her hands. “Fine, I'm too tired to argue. But stay out of my dreams, or I will put a bullet between those pretty eyes of yours.” He smiled. “You think my eyes are pretty?” We both groaned. ===== Anita retired to the bedroom adjacent to the sitting room and once again I was left alone with Jean-Claude. I felt a hundred times better than I had been, full and warm finally. But I wasn't looking forward to another seduction-session, however, and it must have shown on my face. He was standing between the couch and the chair, and he had turned to face me. “Come now,” he said, “my company isn't all that distasteful, is it?” I shook my head. “I'm too tired for this bullshit, too, Jean-Claude.” “Tired?” he asked. “I was up and around at eleven o'clock this morning,” I said. I had lounged back in the chair, trying to force my eyes to stay open. The one downside to a full tummy was that it made you feel sleepy. “So, despite the two times I lost consciousness tonight, I really haven't had any sleep.” “Ah, I have been remiss in my duties as host.” I snorted. He moved towards the door. “I will have a coffin prepared for you. It will not be your own, but it will do for now.” The thought of sleeping in a box with a lid was enough to make me rigid all over. I felt the colour drain from my face. He paused with his hand on the knob and watched me closely. “You… do not like the idea?” I shook my head. “I… don't sleep in coffins.” He tilted his head again, in the manner of a curious puppy perking an ear. “You do not require it?” “No.” “Do you not require the soil from your own grave with you?” “No,” I shook my head. “I've never had a grave. Do you?” He smiled and didn't answer. Infuriating. He turned the doorknob and stuck his head out into the hall. He spoke in hushed tones with someone, then shut the door and walked back to the couch. “I have arranged a room for you. No one will disturb you. Sleep as long as you like.” I stood warily and moved towards the door. “Can I at least have the phials back?” He smiled again, that smug 'I'm-not-telling' look and said, “No, my dear.” I exited the room. The driver-werewolf was waiting for me. He waited a little longer as I punched the cement wall in my fury, over and over, biting down on my tongue to keep from shrieking in frustration. I heard a loud crack and a sharp pain shot up my arm. I'd broken my hand. The pain made the fury subside, to slide into shame for my angry display, and I let the werewolf lead me to a room two doors over. It was small but well decorated and had a bed rather than a coffin. I wondered if it was Richard's room. The werewolf offered to find me some bandages for my hand, and I thanked him and told him it wouldn't be necessary. Blood was running down my scraped knuckles, over my fingers, and onto the floor. I was leaving a small trail. He bid me good day and just before he closed the door behind him, he said, “You know, Jean-Claude is an okay guy. Good businessman, and he treats us all pretty well. Much better than the Master who was in charge before him. You should be flattered that he wants to keep you around.” “And yet, somehow, I'm not,” I sneered. He shook his head and closed the door. I wasn't surprised to hear the metallic scrape and click of a lock being set. Not that it wouldn't be too hard to kick the door down. But he lock wasn’t there to keep me in. The lock was a reminder. I was a prisoner. I sat on the foot of the bed in the dark, alone, licking my wounds. ===== When the nightmares jolted me awake, it was just before sunset. I had slept longer than I had meant to, but I had been very tired and the nightmares hadn't helped. I had woken three times during the day, the first right before sunrise. I had been dreaming of Lucard again, of what he may have done to me. The second dream had replaced Lucard with JeanClaude. I remained awake for about an hour and a half after it, then forced myself back to sleep. I would need to be well rested tonight. The third nightmare involved both of them. I screamed no, shrieking it over and over, kicking, punching, biting where I could, and it had been for nothing. They were immovable, both emotionally and physically. I couldn't get them off me. They were smiling, having a pleasant conversation about the differences in their Vampirism while they... they .... There had been someone else standing in the shadows in that dream, and that's what had scared me the most. Someone with glittering eyes and an expressionless face. I had called to him to help me and he had just melted back into the shadows from whence he'd come, like mist in the morning sunshine. I had screamed so loudly, then, that I had woken myself up. I sat up in bed, the blankets tangled around me, my face slick with sticky red sweat. When I realized where I was, what had just happened, I screamed again, though this time in frustration. I threw the pillow at the wall so hard it burst, sending feathers flying everywhere. The lock on the door clicked open and a blond head popped into the room. It was Jason. “Are you okay?” he asked softly, eyes on the feathers floating all around me, slowly sinking to the floor. I hid my face in my hands in an effort not to cry. “Just a nightmare,” I said softly. My voice sounded weak and shaky. He came all the way into the room and closed the door behind him. “Want me to make it go away?” I looked up to find him leering, leaning against the door with his hips jutted forward and his arms folded over his chest. His ankles were crossed. He was wearing black jeans and another dark tanktop. The bandages on his arm had been removed. There was an angry red welt in the shape of teeth on his shoulder, but otherwise it looked like it was healing fine. The marks on his neck were all but gone. Werewolves healed almost as fast as Vampires. I hoped Richard was feeling better. Jason noticed my eyes on his neck and he sauntered forward. He slid onto the side of the bed and crawled up on his hands and knees to press his face under my jaw. I was so startled by the aggressive intimacy that I couldn’t move. He kissed and licked me there and I stayed still, too shocked to push him away. “Ja-jason, what are you… doing…?” I asked softly. He growled against my skin and said, “Helping you forget your nightmare.” I put my hands on his whole shoulder and tried to push him away. Like an insistent puppy he refused to be deterred and moved further up, lapping my sweat off my cheek. “Jason.” He whined, low in his throat. “C'mon. You've gotta be hungry by now. You're the best suck I've ever had.” “The what?” He sat back on his heels. “Suck. I mean, jeeze, letting you feed off me was like… better than most of the actual sex I've had. I had to go jerk off for an hour afterwards just so I could get to sleep.” I closed my eyes. “I didn't want to hear that.” “Bite me again,” he whispered huskily. He leaned forward and took my hands in his, running them down his chest to rest on his thighs. He kissed me gently. When he pulled back I said, “No.” He chuckled and kissed me again, this time testing my lips with his tongue. I moved away and said, “What is it with all you Hamilton boys? Are you all nymphos?” He ran his hands down my side and gripped my waist gently enough to pull me up onto his lap. “Just kiss me back,” he said. “It won't hurt you.” He was right and I was loath to admit it. He was sexy, a good kisser, and I was hungry again. I kissed him back. I let his tongue into my mouth and just revelled in the feeling of him trying to devour me. Unlike in my nightmares, what he was doing felt good. Real good. “Bite me,” he panted when we parted, and he leaned his head to the side. The kiss had impassioned me enough to not care and I slid my fangs into his skin. He tensed and jerked as I retracted them and I sealed my lips around the punctures and sucked. He groaned and threw his head back, chest heaving. His hips ground into mine and he moaned as if it was the most mind-blowing sex of his life. I wondered if he was a masochist. He clung to me, nails digging into my back, and I let my own lust crackle over our bodies. When I was full I withdrew, lapping at his skin to encourage the flow to stop, and slid off of him. He flopped backwards, a very satisfied look on his face. The sound of clapping startled me. I turned to the door and found Jean-Claude standing there, leaning against the doorjamb, and applauding our performance. I blushed, embarrassed and slid off the bed. “You see, cherie,” he said softly and his voice made both Jason and I shiver with renewed lust. Jason jerked on the bed and curled in on himself. “You are most welcome here. Why not stay?” “No.” He sighed. “Les femmes,” he said softly. “Come, Anita is waiting for us.” I walked towards the door. As I passed him he refused to move. I had to brush by him (invasive bastard) and once we reached the hall, he stopped me with a hand on my shoulder and touched his thumb to my chin. It came away smeared with red. “You are a neat eater,” he said softly and I watched with ensnared gaze as he licked the blood of his thumb slowly, languorously. “But you missed a spot.” I took a jerky step back and shook my head. “Let's… go talk to Anita.” I wondered, secretly, if he had been watching my dream, if he had been the pale expressionless face in the shadows of the last one. Invasive bastard. ===== While I had been asleep, Jean-Claude had had someone call the kidnapper and put in a request for a rare lycanthrope. It had been Jean-Claude's idea to suggest perhaps something that flew, as it would be amusing to see it in a cage. It would appeal, he thought, to the kidnapper’s innate cruelty. The man had called back, arranged to double the sum that JeanClaude's man had originally suggested, and told him about a rare werebat he had met just that night. Jean-Claude's man had agreed and they were out meeting right now to hand over the first briefcase of cash. I was indescribably angry with Jean-Claude. Obviously the werebat was me. But, I had to admit, it was a good plan. I had agreed to go back to the Circus with Anita to cover me tonight, hopefully the first place the man would start looking for me. I all but begged Jean-Claude to return my wand and my knife, so I could at least defend myself. He declined. I was not an attacker, I was the prey, he said. He lent me fresh clothing - an obscenely tight pair of leather pants and a sleeveless tank top of a billowy silk material the same shade of butter-brown as my boots. In my shirt, clipped to the small of my back, we hid a very small cell phone with a GPS system so they would be able to track me if I got out of sight. Jean-Claude himself and any number of his vampires and werewolves would also be there, but I would not see them. They would be invisible in the crowd, watching, waiting. If I saw the man, I was to put up a fight, preferably run out of the Circus to keep the casualties to a minimum (nothing worse for business), but allow him to capture me. They would follow the van to the man's hiding place and thereby find and free Sirius and, hopefully, the other missing members of the preternatural community. If they were still there, that is. If they weren't, Jean-Claude was going to have fun with the kidnapper to get him to tell to whom they had been sold. I almost felt sorry for him. Almost. What Jean-Claude didn't know was that I had no intention of returning to the Circus with him once this whole kafuffle was done and over with. I was hoping against hope that Sirius or the kidnapper would still have his wand. Or that Sirius was in any sort of shape to Apparate. Sirius and I were going to run. Book Three: Anita Blake Chapter Eleven: “Escape” It took less time for the kidnapper to find me than we had anticipated. A few hours, maybe a bit less. We had expected that he wouldn’t find me at all tonight. Trying to look natural but at the same time, always stand out so I’d be easy to spot, I had been walking around the Circus, stopping to listen to the barkers, riding a ride here and there, trying not to gag at the sickly-sweet scents of sawdust and candy-apples and blood. Then, I felt a gentle hand descend on my shoulder. It was a kind touch, but the kindness was for show. I knew who he was immediately. I remembered his scent, the reek of gun powder and oil, the sound of his voice. “I told you I'd be back for you,” he whispered in my ear. I felt something small, hard and cold and round press into my lower back, just above the cell phone. The barrel of a gun, probably. Would he really be willing to shoot me, I wondered. If he was really going to get as much money from selling me as Jean-Claude had been bargained up to, it would be very stupid to shoot me. “Who are you?” I asked, just as softly, continuing to play carnival game I'd been preoccupied with, as if he wasn't there. I was supposed to be shooting a squirt of water - in the Circus of the Damned, it was coloured red to look like blood, but it smelled like sugar - into a fanged clown's mouth to make a balloon inflate. I was loosing. “I collect pretty, unique things like you. I'm a 'rare hunter'.” I snorted. “Oh, how Yu-Gi-Oh of you.” He made a confused, annoyed sound and the gun barrel pressed harder into my skin. I let go of the squirt gun. “You should be flattered. You'll never want for anything for the rest of your life. He sounds very rich, the man who is paying me for you. It's time to go,” he said softly. “Be a good girl and I'll be nice. I won't shoot any of the people around you.” “What makes you think I give a flying fuck about the people around me?” He chuckled, softly. “I've been watching you all night, sweetheart. I saw you help that little girl get her tickets back at the rigged both. You're a softie.” I grimaced inwardly. That had been over an hour ago. How long had he been watching me? How had Jean-Claude missed him following me for over an hour? Unless Jean-Claude had done nothing on purpose. He had hung me out to dry, the bastard. They weren’t going to grab the man at all – they were going to let him take me, I suddenly realized. Jerks. The Rare Hunter steered me around and I let him. We walked towards the main exit, his arm wrapped around mine like a proper gentleman, the gun pressed against my ribs under the flapping expanse of his coat. He had his other arm crossed across his stomach to accomplish this and it just looked like he was rummaging in his inner pocket for his wallet or something. “You'll like being a pet,” he said to me as we walked towards the doors. I felt the panic rising me, and resisted the urge to struggle or look around for Anita. “I doubt it,” I hissed back. “Someone's offered me that position already.” He laughed. “Then that's probably who's paying me this commission.” A lump of ice formed in my gut - what if Jean-Claude was only doing this to get his claws into me? If this 'rare hunter' had a way to sedate me or restrain me, then Jean-Claude could indeed keep me captive, as his pet. I struggled here, wanting to really rip his arm off, but he tightened his grip on my wrist and hissed, “Think about it girlie. Awful lot of humans around here. What if I tried to shoot you and missed?” “You're a despicable bastard.” “Tut, tut, love.” He smiled. “Sticks and stones.” I turned to glare at him and by some trick of movement, caught a glimpse at the other inner pocket in his coat, the one on the far side of his body from me. Sirius' wand! There was a stick in the other pocket which was unmistakably an Ollivander. I looked away from it, staring at my feet as we moved to the outside. I didn’t want to make it look like I wanted it, or he’d move it or get rid of it. I doubted he even knew what it was. But any struggle would end with bullets flying, and we were in the parking lot behind the Circus. Still too full of people. “Where's Sirius Black?” I asked as he hustled me across the lot. He had a different vehicle this time, a dark green minivan with heavily tinted windows. It looked like it should seat a family with three screaming kids, not an abducted shape shifter. The man laughed. “Why do you care?” I didn't answer him. When we got to the van he clicked a remote door opener that had been clenched in the hand on my elbow and the trunk door swung upwards. Inside was a cage and manacle set that matched the one in his white van. My heart jumped into my throat and I dug in my heels. “Please, don't…” I said, putting up a real fight for the first time. The thought of being bound, helpless, pinned down unable to escape was terrifying. Being a captive I could handle. Being unable to fight back was literally my worst nightmare. Lucard's ability to keep me trapped had translated into a compete and utter terror of being bound. “I can't… the cage, please…” He tugged hard on my elbow and I swung my other fist up, aiming for his cheek. He dodged and I only clipped his ear. I lunged for the wand in his pocket and he whipped out of the way. Bugger was fast! I tried to shift, then, to change into my bat shape. Fuck the plan, I wouldn't be tied down! I could follow him to his hide-away in my bat form. He slapped me hard across the face and the stunning quality of the blow confused me enough for him to press the gun up against my arm. “Silly bitch,” he said, and then pulled the trigger. The pain was not at all like I expected. I looked down, anticipating a bloody hole, perhaps my arm blown clean off. Instead, I saw the fuzzy red end of a tranquilizer dart sticking neatly out of my flesh, the barrel empty. “You lying son of a bitch,” was all I had time to say before the darkness came crashing over me. ===== As you can probably guess, I woke in a strange place. Yes, this was indeed becoming a running theme. I was lying on a cold cement floor. Above me was a dark, unfinished ceiling. Someone's basement? Between the ceiling and me were bars, shining silver in the harsh dim light from an exposed bulb. The cage itself was wrapped in chicken wire. The bars were inscribed with runes of a sort - probably a containment spell. Pretty much escape-proof. I groaned and sat up, rubbing my head. “That wore off faster than I expected it to,” the kidnapper's voice said, and I turned to look at him. He was sitting at the bottom of a set of newly-lumbered stairs. The wood hadn't been painted yet. “Go to hell,” I growled. I heard the curse echoed by a few voices around me and I blinked, peering into the darkness. There were at least half a dozen similar cages lining the walls, filled with animals or people, some looking decidedly less happy than I. On all the cages was a thick, expensive looking electronic lock, the kind it was impossible to pick or break open by sheer application of force. At the end of the row of cages sat a forlorn looking man in torn black jeans and a dark blue turtleneck, which had once been clean. Now it was ripped and burnt and bloodied. Sirius Black had been caught in the explosion. The cut I had seen on his head the night before had been tended to, a thick pad of blood-spotted gauze taped to his skin, and I bet it had been while he had been unconscious. He was watching me with dark, glittering eyes. I was sure he recognized me. I turned my eyes to the man on the bottom step. “So what are you big plans, Captain Jerkwad?” I asked our tormentor. Some of the caged people laughed. He ignored them and came forward to stare down at me in my little box. I began to feel decidedly claustrophobic and tried to beat it back. “The person paying me for you is feeling a little…eager. He'll be coming by to pick you up in a few hours.” He gestured around him to the others. “Usually they prefer it if I break spirits for them. I charge extra, but it’s less messy for the client.” “I won't go easy.” He lifted the gun and turned it in the light, letting the dull black metal shine. “A few of these and you'll have no say in the matter. I know what you're thinking - go ahead, shift forms… it'll make you a harder target, I admit, but think of the joy I'd get from handing you off to them, duct-taped into a shoebox.” I snarled at him, wanting to bear my fangs, wanting to scare the shit out of him, and didn't. My lips curled back but that's as far as I'd let myself loose control. He thought I was just a lycanthrope. Let that be his mistake. I nodded at Sirius. “What about him?” “Ah, you were asking about Mr. Black earlier, weren't you?” He said genially, making a show of leaning against the cage of a young boy beside me. The kid couldn't have been more than sixteen. There was a fresh werewolf bite on his leg and the marks of a whip coloured his back, still dribbling blood a little. The boy cowered back from our tormentor, and I didn't blame him. Fucking bastard. “Why is that, I wonder?” The kidnapper asked. “Can you tell me, now, sweet thing?” “Oh, yes,” I said, wrapping my hands around the bars of my cage and staring purposefully at Sirius. “Mr. Black is a murderer, aren't you Mr. Black?” Sirius' grey eyes widened slightly. Otherwise, his face remained blank. “Mr. Black killed fourteen people with a single curse. It was impressive.” I gave him a look, hopefully obvious enough for him to understand what I was getting at, but not so much that our captor figured it out. “Everyone within the radius of the spell just… imploded. Albus Dumbledore told me the truth himself.” The kidnapper turned impressed eyes to Sirius. “That true?” Sirius got it. He smiled, suddenly oozing slimy charm. He unfolded himself and stood up, pressing his palms and forehead against the bars, fingers twining in the chicken wire. “Every word. Give me my wand and I'll show you the spell.” I shook my head. Good cop, bad cop, with a slight variation. “Don't do that! There are no Aurors here! He could use one of the Unforgivables on you!” The kidnapper smiled slightly. “Unforgivibles? I like the sound of that. What do you say, Mr. Black? I let you out, and you become my partner, eh? I won't sell you to the nice lady looking for a lap doggie, and you help me bring in even more exotic pets. It'd be worth it. You could stay off the radar. Make loads of cash. It pays well.” Sirius seemed to consider it. He met my eyes. “Did you really talk to Albus Dumbledore?” “Yes,” I spat. I pretended to loathe him. It was hard. The werewolf in the cage next to me bristled. Could he smell my deception? “The Order of the Phoenix can't wait to get their hands on you, you bastard!” That did it. He nodded, and held out his hand. “I'm in. Keep me away from this crazy bitch, and I'll do your dirty work. I'm not going back to Azkaban prison.” He sounded exasperated enough to be believed. For a moment our kidnapper hesitated. Then he pulled Sirius' wand out of a pocket in the inside of his jacket and handed to him through the bars. The man worked the code on the electronic lock and the door hissed open. Sirius stepped out, smiling, and immediately brought the wand up to point at his nose. “W-wait…!” the man shrieked, his eyes bulging. Greed made people stupid. I'd always thought it, now I had the proof. “Imperio,” he said softly. There was a flash of light and suddenly our kidnapper was sagging. He didn't fall, but his whole posture relaxed. “Open the cages. All of them.” One of the Unforgivibles, the Imperitives curse. It could make anyone follow the commands of the caster. I was glad Sirius had caught my drift. The man did as he was told, starting with the far wall. Beasties of all descriptions poured out of their prisons and up the stairs, into the night. Some threatened to turn on their captor, but Sirius shooed them away. He had to be alive to open all of the cages. He unlocked my cage last, then stood back and waited for instructions. Sirius stood there, hand still tight around his wand, aiming at me, studying me. “You with the Order?” he finally said. “More like I do freelance work.” I smiled. “I've been sent to take you home, Sirius Black.” He frowned slightly. “There's no way back through the Veil. Believe me, I tried.” I nodded. “I know. I have something else.” “Portkey?” “Something like that. I need you to do me a favour though.” “What?” “Accio pouch.” ===== Anticlimactic, I know. What can I say? Sometimes real life is just not the movies. Ha. Like this is real life. I'm a friggin' Mary Sue. Scant minutes after I had strapped my pouch (thank you JeanClaude for putting all of my stuff back inside it) around my waist and pulled my shirt back down to hide it, Dolph Storr, Anita Blake, and half of the Regional Preternatural Incidents Team came barrelling down the stairs. I hoped no one had seen it flying through the air towards us. Sirius had concentrated on the pouch for a very long few minutes, and I wondered if he was mentally navigating it through the passages and hallways, over streets and yards, with his mind, or if some trick of the spell just automatically sent the summoned item harmlessly through walls. As long as it worked, I didn't question it. Our kidnapper was arrested, and we were lead upstairs into a deceptively normal looking suburban house. It made me shiver to think of all the monsters that had been living in these nice people’s ‘kooky’ neighbour's basement. I discreetly passed the cell phone to Anita, and Sirius just as discreetly lifted the Imperatives curse just as Sergeant Storr slapped the cuffs on our captor. Sirius and I both gave our statements, and then tried to slip out the back. Sirius claimed a need for a cigarette and I told him I'd keep him company. Anita offered to go with us to keep an eye on us. I would have preferred it if we could have slipped away alone, but the cops were having none of that. If it had to be someone, I was glad it was Anita. I wanted a chance to thank her. The minute we reached the back yard, I dug into my pouch and retrieved one of the 'HP' labelled phials. We were standing in the shadows, off to the side of a newly-finished deck. Sirius turned to me immediately. “I want to go home,” Sirius said, desperation in his voice. I nodded. I grabbed his hand with my free one, lacing his fingers in mine. “What are you doing?” Anita asked, her voice raising a pitch in alarm. “Bye Anita,” I said, smiling at her. “Thanks. Give my regards to Jean-Claude.” I lifted the phial over my head and smashed it on the unstained wood. I felt the world start to tilt and suddenly a hand grabbed my other wrist in a crushing grip. “Give them to me yourself, cherie,” his voice hissed, and then there was a flash of light and a loud cracking sound, and I was falling. ===== Jean-Claude, Master Vampire of the City of St. Louis stared up at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry with awe in his sapphire eyes. I had wrenched my wrist out of his hand the moment we had landed, and hauled Sirius to his feet. “C’mon!” I hissed, hauling the stunned Sirius behind me. He stumbled and I wrenched harder and he launched forward. We were on the far end of the Quidditch pitch before I realized that Jean-Claude was not following us. He was too busy staring at the castle, the Forbidden Forest at his back, dumbstruck. The moon was out and the stands around us were empty, echoing with Sirius’ panting. For a long moment, Jean-Claude and I merely stared at each other, waiting, ready for the other person to make the first move. Neither of us were willing to do so, and so we waited while Sirius caught his breath. There was a shout from Hagrid's hut and the lumbering half-giant, Fang snarling and snapping and barking at his heels, came barrelling towards us. “Hide!” I cried to Sirius, and though he looked confused, he dropped down into his dog form and pressed himself under my cloak, hiding in the shadows behind my legs. “I saws the light, I did! Yer back, yer back!” He hauled me into a bone-crushing bear-hug. Sirius shrank into my shadow and Fang sniffed at him once, then retreated to sniff at Jean-Claude instead. I allowed it the hug, keeping an eye on Jean-Claude. He was watching us, amazement written on his face. “Yeh did it!” He said to me, ruffling my hair as he set us down, “Yeh’ve come back from beyond the Veil. Did yeh see Sirius?” “No,” I lied softly as Hagrid set me down on my feet. “No, I didn’t, I’m sorry. It was too big – but I think he’s fine. It wasn’t that bad.” Hagrid looked crushed, but nodded sagely. As much as I wanted to shout “Yes!”, as much as I wanted to dance up and down, hooting, pumping my fist into the air, celebrating my victory over the Veil, I didn’t. I had no idea what J.K. Rowling’s plans for Sirius may or may not be in the sixth and seventh books, and I didn’t dare interfere. If it became known that Sirius had been brought back from beyond the Veil, I could inadvertently destroy the whole fandom. Sirius’ return had to stay a secret. Dumbledore would have to know, and Remus of course, but everyone else, especially Harry, couldn’t know until after the war was over. That’s when I assumed that Rowling would stop writing the series. After that, Sirius could reveal himself, because his arrival couldn’t harm the yet-to-be-written plot. But not before. Hagrid turned to Jean-Claude, and Fang, cowed by the Master Vampire’s strangeness, hid between his legs. “’Os this?” Hagrid asked me. “Trouble,” I replied. Jean-Claude just smiled. ===== Using a portkey brought down to the pitch by Dumbledore’s owl, Jean-Claude, Sirius and I moved to the Headmaster’s office. I wanted to leave Jean-Claude behind, but didn’t dare for fear of the disaster he could cause. He had yet to say anything, just smile. When the owl had dropped the candlestick into my hand, I had known immediately what it was. Sirius had wrapped himself around my leg, as much as his doggyness would allow, and I had held it out to Jean-Claude. “Please take hold of this,” I said. He only continued to smile and did as I asked. There was a sharp tug behind my navel, the last-second blur of the human Sirius snatching hold of the candlestick, and then we were in the office. Dumbledore was seated behind his desk, looking grim. Remus was standing by the fireplace, worrying the cuff of his cardigan. Severus Snape was sitting in one of the wing backed chairs beside Remus, looking distinctly sulky. Aside from those three, Dumbledore’s office was entirely empty. Sirius shot to his feet and put himself between Jean-Claude and Remus. Remus leapt at Sirius and wrapped his arms around his friend, weeping openly into his neck. “You're alive!” he kept repeating over and over again. Sirius made soothing sounds and rubbed his back. “You’re alive!” I stepped forward to put the candlestick down on Dumbledore’s desk. He rose to shake my hand. Dumbledore gave me a once over and smiled, patting my shoulder, before turning his attention to the Master of the City. But Jean-Claude was looking at the affectionate reunion between the two Marauders. “Ahem,” Jean-Claude said gently, the expressionless look was back on his face. “I would appreciate it if you would unhand Messier Black.” Remus stepped back and stared at Jean-Claude. “Why?” he asked, his voice full of suspicion. “Because,” Jean-Claude drawled, smiling. “He belongs to me.” There was a few seconds of absolute silence. Dumbledore snapped to it and said, “Won’t you please sit, Mister...?” “Jean-Claude,” the Master Vampire provided. “Jean-Claude,” Dumbledore repeated. Jean-Claude took the accepted offer of a seat before the desk. “And Miss Marie?” I nodded and sat in the chair beside Jean-Claude before the desk, feeling like a little girl in trouble. Bad man, I thought as hard as I could at Dumbledore. Tell Snape. Gotta key a phial. Get him gone. Hurt Sirius. “Tea, Severus, if you will, for all of us,” Dumbledore requested grandly. The Potions Master cum DADA Professor sneered and elegantly began to pour. I pulled a single, long blonde hair out of my pocket, where I had been hiding it. While Severus handed me the tea that I couldn’t drink, I passed the hair to him discreetly. Dumbledore dismissed him, and Snape billowed down to the Potions Lab. God bless Dumbledore and his occulamency. Jean-Claude was lounging back in the chair, his tea untouched on the edge of the desk before him, one ankle resting on his knee, a smug smile on his face. “Now, Mister Jean-Claude,” Dumbledore said amiably. “Please tell us how it is that Sirius Black has become ‘yours’. I’m sure we can work out some sort of arrangement.” “We had a bargain,” Jean-Claude said plainly, “Miss Dracul and I.” “Don’t call me that!” I snapped. Beside me, Sirius jumped, and Remus’ eyebrows drew down into a scowl. They remained silent and standing, however, waiting for a signal from Dumbledore before they did anything. “Regardless,” Jean-Claude shrugged, “You and I did come to an agreement. I would help you find Sirius Black. You would return with me to the Circus and become my pomme du sang and pet.” “I never actually agreed to it!” I protested. Dumbledore sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. “But you accepted his help nonetheless.” “Professor!” I gasped. Remus and Sirius also protested, but Dumbledore put up his good hand and silenced them. It was then that I noticed that one of his hands was hidden in the cuff of his robe. What had happened when I had been away? God, I wanted to read the sixth book... I yanked my attention back to Dumbledore’s words: “By default, that means you accepted the terms of the bargain.” “No!” “See, cherie?” Jean-Claude said seductively, and I could feel the touch of his power tracing along my spine. His eyes were intense and glittering, staring at me as if he could see into my soul. It made me feel sick. “Even your Professor admits that I am right in calling you my own.” He took my hand gently in his and tried to lift my knuckles to his lips. I yanked my hand out of his grip and he merely shrugged and sat back. “Marie,” Remus said softly, “Surely, there's something you can--” “Stay out of this, Wolf,” Jean-Claude said in a cold, brittle command, and Remus snapped his mouth shut out of pure shock. “Marie,” he turned the magical warmth of his voice back on. “I will not be so bad a Master as your last one.” I stiffened. “What the Hell do you know about my last Master?” He smiled slowly. “I drank your blood as you slept at Richard's. I have the ability to travel your nightmares.” I leapt from my chair, lunging at him. Sirius and Remus managed to grab me just in time and haul me backwards. Dumbledore stood, flabbergasted. “You invasive son of a bitch!” I shrieked. “You… mind-rapist! That was you in my dream, you peeping-tom fuck! You saw all that and you didn't save me! I hate you! I fucking hate you!” He sat there and took it all without batting an eyelash. Dumbledore sat slowly as I tired myself out, struggling in Sirius and Remus' arms. “Is this true?” the Headmaster asked Jean-Claude, and Jean-Claude merely nodded. “As my pet, I have the right access her dreams.” Dumbledore did not look pleased. “I do not believe that sounds very ethical.” Jean-Claude's eyes flashed dangerously. “And who are you to call down judgment on me, old man? I am the Master of St. Louis and a direct descendant of Belle herself. Who are you?” Remus and Sirius began shouting obscenities, when a polite knock on the door and a loud “A-hem!” put a pause on the mounting hostilities. Professor Snape was standing in the doorway holding up a phial. It looked freshly corked and in the bottom floated several long blonde strands. Jean-Claude stood up, warily, eyes on the phial. “What is that?” I smiled and the two men holding me let me go. “Jason's hair,” I said, “from our little 'show' at sunset.” Jean-Claude whipped around to snarl at me. “Don't you dare!” Dumbledore rose to his feet and cleared his throat. “I believe that, on the grounds of your violating Miss Marie's privacy, I will deny you the right to claim her. Have a good evening, Mister Jean-Claude.” Snape grinned and threw the phial at Jean-Claude's feet. The Master of the City howled in frustration and tried to reach for me, but I ducked out of reach. There was a flash of light and the cracking sound of air rushing in on a vacuum, and suddenly he was gone. There was a small spray of broken glass at our feet, but no sign of the potion. I turned to Snape and smiled at him. “Good arm,” I said. For the first time, I got a genuine smile in return. “My pleasure.” ===== I stayed a month at Hogwarts while I brewed another batch of the potion. Severus had started that second batch before I’d left, but he had used it all up himself in tests. We got on a bit more civilly this time around, but I mostly brewed the potion on my own in the empty teacher’s quarters in which I was secreted. This time I did what I could to stay out of the public eye. None of the students of Hogwarts knew I was there, nor Fudge. He had not been told that I had found a way to return from beyond the Veil, for Dumbledore wanted to keep it a secret for now. It was a secret security for the Order of the Phoenix, who all carried a phial with them now, keyed for Grimmauld Place, and it would do no good for the Death Eaters to know the method as well. Of course, some of the teachers knew I was back, and Slughorn had a way of finding things out. He still wanted to “talk” to me, and I still didn’t want to. Avoiding Professor Slughorn was a challenge, but I did have the ability to throw myself out of the window, when necessary. I had been lucky - Snape had been saving that last little bit in the bottom of the cauldron from the first batch, just in case. Remus and Sirius had vanished into London proper, doing what they could to get Sirius out of England as soon as possible. He was still a wanted criminal, and many of the Death Eaters thought he was dead. If his return could stay a secret, then he could become a fantastic spy or secret weapon. To make up for the disappearance of Remus, I went on a few missions for the Order of the Phoenix that month. They were simple tasks – go to this or that graveyard, cling to a tree, and eavesdrop on a conversation. I perfected my ability to transform into a bat at will and crawled about in the shadows, generally. Mostly, I stayed on the Hogwarts grounds, learning more charms from Professor Flitwick and watching Remus and Sirius catch up while they had still been here. Although not once did I hear Sirius mention what it was that he had done for employment in St. Louis. When the time came for me to be on my way, it was nearly Christmas. I know nothing really important happens in J.K. Rowling's books until after the Christmas holidays, but I didn't really want to stick around. I hadn't read the sixth book yet and to be honest, I wasn't sure I wanted to be in the middle of it, either. I chose to travel from Dumbledore's office. No more Veil for me - I didn't want to end up back in Jean-Claude's clutches. The contents of the pouch were added to - I still had my wand, my knife, the recipe, a 'Lucard', two 'Harry potter' phials, and an 'Anita Blake' phial, but now I also had two spare unkeyed ones. Snape told me that in his research he had discovered that if I shifted too soon from realm to realm, I may make myself ill, so to wait at least twenty-four hours before I shifted each time. I wondered if Jean-Claude was feeling the after effects yet. Heh. The day I was to leave, I was also given a pouch of loose knuts and sickles (because almost every reality dealt in some sort of coin money), as well as some Muggle money, and a bag of lemon drops and a small box Bertie Bott's Everyflavour Beans. And I finally got that kiss from Sirius I had been wanting, though I had to lean into a fire to do so. I thanked everyone for their hospitality and help and raised the phial above my head, meeting everyone's eyes and savouring the taste of Sirius Black on my lips. Book Four: Pirates of the Caribbean Chapter Twelve: “Rum” By now the flash of light and the flat, gunshot like sound of the air I was suddenly vacating rushing in on itself was familiar. I braced myself for the fall and landed on cobblestone. I dropped right down into a crouch and looked around, warily. Where was I now? Above my head, the sky was just starting to darken, the clouds navy streaks in a bright orange and fuchsia sky. Sunset, somewhere. That was nice – I’d have my powers at my disposal any second now. I straightened and backed up, pressing my back against a damp, rough-hewn brick wall. The town around me was grimy, narrow and old fashioned looking. A sudden, high laugh cut the air and I sank back into the shadows, wrapping my dark robe closely about me, pulling up my hood to hide my pale skin and vibrant hair. Two people passed, a woman on a man's arm. They were both smiling, laughing. He was in breeches and hose, a tricorner hat fit snugly on his head, a tail of light but dirty hair out the back. He was wearing a cloak. She was in a wide-hipped and flat fronted dress, a cloak wrapped tightly around her, as well, and both had seen better and cleaner days. At least I knew when, if not where. Somewhere between 1780 and 1830… ish. That didn't help much. The weather was warmish, so I couldn't be any further north than the Carolinas. If I was in the United States at all. I watched the couple walk down the street a bit and stop at a door. They opened it and warm light and loud laugher came spilling out. A tavern or a pub. I shrugged and pulled my hood up further. It was as good a place as any to scope out my night's meal and a bed for the day, both of which I would need during my twenty-four hours where I was. I had enough phials to move on immediately, if I wanted, but I remembered Snape's muttered warning about not sliding too much, too often. I could make myself very ill. Thinking of the Jean-Claude disaster I had just narrowly escaped from, I decided that this was one Mary Sue who was going to stick to the background for today. And I had a woman's curiosity - I wanted to know which fandom I was in. I looked around and saw nothing suspicious besides myself, so walked down the street to the pub. The sign above the door said 'The Saucy Wench'. I shrugged, pulled the Hogwarts robe closer around me, and went in. I was immediately blasted with the heat from two roaring fires on either side of the room. The clientele was respectable looking enough - all middle class merchants, whores, pick pockets, and drunken sailors and soldiers. There were indeed wenches milling about, getting their bottoms slapped and their trays upset. I picked my way to the bar and sat on a stool off to the side, as close to the shadows as I could get. There were a scant few others at the bar, mostly loners like me. A few stools down was a mass of dark hair resting his face on folded arms. His black pants and white shirt were grubby and I suspected that he'd passed out. His frock coat, just as filthy, was folded on the stool between us. He reeked of rum. The bartender came over and tried to get a good look at my face under my hood. I angled my chin down so it would be impossible. Being as unrecognized as feasible would probably be a good idea. I didn't plan on getting into any trouble, but I was a Mary Sue. If something did happen, if I became known or I got into the middle of something by accident, then I didn't want anyone to know that I'd been to a pub on my own. A female unsupervised and in trousers… what a scandal. I suddenly ached for the twenty-first century. I ordered ale from the man and pretended to sip it when it arrived. I looked around, observing, trying not to be observed. An hour passed and full dark descended and I was no closer to finding out where I was. Feeling more confident in my ability to wander around alone now that the dark had come, and with it my powers, I decided to leave. I wasn't going to learn anything sitting in a pub. The pub in question was growing steadily rowdier anyway, and I had a feeling I should duck out before a brawl began. Because there were always brawls in these sorts of places. Setting a knut on the bar I slipped to my feet and headed towards the door. As I passed the smelly man sleeping on the bar, he jerked a hand out, faster than I expected from a drunkard, and grabbed my wrist. I could have yanked out of his grip but he was drunk so I stopped instead. I didn't want to hurt him, after all. “Yes?” I said archly, keeping my voice low. “Thas' the strangest coin I've ever had the pleasure of layin' eyes on, sweeting,” he slurred and his head turned slightly. So he'd been awake this whole time, had he? Hm. I could see one browny-green eye poking out between dreadlocks and filthy white shirt to regard me. “From which country hail you?” I gently extricated myself. “A country that I doubt you'll ever see, sir. Good evening.” With a rocking sway he pulled himself to his feet, my wrist still in his hand. He smiled at me, and I could see the flash of at least two gold teeth. I gasped, recognizing him instantly, and cursing my blindness for not figuring it out earlier. The red bandana, the cheeky accent, the beaded dreadlocks. “Captain Jack Sparrow…” I whispered. I was in 'Pirates of the Caribbean', talking to the most famous Pirate in the movie. I wondered if I was pre-, in the middle of, or post-movie. By the respectability of the clientele around me I could tell I wasn't in Tortuga, the Pirate island, but I could be anywhere in the British Colonies. Jack Sparrow was momentarily shocked, and then he broke out into a broad grin. “'Eard of me, then?” I nodded dumbly under my hood. This character was Johnny Depp's finest performance, I thought. But, I had to tell myself, this wasn't Depp, any more than Lucard had been Geordie Johnson or Sirius Garry Oldman. Jack's swaying and weasely mind weren't a performance. As pretty and as harmless as Jack Sparrow may seem, he was smart, witty, and very very dangerous. “Let's us talk somewheres … quieter, hey, lass?” I nodded again and let him lead me out into the streets. If I said no, I'm sure he would have used force. He pulled me up a ways, and we turned into an empty alley. I scanned the shadows and saw no one. Confident that we were alone, I pulled my hood down and leaned my back against the wall, opposite Jack, who took a seat on a broken down barrel. “How did you know I was a girl?” I asked once he had finished settling himself. He reached out and lifted one of my hands, brushing a filthy rough thumb across the back of it. “Only ladies have fine hands such as this.” He half leered, half squinted up at me. “Run away, did you?” I laughed lightly. “I didn't run away from home, if that's what you mean. I'm not a highborn lady out seeking adventure among the commoners.” His eyes roved boldly down my frame. “Yet your hands are uncalloused. Yet you wear trousers - no hose, even. And a men's shirt…. Of a sort. And your hair,” his eyes lingered on my neck, my exposed ears, and I suddenly felt obscene for wearing my hair so short. I'd never had a guy stare at my cleavage, but it felt like that like he was imagining me doing all sorts of sexual things. Or like I was the most breathtaking woman he'd ever seen and all he wanted was a touch and a taste. All this from looking at my neck. “Like a boy's. Are you one of them lasses who prefers her own sex?” I swallowed a laugh, coughing. I made a strange hiccoughing sound, and then giggled. “No, … ha… no, no…” It took me a moment to sober up. “I'm not. Just makes it easier to get around.” He nodded and stood slowly. “And per'aps you were lookin' for ole' Jack, hey? Maybe wantin' to be a pirate yerself?” I shook my head. “Just passing through, really.” I shrugged. “But I am very happy to have run into the famous Captain Jack.” “Ah, sos it the fame, is it?” He grinned again. “Come, lass, you'll buy me a drink with your strange treasure, and I'll tell you all my stories.” I grinned back. It seemed as good a way to pass the night as any. I knew Jack would probably try to get me drunk enough to get into my 'strange trousers', but I was confident that I could ward him off. Besides, if I was careful, I could use him as a pomme du sang for the night. “What of Will and Elizabeth?” I asked as he swayed back onto his feet. “I should like to hear them tell you you're full of shit.” He frowned and looked away. “They're… previously engaged tonight.” “Oh,” I said, “That's too bad. With what?” He mumbled something. “Pardon?” “I says… their engagemen' party.” I stopped and blinked at Jack. “Their… engagement party?” A few things clicked into place. I must be in Port Royal, then. “Aye,” he snipped, “I was to stand for Will. Woulda made my heart proud to stand wiv Bootstrap's boy.” His body was one tense line, radiating anger. “Make a bonny speech an' all tha'.” “What happened?” I asked gently. “Norrington,” he hissed. “Tried to arrest me. I left. I didn't want to ruin the kid's day. Sos I ran. ‘Spect Norrington will be behind me on the next tide.” Anger flooded me as well. As sore as he was, Norrington had no right to deny Will his Best Man. He had given Jack a few days head start at the end of the movie, after Jack had escaped from his own hanging. Couldn't Norrington have given him a night's reprieve to attend the engagement party of his best friend's son? A sudden idea struck me. “Which way to the Governor's house?” Jack pointed listlessly. “But you don't want to be goin' there, poppet. The party's there, savvy?” I grinned and grabbed his wrist. “Exactly.” ===== Jack and I traded our outer garments. He put on my cloak and I shrugged my way into his oversized, smelly, dirty frock. It was a pathetic attempt at a disguise, but at least he didn't look like Captain Sparrow any more. Jack pulled the hood up over his head and it covered his distinctive dreadlocks. His coat was huge on me, hanging well below my fingertips and I rolled up the cuffs. Even though the coat wasn't actually designed for it, I was small enough that I managed to button it up the front. The collar was higher than I expected it to be, and it felt like I was wearing priest's robes. Jack told me stories as we walked towards the large house on the hill, and occasionally I called him on his bullshit. Mostly, I just enjoyed listening to him talk. He was a very good storyteller. I'd always appreciated a good storyteller. When we were almost there, a second idea struck me. We passed a man sleeping on the ground, reeking of cheap wine and clutching a battered violin. I slipped it stealthily out of his grasp and handed it to Jack. “I'm all for theft,” the pirate admitted, holding the violin carefully and close. “But don't you think it a mite cruel to take the man's livelihood away?” I pulled five silver sickles from my pouch. “You reckon this will buy him a new violin?” Jack's eyes widened. “I reckon it'll buy him two.” I slipped the money into the man's chest pocket and we were on our way. “That is strange coins,” Jack ventured. “Be it treasure from an Indian tribe?” I shook my head. “No, Captain, I won't tell you where I got it.” He smiled to himself, as if to say, 'We'll see.' We walked up to the gate and two guards confronted us. They were navy men in their bright red dress uniforms. I got us passed them with some quick lying and a little bit of the Vampiric mental razzledazzle. I couldn’t hypnotize people, but like Lucard, I just stared at them and they stopped moving and did as I told them to. After the guards went on their way, convinced that the piece of paper from my pouch that I had flashed under their noses was actually an invitation, Jack stopped gawping. “I'll admit, I ain't never seen the likes of a trick such as that, lass.” I winked at him, smiling, “And you probably never will again, Captain.” His made a face that was sort of a cross between a grimace and a grin. “You play it close to the vest.” “Only way to keep the game where I can see it.” I began to walk up to the house, not waiting for Jack. He had to scramble to catch up. When he did, he laid a hand on my arm. “We could use a lass of your skills,” he said, and his voice sounded mildly impressed. “On the Pearl, I mean.” I laughed. “Thank you, but no, Captain. Like I said, I'm only passing through.” “Mores the pity,” he muttered softly and I could feel his eyes on my breasts, visible through the fabric of his coat. “An' you c'n call me Jack.” I shook my head and chuckled. Jack was always after something. If one thing was denied him, he'd always turn to another. I let it go and walked up the lane towards the Governor's mansion. Every window was awash in golden candlelight, and the strains of music and laughter were coming from everywhere. We were admitted at the servant's entrance under the pretence of coming to join the orchestra. Upon my instructions, Jack presented the violin and I told them I was the singer. We were ushered inside. We left our outerwear in the hallway with the other guest's cloaks and hats and whatnots. Jack and I snuck upstairs when nobody was looking and 'borrowed' some clothing from an empty servant's room. I slipped a skirt over my pants, and threw a shawl over my shoulders. I put my Hogwarts robe back on to sort of hide my mismatched outfit. Jack borrowed a posh green livery and buttoned it tightly across his chest to hide his wide pistol belt and dirty breeches. He pulled his dreadlocks back into a tail and slipped his scarlet bandana into a pocket. I even convinced him to wash his face in the basin by the window. He was still holding onto the violin, just in case. We made our way back downstairs and he slipped his arm through mine, 'escorting' me into the ballroom through the servant's entrance. Three steps in I stopped and I gasped. The room was sparkling with the light of a thousand candles refracting from the crystals set in chandeliers. Everywhere women were dressed in bright jewel-toned gowns. The men were just as smartly dressed. Dress Navy uniforms circulated among the fops and aristocrats. Fans fluttered, earrings danced, laughter floated on the air. Powdered wigs twirled on the dance floor to the rhythm set by the clicking of gilded heels. This was like any Hollywood movie about the mid-1700s. If Jack hadn't been on my arm, I would have wondered if I'd stumbled into “Interview with the Vampire.” I was glad I hadn't. I was pretty sick of Vampires right now. The dance floor was filled with happy people, and in the middle of the room I spotted the two happiest faces. They were practically floating. Elizabeth Swann and William Turner were turning in slow circles in each other's arms, faces aglow. “Ex'cuse me, love,” Jack said to me and cut through the dancers on the floor like a goldfish through reeds. I watched as he tapped Will's shoulder. My Vampiric hearing allowed me to eavesdrop over the din of the conversation and the strains of the orchestra: “May I cut in?” Jack asked, and Will turned to frown at him. Recognition, like lightning, danced across the boy's face and he grinned, hissing, “Jack?” The pirate smiled. “That I am.” Elizabeth laughed. “If the Commodore finds you here…” Jack shook his head. “I'm cleverly disguised, savvy? Washed me face.” Will grinned and turned his bride over to his best man. Jack handed him the battered violin and pointed at me. “Go be a mate and keep me girl happy, eh?” Will's brown eyes got wide as he stared at me. “Your girl? The one with the… short hair?” Jack nodded. “An find out where she got them coins, mm? Can't seem to get her to fall for the old Jack charm.” Will shook his head, laughing and headed over. He was stopped a few times by well-wishers, but I stayed where I was to make it easy for him. He bowed to me and kissed my hand and I attempted a curtsey, hoping I didn't look too foolish. “William Turner,” he said, tucking the violin under one arm. “Marie,” I answered, introducing myself in return. “And I'm not Jack's girl.” Will frowned slightly. “Ah. I, uh… Just Marie?” I shrugged. “For now.” His eyes were drawn to my short hair and he said, hesitantly, “May I ask… Miss Marie… your hair?” “Horrible sea-turtle roping accident,” I dead-panned. He blinked, chuckled slightly as if not sure whether or not to believe me, and let it slide. I think he was about to ask more when someone came up to me and tapped me hard on the shoulder. I scowled at the person, then realized it was the servant I had told I was the singer. He was frowning. Will looked at me, expression puzzled. “Excuse me, sir,” the servant said to Will and dragged me away. “You have not been paid to bother the guests,” he hissed at my primly. “You are here to sing.” I smirked. “I haven't been paid.” The scowled and pointed at the leader of the orchestra. He was conducting, still, but was watching us carefully under his white wig. “He is waiting, Miss.” I swallowed. Wait, me… sing? Actually do it? In front of … everyone? Okay, theatre student though I may be, singing, completely unprepared, in front of a whole ballroom full of nobles and snobs? I cut a look at Jack, who was laughing at my predicament. Oh, fine repayment for getting him in here. “Yes, alright,” I said to the man. “One moment.” I made my way to Jack and whispered in his ear. “Just one song. I'll be leaving after this.” “Leaving?” he whispered. “Where shall we go, lovely?” I shook my head. “Just me, Jack. Just passing through, remember?” He frowned slightly. For a moment it appeared as if he was going to say something, but he just stood there, looking at me and chewing on his moustache. Finally, he said, “Then my thanks for getting' me in to see Bootstrap's boy.” “My pleasure. I had fun.” “You come see me when you're ready to be a pirate.” “I will Captain.” “'Cause that trick o' yers--” I cut him off with a giggle. “I will, Captain, I promise. When I'm ready to turn to piracy, I won't join any other crew but the Pearl.” Jack nodded. He reached up and pulled on the thin silver coin tied to the end of the dreadlock that usually hung over his forehead. “Trade you this for one of your copper ones?” I laughed. “Okay, fine.” I handed over a knut. He gave me the coin from his hair, then one from his pocket. I added a sickle and he was more than pleased. “Gimmie a good-luck kiss?” he pushed and I raised my eyebrows at him. “ 'S good luck to kiss a pirate.” I hesitated. Then I thought, what the hell - when would there be another chance to kiss Captain Jack Sparrow? Elizabeth looked appalled, and I didn't hear Will return to her side, but he was there when I finally pulled away from Jack. His mouth tasted like rum and sea-water and his beard and moustache were scratchy, but in a nice way. His mouth dangled open, sexy and wanting and... hot. It was lovely and sent little tingles to all the wrong places. Like my eyeteeth. Wow - Jean-Claude, Sirius Black, Jason, and now Jack. I was going to have to start keeping a little black book. I reached up and pulled a few hairs from Jack's head and he yipped in pain. “Souvenir! Well worth the difference for the sickle!” I laughed in my defence. I wanted it for the next batch of potion. Because, maybe one day I would want to turn pirate. I was starting quite the collection. I slipped the hairs into my pouch, thanked Jack, Will, and Elizabeth for a wonderful evening and gave them my congratulations and good wishes on their upcoming marriage. Taking a deep breath, I turned towards the slightly raised platform that the orchestra was set up on. The conductor was frowning at me. I guess it was time to hurry up. I knew what I was going to do, knew that using the potion so soon after my last slide may make me feel sick, but I was willing to risk it for the fantastic exit. Theatre people are nothing if not dramatic. Still… I couldn't believe I was doing this. I pulled and unkeyed phial from my pouch as a walked and tucked it discreetly in my palm. I approached the conductor and he sneered, “Well? What will it be?” “Mind if I go a capella?” I asked in a whisper. He raised his eyebrows but nodded. The players put down their bows and mouthpieces and watched expectantly. The room fell silent at the cessation of playing and I felt all eyes on me. I turned to the crowd and gave them my best smile. I was nervous as hell and wondering what in God's name I was doing, but I was going to do it anyway. I'm an actor… sort of. I could fake it. “To the affianced!” I called out into the hall. It was a cheap way of testing the acoustics, a trick someone taught me the last time I had been asked to give an impromptu performance at a public gathering. Shout at the crowd, talk to them, tell a joke, anything. Get a feel for the sound of the room before singing - that way you know what kind of volume and emphasis would be required. “May your years be filled with joy and adventure! Savvy?” The three people in the know broke out into peals of laugher. I caught Norrington out of the corner of my eye, frowning and studying me. His eyes flicked over the crowd and lit with a deep scowl on Jack. He began to cut across the room, so to distract him, I decided to start. I took a deep breath and launched into the song before I could chicken out. It wasn't exactly the most appropriate to an engagement party, but it seemed to fit the mood. And it was easy to stay on key. Think of me, Think of me fondly, when we've said good-bye! I sang tenderly, one hand out to Norrington, to make it clear I was singing directly to him. The ploy worked and he stopped, confused to be directly addressed. Remember me, Every so often, Promise me, you'll try! When you find That once again you long To take your heart back and be free... If you ever find a moment, Spare a thought for me! I winked at Jack. Think of August, When the trees were green. Don't think about the way Things Might Have Been. Think of me! Think of me waking, silent and resigned! Imagine me, Trying too hard to put you from my mind! Recall those days, Look back on all those times, Think of the things we'll never do! There will never be a day When I Won't Think I raised the phial above my head. Jack slipped out of a side door. Norrington went after him, muttering, “To the ends of the earth if I have to...” Of You…! And dropped it. ===== The light and crack were familiar by now, but the accompanying violent wave of nausea was not. I collapsed to the ground, head swimming, clutching my middle. I felt like I was going to be sick. Snape had been right. Damn. I closed my eyes and braced my hands against the stones, taking deep breaths to try to calm my nervous stomach and muscles. I hadn't fed all night. I'd never gotten the chance. That made my veins burn even more. I pressed my hot forehead to the cool damp paving stones below me. Someone was standing over me suddenly, wide skirts brushing against my hands. I looked up and made out a pale face against a grey, dripping sky. She looked concerned. “Mademoiselle? Mademoiselle, êtes-vous correcte?” she said, and I blinked stupidly at her. French. Perfect. I suppose I had been lucky to land in English-speaking fandoms thus far. Of course, my luck couldn't have held out. I wanted to shake my head, but any movement made the world tilt dangerously. I felt drunk, the bad drunk, worse than Anita's magic had made me feel. That had given me a one-in-the-morning-still-ready-for-morebuzz. This was the four-in-the-morning-icky-kind-of-drunk. “Êtes-vous blessé?" The girl held out a gloved hand for me. She had delicate fingers. A lock of golden hair fell over her forehead. “Avezvous glissé sur les pierres? Il vient de pleuvoir." “Desole,” I said in a flat, bad-high school accent. “Je suis… Anglais.” The girl smiled brilliantly, and I took her hand. She helped me to my feet. I squeezed my eyes shut and prayed that the world would stop spinning. “Venez, venez avec moi à l'intérieur. Mon anglais n'est pas si bon. Maman va nous aider." We began to walk towards a colossal building with a grand edifice and gothic angels perched round the top. It looked annoyingly familiar, but I couldn't figure out from where. Somewhere… something in Paris? I must have passed out on the stairs. I don't remember walking inside. Book Five: Phantom of the Opera Chapter Thirteen: “Angel” I woke up lying on a fainting couch. Marvel at the appropriateness of the name. Yes, more unfamiliar ceilings. I guess this was just my lot in unlife. I put a hand to my forehead and sat up slowly. Around me was a knot of giggling girls with their various shades of hair pulled back into rigid buns. They ranged from age ten to twenty, it looked like, and they were all in white leotards, point shoes, and limp rehearsal tutus. “Mademoiselle?” one of them said, “Ca va?” I shook my head. She was asking me if I felt alright and I certainly didn't. I was starving. The rushing wave of vertigo and nausea had passed, but I could smell the blood under her skin. I could see it jumping in the big vein on the side of her neck. I could hear it in the chambers of her heart… I could almost taste it on my tongue if I just…strained forward…enough… I caught myself before I could sit up and forced my own blood to hush. Soon, soon. If I didn't feed soon, I would attack somebody. “Viens,” she said to one of the other. “Cherchez Maman.” The other ballerina bustled off to find 'Maman'. I shivered and a blanket was dropped around my shoulders by the smiling blonde girl. “Je m'appelle Meg Giry,” she said gently. I blinked stupidly. I heard her words but they didn't sink in. I was too distracted by the smell of her ... think and sweet and oh, so refreshing. No, I was stronger than this. I would be stronger than this. I was not an animal, to feed my base instincts wherever and whenever they arose. I was no beast, no monster. I was a person and I could control myself. I concentrated, instead, on the girl's face, on her blue eyes and her blithe smile. I reminded myself that she was human. She was not prey. But I knew her name. I was certain I'd heard it before… An older woman, iron-grey hair also in a rigid bun, neck and back straight as a ramrod, came into the room. Here mere presence scattered the ballerinas like Moses before the Red Sea. “Are you well?” she asked me in heavily accented English. The accent sounded part French and part Irish. She sat on the chaise beside me and pressed a hot hand against my brow. “You're still very cold.” I pulled away. I didn't want her to realize that was always cold, and that now, with my stomach empty, I was clammy. She didn't need to know I was a corpse. And I didn't want her so temptingly close. I was freezing. I tried to huddle under the blanket, but the ice was in my stomach, around my heart, in my veins. The blanket did nothing. It was uncomfortable and was making me both agitated and sleepy. The warm press of the ballerina's bodies was becoming more than I could bear. I tucked my feet under the blanket, sitting lotus-style. I would lash out soon. I grabbed my ankles, digging my fingernails into my flesh. The pain helped my head clear a little. I closed my eyes and nodded slowly. “I'm fine. Just… the people…” The woman waved a hand and the tittering girls dispersed, bemoaning their ill-luck for being cast out of the room and starting to tell stories about where I must have come from already. I waited until their voices faded from the hall and then looked around. The girl who had introduced herself as Meg was sitting in a chair to the side, watching me worriedly. She had thrown a dark cloak over her rehearsal garb. The older woman, 'Maman' and so probably her mother, was watching me carefully. “Did you hit your head?” she asked gently. “No,” I said softly, then, “Maybe. I don't know.” “Je pense qu'elle a tombé, Maman.” Madam Giry turned her eyes back to my face. “Have you hurt an ankle? Your knee?” “I really am fine. I was just careless, Madam,” I said. “The stones were slick, and I was running.” Madam Giry raised an eyebrow at this and ran her eyes over my wardrobe. My Hogwarts outer-robe was hanging off the back of a chair nearby. I was wearing the skirts and shawl I'd stolen from the Swann house over the black leather pants Jean-Claude had given me and a thick red turtleneck I had borrowed during my month at Hogwarts. My soft brown leather ankle boots were sitting on the rug next to the chaise. Discreetly, I slipped a hand under the shawl. I checked to see if my pouch was still there, under my shirt, and was relieved to find it so. I must have been quite the sight. “I'm sorry, where am I?” I said, pulling her gaze back to my face. “The Opera House,” Madam Giry supplied, and said something quickly to her daughter in French. The girl nodded and left the room. “My daughter found you on the ground by the steps. Are you sure you are well?” “Yes, I'm fine,” I lied. I needed to get outside, soon. I needed to find a pick-pocket or a cut-throat or a pimp. I needed to feed. God, I wished she'd stop touching me. It just made it harder. It made her too close. Too damn close. “Your clothing is strange,” she finally said, voicing what I knew she had to have been thinking. “As is your accent. Where are you from?” “Um, America,” I lied. Well, no really I was from North America, so it wasn't a total lie. “I, uh, appreciate your help, Madam, but I really do have to go, now.” “Oh, no, I can't possibly allow that,” Giry said, shaking her head. “Our hospitality is better than that. You will remain here until your chaperone comes for you.” The corner of my mouth twitched. My chaperone? Right, 1800s Paris, young women weren't allowed out alone. Bugger. “I can just take a hansom cab home, it's really all right.” Giry raised a sceptical eyebrow at me. “With what money? Your purse has been taken, or Meg couldn't find one on you.” I cursed under my breath. Of course, I couldn't pay a cab with paper pounds or wizarding money, and that was all I had. I thought for a moment. I couldn't slide away, either. I'd used my last phial to come here. Somehow I was going to have to find somewhere I could stay for a month to brew the potion. I could go back to Hogwarts and ask Snape for more, I had a phial for that - but I didn't want to be dependant on him, on them. I was going to get home on my own. Besides, he said that I'd be back to beg more from him, and I didn't want to prove the greasy-haired bastard right. If I could find a way to get Madam Giry to take me in for the month, then I could stay at her flat and brew the potion there, away from prying eyes, away from brigands and robbers and…people. But she would see me doing it, pry, or worse, ruin it. She could throw it out - over boil it… eat it. Any number of things. And then I would have to start all over. This was so frustrating. I longed, suddenly, for Snape's damp and drafty dungeon potions lab, where the worst thing that may happen is Harry asking what it was, or the new Potions guy tossing it. Or, I could maybe, then…. or… no, the idea was absurd but… but it could work. This had to be the Paris Opera House, Garnier's Masterpiece. I knew that there were any number of empty rooms, abandoned attics, and at least five stories below the stage level of chambers, fly houses, prop rooms, not to mention the lake. I could work in any one of those places, spend the days there, feed from the criminals in the streets, and steal the ingredients from shops and from the kitchens of the Opera House itself. All I needed was for Giry to leave me long enough to vanish into the shadows. And vanish I could. There was a legend of a Phantom haunting the Opera House. For a month, just for as long as it took for the Lady Moon to change her face, I figured… they could be true. Meg Giry returned, carrying a plain cotton dress in light blue, with darker blue stripes. “You may borrow this, Mademoiselle,” her mother explained to me. “It will be more fitting for you.” I thanked them and asked them politely to leave the room as I changed. I had no bloody clue how to put on the dress, but it wasn't for modesty's sake that I asked for privacy. I noticed a window, small but open, to one side of the room and I intended to transform into my bat shape and sneak out it. I was starving. Madam Giry called me silly - no girl could possibly dress on her own - and instead proceeded to attack my stolen skirt herself. I wriggled out of my clothing fast, folding the parts I wanted to keep - the leather pants, the turtleneck - and putting them on the chair with my robe. Dammit, I was never going to get to eat! I held still as they forced me, tied me, buttoned me and suffocated me. When I looked up at myself in the mirror, I saw a surprisingly pale girl with fever-flushed cheeks and sparkling eyes, and short reddish-dark hair badly in need of a hairbrush. I was also slightly shocked at my reflection. I couldn't remember if Lucard-style Vampires could been seen in mirrors. Obviously, I could. When I was finished, I confessed that I wished to check the street in hopes of finding my purse again, and Meg was more than happy to escort me outside. I lost her quickly and found a pimp with bad street French even faster. He was a quick meal in the alleyway and I returned scant minutes later to Meg with a warmed core and a fake frown. We admitted to being unable to find my purse, and returned inside, getting out of the rain. I went with Meg back into the dressing room and we were surrounded once more in the waves of ballerinas. I was told that I could remain in the dressing room until someone had managed to locate my family or my chaperone and let him know where I was. No one had the presence of mind to ask me where they were. I would have lied about a place, a house, but they assumed my family was at a hotel and had sent someone out to check the nearby ones already. Eventually the girls all went to rehearsal, and I was left alone in the room, staring at myself in the many mirrors and wondering what to do. Now would be the perfect time to take off, but if I vanished, would there be an all-out-search to find me? If they did search and they did find me, then I may never manage to brew the potion in peace and escape. If I waited, then I may be given an apartment where I could brew the potion in relative privacy, but if I did that, how long would I be waiting and would I get the privacy required? Too many damn questions! It was all so frustrating to think about and I wished I had stayed in Port Royal after all. I had been afraid of being arrested for piracy, but now I had to deal with gossipy, meddlesome ballerinas. I wasn't entirely sure which was worse. The sudden waft of the scent of a person filled my nose and I paused in my self-pitying internal diatribe to try to locate the source. It smelled male, his clothing slightly damp and smelling of wet wool. But no one had come in the door and I didn't hear any one's breathing or heartbeats out in the hall. Where was it coming from? Suddenly feeling as if I was being watched, I carefully and casually turned my head. I picked up a hairbrush and began to attack my rain-tangled locks to mask the head movements I was making to try to angle my ears in the right direction, moving my head back and forth to try to hear the heartbeat of the person I smelt. There. At the far end of the room. Behind the… the large, full-sized mirror? It took everything I had not to gasp and drop the hairbrush. So, there really was a Phantom of the Opera! I smiled to myself. Well, this just might solve all of my problems. If there was a Phantom, then there was a Phantom's lair… the perfect place to gather ingredients and brew my potion and do it in relative comfort in a place where no one would find me. I just had to convince him of that. “Why in the world are you there hiding?” I sang softly to the tune of Webber's “Angel of Music.” I figured the best way to get Erik's attention was to sing. I may not be the best of the best, but I could carry a tune and I knew that he would listen to me if I sang. “Really, you are perfect. I only wish we shared your secret. Who are you, strange tutor? Flattering child though I may be, I know in shadow you hide. I see your face in the mirror You are there, inside. Angel of Music, Guide and Guardian ---ack!” A thin wire was pressed up against my throat, pushing against my vocal chords, being pulled from behind. There were two strong, black-gloved hands on either side of my face, pulling on the garrotte. The fucker was trying to strangle me! He must not have liked the idea that I knew where he was. Oops that's me and my too-blunt-ness again. I shifted my head a bit to bring the pressure off my voice box so I could speak. “You know,” I said casually, carefully measuring out the breath required to speak. I wouldn't be able to suck any more in. “That only works if your victim needs to breathe.” The wire was lifted away and I turned in my seat, knees crossed and a smile on my lips, to look up at the stunned eyes of the Phantom through his mask. “Bon soir, Messier Le Fantome,” I said softly. “I have a proposition for you. Tell me, do you know what a pomme du sang is?” Book Five: Phantom of the Opera Chapter Fourteen: “Phantom” The eyes behind the mask stared at me. I felt the garrotte wire slip away and with a deft hand movement, watched as it vanished into a pocket. I heard the hissing silver sound of a knife being drawn from its sheath and though I couldn't see the weapon, I assumed he had it clutched in the hand hidden by the folds of his cloak. “Stabbing me won't work either,” I said softly. His only response was to blink. “Look, Messieur,” I said, “I have no intention of ousting you to the managers or the police. I am actually in need of your aid.” “My… aid?” he said softly and I felt a shiver travel up my spine. The Phantom's voice was special. Not like Jean-Claude's voice had been special: Jean-Claude had the power to physically touch someone with his voice. The Phantom's voice sounded like music. He had spoken, but his voice was still pure music. To my sensitive ears, it was like hot honey and cinnamon. “Why would an American child need my aid?” I frowned at him. “I am neither American nor a child.” He seemed to ponder this, and then asked, “What is it you wish to ask of me?” My hands knotted in my lap. This request was a gamble. He always did this for people in Mary Sues, but it was so out of character for him to acquiesce that I wasn’t sure which version of his answer would win out – the Mary Sue or the Truth. “I need somewhere to stay for a month,” I said, taking the gamble anyway. The Phantom scowled. “Then take a room in a hotel. I do not take in charity cases.” “Normally, I would do that,” I said, “but I have no money and nothing to trade. Besides, I need to somewhere where… the police cannot find me.” He chuckled. “Why, my dear… what crime have you committed that you seek refuge in the Opera House?” “None,” I spat. “…yet. Look, I need solitude in order to … to create a … something special and suspicious. I swear to you that it will not harm you or anyone here. But I can't be found by any sort of authority.” “And if I allow you to take a place in the dark corners of my Opera, what will you give me in return?” I gestured to the mirror behind me and concentrated on having no reflection. I knew I had succeeded when I heard him gasp. “Some of the best scares you've ever done. They say you're a real ghost, Messieur Le Fantom. I can make it seem like it.” He continued to stare at the mirror but shook his head. “No, I am … it is incredible… but I am too busy for such childish things as this.” “Too busy?” “I am writing an Opera.” I smiled. “Don Juan Triumphant.” His eyes snapped back to my face. His voice was raw and dissonant when he asked, “How did you know?” “Perhaps, if you help me, I'll tell you.” He fell silent, regarding me carefully from behind his mask. I was dangling an awfully tempting carrot in front of his nose. The Phantom's life depended on solitude and secrecy - obviously, somehow, I had invaded both and he would be keen to find out how and why. Finally he said, “Very well. But if you betray me, if my lair is found or I am hunted, I will find a way to kill you.” He turned towards the full-length mirror. “A wooden stake through the heart.” He paused and looked over his shoulder at me. “I beg your pardon?” I stood slowly to follow him, “To kill one of my kind, you must pierce my heart with a weapon made of wood.” “And why do you tell me this?” “So it's fair. I know your darkest secrets. Now you know one of mine. Hopefully we can learn to trust each other.” “Trust each other?” the Phantom echoed softly. “Trust is for the weak.” He turned on his heel in a swirl of black cloak and vanished into the looking glass. I sighed, picked up the bundle of my folded clothes, and followed. ===== “Oh, much better!” I sighed, stretching. I had used the guest bedroom to change out of that damnable 'respectable' dress and corset into my leather pants, Hogwarts cloak, and red turtleneck. From the stool in front of his organ, the Phantom regarded me disdainfully. He was in his shirtsleeves. “Respectable ladies should not dress in such garments,” he said. I smiled winningly at him. “I'm hardly a respectable lady.” I sat down on a low stool by his Organ. The Phantom's Lair was like a cosy, overly cushioned house. Although the house open to the lake in the Gerard Butler movie was dramatic, it was eminently impractical. My host had built an actual house, walls and all, on the far side of the lake. It was long, with one room spilling off the back of another. A Siamese cat with a diamond collar rubbed against my knee and I reached down to pet it. The cat's fur stood up and she pressed her ears back. Okay - so she was allowed to touch me, but I wasn't allowed to touch her. I dropped my hand back into my lap and she resumed scent-marking me. If the Phantom had a cat, then this had to be Susan Kaye's Phantom: A Novel Of His Life. The Phantom turned on the stool to watch me. “No, indeed you are not a respectable lady. What are you?” I shrugged. “I am a traveler from… very far away.” “And you are not human?” “Why would you say that?” His hands flexed once on his knees, curling slowly into fists. “I could not throttle you.” “Oh yeah,” I said, rubbing my neck gingerly, “that”. I shook my head. “That's why Ayesha doesn't like me much.” The regarded me carefully. “You know my cat's name. You know the name of my Opera. You knew when I was behind the mirror. How do you know these things?” I smiled gently. “I'm sure you won't believe the full truth, so let's just say that I've been paying attention.” “That is not good enough.” I sat forward and steepled my fingers. “As you have so candidly pointed out, Messieur, I'm not human. My hearing happens to be very good - I've overheard conversations. I could hear you breathing behind the mirror and I heard what you called your cat when you entered the house.” “And the name of my Opera?” I sat back and told a little white lie: “The acoustics of this area are beautiful - I've heard strains of the music coming out of the drains nearby. That caught my attention, and that is partially why I want to lodge with you. You're interesting.” He frowned, obviously not pleased with my answer, and turned back to the Organ. Well, what was I going to say? 'I've read a book about you and I know that even though you are desperately in love with Christine you're going to be killed anyway in about six months.' Ri-ight. He began to pound out some chords, then stopped. “I don't want you watching me.” I nodded and stood. “It's nearly sunset,” I said, “Now that I've been down here, I can find my way back. I'm going to start collecting supplies.” “For this suspicious thing you are making?” I nodded. He turned back to the organ and began to play again. I knew when I was dismissed. ===== I roamed the streets of Paris and the setting sun turned the sky to flame. I was looking for a pot or something that would serve as a cauldron. I could force a spigot into the base of it with my Vampiric strength, but I had to find one of those first, too. I didn't want to steal one from a poor family, because it would probably be the only one they had. But stealing from a poor family's house would be easier than trying to break into a rich person's. I was debating this dilemma when I came to the banks of the Seine. There were piles of discarded appliances and pots, rotted boards, a broken and rusty bicycle, and other sorts of treasures. An impromptu junk yard to most, and a lucky day for me. I was finally rewarded by finding twisted hunk of metal by the river. It had once been a chamber pot or something of that persuasion. I rinsed it out in the water of the Seine and banged the dents out of it. Yes, it would do. I rummaged around in the trash some more until I found a discarded, rusty sheet of metal I could clamp down over the pot as a lid. The spigot would be harder, so I kept searching for a tube or another strip of metal I could bend into one. When the time came for the needle, the corks and the phials, I figured I could pilfer some from the Hotel Dieu, the Parisian hospital. So intent on pawing through the trash was I that I totally missed the sound of footfalls coming up behind me. Something blunt struck the back of my head and I went sprawling forward into the damp grass and dirt. I cussed and rolled over. Above me stood several hooligans with bats and knives. One spat to the side and sneered at me. “Your money or your life, boy.” I sat up slowly, rubbing the tender spot on the back of my head. The pain was fading, but my head was throbbing from the hit. “Sorry,” I said, lowering my hand to use it to lever myself to my feet carefully. “I don't have either.” Another one frowned. “Huh?” “I have neither money, nor a life,” I said, frowning around at them, “and I'm not a boy either.” Eyes widened. “A bit 'o skirt oos playing dress up?” I shook my head. “Fuck off, guys. I'm busy.” They laughed. Then they started to move closer. Aw, hell. I skipped backwards a few steps, then paused. Hey - how was it that I understood them? “What language am I speaking?” I asked and they stopped advancing. “French, ya daft nit.” “Hm,” I nodded. Yeah, I was, wasn't I? But how was this possible? My French wasn't this good. I cast my mind back - when had I started to understand? After Meg and I had come back from 'searching for my purse'. So, after I had eaten that pimp. I drank his blood and now I could speak French. I thought about it, ignoring the hooligans what were advancing on me. If I had learned to speak French just by snacking on the street punk, then… then that explained why I could perform magic. I'd drunk the blood of a Wizard. Maybe why my sense of smell was so keen, as I’d fed from two different werewolves. Well, that was a nice and tidy revelation. Probably be useful… sometime. I felt filthy hands grab my arm and I flung the hoodlum aside. He wailed until he hit the ground, and then lay still and quiet. For a second I feared I'd killed him, but I could still hear his heart beat, and over that, his pathetic mewling. “I just busted your buddy's ribs,” I said to the others. I had heard the crack as he'd landed. Maybe they had, too. They had backed up and were staring at me like I was some kind of monster. I guess I was. “You better get him to the hospital.” There was a tense moment of inaction, then energy burst out of the thieves and they ran. One had the courtesy to stop long enough to scoop up his friend. I smiled, shrugged, and went back to my scavenging. ===== When I returned to the Lair, it was well after midnight. I could hear the Phantom's deep breathing in the furthest room as I carefully set my packages down on the floor of his kitchen. He was asleep. I had found a broken faucet to use as a spigot, and had managed to collect up most of the ingredients for the potion. I was just missing morning dew, but I could go outside and collect that in a cup in a few hours. I prowled around silently, trying to find a cutting board and a knife to start shredding the butterfly wings and dandelion roots while I was waiting, and was startled to hear the Phantom wake up. He came into the kitchen swathed in some sort of dark robe. He'd slipped on his mask. I guess he wasn't comfortable enough to let me see him without it, and I didn't mind. “Sorry I woke you up,” I said softly. “This can wait until morning.” He shook his head. “I need very little sleep, as it is.” He hesitated by the doorway and I said, “Come in and watch if you want.” I found no knife, so I reached into my pouch and pulled out the silver one Remus had given me. It wasn't meant as a veggieshredder, but anything in a pinch. The Phantom walked over to the table I was working at and watched for a moment. “That is a beautiful dagger.” “It was a gift from a … a teacher.” There was another long silence, and he asked. “What is a pomme du sang?” “Huh?” “You asked if I knew what a pomme du sang was, but did not tell me what it was when I did not know.” I shrugged. “It's pretty much what it sounds like - a Blood Apple. It's someone who willingly lets a Vampire feed off them. But, it's sort of a deal. You provide a risk-free, secure meal, they promise not to hurt or kill you in the process. And feeding can sometimes feel… uh… really good, so you know, both sides win.” The Phantom sat down on a chair on the opposite side of the table. His eyes were glittering with curiosity. “You are telling me that you are a Vampire, then?” I nodded. “Yup.” He shook his head. “How strange.” “Stranger than some guy living in the basement of an Opera with a voice so good it's damn near preternatural?” I paused in my chopping to meet his eyes. He looked away. “Yeah-huh.” I started chopping again. “You want to feed from me, then?” I shrugged. “Nope. Not unless you want me to. Otherwise, I can go find a cutthroat later tonight. I'm starting to get chilly.” “Chilly?” he repeated, and his one visible eyebrow rose. “Yes, when I don't feed I get cold, Messieur Le… oh, bugger it, can I call you Erik?” He sat back. “You know my Christian name as well, Mademoiselle. You are indeed a puzzle.” “Look, call me Marie.” One corner of his lips twitched upwards. “Then you may call me Erik.” I turned back to my work. “Yeah, I'm a big fat puzzle. I'm so puzzley that even I don't know everything about myself yet. You hear this French I'm speaking?” I pointed to my mouth with the tip of the knife. He nodded, bemused. “I couldn't do that a few hours ago. I drank the blood of a rascal and now I can speak French. Go figure.” “You were not aware that you had this ability?” “No frickkin' clue. Yeah, the guy who did this to me - not big on the sharing of information.” “That is unfortunate.” “Yeah - he was sort of more focused on finishing the job than helping me learn the ropes.” The thought made me angry and I ended up slicing too hard. The knife got away from me and I accidentally drew it across my knuckles. I cussed and dropped the knife and ran over to the sink. Blood ran over my skin, welling up from an erratic, deep cut. “Jesus fucking Christ on a piece of toast!” I said and just let myself bleed. Erik rose to his feet and reached for a towel. “Don't ruin your towels on account of me,” I said as he began to approach with one. “It'll heal over soon. I'm fine. Did I get blood on anything?” He stopped and held the towel in his hands, as if considering the truthfulness of my words. The blood flow wasn't slowing just yet, and my whole arm was starting to feel numb. The cut itself tingled, the pain lasting longer than it had when I had fallen in Harry Potter. Perhaps the cut was taking a while to heal because my knife was made partially of silver? That was a disturbing thought - I'd have to make certain not to cut myself again if it was the case. Erik's eyes skipped over the things laid out on the table, then turned back to me. “It appears not,” he said. “I believe your… ingredients… were not soiled.” “Good,” I said. “I'd have to start all over again if they were.” I looked down at my hand. “Ah, there we go.” The blood flow had finally stopped. I poured some cold water over the cut to rinse away the residue, and watched with sickened fascination as my skin knit together, healing over the cut in a thin white line of scar tissue. Within minutes I knew the scar tissue itself would fade, and my hand would be left as clear and as whole as it was before I had cut it. Erik was watching the process too. “That is… unnatural,” he said softly. “Yeah,” I agreed, holding my hand away from me as if it was a giant pale spider, “Yeah, it is.” ===== We got to know each other for a few hours, Erik watching me cut, slice, burn, chop, cuss and growl without ever offering help. I didn't want help, anyway, and he seemed too…well, not annoyed by my presence, but I was definitely a chore, a burden. Nothing more was said about my particular physiological condition. I suspected that he had seen enough for one night. About a half an hour before dawn I went out to collect dew from the flowers in the planters by the doors of the Opera. Erik had vanished into the corners of the building already, to go spy on people, write his notes, or whatever else it was that Phantoms did at the ass-crack of dawn. I felt the hunger gnawing at my gut and decided that I had just enough time before sunset to go pick off a meal. My meal was waiting for me in a nearby alley, a different kind of thief this time, one with a flashing knife and a crushing grip. His breath stank and he was filthy. There was a brief struggle. I ended it quickly by sinking fang into his neck, but he left me quite a nasty token of his hatred. Even as I swallowed his thin blood, blood of my own trickled down my face from the open gash his knife had cut on my cheek and nose. By the time I'd had my fill the cut was healed and gone. His knife had been made of cheap steel. I scrubbed the dried blood off my face and let the unconscious man slump to the dirty alley floor. I had yet to be so thirsty as to kill a human being as I fed from them, and was always careful to never take more than six or seven good swallows. I hoped I never killed. I went back inside with my cup of dew, warm and sated and feeling rather cheery. I wandered around the foyer for a few minutes, admiring the statues and the marble work, before donning my bat shape. I gripped the cup between my toes and flew down the secret passageways and over the lake to Erik's house. When I got there, I could hear the organ pounding away. Erik was working violently on his Opera. I set the cup down in the kitchen and plopped down on the table myself. My little batty wings were killing me - bats were not meant to be beasts of burden. There was a yowling hiss and Ayesha the Siamese cat sprang upon to the table and made to swipe at me. I screamed and flapped backwards, tumbling off the table. I landed on my human arse on the floor. “Mademoiselle Marie?” Erik's voice rumbled out, and I turned my head to find him standing in the kitchen door. I wondered how much of that he'd seen. From the ghostly pallor of his face, I'd say all of it. “Are you… well?” I stood and moved to pet the cat but she snarled at me and took off. “My dignity's hurt more than me,” I said. Erik hovered by the door, silent but thinking. “That bat… was you?” “Yes.” He frowned again. “I followed you outside.” I stopped puttering around with the cauldron and turned to look at him. “Oh?” “I saw… your eyes. Your teeth. You… drank the blood of a man.” “…yes.” “You killed him.” “No.” “You… gave him this pleasure that you spoke of earlier?” “…no. I only do that for people I like.” Erik nodded to himself, and without another word left the room. In a few minutes I could hear the organ again. It took me a few moments, but I recognized the melody. Past the point of no return, I sang along softly from the kitchen. “No backward glances. The bridge is crossed So stand, and watch it burn…” Yeah, I thought. I'm surrounded by burning bridges. Book Five: The Phantom of the Opera Part Fifteen: “Blood” For the next week, I stayed out of Erik's hair, and he stayed out of mine. I always thought I'd held a rather romantic opinion of the Phantom of the Opera - somewhere deep inside I'd always wanted to believe that he was really kind, wise, and tender. The way he acted around animals and Mary Sues. The real Phantom was very different. Erik was a singularly unpleasant man. He was gruff, opinionated, and took no care to be easy on the feelings of anyone but Mademoiselle Christine and his damnable cat. Granted, I was imposing on his space, so I had a lot of nerve expecting him to be a generous host. But still! Mostly he pounded on his organ during the day and spied on the rehearsals above during the evening. While he was skulking about the Opera House, mooning over his lovely ingenuous (and Mr. Webber has clearly forgotten to mention that Erik is old enough to be her father), I was in the kitchen, doing the hour or so of work each night required for the potion. At night, when he slept, I stalked the streets for dinner and entertainment. I managed to ghost my way into the Hotel Dieu and take the medical supplies I needed - needles, tubes, phials and corks - and found a lovely café where an engaging group of young men with grand idealistic designs spoke passionately at a table by the fire. They drank and made love even more passionately. I eavesdropped and laughed along with the young men, but something inside kept me from joining them. Their life sparkled in their eyes - warm blood coloured their cheeks, and for the first time since the whole mess began I felt…dead. I sat near the men and drank up their vitality as I drank blood. The warmth of their youth kept off the chill for many nights, and I suppose when one was to see me looking at them, one would see longing on my face. The young men - boys, really - always left the tavern with a new wench on their arms, and more than once I was sorely tempted to be that wench. If their drinking and laughter was this passionate, how must their lovemaking be? But I was too shy, still. Too afraid of myself and what I could do. And couldn't do. I had never slept with a boy before, and I was scared. I didn't even know if I could make love like a normal human being anymore. I felt quickened by a heady blood suck, but it wasn't the same. On my fifth night in the café, I turned down an invitation to join the young men and headed back towards the Opera House. There was a play on tonight and I planned on watching it from the ventilation hole in the roof. I had debated shifting into my bat form and sitting on the chandelier, but I had heard the echoes of La Carlotta rehearsing earlier in the week. I didn't think my sensitive batty ears could handle such shrieking. The Opera was due to start at eight o'clock, and I had a good fortyfive minutes to bum around out front and watch the carriages arrive. There were way too many painted faces and glittering gowns and mounds of powder and fake hair and it just made me roll my eyes. The upper classes really were simpering. More than once someone peered into the shadows by the grand staircase at me. I was wearing my Hogwarts robe and I watched their eyes flash to the crest on my lapel, then the eyebrows draw together in confusion. The people would try to get a look at my face and fail, because I had the hood pulled up all the way. But I would smile and wave, and they would balk and walk off. It was then that I realized that I had turned into a bit of a sadistic bastard. Annoying people was way too much fun, and I loved gauging people's reactions. And as I was, it was also very easy. Oh, well, as long as I didn't go too far with it, I wasn't all that concerned. It was when I started to turn into Lucard or Snape that I would have to be self-reprimanding. I climbed up the side of the Opera House by clinging to the vines and the brickwork, once the doors were closed and went in through the roof access. I sat in the attic of the theatre, swathed in black, an (un)living shadow, and gazed upon the stage from afar. Carlotta blew. But the rest was great. During the curtain call I heard the soft crunch of an expensive shoe on dust and smelled the familiar damp-wool smell. Erik sat down beside me. “Did you enjoy the Opera?” he asked. He sounded gentle. He sounded like he actually cared. It was the kindest he had ever been. It was true; music did soothe the savage beast. “It was lovely,” I said. “I've seen a few, when I was younger. But, you know, I have the knowledge now to really appreciate it.” He rubbed his uncovered cheek briefly with a gloved palm. “I do wish it had been Mademoiselle Daae to sing the lead role, however.” “Instead of that toad Carlotta? Amen.” He smiled down at me. “I believe I have tea back in my kitchen. Will you partake?” I stood and brushed the dust from my knees. “You mean, 'Can I partake?' The answer is yes; I'd love a cup of tea. Thank you.” He chuckled to himself and we slipped thought the alleyways and catwalks of the grandiose building in silence until we reached the lake. Two ghosts in the rafters. He took up the pole and stepped into the boat. “I'll get the water boiling,” I said, tossed off a salute, and dropped down into my other form. The flap across the lake was quick and the tea was steeping by the time Erik came into the kitchen. Ayesha and I had formed a tremulous truce, and she was watching me with alert eyes and tail from the counter as I laid out the cups. Erik stopped in the doorway, untying his cloak, and shook his head. “You are remarkable.” I handed him a cup then filled it from the pot. I was torn between laughter and the burning lump that suddenly appeared in my throat. “Some people would call me damned,” I said. I meant it to be a joke, but the reality of the statement slammed into me so hard my hands began to shake. Was I damned? I had to turn my back to Erik and set the pot down. I took a few deep breaths, then I poured a second cup for myself and we moved out into his music room. He took a seat on the organ bench and I sat on an ottoman. “Thank you,” I said as we settled ourselves. Ayesha followed us out and wound around Erik's legs. “For letting me stay.” For the first time, the smile that I was given seemed genuine. “I suppose I have a habit of adopting strays,” he whispered. He took a sip of tea and I followed suit. I wasn't looking forward to having to sick it up later, but for now the heat was nice. “Do… they call you damned because you feed on blood?” I blinked. I hadn't expected that question. The burning lump returned and I tried to wash it away with a swig of hot tea. The back of my eyes hurt, as if I was going to start to cry. No, I refused to allow myself that luxury. “I suppose. There is… well, people, stories say that Vampires live forever because they give up their soul to... Hell, the devil, demons, I don't know what, but something that damns them.” He thought about that for a moment. “So, you don't fear damnation?” “Of course I do. Why wouldn't I?” “Then why did you … choose to become as you are? If you knew the price, then why? Was the lure of Immortality so great?” I shook my head and set down my cup. Ayesha seemed to think that I did this for her benefit and padded over and began to lap at the cooling tea. Erik didn't stop her and I didn't mind. Less for me to have to vomit up later. “No, I… well… I didn't choose this. It was forced upon me.” “Forced?” I chewed on my bottom lip for a moment. “You know what rape is, yes?” “…yes.” We let that hang between us for a long moment. Erik finished his tea and went into the kitchen for a second cup. I thought about what I had confessed. Did I actually believe that I was damned? That when, if I died, I would go to Hell? I had never been that much of a church person in my mortal life. I was more New Age than my Mother's Presbyterian. But I thought, hopefully, because I hadn't really done anything bad yet that, perhaps, I was okay. I mean, I hadn't agreed to this. And I hadn't killed anyone yet. I had barely hurt anyone. But I did have some petty larceny under my belt. I wasn't a Catholic, but going to Confession was starting to sound better and better. When Erik returned, he asked, “Do you suppose you may be damned because you feast upon the dregs of society?” “What do you mean?” He sipped his tea. “I have watched you, followed you,” he levelled his gaze on me and I felt an embarrassed flush creep up my face. “You feed upon thieves and pimps, people who commit crimes and harm others. Perhaps it is their blood that fouls you.” “Maybe,” I said, not really wanting to think about it. If it was true, then that meant to save myself I would have to feed from the innocent. But I would be damning myself that way too, for harming the pure. Either way, I was screwed. I said as much. Erik nodded. “Possible. Is that why Vampires take this… pomme du sang? A willing and knowing innocent?” “I dunno,” I admitted. “Possibly. But, I mean, finding a person willing to let you suck out their life through two little holes in their neck is... hard, to say the least. Feeding is a very intimate act when both parties are willing.” Erik raised one eyebrow. “You have… experienced this intimacy?” I blushed harder and looked at my feet. “Yes… erm… twice.” “With a pomme du sang?” “Yeah - the first guy was the Professor who gave me the knife. I was starving to death and pretty much intent on killing myself by not eating. He cut his arm and let me. The second guy was a… hmmm… kind of a letch.” “A letch?” I nodded slowly. “He got off on it.” “ 'Got off'?” “Ah… erm… yeah, you know. He found it really pleasurable.” Erik set aside his empty cup and cleared his throat. “Oh. Ahem. I see.” He loosened his bowtie and set is aside. Erik was never anything less than impeccably dressed. “And… you want me for your pomme du sang?” Ah. So this is where this whole conversation had been heading. “I dunno,” I shrugged, “I hadn't really thought of it. I wondered if you knew what it was, that's all, really, that's why I asked. I wasn't really offering.” He wriggled a little, obviously uncomfortable. “Erik,” I said earnestly, sitting forward. “If you really want to, I'm not adverse to it. But feeding is an awful lot like lovemaking, and I know that you are in love with Christine.” His eyes flashed and he stilled immediately. He was angry. He was suddenly very dangerous. “How do you know that?” I lied. “I see the look in your eyes when you talk about her. When you watch her.” He looked down. “You disapprove.” “I think you're willing to go to unhealthy lengths, but I don't disapprove. You can't disapprove of love.” He shook his head and stood. “I… I wish to consider this. Leave.” I stood, not offended, and collected up the empty teacups. As I left the room, Erik applied himself to the music. He began to attack the same section he had been worrying for the past two days. He just couldn't seem to make the bridge of the melody work. I stopped at the door and said, “Erik, try, going up a half step there. I mean, go from a minor to a major - it is the climax of the song.” He paused, hands like claws over the keys. He nodded, then shook his head, and then nodded again. He moved his hands up and began to play the section again, this time in a major key. Yes, that sounded just like what Andrew Lloyd Webber had written. I washed the dishes and retired early. The nightmares came back that day, and it was only then that I realized that they had slowed recently. I'd only been having one or two a night. That night I had five. I had talked about it. That's why. ===== The next week passed quickly. Again, Erik and I spent little time together. The music consumed him to the point that he never left the house. As it got worse, I would find him passed out on the organ, asleep, and have to move him into his room. I spent a night cooking to make sure he had enough leftovers to last him through the week, and made sandwiches to eat as he worked. I had felt bad for sponging off him, so this was one way I felt I could repay him. He never thanked me and barely acknowledged by presence, but when I woke in the evening there would be plates and dishes empty, scattered around the music room. The next Saturday we shared Box Five to watch the Opera and again had tea and conversation afterwards. This time I asked him about his own life. I knew from the book that it had been filled with disappointment and wrenching, bitter anger. I steered away from topics I feared would encourage self-pity and instead focused on music, architecture, and puzzles: Erik's great passions. Sometime around the third pot of tea, he raised one hand to his mask and said, softly, “Why have you never asked me about this?” I shrugged. “Erik, you wear the mask because you don't like the way you look. People judge you on your appearance, rather than on your heart and intellect, and you think it makes you a monster.” “I am a monster.” “You are no more a monster than I am. We were both forced into situations which have scarred us physically, without any choice or chance to redeem or fix these problems. But dying hasn't changed me anymore than a strange face has changed you. It has effected our lives and beliefs and choices, but we are essentially the same person inside, and that person is not any less because our outsides are different.” He stared at me. “You say that almost too easily.” “And perhaps I believe it too easily. The important part is that I believe.” I sat forward and set aside my teacup and Ayesha was again quick to claim what was left as her own. “Leave your mask on or don't, Erik, I don't much care. I've probably seen worse. I've seen a security guard with the back of his head blown out and his brains scattered all over the stairs.” “Pleasant.” “Yup.” His hand hesitated by the ties at the back of his head, and in the end he chose to leave the mask on. I had told the truth - I didn't care one way or another if he kept his mask on. Whatever made Erik the most comfortable was fine with me. He did, however, undo the top three buttons of his dress shirt, and shed his tie, vest, and jacket. Being that undressed was almost unnatural for him, and I sat back, slightly shocked. “What are you doing?” “I… have thought about it,” Erik whispered, and his voice was like black velvet. I shivered and was surprised to feel the shiver. I thought only Jean-Claude could do that to me. “And I think, perhaps, I would like to be your pomme du sang… just this once. Just to feel it.” I nodded. “Yeah. Yeah, okay. I… uh…” I felt the heat fan on my cheeks. Jeeze, I was going to do this. I was totally going to suck on the Phantom of the Opera. “Perhaps, we should go sit on the couch. Just in case.” “In case of what? In case I faint?” I laughed. “In case I faint.” ===== “Just lay back,” I said softly, “and relax.” He eyed me. “Easy for you to say.” We were sitting on the opposite ends of the couch. He was sitting stiff-backed, with his hands in his lap and his ankles together. I had unconsciously mimicked his pose. I had my head turned to him, but he was looking straight ahead. “We don't have to do this if you don't want to.” “No,” he said, almost too fast. He paused and took a breath. The musicality in his voice was lost to hard discomfort. “No, I… I want this.” I knelt on the cushions, feet tucked up under me, and reached out with one hand. He jumped as I carefully brushed my fingers over his mask. It wasn't porcelain, or china, or anything brittle, but it wasn't really cloth either. My guess was fabric stiffened by white glue. “Shall I remove it?” he asked softly, a little boy suddenly. I realized what this meant to him. To Erik, this was his first sexual exploit. Erik was over fifty and still about as virginal as a man his age could be. I swept my fingers down against the skin of his neck, and he felt hot. I could feel his pulse jumping and it made my mouth dry. I swallowed hard. Aside from the boy in the car outside of the bar back in St. Louis, this was the most sexual I'd ever been, too. “Keep the mask if it's what makes you the most comfortable,” I said. “I can cut down on the intimacy, if you want.” He finally turned to look at me, his other hand reaching out to take my free one. “No, please don't… I… it feels so good to just be… just be touched.” I nodded. “I won't do anything more than touching.” He nodded. I pushed forward slightly, forcing him to readjust the line of his body. One knee came up and he resettled his foot on the couch. His legs splayed wide and I settled between them, resting my weight on his stomach. He let his head fall back against the arm of the couch and pressed his back into the arm pillows. I met his eyes once, just once, and asked, “Do you want me to stop?” “…no.” I sighed and it was partially from relief and partially from the sexual tension. I was not physically attracted to Erik. He was very fit for his age and the side of his face that wasn't mangled was very handsome. It had nothing to do with his mask or what lay beneath it. It's just that I didn't find him attractive. The thing inside of me, however, could hear his blood pounding, smell its heat beneath his skin, and wanted it. It was less sexual tension and more pure hunger. On Erik's side, however, it would feel like lust. If Erik reacted anything like Jason had, then we might be in for a spot of awkwardness in a few minutes. But we’d cross that bridge if we got to it. I shoved my insecurities aside and parted my lips. I pressed my open mouth against his skin and kissed, sucked, nipped and nibbled, did my best to give him a hickey and get him used to the idea that I was about to slip fang into him. When he was groaning, his eyes rolling up into his head, I bit down. Not hard enough to bruise with my other teeth, but enough to puncture the skin with my fangs. I could feel my eyes burning, my vision dappling with red in the way that told me my iris had turned bright yellow. I don't know why they did that - there was no biological explanation for it. My fangs could retract into pockets in my upper jaw and slid out when I was hungry or aroused. Muscles in the gums squeezed them out of their sockets until they were long and naked. But the eyes had no logical explanation. It made me wonder, again, if I was damned. I forced these thoughts away and concentrated on the hot blood that welled from the wounds into my mouth. I pulled on the punctures, like sucking liquid through a straw. When my mouth was full, the taste of Erik rolling hot and thick against my tongue, I swallowed. The heat hit the back of my throat and slid down my chest, into my stomach and radiated outwards. I was always amazed at how cold I was before I fed. And I always seemed to forget that I was cold until I was feeding. Other people recoiled at my touch. Before I fed I was chilly and corpse-like. But I felt neither cold nor heat, so I couldn't tell. I pulled and swallowed again, revelling in the waves of heat that passed through my tissue and nerves, like a wonderful orgasm. I could tell that Erik was enjoying it too. Lust, rich and meaty tasting, tinged his blood. I took one last large mouthful and pulled away. I licked my lips free of the remains, making sure I hadn't left any on my chin, and lapped away the blood seeping from the cuts. I pressed my fingers down on the wounds to stop the blood flow and Erik lay limp against the cushions, sweating and panting, his eyelids fluttering and his mouth open wide. I withdrew and stared down at him. I lifted his other leg and placed it on the couch, adjusted the pillow behind his head, and spread the throw blanket that had been on the nearby chair over his prone form. He wasn't asleep or unconscious; he was just… caught up. To see him like this… vulnerable and … passionate… it felt wrong. I felt like I was intruding on his most private thoughts. I couldn't feel more awkward if I'd walked in on him masturbating. I hastily vacated the living room and went to the kitchen. Erik had some juice in his cold box and some pastry sweets leftover from a nearby bakery. Not exactly the carton of orange juice and the cookie you get at the blood donors, but close enough. I set them out on a small table by his head and went out to the lake. I stared over the bottomless, black water and closed my eyes and felt Erik coursing through me. I could taste his passion and his anger on my tongue still; feel his bitterness under my skin. But in my head… in my head, I could hear his music. If I had done this half a year ago, I would have puked. As it was, it was all I could do not to tear into him again and finish the job. I wanted Erik's music. I wanted all of Erik's music. No. That was the difference between the monsters and me. I wouldn't kill. I had told Jean-Claude as much, and I meant it. I would not kill. I stood alone, on the edge of endless night, and listened to the music of disappointed solitude that rang clear and slow in my head. Book Five: Phantom of the Opera Chapter Sixteen: “Ethics” The last two weeks passed fast enough. Once more, Erik was consumed by his music and I kept out of his way. Just once, one afternoon, I slipped into the music room and sat on the ottoman and listened to him play and mutter to himself. It was a bad idea. Hindsight is always twenty-twenty. His opera, Don Juan Triumphant, was almost complete. I knew what that meant - soon he would rise from the organ and take the bound libretto and don the Red Death costume and menace the managers and cast. He would stalk Christine and she and Raoul would flee and Erik would force the company to perform his opus. In the middle of one of the songs, Erik would kill Piangi the tenor and take his place, and Christine would unmask him in front of all of Paris. He would drag her down here and threaten to kill her and Raoul and everyone in the building if she didn't agree to marry him. Christine, however, would feel pity on Erik. She would marry him to save Raoul and they would have one night together. When that night was over, Erik would die of what his friend Nadir would describe as a broken heart. In that night, Erik would learn what real love was, and he would regret separating Christine and Raoul. He would die, and Christine would marry Raoul and they would flee to England, where Christine would have a baby boy named Charles. He would love stray animals. He would have dark hair, and brown eyes. Charles would have an extraordinarily compassionate nature, a brilliant mind, and a love for music. And Raoul would know the truth and never hold it against his wife or her son. But Erik didn't know any of this right now, and I was not inclined to tell him. I had learned something in my travels these past six or so months: you never put your nose in it. Every time I've ever stepped in and spoke to or interacted with the people, the characters of a world, it had been nothing but trouble. I had been hurt, or I had hurt someone. I had changed things that shouldn't have been changed, and swayed the balance. Erik's life had been hard, and although I liked to believe that my presence had helped to ease his loneliness and bitterness these past few weeks, I knew it was too little, too late. Erik would die. There was nothing I could do about it, short of making him a Vampire. Which I couldn't do. I honestly believed that Erik would not appreciate being given eternity when fifty short years had hurt him so much. Not in the flesh of a monster. If he wanted it, he was blunt - he would have asked for it. Part way through reviewing his song, Erik began to sing Don Juan's part softly under his breath. I recognized the section and waited until Christine's part began and sang along. I sang softly at first, but grew louder as I became confident that I knew the melody. Erik stopped abruptly and turned in his seat to stare at me. “I did not hear you come in,” he said. “Sorry, I'll leave.” I stood to do just that and he raised a hand. “No, wait. You know this song?” I nodded. “I've heard you playing it enough.” He looked thoughtful for a moment. “You know it well enough to sing it with me?” I paused and sort of gapped at him. “I'm not good enough,” I protested. “Not to sing with you.” “You can hold a pitch,” he retorted. “That is more than Carlotta can say.” I shrugged and nodded, “Yeah, okay.” He picked up the song from the beginning and I moved to peer at the sheet music over his shoulder. I couldn't read sheet music very well. I'd taken the requisite classes in high school but that had been so long ago, and I hadn't been very good then, either. I did, however, remember the melody from the musical and used the sheet music to remind myself of the words. I found it fascinating that although the version of “Phantom of the Opera” I was in was clearly Susan Kaye's, Erik was still playing Webber's music. It was such a strange development. I mean, could two versions of the same reality overlap? Could they both exist at the same time in the same place? It made me think. I wondered if there was a core reality out there. Well, obviously not a core reality. I was sliding through enough realities to know that they were all too different to be connected in some fundamental way. Then again, maybe they were. I sort of had this secret theory that each reality was just a fractal fragment of the centre reality, a core truth, an essential time and place. If that was the case, I was hoping that my home reality was the centre - then all I had to do was spiral down through the alternate universes until I got home. If that was the case, if the universe really was fractal, then it stood to reason that each separate reality also had its own fractal nodes. “Phantom of the Opera” had at least three different official versions that I knew of in my reality - the Kaye, the Webber, and the LeRoux. It made sense that whatever power or vision an author or a creator used to tap into this alternate reality, to see it and record it, would help the 'creator' see it through different lenses. Each version of a story was really just the same story seen through a different lens of a kaleidoscope. It was a heartening and terrifying all at once. It meant that there could be a finite number of realities, and one day I may make it home. It also meant that oppositely there could be as many endless variations of different realities as there were dreamers and fanfic authors, and I could be left stumbling through the multi-verse for the rest of eternity. I shoved these thoughts aside, saved them for the day when I knew they would fertilize my nightmares. Erik was singing. I was supposed to join him. We sang through the song and when it finished, Erik rested his hands on his thighs and turned to look at me. There was a sadness in his eyes that I didn't expect to find. He reached out and touched my cheek gently and I was startled by how rough and calloused his fingertips were. He'd been playing piano and organ for most of his life, and he'd been on construction crews as well. “Tomorrow I am going to take this to the Managers,” he said softly. “I know,” I replied and did not pull away from his touch. “I will make them perform this. Christine Daae will finally have the spotlight she deserves.” “She will.” “You know, you say, as if this is no surprise to you.” He lowered his hands and narrowed his eyes at me from behind the mask. “You know so much about me, and I do not know why. Was it in my blood?” I smiled and knelt on the ottoman so as to be eyelevel with him. “The only thing I took from your blood, Erik, was your music. I close my eyes and I can hear it in my head. It's beautiful. Music really is in your blood.” I paused, licked my bottom lip, and decided to say what I really wanted to say but really shouldn't. As much as I cautioned myself against it, I couldn't help wanting to make his life even the tiniest bit happier. “Your son will inherit this gift.” Erik smiled a self-depreciating smile and turned away. “No woman would let me get a child on her.” He stared down at the black and white keys in front of him. “Why not?” He snorted, a harsh and self-hating sound. “I am a monster.” “Erik…” “No matter what you say, Miss Marie,” he said and turned back to me on the organ stool, “No matter what you wish to believe, we are both still monsters. We both skulk in the shadows, hating those who can walk in the sun, hating those who have lives and loves and … homes. Real homes.” I shook my head and stepped away from him. I stared at my hands, then down at my feet, anywhere but in his eyes. Those brown, truth telling eyes. “That's not true.” “Oh, isn't it?” he said and rose, coming toward me, matching me step for step, “Then why can you not answer me? Then why do you brew that potion? Why do you live in the shadows and watch the people even as I do? Aren't you desperate to return to your home? Wouldn't you cure yourself of this affliction in an instant, if you could?” “I…” I stuttered, but had nothing with which to reply. “Answer!” he bellowed. “Account for yourself! You muddle blindly through the alleyways, feeding on scum and skulking away from the light! You are a monster, the same as I!” “No!” “What makes you what you are, then? What keeps you human when you drink blood and wear the shape of a bat!” “I am still human,” I protested, but I was being backed up against the wall, both literally and figuratively. I laid a hand over my chest, and felt my fingers fluttering against my throat. “- inside me, my heart, it's still human.” “That is a pathetic and half arsed excuse and you know it!” “I am not a monster!” I screamed. “I don't kill!” Erik stopped advancing on me and stood stalk still, his arms rigid at his sides. Fire burned in his eyes, but his skin went pale. He ceased to move entirely - he didn't breathe, he didn't sway, he didn't twitch. “Is that what defines a monster?” he asked and his voice was tight, his teeth clenched. The music had evaporated. All I could hear in his voice was pain. “Does murder make one a monster?” I jerked back as if he has slapped me. “Oh, Erik,” I said softly, “I didn't mean…” “You meant exactly what you said.” He turned away from me. “I have killed. My heart is no longer human. I am a monster and Christine will never love me.” “Erik…” “Go away.” I hesitated, one hand reaching out to him. Then did as he asked. I went away. ===== I went out to the Seine and I stayed there by the water, watching the sunrise. I listened to the music in my mind and refused to cry. Could monsters write music like that? ===== I returned to Erik's house beneath the Opera just before dawn to check on the potion one last time. It was the right colour and viscosity - a watery burgundy - and would be ready to cork in the morning. I would make six phials, key one to “Pirates” with Jack's hair, and one to here with a piece of fur I had rubbed off of Ayesha. That would leave me four blanks. Four worlds in which to travel, to spend twenty four hours in each or more. If I found a particularly suitable world, I would probably stop there before I ran out of blanks and brew a batch or two more. That would give me between six and twelve extra blanks. I could travel for an extended period, get some ground beneath me, get that much closer to home before having to stop again. During the past month, while I had been waiting for this batch of the potion to brew, I had made some adjustments to my pouch. I had sewn little pockets around the inside of it, with some extra padding - that way the phials could stand in the pouch without clinking together, and I could run without fear of breaking them. I had written the name of each phial onto the cork, so I could glance at them swiftly and pull them out if needed. I wasn't above using my phials as emergency escape routes or offensive weapons. I had no problem dropping an attacker into Jean-Claude's or Norrington's lap. They'd probably get what they'd deserve. I had roughly forty separate pouches for phials, and hoped that I wouldn't need more than that. I hoped even more that I never filled all of them. I wanted to go home. I wanted warmth and daylight again. Erik's words had stung, but they had been accurate. Erik had been right about me - I was a thing that stalked in the shadows and longed for home. As I slept that morning, the nightmares of Lucard were replaced with those of an eternity of never being able to hold my parents again. ===== When the next day came, I awoke to the sounds of Erik donning his Red Death costume. The fabric was thick and made a swishing sound as he threw the cape up over his shoulder. I stood in his doorway and watched him slip the death's head mask over his face. “Will you join me upstairs?” he asked over his shoulder as he adjusted his hat on his head. He was going by the feel of it. Erik's house had no mirrors. His question had been mocking, calculated to be cruel and cutting. “You know as well as I that I would only get in the way of your grand entrance.” He turned to me, his hands on his hips and a frown on his lips. “You promised to teach me magic tricks once. Will you not use one for me now?” I looked at him, really looked at him. A man so desperate for love that he would blackmail for it. He would terrorize people for it. He would kill for it. “No, Erik,” I said softly, “I won't.” “You are a liar, then,” he hissed. “You are false and you are selfish.” “Maybe.” “I gave my blood for you.” “I don't recall forcing you.” Erik took a threatening step forward, and my wand was in my hand and pointed at his chest before he could take a second. He stared at the wand. “You would kill me?” “If I had to.” He smiled, triumphant. “Then you truly are a monster.” “I guess I am,” I said, and hated to agree with him. I didn't take my eyes off him, though, and my aim was unwavering. “I want you gone by the time I get back,” Erik whispered. I nodded. “Have a good party, Erik. I hope your Opera is a success. And I hope you don't regret getting what you want.” He swept a bow towards me. “Good bye, Miss Marie. I hope your nightmares ease.” I stepped out of the doorway and let him brush by me. And that was the last time I saw Erik, the Genius in the Cellars, the Phantom of the Opera. I slid with a bitter taste on my tongue. ===== I closed my eyes against the flash and braced myself for the fall, wand out and at the ready. I hit sandy turf and crouched, following the momentum of the fall to save myself from the disorientation of the jarring effect of it. I opened my eyes and looked around. I was standing on a small sandy rise. There was a lone, Beckettesque tree just to my left, and scrub brush on the ground around me, struggling to stay alive. The sky above my head was red, streaked with long, wispy amber clouds. As far in the distance I could see, there was nothing but flat desert. But it wasn't hot, it was slightly windy. A brisk breeze picked up and blew my hair into my face, flattening my Hogwarts robe to my back and flaring it out around the front. “Are you here to play?” a voice suddenly whispered in my ear. It was male, a clear tenor with a slight English accent. I repressed the shriek of surprise that threatened to claw out of my throat and whipped around to point my wand tip to the patch of skin between the man's eyes. His mismatched eyes. “Ziggy Stardust?” I asked hopefully. He shook his head and took a step backwards. He raised a gauzy black cloak along his arm, blocking the view of something behind him, smiled at me, then dropped it. When the fabric fell away, I could see it - a winding and terrible maze. On a hill in the very middle stood an imposing and almost impenetrable castle. “Will you play?” he asked again, one eyebrow cocked. “You're him,” I whispered. “You're the Goblin King.” Book Six: Labyrinth Chapter Seventeen: “13 o'Clock” The Fey like games. In every book I'd ever read, in every fanfiction or article, it mentioned that the Fey, or those with Fey blood, were mischievous tricksters with a special affinity for playing games. Any kind of games would do; from real old fashioned chess to 'hide the left sock', hide and seek in the orchard, to mazes, to riddles. That's why so many stories that involved fairies and goblins also talked about prizes and punishments, time distortions and confusion for the humans involved. The Fey liked to play games, and seemed as if Jareth, King of the Goblins and Ruler of the Labyrinth, was no exception. I regarded the Goblin King before me, his mismatched blue-grey and green eyes shining with eagerness, but his expression and posture cold and menacing. He was playing the part of ice-King, but inside was as happy as a kid at Christmas. His feathered white hair fluttered in a breeze that I couldn't feel. His garments were flapping dramatically, but I was stifling in the heat of my leather pants and turtleneck. I felt no breeze at all. He had asked me “Will you play?”, and I knew that he meant he wanted me to run the Labyrinth. I had absolutely no desire to. I just wanted to sit on my butt in the sand and not interfere. The faster my twenty four hours were up, the faster I could move on, and if I got myself tangled in a giant maze-from-hell, something could happen that prevented me from sliding. In fact, something probably would. I didn't want anything like my little bargain with Jean-Claude over Sirius to happen ever again. The Goblin King was far too good a twisting words and intentions, and falling into a trap of his would be too easy. I had to stay out of it. No more interacting with the people I met, as much as I may like their characters or world. No more exploring. No more chances that I could be stopped permanently. I would flit through their lives like a dark, unseen shadow, and be gone. I would live my own life alone, cold, unseen, unheard, unknown. I would withdraw from people, from humanity, from civilization. It was the safest bet. The thought left me cold inside, but what else could I do? I wanted to go home. I returned my thoughts to Jareth, and his imposing Labyrinth, and shook my head. “Forgive me, your majesty,” I said gently, with as much honest aplomb as I could muster. “But I have not come to run your Labyrinth.” Jareth dropped his pointing arm to his side and frowned. The news didn't seem to anger him or puzzle him so much as cause disappointment to flit over his elfin features. “Yet you are here.” “A mistake, I assure you.” I was trying my damndest to sound courtly and polite. Many months navigating the choppy waters of different realities had taught me that I had a habit of being too damn blunt around the wrong people. It had gotten me into more messes that I cared to admit. Vinegar and honey and all that. The Goblin King took a few steps towards me and I stood my ground. He had one leather-clad finger resting on his chin, the other hand on his hip, and he was regarding me thoughtfully with narrowed, green and blue eyes. I refused the urge to step back, to aim my wand at his face. Deftly, I slipped my hand into the pouch and let my fingers curl around the hilt of my wand and my dagger, bringing them close together, just in case. If Jareth saw the movement, he dismissed it. “I have no child of yours,” Jareth said after a moment of studying me, “You did not wish one away.” “No,” I said, “I'm here by accident.” He shook his head. “That is not possible. No one may enter my realm without wish and a desire.” “…desire?” I asked, knowing that soon enough I would wish that I hadn't. Despite my new oath to never get involved, my curiosity was getting the better of me. He grinned, “A desire to play. That is the way this works - I take something dear to someone, and they much travel my maze to get it back from me.” It was my turn to narrow my eyes. “And this benefits you how…?” “A person's desire reaches a fever pitch as they run through my Labyrinth,” Jareth said, as if that was supposed to explain everything. I still looked puzzled, so he went on: “They panic, and it increases their desire to find the thing or person I have taken from them. They are frightened, and their desire to protect whatever or whomever it is they have lost increases.” I shook my head. “I don't understand how that's relevant.” “The Labyrinth acts like a focusing device - all the desire flows into my castle.” “So?” He grinned wider and leaned in closer. “I feed on desire.” This time I did take a step back. “What do you mean, you feed on desire?” He sighed, his eyes fluttering closed as he pushed his head forward. His nose was practically in my hair and I jumped to the side. He opened his eyes and straightened, and his grin this time was less filled with child-like joy and more with sultry want. “I smell much desire in you,” he said, “It's hot and it's desperate. For what or whom do you yearn so strongly?” I shook my head. “Nuh-uh,” I said, “I'm not telling you. I'm not playing your stupid game.” Ice formed in his gaze, and I knew he was angry now. Perfect - I got him mad when I was trying to do the exact opposite. Damn blunt. That's me. Why is it that I can't avoid the clichéd traps of the Mary Sue, ever? Right, because I was one. Silly me. “I want your desire,” Jareth said, and took a rolling step towards me. The movement drew my attention to his thighs and hips, and I knew he had done it on purpose. He was as deliberate and arrogant as Jason and Jean-Claude together. I don't think he was just talking about my desire for… whatever it was he said I desired. I think he meant in the sexual sense, too, and that bugged me. Couldn't I, just once, land in a realm where there weren't sexcraving guys? Jean-Claude, Jason, Jack Sparrow, Erik, those hoodlums, and now Jareth. Well, I guess I couldn't really blame them. Guys were kinda the same everywhere, now that I thought about it. Or was this the eternal damnation of the Mary Sue? Mary Sue always seems to be able to make any guy at all fall for her - what if it's not the Mary Sue's power, but the power of the story? What if the men (and sometimes women!) were magnetically attracted to the Mary Sue? What if she put out some sort of irresistible pheromone that she herself couldn't detect, but was like liquid sex to every virile creature in the fanfiction realms? What if it wasn't the Mary Sue who seduced the characters, but her very existence? That sudden thought made me cold all over. I didn't want to spend the rest of my (un)life fending off horny suitors and avoiding comfort sex or demons who were trying to seduce me. Worst still, I didn't want to leave a trail of broken hearts in my wake. Because I would be leaving. I would be going home and nothing and nobody, not love and not a lover, would stop me. Jareth reached out to touch me and I jumped backwards, bringing my dagger and wand up to point at him. “You stay away from me,” I threatened. “Or you'll what?” he laughed, “Give me a splinter?” “This wand is magic - I know you can probably feel it. And this dagger is made partially of iron, fey.” Jareth's scowl blotted out his amusement. “You come prepared. Have you come to destroy me, then? Is the desire I taste the desire for my own death?” “No,” I said, “I didn't come to kill you, or anything else. I was on my way home and I got a little sidetracked. Trust me, just leave me alone, and I'll be out of your… very feathered hair… in twenty three hours.” Or sooner, I thought. Illness be damned, I don't want to stay here any longer than I have to. Leaving the wand pointed at him, I slowly began to reach for my pouch. I decided that I would slide, and hope that the next place I ended up was safer. Jareth darted forward faster than I could see and snatched the pouch away from me, snapping the ties that held it fastened to my hips. I stared in shock as he lifted it before him. I couldn’t believe he had just done that! “Your desire to return home is strong,” he said, “and I want it.” I snarled and he laughed. “It is connected to this - this will help you get home, yes?” Reluctantly I ground out, “Yes.” He gestured with his free hand a small black clock appeared, hovering in midair. It had thirteen hours on the face, instead of just twelve. It read thirteen o'clock but as I watched the hands reversed themselves until they were set at one o'clock. “You have thirteen hours to defeat my Labyrinth,” he said. “Come to me in the Castle Beyond The Goblin City and I will allow you to challenge me for it. If you win, I will give up the pouch to you. If I win…” he took several steps forward and touched my hair gently with his glove. Then it fisted around my hair and he yanked hard. I yipped a little, not expecting the pain. “I will harness that great desire in you and force you to feed me until I drain you dry. Once I have taken all the desire, all the will power from you, you will make an excellent and loyal goblin, I think.” I swung up with my foot, intending to kick him in the knee, but my leg passed right through him. His body began to vanish, to fade into the orange sky. When he was gone, only his laughter remained, ringing through the open space. “Asshole,” I spat, and turned towards the great outer wall. Guess I was going to run the Labyrinth after all. ===== I decided that I would genuinely try to run the first few parts of the maze, the parts I knew from the movie. After that, or if I ever got to a point where I didn't know where I was, then I would morph into my other shape and fly to the castle and hope that didn't constitute cheating. My only trouble with that is that I would have to fly low and carefully, as I would have to carry my wand and my dagger with little bat feet so it would be in my hand when I transformed back, just in case. As I walked towards the wall, I wondered why it was that I could transfigure my clothing with me when I changed, but never what happened to be in my hands. Was it something about mass or weight? Could I only take so much with me? I would have to experiment later, when it was safe to do so. Right now, I had to get my phials back, and I only had thirteen hours in which to do it. The Labyrinth seemed to be caught in eternal sunset, so I was at least lucky there. If the sun rose I would be as a human in this place (albeit heavily armed with offensive charms) and whatever advantage my Vampiric senses and abilities leant me would be gone. There was a brief moment of wondering as I walked towards the mucky pond that sat in a stone basin beside the wall, if this was pre-, during-, or post- movie. So far, there hadn't really been a pattern in when I had arrived places. In 'Dracula: The Series' and 'Pirates' it had been post, but in 'Anita Blake' and 'Phantom' it had been during. I'd yet to end up somewhere 'pre-' and wondered if this was it. Would I find Hoggle spraying faeries? Or would I cross paths with Sarah? Could Jareth keep track of more than one player at once? There was no Hoggle the Dwarf around when I reached the gate, so I went to try to talk to the faeries instead. “I'm so very tired,” the faery I approached said. “Hold me up?” I shook my head. “I bite back, pip squeak,” I replied and she hissed at me and moved to fly away. I plucked her out of the air by her wings and held her in front of my face. “Where is the door to the Labyrinth?” I asked. All I could see was solid wall. “I won't tell you!” she shrieked, “This is unfair!” “Life's unfair, chika. Show me the door to the Labyrinth, and then I'll let you go.” She kicked dainty little feet at me, but couldn't reach. Finally she pouted, and pointed at the wall. “There it is! Let me go, you bully!” I released the faery and she dropped a few feet before taking off at a brisk flapping pace. I didn't blame her for wanting to get as far away from me as possible. I looked to where she pointed. The door was now there. Sweet. ===== I had watched the movie enough times to know to turn left and keep walking until I found the weird fern with the eyeballs that grew from it, and the fallen stump. From where I stood, it looked like the path went on forever, and knowing the Labyrinth, it probably did. But to the side, there were gaps, artfully hidden gaps in the brickwork that were invisible unless you knew they were there, or accidentally brushed against the wall in exactly the right spot. I, of course, knew it was there. Where I got to the rotting log, I turned to the wall on my left and said, “Hello?” I waited for a moment, and when I got no answer, I said, “Hello?” again. From a tiny gap in the silver brickwork, right about knee level, a small blue worm with a red scarf on inched his way into view. “Did you say 'Ello'?” he asked me, in a mildly cockney voice. “No, I said 'hello',” I corrected, grinning, “but that's close enough.” He squinted at me, but said nothing. What I had just done was recited one of his own lines from the movie, and I honestly wondered if he realized it. I hadn't the time, really, to stand around and chat with wall-worms, so when he opened up his mouth to invite me in to have a spot of tea with the Missus, I interrupted and asked, “I beg your pardon, but is there a path straight to the castle at the centre of the Labyrinth?” The worm gasped and started at me, aghast for a moment. He was no fan of “that ghastly castle”, and clearly said so in the movie, but I knew how to navigate the Labyrinth, or so I thought. The best way to do things was to A) Ask the right questions, B) never take anything for granted, and C) play fair. Finally the worm cleared his throat and said, in a much smaller voice, “Aye, there is.” I crouched to be eye level with the worm. “Do you know where the path that leads straight to the centre of the Labyrinth is?” The worm coughed once, but nodded. Apparently, the creatures in the Labyrinth were required to help a petitioner if they asked questions, but only the correct ones. I had read theories about this on websites and overheard them at conventions, and it was nice to find them true. Of course, maybe the worm was just a helpful honest fellow, and was doing this without being compelled. That meant I may run into trouble if I took for granted that all the creatures of the Labyrinth would be helpful and honest. I would have to be careful. Grains of salt and the like. “Would you please show me how to get on the path that will lead me straight to the castle at the centre of the Labyrinth?” The worm started at me with huge eyes, then finally gestured with his head at the opening I knew was across the way from his hole. I could have saved myself ten minutes of wormy conversation and just turned and walked through it, but the Labyrinth has a nasty habit of rearranging itself when your back is turned, and I wanted to make sure that everything was where I expected it to be before I took for granted that it was the same. Say what you want about me, but I'm a stubborn bitch, and when it came to getting home, Jareth the Goblin King was right - my desire was strong. I thanked the worm and went through the artfully hidden gap in the stonework opposite him. He told me to go right, and I took his advice, starting off and away with a preternaturally fast loping run. From here on out, I was on my own. In the movie, Sarah had gone the other way, and had to travel through many dangers untold to get to where Jareth had her little brother Toby held hostage. I, on the other hand, was on what I hoped was the direct path. Oh, yes, Jareth had been very right about me - my desire was strong. I was a passionate person who acted more on instinct than intellect, especially since this whole Sliding mess had begun. I had noticed it myself: my growing dependence on my emotions, my gut feelings and my Vampiric instincts, rather than logic and rational human survival tactics. The university logic was burning away in the heat of my want. I felt more than I thought. And right now, I felt like kicking Jareth's poncey blonde ass. Book Six: Labyrinth Chapter Eighteen: “Illusion” I knew Jareth was watching me stumble, frustrated, through the Labyrinth, from somewhere high in his castle towers. Every time I glanced up at them, taking my eyes from my path, it gave me a cold shiver and made all my short hairs stand on end. Sometimes I even caught the glint of diluted sunlight refracted from his scrying crystals. He was clever, though, and that was unsettling. He knew exactly what to go for, and that unnerved me. How easy was I to read? I paused to slip the knife and my wand into my boot, sick of carrying it in my hand and afraid it may come off as too aggressive, and then kept running. I could see the top of the castle growing closer as I made my way down an extremely straight and narrow passage way. It was dingy and grey, filled with fallen foliage, eyeball moss, and giant cobwebs. It looked like it hadn't been used in centuries, which, knowing this place, was probably truth. If the movie, and the wall-worm had been right, this passage ought to lead me straight to the castle, but how willing was I to take it for granted that this was the truth? Jareth had accused me of coming to destroy him, and I wondered if winning my phials back would do just that. Neither the movie, nor the commentaries on the DVD, actually explain what happens to Jareth after Sarah beats him. Do her words strip him of all his powers and dissolve the Labyrinth? Or does it merely mean that he has to relinquish her and Toby and start over? Does Jareth's defeat affect him at all? And why was he an owl at the end of the movie? He turned into a snowy owl after Sarah said the words “You have no power over me,” but did the words force him into the form or did he choose to switch? If he chose, why? If not, then is he trapped as an owl forever? Or just until someone else wishes a child/desired thing away? It was all so confusing! I suppose knowing the answers to these questions wouldn't really effect my own stab at the Labyrinth, as I fully intended to win back my phials, no matter what… but said answers may make things easier, at least. If I knew whether or not my words would destroy Jareth permanently, I may try to bargain with him instead. I hadn't killed anyone yet, something that I think must be a record of a sort for a seven-month-old Vampire. I definitely intended to be the world record holder on that one. All this running was giving me time to really think, something I hadn't been able to really do in a few worlds, at least. I chewed over some of the thoughts as I ran, the first being, What the hell was I? I was me, of course, still the same old Marie Susan Brooke. But now I was a dead me. Undead me. Whatever. But that didn't explain what I was. I was some sort of person, torn from my own reality and sent spinning headlong through fictional worlds, another's canonical intellectual property. The closest term I could think of for it was the fanfiction’s Mary Sue, and had indeed been referring to myself in my head as one for months already. But if I was a Mary Sue, that meant that I was now also a fictional character, didn't it? Which of course I’m not. Thoughts along that vein gave me a headache and the bone-deep willies so I shied away and instead thought about what it meant to be a Mary Sue. I knew I was slowly, one by one, falling prey to the traps of the Mary Sue of Fanfiction. I knew, from my Literary Theory classes, and now from my own experience, that a veritable checklist of requirements for being a Mary Sue could be composed: the Mary Sue is sexually attractive to all canon characters; the Mary Sue character exists for wish fulfillment; the character drops in from 'our reality'; the Mary Sue is considered attractive; the character has a tragic past; the Mary Sue character 'saves the day'. When I get home, I promised myself, I'm writing an essay about this for class. Professor F-- had damn well better give me an 'A' on it, too. What wasn't addressed in Mary Sue fanfiction, I realized as I risked another glance away from my path up at the castle, is how soulnumbing being a Mary Sue can be; how desperate you become, and how horribly homesick. How exhausting jumping from crisis to crisis was, how mentally draining being on the alert all the time could be. If the insanely huge gaps of culture shock don't kill you, the swarming hormones might. Getting involved with any of the events or characters meant throwing that whole world out of whack and inadvertently making yourself the centre of attention - and thus, the centre of the plot. When you were in the centre, when everyone was looking at you, it was hard to escape. I had made this promise to myself once before, and I made it again as I continued to run (glad, perhaps for the first time that I was undead, as I was not, of course, running out of breath): I will not interfere. I will wait out my twenty-four hours and slip between the realities, unknown, unseen, unheard, unloved. The internal vow made my heart and stomach twist simultaneously. I wanted my phials so badly- I wanted to go home so bad. I wanted to see my mother and father, talk to my friends, embrace them, be home, safe, and free of the nightmares and the stress and the constant wariness and the fear and anger and hatred… I wanted to feel safe again. My desire was so strong - it occurred to me that to Jareth it must be damn near intoxicating, it had to be so strong and passionate, and so laced with... arsenic. Heady, dark... tainted. I caught the smell of green things in the distance and squinted as I ran. There was an equal amount of path behind me as ahead of me, and I hoped I was more than half way. From the scent of the foliage and the little spots of green and red I could see, it appeared as if I was indeed more than halfway down the path, and that it would eventually lead me into a pleasant little rose garden. I hoped it was right beside the Castle. And that they weren't strange carnivorous roses. I was making it through this thing in less than an hour - a record to be sure, and a worry. What if I was going the wrong way? What if all this progress was a trick? If I found out it was, I would transform into my bat shape and fly directly for the castle over the Labyrinth, I decided. I didn't relish the thought of having to carry my knife and wand in my claws, but what else could I do? I hoped that wasn't cheating. I just really, really didn't want to be stuck here for the rest of eternity - and I really didn't want to be a goblin. And what would Jareth do once I got there? Taunt me again? Try to seduce me and feed from my desires? Try to kill me and be done with it? All this running gives me too much time to think! I cussed to myself. No more thinking allowed! I finally came to the rose garden and skidded to a scraping halt. I ended up flailing a little bit, and scratched the back of my left hand against something unexpected and sharp. While he wasn't there a second earlier, Jareth was now standing in the doorway between the garden and me. The archway was made of elaborate stonework, twined with brambles and thorny vines. It was engraved with the images of the little biting fairies and frolicking twisty goblins. I could see more of the fairies flittering among the blood red, livid purple, midnight blue, and black blossoms behind Jareth. I'd never seen such Tim Burton-esque roses before. Jareth himself was standing on the direct threshold of the archway, the heels of his thigh-high black leather boots in lush dark green grass, the pointed toes resting on the dingy grey stonework of the passage I stood in. I narrowed my eyes are him warily and took in his appearance. He was wearing green trousers that matched the grass, his wild and asymmetrical jacket a rich blue and a rose head like a gunshot wound obscenely displayed on his lapel. His shirt and ascot were black, and his eyeliner particularly thick. He was spotless down to his black leather gloves. In his hand, he held a single pale red rose, the only one in sight. I had scraped the back of my bare hand against its stem, and the thorns had raised blood. It was just short of pink, and I didn't trust it. He was holding it out, as if he wanted me to take it, and I knew better than to accept anything from the Goblin King. He didn't move, or drop his arm, or anything, and neither did I. For a long, long moment, we just started at each other, both of us determined not to be the first to break, the first to blink, or the first to speak. I crossed my arms under my breasts and waited him out. After all, it’s not like I was getting any older. Although it was possible that he wasn’t, either. We weren't quite at the castle, yet, and I couldn't recite the poem that would force Jareth to accede to my win until we were inside it. Those were the rules. Suddenly, as if a switch inside of Jareth had just been flipped on, he smiled in greeting and extended the flower towards me. "I thought we could meet here,” he said gently, the soft burr of his accent warm in my ear. “Just for a small rest. It's so much more pleasant." I still did not take the flower. Something fishy was going on here. "Thank you, no. I have a castle to get to. If you'll excuse me." I waited for him to move out of my path. Obviously, he wasn't going to. I scowled at him, and debated my options. I could go around him, shove him out of the way, or fly over his head… he saved me the choice by speaking again: "What's your hurry my dear? You've got lots of time.” He remained smiling, but the smile did not reach his mismatched eyes. “I am anxious to discuss how you managed to find the short cuts so quickly. Your determination is... most intoxicating." I shook my head. "The only thing I want to discuss is you moving so I can get to the castle and get my phials back.” The rose remained upraised - he was determined that I take it, and the longer he stood there offering it to me, the less I wanted to touch it. “But why such a rush? You have missed all the great splendours of my Labyrinth.” “I want to leave." "I can see that." The look in his eyes just got colder and colder, but his smile remained, plastic, and so did the offered rose. "But you have already defeated me. The least you can do is briefly indulge me. Come, am I that repulsive?" I scowled at this very obvious ploy. The near echo of Jean-Claude’s own simpering plea twanged on my already taught nerves. Somehow, I thought Jareth would be more clever, more subtle than this. "Don't yank my anything. We both know I haven't defeated you yet. I will force my way past you if you will not step aside, King or no." Finally, he stepped back a pace, but continued to hold his ground. "But you have defeated me. The castle is there...I cannot detain you from it for the rest of the time remaining. Clearly, you know what has to be done in order to solve my world...now all I ask is for you to tell me how. I can offer you...many things..." By this time, I had grown very frustrated and thus angry, and perhaps a little sloppy. "Fine,” I snarled, “if this is close enough to count as the castle, then this is close enough to finish this dog and pony show. Give me the Phials. Through dangers untold and hard ships unnumbered..." Jareth's calm veneer cracked and I actually could see the moment he began to panic. I knew more than just how to solve his Labyrinth, and he had just realized it. I knew how to play his game at his level, and he wasn’t used to being challenged. There was a flash of light and suddenly he held my light brown leather pouch in one gloved hand. He was threatening the phials I so coveted and in his most commanding voice said: "Stop! I can destroy these before you ever finish if I wish to. I am King here and however you may know my world, you are a guest. I am willing to acknowledge your triumph, but you will accept my gift and you will answer my questions first." Slowly, deliberately, I bent down and retrieved my wand from my boot. I straightened and pointed it at him. "I'm really not in the mood to screw around," I said. Jareth viewed the wand with distaste and mild humour. "That will not work for you here. This place, this game, is of my creation. It is my magic...my world. Other magics are invalid in my reality. We play by my rules." I frowned and lowered the wand. I had no way of knowing if this was truth, but the last thing I wanted to do was try a spell and have it backfire on me. Suddenly, my ace-up-the-sleeve was gone. All I had left was the poem - if I could finish it before he could react, then maybe … but there was no guarantee that he wouldn't crush them anyway! And would my reactions be fast enough to snatch the phials out of the air if Jareth did drop them? If the phials were destroyed, I'd have no way of getting out of the Labyrinth - I'd be trapped forever, and a goblin to boot! I had to try. "... I have fought my way here, to the castle beyond the goblin city..." His gloved fingers flexed around the pouch and I heard the groan of the glass and stopped. We were at an impasse. His voice lowered to a dangerous hiss. "I'm not playing anymore, child...I will destroy these." "You can't,” I reasoned. “They're my prize for solving the Labyrinth. You can't destroy my phials any more than you can deliberately kill a child." He glared at me, and for the first time, lowered the pale red rose. "And just how do you know what I can and cannot do? You appear to know all of my secrets, but I may just surprise you. I suggest you co- operate with me, rather than test me. You will receive your prize, I assure you… just take my gift." I shook my head to that one. “No - it's going to do something to me.” “It is merely a token of my affection - I am very impressed that you have come as far as you have. Think of it as a goodwill offering. A truce so we may speak for a few hours before you go?” I let the bluntness out. "You can't possibly say or offer to do anything that will make me want to stay in the Labyrinth and let you suck all the energy out of me, feather-head." He quirked an eyebrow and raised the rose again. He peered at the blossom, staring at it intently as if he can see something within it. "Oh? Are you sure there's nothing I can offer you? Nothing you want desperately, to the very depths of your being? Nothing you've been fighting for, for some time now?" I clenched my fists and my jaw. I hissed at him through my teeth. "Even if you could know what it is that I want - and I don't think you do - I doubt you could give it to me. And if you could, I wouldn't accept the offer, because whatever price you would ask would be too high." "All I have asked... all I am asking you for is answers... for you to tell me how it is you know all you know.” He looked back up, sincerity painting his features. “This is my world, and yet you breeze through it as if it were an afterthought. That does not happen. As for what I can give you... my powers are quite far reaching. I created this world. Do you honestly think it is beyond me to give you what it is you crave?" "What I want is not of your world. You can't give it to me. And trust me, you won't like my answers. No one else has, yet." Sighing, he took a small step towards me. I let him, and didn't back up. He was now out of the rose garden entirely, and for some reason, it seemed to pull some of the life and colour out of him, like a thread of breath. The vibrant shades of his clothing became a muted dull grey, washed out and dusty. His cheeks and lips, once rosy, were pale and luminescent. His eyes dulled to a dishwater grey, and there were fine lines around his eyes. He looked suddenly human, and very weary. "I'm not asking to like your truths,” he said, and for the first time, I heard raw desperation and want in his voice. “Merely to know them. If my world, my Labyrinth can be defeated so easily, it weakens me. It threatens my very existence. And perhaps that doesn't matter to you, but this is all I have. Please…. I… I can do many things that are not of this world, child. You underestimate me. Just take the rose, and tell me what you know, and I will do all I can to fulfill your desire.” I didn’t reach for it, though I found myself grudgingly moved by his plea. “I don't trust you.” She shook his head and muttered to himself, “They never trust me. It was one of her faults as well..." His eyes and thoughts were now elsewhere, thinking of the only other person to defeat him. "You're thinking about Sarah." His head snapped up and this time he moved more aggressively towards me, clutching the rose like a blunt weapon, but stopped short of me. "How do you know that name?" "I've already told you, you won't like the answers. Just give me the phials and I'll leave. You'll never see me ever again." "I am not a child to be coddled, nor am I a patient man." By now, he was almost shaking with anger. "I don't care if the answers infuriate me or not, I need to know. Will there be others like you? Has this world become superfluous?” "No, it hasn't and no, I don't think there are any others like me in the world.” I took in his haggard appearance, his obvious desperation, and, ignoring the instincts screaming otherwise, took pity on the Goblin King. “I'm a traveler, Jareth. I'm passing though worlds that I thought only existed in... imagination... in fiction. In libraries." "Fiction?" He sounded curious now, and his anger deflated a little. He touched the head of the rose gently, stroking the petals with the tips of his fingers as he mused. "Am I not real, then, where you come from?" "I told you that you wouldn't like the answers. Now give me my phials, please." "Have I shown you any anger yet? Have I given you any reason to distrust me?" He cocked his head to the side. He didn't insist that I take the rose again, which left me slightly startled and wary. What had he done to the rose that he wanted me to take it so badly, and what would it do to me? And why didn't he want me to take it any more? "I am more curious than anything. I take it you read of this place then? And of Sarah?" I touched the back of my hand gently, where I had drawn blood on the roses' thorns. The cut had healed over already, thanks to my Vampiric abilities, but the spot was still slightly itchy. That was a small concern, but I decided to focus on the threat right in front of my face before I worried about why my skin was still itchy. I hesitated, then said, "Yes." Ever the vain fey creature, Jareth smirked slightly, but it was a wounded smile. "Then you know of my defeat once already. Tell me how was I... received?" "You mean, what people thought about you?" I shrugged, relaxing slightly with the banter, but I kept my gaze vigilant on my pouch. Jareth was calmer now, but if I said anything else to anger him, it may be 'game over'. "Most people thought it was a shame that it ended the way it did. Sarah doesn't have a lot of fans, in my world." He smirked again. "You wouldn't just be saying that in order to placate me, now would you?" Actually, I sort of was, but it was kinda the truth too. Everyone I'd ever watched the movie with agreed that Sarah was a whiner and she didn't really deserve the Goblin King's attention or affection. I shook my head. "I think she was a snivelling brat who got taught a much needed lesson in growing up when she was here. You did exactly what she demanded and expected of you and still she couldn't take responsibility for your actions. That said,” I added hastily, “I did not wish away my phials, nor did I agree to this contest. Please uphold your end of the bargain now, Goblin King, or I will finish the poem." He appeared to ponder it a while, before finally inclining his head ever so slightly. "Very well. You seem to think me honourable and yet deplorable at the same time... curious. I will give you what you ask of me; but what of your home? Do you not wish for me to try to send you there as well?" I felt the colour drain from my face and my stomach do a perfect back flip and then land at my toes. But what of your home? He had asked - how had he known?! "H-how…” I whispered. I felt like someone had punched me in the chest, I couldn't get enough air to properly make a sentence. “ ... how do you know what my desire is?" He smiled, almost warmly, and brushed the petals of the pale red rose under his nose. "Deductive reasoning child, simple as that. You have told me how you know of me...from your home and yet you are here, and quite unhappily so. I know you want something so badly you can taste it. I'm right aren't I?" He took a step closer to me and I realized what he was doing - he was feeding on me. That's why he was standing here, that's why he kept popping in to visit Sarah. Jareth was sucking my desire out of me and consuming it. That's why he was growing happier, more content, while I felt my anger and fear slowly draining away. My passion was leaving. All the energy and power, and strength, that my indignation had given me was swirling out of me like water out of a very small hole in a bathtub. The realization made me feel the effects even more strongly, and I swayed on my feet. I had to take a step back, brace myself against the wall to keep upright. Jareth grinned at me and I glowered at him from underneath my hair. "... yes,” I finally admitted. He tried to take another step forward but I straightened, keeping one hand against the wall to keep myself upright, and held the other one out in front of me to ward him off. I took a step back again and he stopped. “But I don't believe you can send me home. Better men than you have tried." He stepped forward despite my outstretched hand. He was almost within touching distance and I jerked my fingers back. With a flick of his wrist, the rose vanished and was replaced by a pale red crystal ball. He balanced it between his fingertips for a second, then released it - for a second it appeared as if the ball would shatter, but he slipped his knuckles under it and began to roll it back and forth over the top of his hand, up his fingers, over the tips, down into his palm, and back again. He made it look as easy as waving. "You wound me and yet I am willing to help you,” he insisted, “Is that not generous?" He smiled, at me, knowing the words would have an impact. I blinked at him. "Generous?" “I have been known to be so." He gave me a look of complete innocence and held up the crystal yet again. I realized that I was trapped, now. The banter, the offers, the rose, the pleading, it had all been to stall me, to get him close enough to me, to get me relaxed enough, for him to start draining away my desire, my ambition. Even now when I thought of home, the burning need to reach it had dwindled. This realization alarmed me, filled me with muddy despair. Soon I would be nothing more than a husk, wan and uncaring; just as Sarah was in the JunkLady’s house. I had to get away from Jareth. I had to get to the castle, finish the poem, and free myself. "Wait... no,” I said, “this isn't... this is too... what have you done that's generous?" He smiled, enjoying my disconcertion at the deja vu. I had unknowingly given him a weapon. "Everything. You may not have asked to play my game, but I have accommodated you as best I could. I have graciously accepted my own defeat...isn't that generous?" "But I... I mean, I haven't even... give me back my phials, then!" He bowed slightly and handed me the pouch. His hand brushed mine as we parted and I felt heat leap from my body into his through our hands. I bent over, clutching the pouch to me, shivering suddenly. Jareth bent as well, leaning into my ear, and whispered, "Thank you for everything you've given me. I wish you a safe journey." I strapped my belt on, watching him watch me, reached into the pouch and plucked up an unkeyed phial, lifted it above my head. "You're welcome... I guess," I said, not knowing what else to say. I dropped the phial and when it hit the ground, it broke. Just… broke. Burgundy liquid oozed out onto the grey flagstones beneath my feet, vanishing into the cracks - but there was no flash, no crack. I stared at it in amazement and horror for a second. Jareth had cautioned me that my magic wouldn't work here - did that include the phials? I reached into my pouch for some wizarding candy - if the enchantments on the candy weren't working either, then I would know that none of the Harry Potter brand hocus-pocus would be able to help me. My hand hit empty air. I looked at my waist - there was no pouch. At my feet, there was no broken glass, no puddle of useless potion. There never had been. Jareth was standing there, on the threshold between the eerie rose garden and the stone corridor, once more clad in his gothic finery. He was watching, smiling, amused that I had fallen for his little illusion. "You sneaky son of a bitch!" I cried, and lashed out with a foot before he could quite react to the insult. I hit him directly in the hand. The crystal ball he was holding was sent spinning into the air, flying, rolling over and over, and shattered against the ground. The world around me splintered - the sky rained down in shards of broken glass. I shrieked and covered my head with my arms. When I looked up again, I was back in the grey, damp, cobwebby passage that lead towards the castle. There was no rose garden. There was only a wall with a carved rose in the stone, grey and eroded with age and rain. At its base were smashed crystal fragments in pale red. From the shapes of the scattered pieces, I could tell that it had once been a small rose. On one of the thorns, a drop of red shivered - my blood. I had been trapped in an illusion, just like Sarah and the peach. I lifted my face to the air and screamed in frustration. Book Seven: Labyrinth Chapter Nineteen: “The Words” The frustration finally gave way to fury and that was that. I concentrated and before I knew it, I was a bat. My wand and my knife were clenched in my little batty claws. Apparently that much magic still worked for me. Perhaps because it was ingrained in my DNA. I still functioned – I was still a Vampire, still walked and lived, so that magic was still active. I hadn’t crumpled the moment I’d walked into the Labyrinth. So it made sense that I could also still transform. I flew up over the grey stone wall and made a bee-line for the castle. I just hoped this wouldn't constitute as cheating. The player was allowed to use every means at their disposal, right? As I approached, I saw Jareth sitting on the windowsill of the circular tower throne room. On the sill was a smashed crystal and his eyes and mouth were wide 'o's of surprise. He had probably dropped the crystal in shock when he saw me transform. Served him right. Peeping tom. I flew over his head and landed on the stone floor on human feet, and in a single fluid movement brought the knife up to his chin. “Through dangers untold and hardships unnumbered,” I began, even as he rose to his feet, sputtering, the colour draining away from his face. He took a step backwards and I matched it, flicking the blade of the dagger, lightly scraping the flashing metal against his skin. He froze. “I have fought my way here to the castle Beyond the Goblin city.” “W-wait!” he cried out, but I was in no mood to listen. “To win back the phials which you have stolen.” “Please, don't do this!” he said, and just hearing the Goblin King say 'please' was enough to pique my curiosity, enough to make me pause in the incantation. I narrowed my eyes at him. “Why shouldn't I?” I asked. “Well? Will it kill you?” “No,” he said hastily, “but you are the first challenger I've had in… years… I'm half starved for desire. Remain with me, please, and…” he flicked his wrist and another of his crystal balls appeared in his hand, balanced on his gloved fingertips. “I'll give you anything you want.” “You can't give me what I really want and keep me here.” “I can.” “I want to go home.” “I can make is seem as if you're home.” “I don't want another fucking illusion!” I took another menacing step forward and Jareth, obviously flustered and thrown off by my brutal aggressiveness, could do nothing more than press himself back against the stone wall and stare in horror. “I want the real thing, dammit!” “What are you?” he whispered. “A Vampire,” I replied, not really seeing why it was relevant. He shook his head minutely, as if afraid that too strong a motion would cause him to slit his own throat. With the way I was holding the knife, and how closely, it was a distinct possibility. “I know that,” he said dismissively, “I mean, what are you?” That made me pause. For the briefest of seconds, I hesitated, and he used my confusion to break away from me. I turned to follow him, but his words stung. Had I truly become a monster? I had accused Erik of being one because he had killed - and here I was, with my knife poised to slash out someone's throat. Was my own desire, my own anger, mutating me, making me an ugly thing? I shook my head. Now was not the time to think about such things. I had to escape. “Don't try to distract me. For my will is as strong as yours, and my kingdom as great.” Jareth dropped to his knees in front of me, holding up the crystal, offering it to me as he had offered the rose. “Don't do this to me,” he said softly. “Don't leave me to starve.” I looked into his eyes, and couldn't tell if he was lying. Would he truly starve to death if I left now? If I said the last six words, would that be the end of the Goblin King? I cared, I wanted to know, I had no wish to hurt him, only to leave… but my own selfish desire to win back my precious phials overcame me. “You have no power over me.” He sighed, and the exhalation of breath made his whole frame shudder. The castle shuddered with him, cracks appearing in the mooring between the ancient stones. The whole building began to shiver. There was a tugging sensation at my waist, and suddenly I felt my pouch. It was back, hitched high over one hip, like it should be. I dug out a blank phial and held it above my head. Against the hand with the knife, I felt the chilled, smooth surface of a crystal pressed against my fingers. “Take it!” Jareth screamed and shoved the crystal into my other hand. “Seek your home, but feed me of your desire! I will feed from you through this - as a creature who must rely on others for sustenance, you cannot deny me my chance at survival! Please!” This last word was shrieked over the thunderous rumble of falling masonry. I felt guilt twist in my gut, and I closed my fingers over the crystal. I had been less than a stellar example of human compassion the last few hours, and I felt guilted into accepting it. I hoped I would not regret my generosity any time soon. The minute it left his hands, Jareth became a snowy white owl, and swooped out the window. The castle was coming down around my ears, and I wasn't going to wait for it to crush me. Just as I had released the phial, something unforgivingly hard struck the back of my head, and I tumbled down with the castle, spinning into blackness. I clenched the crystal in my other hand and prayed that my landing would be soft. ===== In my mind I had dubbed it the “Slip-Sickness”, and I lay on the ground firmly in its throes. The bash on the head wasn't helping any, but my Vampiric nature was helping to make the feeling go away fairly fast. I rolled over onto my side and vomited into the lush, soft grass under my cheek. It was all red and reeked like rotting meat, and I pushed onto my hands and knees to escape the mess. My throat felt tight and raw, my head swam, and the world swayed and bobbed. My vision was dark around the edges, and stars sparkled in the middle. My stomach felt like it was trying to crawl out of my mouth, and my heart was trying to break out of my rib cage. My extremities were numb with painful cold, yet all my joints were on fire. Knives stabbed the back of my eyes every time I opened them and let in the light, and every breath of air made my chest constrict and my bowls roil. I vomited again and crawled away, backwards. My ears were ringing and my head throbbed. I lay back in the grass, flung my forearm over my eyes and prayed to die. ===== The first thing to sluggishly return to me was my hearing. The gongs and high-pitched whistles that had been ringing in my ears, making me want to pull a Van Gogh, finally evened out into the whirr of the wind, the wet green sounds of shivering foliage, and the heavy crash of nearby thunder. The ground shook and it sounded, felt, like I was in the middle of a storm. But I felt no rain, and the sky on the other side of my eyelids was light. I heard a high-pitched whirring whine, like some electrical thing powering up, then a zapping sound of a discharge. There was a flash of light, more crashes, and a muffled curse broadcast over a poor quality, cracking radio. “Surrender, vigilante!” one crackling voice commanded, and it was met with the sound of a zapping discharge. “You can't order the Shinigami to just surrender and expect me to!” another, brasher voice called back over a speaker system. “I mean, hello, Death.” There was another zap and the grass near my head was suddenly hot, and smelled of burning greenery. I climbed to my feet and opened my eyes. Above me, almost directly above me, stood two giant robots. No shitting. One was grey and very plain looking, man-shaped and armour-esque. The other looked like a hybrid between the Batmobile and a Transformer. In one giant mechanical hand it held a staff with an arc of acid green energy off the end that made the weapon look like a scythe. In the other is clutched a laser gun. A laser gun. The two robots exchanged another volley of laser fire, and I had to dance out of the way when the missing shots arced by my head. They continued to fight, oblivious to my presence. I nearly was stepped on, and I wasn't feeling with it enough to move fast enough to get out of the way. I guess that's why I didn't see the third angel-like robot hovering via thruster-pack in the air above my head. I hear the whirring sound of a large zap gun being charged, and looked up, over my shoulder just in time to see the stream of yellow energy heading right for me. “Aw, shit,” I said, and covered my head with my hands. I crouched, and wondered if this was to be the end of me. ===== I sat up slowly, my head spinning, eyes wide to try to suck in any light I could. The room was pitch black. The only indication of colour came from set of thick curtains. Golden sun streamed through the cracks at the bottom and in the middle. The fabric was lightened. The silhouette of a man was a dark shape against the curtains. It made me shiver. “You're still a sick fuck,” I said softly, facing the window. He chuckled softly under his breath, and the silhouette took a step closer. “And you're still a brazen young lady.” “Don't come near me,” I warned, groping along the cover for something to throw. I found the bedside table and closed my fingers around a heavy, hard-cover book. He chuckled again, and the sound gave me something to aim at. He yelped as the book glanced off the side of his head and I could see his shadow move as he raised his hand to the new bruise. “Why do you insist on throwing books at me?!” he snarled, and two dots of gold appeared in the shadow. His eyes were glowing.. “Why do you insist on trying to hurt me when you know I will throw books at you?” He snarled and I felt the bed sink and sway. I crab-walked backwards until I hit the headboard. I could only see the feral glow of his eyes, but they were coming closer, skimming towards me over the bed. Christ, he was crawling. I pulled myself into a ball and clamped my arms around my neck, hiding my face in my knees, in an effort to protect the vulnerable stuff. I felt his long fingers prying at my arm and I went stiff. I could feel his thighs on either side of my legs, his other arm brushing my shoulder. He had me pinned to the headboard. He laughed softly and his breath whispered along my ear, hot and smelling of rotted meat. Old blood. “I have never tried to harm you,” he said softly into my ear. I shied away from that side, and the movement gave his hand the leverage needed to pull my other arm away from my neck. He grabbed my forearm and slowly yanked it upwards and back, pinning my wrist against the wall. I couldn't fight him. He was moving slowly, deliberately, and I couldn't fight him. He switched his face to the other side of my neck, the side that was free now, and nuzzled. I could hear him snuffling against my skin like a dog, taking in scents. His tongue shot out and lapped briefly, then vanished. It appeared again, pressing down, searching for the pulse. He found it and nipped once, no fangs. I struggled briefly, but there was no point. “You tried to bite me.” “I would not have hurt you.” I shook my head minutely. He nipped again and I quashed the urge to scream and struggle. This time he drew blood. “You are going to hurt me.” “Yes,” he said, smiling. His fangs flashed crimson, his eyes glowed gold. “Yes, I am.” I screamed. ===== The sound of a scream ringing in the void under a high ceiling awoke me. Cautiously, I opened my eyes. I was laying on my back in a wide, expensively draped bed. On the nightstand beside me sat my knife, my wand, and Jareth's crystal. Don't let me starve! I closed my eyes and looked away from the ball of glass. I heard a door open, and the soft footfalls of boots on thick carpet. I didn't look up. I smelled a man - expensive rose cologne, salonquality shampoo, very fine whiskey - stop at the end of my bed. “You are awake?” he asked, and his voice was smooth and confident, lightly accented and with just a hint of a rumbling purr. Sexy, is what it was. “I am,” I whispered. I didn't open my eyes. “You were screaming.” “Nightmare.” “Ah,” he said, and left it at that. Book Seven: Gundam: Wing Chapter Twenty: “Conversations in the Dark” I woke again later, but how much later I don't know. It was dark and the man who smelled of expensive things was not there. Beside me on the nightstand, Jareth's crystal was faintly glowing. At first I thought it was a trick of the light - the moon light lancing through the stone. But then I realized that the crystal was on the opposite side of the bed as the window and the shadow of my own head was in the way. A light, faintly red, throbbed in the very centre of the orb. Your desire will be mine, the light seemed to say. I will take it from you. I threw a pillow over the crystal and let the pain of my singed flesh drag me back down into blackness. ===== His desire is strong, the crystal was saying in my dreams, and fine. He is a man of refined tastes with refined desires. I will have them. You mean the man who smells expensive? I replied, not at all concerned that I was talking to Jareth through a crystal. Or to the Crystal itself. Weirder things had happened. And mostly they had happened to me. Yes, the crystal said. His desire is so strong that I may siphon it off from even here, on the other side of his … house. I was waking slowly, this conversation pulling me out of my sleep. I laughed to myself at the euphemism the crystal used for what was probably a sprawling palace. I could hear people moving all around me, the low indistinct murmur of voices, the splash of water, the snick of someone chopping vegetables. This man had servants, and lots of them. What does he want? That I can't say. But his hunger for it makes his desire sharp and honed. It is like a heady champagne and a rich cheese. Nice to hear you found someone better than me to feed you. Oh, no, don't think you're so easily replaced, the crystal said. He may be champagne and caviar but you are a full bodied red wine and your desire is cutting. Goody, I sassed and wondered if my mental tone sounded as sarcastic as I thought. No need to get tetchy, the crystal said. Don't forget, you agreed to feed me by taking the crystal. I turned to face the crystal. It wasn't glowing anymore. “So you are King Jareth then?” I asked it. “Me, a King?” the expensive smelling man said from the doorway and I gave a slight start. I had been focusing so hard on the crystal that I had missed his approach. The lights were still low and I couldn't make out his face, but he was dressed in light-coloured breeches and dark boots, and a sort of military coat in Prussian blue. I wondered if I had ended back up in 'Pirates'. “Er.” “Hardly,” he said with a dismissive wave of his hand, “but I could see where you would make the mistake. My name is Khushrenada.” He stepped into a patch of moonlight and I watched as it turned his eyes into glittering shards of blue ice, his roan hair into a foppish puddle of gold and blood. “General Trieze Kushrenada. But you may call me just Trieze.” I swallowed hard. Your desire has just grown sharp, my dear, the crystal said. Either you want this man, or you fear him… or maybe both? Shut up! I thought at it viciously. You know who his is, then? How could I not? He's the Leader of the Specials, the Officers of the Zodiac. OZ for short, and they're the most talented and ruthless Mobile Suit Pilots in the universe. This guy is just as ruthless, but he's definitely more stylish about it. Ah, then it is ambition that makes his desire strong. Actually… his only ambition, I think, is to create peace. I think the crystal laughed. Peace? A Warrior? How does he plan on doing that? I took a good long look at the General. By becoming a martyr. The crystal fell silent and I turned my attention back to the patient Trieze. “Sorry,” I said softly. “I'm a little out of it. I was… thinking.” He smiled at me. “That is all very well. You have been injured badly. I expect you to be… 'out of it' a little. I am very glad to see you awake, miss…?” “Marie,” I said softly. “Just Marie.” “Ah,” he nodded his head knowingly. As if he expected me to have only one name. Spies only ever have one name, don't they? “Then welcome to my estate, Miss Marie.” I quashed the inane urge to try to pull a curtsy and just nodded instead. “Thank you, General.” He chuckled again, a rumbling lion sound and strode out of the patch of faint light. I felt the foot of the bed sink and sway -he's not Lucard, stop thinking about that stupid dream - and he sat gingerly on the edge, as if to stay far away from me for my own comfort. “I said you may call me Trieze.” “Right. Sorry. Trieze.” His face really did look concerned. As I studied his expression for genuineness, a shocking realization slammed into me. I was looking at General Trieze Kushrenada… and he was real. All the other realities I'd slid into had been based on live-action series or books. But “Gundam : Wing”, the story that Kushrenada came from, was animated. Here I was looking at the real-life fleshand-blood face of a man whom I'd only seen as ink lines and paint smears. He looked far more handsome, far more cunning, and far more charming in the flesh. Literally. I would have to be careful around him. Letting my guard down near His Excellency Trieze was just begging for all kinds of trouble. The man had the uncanny ability to know exactly what your weak points were, and the ruthlessness to go for them. The only weakness I'd ever heard of Khushrenada having was a fascination with beautiful and unique things. Trieze collected rare birds, raised nearly extinct flowers, and tended to collect around him people who were the last or one of a kind. His lieutenant was the Prince of a dead Kingdom. His current foe was the last really ethnic looking Chinese person in the universe. And here I was, the only Vampire in the tale, accompanied by the only sentient rock, bandaged up and infirm in his great big house. As long as he never found out, things would go fine. Ri-ight. Trieze reached out one white-gloved hand and picked up the crystal ball. Deep within its dark depths I saw the red light pulsing faintly. “This is a most fascinating mineral, Miss Marie.” He said my name as if it was in inverted quotations. “Wherever did you find it?” I struggled to sit up against the pillows, hissing under my breath when I felt my burnt skin cracking open. I was swathed in bandages and slathered in some sort of menthol liniment. It didn't hurt as bad as it had when I had first woken up, but I must have been very badly crispified indeed to still be in so much agony so long after. Trieze watched me adjust myself with silent and calculating eyes, but never offered to help me. He was waiting for me to answer. “It was a gift,” I said softly. Around us the room was growing lighter, the windows rosier. Dawn was on its way. Damn dawn. “And what does it do, exactly?” he said, turning it this way and that in the light. “Besides make my fingers tingle?” Ah, so the crystal was sucking the desire out right at the moment. Silly man. “Nothing, really,” I admitted. “It just sits there like a lump of coal and sparkles.” I resent that last remark. Shut up, featherhead, you don't get a say. Trieze set the crystal aside and the red glow died. If he had noticed that it was pulsing with light faintly, he said nothing and did nothing to give it away. Trieze played everything close to the vest. “You were clutching it very tightly,” Trieze pressed. “We feared we might have to break your fingers to get it out of your grip.” “You could have left it,” I said. “Oh, but you see my dear… you were dead.” I froze and stared at him. I know I must have looked like a deer caught in the headlights, and I tried to will the expression away, but I couldn't. “D-dead?” I repeated, and cursed myself for the stammer. Underneath the sheets I moved to grasp a phial, and froze when I realized that yet again, my pouch was missing. In fact, everything I have been wearing was gone, and I was in some sort of loose silky bathrobe thing over piles of bandages. Oh my god… had my pouch burnt up? My wand, my potion, my recipes, everything, gone?! If they… it they really were… I was defenceless! Without the wand, I would have to rely on hand to hand combat when I fought, and I was shit at that. “You suddenly look panicked,” Trieze purred at me and I stopped my freak out long enough to scowl at him. Smug bastard. “The pouch I was wearing,” I said, answering cool tone for cool tone, “What happened to it?” “Ah, this?” he said and pulled my pouch from the inner pocket of his jacket. He handed to me and I did everything I could to keep my hands from shaking as I examined it. The back of the strap had burned away. It had probably been flung away from my body by the force of the electrical blast. Thank god. I opened it up and went through it - yes, wand, knife, phials, recipe, odds and ends, yes, it was all there… By my careful count I had one blank phial left. That meant I would have to stay here and brew more, or hope that the next world was settled enough to do it. I was by no means well enough to even start thinking about brewing the potion here and now, and I knew better that to try it around Trieze, at any rate. That was just asking for all kinds of cans and worms. “Is everything in order?” he asked. “Yes, yes,” I said. “Thank you.” “Good. Now, if we may return to my original question. You were dead, were you not?” He hadn't actually asked that question but I didn't care to point it out to him. I answered his question with one of my own. “Do I look dead now?” I asked and he frowned slightly. It was more in the corner of his mouth and in his eyes, but I could see the 'not happy' look. “No, I dare say you do not, now.” “Then I can'tve been dead.” He said nothing and studied my face for any betraying tics. I schooled my features as best I could, trying to re-enact JeanClaude's China Doll look. “People don't come back from the dead, General Khushrenada,” I said softly, and I knew it for the truth. I was dead and I was not coming back. Something went funny in his eyes. Not like getting or loosing a glassy look, but definitely a change that told me he was thinking of something deep inside of him. Was he planning ahead for his own death? Or maybe thinking of the lost mother of his estranged child? Or of colleagues and protégés fallen in battle? “No, I dare say they do not,” Trieze whispered and his low voice was like warm cinnamon. He leaded forward slowly, as if I were a skittish kitten, touched the side of my face gently with the backs of his fingers, running his knuckles lightly down my neck. His nose was entirely too close for comfort. Yeow. He was almost as good as Jean-Claude. Almost. Beside me I felt the crystal smiling. Give in, it said. Go on - feed the flames of desire. Fuck off, I thought back cattily. The crystal was silent. I turned back to Trieze and he had returned from wherever it was that his thoughts had taken him. His true thoughts and emotions were unreadable on his elegant face. I wondered if he was disappointed that I didn't give in, take the offer of his tempting proximity, and kiss him. Hell, I'd been seduced by badder and better. If Trieze wanted to try to use my femaleness against me to uncover whatever secrets it was that he wanted to learn, he could damn well go stuff it in his jumper. “Sorry,” he suddenly said, as if he had suddenly realized what he had been doing. He jerked backwards and put his hands on his lap like a Guilty Little Boy. I didn't buy that act either, but I kept my face carefully neutral. “That was entirely inappropriate.” On anyone else, it would have been a clever ruse – make the patient think you cared for her, thought her beautiful, and she would tell you anything. It worked better than torture. “It's okay,” I said. It wasn't, and we both knew it, but it was what I was expected to say. “Listen, I don't know what happened, okay? I heard this discharge and then… I woke up here.” “You were very nearly killed,” Trieze said. “If I had not seen your hand twitching, I would have been certain that you had been killed.” “I'm a tough cookie,” I said. “I take a lickin' and keep on tickin'.” A smile cracked at that, and this one I thought may just be genuine. “Where do you come from, my dear?” “Nowhere and everywhere,” I said with a pain-inducing shrug. Dawn had come full force, leaving the eeriness of Trieze by moon light behind. This new Trieze by daylight was rosy and breathtaking. Dawn had also left me more or less human for the day and therefore unable to heal up properly as a Vampire should. The agony of the burns began to pick at me and I fidgeted. Truth be told I was also starving. This whole healing thing always left me parched. “You're a vagabond then?” “I go where the stars guide me, yeah.” He laughed again. “That's rather romantic sounding.” I allowed myself a smile. “Yeah, I guess I'm a bit of a hopeless romantic.” “That's the best kind to be,” he admitted with a nod. “All or nothing, that's what I say.” “Yeah.” “You've grown pale, my dear. You must be hungry. Shall I have someone sent up?” Hungry. Yeah. He had no idea. Sending someone up sounded great. Maids slipped and fell neck-first onto forks all the time, right? Riight. I nodded, not trusting myself to speak. I felt my eyeteeth pushing against my gums, but while the sun was up, I was unable to make the change necessary to give me the feeding equipment that I wanted. If Trieze hadn't come to me at dawn, if he had tried this last night… I probably would have taken him. I was glad that I hadn't. This whole “the dead don't come back” thing may not have worked so well with his blood staining my lips. He stood and made his way to the door. He stuck his head and spoke to someone. Hm - I wondered if I was being guarded or protected. I heard the heartbeat and the footfalls of the other person patter away, and Trieze turned in the doorway to look at me. “It is a wonder,” he said softly. “What is?” “The speed of your recovery, my dear. If the dead don't come back to life, then I am certainly looking forward to finding out just who you are. You looked very dead to me.” “I wasn't,” I insisted. “And I told you, my name is Marie.” “Yes, of course,” he said, but his tone told me that he didn't believe a word out of my mouth and hadn't yet. “I can only tell you the truth,” I whispered. Liar, Jareth's crystal hissed at me gleefully. Trieze nodded. “Of course,” he said again. We both knew he meant the opposite. And then he left. ===== The serving girl had no idea what hit her. When she got close enough I simply stared at her and sapped all the willpower from her. I had seen Lucard do it on the TV show - paralyze someone with a gaze like some sort of grotesque man-shaped basilisk. This had been my first try at it and I was secretly both proud and disgusted for having been able to accomplish it. The girl had already set aside her tray of soup, bread, and strong tea, so all I had to do was get her to step up to the side of the bed. But, dammit, it had no fangs. I was hungry, but how could I pierce her flesh if I had no fangs? Well, I could chew, tear, hack… but that would kill the girl or at least endanger her life, or maim her at the very least. No, I couldn't do that. The idea was a quick meal with as little evidence leftover as possible. Then I remembered my dagger. I hated the thought of using on this innocent girl, but what choice did I have? I pulled my pouch from its new hiding place under my pillow and withdrew the dagger. With shaking, careful hands I lifted the girl's arm. I touched the point of the blade to her skin, causing a tiny indent, and hesitated. Was I really about to do this? I had done worse, I know I had, biting people's necks, but this seemed so… so dirty. So cowardly. At least then I had been giving those I had fed from something in return, even if it was as shallow as some brief physical pleasure. Feed, the crystal thrummed, Feed us both. I did not dignify that with a reply. Instead I nicked the inside of the of the girl's elbow, trying to make the cut look like the kind you'd get from kitchen work without noticing. She didn't even flinch. I licked the blood carefully from the end of the knife and put it away so it wouldn’t rust. When I had turned back to the cut on her arm, it had begun to well tiny beads of blood. I lowered my lips to the red liquid and sucked as gently as possible. I was determined not to leave a hickey. I drank just enough to take the edge off my hunger - three or four mouthfuls - and slowly allowed her arm to flop back to her side. I licked my lips free of the clinging droplets, then reached up and nudged her gently. The girl blinked once, as if suddenly coming to attention. “Oh, I'm sorry!” she gasped. “I... I don't know where my head went…” “That's fine,” I said. “You look a bit tired. Why don't you sit down and talk with me?” “Well,” she said, hesitating. “Will they miss you?” “Well, no.” “Then please, sit.” She sat. “It's kinda lonely,” I admitted and felt guilty twice over for what I was about to do. Not only had I used her for my dinner, but I was about to use her to get Trieze off my case too. “Talk with me?” “Well, yes, alright,” the girl said, relaxing a little. “I'm Marie,” I said. “Elizabeth.” “Nice to meet you. Are you sure you're okay?” She shook her head. “I do feel a bit light headed.” I pointed at the food. “I've had my fill, please, go ahead,” I said, and this time she only made a token protest before digging in. I knew Trieze wasn't the type of employer to treat the help badly, but I'm sure the quality of bread and soup were better that she usually had. As she ate, we talked. I told her all about the brother I had who didn't exist, and how I was looking for him. Rumour had it that he had run off to join the war, but he hadn't said anything to me, I told her, so I had come looking for him. The crystal on the bedside, I told her, was from our old Grannie who also didn't exist, and it was supposed to be a sort of good luck charm. I told her how Mr. Trieze was being awfully nice after I had accidentally mistook his lovely rose garden for a public garden and accidentally (and isn't it just too bad?) trespassed and even more accidentally had gotten myself crisped around the edges by that big old laser cannon. I really appreciated him taking me in and caring for me and aw shucks, if he isn't just the most charming man ever, anyway. I heard Jareth laughing my head the entire time. It was less disturbing to know that the Goblin King was eavesdropping and more annoying really. I had come to a point in my (un) life where the weird was just accepted now. Couldn't suffer from culture shock every three seconds now, could I? Things would never get done. As Elizabeth and I traded lies, I could feel her blood tingling in my skin, trying to do what repair work it could while the sun was up. A few more square meals and I thought my skin would be completely healed. A week's worth of rest, a good soak or too in a nice hot bath, and I would be on my way. I'd just consider this my little vacation. When Elizabeth left to go whisper everything I'd told her in Trieze's ear, I lay back and closed my eyes, for the moment content. Heck, I was in a big, comfortable bed, getting fed and pampered and so what if the guy who was taking care of me was a bit of an eccentric sociopath. In the end, weren't we all? Ha. The sound of Jareth's laughter chased me into sleep. I dreamt of rose-scented baths and Vampires with expensive whiskey on their breath. Book Seven: Gundam: Wing Chapter Twenty-One: “Roses and Angels” Late the next afternoon I was 'miraculously' well and, unbeknownst to my host, mostly whole. And bored enough to climb the walls. When my restless boredom became obvious, I was bundled up in a big blanket and placed in a gazebo out in the garden where I could breathe in the fresh air and take in the scent of the roses. They really were nice. Jareth's crystal was sitting on my lap, as they thought it would be a comfort to me, and it was quiet and dark for once. Maybe he was enjoying the late afternoon respite as well. I was not surprised when Trieze showed up with a bottle of afterdinner wine and two tasteful glasses shortly thereafter. I had declined joining him for supper, claiming that I was not hungry and that the soup from lunch had given me an upset stomach. He'd had more food sent to me around noon and to save face I had eaten it. When the maid was gone, I had promptly gone to the bathroom and gotten rid of all of it. Foul. “Care to partake?” he asked, and I felt it would be rude to say no. “It should help settle your digestion.” “Yes, thank you,” I said softly. He poured out a carefully measured glass of the vintage and handed it to me gently. I was still almost mummified in bandages (which was lucky because once the sun set I would probably heal completely, and I didn't want anyone to see) so I had to balance the sleek glass in my hand delicately. If I held it too lightly, it would slip on the gauze and fall. If I held it too tight, I would crush the glass. Trieze was already suspicious enough of me. Having the strength to crush a wineglass in his presence was probably not the best way to help set those suspicions aside. I followed the General's example and place the rim of the glass under my nose. I took the time to appreciate and savour the scent of it - it was the first time as a Vampire that I'd had wine, and a million more scents than were usually undetected swam up my senses. My god, beer certainly didn't smell this good! I could smell the grapes, the currents, the oak of the barrel, the slight smoky scent of charred wood, the soil of the field, the hands of the workers, the autumn breeze... it was a sheer treat and I continued to smell the beverage long after Trieze had taken the first sip of his own. I clutched the glass carefully by the bowl and closed my eyes, inhaling slowly. Oh, what a marvel! In my mortal life I had been quite the fan, but now… I could smell things that I doubted even an obvious connoisseur like Trieze could catch. I took a mouthful and held it on my tongue, regretting that I would have to sick it back up later. The flavours danced along my taste buds - wind, sun, and that first nip of autumn frost. I groaned and then flicked guilty eyes over at the General. He was amused, watching my blatant enjoyment of the wine. It really was superb. Not that anything of Trieze's was never anything less that superb. “I'm glad that you liking the wine,” he said softly and another of those mostly-genuine smiles graced his features. “It's delicious,” I admitted, not having to embroider one spec of that truth. I took and savoured another sip, really sad that I would have to expel it. I was also sort of in the mood to get drunk. That's the problem with being a Vampire, of course. You can't get drunk. The sweet rollicking oblivion of alcohol was not for one such as I. It was probably just as well. If I had been able to properly partake, I would have been a wino worlds ago. Would have made all this 'slipping' much easier to deal with. “Are you feeling better, my dear?” “Much improved, thank you.” He blatantly swept his blue eyes along my body again, in a gaze probably calculated to make me get all warm and goosebumpy. I shivered once to appease his ego. He smiled to himself and uncrossed his legs. He tucked a hand between his thighs and gave a short tug on the seat of his chair, pulling it around a little so he could face me better. He pressed the bottoms of his boots firmly and calmly against the paving stones under us, and rested his elbows on his knees. He bent forward slightly and an earnest mask appeared on his face. He laced his fingers together slighting in front of his mouth, and for a moment I was sharply reminded of the villain from a different anime, Neon Genesis Evangelion. “I hear that you are looking for your brother,” he said. “It seems the walls have ears,” I said back. He sat back a little. “Well, Miss Elizabeth was very concerned for you, and came to me.” “Uh-huh,” I said and the scepticism was clear in my voice. A little grin pulled at the side of his mouth again. “You do not believe me?” “I know that you probably told her to report to you after she spoke with me.” He sat all he way back and crossed his legs again, one elegant ankle resting on his knee. “I see. That is the way of things, then? Of course, I must now ask, do you really have a brother?” “Yes,” I said and finished the glass of wine. “His name is Klaus and he's totally insane.” Trieze nodded again but did not voice his obvious disbelief. Instead he said, “Are you certain you are not hungry now? Is there anything more I can do for you?” I flicked my eyes to the sky behind him - nope, still at least an hour away from sunset. It must be summer here. I wasn't 'eating' anything for a while yet. You could hand me your blood in a silver tureen, I thought, but decided against saying it. People don't come back from the dead, remember? ===== We parted ways pleasantly enough. Trieze had some matters to attend to, he said, and I was installed in the library to browse as I saw fit. He was being extremely gracious, and I really did feel bad for lying to him. He was probably spying on me though. I'm sure he must have cameras somewhere. As soon as my escorting butler was gone, I found my way to a bathroom and got rid of the wine. Trieze really was a good host. The wine had been nice. But he was as clever as the come, and I didn't dare let my guard down for a second. I knew the minute I tried to run or escape in anyway, I would be in shackles in some god-forsaken dungeon. My wand, my phials, my pouch would be taken away and I would be left bound and helpless. And I would be without a food source, the crystal said. Har har, I thought back. You're awake? I don't sleep. I was simply ...resting. Yeah, sure. ===== I was led back to my room about an hour after sunset. I was served tea, but drank what the maid had under her skin instead. She didn't remember a thing, and this time I had my fangs at my disposal. I followed the blood with the tea, thanked the maid, and when she left, I made another trip to the bathroom. ===== Trieze was busy all the next day, so I was left to my own devices. I wandered the house a little, but finding so many locked doors, I decided to stay in the garden or the library. Too much exploring would lead to trouble, and trouble was exactly what I didn't want. I was still mummified in bandages but shrouded in a silk lounging robe. I had left my pouch and the crystal in my bedroom to keep Trieze from asking me about them. I ate the lunch brought to me, then puked it into the shrubs when the porter left. One more day, I thought. One more day of pleasant roses and vomiting up solid food bits. That night I would leave. I was feeling rested enough, and I was starting to get a bit antsy to be on my way. The pain had completely faded by sunrise that morning, but I wanted to wait until sunset, just in case, to make sure that I would have my full powers before I slid. I sat to dinner with Trieze that night. We both chatted, he verbally circling me, warily like a hunting cat, trying to decide what was lie and what truth. When the meal was finished, I moved to excuse myself and he said, softly, “I do hope you're not planning on visiting the lavatory again.” I paused, halfway out of my chair, and blinked owlishly at him. “Ex...cuse me?” He smiled softly and gestured for me to return to my seat. I did. “My staff tells me that you've been having stomach problems. You seem in fine health, but you are sick after every meal.” I blinked, taken aback. He knew? I mean, he knew that I had ... eeeeew. “I'm fine now,” I said. “Really.” He pushed aside his empty plate and put his chin in his palms. “Perhaps this is an attempt to avoid...ah... how to put it delicately... putting on weight?” I blinked again, stupefied as easily as if Severus had pointed his wand at my nose. Then I threw back my head and laughed. Trieze looked disgruntled at my sudden amusement, frowning. That doubled my laughter and I clutched at my full stomach. The food was sitting like a hot rock in the bottom of it, and the laughter was making my gut roil and churn, but I forced the feeling away and tried to concentrate on calming my giggles. “I do not see what is so amusing,” he said. “You think I'm bulimic?” I asked, and the mere mention of the word made me chortle. “Well,” he said, “seeing as you are being so blunt - yes.” I waved my hand in a dismissive gesture. “Thanks for the concern, General, but I'm not.” He slammed his palms down on the table, the only indicator of his anger. He rose calmly to his feet, looking otherwise unruffled. “Are you saying my concern is misplaced?” The thought that he was concerned about me sent me into another fit of giggles and he patiently waited me out. Imagine, Trieze Khushrenada concerned. “Then explain!” he said. “There is no record of either a Marie nor a Klaus in any of the military's records. You eat everything yet digest nothing. You seemed perfectly dead, and now you move about as if nothing has happened to you. That crystal of yours seems to glow more the closer I come to it. And my serving staff has suddenly had a rash of clumsy accidents wherein they cut themselves.” I grinned toothily at him. “There's nothing to explain, General.” He came forward suddenly, walking briskly around the table to tower over me. His face was smooth, his tone cool, but there was sparkling fire in his eyes. “I will not be defied or lied to. Who are you and why are you here?” “I am Marie and I had an accident.” A little line appeared between his eyebrows but otherwise he seemed perfectly cool. He was about to say more when he turned his head to look at the door that separated this dining room from the study. He was listening to something. I sniffed once and found what had captured his attention - there was someone in the next room. By the look on Trieze's face, it was someone who was not supposed to be here. “Please wait here,” he said, though I could tell by the tone of his voice that it was an order and not a request. He did not wait for a reply, which was just as well as I did not intend to give him one. He stalked over to the wall and removed an elegant ornamental sabre from the display of swords on the wall, and went carefully into the next room. “My, my,” I heard him say before the door swung shut behind him. “What a pleasant surprise. Mr. Chang -” The rest was lost by the door closing. He was probably about to say something else, but a loud shout, followed by the clatter of something falling over and the unmistakable clang of metal on metal told me the battle had been joined. I seized the opportunity and dashed out of the dining room. There had been guards on the far side of the door, as I had anticipated. With the force with which I slammed the door back, I knocked the man behind it unconscious. The second man barely had time to register my presence before a sharp kick to the chest sent him sprawling backwards down the hall. I raced up to the guest bedroom where I had left my pouch and the crystal. Laid on the foot of the bed was a fresh set of clothing and I stripped off the silk lounging robe and bandages in a flurry. I quickly donned the tasteful black skirt and the blue turtle neck provided. My brown boots were sitting on the floor with pantyhose. I forwent the nylons and jammed my bare feet into the soft leather. I mourned my Hogwarts robe, burnt to a cinder. What's happening? Jareth asked. Grabbing the pouch and tying it as I walked towards the bathroom, I thought back, Dunno, don't care. We're leaving. But his desire right now is so sharp! Jareth protested. I could leave you behind, I threatened. The silence that followed was sullen. I expelled the food, then washed my hands and rinsed my mouth thoroughly. I grabbed the crystal in one hand and was fishing in my pouch for a phial with the other when my door slammed back. I turned and clutched my wand instead, pulling it out in a rapid crass-draw, aiming at the intruder's head. Or rather, in the empty space where the intruder's head would be were he standing. Which he was not. Trieze Kushrenada was slumped against the doorframe, a wound on his side gushing red. “Jesus!” I cussed as he stumbled into the room and fell to his knees on the floor. “The boy did not see the cut,” he said grimly. “He is far more skilled than either of us have given him credit for. Determined to kill me as he is, he will never know that he mortally wounded me.” I went to his side and helped him stumble to the bed. “Stay here,” I said, setting aside the crystal. It rolled along the mattress, pulled by the indent Trieze's body made, and came to a rest touching the General's hip. “I'll get help.” I turned away and heard him say, “It is too late for that, I--” The rest was interrupted by the loud blare of a klaxon. The almost obnoxious alarm started to go off and I jumped, slamming my hands over my ears. “What the hell is that?!” I asked into the air and nobody answered. Or if they did, I didn't hear them. I felt the earth under my feet shudder and I ran to the window. Was it an earthquake? No, there was a giant robot on the front lawn! It was large, white, and had protrusions out the back of its thrusterpack that resembled nothing more than Angel's wings. This was Wing Zero, the most technologically advanced, yet dangerous giant robot in the series. It was piloted by a computer system so advanced it could literally tap into the user's brain and read the electric impulses of the pilot and anticipate it's next motion. The downside of this was that it drove nearly everyone that piloted it insane. I backed away from the window and turned to talk to Trieze. “Hey, is there a back way out of...” I stopped. Trieze was sprawled backwards on the bed, his knees hooked over the edge and his feet still touching the floor. He was deathly pale. A scarlet pool was collecting around him, seeping into the bed sheets. Beside him, touching his hip still, the crystal orb was glowing a violent red. “Stop it!” I shrieked at the crystal and sprang forward to snatch it away. “You're killing him!” I want him! Jareth screamed back. Heat flared out of the stone and burned me instantly. I dropped it with a shriek. The red died, but there was still a burning nebulous of desire in the core. “You son of a bitch!” I screamed at Jareth through the orb. “I ought to leave you here to starve!” If it meant staying near Trieze, I could do it. “Oh, god, Trieze.” I went to the General's side, ignoring my healing hand, and felt for a pulse. It was weak, but it was there. “You can't die!” I told him. “Not now, not here, not like this. You have to live long enough to be a martyr!” His eyes silted and he looked down his nose at me, but they were pale and without shine. “How...” his voice cracked and he cleared his throat and tried again. He sounded parched. “How do you know about that?” “It doesn't matter,” I said, “We have to get you to a hospital, You can't die here!” The mostly-genuine smile returned. “And what does it matter where I die?” I grabbed both of his hands between mine. He was freezing. “If you don't die in space, fighting with Wufei, where every camera satellite in the universe can see, this war will never end!” “So it works?” he croaked. “Of course. Now, tell me, how can I get you out of here without the Gundams seeing you?” Trieze shook his head and his eyebrows drew down. He must have been in agony, but his face remained as hard to read as ever. “I will not survive if you move me.” “Then what do I do?!” He stared at me meaningfully, and I took a jerking step backwards. “No,” I said. “Do to me what you did to yourself. You healed from wounds that should have been fatal, and at a miraculous speed. Whatever it is you did, do it for me.” “No, I can't,” I said. “Yes, you can. You told me the dead don't come back, but you live!” “No,” I screamed, “I don't!” There was another silence, broken only by the klaxons and the shudders of the suits battling outside. I could hear the distinctive sound of laser fire and wondered briefly in the back of my mind if the room we were in would be hit. “What do you mean, you don't live?” “I am dead, General,” I said. “I have been dead for near on seven months, and yet I am as you see me. I am not bulimic, I simply do not eat. I probably did die, but my soul is tethered to this corpsebody that continually re-makes itself. You do not want to be what I am.” “But you could make me as you are?” I wrapped my arms around myself. “I have never tried, but I do know how.” “Please.” I stared at him, open-mouthed and horrified. Had Trieze Khushrenada, the man who took what he wanted and never felt regret, just said please? “I-If,” I said shakily. The whole house shuddered and I pitched forward. The red stain on the bedspread was continually growing. I was running out of time - either Trieze would be dead or we would be flattened by fighting robots. “And that's a big bloody if... If I turn you, you have to promise me two things.” “What?” he asked. “Promise and I'll tell you.” One side of this blue lips quirked upwards. “Tell me and we'll see if I promise.” “Fine.” I moved to stand over him, looking down into his white face. He no longer had the strength to lift his head to stare at me. “One you must swear never to make another of us. Period.” “I think I can honour that.” “Good. Two - you will still martyr yourself as you planned to.” “Why?” “If you don't, this war will never end. You do want it to end, don't you?” “Will I die from it?” “No, but it'll hurt like an S.O.B.” He closed his eyes and made a small motion that I think was supposed to be a nod. He probably no longer had the strength to speak. “Okay, then,” I whispered. “Keep your eyes closed. This will prick a little...” I lowered my mouth to the wound in his side, pushing away the frock coat and the silk shirt in my way. Yes, take him! The crystal trilled from the floor. I ignored it. ===== When I came back to myself, I was lying on my back on the carpet. Trieze was standing with his back to the window. His eyes were a glowing, feral yellow, and he was staring at his hands as if he couldn't quite believe they were his own. I lifted a hand to my neck and winced at the pain it brought. Jeeze, had he ripped my throat open when I had told him to drink? It hurt like a bitch! He had sucked for all his worth and then, with no more blood in my brain, I had slipped into the darkness. But I was feeling better already. The speedy healing was doing its work. My veins screamed in hunger, but I had enough power left to pull myself to my feet. “What is this?” he gasped. “Undeath,” I replied. “While the sun rides the sky we have no power. When the moon rules we can bend the weather to our will, take the form of a bat or a wolf, and are in possession of senses far superior to that of any human. In payment, we must drink the blood of the living to sustain ourselves.” The yellow eyes that met mine were mildly horrified. “I'm a Vampire?” he whispered. “Now and forever.” He frowned. “I did not expect this to be something so...” “Vile?” I supplied. “Base,” he corrected. “Common.” I frowned, offended. “Well, what did you think I was? An Angel, fallen from heaven?” His own scowl deepened. The yellow faded from his eyes and his fangs retracted. “Are you happy?” I asked. “I am not sure,” he admitted. I stumbled over to the bedside and clutched at the table to help stay upright. The dizziness was fading with every passing minute, but I pressed my fingers against my eyelids in an effort to will it away faster. “Well, a wooden stake will solve your problems, if you decide you're not.” “What about the sun?” “You saw me in the sun, didn't you?” “Of course. Yes.” The house rattled, the paintings on the walls shuddering violently. “Time to go,” I sighed. “Go on a head of me. I will stay,” Trieze said. “This battle needs to be stopped.” I turned my own eyes to him. “You misunderstand. I'm leaving,” I said, and the finality of the statement was not lost on the General. “Will you return?” I shrugged. “Maybe. I don't know. Give me something of yours.” He frowned again but complied. From around his neck he pulled a gold locket. I had never seen it before. He had always hidden it beneath his shirt. He snapped it open to show me the picture. On one side was a lovely young woman with pale brown hair. On the other, a baby with bright blue eyes that matched Trieze's and a few thin curls of what I knew would darken into a mandarin red. “Marimaia and her mother,” I whispered. “Your daughter?” Trieze stiffened when I spoke the name of his illegitimate child but otherwise showed no sign of surprise. He snapped it shut and held it out for me to take. “I can't,” I said. “I won't take that.” “It's the dearest thing to me,” he said. I reached up and pulled the rose out of the buttonhole on his lapel. “This will do,” I said, smiling. I wrapped it in one of the strips of discarded bandages from earlier, and placed it in my pouch. I reached out carefully for the crystal. It was still throbbing red, but it didn't burn me. Jareth must have been sleeping off his feast. “You are truly leaving then?” he said, and for the first time I thought I heard a little fear in his voice. “Look,” I said. I fished out one of the Harry Potter phials and pressed it into his hand. “If you have any questions, any concerns, use this. Ask for a man named Dumbledore or one called Remus or Sirius. They can help you, or point you to me. Be sure you bring something uniquely of this world with you - a coin, a rose, something.” He nodded. “To use it, smash it against a hard surface and be sure you are near enough to be splashed by the liquid.” I lifted a second phial, my last blank, above my head. “Like this.” I slammed it downwards. Running. Like the coward I was, because I couldn’t believe I had just done that to him. Monster. You know, with the sun setting behind him like that, and Wing silhouetted against the dying light far in the distance, I could almost believe that Trieze was some sort of fallen… Flash. Crack. Drop. Crouch. …“Angel?” I heard a woman say, and ducked into the shadows of a concrete planter on the sidewalk. “Angel, is there a Taco stand around here somewhere?” I clutched the crystal in my hands tightly. Don't scratch me, it said. Oh, hush, I thought back. For a sentient rock you sure to gripe a lot. I am not a sentient rock! He hissed. You know damn well that you're just speaking through the crystal to me. I know. I grinned as I slowly straightened. I just like pissing you off. There was a low growling sound and then the King of the Goblins was silent. I looked around the busy Los Angeles street. No one seemed to have noticed my appearance. Then I noticed the sign advertising the building three inches from my nose. “Huh,” I thought. “That works.” What does? I've figured out what I'm going to do with you, I said to the crystal and there was a sort of mental shrug in return. I'm going to leave your betraying, selfish ass right here. Right here?! He bellowed. Like some kind of common lawn gnome--!? Well, not here here, obviously. I held the crystal aloft a little so he could see the smart sign with silver lettering that I was standing in front of. Wolfram & Hart? He read and I could hear the scepticism in his voice. Oh, yeah, I remarked. If there was ever a place that reeked of feverish desire, it’s this place. I won't put up with you trying to kill people around me for their desire. You won’t force my hand again to fill your greedy belly. You can glut yourself here and never get full. ===== Angel was right - for a law firm dedicated to the ways of evil (or the ways of Good through Evil if Angel and his crew were currently in charge), it was ridiculously easy to break into. Well, I didn't so much break into the place as I just… sort of walked in and took the elevator up to the executive floor. Book Eight: Angel: The Series Chapter Twenty Two: “Talking to Myself” Walking in the main foyer of Wolfram & Hart was a little like walking into a cathedral. The ceilings were high and cavernous, the glass and chrome polished smartly, the wood honey coloured and warm, and everywhere the air held the hushed sense of Importance. Men, women, and creatures of all descriptions rushed about with a kind of frenetic self-importance, cell phones to their ears, PDAs grafted to their palms (some literally), swathed in the eternal bureaucratic uniform of subdued blazers, pencil skirts, and neck ties. These externally blind, self-important business-people dodged around me as if I were no more consequence than a flag standing upright and silent on a slalom slope. Wow, Jareth thought to me. I still held his crystal tightly in my hand, and the depths were glowing with a faint redness that would have been undetected had I not been searching for it. There's so much raw desire... I'm getting dizzy, Jareth whispered, his voice filled with a hushed sort of awe, as if this was not a regular occurrence. Knowing his particular diet, it probably wasn't. At least he wasn't feeding on me. I feel like I'm drunk. The red core was starting to pulse brighter. “Cut that out!” I said out loud, hissing under my breath. “Can Goblin Kings even get drunk?” “They can if there are enough people in the room. That’s why they tend to take people one at a time into their mazes.” The voice that answered my rhetorical question was marked by a distinctly clipped British accent, upper-class of that I had no doubt, and came from over my left shoulder. I turned to face the speaker, tucking the crystal out of view behind my back, trying to jam it inconspicuously up my sleeve to mute the glowing. You look guilty, Jareth hissed at me. Shut up. Out loud, I said, “Oh, I ...um... didn't know that. Fascinating. Yeah.” “Wesley Wyndam-Price,” the man said suddenly and stuck out his palm at me. “Eh?” “I... uh...” he seemed puzzled by my confusion, his suave attempt at introduction made suddenly awkward. “It's... uh, my name.” “Oh,” I said, then the lights went on. “Oh!” I took his offered hand and shook it, keeping the other one, the one holding the crystal, out of view. “Sorry, I'm an idiot. I'm Marie Susan.” “Welcome to Wolfram & Hart, Miss Susan,” he said. He puffed up his chest slightly and I understood immediately that this character probably had some important job to do here. I had been a long time since I had seen 'Angel' and I didn't remember everything that had happened very well. When I simply continued to just stare at him, Mr. Wyndam-Price deflated a little and hesitantly said, “Is ... is there, uh, anything Wolfram & Hart can do for you, Miss Susan? Perhaps a nasty maze incident with the afore mentioned Goblin King?” He frowned slightly, a cute scholar's crease appearing between his eyebrows. “Technically, if you agreed to enter the Labyrinth, we can't really press charges, but you could sue under the context of misinformed intent... Maybe you should be talking to Charles--” “Mr. Wyndam-Price,” I tried to cut in, but he wasn't really listening. “—as he has a better understand of the legalities of such verbal contracts. Of course, Goblin Kings are just like any other kind of pest--” I am not a PEST! “—and all you have to do to get rid of one is recite poems at them.” He cleared his throat dramatically, all proud of his mental capacities, and launched into the recitation: “Through dangers untold and hardships unnumbered--” “—I have fought my way here to the Castle beyond the Goblin City, yeah, I know.” He ground to a halt, his eyes widening fractionally. “Oh. You do. Wait, I mean, you do?” He ran a hand through his hair. It was a dark, rich brown. Though he had to be older, as evidenced by the smile lines around his eyes and mouth, he looked about thirty. “Yeah. But it's taken care of.” “Oh.” He looked slightly embarrassed, and jammed his hands into his pants pockets, as if ashamed of their now-pointless academic fluttering. He was tall and thin without being skinny, wearing a finely tailored suit jacket paired with a dress shirt of blue that brought out his light eyes, and a pair of crisp denim trousers. A distinctive scar ran vertically across his neck. Someone had slit his throat, once. I rubbed my own scar in a semi-conscious empathetic gesture. His scar reminded me of what it felt like to slowly suffocate, your life oozing out of your skin, even as your lungs pumped desperately for the oxygen that you didn't have enough blood left to carry to your brain. It was a terrifying memory and I shoved it away, down into the black box in my guts where I had begun to keep all the things I didn't want wandering through my regular thoughts. The place where all my nightmares escaped from. Wesley's hazel eyes immediately settled on the scar and a calculation followed by a lightning realization lit up his face. “Vampire problem, then?” I curled up the corner of my lip in what I knew must have been a pathetic attempt at a smile. “Oh, no, that's taken care of, too.” Wesley frowned slightly and removed his hands from his pants pockets, only to flex the fingers once, then jam them into his blazer pockets. “Then, forgive my confusion, Miss Susan, but ...what exactly can Wolfram & Hart do for you?” At this, I did smile. “Are you accepting applications?” ===== An hour later I set Jareth's crystal down on the - my - new desk. I had been secreted in a small cube of a room in some back hall off to the side of the main foyer. I had been given the rather tedious task of typing up the Holiday Season's letters. It was a temporary position. I was given to understood that it was usually the boss' personal secretary who did this job, and did it rather efficiently. However, the new boss had a like-wise new personal secretary, a bouncy blonde who lived up to and even surpassed most of the jokes her hair colour was famous for. The new boss feared she would inadvertently offend someone just by getting within ten feet of the letters, and thus somehow cause the end of the world. He had just been pondering how to convince said secretary - a Vampire named Harmony, honestly, just as bad as Buzz - to hand the job over to someone else when Wesley had stuck his head in the boss' office door and asked whether there were any positions currently open. In any truthful reality, I would be told leave a resume and get lost. But, seeing as I was a Mary Sue, this male character had immediately gone out of his way to personally forward my request to the head honcho himself. I was starting to learn what my status in these realities could bring. It would be interesting to exploit it as much as I could, se how far people would be willing to go against human convention or against their own character just because I was there. “How the hell should I know, Wes?” the boss-man (a four-hundred year old Vampire with a soul and a hero-complex named Angel - talk about your contradictions) said, then peered over Wesley's shoulder at me. “On second thought, she looks like just the kind of girl we...um, you are a girl, aren't you? I mean, obviously, female, but... ah... no extra appendages, I mean, no, not like that...” Jeeze, could Vampires blush as brightly as that? “No overt slime orifices or anything, right?” I shook my head. “Nope. What you see is what you get.” He waved us in and just as I was about to sit, Harmony herself flounced in. “Hey, boss-man,” she started, staring at her clipboard, “about those letters--” “—here she is, Harm, remember, the, uh,” Angel had started strong, gesturing grandly to me, but faltered for a moment, “....university, um, accredited... uh.... card-writer major girl that I was... uh, telling you about. Remember? I was telling you about it.” Harmony paused and stared at me, her lower lip jutting out prettily. “Oh?” Clearly, Angel had not told her about anything, as he had just made it up on the spot. Harmony would not, however, loose face, and instead said, “Right, yeah! Okay, yeah, you were just telling me about it. Okay, so does that mean I don't have to do the cards?” “No.” “Great, cause I wanted to go to this new bistro, you know, the one that I keep telling you that you should bring the Tallaxians to, and-” “—that's great Harm,” Angel cut in, “You'll check it out for us? Do a little street-work?” She looked at Angel with a sort of blatant, vapid calculation. “Can I use the company credit card?” He fished into his wallet and tossed it at her. She plucked it out of the air with pink-lacquered nails. “Sure bossman, no sacrifice too great!” She flounced out again, relieved to be duty-free, and Angel collapsed into his chair and put his hand to the bridge of his nose, relieved to be Harmony-free. He pinched briefly, then looked up at me over the desk. “You're hired,” he said, wearily, and Wesley stood to gather up the piles of clipboards laying helter-skelter all over the large black desk. “You don't even know who I am,” I said back. “What if I'm here to corrupt your company?” “It's already corrupt.” “Oh. What if I'm here to uncorrupt it?” “We're trying to do that, any help would be appreciated.” “Oh.” I tried again. “What if I'm here to kill you?” Angel smiled wearily, “Do you know how to write a business letter?” “Well, yes, but I don't see--” “Can you dot 'i's and cross 't's?” “Of course, but--” “Then I'll deal with the assassination attempts as they come. For now, just write me some letters, please. Wes, get her an office?” Wesley was trying so hard not to snigger that Angel had to repeat the request, slightly louder and angrier. Wesley ushered me out the door and down the hall. I sent once last look at Angel over my shoulder and said, “Thanks.” “No problem,” he said, sweeping empty Taco Bell wrappers into the rubbish bin by the side of his desk, “Just no human blood, okay?” I blinked. “Right. Um. Oookay.” Wesley was waiting patiently for me in the hall. He stared at my scar once more, then flicked a glance through the window-wall at Angel and then back to me. “So that's what you meant by the Vampire's taken care of?” I frowned at the slightly reproachful tone in his voice. Anger, hot and searing, fuelled by the things in the black box, roared up in me. They came out my mouth before I even meant to take the breath required for speaking. “I didn't do this to me, and I didn't ask for it either, buddy-boy. In fact, I distinctly remember screaming 'no' with my very last breath, so get off your high-horse!” Wesley blanched and took a step back. “Don't take it so personal, lovey,” a congenial voice said behind me, and I turned to come face-to-chest with a garish yet paradoxically natty banana-yellow suit, and a green demon fellow with red horns inside it. “I'm Lorne, honey-bear, and Wes here just forgets that sometimes we can't help being born green, if you catch my uh-huh.” I smiled despite myself at the little wink and nudge and the loungesinger personality that flowed like waves of relaxation off this Lorne guy. He definitely had not been in the first season of 'Angel', or I would have remembered him. “Right,” I said, shoving everything back down, mentally re-settling my feathers. I turned back to Wesley. “Sorry.” “My apologies, Miss Susan,” he said softly. “I didn't mean to insinuate anything.” I raised my eyebrows to match my smile. “Righte-o then. Office?” “This way,” he said and jerked his chin in the direction I was to go. “Catch ya later, babe!” Lorne said and glided off, a harried looking assistant trailing fitfully in his wake. “Do drinks with us sometime?” “Er...” he was gone before I could answer fully, so I turned to follow Wesley, who was shaking his head confusedly. “He's usually not that genial around new-comers.” I snorted. “MS powers strike again.” “Pardon?” “Nothing. Lay on, MacDuff.” Wesley had led me to the small supply-closet-cum-workspace, glanced around apologetically, then left me with a pile of clipboards filled with information like: Name: Chandark Preferred Title: The Mighty Pointed-ly-ness Yrs With W&H: 387 Holiday: Krshlatuk Ritual: Annual shaving of genitals and back Ew. Well, it was now my 'job' to write and print and mail each of these clients a 'personalized' holiday card. Wesley would check the first few letter I did. Once the first ones were approved, I would be at liberty to finish the rest. I was to send them to Angel's office in groups of ten or so he could read them over and sign them. They would then be returned to me so I could fold them into their envelopes, address them, and send them away. Or at least, that’s what the instructions left on the top clipboard said. All-in-all, easy. And temporary. Which is what I wanted. Why did you get a job? Jareth asked me, the distaste obvious in his tone. I set him in the clean ashtray. Clearly, it was on my desk for my convenience, but I didn't smoke and it kept him from rolling away. The indignity of it also had to annoy him, which wouldn't hurt. I pulled the leather bag I'd been using as a money bag out of my hippouch and opened it, showing Jareth the meagre few coins and paper bills I had left. “Zoom in on my empty wallet. I need cash.” You could steal it. “Which I bet you'd just love.” I next opened the pouch proper. “Also witness the lack of blank phials. Fresh out. And I gave one of my Harry Potter ones to Trieze, so I'm short one of the more important ones. It takes a month to brew more, so I gotta do something in the interim.” But... stuffing envelopes? It's... undignified. “Pre-cicely. Do you really think anyone will come in this room if they don't absolutely have to? I can't think of anywhere better to brew than right here.” Where there are demons and Vampires and werewolves around every corner? “Ah, but now I'm a fellow employee.” “And one who talks to herself.” I threw a paper over Jareth, ignoring his mental shout of protest, and turned to look at the intruder. He was standing in my doorway, obviously just having opened it. “Most civilized people knock,” I said pointedly. He grinned at me, a cigarette dangling from one corner of his smirking mouth. “Most civilized people don't hold conversations with rocks, ducks.” He did have a point. He wore a black leather jacket that brushed his ankles, and his hair was slopped back with enough gel to do me for a month, and was dyed an almost phosphorescent blonde. He spoke with an almost-cockney accent, as if it had been a long time since he had last trod on the soil of his native England. Now, here was a character I recognized better. I had only ever watched a handful of episodes of “Buffy: The Vampire Slayer” and its sister series “Angel”. But Spike, the fellow making a show of holding up my door frame, had been visible enough in both. The way his arms were crossed arrogantly over his thin chest, his hips thrust arrogantly to the side, his ankles hooked together... he reminded me sharply and suddenly of Jean-Claude's pet werewolf Jason. ...You're the best suck I've ever had... A hot blush crept up my face at the memory of the delicious and grope-y werewolf. Spike smiled, assuming that my intense and immediate physical reaction was in response to his presence. I didn't bother to correct him. Instead I turned away and went to sit in my chair. Not the most comfortable of chairs, but it would be okay for sleeping in. I didn't have the money to pay for a hotel room for a month, but I could sleep in the chair in my bat-shape contentedly enough, and use the employee locker-room to shower. I would just have to hope that no one noticed my lack of changing outfits. Oh, maybe I could figure out how to charm my clothing to change colours... Spike's hand pressing down on the desk in front of me snapped me out of my distracted thoughts. I looked up to find him leaning into my personal space, a sharp grin on. “Like what you see, ducks?” I snorted. “Yeah. You. Leaving.” Spike took a slow and deliberate drag of his cigarette, exhaled through his nose (as if that was suppose to impress me - ew), and obligingly turned his back to me. He took his swaggering time walking to the door. He turned his face over his shoulder and said, “An ass-girl, I see. Feel free to look all you'd like. Whatsay I pick you up around closing time and I take you out for a bite?” “I say 'groan'. Out.” “As you command, sweet-fangs.” He slipped out the door, leaving it open. I started to realize the meaning behind the new annoying nickname. It meant that he knew I was a Vampire. Well, duh. He and Angel both - they probably both could hear that my heart wasn't beating, and until my eyes changed colour and my fangs extended without my forehead becoming all bumpy, the would never know that I was a different kind of Vampire from them. Something I never intended on letting happen. When Spike was gone, I pulled my wand from my pouch and pointed it at the door. “Sayonohamora,” I said, and the door swung shut and locked. I set my wand down on the desk, uncovered Jareth, and began to leaf through the pages on the clipboards, deciding where to start while the computer booted up. Neat trick, Jareth said. “What, the door thing? It's just a charm.” No, the part where you make all the men fall ass over ears for you. “Oh, Gods, don't start,” I begged, but he started anyway. First, I find myself unnaturally intrigued by you. So much so that I act completely out of character and force you into the Labyrinth. Trieze fell under your spell easily enough - I have a feeling that were it anyone but you, your fine bed would have been a rough cot, and period of convalescence would have been spent in a dungeon. Dear mister Wesley's aura of desire jumped when you began to speak that cursed rhyme and he realized there was a brain behind your baby-blues. He clearly has an intelligence fetish. The demon invited you out for drinks immediately. This 'Spike' had the strongest reaction, practically panting, but then I assume by his demeanour that he is used to gaining his sexual conquests. I set down the paperwork with a 'whump'. “What the hell is wrong with you?” I said, “Sexual conquests? What the hell do you think I am?” They all desire you, to an almost unnatural level, and though I revel in the buffet of reactions, I wish to puzzle out why. What power is it that you possess? “No power.” I sighed and rubbed my forehead, mimicking Angel's frustrated motion from earlier by pinching the bridge of my nose. “It's because of what I am.” A Vampire? “I don't want to talk about it, Jareth.” Well, I do. Is it because you're a Vampire? “No!” Then what are you? I sighed again. “A Mary Sue.” A what? “Never mind, you wouldn't understand.” Try me. “Remember how I told you that your world was a book in mine?” Yes. He bristled. It was probably a blow to his ego to be told people think he's just a fictional character. Truth be told, I couldn't be sure I wasn't a fictional character anymore either. Jareth and Jean-Claude, Erik, Sirius, Anita, everyone I knew, they were all made up. I had been assuming that I was the real person amid the menagerie of fictional ones, but what if it just wasn't true? What if I was made up, too? I shoved that thought down into the box, to keep company with all the other dark, disturbing things that plagued me. Fictional Character or not, I was me, and I would let nothing stop me from getting home. If that was my plot, that was my character’s major motivation, then I would go with it. There wasn’t anything else to do. I licked my lips and dove into what I thought was a reasonably easy to understand explanation: “These past two worlds have been similar - fictional realities from the point of view of my world, but entirely real from the point of view of theirs. A Mary Sue has the ability to cross these barriers, at least nominally. That's me - crossing into fictional realities from what I assume is the real one. And I'm not even sure of that, anymore. Well, suffice to say that, among other traits, a Mary Sue is marked by a leading character's inexplicable sexual and romantic attraction to her, whether she welcomes the reaction or not.” So, you're telling me that these men fall in love, or lust, with you simply because you exist? I shrugged. “More or less.” I folded my arms on the desk top and rested my chin on them, staring at the crystal. The red glow was fainter, almost invisible. “Tell me, Jareth, how bad did you want me?” He was silent for a moment, and I assumed his was contemplating the question. Finally, he answered, Badly. “More than you wanted Sarah?” Oh, yes. What were you to her? A woman in full bloom compared to her childishness and waify youth. “Gee thanks. Why?” I beg pardon? “Why did you want me?” There was another silence. Then, I... don't know. You... were just there, and the moment I saw you, I knew I had to have you. Had to consume your desires, all of them, satisfy the ones I could, feed on those I could not, and take you into me entirely. “Little squicked, but I'll take that as a compliment. And now?” What do you mean? “Do you want me now?” ...no. “No?” Yes, dammit! Just... not as much. “Because I'm not near you?” Perhaps. I leaned back in my chair, amused by his puzzlement. So, he ventured after another long, thoughtful pause, You're telling me that the sudden, violent longing I felt for you was the direct result of your proximity? “Bingo.” Hm. “That's why you offered me the crystal.” Oh, it is, is it? “Yup. Aren't you secretly harbouring hopes that one day I'll slide back into your realm and return it to you in person, or something like that?” ...no. “Huh. Maybe you're using it as a way to keep track of me - keep n eye on what you think is your rightful property?” ... of course not! “Yeah, sure. You don't mind me hanging out with these other men who find me suddenly irresistible, do you, as long as I come back to the crystal and you, that it?” ... “Would you be jealous if I went out with Spike tonight?” Of course not - it would only feed me if you gave into his desire. “Pervert,” I replied. “You'd like me to make it with every guy who blinks at me.” Yes. “Pervert,” I confirmed and proceeded to ignore him. I started the paperwork. ===== Just before the work day ended, I covered the crystal again to mute Jareth's well-fed red glow, snuck out of my office, locking it behind me, and picked my way slowly and carefully towards the science lab. If I was going to brew my potion, I'd need a cauldron and a Bunsen burner. I was starting to get the hang of this Mary Sue thing, and I was shakily confident that I could weasel them out of Fred, the girl in charge of the lab. According to my theories, I had the ability to get whatever I wanted. My talk with Jareth had got me thinking, and I sort of wanted to test it to see if it was true. It was also a good way to avoid Spike, who would be heading to my office soon to make good on his promise-cum-threat. As I approached the lab, I heard Wesley unmistakable voice conversing with a southern-accented girl. Fred, I assumed. And, another hesitant and soft sounding male. “...well, we'll all keep an eye out, at any rate,” Wesley was saying, obviously wrapping up some conversation. “I just wish the alert system was a bit more... well, specific. 'New, other-worldly magic in the vicinity' just doesn't help.” “Knox and I'll keep our heads up, too, Wes. Show me the spell in the mornin' and maybe I can take a look at it?” “Yes, of course.” “I'll prep a table for it,” the second man said. “Sure. Thanks, Knox. Wes, let me walk you to your car?” “Yes, okay.” I ducked back around the corner so the departing couple wouldn't run into me. When they were down the corridor and out of sight, I let myself into the lab. I expected to find it empty. Instead, I found Knox, an amiable-looking dark-haired twenty something in a lab coat. He was holding a scarf that was extremely girly and very obviously belonged to Fred, a longing expression in his eyes and his nose buried in the soft wool. Knox I remembered hearing about, too. I didn't like a word of it. Never trust a man whose name is Latin for 'dark', and is a charm for extinguishing a lumos light. Knox jumped guiltily when he heard the door open and hastily dropped the scarf back down on the chair he had taken it from. He cleared his throat and said, “Hi. You're the new Vampire? I'm Knox.” “Let's get one thing straight, fort-boy,” I said, pointing an accusing finger at his face. He jumped again, surprised by my sudden and unprovoked hostility. “I don’t like you. I think you're a total asshole for what you're going to do to that sweet girl.” “How do you--?” “Doesn't matter. I know I can't stop you either, I don't have that kind of power. But I tell you right now, you hurt her before that in anyway, you pull more of this romantic bullshit, I will do everything that is in my power to make the rest of your admittedly short life very, very painful.” The amiable mask slid away and a crueller, zealot Knox stood sneering at me. “And just how do you plan to do that if you can't stop me from releasing the Elder God?” “Glad you asked!” I withdrew my wand from my boot and pointed it at his chest. “Crucio.” Knox hit the ground like a pile of rocks and writhed around, wailing, his skin flushing an angry red over pulsing veins. I felt a cool breath in my ear, smelling of cigarettes and whiskey, and wondered how he'd snuck up behind me without my hearing it. I must have been too involved in my anger. A mistake I couldn't let happen again. “Looks like you started the party early, ducks,” Spike whispered. “Nice trick.” “Finite Incantatum.” Knox collapsed backwards, sprawled on the cold tile floor, panting, tears squeezing out of the corners of his eyelashes. Spike rested his chin on my shoulder and pressed his chest against my back. “Teach it to me?” “No.” “Aw, why not?” “I can't.” I stared down at Knox, who had curled himself into a painful foetal position, and was now rocking back and forth, holding his head and keening softly. Served the bastard right. “For one thing,” I told Spike, “You don't have a wand.” I felt rather than saw him clutch at his crotch. “I gotta wand right here.” “Eug, weak. Get off me, Spike.” I pushed away from him, stepping over Knox's prone form and walking around a desk to get to the far door. Spike jumped over the suffering human with nary a glance for his pain and caught up with me. “See you found out me name. You look like someone who needs to get drunk,” he said. I snorted and returned the wand to my boot, careful not to present my ass for pinching fingers. “Wish I could. Doesn't work that way for me anymore. And I'm sure I won't find someone willing to get drunk just so I can suck on them and steal their buzz.” Spike raised his eyebrows and spread his hands, palms up. “Who says you need to find someone, sweet-fangs? Offerin' here.” “Christ, Spike,” I rolled my eyes and put my hands on my hips. Being a Mary Sue had both it's up and it's down sides. “You don't even know my name.” “Don't matter.” “What if it's Gertrude?” “... might matter. Are you Gertrude?” “Marie.” “See? Not so bad. Let's go.” I wanted to say 'no'. I wanted very badly to say 'no'. On the floor, Knox rolled onto his back, panting. He groaned and the sound was filled with lingering agony. I was struck with a sudden, nauseatingly guilty thought: You just used an Unforgivable on an unarmed, unprepared mortal. Without a second thought. You hurt him just because it suited you to. Because it was fun. The desire to get drunk won over and I let Spike lead me out of Wolfram & Hart by the elbow, blinking back burning tears. I was not a monster. Book Eight: Angel: The Series Chapter Twenty-Three: “Broody” I was starting to think that maybe this had been a Bad Idea. The kind that deserved Capitalization. Spike was sitting across from me in the shadowy booth of any even shadier bar, throwing back whiskey shots like the Prohibition was starting back up tomorrow. The clientele was a mix of the human and the not, and I was shocked to find that us Vampires were in the demony minority. I kept my eyes on the table, if only to keep from staring in wideeyed wonder at the vast array of things that went bump in the night. In this case, judging by the dance floor, some went bump-n-grind, too. “Come gimmie a cuddle, sweet-fangs,” Spike said after a protracted pull on the whiskey bottle, and I looked up across the sticky table to find him staring at me with a seductive 'come hither' look on his face. Or, it would have looked 'come hither' if he had been able to stay upright. He was slouched back against the backrest, one arm flung up over the edge. He had one leg rucked up so his shin touched the edge of the tabletop, the steel toe of his boot tapping the bottom of the table intermittedly, as if he was trying to keep beat with the music, but too lazy to tap on every count. “Thanks,” I replied. “I'm good here.” “Aw, now are you gonna be a party-pooper? I didn't get this blitzed just for me, you know.” I rolled my eyes. “I'm really not in the mood anymore, Spike.” He snorted. “So you'd rather sit there and mope?” he asked, fumbling in his pockets for what I assumed was cigarettes and a lighter, cause that's what he surfaced with. He popped a crumpled cigarette between his lips and lit it with dexterity that I didn't think a man as drunk as him could posses. The gestures must have been pure habit. “I'm not moping,” I insisted, tucking one leg under my other thigh. “I'm... thinking.” His eyebrows pulled downwards and he gave me a sort of disgusted look, blowing the smoke out of his nose. “Oh, no. You're one of them Vampires that flashbacks.” I blinked. “Flashbacks?” He snorted, and made a sort of dismissive gesture with the hand that held the cigarette. Smoke trailed after the hand like some sort of elaborate design in the air. I could see the whiskey in each movement Spike made. I could hear it in his voice. “You know, sommat reminds them of sumthin', and suddenly they're all glassyeyed thinking about this or that situation in the past. Flashbackin.” I snorted myself. Yes, it was a device used often in television shows to reveal some of the character's past - Forever Knight, Highlander, and even Angel used it to some extent. I, on the other hand, was only seven or eight months old, so I had no past to flashback to. I was definitely not flashbacking. “No, not doing that,” I said, looking my hands folded in my lap. He took another long drag of the cigarette. This time the smoke leaked out of his mouth when he spoke, like a dragon with a belly full of fire. “Ah, so you're brooding.” I looked up at him, incredulous. “Brooding?” “Vampires either flashback or brood.” He took one last drag, then smothered the dying embers of the butt against the scoured table top. “It's practically a law.” “I'm not brooding, either,” I insisted. “So you're not sitting there thinking about how guilty you feel for every little thing you've ever done that wasn't morally acceptable according to the human's ethics, or about all the terrible things that have happened to you, you poor thing, or might happen to you.” I stared at him with wide eyes and an open mouth. How, how had he known...? Spike looked smug. “And yer not thinkin' about what you did to 'Poor Knox', wondering what it was that drove you to hurtin' him like that?” I was actually speechless. Spike snorted again. “Right. I don't know that the whelp said, but if it was enough for you to do whatcha did, then you gave Knox what he deserved. The past is in the past and you're now. And if you always worry about the future, then everything you worry about will come true. Okay?” “I...” I said, knowing that I was gibbering but unable to stop it. How did Spike know exactly what had been eating at me? “Okay...” He smiled then, a drawing back of his lips over his teeth. “Just like Angel, ya are, ducks. You think too much. Now, come get drunk.” I nodded slowly, shocked. I had been brooding. Me! I'd been brooding! Brooding like Angel! Angel was the worst brooder there was! I was a bad Vampire cliché Well, enough of being that for one night! I was determined to get drunk now. I scooted around the seat in the booth until I sat directly beside Spike. I reached for his wrist and he grabbed my hand before I could, dropping his leg to the floor. “Puh-leese,” he said, and with a deft yank and tug, I was straddling his hips, our chests crushed together. “Much better,” he intoned with the gravity of the very drunk. One arm slid around behind me, his hand sliding down to tuck under the material of my skirt. I had a brief panicked moment of recollection, being in this same position with Jean-Claude, but Spike's breath was hot and smelled of whiskey, his hands broad and persistent but not intrusive, so I let the memory fade away and focused on Spike instead. His other hand was stroking slowly up and down my neck, and I shivered once, realizing with a start that Spike had found a new erogenous zone. My neck hadn't been the sensitive before I had died. His tongue stroked along the other side, like the lapping kiss that Padfoot had given me at Guilty Pleasures, and Spike sucked briefly at my scars. “Giv's us a kiss, sweet-fangs,” he said, and I leaned back from him a bit, affording him with a fish eyed glance. “How is all this supposed to get me drunk, Spike? Surely not through osmosis?” He grinned. “Giv's us a kiss, and you'll see.” I frowned at him. “Aw, the only one I'm gonna bite is me, ducks.” Then he bit his tongue. I could suddenly smell blood, thick and rich and tangy with alcohol. And then he kissed me. Well, this is new and interesting, I thought. ===== I banged my head. It was dark, so I couldn't see what I had banged it off of. I lifted a hand gingerly to the newly forming lump. I didn't feel any tell-tale wetness, so I guess I hadn't cut myself. I blinked dumbly into the inky room, running my parched tongue over fuzzy teeth. Gawd, I felt like shit. My head had started to throb with the bump, and although the Vampiric healing was taking care of the hurt, it was still a persistent, aggravating thump behind my eyes and at the base of my skull. “Spike?” I said into the darkness, and was startled mostly awake by how croaky my voice sounded. I cleared my throat and tried again. “Spike?” No one answered. I realized through he haze of confusion and muzziness that I was laying on the ground. I tried to sit up and banged my head again. “Goddamn,” I hissed, clutching my abused skull, trying to keep it from throbbing itself into a hundred pieces. I reached up to find a solid wooden ceiling directly above my head. I moved my hand to the left and found a wall of the same material. Panic tried to seize my heart, but I shoved it away. I was not claustrophobic. I wasn't. I was scared of cages. After what Lucard had pulled with the church, what Jean-Claude and the Rare Hunter had each done to me, I had every right, I thought, to be terrified of being locked in somewhere. Cautiously, carefully, I reached out to the right, terrified of feeling another wooden wall. My hand crashed into something metallic and cylindrical, and I yelped, jerking it back. Bars! I held my hands over my heart, willing the sudden rushing beat to calm down. I was alert and awake now. My wand, where was my wand? My knife? My pouch was not around my waist. What the fuck had happened last night? I closed my eyes and took a deep breath, the shortness of my cage not allowing me to stretch out my legs. I pressed my forehead to my knees. I concentrated on trying to banish the panic, the throbbing headache of the hangover, and on my misty memory. Spike had kissed me, I remembered that. His mouth had been full of his blood, thick, heady with lust, and alcoholic. I remember feeding from him, neither of us needing air, until he couldn't remain upright any longer. He had slid down the bench, until he was lying on it, and I on top of him. That was when the cat-calls had started. Someone whistled. Someone else screamed, “Take it off!” I looked up at them, and there had been a general exclamation of appreciation at the sight of my glowing yellow eyes and bloody mouth. “Do me next!” someone had said and then there were hands, a wrist in front of my mouth, it’s partner already in Spike's. I bit, and sucked. He, too, tasted of blood, and demon, and alcohol. The man was kneeling on the bench by Spike's head, and we were both feeding from him, a sexual, arousing feeling of connectedness growing between us. Spike's feeling on the matter was clearly outlined by the tight leather of his trousers, and I didn't pull away. I was too drunk to get off him without falling over, I think. Then what? The man was pulled off us by his friends before we could hurt him, and a woman took his place, a wrist in each of our mouths. By then I was feeling bloated, a swollen leech engorged with the feverish blood I'd stolen from the drunk and the desperate. I consumed their desire as much as I'd consumed their blood. Then there was another, and another. ...fantastic, the Senior Partners will be thrilled... ...promoted... There were voice swirling in my head, snatches of someone else's thoughts carried to me on the blood... ...the monster, one man said. ..release it and Angel will never get the... I was burning with blood. I was sick on it. ...crystal, said another...detected it in the area.... open the cage.... Spike's tongue was in my mouth, his hands on my breasts, his hips under mine, straining upwards. And then...? ... figure out who’s got it. Track down everyone who came into the building yesterday... I shook my head to try to shake away the annoying gaps in my memory. Where had these strange wisps of conversation come from? Whose was it? Not mine, surely, not with Spike. We were both too drunk to say anything coherent. Spike was trying to get his hands up under my shirt, and then...? There was no 'and then'. I woke here. In this cage. Had someone seen my eyes, the way my facial structure remained smooth, and realized that I was a different kind of Vampire? Was I imprisoned in the basement of Wolfram & Hart? Had Angel ordered me locked up? Or had it been someone from the bar? What crystal had they been talking about? Not Jareth's? Maybe they wanted it. Or maybe... Angel had told me no human blood. Oh, god, was I in trouble for hurting those people? Guilt, hot and heart-wrenching, nausea-inducing, flooded my breast. Had I killed someone...? Worse... had I slept with Spike?! “I'm never drinking ever again,” I said out loud, defiant in the darkness of my new prison. “I will never touch another drop of that hellish stuff!” Ah, the Eternal Cry of the Hung-over, Jareth chuckled into my head. I was so shocked to hear him I jumped and banged my head again. “What the hell are you doing here, too?” I hissed, rubbing my new bruise. “Did they capture you too?” He was too busy laughing to answer. “What's so goddamn funny?” I snarled. You are, he sniggered. Captured? Ha! I frowned into the darkness. Why would Jareth think it so funny that we'd been captured.? Of course, he wouldn't mind so much, as there was probably enough desire in the air to keep him satiated. But if I didn't get out of here, who would take care of his crystal? Maybe, with the right angle and application of strength, I could kick out the bars. I tucked myself into a ball, the back of my neck banging on the low wooden ceiling, and braced my feet against one of the bars. I took a deep breath and kicked. The ease with which it came loose startled me and I slipped down and smashed my head against the ground, put off balance by the lack of resistance to the momentum of the kick. I heard a screeching sound, like un-oiled wheels, and a loud crash as the metallic bars thumped into the wall opposite. “Shit!” I hissed. In my head, Jareth was laughing harder. I heard footsteps racing down the hall outside towards this room, and struggled to pull myself to my feet. I was still slightly dizzy from the hangover and the crack on the head. I wouldn't have much time to get my bearings before whoever it was arrived. I would have to assess the situation fast, maybe transform into a bat if the sun would let me. I leaned against my cage, resting my arms and chin on the top of it, groping around for something to throw at my attacker. Just as the door began to open I closed my hand on something smooth and heavy and wound back to throw it at the door, hopefully hitting whichever guard was there. The door swung inwards and I pulled my hand back. The silhouette was in sharp contrast to the knifing light streaming in from the hallway behind him. Just was I was about to release, I heard his tentative, “M-Miss Susan?” I paused. “Why are your lights off?” The lights suddenly went on and I cried out and covered my eyes. God, they hurt! I rubbed them, trying to ease the pain, and was disgusted by the crusty residue that gummed my lashes together. Ick, I hadn't had 'sleep' in my eyes since I had been mortal. This gritty feeling of dirt alone was enough to have me swear off alcohol forever. When I felt I could stand the pain of the light, my eyes having adjusted, I looked up to find Wesley standing in my doorway with a startled look on his face. “I, uh,” he stammered. “I heard the crash. Are you okay?” I blinked around me, stupidly, taking in the room. It wasn't a prison. It was my office. I was kneeling behind my desk, my arms and chin resting on the blotter, my flower vase wielded in my hand like a ceramic football. “Oh,” I said intelligently. “Oh! I... uh...” “Are you okay, Miss Susan? You look awful.” I nodded once, pulling myself to my feet shakily. I set down the vase gently, scooping up the fallen flowers. I ignored the puddle of water on the carpet and placed them back into the vase. A glance behind me revealed my chair laying on its side against the wall, a tell-tale dark black scuff-mark in the paint above it. I felt my face flush red with mortification. On the blotter next to my hand was my wand and my pouch. I made a show of shuffling some papers and set them down on my pouch to try to hide it. Wesley had probably already seen it, my wand laying in plain view, but he may not have realized what it was. Spike must have helped me get back here last night, or I had done it on my own... and then I had come in here, dropped my stuff on the desk (it was a wonder I hadn't broken any of the phials!) and then... ...passed out under my desk. Jareth was still howling with laugher. Wesley was waiting patiently for my answer. “I'm fine,” I lied and my voice was hoarse. “Sorry, I slipped. Bit of a crash. Bu-bumped my chin. I'm okay.” Wesley glanced at me critically. “I didn't see you come in this morning.” “Wanted to start early,” I said, and even to myself it sounded lame. “Okay,” Wesley conceded, even though he favoured me with a funny look. “Are you sure you feel alright? You're awfully pale. Have you fed? I know Angel told you no human blood, but I know Harmony keeps a few bottles of a few different species of mammals in the bar-fridge behind her desk for Angel. Shall I have her bring you some?” I nodded, “Yes, thank you. I forgot to eat this morning. Didn't know what to do.” Wesley smiled fondly at me. “You shouldn't punish yourself like that - Vampires get the shakes pretty bad when they haven't fed. I'm sure going cold turkey will be hard for you, but you'll see. Going off human blood isn't so bad.” I blinked at him again. “Ah, yeah. Cold turkey. Yeah. Thanks.” “No problem.” He nodded, his expression suddenly extremely fond and amiable. “Just let me know if you need anything else, okay?” “Yeah. Thanks. Bye.” “Bye.” He moved to close the door, taking a step back and I said, “Wait!” He paused and turned eager eyes back to me. “Yes?” Now, I knew that Wesley was in love with that Fred girl, the one who ran the Lab, but here was the Mary Sue's curse again. If I told Wesley right now that I wanted him to come into the room and get naked, he undoubtedly would. I think he had more of an admiration for my mental prowess than nooky - like Jareth said, he had an intelligence fetish - but I'm sure I could manipulate it into a sexual context. If Wesley was hoping for a good verbal spar or a shag, he was about to be disappointed. “Has Spike come in yet?” I asked. Wesley wilted slightly, but bolstered himself admirably. If he was crushed, I couldn't tell. “Yes,” Wesley said. “A few minutes ago, actually.” I nodded. “Thanks - trying to avoid him.” Wesley's metaphorical ears pricked up again. “Oh, yes?” “Oh, yes,” I said. “How did he look this morning?” “Fine...” Wesley said. “Did something happen between you two that I should know about? He hasn't been acting inappropriately, has he? Angel has already had a talk with him about hanging about the female locker room--” “Everything's okay,” I said hastily. Inside I was fuming. I was hungover, a wreck, and Spike was 'fine'? There is no justice in this Universe! I was hoping he at least would have a bad headache to punish him for getting me so wasted. “Thanks again, Mr. WyndamPrice.” “Wesley's fine,” he said, waving a hand as if to clear the room of all lingering formalities. “I'll have Harmony send round that blood.” “Thanks. Ta ta.” “Ta.” He closed the door slowly, and I could hear him move slowly down the hall, back towards his office. Oh, how embarrassing. Jareth was still laughing. “Shut up,” I grumbled at him, and went to right my chair. ===== ...fantastic, the Senior Partners will be thrilled... ...promoted... ...the monster ...release it and Angel will never get the... ...crystal... detected it in the area.... open the cage.... ... figure out whose got it. Track down everyone who came into the building yesterday... I sat at my desk, chewing on my thumbnail, staring at the door. The clipboards lay forgotten on the desk by my elbow. Jareth's crystal was throbbing faintly with a dull red glow. He was feeding again. I wasn't feeling any worse for wear, so it wasn't from me. I had gone down to the locker room, checking thoroughly for any Peeping-Spikes, and had a long hot shower to help clear my head. In the steam heat of the water, snatches of the conversation I had heard last night came back to me. Now that I was sober, the words had me worried. Obviously, someone was looking for some sort of stone to open some cage to release some monster that would eventually kill Angel. And they hoped to get promoted for it. Was the stone they sought Jareth's? The voices had said that the stone had only been detected yesterday. And now that I thought about it, wasn't that what Wesley had been talking to Fred about when I had eavesdropped on them? Some sort of alarm spell had gone off letting him know that something dangerous had entered the building? Fuck, I thought to myself. If it is Jareth's crystal they're all after, I could really be up shit-creek. I still need a month to brew the potion - I've got no phials left besides the ones that are already keyed, and I don't think I could get a month in secret in any of those places... and I won't go crawling back to Snape. I guess I just have to hope that it takes them a month to pin-point me. But even if it wasn't Jareth's crystal, whatever it was that they released would without a doubt wreak enough havoc that my potion would be destroyed, or my life could be endangered. In fact, according to the rules of the Mary Sue, it was pretty much a guarantee that I would find myself in the middle of whatever battle took place. Fuck! I would have to think of a way to get rid of the monster, and fast. Or... or, get rid of the men who were planning to release the monster. If they weren't around to do it, then I wouldn't have to worry. Obviously, I wouldn't kill them. I wasn't a monster myself. But, I had no qualms sending them to Port Royal to deal with the Zombie Pirates, or straight into Lucard's lap to be dinner. If they were demons or evil or dangerous, then I would have to figure out a spell to immobilize them permanently, or something similar. Or I could just report them to Angel, and he could deal with them. But I had to find out who they were first, and on my own. If I told Angel, or any of his crew, what I had heard, the plotters could bolt, and I would have no way of foiling their plans. Or they could just start a big fight and again that could endanger my potion. No, I had to do this in secret, on my own. But how to figure out exactly who these men were. I had no faces for them, only the sound of their voices in my admittedly hazy memory. I had been so drunk... What did I have to go on? Nothing, except that they were both men and desired to kill Angel. Desire. “That's it!” I said, and turned to Jareth. The red light gave a startled jumping throb and Jareth said, What's it? “Can you pinpoint the two men who desire to kill Angel?” Why on Earth should I do that? “Because if they succeed in releasing the monster, then your crystal may be broken in the resulting melee. Besides, I think they want to use you to open its cage.” Oh, fine then. There was a short, pregnant pause. Then, I can't pinpoint who the two are. “What?” I asked, startled. I was sure this would work! “Why not?” Because, he sighed, there many more than just two. Book Seven: Angel: The Series Chapter Twenty-Four : “Mortimer” Knox was sufficiently scared of me that when I demanded them from him the next day, he handed over a cauldron, a portable Bunsen burner unit, a scalpel, and a cutting board with nary more than a quivering bottom lip and a steely glare. I didn't feel guilty, but I didn't exactly feel innocent either. I shoved these new ambiguous feelings into the box in my guts and tried not to pay attention to the way its seams groaned in protest. My little box of nightmare fodder was getting awfully full. ===== I tried to keep the clatter-bang sounds to a minimum. I was only supposed to be typing in my office, so the rattle of setting up the cauldron, the clinking of phials, and the scrape-thunk-snick of slicing things on the cutting board were sounds that would probably be investigated. After the incident with my poor chair, I was aware that my office was close enough to all the main ones that I could have a leading character poking their head in at any strange auditory signal. I had the cauldron set up on a folding card table in the back corner of the room, and I was working away with my back turned to Jareth. How's the headache? he asked at length. I rubbed the bridge of my nose. “Getting better. It's mostly faded now. I just can't figure why it's taking so long. It must be this place.” Or the copious amount of libations you imbibed. “It wasn't that copious.” You weaved in here bare hours before dawn, babbling like a lunatic. There was a haze of desire so thick around you I almost got drunk too. I paused in my preparations and turned to narrow my eyes at the crystal. Sure enough, the depths of it were pulsing a contented red. I walked over and poked it with one finger - that finger tingled. “You're feeding from me!” I hissed. Well, of course I am, Jareth said, and if I could have seen him, I probably would have watched him roll his mismatched eyes. You can't honestly expect me to pass up a feast like that. You had the desire of at least thirty three different people clinging to you, not to mention the thick cloud of Spike's. “I can't believe you,” I hissed. “You're the reason I've felt so crappy and snarky and weak all day?” I suppose. “You suppose?! Jareth, you ... you just don't think do you? Did it ever occur to you that if something happened I'd need to be able to react fast and with a clear mind to get us - both of us - out of danger? If you keep sucking on me, how am I supposed to stay alert?” But it was so tempting! I turned back to my make-shift laboratory with a snort of disgust. “Then learn to curb your temptation. You're a danger to me if you do this. You're a danger to both of us.” Just as I had begun to heat the first ingredient in the cauldron four and three fifths of a cup of water - I heard the unmistakable creak of my door being pushed back. “I'm busy, Spike,” I said, not bothering to look up from my dandelion-root slicing. “How did you know it was me, ducks?” “Everyone else knocks.” I set the weeds aside and turned to look at him, wiping the juice that was making my hands sticky on my skirt. “And you reek of cigarette smoke and Jack Daniel's.” He was leaning against the doorframe again, the entrance wide open behind him. I didn't like the idea that anyone passing in the hall could see in and catch me at what I was doing. “In or out, Spike.” He chose in, and shut the door behind him. My wand was still sitting on the desk and he strolled over and picked it up. He twirled it between his hands like a pencil and continued to look at me. “You were talkin' to your rock again,” Spike said. “Yellin' mores like. What's it sayin'?” “Nothing that would be of interest to you. Please put that down, Spike.” He smiled at me, a wide tooth grin, but set aside my wand. “Thatchyer magic wand?” I raised an eyebrow. “And if it was?” “Never heard of a Vampire that did magic, before.” I opened my mouth, and he hastily added, “Not with no poncey wand, I haven't. You brewin' a potion?” I debated lying. It was obvious that brewing a potion was exactly what I was doing, so that would have been moot. Instead I said, “Yes. You gotta problem with that?” He shrugged. “As long as it don't hurt me ... nope. If yer a Harry Potter fan, who am I to spoil yer little dreams?” I nearly choked on my teeth. Right. Yes. A fan. I had forgotten that J.K. Rowling's books had been mentioned in this fandom before. Humph - 'as long as it didn't hurt him'. I rolled my eyes, thinking, selfish bastard. “Course,” Spike ventured, hitching one butt cheek up on my desk, leaning across it to leer at me, “I never saw a Vampire whose eyes did what yours do either.” This comment made me freeze. “Do what?” I tried to say with calm nonchalance. It came out as more of a squeak. Spike stood and stalked around the desk. He lifted his hands to touch my face and I backed up, almost upsetting the card table, side-stepped it, and pressed myself against the wall. Spike kept coming, until I was trapped between a Spike and a hard place. He cupped my face in his hands and frowned as if he was concentrating on looking into my soul and finding out my secrets. “You are a Vampire, ain't ya? Not some demon.” I tried to nod and found his firm but gentle grip didn't allow for it. “Yeah, I'm a Vampire,” I said. “But your face didn't go bumpy.” “So?” I shrugged. His eyes narrowed even more. “So, the only bloke's face who never did that was Dracula's.” The fear fluttered across my face and Spike saw it. He let go, rubbing his hands on his pants as if I'd left a slimy residue on his skin. His distaste was apparent. It made every angry, seething thing in my burst to life. “You're one of Drac's,” he said, and it wasn't a question. “Don't you pass judgment on me, William the Bloody!” I snarled, pushing away from the wall, shoving my finger in his face. “I didn't choose Dracula any more than you chose your sire! I told Wesley and I'll told you - with my last breath I said no.” His eyes widened fractionally, but the frown got deeper. He shoved his hands into his pockets and turned away, walking towards the door. He stood in front of it, making no move to remove a hand from his pocket to open the door. “I ain't gonna tell anyone,” Spike said, and his voice was an angry grumble. “Butchyer gonna owe me.” “Like hell,” I spat. “Open the door,” he ordered, looking pointedly back over his leather-clad shoulder at my wand. I lifted it and hissed, “Alohamora.” The door swung open. Spike nodded once, a sharp, angry movement. “That's what I thought.” And then he was gone. I got great pleasure in stalking over to the door and physically slamming it myself. You shouldn't have blown up at him... Jareth said softly. “Oh, for God's sake, don't you start!” ===== Spike did not come back and bother me that night, nor any night for three days afterwards. Every time someone knocked on the door, I panicked, thinking it was Angel come to kill me. I did my best to pretend nothing had happened, and continued to write my letters and brew my potion. It was an easy enough task to wander the streets of LA and collected the requisite potion ingredients. Some inventive shotglasses lifted from a local bar proved to be the perfect phials, and the stubs of some candles out of the wine bottles in the middle of the tables in an outdoor café vanished into my pockets before the waiters could look up. This stealing thing was getting easier and easier, and the fact that it rarely twanged my conscious any more worried me only slightly. It was all just a means to an end. Anything to get home. While I worked away at the Seasonal Letters for Angel, and the potion for myself, Jareth was doing his part and trying to pick out the two men who desired to kill Angel with the monster. I worked as fast as I could on the letters, and I made up excuses to wander the building. Getting coffee I never drank, getting 'lost' on the way to Angel's office, helping Harmony deliver some mail. I was listening in on as many conversations as I could, trying to recognize the two voices from the night I had gone out with Spike. It didn't seem to be working. I had been too drunk. ===== The days passed, and then the weeks, and I did my best to keep my head down and out of the way. It was uncomfortable at first, keeping myself isolated as I dared, sleeping in my office. Eventually I got the hang of sleeping in my bat-shape - pun intended. I just dug my little claws into the armrest of my chair and snoozed peacefully away, ears down and tail up. Despite my attempts at staying under the radar, the Curse of the Mary Sue had kicked in and I became the new centre of interest for most of the main characters. None of them mentioned anything about Harry Potter or Dracula, and I began to think that Spike was keeping his word about staying mum. But he had threatened a favour in return, and I wondered when that particular Doc Martin was going to drop. I couldn't seem to avoid the leading characters, no matter what I did. Angel and I chatted at least once a day while he signed the previous day's letters, which I always managed to cut short by telling him that I had more letters to write. Harmony was easy enough to avoid, and Gunn seemed fairly occupied himself. Fred was always up in the Lab so I think she was spared some of the effects of my proximity. Spike was the hardest to avoid interacting with. He seemed determined to get into my skirt, and I, of course, was equally determined to keep him out of it. He never pulled the 'favour' out on me, but I had a feeling it was just a matter of time. Okay, so he was gorgeous. And witty. And sexy as hell. But he was also Bad News. He knew things that I didn't want him to know. I couldn't afford any distractions, not with all the mental juggling I was already doing. And boy, was Spike a Distraction. I managed to not be in my office every time he 'dropped by', mostly by virtue of the fact that I'd turn into a bat and hide under my seat cushion. If he smelled me, he must have thought it was a lingering scent leftover from my presence. I was lucky, and he usually only showed up after the sun had set. Of course, if he knew I was Dracula's get, maybe he did know I was changing into a bat, or mist, and didn't press it. Lorne and Wesley each wheedled me in turn to go out for coffee or drinks with them, and I conceded on several occasions, if only to escape the mindless prattling of a hyped-up Jareth. Apparently, desire really was like alcohol, and with so much around Jareth at all hours of the day, he was like a drunk twenty-fourseven. It was getting increasingly distracting and annoying. With the stress of trying to finish the goddamn letters, and brew the potion, and keep an eye out for whoever or whatever it was that those men were planning to do lest either Jareth or I end up in the midst of it, Spike 'favour' in the back of my mind, and my scramble to make sure that no one found out that I was working Harry Potter magics, I was starting to become a stress-monkey. I worked incessantly when Jareth slept. When he was awake, I tried to stay out of my office as often as possible. It seemed as though Jareth could only communicate with me if I was in a ten meter radius, so I tried to stay out of that radius as much as I could while still doing my job. I always, always locked the door after me. Which was why when I returned from lunch with Lorne and Gunn one afternoon somewhere around week three, I was shocked to find my glass ashtray empty. Oh, shit. ===== As quickly and discretely as I could, I searched Wolfram & Hart for the crystal. Every ten steps I would shout to Jareth mentally, hoping I was close enough for him to hear. No one and nothing replied. I had no scents to follow - whoever had broken in had been pro. No prints, no scents, no hair, nothing. Only one small scuff on the outer casing of the lock had given away the intrusion, and the fact that Jareth was not there. I couldn't help but wonder if Spike had sold me out, finally. I completed a hasty circuit of every area I could access in the building, and was about to start to try to break into the areas I wasn't allowed, when I heard a throat clear behind me. I turned to find Spike grinning at me, standing in the direct centre of the hallway as if to prevent me from passing. “This yours, ducks?” Spike said as he tossed Jareth's crystal back and forth between his hands. “Oh, thank God you found it, Spike!” I said and ran towards him with my hands outstretched to grab it. “Ah, ah,” he said, and held it above his head where I clearly couldn't reach it. “Now, I saw this in the hands o' a couple of wankers down on the storage level with this, and I thought to myself, 'Mr. The Bloody, ain't that the hunk o' rock that Marie talks to all the time? I think it is.’ When I asked them, they had nothin' interestin' to say, so I took it away from 'em.” I lifted my own hands over my head. “It is, Spike, please give it to me!” He smirked and lifted his other hand to brush the pad of his fingers over my bottom lip. “Oh, I'll give it to you ducks. Butchya gotta do two things for me first. Remember that favour? I'm callin' it in.” I jerked back from his invasive touch and scowled. “What?” He held up one finger in front of my nose. “One, ya gotta tell me why you've been avoidin' me.” “I haven't been avoiding you, Spike,” I lied, making exasperation clear in my tone. “I've been working.” “Uh-huh,” he smirked. “Just like you've been thinkin? For all the 'work' you do, you seem to have gotten pretty cuddly with Book-Boy and the Green Wonder.” “That's cause Lorne doesn't act like a horndog when he takes me out,” I huffed and tried to reach for the crystal. Spike stood on his tiptoes. I was sorely tempted to give him a good knee to the stomach, but I resisted the urge. He might have mistaken it for foreplay. And he could very easily tell someone who I was. Spike put one hand on my shoulder and pushed me away from him, raising an eyebrow. “I'm waiting.” “Fine,” I said and crossed my arms under my breasts. “Yes, I've been avoiding you.” “Why?” “Because I have no desire to be hit on every five seconds, nor groped, nor ogled.” Spike shrugged. “We could just shag, then.” I threw my hands up and rolled my eyes at the ceiling as if to ask the Senior Partners to witness what I had to put up with. “What's demand number two, Spike?” “That you come out drinkin' with me again tonight.” “It's a weeknight.” “Didn't stop you last time.” I shook my head. “Spike, we both got so drunk that we started sucking off of half the crowd.” “It was fuckin' hot, I know. I'm hopin' for a repeat performance.” “Well I'm not,” I insisted and held out my hand, palm up. “Give me the crystal please.” “Promise you'll go out with me tonight. No funny business. I won't even drink as much.” I fish-eyed him. “Well, not much funny-business,” he said, trying for innocent and failing miserably. I chewed on my bottom lip, thinking it over. I could turn down Spike, but then who knows where Jareth would end up - he could fall into the hands of the plotting 'wankers' again. But did I really want to get drunk with Spike again? I had learned my rather embarrassing lesson last time. But if I didn't, then he could blab. Evil Monster that could kill us all vs. Evil Monster that would try to shag me. It was a tough choice, really, it was. In the end, the need to try to foil the 'wankers' plans won out. I nodded my agreement to his second term. Then, I added, “Is there anything I can do to make you give me that crystal that doesn't involve me getting drunk with you?” I asked, hands on my hips. Spike gave me a shit-eating grin. “Yeah, but involves you, me, a pair of handcuffs, and as little clothing as possible.” “Right,” I said, “Drinking it is.” ===== Jareth was abnormally silent, and it was worrying me. His red glow was absent, and the crystal was just refracting light back at me. It was the first time I had seen it so dormant since he'd handed it off to me, and I didn't like it. There was little I could do to find out what was wrong, however, so I just kept it close by and hoped that he would wake up soon. I didn't trust leaving Jareth's crystal alone in my office again obviously someone knew how to jimmy the lock, so I decided to bring the crystal with me. In the weeks I had been here, Lorne had noticed that my clothing had not changed, and without a word of pity or apology, three new outfits had arrived at my office - all of them were very professional and made of light, flowy materials that were perfect for Los Angeles. He really was just the sweetest, most thoughtful demon ever. After the 'talk' with Spike in the hall, I returned to my office. I donned one of the clean blouses, put Jareth into the matching purse that had come with it, and met Spike at the elevator. He eyed me openly, but instead of making a brazen comment about me, he said, “How's your pet rock? Alright? Not all scuffed?” “He's not speaking,” I admitted reluctantly. “I don't know if he's asleep, or if the wankers did something to him.” “Give 'em the night,” Spike said, rooting around for his cigarettes and lighter again. “Maybe he'll be better in the mornin'.” We exited the elevator and walked out of the office. The evening air was nippy and Spike snuggled down into his coat. “C'n you Apparate us there?” I snorted. “Didn't figure you for a Harry Potter fan.” “I ain't, but Dru liked the books, so I would read 'em to her. She would always be so disappointed when Harry escaped You-KnowWho's plans.” I rolled my eyes. “Poor baby.” Spike shrugged, sucking on his cigarette to light it. “She always felt better after killin' a boy with black hair 'n green eyes.” “That's sick,” I said, the revulsion clear on my face. Spike ignored my disgust and said, “So, Miss Drac, you gonna Apparate us or not?” “Not,” I said. “Why not? Don't wanna do magic in front of me?” I balled my hands up in my sleeves to keep them out of the chill air, wishing I still had my Hogwarts Cloak. I missed it. “No,” I explained. “It's cause I don't have my Apperating License, and I don't want to be hauled in to stand in front of Umbridge on 'Misuse of Magic' charges.” Spike laughed. ===== Neither Jareth nor I were very coherent in the morning. I had to throw out the new blouse. Bloodstains just don't come out of silk. But at least Jareth was talking. He couldn't remember what had happened to him after the wanker had snatched him out of the room. I just hoped that he wasn't incoherent because he'd been used to the cage of the creature. As for me, I was hung over. Again. ===== By mid-afternoon I had a throbbing, blazing headache. The noise in the foyer just down the hall form me was getting steadily louder and more shrill. When I finally couldn't take it anymore, I stuck my head out of my office door, scowling at the noisy chaos in the main foyer. “Excuse me!” I said. No one heard me. “Excuseme!” Annoyed, I retrieved my wand from the desk and tapped it against my voice box, and muttered. “Sonorous.” “Excuse me!” I screamed over the din, my voice now magically amplified. “Some of us are trying to work! Your noise isn't helping any! I have a very delicate potion in here that could blow up and shift us all into alternate realities if I don't concentrate!” Everyone in the room stopped running and screaming, and instead stared at me in gap-mouthed wonder. “Better,” I said, and moved to go back into my office. Then I saw It. The reason they had all been screaming and running. It hadn't been just random noise. They had been fleeing in terror. From The Monster. Looks like the Wankers had used Jareth after all. Oops. “Well, shit,” I said. I winced at the way my amplified voice echoed around the cathedral-like room. I quickly nixed the spell with a whispered, “Quietus.” The monster's many inky wet eyes swivelled and focused on me, the only moving thing in the room. Apparently it was part T-Rex. It only saw what moved. Deliberately I stepped out of my office and raised my wand. If I was going to have to deal with this thing, I would deal with it, first and then worry about everyone's reactions to seeing Harry Potter magic work in their own reality. The monster slithered towards me, a giant seaweed octopus-looking thing with tentacles that ended in sharp wooden points. It was like... a crawling shrub, but glistening with monstery-ooze-slime and dangerous. So this was the Angel-Killer - a living stake-machine. One jab in the chest with those thick, branch-like tentacles, and any Vampire would be dusted. Me included. I swallowed hard. What the hell kind of spell did I know to rebuff something like that? 'Cause I sure as hell wasn't fooling myself into thinking I could fight it. Looking at the mess the creature had made of the foyer, and the people in it, I knew I wouldn't last a minute against this beast in physical combat. Angel was sort of draped over the balcony, looking very bloody, slashed up, and unconscious. Gunn was hunched in a corner, cradling his arm. Spike was just rushing out of a side hall, where it looked as if he had been tossed. Fred and Wesley were up on the second level, making their way to Angel, Wesley frantically flipping through the pages of a spell book. Spike saw me standing there with my wand and said, “Avada Kedavra the bastard!” “I don't know the Killing Curse!” I shouted back. At the same time, Wesley yelled, “There's no such thing, Spike!” Spike snarled at threw himself at the monster again, sword raised, and the monster whipped out three tentacles to intercept him. It was clear as moonlight that Spike was about to be impaled. I hadn't wanted to use anything distinctly Harry Potter while I was here. Ri-ight. I swung my arm around to aim at Spike and screamed, “Expellaramus!” Spike went hurtling backwards, faster than the monster could jab at him, and crashed into the wall opposite. He slumped down, still clutching the sword, and glowered at me. “I didn't ask you to get in my way, Little Miss Dracula!” he snarled. “You’re welcome!” I snapped and turned my attention back to the monster. Above Spike I distinctly heard Angel say, “Wait, Dracula?” Fan-bloody-tastic. I scanned the room and everyone who could fight, or would at any rate, was still down for the count. It seemed that the Mary Sue would have to save the day. Lovely. “Petrificus Totallus!” I tried, steadfastly ignoring the panic in my voice. The Creature grabbed for the flash of light as if it was a butterfly to catch. The limbs that the spell splatted against froze and dropped to the floor, but the Creature as a whole remained animate. It blinked dumbly at its frozen limbs. Then it howled. It lunged towards me, slithering faster than I gave it credit for. I skipped backwards, ducking to avoid the wide swing of one tentacle, just barely missing getting jabbed by another, rolled to the side, and came up to my feet behind it. The room cleared out. The smart business people were using their slalom skills to get out of the way of the tentacles and my waving wand arm. “Stupify!” I shrieked, and only three more limbs succumbed to the spell. The Creature was angry now. It hauled itself around, more than half of its legs still functioning. I dug into my brain, trying to remember everything I'd read or learned with Flitwick. “Fuck, highpower freezing spell, freezing spell...!” “What the hell are you doing?!” I heard Wesley's' voice behind me, but I didn't dare take my eyes off the monster. “What kind of spells are those?!” “Defensive Charms!” I screamed back. “Don't fucking distract me! Uh... um... Locomotor Mortis!” This time it stopped the beast in its tracks. There was a wet slapping sound as its legs all slammed together. It tried to pull them apart, straining and keening, but like a particularly bad case of stiff bubblegum, it was stuck. The whole thing overbalanced in its struggles and tipped over onto the carpet on its side, blinking furiously at me. The Creature writhed and howled, thrashing, but the charm prevented it from taking a step in any direction. I heard Wesley descend the staircase, felt Angel come up behind me and put his hand on my shoulder. “What the hell was that?” he asked, rather more flippantly than I would have expected from someone who was very close to being killed mere moments earlier. But then, I suppose Angel was used to nearly being killed. He did it on almost a weekly basis. “Leg-locker curse,” I said. “I've never tried it on anything bigger than an ant. Looks like it worked though. Guess I should send Professor Flitwick some flowers and a thank-you card for the private tutoring.” “Send him some from me, too.” Angel squeezed my shoulder once, then sucked in a breath. “Wait, did you say Flitwick?” “You read Harry Potter, too?” I asked, brushing at the slime that had gotten on my new blouse with disgust. “Anyone here who doesn't?” Fred tentatively put up her hand. Wesley and Lorne I expected, but Gunn? I raised an eyebrow at him and he said, “Hey, my sister liked 'em, okay?” “Yeah, I said Flitwick,” I admitted to the curious faces. “Did a little training in an alternate reality, okay?” “Er... yeah, okay,” Angel said, obviously not wanting to think about it (or bawl me out) just yet. He had other things to worry about first. Like writhing, snarling, homicidal shrubberies. Angel walked past me to cautiously inspect the struggling Monster. “Miss Susan. Spike called you Dracula - I would assume then that you are the progeny of--” Wesley began, his tone equally awed and reproachful, and I turned to look at him, cutting him off. “Mr. Wyndam-Price,” I interrupted, deliberately using his last name, as he had used mine, matching him tone for tone. “What Spike called me is none of your damn business.” “It is if Dracula is involved! He is a particularly nasty--” “Yeah, I remember,” I snapped, cutting him off again. I pointed to the scar on my neck. “No with my last breath.” Wesley looked suitably chastened. “Well, then, I would like to ask you about this whole Harry Potter thing, then. Is that really a--” “Yes, that was wand magic, no, I don't know how it was done, no, I can't teach you, yes you can inspect my wand, yes, I can give you some demonstrations.” His eyes grew round, obviously surprised by my anticipation of each questions. “Uh, very well then,” he said, trying to regain the upper hand. “I, uh, look forward to it. Now, what will you do about the creature?” “Well, from what I understand,” I said as we both turned back to inspect it. Lorne, Gunn, Spike and Fred had all circled it, keeping an eye out in case it broke free of the spell and started to rampage again. “It's programmed to kill only Angel?” Gunn nodded and hefted an efficient looking battle axe. “I say we chop it to messes.” “Nice Shakespeare,” I said with a quirk of my eyebrow, “but that seems a little cruel, doesn't it? I mean, it can't help being brainwashed. What if it's an innocent shrub sprite or something?” Fred shook her head adamantly. “Ah get tha distinct impression that shrub-boy was never an innocent anything. But, ah agree with ya that we shouldn't kill it.” Lorne grimaced. “Well, if you don't want to kill it, sweet-fangs, then what do you plan to do? Let it go?” “Hell no,” I said. I thought for a moment, and then it came to me. If the creature was programmed, as I'd said, then it was hardly fair to kill it. We could just... reprogram it. “Step back,” I said, and everyone warily did so. “Obliviate!” The blue sparks shot from the end of the wand and hit the creature right in the eyes. It didn't appear to pain it any. It just... slumped. It stopped struggling and blinked around quietly, sort of shocked looking. “What did you do?” Spike asked, fingers still flexing on the hilt of the sword he gripped, as if he really wanted to use it. “Book Two - Gilderoy Lockheart.” Spike, Wes, Angel, Gunn, and Lorne all nodded, understanding. Fred looked even more confused. For her benefit I said, “Totally erased its memory,” I said, with a smile. “Now it doesn't remember that it's programmed to kill Angel.” “Well, that's all fine and dandy,” Angel admitted, “But we've still got a huge walking Vampire-killer plant-doohicky here, who although doesn't remember that it's supposed to kill me, could do so by trying to hug me.” I stifled a chuckle and thought instead. “Hmmm. I think I can take care of that, too... but I'd need some Shrivelfig roots.” Spike snorted. “Oh, that it then? Not asking much are we?” I turned to glare at him. Gunn snapped to - “I think I can call in some favours,” he said and dashed off towards the elevator. “Anything else you need?” Wesley asked. “Yeah - cauldron, burner, spoon, daisy roots, caterpillar, leech juice and... um ....” I wracked my brain... bugger, what was that thing that Neville kept messing up... “Ah, one rat spleen!” Wesley nodded once and went up the stairs towards the lab. Fred was hot on his heels. With a shrug and a smile at the stunned Angel and Lorne, I followed after. “And here,” I heard Lorne whispering to Angel as they followed me up the stairs, “I thought she was just the letter girl.” “Me too.” ===== Gunn's kitty came through. As I brewed the potion as best I could from memory, I explained to the senior staff of Wolfram & Hart who I really was and what I had been doing for the last seven months of my life. It was the first time I had divulged everything. I hadn't even told Remus the full story. It felt damn good to get it off my chest. It also made me feel a little emotionally naked. Angel started in on me about 'Dracula', but Wesley headed him off. Well, he had learned at least. I even went so far as to explain what a Mary Sue was and why everyone had been acting towards me the way they had. They all seemed slightly surprised by the inadvertent manipulation, and denied it until I started to point out instances, little comments they had made about one another. Spike was the least pleased, to put it mildly. Fred took notes on everything I did, Wesley made notes on everything I said, and I pointed out that if the potion turns orange, it means you've spoiled it. When the potion was a nice, acidic green, I spooned some into a glass beaker and took it back downstairs. The monster was still laying on its side, looking dazed. It was complacent and I found it easy enough to manipulate it into opening its mouth. I poured the potion down its throat and with a cough and a wheeze, it was suddenly the size of my hand. Around me, everyone gasped in awe. And thus the Mary Sue saves the day in ways that totally shock and amaze the cannon characters. In my defence, they didn't know I was brewing the shrinking potion. “Ennervate,” I said, casting one last spell on the unfortunate creature, then picked it up as it began to wriggle around on the carpet. “Oooo!” Harmony cooed, standing up from where she had been hiding behind the desk. “It's so cute!” I rolled my eyes but handed the thing off to her. She promptly put it in a deep round flower vase of glass. “It's not a pet, Harm,” Spike said, but she wasn't listening. She was already naming it. “Hello, Mortimer, you cutie widdly thingy you!” “That was some remarkable magic,” Wesley ventured after a moment's dumbstruck observation of Harmony. “Would you teach it to me?” “You can keep the rest of the potion,” I said, jerking my thumb towards the stairs. “It's all yours.” “What did you mean earlier, baby-cakes,” Lorne said, “when you said you had a delicate potion going that could blow us all into another reality?” “Oh, that,” I said, waving away his concern. “It's just my slider potion. Its how I'm going to get home.” Wesley's eyes lit up. ===== In the end, I conceded to give him two phials for him and Fred to study. I keyed one to this reality for him, and left the other blank. It meant that I'd only have three phials left for myself - I had to key one with Trieze's rose, one with some of Remus' tatty robe, one with a clipping of Angel's fingernail, and one with a bit of Jareth's hair. I skimped a bit on each phial, trying to make the potion stretch as far as I could. I had tried to make the batch larger than usual, but I had only managed to squeeze two extras out of it. Of course, whether or not any of them would work was a question. One I tried not to think too hard about. Before that, though, there was a week of letting the potion simmer. In that time, I spent more hours than I'd care to admit in Wolfram & Hart’s octagonal glass 'testing' room. It felt an awful lot like being in a cage and I hated every second of it, but I had promised Wesley that I would let him see what my wand could do, and I wasn't about to renege on my promise. I threw as many charms, curses, and hexes as I could remember at a stuffed practice dummy. Some of the less harmful ones I threw at Spike. Fred and Wesley video taped each session and I knew they spent long hours together in his office studying the tapes. It made me happy to see them spending time along together, snuggling on his big leather couch, sharing coffee. All too soon, Fred would be gone forever. ===== When the month was up, Fred came into my office and handed me a shopping bag. “What's this?” I asked. “Just some clothes,” she said. “Ah don't wear 'em so much any more, and I thought they had to be tougher than the stuff you're wearin'.” I looked down at myself. The clothing Lorne had given to me had been wonderful, but everything he had bought had been beautiful but fragile. My various skirts and blouses ad poufy little neckscarves would do me no good while I was sliding. They would be torn straight through by the first bush I passed. I appreciated Fred's foresight and let her know, then opened the bag. Inside was a pair of tough boiled leather pants, a thick black teeshirt that said “Foxy” in glitter print, and a warm-looking red hoodie. Fred left me to don the new clothing, which I did after strapping on my pouch. I picked up Jareth and shoved him into the kangaroo pocket of my hoodie. When I got out to the Foyer, intent on going up to Angel's office to say the first of my goodbyes, I was greeted by a small crowd of staff members. It was mostly made up of the senior staff and a few of the secretaries, lab folks, and personal assistants I had come to know in my short month at Wolfram & Hart. Fred and Lorne had on cute little party hats. “What's all this?” I asked, blinking at the smiling faces and clapping hands. Well, those hands that weren't holding drinks were clapping. “Good-bye party, ducks,” Spike snorted, as if it was obvious. Emotion swelled inside of me, and for a few short hours, I could pretend my box of nightmares didn't exist. ===== Let's go already! Jareth snarled after I’d had cake, made a speech, played with Mortimer the Plant Monster, and had way too much wine. “Oh, no,” I told him, pulling the crystal out of the pouch where I had been concealing it. “You're staying right here, remember?” You can't do that! Jareth howled. Especially since I helped you find those men! “You did not. Spike found them.” Well, I tried. “You also damn near killed Trieze,” I spat back, “and I don't think you'd hesitate to do it again, would you?” ... “The only reason you helped this time is cause it was your own bacon in the pan.” If you leave me here, I will have to feed on all the same desires. Where is the variety in that? Where is the interest? “So you want to come with me because you'd get bored?” Yes! I held the crystal up to my face and sneered at it. “What's worse, boredom or starvation?” The crystal's red light pulsed thoughtfully. Starvation, of course. “Right, and there's no grantee that you're going to be as well fed anywhere else as you were here, right?” ...yes. “Good - then you agree that it's for the best that I leave you here.” ... yes. But--! “Don't but me, Mr. Goblin King. You only want to stay with me cause of that Mary Sue stuff. If you really miss me, you can go get drunk with Spike, but I grantee you that you'll get over me and go back to mooning over Sarah the moment I'm out of this reality.” He said nothing else, but I could tell that he was pouting. Imagine, a moody crystal. “Um,” Wesley said gently beside me, and I looked up to see everyone in the room staring at me with identical expressions of bemusement. Oops. “Who exactly are you talking to?” I turned to face him and lifted the glowing crystal up so Wes could see it. “Wesley Wyndam-Price, meet King Jareth of the Labyrinth.” Wesley gasped. “Is that the...!?” “The stone that opened the Creature's cage? Yeah, and I'm sorry. I accidentally brought it here with me, and I didn't mean to start that ugly ball rolling.” “Oh, I'm sure it was all an accident,” Wesley insisted, his gaze intent on the stone in my hands. He hadn’t actually said anything I said, and was entirely engrossed by the orb. He was like a kid in a candy store every time I came up with something new. Angel looked extremely annoyed at Wesley's flippant pronouncement regarding his near-death experience, but said nothing. Wesley held out his hands and I obligingly passed over the crystal. He let out a little gasp of shock and I knew that he felt the tingling sensation that meant that Jareth was sucking his desire out of him. “This is truly fascinating. How exactly is he speaking to you?” “Well, the real Jareth is back in the Labyrinth, but he's communicating with me via this crystal. He speaks directly into my mind.” “I see. Why is it glowing red?” “It means he's feeding.” “From you?” “From you.” Wesley dropped the crystal took a distinct step backwards. It bounced once and rolled a bit until it stopped, resting against my boot. Spike barked out a laugh. I bent to pick it up. “As long as you're not in contact with it too long, or you're too weak when you touch it, it can't hurt you.” Just as Wesley was about to speak, he paused, his already wide eyes growing rounder. “He... he just spoke to me,” Wesley said, his voice full of awe. “Great.” I tossed the crystal at him and he caught it, fumbling for a second but pressing it against his chest. “He's your headache now.” Well, goodbye to you too! Jareth snarked at me. Goodbye, Your Majesty, I thought back, infusing my mental tone with warmth. It had been nice to travel with Jareth for a while, even if he was a selfish prick. Sliding was lonely. I wanted him to know that I had appreciated his presence, if not his actions. “Time to go,” I said out loud, and went fishing for a blank phial. “As much as I've loved my time here, I wanna get home.” “Travel safe,” Fred said and gave me a warm hug and a peck on the cheek. “Yeah, we'll be here to bail ya out if ya need us,” Gunn added, doing the same. “It was nice meeting another Vampire with a good heart,” Angel said, and gave me a firm handshake. Wesley smiled almost shyly at me and also shook my hand. “Thank you for being such a good sport.” Spike said nothing. He just grabbed me, dipped me low, and kissed me as thoroughly as possible. When he was finished and he straightened us back up, I was distinctly out of it. Lorne laughed. “Don't think I can top that one, honey-bear,” he said and bumped cheeks with me, kissing the air. “Just take care of yourself. Pop on back any time you'd like, okay? Especially if you find yourself in Pylea. You'll wanna get outta there pronto.” “Pylea?” I said, smiling. “Who knows? Maybe the next stop will be Pylea. It would make twisted sense.” “Well, then avoid my family, toots,” Lorne said with a quirky smile and I grinned back. “If they all look like you, then why should I?” Lorne grinned large at the compliment. “Honey cakes, I'm an elf in a sea of orcs.” I laughed. With one last good-bye wave, I lifted the un-keyed phial over my head and dropped it. The glass shattered against the tile floor of the science lab, and I was gone. There was a crack and a flash and I bent my knees to soften the drop. Well, whattya know. The weaker version of the potion had worked after all. The thought that I may be able to stretch each batch further distracted me. The footing under me was slightly springy, and I slipped. “Oof!” I cried and flailed to try to regain my balance. I failed and fell onto my arse on the side of a grassy slope. I shook my head and looked around. I was sitting at the base of a small hill. Around me rolled a peaceful looking valley, a dirt road cutting along between the knolls. A patch of vegetables or two could be seen around the large-leafed, ancient looking trees. The sun was shining and the sky was mostly clear. I shaded my eyes with my hand, checked my pouch with the other briefly, and looked up. The pouch was fine, but I knew that I probably ought to spend the whole month in this realm, wherever it was, to make more phials. I wasn't keen on the idea, but with only three spares, this was the only choice. I sat still, revelling in the fresh breeze. The air was definitely cleaner here than it had been in LA. And without Jareth prattling in my head, the consistent headache Id' had since I'd gone drinking with Spike the second time was slowly fading away. The sun on my face was nice. On second thought, I didn't think I'd much mind spending a month here. Where ever here was. I looked around again and didn't recognize it. Hm. I'd always wondered if I'd ever come across a realm I didn't know. It was a possibility that this is where I was now. I climbed to my feet slowly, making sure not to slip on the dampish grass again, and noticed the hoof prints and foot prints in the pounded dust of the road beside me. Well, there were people here. That was good. I just had to pick a direction and start walking. Deciding to go right, I followed the dirt road around the bend of the hill and stopped, gasping. I was just outside of a village square. The hill had hidden it. I squinted at the square, puzzling at the perspective. It was small, so I thought it was far away, but it wasn't. It was just down-scaled. Instead of seven foot tall doors they were five feet. There was a man dragging a pig to market, but the pig was nearly the size of him. His hair was soft and curly, his feet bare and covered with hair. That struck a chord and I had to choke back a giggle. Hobbiton. I was in Middle-Earth. Cool. Book Nine: The Lord of the Rings Chapter Twenty-Five: “The Green Dragon” I headed for the pub. That seemed as good a place as any to find Mirriadoc Brandybuck or Perrigrin Took. If I did have to be here for a month to brew more potion, then it would be in good company, dammit. Because I did want to brew more potion. I just wasn't comfortable with only three blank phials. If this had been a rougher world, I may have just waited my twenty-four hours and moved on. But I knew I could find a safe enough place here to brew. I hoped. If this was Middle-Earth, it could be filled with all sorts of orcs, dark wizards, goblins, trolls, necromancers, elves, giant spiders, and any number of creepy-crawlies who could pose a danger. I tried to shove those things to the back of my mind. No, I would try to use the cash I'd made working for Wolfram & Hart to procure a room in an inn for a month and stay out of the way of whatever quests were going on at the moment. Maybe somewhere nice and quiet like Gondor, where I could vanish into the crowd easily. Of course, I would have to worry about cut-throats and murderers, but I knew how to take care of monsters of that variety. Humming softly to myself, I strolled along the rambling, amiable paths towards the town square. Tolkien had been right, of course Hobbiton really was one of the most peaceful places in the world. The whole place just set my heart and mind at ease. And I had been to several - I had comparison material. I felt like I was breathing again, really breathing, for the first time since Lucard had murdered me. How long ago had that been, I wondered. Eight months? Seven? Nine? I'd lost track already, jumping about as I did. Hm. I'd been dead for over half a year. ... I wondered if my parents were worried about me yet. If they even knew. I didn't like where this train of thought was heading, and tried to distract myself. If Jareth had been here, he would have done it for me. It had been less than an hour, and already I was feeling Jareth's absence keenly. He was a jerk and a selfish ass, but he had been someone to talk to. Yes, I wanted company, talkative company, and who better than Merry and Pippin? Providing that the Hobbits in question weren't actually out Fellowship of the Ring-ing right now. I ducked under the small archway of the famous Hobbit pub, and scanned the crowd. Conversation stopped. I smiled weakly and crouched, heading directly for an empty table. I balled myself up to sit on the chair - it wasn't too small. The legs were just short. A plump, glowing waitress came over slowly and smiled warmly. “Don't get many of the Big People in Hobbiton,” she said softly, golden curls bouncing with her nod towards me. “I'm passing through,” I replied. The conversation in the room had returned to a low buzz, although I could all but see their pointed ears swivelled in my direction. “May I have beer, please?” The Hobbit woman bobbed her head again and flounced away. Presumably, to get my drink. The buzz of voices got louder, as if trying to make up for the awkward silence moments before. Nothing to see here, folks. Just a Big Person. They were probably blaming the Tooks for my being there already. An older Hobbit man came and sat at the table across from me, a suspicious look in his eye but a welcoming smile on his face. “Just passing through, I heard you tell Rosie?” I nodded. “That was Rosie?” I wondered if it was Sam's Rosie. “Aye, that there is Rosie Gamgee, and I'm her father-in-law.” “The Old Gaffer?” I gasped, overjoyed. His eyes narrowed even further. “Yeh've been hearin' of me then?” “Ah,” I said, oh-so-intelligently. “Stories here and there.” He nodded. “And where might you be heading, that takes you through Hobbiton, Miss…?” “Marie, sir. And I'm trying to get to… ah…” Think quick! “Gondor.” Well, I had thought about it - I guess I had just made up my mind. His eyebrows went straight up into his hairline. “Gondor, eh? Gondor,” he hissed, rubbing his chin. “Damn Tooks.” Rosie returned with my drink and I pretended to sip it. “Bet every Big Person there ever was is going to go tromping though Hobbit country now, eh?” I shook my head. “No, probably not, sir. It's a very indirect route, you see.” I thought for a second, and decided to seize on this opportunity to get into contact with the Hobbits in question. “Did you say that this… Took knew how to get to Gondor?” He had said nothing of the sort. But I was fishing. I think he was already buzzed, so he may have believed that he had actually said it. “Yep.” I shrugged. “Think he'd be willing to work as a guide?” The Gaffer narrowed his eyes at me again. “Don't you think that you can come in here like that bloody wizard and just go draggin' off Hobbits. Er a wizard aren't you?” His eyes made a point of roving over my leather pants, the strange red hoodie, and my short hair. Though not as lewd as Jack, the Old Gaffer's expression said how distasteful he found short hair on women to be. Well, it wasn't that short any more. I hadn't had it cut yet, and it was just to the point where I would need to start tying it back. I shook my head. “No, sir. I'm not. Just a lost traveler.” He harrumphed at me and that ended our conversation. He left the tavern after a short word with Rosie, and I stayed where I was. I had no idea where to even begin to look for Merry or Pippin, or even Sam for that matter. One of them would eventually have to come to the town watering hole, I figured, so I would have just as much luck sitting here as I would wandering around and peering into little round windows. Now that I'd committed myself to at least leaving Hobbiton, if not actually following through and going all the way to Gondor, I'd need to speak to at least one of the more worldly Hobbits. I'd need one of them to at least help me get to Bree. Now that I really thought about it, I realized that I had no desire to stay in Hobbiton for the month, beautiful and peaceful though it was. I couldn't live or hunt anonymously among the Hobbits. I didn't want to hurt any of them, either. They were suspicious enough of me because I was a Big Person - what would they do if they knew I was also undead? No, I had to move onto Bree. I needed an urban centre. I needed other humans around me, people who looked like me so I could blend in. Maybe actually even go all the way to Gondor. It was an appealing idea. Why not? I could go east and skirt Rivendell. It would be empty now, with the last of the elves having left Middle Earth for the Grey Havens, but I could probably still spend a night there. (Presuming I was showing up at the end of the books, of course). I would love to explore the abandoned city of elves, even if I knew I would be awash in the lingering sorrow of the departed. It would be a perfect place to wait out the month, but far too unpopulated. I was a city predator, I needed people to feed from. I couldn't stay in Rivendell. After that I could cut south, skirt the foothills of the Misty Mountains, avoid the ruins of Isenguard, (if it was in ruins) and maybe find a horse near Helms Deep. From there I could ride across the plains of Rohan and if I followed the rivers south and then back west a bit, possibly reach the White City within the month. Then I could spend another brewing. If I was unaccompanied I could go over the mountains in my bat form and shave days off the trip. At night, if I couldn't find a horse, I could lope across the plains as a wolf. I hadn’t tried that particular transformation yet, but I was willing to experiment. Eventually I would reach the river. If I followed it southward enough, I'd reach the ruins of Osgiliath and eventually Minas Tirith, the White Tower. I would have to be careful changing forms. Someone might suspect me of Dark Magic and try to kill me. In fact I would have to be very careful in general. There were many people here who were good with archery. The last thing I wanted was to find an arrow shaft sticking out of my chest. What I really should do is hide in the woods for a month, but the idea of beasties that might be in there scared me. Big tough Vampire that I was, I was terrified of creepy crawlies and giant spiders and stuff. Even on the borders of the Shire, there might be nasties. I'd rather stay within civilization. I was sipping the beer, casually sopping it up with a cloth napkin I was provided to make it look like I was drinking it. I 'accidentally' spilt half off it when the Hobbits I was seeking walked in the door. The three of them looked around and spotted me. It wasn't obvious if they were looking for me in particular, but I had a feeling word had gotten around already. They were searching for someone, and I was the only Big Person in the room. “You're Miss Marie?” Samwise said, and I nodded, offering them seats with a wave of my hand. They clambered onto the benches and Rosie brought them drinks without having been asked. She lingered only long enough for Sam to give her a peck on the cheek. I wondered who was minding the kids. Sam introduced everyone at the table, and I saw that Merry and Pippin had their elvish short-swords strapped to their hips under their cloaks. I didn't blame them. I was a stranger, after all, and they'd had such bad luck with strangers recently. “You're looking for a guide to Gondor?” Pippin said, cutting straight to the point. I blinked at his abruptness. “Yes, I suppose I am. Are you willing?” Pippin and Merry looked at each other. Sam put up his hands and the meaning of the gesture was obvious - no more adventures for me. “What are you offering to pay?” Merry finally asked. There was a shrewdness in his demeanour that I found startling. I had to remind myself that this was not the bright happy Hobbit from “Fellowship”, but the battle-seasoned warrior of “Return of the King”. “What are you asking?” I countered with. I had no money, nothing that anyone in Middle Earth would take, at any rate. I had no camping supplies. No rations. Pippin had noticed. “You don't look like you have anything to offer,” he pointed out. I nodded. “I am ill-prepared for the journey. I lost all of my gear. I have no money. I was hoping that the chance to visit old friends in Gondor would be incentive enough.” They exchanged another glance. “Old friends?” Merry asked. I decided to act as if I knew who they were from the coronation ceremony. “You are friends of the King, are you not? You were at his crowning.” Another glance. More silent communication. It was getting unnerving. Finally, Merry set down his mug and said, “Yes, we'll go with you. Is it okay if we wait two days to leave? Pippin and I have some affairs to take care of. Sam has offered to guide you to Bree tonight - if you'll wait for us at the Prancing Pony, we'll procure gear. You'll have to pay for your own food, though.” I smiled. “I am a very good hunter, Mr. Hobbit. You provide the vegetables, I'll catch the meat.” After I had sucked all the blood out of the game, of course. There was more talk, more arrangement, and more agreements. Sam said dark would be coming soon and he wanted to be home before it, so he and I set out towards Bree immediately. There was a sombre stateliness about Samwise Gamgee. He was a father now, and a husband, and I knew his heart still held a place for his master Frodo. Was he writing in that red book at night? Had the War of the Ring destroyed the sunlight in his soul? I walked, professing that I would not tire easily, and Sam had borrowed a neighbour's pony. The pony and I had immediately exchanged such similar looks of distrust that Sam had actually laughed. Sam was a kind and thoughtful guide, and never went faster than he thought I could walk. Of course, I didn't disabuse him of the notion that I could only walk as fast as a human. I was enjoying the gay scenery of Hobbiton and wanted to absorb as much of it as possible before I was stuck in gloomy, grey Bree. For the first half an hour we barely spoke. I was concentrating on the landscape. Sam was concentrating on making it look like he wasn't concentrating on me. Eventually Sam said, “Who are you really?” It was rather sudden. I had been contemplating what to do in Bree, how to procure camping supplies, and I wasn't expecting his question at all. I blinked at him dumbly for a moment while my brain switched gears. “Pardon?” He pulled the pony to a stop and turned in the saddle to look at me. “You don't look nothing like any Man I've seen. You're too pale; your eyes are too bright. And I don't think you'd have any real business in Gondor. Before I let my friends go off into the woods with you, I want to know who you are.” I stopped and turned to him, a slight smile playing at the corner of my mouth. “If you don't trust me, Master Gamgee, then you took quite a risk, coming out into the woods with me alone.” Sam turned his face away. I think his cheeks may have gone slightly red. His fingers tightened in the reigns. “I wanted you away from Hobbiton.” “I gathered as much. That's very noble of you, by the way, but not much good if I had decided to kill you.” He frowned and his own hand went to the sword under his cloak, though he didn't draw it. “Are you going to kill me?” I snorted. “Hardly.” “Oh.” His face got redder, and he returned his grip to the reigns. “What do you think I am, Master Gamgee?” He looked back at me, eyes narrowed. “A wizard, maybe? I dunno you don't dress like any wizard I've ever seen. Too many colours.” I looked down at myself. I was still in the black leather pants and the warm red hoodie that Fred had given me. My pouch was around my waist under the large sweater. I had a tee-shirt on that proclaimed me a “Foxy”, but I didn't think Sam would get it. I think I looked more like a Ranger than a Wizard, but Sam was entitled to his opinion. “Can't I be what I say I am? A lost traveler?” Sam thought about that for a moment, then conceded. “I suppose. But you're not a Man either.” “No, I'm not a Man.” I knew I could trust Sam, and telling him could only make things easier. Sam Gamgee was like a dog with a tennis ball - he wouldn't let go until he'd worried all the fur off the ball and could see it for what it really was. “I don't know if there is a word in your tongue for what I am, Master Gamgee. I don't know if there's anything else like me on Middle Earth. But I promise you that I won't hurt anybody while I'm passing through.” “But you are just passing through?” I shoved my hands into the kangaroo pocket in the front of my hoodie. “I am. I'll be here for a month, maybe a little more, and then I can move on.” He spurred on the pony, which was happy to keep walking. Its skin kept crawling under the saddle. It didn't like being near me, and I think Sam was wise to that. He kept it on the far side of the road from me. I had no problems with that, and neither did the pony. “So… what are you, then?” Sam finally asked. I was wondering how long it would take before he asked. Less than I had anticipated. I shrugged. “Once I was a Man. I was attacked by a thing that was also once a Man, and now I'm not.” He sent me a sideways glance. “I am dead, because it killed me. Yet I walk and talk. I think. I am as a Man is during the day, but when the sun sets I am a different creature all together.” “Then, it's a curse?” I shrugged again. “Yes, I guess that's a good way to put it.” “And this thing that attacked you - you're the way you are because of that attack?” “Yes. Don't worry, though, I have no intention of attacking anyone and cursing anyone else. I still have a Human conscious.” Sam thought for a moment. “Do you go to Gondor to seek the cure, then?” That made me pause. Literally. I froze in my tracks. “I… do you think it's possible?” It was his turn to shrug. “Queen Evenstar is a powerful Elf. I bet she could do something for you. And I'll ask Merry and Pippin to try to catch up with Legolas and Gimli - there might elvish or dwarvish cures where there are no Hobbit ones.” “I… thank you, Master Gamgee.” “Just Sam's fine. And there's no needing to be thanking me. Folks gotta help other folks out. It's the right thing to do.” I nodded and thanked him again anyway. For doing the right thing. My heart suddenly felt lighter. I saw how this man could have buoyed Frodo through his ordeals. We chattered amiably for the rest of the journey. It was near full dark when Sam turned around at the gated wall to Bree. I asked him to spend the night, as it would be safer, but he smiled at me and told me that he had been through worse in his life than a dark forest, and he could handle himself. “Things out there you wouldn't care to imagine,” he said, smiling all the while, but I knew the things he spoke of and saw the pain in his eyes. I almost told him so, and bit my tongue. Instead, I offered him the knife that Remus Lupin had given me. “It's not much,” I said, “But it's bespelled to repel most lycanthropes and fey.” He promised to send it back with Merry and Pippin when they came to pick me up. I went into Bree with hope in my heart and an idea in my head: Was there a cure for Vampirism in Gondor? If there is… do I want it? ===== The Hobbits made good on their promise and a few hours after sunrise, we were mounted on two ponies and a horse with a strong constitution. It took some doing to get mine to hold still, I can tell you! I was all for walking, but the Hobbits insisted that the horses would cut our time in half, and maybe more depending on how hard we pushed. I finally conceded. The less time I had to spend on the road, the better, and the horse and I came to a wary truce when I forked over some apples. Sam had sent my knife back to me wrapped in white fabric, a gesture of good will. When I had secured rooms at the Prancing Pony with a roll of American pennies the night before, I had gone out and fed as heavily as I dared from the cutthroats in the alleys, and pinched all their purses. So, I now had enough Middle-Earthian coin to buy whatever we may need along the way. I had made a point of purchasing a thick-bottomed soup pot with a lid, and a spigot. It wasn't nearly as big as a regular cauldron, but I figured while we were stopped for the night and the Hobbits slept, I could work on the potion in a half-batch. I did my best not to distract myself with thoughts of what may lay for me in Gondor, the destiny that Arwen Evenstar may hold for me in her hands. Instead I listened with a keen ear and a glad heart to the tales and songs that Merry and Pippin wove out of words and tune. They were both master storytellers, and both had high, pure celtic voices for singing. When they demanded a story of me, I bowed in my saddle and admitted my lack of talent in the face of theirs. Maybe one day I'd tell them a story about my adventures, but for now I was content to listen to theirs. We passed the first night on the damp undergrowth of the forest. I would have been far more comfortable clinging to the stirrup of my saddle in my bat shape, happily upside down, but the horse was way too skittish to allow that. And I wasn't about to allow the Hobbits to catch me at it. I had sort of gotten used to sleeping in my bat form in the last world and found having to deal with long human legs and arms annoying in sleep. I made good on my promise and when Merry and Pippin began to make the fire and prepare their rations for dinner, I slipped into the darkened woods and brought them back two perfect little rabbits sans blood, of course. They were slightly concerned when I turned down dinner, saying I was full already. But, Hobbit appetite won out and they were more than happy to eat my share, too. I knew I would have to fake eating breakfast tomorrow - if I took just an apple, I could pretend to eat it and slip it to my horse to strengthen our newfound truce. Sleep was slow in coming to me, and I only became comfortable on my bedroll when I crossed my arms over my chest in mimicry of bay wings folded together. I felt foolish and cliché, but it worked. By noon the next day we were out of the woods and trotting along at an amiable pace along a beaten path in a stretch of fields. Far in the distance, I could see the distinctive, crumbled outline of the ancient mountain-top keep of Weathertop, where Frodo had received his nearly-fatal stab with the Nazghul-blade. A notable place of Hobbit history, Pippin told me. And I was going to spend my second night on the road there. How cool was that? Book Nine: The Lord of the Rings Chapter Twenty-Six: “Story-teller” “Now it's your turn,” Merry said to me, meeting my gaze over the firelight. I shook my head. “No way. I don't have any stories for you.” “Sure you do,” Pippin argued, pausing his puffing just long enough to blow the words out at me along with the fragrant cloud of pipeweed smoke. It smelled suspiciously of marijuana, but I said nothing about it. Tolkien was a sly devil. I'd always wondered why everyone went off to find something to eat after having some Longleaf. “Sam said you 'ad quite the story to tell him. Tell us.” I shook my head again, silently cursing Samwise Gamgee. Of course he'd be curious about who and what I really was, beyond what I had told him, and of course he'd set Merry and Pippin on me. Easier for them to wheedle it out of me than him. “At least tell us where you learned to hunt like this.” Merry pointed to the stew simmering in a pot over the fire. In it were vegetables, a bullion, some tubers Pippin had dug up, some mushrooms that had been growing on the side of the path, and several large rodents, sort of like mice but as big as voles. The mouse-voles had been all I could find on Weathertop's barren ruins. “And, tell us what you do with the blood. There's never any left.” I licked my lips theatrically. “I drink it.” Merry shook his head and Pippin choked on a laugh. “No really, how do you drain it so fast?” Merry insisted. I merely raised my eyebrows at him, indicating the answer I'd given was the only one he'd get. He sat back, resting against the rocky outcropping we were sheltered under, grinning slyly at me. I knew that look. It was the, 'I'll figure it out eventually' look. Merry poked at the fire with one big hairy toe, easing a branch further into the flames. Neither of the Hobbits were worried about the firelight being seen by anything below. Weathertop, they had explained to me on the ride up the steep path that led to the fortress' ruins, used to be haunted. But thanks to a Ranger named Strider, all the dark things in this area had been driven away. I knew full well they were talking about Aragorn's battle with the Nazgul over Frodo, but I didn't tell them. My hunting prowess, my eating habits, and Sam warning them that I had 'a story' was enough to make them wary of me. I didn't want to end up with one of Legolas' arrow-bolts sticking out of my chest just because I got too chatty. “Well, then,” Pippin said, tapping the ashes out of the bowl of his pipe into the fire. “At least tell us what your strange shirt says. It's not Elf-runes, it's not Gondorian.” “T'ain't Roharim, neither,” Merry tossed in. “What is it?” I had taken off my hoodie at mid-day. It had been hot. They had booth been intrigued by the sparkly glitter letters spangled across my breasts. Or, they had been interested in the breasts. It was hard to think of such short men as anything other than curlyhaired kids, but I couldn't fool myself and forget that these were two full-grown thirty-somethings. “Foxy,” I said. “It means... sexy. It's sort of a joke.” The Hobbits exchanged telling glances but said nothing. What the glances told I didn't know - they were close friends, cousins, and brothers-in-arms. They had their own silent language of hand signals, nods, and looks, and I had been way out of the loop all day. Silence fell again, slightly strained but mostly comfortable. Pippin poked at the pot over the stove with an inquiring wooden spoon, and declared it ready to eat. Merry happily pulled three bowls out of his carry pack, along with three smaller wooden spoons. I knew that outside of this, he also carried three cups and a knife for cutting up meat, and nothing else in the way of utensils. I hadn't think to bring anything like that, of course - I rarely ate solid food, and I never drank from anything except straight from the vein. I had no need for spoons, bowls, or cups. I did have my pot with the lid, in which the smudged dandelion roots and water were currently marinating. I had left the pot tied to the pommel of my horse's saddle, where it would not draw the attention of the Hobbits. When the time came for me to heat the concoction, I was confident I could do it in the embers of the nightly campfire after the Hobbits had gone to sleep. If I could get the work done at night, then I felt I could safely doze in the saddle during the day. My horse was perfectly content to follow Merry's pony without my needing to steer him. I have to stop thinking about him as “Horse” and give him a name, I thought candidly. When Merry began to dish out dinner, I managed to talk my share down to a half-portion. I split it between my mouth and the nearby scrub bushes, knowing the bushes was eventually where it would all end up anyway. Conversation picked back up around spoon-fulls of stew, and Pippin was soon weaving a story of the White Tree in the courtyard of Minas Tirith. Boromir had once told him its origins, and now he was telling me. The story wound down as our spoons were scraping the wooden bowls for the last of the broth. There were leftovers and though Merry and Pippin insisted, I did not take seconds. They shrugged, and stored the rest in a widemouthed wine-skin obviously built for this purpose. It looked like it would be mouse-vole stew again for lunch tomorrow for the Hobbits. I was perfectly content to pretend to sleep through the midday meal to avoid having to eat it. I offered to help clean up, but I was told to relax and enjoy the fire - after all, I had done all the hunting. The hunting had not been hard work in the least, but I was happy to sit back and watch them go about their cleaning up in contemplative silence. Merry began to mutter to himself under his breath. Slowly, almost seamlessly, the muttering turned into humming. Merry's mindless humming as he packed up the food was soon echoed and harmonized by Pippin. It grew into a melody, then a song, and words sprang forth like water bubbling up out of a cleaved stone. The words were rolling, long and elegant and wholly unfamiliar to me, but it did not take away from the pleasure of the listening. I sat still, mesmerized by the haunting beauty of their voices. The melody wove in and out of me, circling around me, ensnaring me in a way that I had never experienced before. I felt like the most comfortable fly in the world, lounging amid the silken threads of a very gentle spider. The notes were sweet and pure to my sensitive Vampire's hearing, and cut straight to my heart. I gasped, feeling something inside me hitching, yearning, something that was of me and yet was not mine. I was floating. I was falling. I was loosing. I began to tumble headlong into the notes, the reverberations, the timbre of their vibrating throats, the sweet ecstasy of that one perfect pitch making something inside me tighten hotly. That something inside me was enthralled by this ethereal, strange music. “S-stop it,” I managed to whisper. Was I talking to myself or to them? I was clinging to the edge of a cliff - below me was the soft grey mist, the comfort of the melody, and all I had to do was jump... all I had to do was let go. The peaceful succumbing to all tone and song terrified me - my complete compliance and subservience was horrifying and that horror rattled my teeth with fright. I felt my heart cut in two. “Stop it!” My echoing cry rent the dream. Merry and Pippin's voices died in their throats. I was not clinging to the edge of a cliff. I was kneeling on all fours on the ground, my face slicked with bloody sweat, panting like I'd just run a marathon. The tips of my fingers were digging into the sharp crags of the stones, and I felt the itching heat of the numerous tiny cuts on my palms made by pebbles. “Marie?” Pippin asked softly, hands out to shake my shoulder. “Don't touch me!” Pippin jerked back as if mere proximity to me had burned him. He exchanged a glance with Merry. Merry took the cue and said, “Are you okay?” “Wh-wha...” I said, still panting, feeling my normally-still heart banging against my ribcage with urgency. “What the hell did you do?” Another glance. “We were just singing,” Pippin whispered. “It's an Elf-song.” “No more Elf-songs,” I said. I forced myself to take deep breaths, to calm the flutterings of my soul. I sat back and stared with cool collectedness at my palms. They were already healing over. “No more Elf-songs,” I said again, “Ever. None.” The glance again. Merry and Pippin sat carefully by the fire, but I saw each of them make a point of flicking their cloaks out of the way of the hilts of their swords first. If I was about to go crazy, they would have their weapons at the ready. Maybe I was going crazy. How else could I explain the strange compliant trance I'd just fallen under? God, if Jean-Claude had ever played Elf music, I would never have made it past that third world. He would have had his rotten way with me then and there when I was too confused by the notes to fight him off. The thought that anything could have happened while I was under the trance served to horrify and anger me further. No, I couldn't let myself get caught like this a second time. I mopped at my face with the sleeve of my hoodie, grateful that my blood-sweat and the fabric were the same colour. The Hobbits had to have seen the blood on my pale face. They had yet to say anything about it. Maybe they were too scared. I folded my hands in my lap and stared at the flames of the fire, forcing myself to continue the even, calming rhythm of the deep breaths. In, out... in... out... in... out... in... I held the breath for a long time. Perhaps ten minutes of silence followed in which the Hobbits were straining to hear me exhale. They had to know something was wrong with me by now. I paid their secret glances and gestures no mind. I was too busy wondering what the Hell had just happened. What on earth had been that thing in side me that had risen to the music, so purposefully enslaving me to the beauty of the Elvish sound. Erik.. The thought was like a blow to the back of my head. I gasped and clutched my throat. This wasn't my lust for music, my longing to be lost forever in melody - this was Erik's. This was the Phantom of the Opera's. I had inherited the ability to make magic when I drank from Remus. I had learned French the same way. It made sense that I had also taken into myself Erik's passionate yearning for the world of fragile, melodic beauty. Mixed with Trieze's obsession with collecting beautiful things, the Elf-song had become a dangerous trap for me. A trap where I could be lost forever inside its floating grey realms. I looked up at the Hobbits. They were waiting for something - my exhalation, an explanation, or for me to go ape-shit. None of these things happened. Instead, I began to speak. “There once,” I started slowly, “there once was a child born with a voice so hauntingly beautiful, so mesmerizing, that people said he had inherited the music of the angels.” Merry and Pippin exchanged one last glance. Pippin let go of the hilt of his sword and picked up his pipe instead. Listening intently, he quietly stuffed his pipe with the dried leaves in his hip-pouch. Merry handed him a glowing twig from the fire and Pippin took it carefully, holding it to the bowl of the pipe. He puffed expertly and soon the weed was burning gently. He passed the pipe to Merry, who took a strong pull, then passed it back. It looked like I had a story after all. “The child was a boy,” I said softly, my voice barely audible over the crackling and popping of the fire. “To compensate for the beauty of his voice, which would have given the boy-child unfair power over men and unfair advantage over women, God took away his face.” “Took it away?” Merry echoed, his concentration intent on me, his eyes boring into my through the flames. The shadows thrown by the warm dancing light heightened the quizzical upslant of his eyebrows. “Where his nose should have been was a dark hole. His eyes were sunken and mismatched, one a starting, bulging blue, the other a small furious yellow. His skin was yellow and dry, like old parchment. His lips were mismatched and awkward, though his teeth were straight and perfect. One side of his skull never developed. Through a thin layer of his yellow skin, it was possible to see his working brain.” Merry and Pippin both recoiled in horror at my description. It did not horrify me. It only made me sad. “Poor unhappy Erik,” I recited softly. “Should we pity him? Should we curse him? He had a heart big enough for the Empire of the World. In the end, he had to content himself with a cellar. Clearly then, we must pity the Opera Ghost.” “Opera Ghost?” Pippin echoed in a puff of bluish smoke. “Erik, as the boy was called,” I said, “Did indeed have the most beautiful voice in the entire world. But his face kept any from loving him. He hid behind a mask - it was his first garment, fashioned by his mother's revolted hands. His genius was unparalleled - he was a skilled architect, lay-mason, and stonecarver. He could compose buildings as easily as he could compose music. He was a deft hand at parlour-trickery and even defter with poisons, pick-pocketing, and his deadly garrotte wire. Erik was clever enough and talented enough to get everything he ever wanted - except one thing.” “Which was?” Merry asked, captivated by my tale. His arms were wrapped around his knees as if despite the warmth of the fire singing his arm-hairs, my tale chilled him to the core. “The love of a young woman named Christine.” I smiled sadly. “Christine, like Erik, was alone in the world. Her mother had died giving her life. Her father had died several years after. Before he died, he swore when he got to Heaven that he'd send the Angel of Music to his daughter, so she would never want for anything or anyone. Her father would see her trained to be a great performer, and everyone would love her.” “And did the angel come?” “No.” I lifted my hands to the fire, feeling the heat lick at my palms like an affectionate puppy. “The angel never came.” “Then what happened?” “Christine was taken to live at a theatre, where she was trained to be a dancer. It was the same theatre that Erik had helped build. It was the same theatre where Erik secretly lived in the cellar, where the hateful stares of mankind could not reach him.” “And Erik saw Christine and fell in love with her?” I nodded. “Yes. Erik took on the guise of Christine's angel and became her secret mentor. For years he trained her voice, so that she was a match for his. He groomed her in confidence to be the perfect mate for him.” “Only when she saw his face, she was scared. I'd be scared,” Pippin admitted as he took the pipe back from Merry. “No,” I said, “Christine was never scared of Erik's face, not after the first time. The truth is, she had given her heart away to a young man named Raoul before she had even met Erik. Erik never knew that he could never have Christine's love because he had come into her life just those few years too late.” “That's tragic,” Merry admitted. I nodded. “Erik grew so angry when he found out about Raoul that he tried to kill his usurper. But Christine's tears convinced him not to, and in the end, he died of a broken heart. But Christine had pitied him, given him one night in which to show his love to her - so although the Opera Ghost was dead, he had a son that carried on his love of music.” “Did the boy have a face like his father's?” “No,” I said. “He was whole.” Pippin shook himself all over, as if to shake off the lingering terror of the tale. “Did Erik ever see his son?” “Never - Christine married Raoul and Erik died three months later. Only Raoul ever suspected that the child was not his.” “Did he hate the boy for it?” “No. Raoul loved Charles like he was his own son, because the boy had been made by a great man who had once loved his own wife very much.” Merry nodded. “That was noble of him.” Pippin tapped out the pipe and went about re-stuffing it. “That doesn't explain why we can't sing Elf-songs.” I shivered all over, myself. I met their frank eyes and sighed. “Once, I met Erik.” “You've seen him?” Pippin squeaked. I was tempted to laugh at his wide-eyed terror, but it was so genuine that I couldn't. “I never saw Erik without his mask,” I admitted, “but I'd heard the stories.” “So, what happened?” “Quite by accident,” I said reluctantly, trying to figure out how to explain what had happened without letting on that was anything less or more than a Man. I ran a hand through my hair, a short frustrated movement. “I took some of Erik's devotion and memorization to music into me. It was a silly thing to do - I hadn't meant to do it. Elf-music is the most beautiful thing I've ever heard in my life; that part of me that is still Erik's longing ... it was drowning me.” “Drowning in the music?” Merry lifted a quizzical eyebrow. “Sounds a bit dangerous, doesn't it, Pip?” Pippin nodded. “Right then, no more Elf-song.” But he had latched onto a different part of my explanation. “What do you mean, you accidentally took part of him into you?” “That, my good Hobbit,” I said, trying to force some of the old cheerfulness into my tone. It was hard - I suddenly felt hollow and empty. “That is a story for another campfire on another night.” ===== He stood over me, looking down with a sneer on his face. The firelight burned in his eyes, or maybe it was the usual golden predatory glare. I was laying on my sleeping roll on the side of Weathertop. I could feel the sharp stones poking up through the leather padding and the thick blanket. I could smell blood, and it was fresh. His feet, still in the shiny black dress shoes, were on either side of my waist. His fingers were soaked in blood, splashes traveling up his arm to the elbow. He looked like a child who'd been fingerpainting with gore. The blood was steaming slightly in the night air, collecting in fat drops on the tips of his fingers. He lifted his arms and spread his hands above my face. I knew what he meant to do but I could not move to avoid it. Fat, hot drops of blood fell onto my face, into my mouth and eyes. I screamed but there was no sound. He laughed, and kneeled down. His hips pressed against my chest as he slid forward and painted my cheeks in long, livid lines. The caresses were languorous, seductive. He was touching me and it made me want to claw my skin off, to retch in his face, to die. I would rather die than have him touch me again. But I was already dead. He had killed me. He had violated and killed me and violated me again by brining me back. He forced this hated, this half-life on me, and it was a worse torture than his hands and lips and teeth and ... and... And I could not move. He pushed gently with two fingers, just enough pressure to roll my frozen head to the side. I suddenly knew where the blood came from. The ruined bodies of two tiny Hobbits lay scattered across the camp site, limbs strewn in a haphazard jumble with organs and bone, curled fair hair wet and limp as paintbrushes, chunks of flesh and scraps of Elf-cloak. He leaned down to kiss my ear and his lips were painted with blood as well, wet and revolting against my flesh. “You belong to me,” he said, his mouth moving against my skin. His splattered hand slid down, between my breasts, pausing over the place where his fingernails had once driven deeply into the flesh of my belly. “No one but me. I have followed you, you know. I have always been one step behind you. I am your shadow. I am your reflection. The blood on my hands is the blood of everyone you have ever loved.” He touched my hands, leaving burning hand-prints on my flesh. Now it was all my fault. I felt the tears pooling in my eyes but I could not cry out, no matter how hard I shrieked. He dropped something on the stony ground, right in front of my unblinking eyes. It was a mask. A white half-mask, streaked in glowingly red blood. ===== My own shrill cries of terror woke me. I was shaking hard, panting, the tears running out of the corners of my eyes. I jerked up into a crouch, eyes glowing and teeth bared, ready to throw him off. My knife was flashing in my hand before I knew I had reached for it, prepared to use deadly force against my attacker. No one was there. The empty black night was still and silent, broken only by my ragged panting. I looked over at the Hobbits. They were peacefully slumbering, unawares, innocent... whole. I shuddered once, all over, my skin crawling and pricking with disgust. I could feel the hot slickness of his blood-smeared lips on my ear and neck and I wiped frantically at the side of my face with my sleeve, desperate to erase any mark of him. There was nothing on me. My scar burned, painfully sharp in all the places where his teeth had once driven through my skin. Not like Harry's, but in a different way. The tactile-memory of his tongue prising the wound wider, his teeth latching onto my flesh and pulling back, tearing a ragged hole in my body. I scratched the scar, trying to drive away the phantom pain. “He isn't here,” I told myself firmly. I concentrated for a brief moment, blinking away the beast-yellow in my eyes. The heatvision brought on by the change vanished, and once more the night was chill and black. I bit down on my tongue, as if to assure myself that my fangs had indeed retracted. “He wasn't here. You will go back to sleep and you will never dream about him again.” I almost believed myself this time. I lay back down and tried to sleep. I still clutched the knife in my white-knuckled grip, and it only vaguely occurred to me that I ought to be aghast at myself for being so ready to slice and hack with this deadly weapon. Since when had I become so violent? This and other disturbing thoughts kept chasing themselves around my mind. Sleep didn't come, so I stared up at the unfamiliar stars and tried to will the adrenaline coursing through my abused system to dispel. “Pitiful creature of darkness,” I sang softly, hugging myself, “What kind of life have you known? God grant me courage to ...” I couldn't finish. I was alone. ===== I didn't catch the flash of dim firelight on Perrigrin's eyes as he watched me trying to fall back asleep in terrified puzzlement. Book Nine: The Lord of the Rings Chapter Twenty-Seven: “Him” I was too exhausted, physically and emotionally, to lodge any sort of protest when the Hobbits forced breakfast upon me the next morning. Pippin was silent but watchful, and it made me wonder whether my nightmare had woken him up the night before. Merry was just as chatty and free as ever, so I overlooked Pippin's sullenness. Maybe I was just being self-centred and paranoid. Maybe Pippin had just slept on a sharp pebble and he was feeling cranky. After breakfast, we rode down Weathertop, and across the plain, making decent time. We didn't press our mounts, but they seemed eager enough to leave the steep mountain passes of Weathertop on their own. The ghosts of horrors past seemed to bother them, and I can admit I was glad to be away from that dead place myself. My fangirlishness had evaporated at sunset, when the discomfort and haunted-ness place became all too real. As we rode, we talked. The chatter between Merry and I was light and frivolous, and we spoke of a whole lot of nothing. We discussed naming my horse for an hour at least, and landed on 'Karl'. He thought it was a neat-sounding name when I had suggested it, and it was a sort of private joke for me. The actor who had played the Prince of Rohan, the leader of the Riders of Rohan, had been a Kiwi actor named Karl Urban. I patted the butter-coloured horse's neck and whispered in its ear, “Well, whattya think? Karl?” The horse snorted and I took that for a yes. Karl it was. When we got to Gondor, we'd see about finding him an Eowyn. For the rest of the morning, Merry and I spoke of nothing in particular. Pippin remained uncharacteristically silent, and when I made a motion with my head towards him, Merry shook his and mouthed, Leave him. He gets in moods. I wondered if Pippin's moods had anything to do with the carnage he had seen in Gondor. I certainly knew that sort of thing was where my 'moods' came from. I was worried for Pippin, but decided not to press him. If Merry thought that leaving him alone was best, then I would trust his judgment. Merry knew his cousin better than I did. Bad moods festered if they lasted too long. I hoped that Pippin would work his was thought his own quickly. However, our interference could only make it last longer. If we jolted him out of his heavy thoughts, I knew from personal experience that it would serve no purpose but to annoy him. Whatever it was that he was chewing on, it was best just to leave him to it. He'd join us when everything was all sorted out. Not for the first, nor the last, time, I wondered of Pippin's sullenness had been brought about by my screams last night. Merry had given no indication that I had woken him, but then, he'd smoked a lot of leaf last night. If I had woken Pippin, I could well imagine the sorts of thoughts hearing me screaming and panting, watching me writhe and then jump up to eviscerate an invisible non-entity would stir in him. Both Hobbits had battled fiercely on the plains out side of, and streets within, the White City, Minas Tirith. Both had seen death, blood, and carnage. Both had killed. Both had people try to kill them. Merry would not have been immune, by any means - that sort of mass slaughter left an impression upon a person, a watermark that overlaid the colours of the world, dimming them just that little bit. But Pippin struck me as more susceptible to dark thoughts, more fragile. He was more curious, more introspective, more perceptive, more emotive. Pippin had definitely come out the worst of it. Knowing there was little I could do to ease Pippin's inner turmoil, I turned my attention back to Merry. We chatted in the relentlessly bright morning sunlight. I encouraged Merry to regale me with as many stories as he could, for I felt sadly lacking in things to tell him. There was only so much one could say about one's friends and family before betraying the fact that one was not a citizen of Middle Earth and never had been. Besides, talking about them made my heart hurt. God, how long had it actually been since I'd thought of my parents? My friends back at school? Surely I'd put them from my thoughts somewhere in “Anita Blake”. I hadn't wanted Jean-Claude to pluck them from my mind and use them against me. I'd made myself forget about them. And I had done it so thoroughly that it wasn't until now that I had noticed that I had not thought of them at all. I felt guilty suddenly, terribly guilty for forgetting the people back at home. I was fighting to get back to them, fighting hard. Wasn't I? Enduring world after world, torment after torment, each and every characteristic stereotype of the Mary Sue. I felt worn down. I felt wary. My heart hurt every time I let my head stop leading me. Except here I was, enjoying the sunshine and the conversation, on my way to Gondor. I had enough blank phials. Why wasn't I sliding immediately when I could? Shouldn't I be trying faster? Harder? The thought made me suddenly weary and I remembered why: Dumbledore had told me. As draining as this was, is was also a gift. I had to get home. But I couldn't loose myself in the process. The nightmares hurt, yes. But they meant I was still human. I turned my thoughts away from my own aching nightmare-box and back to my family. Were my parents worried? Did they know I was gone? They had to by now - my landlord would have noticed me not returning to my apartment. If not that, then he at least would have figured it out when I hadn't paid him for the next month's rent. Work would have called. When I hadn't picked up the phone, would someone have called the cops? Would my friends have forced their way into my apartment, only to find it empty? And then what? Cops, detectives, missing persons reports, feared kidnapping? Run away? Would they arrest Rob, accuse him of killing me and burying my corpse because his café was the last place I had been seen? Was my mother clinging to my father every night, sobbing? Did they think I was dead? That I had run off? That I had killed myself? Were they mad at me, angry that I hadn't turned to them when I needed help, when I was overwhelmed with the world? Were they angry at themselves for not paying attention to me? For not 'seeing the signs'? Were they replaying our last conversation together over and over, looking for imbedded meaning, for a cry for help that they should have heard? I shook my head, forcing away those dark thoughts. How long had I been gone? Nearly a year now? Eight months, surely... I felt the leather of the reins in my hands cut painfully into my palms. I was clenching my fingers so tightly I had cut through the flesh. It was only a tiny cut, but the stinging pain brought me back to myself. Karl rolled his eyes and snorted at me, he ears against the side of his head. He could smell the blood, and it was making him antsy. I patted the side of his neck with my clean hand and he settled enough for me to feel safe that he wouldn't suddenly bolt. It was time to put this all away again. These thoughts made my head hurt, and my heart. My throat suddenly felt too tight. My eyes burned. Breakfast wanted out. I pulled Karl to the side of the path and dashed around a bush, coughing and gagging. Merry dismounted and stood behind me, a worried look on his face. When I was finished, I took his offered water skin and swished the taste of vomit away. I handed the skin back and he went back to his pony and returned it to the saddle bags. We remounted. “Miss Marie... are you okay?” he whispered after a few moments of silence. “Fine,” I lied. “Just a reaction from last night... you know. I didn't sleep so well.” Merry narrowed his eyes. “Pip said you were havin' nightmares.” I tossed a glance behind me. Pippin was watching us with shaded eyes. So he had heard. “Sometimes I get them,” I said. “What about?” I shuddered all over once and frowned. “Someone who did something very nasty to me. Something I'd rather forget, so let's change the topic now.” Merry looked slightly startled, blinked, smiled, and said, “Well, okay. What's in the pot on your saddle? Lunch?” I shook my head. “Stuff that you'd really rather not eat, Master Hobbit. Trust me. New topic.” This time Merry laughed. “Demanding! Very well then... tell me more about Erik.” I told him the story of the night Erik had been born. His father had been killed in an architectural accident, a large corner stone of elaborate masonry crushing him to death mere days before Erik's mother went into labour. She had intended to name the baby Charles, after his late father, but when she saw his Hell's Face, she had told the priest to name the baby after himself instead. The maidservant attending the birth had run to fetch Father Erik the moment the child's head had emerged from his mother's womb, and never returned. When the priest had baptized Erik and cleansed him and handed him to his mother with a blanket covering his face, he left. The selfish, frightened bastard left that broken woman alone with her living dead child. At first Erik's mother refused to feed him. If she denied him suck, he would die, and she would be rid of him. But the child cried, his angel's voice a keening wail of desperation and despair, and his mother could not resist his piteous sobs. She fed Erik, swaddled him, then set him aside in the crib that had been prepared for a pretty baby, and set about sewing his very first scrap of clothing... A mask. Despite the heat of the morning, when I finished the tale Merry was shivering. “That man never had a happy moment in his life, did he?” I shrugged. “He seemed pretty happy in Italy, when he was apprenticed to a stone mason. And when he was designing palaces in India. And when he loved Christine in France.” Merry shook his head. “I've never even heard of those places. Where are they?” “Far away,” I said with a totally straight face. Merry groaned. “You play it closer to the vest than Strider!” I smiled sadly. “Only place where I can see the game,” I said softly, mocking my own flippant reply to the last time someone had told me that. Merry cajoled. He wheedled. He whined. I told him he'd just have to wait until the next time I was ready to tell a story to find out who I was, where I was from, or how I had accidentally absorbed some of Erik's “essence”. Not mentioning, of course, that I fully intended on that being 'never'. “You won't do it to us, will you?” Pippin asked suddenly, startling Merry so badly the blond Hobbit nearly tumbled out of his saddle. Pippin had been hanging back on the trail, his eyebrows drawn together in a look of thoughtful preoccupation. He'd barely said three words together since we'd left. “Do what?” I asked, but I feared I already knew what he meant. “Absorb our 'essence'.” I saw his fingers tighten on his mount's reins. “No,” I said, and I meant it. I stiffened my spine and tried to look affronted. “You said it was an accident,” Pippin pressed. “Is this 'accident' likely to happen again?” “No,” I repeated. “That was a long time ago, when I was young and ... unaccustomed to what I could do.” Pippin frowned, but left it at that. ===== At lunch time I declined the food, citing a headache brought on by the incident by the fire the day before and my sickness that morning. Merry shrugged and accepted that, and doled out the remaining stew between Pippin and himself. Pippin ate slowly. His thoughtful slowness began to infect the rest of us, and by the end of the meal, we were all silent and staring at each other. “What?” I finally said. Pippin set aside his bowl and placed his hands carefully on his knees. He met my gaze directly and said, in a well rehearsed voice: “Don't you think it's time you told us who you are?” I scowled. I sort of had an idea that this would come, but I didn't think it would be so bluntly and so soon. “And if I say no?” I asked tartly. Merry's eyebrows ratcheted up a few notches. Pippin seemed nonplussed by my rudeness. “Then Merry and I will get back on our ponies and turn around.” It was my turn to lift my eyebrows. “Would you really do that? Just turn around and go back?” Merry set aside his own empty bowl. “We can't just leave her out here, Pip!” Pippin's scowl deepened until it matched my own. “I have the feeling that she doesn't need our protection.” I looked away, down at my feet. Suddenly the frankness in his burning gaze was too much to bear. It was too hot, too uncomfortable, and I felt the heat in his eyes transfer to my cheeks. I blushed hard, mortified, angry, embarrassed. “You don't?” Merry gasped, and then gasped again when I nodded. “Why invite us along, then?” He shifted backwards a little. “You...you don't really want to take our essences, do you?” “Of course not!” I shouted. “I wouldn't do that to you. I told you, I don't do that to people on purpose. But I... I didn't lie when I said I needed guides,” I whispered. “I wouldn't know east if it grew teeth and bit me on the arse.” I smiled, hoping the mild joke would break this animosity. It didn't. Aren’t Mary Sues supposed to be witty? “What are you?” Pippin hissed. I crossed my arms over my chest and chewed on my bottom lip. “There is no word for what I am,” I lied. There was, but it came with all sorts of negative connotations that I didn't want to invoke. “Look, I told Sam, and I'll tell you: I was once a Man, okay? I was once Human. Then I was attacked, and wounded, and I died. But I didn't stay dead, and now I'm what the thing that attacked me was. But I won't hurt you, and I won't attack anyone else. It was horrible and painful. It's not right.” Both of the Hobbits thought about this for a long time. Quietly, slowly, Merry said, “Sam said that you wanted to go to Minas Tirith to talk to Lady Arwen. He said you were looking for something.” I nodded. Sam had unwittingly just given me an out - an excuse to stay with them, a lie to play along with. “A cure. Maybe. Or peace. Maybe. Or help to get home.” And maybe I really did want a cure. Maybe. Merry sat back, satisfied for the moment with that answer. Pippin was still glaring at me intensely. “Last night,” he began, and I felt the fear and disappointment clutch at my heart. I had woken him, which means he had seen... “Last night,” he repeated, making sure that he had my attention, “you were screaming in your sleep.” “I know.” “She was?” Merry sounded startled, but only slightly. “I was dreaming of the person who did this to me.” Pippin nodded. “Where is he now? The person who did this?” I snarled, quite without meaning to. “Far away, and hopefully dead, the rat-bastard.” Merry began to crack his knuckles, a nervous gesture I had never seen him do before. This conversation definitely had him spooked. “Which him was it?” Pippin pressed. “You said him. He's gone. What him?” And then it all clicked into place. Pippin's sullenness, his worry, his anger. “I saw Him,” the Pippin in the film had said. “I could hear His voice in my head.” Him. Sauron. The Enemy. Pippin thought I was His envoy. That I was trying to bring Shadow back to Middle Earth. It made me want to laugh. It made me want to cry. I settled for a strange hiccupping sound somewhere between the two. Pippin's hand went to the hilt of his sword. “Which Him?!” he repeated. “I... I...” I stuttered. “Not the guy you're thinking of! Not Him.” Pippin climbed to his feet. Seeing things were about to take a turn for the decidedly painful, I dove to the side, rolled, and sprang up to my feet. It was faster than Pippin could follow, but I didn't go far, so he didn't loose me for more than a second or five. Those five seconds gave me opportunity to pull my wand from the kangaroo pocket of the hoodie. Pippin unsheathed his sword. Merry lunged at his friend and grabbed the hem of his cloak in an attempt to delay him. “Pip!” Merry was screaming, “Pip, for God's sake, be reasonable!” “She works for Him!” Pippin was screaming. “Let me go, Merry! You haven't had Him in your head! Let me go!” Pippin kicked back and nailed Merry square on the chin. The other Hobbit rolled backwards. His cloak free, Pippin lunged at me. I sidestepped, and he swung wide. He lunged again, and this time a slender hand poking out of a fine grey sleeve halted the fierce swing of the elf-dagger. I took a hasty step back, putting distance between Pippin and myself, held my wand warily, and looked up into the face of my benefactor. It was upswept, with fine skin and luminous blonde hair. And pointy ears. “Hold, Master Took,” Legolas Greenleaf, Prince of the Mirkwood said softly. “I taste no Shadow around her. She is free of The Enemy's Eye.” The Hobbit turned his eyes up to the elf. Legolas nodded almost imperceptibly, and Pippin sagged. His eyes rolled up in his head and his knees seemed to turn to water. Merry rushed forward and snatched his friends before he fell to the ground. Gracefully, Legolas released Pippin's arm. He moved his toes out of the way just in time to keep them attached to his foot. He turned serene grey-blue eyes to me and smiled. I took another step back. Legolas' presence was a physical thing, as powerful and invasive as a fist in the gut. Tolkien had mentioned how Elves created a sense of 'awe' in humans, but I didn't realize said 'awe' was a gripping, choking feeling. It was like Legolas had stepped up, hypnotized me into immobility, and reached into my chest and gave my heart a little squeeze. His hair, his skin, his eyes seemed to glow in the harsh sunlight. Then he moved and the spell was broken. I gasped in air, suddenly aware of the emptiness of my lungs, though I didn't need the oxygen. Legolas had turned to watch his travel companion, a puffing, red-faced dwarf, chug over a small hill a few feet away. We had set up the lunch camp-fire beside it because it was good for blocking the breeze that seemed determined to keep us from getting the logs lit. Gimli, Son of Gloin, jogged up to stand beside Legolas and glared up at him. “There's no need to be running off like a sprite, Master Elf!” he gasped, glowering with anger. Sweat ran down his face in rivulets. He wasn't wearing his helmet, nor is customary armour, though I guessed it to be in the pack on his back. “I know fair well that your legs can outstrip mine!” Legolas, whom I noted was also dressed more for travel than war, laughed gaily. “Had I not, Master Pippin would have spitted this lovely maid.” He gestured at me. I smiled, trying not to gag on the courtly prose that spewed out of their lips. At least Hobbits spoke like real people. I was also secretly flattered that Legolas thought I was “lovely”. Gimli gave me a once over, eyes boldly roaming and finding me somewhat lacking. I wondered if he was secretly comparing me to Galadriel. I returned the favour and checked them both out. Legolas was still in his grey leggings, and his elf cloak and green overlay tunic, but he also wore a vest of leather. I guessed it was supposed to act as stand-in armour, just in case they were ambushed. Gimli was similarly attired in leather pants, boots, and a cotton shirt under a leather vest. Only he was sweating in this uncomfortable afternoon shine. The Hobbits were dressed for summer, Elves don't sweat, I don't think, and I'm dead. “And why would Pippin want to spit you?” Gimli asked me at length, obviously finding no fault grievous enough to deserve the offence of being impaled with my appearance. “Whoever you are.” “Small misunderstanding.” I held my fingers about an inch apart. “Tiny. He thought I was a spy for Sauron. Which I'm totally not!” I finished hastily when Gimil's hand went for the axe hanging from his belt. “But, you know - a little cursed. Well,” I considered the space between my fingers and held my arms apart, as if measuring two good meters. “A lot cursed.” Merry, who had laid Pippin out on the ground beside the fire and was cradling his head on his knees added, “Miss Marie has nightmares. Pip thought she was an envoy of Sauron.” Legolas' blue eyes narrowed. “Why would Pippin think that?” Merry shrugged. “Pip heard her say 'him, him' in her sleep.” “Ah,” Legolas said gently. “It becomes clear.” He turned his gaze back to me. “Sarumon is not the only Him whose hurt people,” I said grumpily. I jammed my wand back into the pocket in the front of my sweater. Then I went over to my horse and patted his nose. I held another apple from my saddle pack under his lips and he eagerly accepted my offering. “C'mon Karl,” I said. “I know when we're not wanted.” “Miss Marie,” Legolas said quickly. “Do not be hasty. You cannot travel to Gondor alone, in the wild.” “Watch me,” I said and lifted my foot into the stirrup. He placed a fine-boned hand on my shoulder and I jumped slightly. Normally I could hear people walking up behind me. It didn't sound like he had moved at all. I decided immediately that I didn't like it. I hated not being able to track him and it gave me a small, freezing jolt of horror to know that I was relying on my Vampiric powers more than I used to. That I felt incomplete and wrong if something wasn't working. The thought terrified me. If I really found my cure in Minas Tirith... could I handle it? Could I really stand to be human again? I let that thought drift away, cutting it loose. “Miss Marie,” Legolas said softly, shattering my introspective torture. “Do not let Pippin's anger speak ill of him, or us. He has been tormented by the Shadow and loathes the thought of any others suffering as he and his cousins suffered.” I sighed, a long-suffering sound, and un-hitched my foot. “Fine. I don't hold it against him.” Legolas smiled a brilliant, megawatt smile and for a brief millisecond, that heart-pattering leap of awe sprang up in my breast. “Good,” Legolas said. “Then you will let Master Gimli and I accompany you to The White City? I am looking forward to seeing King Elestar and my cousin his Queen again.” I found myself smiling in response to his simple joy. His emotions were so honest, so unfettered. Then a funny thought struck me. “Now, wait - how do you know that Gondor is where we're headed? In fact, how did you even find us? “Rumours fly fast from Bree,” Gimli said simply. “Messenger birds from Sam fly faster,” Legolas added. “Ah,” I said. ===== Merry and Pippin doubled up on his pony. I took Pippin's empty one, though the beast seemed hard pressed to want to bear me. Karl snapped his teeth at the pony, clearly reprimanding him for his skittishness, and it settled down. Legolas took Gimli into the saddle before him and they rode Karl. Pippin awoke a few hours later. I heard the pattern of his breathing alter, but he didn't say anything. I looked back over my shoulder at Merry, who was concentrating on keeping them both in the saddle. I caught a glimmer of refracted light off the other Hobbit's eyes as Pippin looked around, assessing his location. His gaze met mine and he hunched lower in the blanket wrapped around him and closed his eyes again. He was downwind of me, or I would have been able to tell what he was feeling. By nightfall, we were just at the beginnings of a forest. I was starting to recognize the greenery around me as the forest that Arwen had sped through with the ailing Frodo, the Dark Riders on her tail. Maybe tomorrow, or perhaps the day after, we would reach the stream that had stopped the Nazghul. Before that, though, we stopped beside a freshet for the night. Merry went about starting a cooking fire. Gimli plunked down on a rock and didn't move. Legolas went off to collect some herbs to brew into a tea to help Pippin with his newfound throbbing headache. I slipped into the shadows of the evening and returned half an hour later warm and full, with four rabbits held by their ears. I passed them to Merry, and watched with amusement as the Dwarf's eyes grew comically round. “How did a lass like you catch four tasty morsels so quickly?” Gimli asked, watching Merry start to skin them. The pelts went into a pile he had begun to make - he was keeping the skins, probably to cure and make mittens or hats out of, or something. “And bled them, too? Nary a drop.” Merry looked up sharply. “You were telling the truth last night, weren't you?” he said, and his voice was a mix of awe and concern. “You drink the blood.” I nodded. There was a tense moment. Would they drive me away? Would they try to kill me, now that they knew what I ate? Merry pointed at me with the tip of his gory knife. “You got a spot on your cheek,” he said, then went back to carving. I raised my fingers to the cheek he'd pointed at and found a cold spot of wet blood there. Well, I'll be. I never expected acceptance. And certainly, not so quickly. But Merry had met Wizards, Men, Dwarves, Elves, Dragons, Demons, Ents, and all manner of other creatures. “You're being... calmer about this than I expected,” I whispered softly. Merry shrugged, his eyes still on the meat. “Insects feed on blood, why not you? Is that so unnatural?” “No,” I said gently, a genuine smile on my face, “I guess not, when you put it that way.” On the far side of the fire, Pippin shifted in his cocoon of blankets and sat up slowly. I grabbed a skin of water and sat down beside him. I handed him the water wordlessly, and equally as wordless, he drank. “My head hurts,” he said softly, setting aside the empty skin. “Legolas went to go get some herbs to make a painkiller for you,” I said softly. “He thought your head would hurt when you woke up again.” Pippin frowned. “I'm sorry,” he said suddenly. “I... jumped to conclusions. I assumed things about you that I never should have. Are you really going to Gondor to beg a cure from Lady Arwen?” I quirked one side of my lip. “If one exists, then yes. I never asked for this living death, and I'd be glad to be rid of it.” “Living death,” he repeated softly. “I saw your eyes glowing last night.” I snorted. “Side effect of being raped and murdered.” Pippin's eyes grew just as round as Gimli's had been, but he said nothing. I noticed the uncomfortable silence around the fire - Merry and Gimli had been listening in. I coughed and the Hobbit and the Dwarf resumed their muted conversation. Their voices rumbled and buzzed at each other in a tone too subdued for me to catch over the crackling of the flames. “Listen, Pippin,” I said slowly, “I know what it's like to be haunted by memories. Trust me.” “I do,” he said, but I cold hear the ghost of a smile in his voice. “I do now.” “I don't hold it against you, what you did today. I'm sure if I'd been through what you have, I'd do the same. Probably a lot sooner, though. I tend to have a shorter temper these days.” He shrugged. “Thank you. I still feel horrible. I just... I didn't want another war. You understand?” “Yes. Yet you drew your sword on me. Are you so eager to fight again?” I asked softly. “I don't want to be in a battle,” Pippin admitted. “But waiting on the edge of one that I cannot escape is even worse. I felt I would go mad if you turned out to be a spy for Him.” “Don't worry,” I said again. “It's all settled. I'm not.” “You're not,” he agreed. ===== Pippin was feeling horribly, horribly guilty. He drank his tea, ate his rabbit, and said nothing. When I proclaimed my intention to sneak into the woods and take a dip in the nearby freshet, he volunteered to go with me. I'd have preferred to go alone, but there was no deterring him. He felt honour bound to protect me from the things that went bump in the night, forgetting that I could bump back. “But why?” Pippin pressed. “Because, dear Hobbit,” I said, scrubbing at my scalp with my fingernails. I could feel the grit accumulate under them and grimaced. “I find it distinctly pleasant to take in a breath of air to speak, and not be forced to smell myself.” Pippin adjusted his seat on the bank of the creek, swished his oversized feet around in the water, and looked dubious. “It's just not right. Bathing.” “Where I come from, people do it at least once a day,” I said primly over my bare shoulder. I had my back to him. “Keeps away bad smells and disease.” “I knew a Hobbit once,” he said, “and he said that bathing gives you sicknesses.” I snorted. “Highly unlikely, Master Hobbit, unless he caught a case of 'just-pissed-off-the-kraken.' I hear those can be terminal.” Pippin drew himself up. “A Hobbit died from bathing last winter.” I snorted again. “Well, any idiot fool enough to go for a dip in a crick in the middle of January deserves to catch pneumonia and die.” I heard Pippin's feet swish some more. “You speak so strangely.” I shrugged. “Call it accumulated slang. I've traveled a lot. 'Scuse me a sec.” I sank under the water and scrubbed at my greasy hair as best I could without soap and shampoo. I stayed under only as long as a regular human was able to hold their breath, then resurfaced up to my shoulders. I turned, and Pippin was still sitting on the bank. Luckily, the water was just murky enough to hide my nudity, the night just dark enough, or I would had protested more at his insistence that a young woman ought not be left alone in the wilderness, even when she went to take a bath. Pippin was feeling like he had to make it up to me. “Pip?” I called. “Yeah?” “You can go back now - I'm almost done, so, I'd like a little privacy for when I get out.” “Oh. Oh.” I could hear the blush in his voice. How sweet. There was the rustle of fabric, the sound of bare feet on grass, and then I was alone. Breathing a sigh of relief, I turned in the water and stood. It was fairly shallow, so I walked over to the bank and stepped up onto the greenery. I was just a step away from my clothes when I heard Legolas' distinct voice say, “Pippin? Merry sent me to fetch you and Miss Marie. He says that if you wanted any more to eat, the fire is rea--” He came around a tree and stopped. If Elf eyes could bug out, Legolas was doing a very thorough job of it. His perfect little mouth was hanging open. “You're catching flies,” I said primly and bent to pick up my clothing. When I straightened I saw that Legolas still had not closed his mouth, though his eyes had roved considerably lower. “Pippin's not here,” I said, trying again. A violently red streak appeared on the austere Prince's nose and cheeks. “And, as you've so aptly noted, I'm naked.” “A ... ah ... yes,” he croaked. “You are.” “And you're still looking.” He snapped his eyes up and his mouth closed. “I... forgive me!” he said quickly, dropping his eyes to the ground and bowing his head in humiliated apology. I shrugged, holding the sweater over my torso. And to think, once upon a time being nude in front of a strange man had made me the embarrassed one. I'd come a long way from the victim in the shower with Remus Lupin. Legolas spoke to his boots. “I... will... ah... go tell them that you will.... be back shortly.” “You do that.” He spun on his heel and dashed back into the forest, with rather less grace than I expected an Elf to posses. Heh. ===== Several moments later found me seated by the fire, my back to a tree, finger-picking the damp knots out of my hair. When had my hair gotten so long? It used to sit just at my earlobes. Now it was well past my shoulders. Well, that was some consolation that even if my body was dead, my hair kept growing. Even if I hadn't really noticed it. I was grunting quietly to myself as I tried to work out the tangles with no comb, listening to Gimli spin a poem about the legendary battle at the Lonely Mountain between the Riverfolk, their allies the Dwarves, and the Dragon. I knew this story. I'd read “The Hobbit” in grade school. He had left the part about Riddles in the Dark out, and I was in no way tempted to interrupt and remind him. “Let me,” I heard Legolas whisper into my ear. I jumped. Again with the moving so I couldn't hear him! He touched my shoulder and I obligingly leaned forward. He folded himself into the space between my back and the tree, tucking his legs on either side of my hips. I felt the smooth zing of a comb through my hair and sighed. Okay, I'll admit that Legolas was acting a little more girly than I would have expected, offering to comb my hair and all... He was closer to Fannon!Leggy than Cannon!Leggy... but it just felt so nice that I didn't dare protest. Of course, he had also just seen me naked. This whole shared grooming thing could be natural to Elves, or his way of apologizing, or his way of trying to get closer 'cause he had liked what he'd seen. Gimli's voice became a vague buzz of comfortable white noise and I let my chin rest on my knees, breathing gently, enjoying the scent of the wood smoke and Elf. When my hair was smooth and laying against my back, I felt him quickly and deftly wind braids into the hair above my ears, in imitation of his own style. Then he pressed something small, rectangular and wooden into my hand. I looked. It was an intricately carved but simple comb of wood. “You keep it,” he said. “I can make another.” “Thank you,” I said. “It's beautiful.” Legolas smiled gently, and removed himself from behind me. He returned to his place in the circle. Gimli gave him a slanted look under his bushy red eyebrows, but went on with his tale. Merry and Pippin didn't seem to have noticed that Legolas had moved. I lay back against the tree and closed my eyes, smiling softly. Legolas' fresh woody scent still clung to the air around me, and it lulled me into a deep and dreamless sleep. Book Nine: The Lord of the Rings Chapter Twenty-Eight: “Leggy-Sue” The next evening, we camped beside another stream. After my splashing soapless bath, Legolas once more combed my hair free of tangles for me. As he re-braided my hair, he said, “Though we have traveled together for a single day and night, I feel, Miss Marie, as though I may trust you completely.” Uh-oh, I thought. ===== Gimli wanted to ride with me the next morning. The pony could not bare both of us and I couldn't control the horse with Gimli in front, so we were spared that embarrassment. With his flexible bow, Legolas shot a serpent on the path by my foot when we stopped for breakfast. The poor thing would never have hurt me, but Legolas was trying in his Elfy way to be macho. Gimli offered me some of his Dwarven Whiskey at lunch. Legolas suggested Gimli take the pony after lunch and I ride with him on Karl. Luckily, the pony wouldn't obey Gimli, so again we were spared. Gimli recounted his deeds at Helms Deep. Legolas told fantastical tales of his childhood in the Mirkwood. Gimli described the Sparkling Caves. Legolas launched into Sindarian poetry. When the sun set I shouted, “Okay! Hey, let's stop! I need some exercise.” The two Hobbits, who had been watching what had been happening all day and laughing their furry-footed asses off about it, exchanged a confused glance. I jumped off the pony before anyone could protest and said, “Whew! Wow, isn't walking nice! In fact, I like it so much that why don't you lot go on ahead and I'll meet you at camp, you know, when you stop.” “We can't do that, lass!” Gimli began to protest. “It isn't noble, nor honourable, nor--” “Stop!” I said. “Please, God stop. I will be fine. Just go. Go ahead. For a little while. Please.” Gimli tried again. “But lass--” “I don't need your protection and I don't need to be patronized!” Gimli blinked. A look of hurt crossed his face and I immediately felt guilty. He had just been trying to look out for me. He was just trying to show his... strange, Dwarvish affection. Legolas looked like he'd just won. Damn. “I will walk with you,” Legolas said and leapt down from the horse before I could protest. “Walking is very good exercise indeed, and I would not mind walking after riding all day.” “I appreciate the offer, hon,” I said, “but I really really want to walk all by myself.” Legolas frowned slightly, but remounted. The Hobbits each took a pony and I watched with a grateful sigh as all four men faded into the night as they walked away. I held my breath until all sounds of them and their horses vanished from my ears. Silence. Beautiful, wonderful silence. No pissing anywhere. No testosterone. Nobody trying to one-up one another. I transformed into a bat and mounted the cool night winds. Gorgeous, lovely silence. I flew high up over the path. I could see them again in the distance, but they were too far below me to hear. I flapped a bit faster to keep pace with them, high above their heads. Only once I caught the blonde flash of Legolas looking up at the sky. If he saw the little black bat silhouetted against the stars, I'm certain his Elf-eyes weren't good enough to catch me sticking out my little pink tongue at him. ===== I landed a little ways into the woods a few moments after they stopped to make camp for the night. I took my time walking to join them, still smiling from my reprieve, and noticed that they had chosen to stay close to the stream again. I wondered if it was for the convenience of water, because they knew I would want a bath, or because a certain Elf Prince was hoping to 'walk in on me' again. I wasn't entirely sure how to handle this. In all the Lord of the Rings Mary-Sue fanfiction, it's always Legolas, poor Out-Of-Character Legolas who falls hard and fast for the female character. He becomes a poetry-spewing chivalrous knight who would do anything up to and including dying and/or giving up his Immortality for his New Lady Fair. Whom he has usually known for about five minutes. He ceases to be Legolas Greenleaf, brave and wise Prince of the Mirkwood, and becomes a giggly metrosexual Leggy-Sue. Gag. It was enough to make me want to be ill when I read it. I couldn't believe was I living it. ===== I did not bathe that night. I think Legolas was disappointed. ===== As we travelled, it became increasingly clear that Gimli had conceded to defeat, and Legolas was in hot pursuit. Ever been woken up by a kiss? Yeah, sounds romantic. Feels like suffocating. Feels too much like dying that first time. I screamed, shoved him away harder than I had meant to. He had smacked into a tree and was dazed for the rest of the morning. I felt awful. Merry thought it was the funniest thing he'd ever seen in his life. “Did you see him fly?” he kept chuckling, and Pippin would dissolve into another fit of giggles. I explained the Legolas at lunch how exactly I had been 'attacked', and he felt sorry for trying to wake me the way he had. From then on, he slept close beside me, but did not touch me until I touched him first. More than once, I woke wrapped around the mussed looking Prince, and wondered when in the night I’d reached over, exactly. But he never did anything that I didn't do first. Which ended at holding in my sleep by accident. If I had a nightmare, he would shake me awake before it got too bad. Suddenly, it was nice to have someone to sleep beside. And he was warm, too. And smelled good. And did I mention that he looked a lot like Orlando Bloom? Days, then weeks fell away in our travels. During the day Legolas would wax poetical about his home, or Gondor, or his travels. At night he would ask me to describe where I was from, what my family was like, and where I was headed after Arwen gave me a cure. I would brew the potion when they were all asleep, changing into a bat to wriggle out of Legolas' arms without waking him. He rarely slept, so I had to be quick. In the evenings, Legolas tried to hold my hand, and brush my hair, and cuddle by the campfire. It took him a while to understand that I drank nothing but blood, so he could stop trying to fetch water for me. The funny thing was, as annoying and smothering as it all was, it was nice, very nice to have a handsome young man doting on me without trying to get into my pants. Leggy-Sue was a perfect gentleman. He kissed all right, nibbled on my earlobe when he thought nobody was looking, whispered things like “I would like to show you a secret place in the wood, if you would care to accompany me.” But when I said “no, thank-you”, he was not angry nor insolent, not rude. He did not push, or yell, or threaten, or cajole. He was unlike any other person I've ever had after me. He just smiled and nodded as if my answer made him perfectly happy, and went back to his nibbling or hair brushing. I should have pushed him away. I should have told him he was wasting his time. But it felt so nice to be respected, to be liked, to be held at night, and not lusted after like some sort of cheap trophy, that I couldn't bring myself to do it. Was it wrong? Yes. Was I enjoying it? Yes. Did I feel guilty? Well, I should have... Time passed quickly with the Merry, Pippin, Gimli and Legolas to entertain me with stories and songs. I began to sing for them, short bits of Webber's Phantom score when they pressed me, and called it “Erik's Music”. I told them the story of a ship full of pirates who had been cursed by the heathen gods, and a young man named Will who looked an awful lot like Legolas who helped the dastardly Captain Jack Sparrow save the day. I stretched the tale out, so it took several afternoons to tell. Then, at night I taught them the pirate song. And there is nothing quite so amusing as two Hobbits, and Elf, and a Dwarf sitting around a blazing campfire singing: “We're horrid, we're rotten, we're really bad eggs! Drink up me 'earties, yo ho!” ===== Before I knew it, we had skirted Rivendell (Elrod had abandoned it and all the other elves had gone Over The Sea), passed over the Misty mountains, and were riding into the haunting beauty of The Golden Wood. Gimli seemed inconsolably sad. “What's wrong?” I asked. “Ah, lass,” he said softly. “The Lady of the Wood is gone to the Gray Havens. I thought the sight of this place would cheer me, but it makes me remember her sweet smile with much sorrow.” “You mean Galadriel,” I said softly. “Was she really as beautiful as I've heard?” “More,” Gimli said. Legolas seemed to think this was a fine time to launch into stories of Galadriel's virtues, not forgot among them her kindness, her skilfulness with a loom (she had personally woven each of their grey cloaks), and her ability to perceive the future, as skill honed and shared only with Elrond of Rivendell, though the potential for it was in every Elf's blood. “The mirror!” Pippin said suddenly, interrupting Legolas’ tale. “No there's an idea, eh Merry? Maybe if Miss Marie looks at the mirror, she can find the cure for her sickness.” Merry shrugged. “Maybe Pip.” “Or maybe I'll be forced to relive what was done to me to make me this way,” I said, shaking my head. “I have no desire to peer into Galadriel's Mirror,” I said darkly. “Besides - Galadriel herself has gone to the Grey Havens. Who'll operate the thing?” Legolas and Gimli exchanged a glance. “The lass has a point, ye ken,” Gimli said knowledgeably. “It will work if you desire it so,” Legolas said, his head titled to one side in a romantically philosophical manor that would have done Percy Shelly proud. “Oh, fine,” I grumbled, “We'll try it.” ===== We made camp high in the Mellorn trees, on the flat bowers of the long-lost High Elves. Then Legolas led me to the mirror, my arm in his. “Do not fear what the mirror shows you,” he said gently. “It cannot harm you. It can only show you what may come to pass, not what will.” “I know,” I said. But I was still scared. He kissed me gently on the cheek. “Be brave, my dear,” he whispered. He stood at the top if the steps, hands folded patiently before him. I walked down the stairs and into the glade alone. I walked over to the stone basin, and peered in. Water from rainfalls past sat serenely, bulging precariously at the rim, balanced at the moment between overflow and safety. It made a perfectly smooth mirror, and for the first time in weeks, I saw my own reflection. I willed my face to reflect and it appeared, in oily blobs, on the surface. My hair was indeed long, and I noticed that the braids over my ears were actually quite fetching. My skin had paled even more since I'd been at Wolfram & Hart, despite my having been out in the sunshine for three weeks straight. It appeared as if Vampires were just pale, period. My eyes had grown brighter, the blue almost a radiating glow. I wondered if it was some sort of supernatural reflection of the intense magic that was always around me in Middle-Earth. My eyes certainly hadn't glowed like this elsewhere. I sighed and shifted back. Galadriel's Mirror was just that. A mirror. I saw no images of the past, no prophesies of the future. Just my reflection. I wasn't quite Mary Sue enough to make a magic mirror work without the person whose magic it relied on being alive. It was actually a bit of a relief. And then my reflection winked at me. Damn. Guess I was Mary Sue enough after all. In the reflection, my reflected self smiled at me, then turned so I was looking at the back of her head. Over her shoulder, I could see Alexander Lucard. He was bloody. A line of bright crimson wound its way down his nose from a bullet hole in his forehead. He was snarling. He was standing in someone's kitchen. I didn’t recognize it. Something happened, an explosion that I couldn't see the source of, and Lucard flew at my reflected self. Myself shot a spell at him and he dodged. She shot another, desperately, and he dodged again. He got his hands on her throat and broke her neck neatly. “No!” I screamed. The water rippled. Trieze Khushrenada was standing in a whitecarpeted living room. He was drinking from a long-stemmed wine glass. I knew, inside of me, that it wasn't wine. He was chatting amiably with my father, both men nodding and smiling as if they were the best friends in the whole world. My mother and a girl were seated on a matching white couch, sipping various red liquids and laughing, watching the two men with approving glances. I was not there. I jerked back. The spell was broken. My reflection was no longer on the surface of the bowl. Two visions. In one, I was killed by Alexander Lucard in a fight involving an explosion and my wand. In the second, my whole “family” was together, and liked each other. I don't know which vision disturbed me more. I wound my way slowly up the stairs. Legolas was waiting for me. He had a serious expression on his face. “I heard your cry,” he said softly when I mounted the last stair. “What disturbed you?” “I had two visions,” I said, not seeing any reason to lie to him. “In one, I was killed by the man who cursed me. I fought him, but he dodged me and broke my neck.” Legolas pursed his lips thoughtfully but said nothing, nodding to encourage me to continue. “In the second,” I went on, “my parents were talking pleasantly with my son. My adult son.” Legolas' eyes brightened. “You will have a son? What does he look like?” I knew the Elf was fishing. Blonde hair, blue eyes, pointy ears perhaps? He was hoping that I would have seen that the son looked like him and that we were really meant to fall desperately in love after all and I would change my mind and stop being so distant from him and fall-in-love-for-happily-ever-after. Instead I said, “That future will never happen.” “Why?” Legolas asked softly, his voice dropping into the realm of huskiness. His slender fingers brushed the back of my hand, it what was meant to be a comforting gesture. Suddenly, all his attentions weren't endearing. They were annoying. “Because,” I said, “my son has been dead for three months.” Legolas went ashen white and jerked his hand back. I walked away into the darkness, ignoring his pain in favour of my own. I really was a bitch. ===== I wandered the Golden Wood. I was reliving my time with Trieze. Until now I had not thought of him at all. I had not thought of him, or what I had done to him. I hadn’t even really thought of him as my progeny, but the first time I had spoken about him aloud, just now, I had called him ‘son’. Clearly, I thought of him as something close to me, something from me. But I had never recognized this feeling in myself before. I had never claimed more than a passing affection, lust really, for the General. And he had never done anything to indicate that he saw me as anything more than an ill patient with a penchant for miraculous healing. There had never been anything between us even remotely familylike. I was his mother, in the same sense that he was now my son through Vampirism. But it wasn't until I had seen his face in that pool that I had even thought of it in those terms. That I had even called up his image at all. Did that make me a bad person? Wufei Chang had taken his life, and I had given him another at his own insistence, so that Wufei could take it again. I had not done to him what had been done to me. I had not murdered him and given him no choice. But what he had become was not what he had expected. In a way, I had sort of lied to him. Then I had left. I pushed him into a strange reality and went on my way. Abandoned. I never thought about his own pain, or his own confusion. I had put him somewhere with trustworthy people, but could that ever make up for having me, his maker, his Sire, there? Was I just as bad as Lucard? Was I Lucard? The thought my heart twist, my bile rise, and I spent the next two hours crying among the Mellorn trees of Lothlorien. What had I done? ===== Legolas found me sitting on the ground, my forehead on my knees, my arms around my legs. My head hurt from the crying. He sat down beside me. He put his arm around me, and I let him. He was warm. It was gentle. It made me feel safe. I felt guilty for yelling. He should have been mad at me. I was mad at myself for being so rotten to him. He hadn't deserved what I'd done. But he didn't seem to hold it against me. “You had a son?” Legolas asked softly. I nodded and sniffled. “Yes.” “And he died three months ago,” the Elf said quietly. “...yes,” I lied. More or less. He had died. “I see then why you are so reluctant to open your heart.” He whispered it against the crown of my head and I could feel his cheek resting on my crown. “You have been hurt deeply by your loss.” I didn't correct his assumption. “How old was he?” “An infant,” I said. I figured that was close enough to the truth. If it made Legolas feel better that I was rejecting him because I was heart-sore over the loss of my baby, then I was loathe to dissuade him of that illusion. It certainly made me feel like less of a monster. “I see.” The hand on my shoulder slid down to tuck against my waist, pull me closer to him. “Why did you have a child out of marriage?” I snorted softly, amused by his medieval assumptions. “Who says I have to be married to have a kid?” Legolas looked serious for a moment. “Was it an accident?” I nodded. “Were you... violated?” “I did it because it needed to be done,” I said. I said it vaguely enough that it remained truth but didn't say anything outright. Any conclusions Legolas jumped to were his own, I told myself. Ri-ight. “There was no other way. There was a war going on - if I hadn't, the war would never have stopped. Then I had a son. And now he's dead.” Legolas nodded, no doubt commending me mentally for doing my duty as a citizen of wherever it was he thought I was from, for doing what I could to bring peace to my people. He assumed I slept with someone at said someone's demand in order to stop a war and became with child from it. Then the child had died when I had been attacked by the man who had laid this curse on me. I did not dissuade him of this illusion. It was a nicer story than the truth. It didn't make me feel like a selfish bitch. “What was your son's name?” he asked eventually. “Trieze. Why?” “That's a nice name, Trieze.” He tested it on his tongue. “Names have power,” he said to me. “True names. A name holds power. Names hold the essence of a person. To know one's name is to seize their essence. To call a name is to call an essence.” His line of reason was easy enough to follow. “You mean to call up my son's essence?” “To give you closure,” the Elf insisted. “When we arrive at Minas Tirith, Arwen and I can do the Mourning Ceremony for you. Call up the child's essence so you can bid it farewell. Then the boy can go to the Grey Havens with a light heart and you can live your life in peace.” And be free to be all yours, I thought spitefully, but didn't say. Instead, I said, “Thank you, Legolas, but I think Trieze is happy where he is, and I do not wish to disturb him.” If it worked and the real General Khushrenada showed up, he'd be pissed and I'd have a lot of quick talking to do. I’d have to face up to what I’d done to him. It wasn't all that appealing a thought. ===== I could hear singing in the air as Legolas and I walked back to camp. “You can drink far and wide!” The voice were high and pure and immediately I recognized the Hobbits. It made my heart feel lighter. “You can drink the whole town dry! But you'll never find a Beer so brown as the One we drink in our old town!” When we got closer, I could hear Gimli's rumble underneath, quieter because he didn't quite know the words. Legolas and I exchanged a glance and I joined in. “You can drink your fancy ales! You can drink 'em by the flagon! But the only brew for the brave and truuuuuuuue ~” Legolas and I came around the corner and I jumped into the circle of firelight and wailed: “Comes from the Green Dragon!” That earned me a pair of delighted smiles from the Hobbits, a scowl from the Dwarf, and a blink of confusion from the Elf. I think Legolas expected me to be more gloomy. On our walk back, I had decided something. Trieze was a fully capable young man. He was a General. He was a brilliant strategist. He was a near genius. If my 'gift' didn't quite turn out the way he had expected it to, he of anyone would have learned to cope with it, to milk it for its good points. Perhaps I had abandoned him, but he probably wouldn’t be as resentful about it as I had felt. Whereas I thought of Vampirism as a curse and a humiliation, he would see it as a gift. He would look on the bright side. I didn't have to worry about Trieze. I could still feel guilty for not sticking around and guiding him through his first few weeks, but those weeks were done and gone. I hadn't been there, and I couldn't go back and re-do it. All I could do right now was focus on getting home. Once I had phials keyed to my home reality, then I could venture out again. Then I could try to find my son, whether he was still in the Gundam reality or if he had taken my advice and gone to see Dumbledore. Or, if he had ended up somewhere else. But I wouldn't do it until I knew that I could bring him home with me. I would want a stable reality for him. I didn't want to drag him through the fandoms like this. I wouldn't wish Slipping on anyone else, if I could help it. It was just too hard on the heart, and on the sanity. Having made that decision, I felt better, and the raucous spirit of the drinking song was easily infectious. It made no sense to let myself get depressed over something that I couldn't fix just yet. We sat around the campfire and talked, and sang, and laughed far into the night. I was in such a good mood that I didn't even mind it when Legolas started to make out with me. Dude - can Elves even make out? It just doesn't sound English enough. Book Nine: The Lord of The Rings Chapter Twenty-Nine: “For A Single, Floating Moment...” Almost exactly a week later, I watched with awe as the White City came into view over the rise of a gentle hill. We stopped our mounts on the swell and gazed at the chalky stone of Minas Tirith with varying degrees of wonder, breathlessness, nostalgia, and happiness. “It's beautiful,” I said, and I meant it. “I think it may just be the most beautiful thing I've ever seen.” Legolas reached out and grabbed my hand. He squeezed once. “Second most beautiful,” he said with a smile. I smiled back. I really don't think I have to sell you on Legolas. Although our conversation in Lothlorien was still a sore point, we had come a long way in a week. When you spend twenty-four hours a day with someone, you can't help but become close. When you hunt for each other's food, trust each other to watch backs, when you share stories and stews and songs, then you and four other people become a tightly knit family. No matter what was said, you come to rely on each other. It became less strange to touch one another - pats on the shoulders, punches in the arms, or in the case of a certain Elf, becoming my living teddy bear. A teddy bear that did a very good job of scaring away Lucard in the dead of night. It was no longer strange to the company for me to vanish into the woods the moment we stopped to make camp for the night, and return an hour or so later with their dinner, completely bloodless. I enjoyed those few hours of solitude. The forest was mine, then, my hunting ground, my territory. If there was no forest, then I would speed off over the plains, duck behind a rock where they could not see me and change into a bat so I could scan the ground for life with my sensitive echo-location. I would hunt. I would kill. I would feed. Then I would carefully wash the cold blood of my chin and rinse out my mouth, or chew on some grass, so that when Legolas kissed me, he wouldn't taste death. Leggy-Sue really was a wonderful person. He was handsome, thoughtful, gentle, honest, and poetic. He held me when I slept and chased away the nightmares. He was smart and kind and a very good kisser. And I was lonely, god was I lonely. I think I was in very real danger of being in love. ===== The ride up the spiralling city streets was leisurely and enjoyable. In the same way that the past week had been leisurely and enjoyable. Nothing more pressing than a chilly wind one night had plagued us on our ride through the flatlands of Rohan and the beginning of the hills of Gondor. I had spent many a warm, sunny day in lengthy conversation with Merry, Pippin, Gimli and Legolas, and many a warm, comfortable night whispering in the dark to the Elf who lay beside me on a bedroll. We had talked about his family, about my family, about growing up in the Mirkwood, and the fun to be had at dance clubs, and the shared tedium of parents who try to drill table manners into their children. He would kiss me softly on the lips before I fell asleep, and kiss me gently on the cheek to wake me up. If I was cold he sit behind me and wrap his long slender legs under my crooked knees, fold them under and suddenly I was sitting on his lap. He would draw a blanket around both of us, wrap his arms around my shoulders or my waist and rest his chin on my shoulder. At first Gimli would give him frosty looks, but that faded and I was left with a warm Elf-blanket and a friendly, whiskey-sharing Dwarf. Merry and Pippin didn't quite know what to make of Legolas' sudden and obvious interest in me, especially since I had tried very hard to not fall to his charms at first. Now that I had given up on that and was enjoying being taken care of, they weren't quite sure how to take it. “Well, do you love him?” Pip asked when he and I went to fetch fresh water one afternoon. “That's a bit personal,” I countered. “All's I'm saying is,” Pippin said agreeably, “Legolas seems the serious type, and it'll do no girl any good to say no to him when he's got his mind set. I just want to make sure that you're okay with being set on.” I had shrugged and smiled and said, “For now, he makes me happy. He makes me forget what I am and what was done to me. I haven't had a nightmare in days.” “I noticed,” Pippin said, smiling ruefully. “We'll see if things change.” I had reached out and taken the bucket from Pippin. It was not too heavy for me, not with my added strength, and he seemed relieved to be free of the burden. “For now, I'm just fine with things the way they are.” “Legolas will want you to join him and Gimli, or go back to the Mirkwood and live there with him. Think you could stand living with Elves?” “Arwen can stand living with Men.” Pippin nodded, conceding the point. “So you've got no desire to sneak out into the forest with his Elf-ness?” Pippin said, shaking his head. “Poor boy. His slacks must be awful uncomfortable.” Somehow the bucket had up ended over Pippin's head, then stuck like a bad helmet, though how it had gotten there, I couldn't tell you. ===== As pleasant as the journey was, there were things that weren't being said. I didn't want to talk about them, but if things went too much further with Legolas, I would have to. There were other problems, of course. He kept treating me as if I were human. He never forgot that I did not eat and drink like a human, but he did other things, like worrying about the cold or fearing I would get hurt. Legolas never watched me feed, and in fact I think he forgot that I drink blood. We did not speak of Trieze, nor of my journey, nor of my curse. Nor of the fact that... I couldn't stay with Legolas. I knew it, deep in my heart I knew it, but I couldn't bare to bring it up. I needed Legolas right now. I needed to be wanted. I felt horrible that I wasn't being honest with him, but right now, I couldn't afford to be. My sanity was fragile enough as it was. He didn't know that I couldn't stay, that I wasn't from here and I had made a vow to find home, and then find my son. And I wouldn't take Legolas away from Middle-Earth. He would be miserable in the real world. So I clung to him, to the warmth and protection, and affection he provided, happy to be wanted as a person for once, and not as a body, or a pawn, or a Mary Sue. And I closed my eyes to the future and looked resolutely away. ===== When we rode across the battle pocked plain outside of the White City, I was almost sad to be there. I was really starting to enjoy my time with Legolas, and my new friends. But everyone else was happy to be there, excited to see Aragorn and Arwen, and that included our rides. The ponies enjoyed being in civilization again, and Karl was having a grand old time, prancing up the cobbled streets with his neck arched. He sure felt special. I'm sure they were all just envisioning the juicy apples, dry hay, clean water, and warm stalls that Merry had been promising them since we left Bree. All around us, people nodded and bowed, shouted hellos. We were not a hard group to mistake. How often to an Elf and a Dwarf willingly travel together? Who else could be on Karl but Gimli and Legolas? And what two Hobbits could possibly be with them besides Perrigrin Took and Merriadoc Brandybuck? And who in Gondor didn't know their part in the War of the Ring? If the people didn't know who I was, or didn't recognize me, they paid me little worry - I traveled with four men who were welcome guests in Gondor, so I had to be good and safe. It was a given. I heard the guard at the first city gate say, “My Lords Legolas and Gimli. Ah, and Lords Merriadoc and Perrigrin. Welcome back. Is King Elesar expecting you?” “No, he is not,” Legolas had said. “It's sort of a surprise, you see,” Merry had said. “So don't tell 'im, eh?” “And the lady?” the guard asked amiably. I stiffened. There was going to be trouble. There was always trouble when somebody noticed me. Legolas reached out and touched my head gently. “She is with me.” “Oh, and us!” Pippin said. “We're her guides you see.” The guard laughed and I blinked in wonder. He bowed low, said, “My Lady,” and opened the doors for us. And just like that, I was part of their group. I was accepted. And a chill shadow settled in my bones because they thought I was safe, trustworthy, welcome, and I knew that I could kill them all with a word and a gesture. I was a damned creature with no soul. I shivered once, all over. “I'm not used to it,” I whispered. “Used to what now, lass?” Gimli asked, adjusting his axe so it gleamed showily in the late afternoon sun. “To being liked.” The four Middle-Earthers exchanged sad smiles. “There's nothing that's not to like,” Pippin said softly. I think I smiled, but it felt flat and grey. “There's lots not to like. I just haven't shown you.” We rode in comfortable but worrisome silence through markets filled with jostling shoppers and eager well-wishers. Everyone wanted to catch sight of the Saviours of Gondor and the Lady with them. Word traveled fast in the White City. At the second gate, the guards smiled and shouted, “Welcome back, my Lords!” and waved us through with nary a glance. By the third gate I had been noticed and some woman handed me flowers as we passed. “My Lady,” she said, and curtseyed. “Oh, don't do that,” I said, feeling embarrassment making my cheeks burn. “I'm not anyone's 'Lady'.” She shook her head, smiled, and walked back into the crowd. Legolas sprang off Karl, leaving a rather disgruntled Gimli with the reigns, and came to walk beside my pony. “You are my Lady,” he said. “My Lady Marie of the Dagger Tongue. Sharp, quick to cut, and bright.” I stuck said tongue out at him. I jammed the end of the makeshift bouquet into one of the saddle packs, so the flowers stuck out at a strange angle. “Why am I your Lady?” I asked. The thought of being Legolas's Lady made me all warm and squiggly inside. Legolas smiled at me. “That is a very easy question to answer. You are beautiful. You are kind. You are intelligent. You have a wonderful laugh. You are brave. I admire you greatly, and feel great affection for you. Why should you not be the Lady of my heart?” “I'm not brave,” I said softly. “Yes, you are,” Legolas insisted. “You gave your body to a man you did not love to end a war. You gave life to a son, you raised him alone, when you knew that it would not be welcomed. You undertook a journey alone to protect that son. And even though that child was taken from you, you continue to go forward. How is that not brave?” His earnest glare made my eyes water. I jerked my hand back, and the chill in my bones got colder. Legolas admired me for things I had never actually done. “I'm not brave,” I said again. I squeezed my eyes shut and turned my face away. “I'm a coward and a filthy liar. I'm a monster.” Legolas squeezed my hand again. “Not by choice.” “Because I hafta be.” “Nothing you say can make how I feel for you vanish,” he said with honesty so earnest it made my chest hurt. “Nothing.” He didn't understand. I was a monster. I was. And it wasn't because Lucard had forced this on me. And it wasn't because I pushed my friends and family from my mind. And it wasn't because I killed and drank blood. And it wasn't because I could take the shape of a bat and fly. And it wasn't because I had killed a man. It was because I had brought him back. And then left him. And couldn’t even admit it. It was because I was a coward. ===== We were received in the courtyard with the withered-looking White Tree of Gondor. A single, fragile white bloom flowered on a branch, and I suddenly felt filthy, dark and dirty. A black smudge of soot on this fair city. This pure city. I turned to go. I should not have come. I should slide and get out of there right now, before I did something so horrible that it stained the soul of Gondor forever. “Do not fear,” Legolas said, wrapping an arm around my shoulders to keep me from slinking away. “They will like you greatly.” “We'll see about that,” I muttered. ===== We were given time to bathe and refresh ourselves before being brought before the King and his Queen. The valets assured us that the King had only been told that someone had arrived to see him, and not our names. The surprise would hold. The Hobbits and the Dwarf we led off in one direction, and Legolas and I in another. “Um,” I said, when we were shown into a room with a really big bed and a really big bath. I turned to the guard and said “Um,” again. The guard laughed and winked at Legolas. “Newly weds, aye lad?” A flag of red appeared on Legolas' cheeks, but he did not correct the guard's assumption. The man left, closing the heavy stone door behind him. I detached myself from Legolas and moved purposefully to the other side of the bed, putting a little distance between us. “Newlyweds?” I echoed. Legolas shifted uncomfortably. “Well, I suppose my affection for you was... blatant. To the Men, I mean, and when affection is that... open, then... um... well, humans tend to assume, aye? Since it is improper to humans that there would be, ah... physical love without m-marriage...” As amusing as a stuttering Elf was, I cut him off. “So, humans being what they are, they think we're married,” I clarified, and was slightly surprised by the lack of acidity in my voice. I would never have taken this sort of thing from Jean-Claude, or Jason, or Lucard, or Erik, or Spike, or Wesley, or Jareth, or ... or... well, any of them. The catalogue of men whom I've had to literally escape from suddenly depressed me. I slumped and I think Legolas thought it was because I was angry or disappointed in him. He lifted wide blue eyes to me. “Is that such a bad thing?” Here was the one man in all the universes who had stopped when I'd said “stop”, had been polite, and caring, and genuinely affectionate, and I was being a total bitch to him. “No,” I said softly, “It's not such a bad thing.” He came around the bed and took my hands between his. He leaned forward and kissed my forehead. “I will have it clarified that we are not wed. It is improper for a bachelor and a maid to share a bed.” I raised an eyebrow. And he said it so innocently, too, as if he actually believed it. As if he hadn't been trying to get me alone in the woods for the past two weeks... I found his earnestly and gentlemanliness a sudden turn on. There was just something that worrying about a 'Lady' could do a girl that even Jean-Claude's magic voice couldn't. “Bathe,” he said again. “We will meet the King and his Queen my cousin for a fine dinner. The Ladies-In-Waiting will help you dress.” “What about you?” I asked. He smiled, that wonderful, brilliant, mega-watt smile. “I will have my clothing sent to Gimli's room, and force the Dwarf to share. He is but small, and takes up little room, and he will not mind.” Sudden slashy thoughts entered my brain quite against my own will. I felt my face blush hotter and turned away. “Ahem. Um,” I said. “Well, you know, there's no need to, ah, shared with Gimli, you know,” I said, trying all the while not to think of kinky fanart threesomes. Besides, the beard would feel funny. I twisted my fingers nervously with my other hand. “The, ah, the bed is plenty big if you, uh, you know, wanted to, uh, sleep on your side.” My face got redder, and I felt relatively certain that if Middle-Earth had invented heat-seeking missiles, I would be the primary target in Gondor. This time Legolas' lips landed gently on the side of my neck. “I shall keep that offer in mind, my Lady of the Dagger Tongue,” he said softly, purring into my ear. And then he left. And I felt all wiggly inside. “Bath,” I said to myself. “Cold one. Nowish.” ===== I honestly couldn't remember the last time I enjoyed wearing a dress. That thing that Madam Giry had tucked me into had been restrictive and uncomfortable, and though I had liked what Lorne had bought for me, it had been too frilly for my tastes. I had a black slinky thing in my closet back home, but it sill had the price tag on it. I had been convinced by a friend to buy it, but never had occasion to wear it. I suppose it could attest to the pathetic-ness of my booky life preall of this mess, that I never really went out of my way to find the kind of places that required slinky black dresses. The one I wore now as comfortable and was made up of clean lines and cool colours. It was a heavy, silver fabric that didn't bunch around the bulges and flowed with a sort of elegant weight. I was covered from earlobe to toe, the cut a single slimming line from the high neck, tapering in at the torso and flaring out again just below my hips to give me a deliciously curvy look. The sleeves were tight, but not uncomfortable, and ended in an elegant bell sleeve with a trim made of some sort of blue ribbon that miraculously matched my eyes. It made me wonder how many of these gowns they had to have just sitting around. “Well, we'll trim this one in blue,” said a seamstress in my mind, “you know, just in case any random visitor in strange clothing arrives to speak to the King and Queen, and she needs nice clothing, and she has blue eyes, and then this one in russet, and this one in green, and this one in...” I had visions of a complicated passenger pigeon warning system for seamstresses. “Over, the strange woman who appears to be heading towards the castle has violet eyes, I repeat, violet eyes, one-two, code yellow!” The thought had me giggling to myself and the maid who was busy behind me, trying to make my limp brown hair do something ornate and filled with these little seed pearls that insisted on rolling away over the marble floors, sigh in frustration. Finally I donned an over-dress, with slightly shorter sleeves and open in front, in a slightly greener shade of blue, and a pair of comfortable, but slightly pinchy slippers. It made me feel elegant. It made me feel clean in a way that I hadn't in months. It made me feel female. It made me feel like a ballerina. I felt like twirling, so that's what I was doing when Legolas came into the room. He was wearing the same shade of silver in an Elvish version of a frock overcoat and he looked especially dashing. He had on that funny Mithril crown and I remembered that he was a Prince. He laughed at my clumsy efforts to do a pirouette and his gaiety was infectious. I laughed. I spun faster, the hem of the dress flaring up, showing off my legs. I felt weightless. I felt free. For a single, floating moment, nothing bad had ever happened to me. Legolas stepped in, grabbed my hands, twirled me through a few steps of a dance that I didn't know. Then he stopped us both abruptly with a hard, warm kiss. “Well, hello,” I said. “Now I have to redo my lipstick. And my hair.” “You're beautiful,” he breathed into my mouth. And I believed him. ===== Legolas, as far as I was concerned, was the best thing that had ever happened to me. He stood firmly by my side, our twined fingers hidden by the generous drape of my sleeve. I was scared. Arwen Evenstar was a powerful Elf, powerful enough to know that I was and perhaps prudent enough to cast me away. Or kill me. We, all five of us, were standing in the Great Hall. The chair that Denathor, the Last Steward of Gondor, had once occupied stared blackly back at us. The tall staircase that had ended in a white chair was gone. In its place stood a white marble three-steeped dais. On the top of the dais was a simple chair of a dark, rich looking wood, broad and strong. A deep love had gone into making that chair. That love for the king was etched into every decorative whorl, every leaf and antler, organic and yet solid. It seemed a tribute to Aragorn's days as both a Ranger and as Elf-kin. Beside the King's chair, Arwen's throne of the same wood was smaller, more delicate, but no less solid. Powerful, earthy seats for powerful, earthy rulers. A trumpeting fanfare startled me so badly that I jumped. The Hobbits laughed at me. Their high, pure voices vaulted around the room, bouncing on the white stone and reverberating back almost to the point of becoming painfully pitched. But the sound died away and was replaced with the soft rustle of fabric and pliant-leather booted feet. King Aragon and Queen Arwen entered, hand in hand, from a side alcove. I expected all of us to bow or curtsey, for them to look upon us monogamously and smile. Instead, Aragorn's eyes got huge, and he let go of his wife's hand and rushed the group like an overexcited five-year-old, shouting, “My friends!” He swept Merry and Pippin into a massive hug, lifting them clear off their feet. He spun them around once, dropped them, and visited the same jubilant humiliation upon Gimli, who did not look all that put upon. By this time Arwen had come to greet her cousin Legolas with a warm hug and a soft kiss on the cheek. “Why did you not tell us you were coming?” she asked in dulcet tones, and I felt the familiar awe of an Elf wash over me. Arwen didn't make my non-beating heart go pitter-pat the same way Legolas' had done, but it still nailed me to the floor. “Sly rogues!” Aragorn was blustering, calling for wine and a proper feast and hitting his comrades on the back in a manly fashion. “'Twas a surprise, ya ken?” Gimli said around a gruff smile. Aragon grinned like a golden retriever. “And a good surprise at that, my friends. What brings you to our fair city?” Six pairs of eyes turned to me. I swallowed heavily. “Um,” I said. I wiggled my fingers. “Hi.” Aragorn came forward and swept a courtly bow at my feet, then lifted the back of my hand to his lips. I fought the urge to wrench my hand away. I was just being silly and twentieth century and there was absolutely nothing weird about a guy kissing your hand, for god's sake. “I am King Elesar,” he said gently, straightening, “Protector of Gondor.” He held out a hand and wrapped Arwen into a one-armed hug. “And this is my wife, Arwen Evenstar.” For a brief moment, he looked so much like Sirius Black, smiling around a dark beard and long, slightly straggly hair, shot through with dignified grey, that I had to physically shake my head. He exchanged a look with Arwen but said nothing. “This is my Lady, Marie, daughter of Susan,” Legolas stepped in smoothly. “And she has come to beg a boon of my cousin the Queen.” “Your Lady?” Aragon repeated, eyebrow raised and mouth quirked under his moustache. “Um,” I said again, and Legolas blushed. Aragorn laughed, long, and loud, and joyful, and I could see what Arwen saw in him. ===== The feast was splendid and this time I didn't feel so guilty not eating it. I had learned from Trieze's wine that it was the most flavourful, the most intoxicating (but not in the 'drunk' way), and the most palatable of the mortal liquids. I could drink that and move the food on my plate around a bit and make it look like I was enjoying the feast. I had sips of every kind of wine I could get my hands on, marvelling in the taste of each, the sensations they wrought, and the emotions they called up. Legolas sat beside me, and he did not press me to try anything more than the wine for he knew that all I could properly digest was the blood. Though he had never seen me do it. I think there was a block in his mind. He knew that I was dead, that I was not human, that I drank blood, but I don't think he realized. He knew in that way that you know things without actually believing them. Like that the universe is massive or an atom is smaller than the human eye can see. The chill threatened to return and I beat it back down into my nightmare-box. I watched intently as Merry and Pippin recounted our travels here, though I didn't quite recall the part where we tangled with wild wolves on the outskirts of Bree. They left out anything having to do with my 'condition', as the room was filled not only with our small company, but with a host of Gondorian Lords and Ladies. I refused to be prodded into singing one of “Erik's songs,” though Merry massacred “Music of the Night” enough for me to finally consent and sing it correctly. Heaven forbid any Lord of Gondor ever think that was what had been written by the greatest musical genius in the world. As the night wore on, and the drinking became heavier, Merry and Pippin had taught all their side of the table the Pirates song, and half of the Nobles of Gondor were proclaiming in loud, sloshy voices that they were “really bad eggs.” Oh, to have a video camera. Legolas, Arwen, Aragorn and I took this distraction as an opportunity to slip out of the room and down the hall. Beyond the heavy doors, the palace was quiet and serene, bathed in luminescent moonlight that arched gently through the high windows. I wondered briefly if Karl was enjoying the moonlight too, in his fancy-shmanzy stable, munching on waxy apples and oats. The men left us at the door, and Arwen and I went into what appeared to be a solarium. In the daytime, this room would be filled with the lazy buzz of bees and the heavy fragrance of flowers. The walls were lined with pots and bushes, and little trees of every size and description. The ceiling was a wide circle of ornately patterned coloured glass. Now, though, the colours and scents were muted. The bees were asleep and the blooms closed up tight. Arwen waited patiently for me to finish taking in the room. I turned to her. Her hands were folded gracefully in front of her, and she was standing so still as to seem like an apparition in the cool moonlight. If I had been breathing, I'm sure she would have taken my breath away. “The Shadow of the Enemy does not cling to you,” she said in that deeply resonant voice. “Yet something dark does hover. This is the reason you have sought me out, I assume?” “Yes, my lady,” I said gently, curtseying as deeply as I could without falling flat on my face. I wobbled and wiggled and made a proper mess of it, but I didn't fall. Vampiric powers could not help me much with such a darned unfamiliar gesture. “The Halflings have called it a curse,” Arwen said, her eyes narrowing slightly, “And yet I see no spell on you, no words writ on your spirit. If it is a curse, it is one I have never heard, nor read of, nor seen before.” I fidgeted and tried not to. “Well, uh,” I said. “There is, of course, a perfectly good explanation for that. Perfectly good. It's that, well, you see, I--” “You are not from Middle-Earth.” I swallowed back my words and stared at her. “It is obvious enough to those who know what to look for,” she said with a gently smile. “Do not be afraid. You are lost. I can See that. You are looking for your home.” “I... I am,” I whispered. “Can you... could you...?” Arwen shook her head, somewhat sadly. “I cannot send you home,” she said. “But you will find it. My part in your journey is not to send you. It is to help you come to accept what you are.” “What I am?” I asked warily. But I didn't want to be what I was, that was the whole point of being here. “What you will be,” she said, waving a hand gently as if to brush the thought off her sleeve. “You wish for me to end your curse?” “If it is possible, yes.” Her blue eyes, luminescent in the moonlight, narrowed. “Of this you are certain?” “Yes. I want to be as I was.” “Very well,” Arwen said. “Give me a day to consider what must be done. Then come to me again, here, tomorrow at sunset.” I curtseyed again, and this time managed to wobble a lot less. “Thank you,” I said, with every cell of my dead heart. Book Nine: The Lord of The Rings Chapter Thirty: “Mistake” Legolas and Aragorn were waiting for us outside the room. Arwen professed a weariness and her husband excused them and walked her back to their rooms. Legolas asked if I wanted to go back to the feast-cum-drinking party. “You go,” I said. “I can find my way back okay.” “In the dark?” “The moonlight is enough for me. I'm fine,” I said. “I just need to think for a bit. Go back and enjoy the party, I know you want to.” “I am transparent,” he said softly and kissed my cheek, then my forehead, then my lips. “I will see you anon,” he whispered, and his voice was full of wonderful promises. I didn't trust the butterflies in my stomach to not fly out of my mouth, so I only nodded. He kissed me one last time, and I could taste the wine on his tongue. ===== I finished the potion immediately after returning to my rooms. I had been in Middle-Earth for one month exactly. I keyed it with some of Legolas' hair, which I had pulled off my dress on my way back to my room. That meant I now had one phial keyed for Middle-Earth, and five blanks in total - two left from my batch back in “Angel”, as I had used the third to slide here, and three from this last half-batch here. I could slide five times before I had to stop. I would have preferred to have a full run - perhaps ten blanks and really see how far I could go. For now, five was enough. If I ended up somewhere stable enough, I would consider stopping again. I could have left. Right then, I could have vanished forever. But Arwen had promised to help me and Legolas... Legolas loved me, and I was really starting to love him. I could afford this dalliance, I told myself. I could. ===== It was just after midnight. The tower guard had called the time, and his shout had woken me up. I stretched once and rolled over, reflecting on how nice it was to be woken by something that wasn't a nightmare. The mattress was soft and thick, and so were the blankets. The sheets were clean and smooth and fresh and cool; by far more luxurious than the cheap bedroll and thin wool blanket I'd been using for the past month. Much more luxurious than any place I'd slept in the past year, probably, aside from that brocade-covered bed in Lucard's tower prison-bedroom. I was wearing a loose white gown of smooth cotton, cool and comfortable. I had found it waiting for me when I got back to my room, deliciously tempting and clean. I yawned and snuggled into the fluffy pillow, perfectly content. There was a small chuckling sound. I opened my eyes. They met luminous blue ones. “Well, hello,” I said. “Hello,” Legolas replied. “My Lady of the Dagger Tongue.” I stuck out that praised tongue. He tried to grab it between his thumb and forefinger and retracted it too quickly. “Been here long?” “I was watching you sleep.” “Figured as much.” His head was on the pillow beside mine, his shoulder tucked under it. He was wearing only his grey leggings and a soft white shirt with long tails. His bare feet wiggled in the cool moonlight, and his fingers were wrapped in the cover. “Aren't you cold?” I asked. “Slightly,” he admitted. I pulled back the coverlet and let him snuggle in beside me. He kept about five inches of empty air between us. “You can come closer,” I said. He pushed forward and wrapped his arms around me. I turned my back to him to make it easier, let him snuggle up behind me. We spooned. His wet lips were on my shoulder, kissing softly, hotly. I sighed and closed my eyes. He looked over my shoulder at me. “I never told you to stop,” I said. He chuckled. “Yes, My Lady Dagger Tongue.” He touched his teeth gently to the skin on my neck, and I shivered. Then he kissed again, and deciding that my neck'd had more than its fair share of attention in my lifetime, I rolled over and captured the kiss in my mouth. He tasted like wine, still, like sunrises and earthy vines and honest sweat and under that the pure, driven magic of things older and cleaner than I. He made a noise and I swallowed it. His slender fingers wrapped around my waist, sliding lower, cupping and flexing and pulling me close, as close as my nightgown and his britches allowed. I pushed open his lips with my tongue, dove into his mouth, hot and wonderful, our teeth clicking once in impatience as we tried to make our flesh vanish, trying to fuse ourselves into one creature. Sweat, red and bloody, prickled at my forehead, between my breasts, and he pulled back gasping for the air I had denied him with my fierce kiss, his heart thudding with anticipation against my chest. He smiled, his eyes glazed with desire and his lips swollen. He looked wanton, his hair mussed and his eyes half-lidded, heavy and content. “You look ravish-able,” I whispered. “Then ravish me,” Legolas whispered back. I giggled, wrapping my arms around his neck, winding a lock of hair around my fingers in a silken, intricate labyrinth of white gold. “Isn't it the dashing Prince who's supposed to ravish the Lady Fair?” Legolas grinned. “If you insist.” He pushed his torso forward, moving his hands to my waist, rolling me onto my back and I let him, let him settle heavily, a delicious weight on my pelvis, the feverish heat of his thighs pressed against the inside of my knees. I ran my hands down his arms, across his chest, hooking my fingers into his simple cloth belt. “Do you love me?” Legolas asked me, arching over me, a pale stallion in the moonlight, poetry and heat and glittering eyes. “Yes,” I said, and I knew I meant it. “Do you love me?” “Oh yes,” he said. “Oh, oh, yes.” And I thought he meant it, too. ===== “My Lady Dagger Tongue?” I heard a voice calling, a teasing finger tapping the tip of my nose lightly. “Such a sleepy head.” “Mmm,” I said and stretched, feeling glowy and content. Boy was I content. I opened my eyes and found Legolas kneeling over me, pale and nude and still slightly sticky with the sweat of his exertion. “Wasn't sleeping,” I protested. He grinned, a wry smile that curled the corner of his lips up. I could see traces of my lipstick around his mouth, the colour I had failed to remove before bed. I reached up and wiped a smear of coloured wax from his chin. He sat back slightly, tenting the blankets around us, and I shivered when the chill night breeze struck my sweat-slicked body. I was nude, too. “Are you yet cold?” he said. “Yes. Come back here, and bring that blanket with you.” He sat up all the way, letting the blanket slide down his shoulders, sitting lightly on my thighs to trap me where I was. He raised his eyebrows defiantly. “Meanie,” I grumped. “Shall I warm you?” he said. His palms flattened on my stomach, then started a torturously slow slide upwards. “Yes,” I whispered, my voice husky and caught in my throat, my chest tight with anticipation. He lay down on top of me, solid and safe-feeling. He left the blanket pooled on my knees and licked slowly up the side of my ear. His shoulder was right in front of my mouth and I kissed it. He laughed, a warm, sensual puff of warm air against my ear. I kissed him again. He laughed. I moved up to his neck, kissing, then licking, then doing my damndest to give him a livid hickey. His arms, holding most of his weight, shivered violently and he dropped onto me more, groaning now instead of laughing. “My God, Marie,” he hissed, and it was my name tumbling out of his lips that undid me. I slid my fangs gently into his flesh, tenderly, carefully, but quickly to tame any pain he'd feel. He gasped, his body tightening, his cock jumping against my stomach. I pulled my fangs out, let the blood come to me, to well up and bead and slip down his hot skin and along my waiting tongue. I licked the wound and he jerked, his pelvis thrusting against my skin, his member trapped between our heated flesh. I sucked and he jerked again. I sucked hard and he cried out his pleasure, cresting already, and we were both surprised by the force of it, the warm spray of liquid against our stomachs. I sucked again, pulling hard, swallowing his heady, crystalline blood. He panted and lay still against me, chest heaving and head limp, and I swallowed him, consumed him, and revelled in the refined heat of his essence. He made my head spin, my nerves sing, and I swallowed again. His blood filled me with ecstasy, with contentment, with satisfaction in nature, in my place in the world and its composition. Everything was perfect and wonderful and I felt everything and nothing. He stirred, his breath against my neck, his hands lighting gently on my shoulders. He didn't have the strength to sit up, but I didn't care, I was strong enough for both of us, filled with his poise and his heat and his grace and his power. The deep magics of Middle-Earth flowed in the blood of the Elf-kin, and now it flowed in me. I flipped him over, laying him gently back against the pillows, a hand cradling the back of his skull tenderly, my lips still on the wound. “Ma-marie...?” he whispered and I pulled on the punctures, making him arch and cry out again, an animal sound of passion and pleasure and just that faint hint of pain. I liked the sound of the pain, I decided suddenly. The sound that marked me as in control, me as the hunter, him as my delicious, delicate, hot, prey. I bit again, tearing deep into his flesh and he quivered under me. He was hard again and I pressed myself down onto him, swallowing him up, stealing his delectable heat from there, too. His hands spidered up my arms, clutching at my shoulders, fingers flexing and tightening and then pushing. Pushing? I pulled back, licked a wide pink tongue around my lips to catch any clinging drops. I kissed the wound, put blood on my lips. Then I kissed him deep, opening his mouth, coating his tongue with his own rich blood. He gagged. I sat back. “Legolas?” I asked. “Are you okay?” His face was white. Red splashed up his neck. I had torn deeper than I thought. His mouth was a tight white line of revulsion, his eyes hard and dark and narrowed. “Legolas? Jeeze, I'm sorry,” I said. I lifted a hand, meant to press it against his neck to stop the flow of blood. He jerked away from my touch. I stared at him with wide eyes. “Get off me,” he hissed. “Let me up.” I got off him. He tried to sit up. It was a struggle. My voice caught in a hot lump in my throat. The heat that I had stolen from his blood rushed out of me, extinguished in a wave of icy fear. “Oh, no,” I moaned. “Please, I didn't mean it...” He managed to get himself sitting up, struggled for the edge of the bed, hands pulling on the blood-spattered sheets. He was trying to run away. “Legolas, I'm sorry, I didn't mean to hurt you,” I said, starting forward, moving to help him to his feet. “Stay away from me!” he shrieked and it scared me so badly that I skipped backwards a few steps, hands fluttering beside my ears, my eyes wide and surprised. Then they began to burn. He touched the side of his neck, inspected the red, touched it again and winced when he felt the torn edges of the ripped flesh. “You attacked me,” he said, accusingly, finally managing to get his wobbly feet under him. “You tried to make me like you - a cursed thing! You lied to me!” “I didn't lie to you!” I protested. “It was an accident. I love you.” “Monster!” he cried. That hated word struck me like a slap to the face. I rocked back on my heels. “No,” I said, but my voice was weak, scared. Terrified that he was right, “You only pretended to love me. You used your wiles to seduce me, to drink my blood and steal my essence and my power.” “No.” My voice shook. I began to shake too. “You are no better than the creature that did this to you! You are a cursed thing, a monster, a deceiver.” “No,” I hiccoughed, and the tears, dark red stains, further evidence of my unnaturalness, slid down my face. “No, no.” “Monster,” he burbled. “I see now that I never loved you. You held me in your thrall.” “Don't say that!” I sobbed. I reached for him, seeking his warmth, his comfort, but he had none to offer me any more. “Don't! This wasn't a Mary Sue thing! It wasn't! You... you really ...didn't you?!” He backed away from my questing hands, his eyes wide in terror. The blood at his throat was a livid, viciously glittering streak in the freezing moonlight. “Tell me I'm not a monster,” I begged. “Tell me its okay.” He said nothing. “Tell me this was real.” He said nothing. “Tell me I'm not alone.” But I was. And I always would be. Forever. Because that's what being a Vampire was. Eternity. Alone. Legolas' hand reached out, towards the end of the bed. He was reaching for his bow. It was resting there, silent and waiting. “Please don't,” I whispered. “Haven't you killed me enough for one night?” He paused. I grabbed my nightgown off the end of the bed. The window behind his head was open. I flew out it. Behind me I could hear him screaming for a healer. ===== I had fallen into it. Blindly, stupidly. As moronic as any Mary Sue before me. I had closed my eyes and walked happily into my own trap. I had actually believed that Legolas loved me. Stupid, stupid girl. ===== The man in the shadows was dressed all in black leather. He had a large sword at his side, hanging with an almost sentient, animate menace. His skin was darkly tanned, Mediterranean looking. His hair was a dark spray of barely-controlled almost-curls. He was looking at me with much the same expression as I was giving him. Both of our eyes were saying, 'WTF? Who are you?' “You're not Lucard,” I finally said. The man shifted his weight of the balls of his feet. Apparently I wasn't a threat. He snorted. “I am not,” he said. “Surely you know who I am.” “Surely I don't,” I said. “And I'm not much with the caring right now. Long as you stay not-Lucard, we're all good.” His nosed wrinkled and his chocolate eyes narrowed. Another time, a time when my heart wasn't broken and my veins weren't burning with self-loathing, I may have found him attractive. Right now I just wanted him to go away and leave me to my melancholy. “Who are you?” he asked. “Are you a God?” It was my turn to snort. “Who me? Yeah, no. Pretty much the exact opposite, I'm thinking.” He took a step closer. The source-less light hit the wide planes of his face and I could see that he was more than attractive. He was handsome. A well-trimmed goatee framed thick, kissable lips and a narrow nose. Aggressiveness flowed off him in waves. I took a step back, and he seemed to find this amusing. “Do you really not know who I am?” he asked. His hand fell away from the hilt of his sword and he clasped his fingers in front of him. It was a bit late for the non-threateningly sexy act, but it didn't stop him from trying. “Really,” I said. “Where are you?” he asked. I blinked at him. “I'm in Middle-Earth.” “We're in a place called Middle of the Earth?” the man asked, perplexion crossing his features. “Does Hades know about this?” “No, not... not the middle of the Earth,” I said, exasperated. “I'm in Middle-Earth. You're not.” “Then where am I?” the man asked, and the puzzled look gave way to more of that smug amusement. Normally a face like that would get my dander up. Right now I didn't give two flying whatevers. “Duh, that's obvious,” I said. “You're in my dream.” He blinked. He seemed genuinely startled. “I'm in your dream?” “Yeah.” “Interesting,” he said, looking around him at the vast emptiness. “So this is your mind-scape? Bit cold and dark in here, don't you think?” “I like my solitude.” He smiled. “You're in a very bad mood.” I crossed my arms and rolled my eyes to keep the threatening tears at bay. “I just had the person I love call me demon and try to kill me. Yeah, I'm in a bad mood.” “You were rejected by your lover?” he asked. He took another step, and this time I let him. He took two more, until we were about an arm's length apart. “And then you conjure me? Do you need someone dark and dangerous? Passionate? Kinky? Was your last lover a flighty disappointment? Am I the new man of your dreams?” “Groan,” I said. “Lame.” He reached up and touched the side of my face. I let him. “Oooo, you're cold,” he said. “Here.” He rubbed his thumb over my cheek. Then he let his thick fingers slide down the side of my neck, brushing my scar gently, and settle over my left breast. “And in here.” “Go away,” I said. He frowned and for a brief moment his form flickered. Then he concentrated and he was back. “Interesting,” he said. “No one's been able to do that to me before. What kind of power is that?” I was feeling belligerent. “This is my dream. I can banish you if I want.” He shook his head. “That's not what this is. You didn't bring me here. We met by accident, I think. It's something else. Something in your blood. We shouldn't be able to meet like this, but here I am... Do you have the gift of foresight?” I shivered and took a step back from him. I really, really didn't like the sound of that. I reached for my knife, tucked in the leather sheath at the small of my back, under the over-dress. I wrapped my fingers around the handle to comfort myself. It was a dream and I didn't think to question the fact that I was still wearing my dress from the day before when moments earlier I had been in a cotton nightgown. Blood. Power. Foresight. The world around us blurred. “Aw, you're waking up,” the man said, gazing around him at the hazing gloom. He sounded like a little boy whose fun had been spoiled. Then he was gone in a puff of silver smoke. His voice lingered a second longer. “See you soon,” he said. I sat up. I stared at the sun rising behind the White Tower. I had fallen asleep under a ruined barn at Osgiliath. Blood. Power. Foresight. “Elf blood,” I muttered to myself. “Goddamn it.” ===== The Hobbits had been looking for me. I had not been in my room and they had feared I had vanished. Legolas had gone to the healer in the dead of night and refused to speak to anyone about what had happened. I was relieved, because having only Legolas hate me was just about as much hatred as I could bare. I couldn't have bourn it from Merry and Pippin, too. Legolas had told them that I was leaving, as soon as I had my appointment with Arwen. They asked me if this was true. I told them it was. They asked me why Legolas had been bleeding. I told them there had been a small problem, and not to worry about it. No one believed me, but no one pressed it. Someone gave me a heavy morning robe to cover the dew-dampened nightgown. I glided over the floors. I was miserable. And I was perfect. Legolas' blood was still inside me, and while it was, all was right with the world. Only it wasn't. I felt nothing. And everything, Merry and Pippin led me to a small, sunny room on the same side of the palace as the sunrise. It hurt my eyes and made me want to shy away, to hide my face under my arm. Instead I went and sat one of the four empty chairs around a small breakfast table. The other three were occupied with Aragorn, Arwen, and Gimli. Merry and Pippin were sitting on tomes, the Middle-Earth equivalent of phone books. One empty chair glared balefully from Arwen's side and I avoided looking at it. I know who was meant to sit there. And wasn't. We breakfasted in silence. They ate and I stared at the floor. The clink of utensils on dishes was loud and lonely sounding. The smell of the eggs and toast made my stomach churn and my head throb. Aragorn bid me take a bath to warm myself. I was shivering. He thought I was cold. I didn't correct him. I got up and left the table, and the pitying glances of the Dwarf and two Hobbits only made my bones feel heavier, more leaden. Arwen's gaze was impenetrable and narrowed. A valet met me at the door, and walked me back to my room. I went slowly. The bath was waiting. The bed had been stripped of its bloody sheets and re-clothed in dark blue. It resembled a funeral bower and I forced myself not to look at it. I was enjoying the sensation of emotional numbness. I liked hiding in it. I didn't want to be forced to feel. I stripped out of the dirty nightgown. It was crusted with blood, with the evidence of I and Legolas' love making, with damp grass stains and mud. I tossed it into the fireplace and watched it burn. Then I stepped into the bath. It was almost too hot, but I stayed in the water. I scrubbed my hair, over, and over again, and then my skin, until I was glowing and red. I wallowed in the warm water until it was icy. Outside of my window, the morning burned away. Then I dressed. Someone had provided men's style clothing for me - thick hose, soft grey boots. My tough tunic was of the same overlay leaf design as Legolas'. I was wearing Elf-style clothes. There was a belt just the right size to loop my knife-sheath onto and a new leather holster for my wand. There was even a leather case with a new bronze button just the right size to tuck my pouch into. Someone had obviously been paying attention. Certainly hadn't been me. I de-tangled my hair with the wooden comb Legolas had given me, then tucked the comb carefully at the bottom of my pouch. I had a strong urge to snap it in half and throw it into the fire, to follow the nightdress, and I resisted. I was angry and sad now, but I knew I would wish I had the comb in the lonely, cold months to come, when I started to feel again - a token, a proof that once I had been loved. Once. I dressed. I took my time, clipping everything carefully, snugly. I marvelled in the fabrics, touched the elaborate stitching, followed the organic swirls with numb fingers. Distracted myself with meaningless bits of finely rendered cloth. I tried to braid my hair and couldn't. I cried for an hour. I forced myself to stop. I tried again. I failed and I cried and I hated myself. I tried a third time and they stayed. I watched the afternoon slip by. I washed the dried blood from my tears off my cheeks. And then it was sunset. I opened the door to find Merry and Pippin waiting in the hallway for me. “Hi,” I said to them. “Hello,” Pippin said back. “You look nice. Gimli said you'd appreciate some tough Elf clothes for your journey. D'you like the belt? It was Merry's idea.” I forced myself to smile warmly and hoped it didn't look to flat. “It is nice. I love it. Thank you.” Merry nodded, accepting my thanks. Then he jammed his hands into his trouser pockets. “You, ah... you ready?” he asked. “Arwen's waiting in the garden room.” “Ready?” I repeated. “Yeah, sure. Lay on MacDuff.” “My name is Merry,” he said. “I know.” I felt the smile slipping and jammed it back into place. “I'm just being morbid.” ===== Arwen was waiting for us patiently in the solarium. The windows along the wall had been opened wide to let in the breeze, and it stirred her long dark hair. Her fingers were woven together, pale. She seemed made of moonlight and shadow. The sunlight slanted orange through the glass walls. Reflected fire turned her mithril crown to gold, the strange scrawled patterns on the floor to lava. Arwen stood on the edge of a circle drawn on the paving stones under our feet. Immediately I didn't like it. I hesitated on the edge. If the circle had been drawn in blood rather than chalk, it would have looked almost exactly like the one that had started all of this mess. The designs were in flowing Elvish, of course, and the script, rather than ancient and angled runes that had summoned me into Lucard's grasp. But it was still a circle, the concentric designs of circles, intersecting with triangles and things that may have been flowers and feathers or blades and guts. I stopped on the opposite edge of the circle from Arwen and met her eye. Pippin and Merry hesitated by the door. Aragorn stood, loose-limbed and ready to jump into a fight if needed, leaning against the far wall between windows. What sort of fight there was going to be I didn't know. Gimli was seated in a chair beside a hydrangea bush bigger than he was. “Are you prepared?” Arwen asked. “No,” I said. “But we might as well start anyway.” “Where is Legolas?” Aragorn said softly, so softly that his voice was barely above the buzz of the last of the bees hovering over the night-closing flowers, putting in a little last-minute overtime. “He wouldna come,” Gimli grunted. Something inside me twisted sharply. I sucked in a deep breath but said nothing. Arwen nodded gravely. “Step into the circle,” she said. “Stand in the centre.” I did. The bottom of my feet itched. I wanted to run away. No, I told myself. Stay, you lying coward. You came all the way here, you stay here. This is what you wanted, isn't it? To be cured. To cease to be a Vampire. To stop being a monster. To perhaps become something Legolas can love again. That was a castle in the air if I'd ever heard one. I met Arwen's gaze steadily. I felt the sun, hot on the back of my neck, pricking through the Elf-cloth of my frock coat. “I'm ready now,” I said. “Very well,” she replied. She lifted slender hands, palms out, to shoulder height. She stretched out her arms, swung them in a slow, dignified arc to the side, until she appeared to be crucified. She raised her eyes to the ceiling. No, the sky beyond the stainedglass ceiling. For a brief, adrenaline-inducing second, she looked so much like the Negative-Galadriel, succumbing to the force of the One Ring in her glade by her Mirror, that I took a step back. Aragorn hissed, and I moved back into the centre. Then Arwen began to speak. Her words were nothing I had ever heard before. It was like listening to silver speak. It was sinuous, rapid and filled with double consonants, sensuous and floating and suddenly I felt like my head was filling with blood or helium or perhaps that one fleeting second of almost-falling right before you succumb to sleep. Arwen was singing. I groaned. I clapped my hands over my ears, squeezed my eyes shut. Something in my chest began to burn. The melody washed over me, riding me hard, throbbing, thrusting, bashing me against the rocks of solidity of the thing that made whatever I was cling to this notlife. I dove down into my black box, cowering like a hard-hunted fox from the hounds of her strange silver-words, but I found no solace there, no comfort, only horror, horror, pain and terror and cold, black blackness. I felt my hands touch the calked designs on the circle and wondered when I'd fallen to my knees. The music pounded into me, driving me downwards, stealing the strength in my limbs, turning my bones to water and my heart into an ember and my brains into sloshing quicksilver. I screamed and I tried to scream all at the same time. I could hear my own panic thundering in my ears but no sound outside of them. I felt fingers inside me, on my heart and soul, behind my eyes and in my ears and pulling at my teeth, like someone prying something away, trying to be gentle, but pulling back the plaster too slowly, making it hurt more than a single rip, pulling out all the little arm hairs and leaving tacky glue behind. Someone was stealing something from me. I screamed. I heard glass shatter and wondered if my voice had done it. Someone was yelling. I was writhing. The chalk burnt - it burnt like holy things and fire and silver all together and it hurt hurt hurt. The plaster ripped away. I gasped. Something like a fist slammed against my chest, threw me onto my back with the force of it. Every nerve ending was on fire, electrocuted, squeezed and crushed, hot and cold together and twisting with a vertigo so bad that I was laying on the ceiling. The fist struck me again - dump. Then again. Da dump. Again. Dump. Da-dump. It hurt. Then it fluttered. The fist in my chest struggled. I gasped. I wanted air. My dead lungs were burning. I inhaled, sucking, coughing, sucking again. The world tasted of dust and sweat and worry. It coated my tongue and closed my throat. I gasped again, and panic began. Air, air, need air, the old instincts screamed. Da-dump. Dump. Dadump. Da... da du .. mp. I arched my back against the burning lines of white-hot fire etched into the floor, burning black sigils into my skin. I sucked. I screamed, a little aborted sound, the terrified cry of a strangling animal. Strangling. No air. I couldn't get enough air. The fist in my chest lost its strength, puttering slowly, burning, aching with the effort, a quivering muscle with no strength left. Then I felt something hot on the side of my neck, right where Lucard's teeth had ripped into my soul. Blood gushed. I felt it start, a trickle at first, then a fount, bubbling and burning and stealing all my warmth, and still still still the Elf song ripped me to pieces. Gasping, not because there isn't enough air, but because there isn't enough blood in the body to carry oxygen to the brain. Gasping, crying, not being able to make a sound beyond the low keening of a rabbit under the fangs of a serpent. And then I heard a single clear voice cut, like the cold kiss of a scythe, through the song: “Stop!” ===== Sunset came. Night bloomed. I died all over again. Then I sat up and stared at my hands. Red streaks. Powder from the chalk. Chalk again, not fire, now. Dust and dirt and despair. “I cannot undo what has been done,” a lyrical, melodic voice said. A voice that I loathed. “I can only make you as you should be.” “Sorry, Marie,” a smaller, lighter voice said. “She can't give you back your life. Only your death.” “Leave me,” hissed. My eyes burned and I saw the world in warm sweet blood. Heat was my guide and my desire and these things were filled with it. My mouth was dry, my throat raw, my heart still and silent once more. My teeth were sharp and wet against my bottom lip, itching to be driven into pure flesh. Someone said my name. “Leave me!” I shrieked. The blood-things left. I curled into a ball amid broken glass and sleeping flowers and wept, and wept, and wept. Book Ten : SailorMoon / Dracula: The Series Chapter Thirty-One: “Closure” I sat in that empty room, alone, until sunrise. Then I went and bathed one last time, dressed, and went to the stable to say so long to Karl and borrow a meal from the large vein in his leg. He held quiet and still for me, unperturbed. On my way back to the Palace to say my goodbyes to the King and Queen, I found Legolas sitting alone on a garden bench. His neck was tightly bound in layers of white bandages and he was wrapped in a blue blanket. His hair was bound back in a tight, single braid of white gold. I paused just behind him and watched him for a long moment. I wanted to throw myself at him, to beg him not to be angry. Instead I said, “I'm a Mary Sue, you see. You didn't stand a chance. I ensnared you. I didn't do it on purpose.” Legolas sat stiffly on the garden bench and did not acknowledge me. “It wasn't my intention to hurt you,” I said. “I thought you really loved me. I really loved you. My kind, well, we sort of... bite. But... well.” My throat was tight and burning. “I'm leaving in a few hours.” He turned to look at me over his shoulder. “You lied to me,” he said. Right then I realized that lying was the worst sin in existence. “I loathe you,” he said, “not because you are cursed. Or because you hurt me. Because you lied to me. Did you even have a son?” I didn't know how to answer that. I grasped at wisps of half-formed excuses for a moment. Then I realized I didn't owe him an answer. I walked away. ===== The goodbyes were stiff and formal, and it broke my heart. Gimli would not touch me, and I knew Legolas had told him what I had done. The Hobbits looked wary and shook my hand gently. Aragorn gave me a chaste kiss on the cheek. Surprisingly, it was Arwen who was the least hostile. She pulled me into an embrace and whispered into my ear, “Forgive them, Marie. You are a strange new creature to them and it fears them to think of someone who can kill with pleasure. If even it was an accident. They are still your friends.” I nodded and embraced her back. I had the distinct feeling she was lying to me. I looked around the audience chamber one last time. Legolas was here. Legolas had his back to me. He was leaning heavily on the window sill, his eyes on the city below. I was tempted to call out to him. To beg him not to hate me. I had tried once, that morning. I wouldn't try again. I had my dignity. And my bitter pain. And my pride. And he had his. I dropped the phial onto the flagstones. Perhaps a bit uncharitably, I thought that if I ever saw another head of long blond hair, it would be too soon. ===== The familiar flash of white light was followed by the flat cracking sound and I braced myself for the five foot drop. I landed on my feet, stood slowly, and found myself in a mostly-empty park. The trees and ground were covered with scorch marks, and it looked like a battle had been fought here in the recent past. Knowing my track record, one probably had been. The air was heavy with damp. I had come just after a rainfall. I heard whispering voices behind me and turned cautiously to find myself face to face with five young ladies in really short multicoloured skirts. “SailorMoon, who do you think she is? More Negatrash?” The one in the green mini-skirt and ankle boots asked, and I groaned. Long blonde hair, indeed. And shouldn't they be speaking Japanese? No, she said 'negatrash' this is the crappy dubbed DiC version. I won't bore you with the details of my very short stay in “SailorMoon” world. She was loud, cried a lot, and they all thought I was some youma monster to destroy. I reached hastily into my pouch and closed my fingers over the closest phial. I didn't read the label when I tossed it at my feet. I didn't have time. Between the five short-skirted Super-hero Sailors and their itchy trigger fingers, I would have been frozen, burned to a crisp, electrocuted, and whipped. Maybe purified if SailorMoon herself had gotten off her shot, but there's no guarantees that it wouldn't have just destroyed me. I mean, hello, Vampire. We'd already established that I was Dead, and it seemed that the universe classified anything that was Dead yet Still Moved as automatically Evil. And SailorScouts destroyed Evil. Not exactly the most forgiving of combinations. With a crack and a flash I was crouching on all fours on a cobbled street. For three seconds I was fine. Then a rushing wave of nausea hit, and I vomited. I seemed to be doing that a lot, lately. I backed away and found myself I nice, dark, smelly alley to lay down in. “I'm so pretty,” I said to myself, my voice heavy with cynicism and self-loathing. I wiped a red smear off my chin with the cuff of my fine Elf-frock. “Just bloody gorgeous.” I stayed there until the waves of vertigo and nausea passed. It was too hard to sit up, so I lay down on my face. Well, I started to lay, but gravity took care of it for me. I think I lay, unmoving, unbreathing, on the cobblestones, just willing my stomach to stop trying to crawl out of my mouth, for about an hour. The damp stone was cool against my burning forehead. The weather drizzled a bit, but couldn't quite decide if it wanted to actually rain. When I finally felt well enough to look up, it was just past sunset. I was slightly damp from the condensation on the cobbles and the moisture in the air. The rushing onset of my vampire powers returning to me helped to chase away the last remaining tendrils of the Slip-Sickness. I sat up slowly, shakily, my joints feeling like sloshing water and my eyes burning in the too-bright light of the lamps. Elf blood sang in my veins, almost literally. I felt like I was stoned, but it was the kind of high where everything is perfect. If nearly suffocating to death the night before hadn't taken away that buoying gaiety of rightness that Legolas' blood had bequeathed, I didn't know if anything ever would. I didn't know how long it would last. I didn't even know if it would go away. I sort of hoped it wouldn't. I liked not feeling anything. I hoped it would, too, because not feeling anything was scary. Or, at least, I thought if I could have felt anything, I would have been scared. I ought to be scared. I looked around. The shattered bits of phial had remained in the park, or I would have sifted through them to discover which phial I'd used. I was hoping it was an unkeyed one, but there were more keyed phials in my pouch than unkeyed ones now. I pushed myself to my feet, using the night-cooled wall for balance. My legs wobbled and ached ferociously with pins and needles. I leaned down and rubbed my calves until the sharp pain faded away, left the soles of my feet itchy and my lower-half uncomfortable. I walked over to a street lamp and pawed through my pouch. HP, Anita, Labby, Pirates, Angel, LotR… everything except… oh, no. Just in case, eh? I looked over my shoulder towards what I assumed would be the centre of town. On a hill overlooking Luxembourg City sat the pale, squat Castle Vianden - home of the man who had murdered me. If I acted quickly, I could vanish. I had four more blank phials. I could go, try to find somewhere to lay low. Lucard would never know I was here. Or I could slide right now. Except there was no guarantee that the next world would be a place where I could safely wait out the Slip-Sickness. And Snape had warned me against Slipping twice within twenty-four hours. If twice was so bad, then what would three times do? The Elf blood in me made me brave. It made me stupid. It made me feel nothing. I wasn't the poor girl he had raped and killed last year. I was someone new. I was someone different. I was someone powerful now. I was a Vampire. I was trained in offensive and defensive duellist magic. I had a silver knife and Elf blood. I was not helpless. I was not prey. Not anymore. I looked up at the silent, curious moon. Then I vanished into the shadows of the alley with a smile on my lips and a plan in my head. If anyone had cared to look, the last thing they would have seen of me, before I melted into shadow, would have been two pinpricks of glowing gold. “See you soon,” the man with the dark goatee had said. I wondered idly if he had been the Grim Reaper. ===== I snuck into Lucard's castle. It was actually ridiculously easy and I wondered how it was that he hadn't been staked yet. Very poor security. Then I remembered that a lot of the major plot of the TV show came from the fact that humans could easily sneak into his home. It was the getting back out that was the hard part. In the hallway outside of the sitting room, the one I had vanished from ages ago by diving through the fireplace, I heard him entering the room from another direction. I slipped in the door under the stairs and watched from behind the suit of armour as he entered through the door by the fireplace. He sat down in one of the wing-backed chairs with a book and a glass of something red. The last time I had smelled the something red, I had thought it was wine. Now I recognized the scent of blood in it. Human blood, mixed with something oaky and bold. Blood and wine. Well, what do you know - Alexander Lucard was a lush. I waited until he was settled, then moved myself to the windowsill. I sat down on it quietly and swung my feet up and folded my hands on my knees and watched him. From my place, his eyes were a stunning grey, his hair a rich spiced blond. His nose aristocratic and fine, his cheek bones high. He was beautiful. Nowhere near as lust-inducing as Jean-Claude, or as finely rendered as Prince Legolas, not even as darkly dangerous as the man from the dream. But still very beautiful. I wondered if I could have ever fallen in love with him, if he hadn't attacked me so brutally. I wondered if he could fall in love. Then I wondered what the hell I was doing here. Ah, yes - that little thing called closure. I waited until he'd read a few pages before I took in the breath necessary to speak with. He heard the intake and was on his feet and staring at me before I could form the words: “The wine… who was it?” He stared at me, curled up on his window sill in Elvish garb - thick grey breeches, knee-high boots, an overlay of green-gray and slate tunic woven with gold thread. Slung around my hips was the thick leather belt, my hair braided back from my face and my wand held loosely in my hand. I was definitely the last person he expected to see. And I certainly didn't look the way he remembered me to. He straightened from his crouched offensive posture and smiled charmingly. He rearranged his face, erasing the snarl and instead going for a carefully schooled look of surprised happiness. What a liar. But that's what Vampires are. Liars. We look alive and aren't. We breathe but don't. And we don't fall in love. “My dear,” he whispered in that strange accent of his. He had learned his English reading books, so the emphasis was on all the wrong syllables. It made it hypnotic. His tone was a mixture of awe and anger. “You escaped the vortex?” I smiled slightly. “Yes. And No.” He set down the book and took a step towards me. I tightened the grip on my wand and suddenly it was aiming straight at his chest. He paused, curious. “Ah, ah,” I scolded. “You sit right back down in that chair, Vladyboy.” He raised an eyebrow and repeated with incredulity: “Vlady-boy?” He did not sit. “Are you deaf, or just stupid?” I snapped angrily. “Sit. There.” He grimaced. But he sat. He turned the chair to face me by hooking his ankle around the leg. He folded himself gracefully into it, but his feet remained flat on the floor and his palms pressed against the arms, ready to spring up again at any second. He frowned. “I have no great love of that phrase. I thought it crude when I first heard you use it, and I think it is still crude now. I would prefer it if my daughter had some more lady-like manners.” I unfolded myself gracefully, using every trick I had picked up from Legolas and Jean-Claude about agility and balance to make it appear otherworldly and intimidating. His eyes widened fractionally, which was rewarding. I stood and took two menacing steps towards him, wand pointed between his pretty grey eyes. “Daughter?” I snarled angrily. “Victim! You murdered me!” Lucard smiled and spread his hands. “If that is what you would like to call it.” “You're not denying it?” “Why should I? You are a Vampire, are you not?” I frowned. My aim never wavered. I shook my head. “Why have you come back to me?” he asked softly, so softly and gently that it almost sounded like a… like a lover welcoming back an ex who had left him against his wishes, against his heart. No, I said to myself, pushing away his charm, he's tried this before. Jean-Claude was better at these tricks. And Jareth. I know them now. They won't work. He stood slowly, and the motion made me panic. “Expellaramus!” I cried and he was sent slamming back into his chair with a blast of white light from my wand. It rocked back on two legs, and for a moment, appeared as if it would tip over. Then he threw his weight forward and it slammed down on four legs with a crack of splintering wood. He shook his head, stared at me, then stood again, one corner of his lips peeling back away from a fang. His eyes were yellow now. He was very, very angry. The mask of surprised happiness shattered. I backed up hastily. He came after me. “Expellaramus!” I said again, and this time he flew half way across the room. He crashed onto the throw rug in an undignified sprawl. He shot to his feet, snarling, suit rumpled and hair mussed. God, he looked sexy. I hated him. He came at me again. This time I made the mistake of looking him in the eye. His gaze was like a basilisk's. I felt myself freeze under his eyes. I couldn't move! Somehow he had made me… immobile. I had seen this on the TV show before - Lucard petrifying people by just looking at them, like a snake about to strike. I had done it to Trieze's serving girl. But I didn't know he could do it with another vampire. I tried to raise my wand. I couldn't. I tried to run. I couldn't. This had been such a stupid idea. Panic rose in my chest, hot and choking. He stopped right in front of me, invading my personal space. His eyes remained locked on mine. He plucked the wand from my slack grasp. I was terrified he would break it, but he merely slid it into his back pocket. “I'll have a better look at your little toy, later,” he hissed. His eyes glittered, yellow and beast-like, and he smiled, revealing long, pointed incisors. He raised a hand and gently touched my cheek. I wanted to flinch away and couldn't. “Sweeting, I'll not have my dominance threatened in my own home,” he said with terrifying finality. “You are mine and you will respect me.” “Screw you, Captain Overbite,” I said, adding a colourful cuss I'd once heard Gimli use in Dwarvish. “My, my,” he whispered. His face got closer and I swallowed hard enough to make it hurt. “Aren't we just full of surprises, my dear? Your eyes have changed. They are brighter, now. Purpler. But oh, so filled with hate. I liked it better when they were filled with fear.” I stared defiantly at his eyes, because I could not look anywhere else. I hoped the hatred I felt for him burned hot in my gaze. “I want you to answer me… when you … when you turned me…” I trailed off. I couldn't say it. I didn't want to know. What if he said 'yes'? His eyebrows rose slowly. “Is that why you have returned to me?” “I haven't returned to you!” He laughed. He threw back his head and let forth a full-throated laugh. He patted my cheek and it was more of a slap. His laughter made him close his eyes and in an instant I was free. I backed away quickly, only to feel him slam his body against mine, backing me into the stone wall between two windows. My stomach hit my spine and I let out the breath I'd been using to speak with in a rushing woosh. He placed his hands on either side of my head and leaned in close enough to trap me, his nose mere molecules from mine. “Do you really want to know?” he whispered softly, dangerously. “Will it relieve your nightmares? Does it make you scream at night? Will it make you hate me? Or want me? Perhaps your dreams are better than nightmares, hm? Does it even matter?” “Tell me,” I growled. He was unimpressed. “Scream for me. Scream the way you scream when the nightmares of it wake you.” “No. Tell me how to get home, then.” “So many demands, and from a person clearly in no position to make them.” He drew back slightly and rubbed his cheek against my own, nose snuffling against my skin as he scented my neck, my hair. “Why should I?” His tongue darted out to taste the scars that he had put there. I cringed. Would he bite me again? “I ha-have to know.” He switched sides, lathing my skin, biting gently on my earlobe. “No.” “Manipulative Bastard!” He chuckled. “Is that supposed to hurt my feelings?” “Get off me.” “No.” I tried to shove of the paralysis and only managed to make my hands twitch. I pushed, my eye locked onto his, and lifted my arms. I reached around his body, and he thought I was trying to embrace him. He pulled me close, crushing my breasts against him. I wrapped my fingers around my wand and tugged. It came free from his pocket. “Accio book!” The novel he had been reading flew off the coffee table and smashed him in the back of the head. He jerked, then slammed me back into the stone. My head bounced once, and stars danced behind my eyes. “Again, a book!” He stepped back and hissed at me. “Bitch! I have blocked the Vortex, you cannot escape me!” I pointed the wand at him. “I don't need your goddamned Vortex. I don't know why I put myself through this. You only want to play with me, to control me, to fuck me up.” I fished the unkeyed phial from my pouch and lifted it above my head. “You don't feel the slightest sliver of regret, do you?” His eyes darted from the phial to the wand. He had no idea what I was about to do, but he knew it would take me away from him. Take away my knowledge, my power. I was just a tool to him. A means to a fucking ends. Screw him. I moved to smash the phial and he lunged at me. “Inflamare!” I cried and he dropped to the floor, his hands on fire. I watched for a second as he beat out the flames. I slammed the phial against the cold stone floor. There was a flat crack and a brilliant flash of white light. I dropped to the ground, wand still raised defensively before me, like a gun. I was aiming right between the eyes of a mostly bald man in a black and red shirt and black pants. He stared at me with wide blue eyes for all of five seconds before he threw his head back and said, “Q!” I quashed the inane urge to shout “R, S, T!” Instead I laughed myself into hysteria. The calmness of Legolas' blood was gone. Books Eleven and Twelve: Star Trek: The Next Generation / Tokyo Babylon Chapter Thirty-two: “Disillusioned” I passed out. I shivered and shook and was sick. The doctor couldn't help me because her precious 24th century technology said I was dead. They tied me to a bed in the medical bay to keep me from thrashing so hard as to hurt myself. It was a like an epileptic fit, they told me, when I came out of it. They didn't have any explanation for it. I knew it was from Slipping thrice in as many hours. If I had been human, I'd be dead. All the way. I wasn't sure that wouldn't have been welcome at this point. The Ship's Guidance Councillor was an empath and the searing night-terrors brought on by my Slip-Sickness and visit to Lucard shook her so badly that she was screaming from three decks above me. They shot her full of a sedative and put her in a bed as far away from me as the ship would allow. Two days later I woke up. I wasn't any more calm awake than asleep. I was freaking out. Security personnel in yellow shirts had to hold me down when I wrenched the restraints right off the bed. It took me several long hours of shouted reassurances and futile attempts to give me calming drugs for me to become tranquil. They shot me full of things that just made me angrier, and wore off in moments. Finally I exhausted myself. I lay shaking and crying, drained and empty and dead feeling on the bed. The Doctor whispered false, empty, reassuring things to me. I slept again, sleep with no dreams. Sleep with no rest. Then I woke. Then they demanded a story. I said I was a traveler, I had gotten lost, sick, hurt. I needed shelter, kindness, warmth. I said I didn't know how I got here, that I just needed to rest. The Empath woman said I believed that what I was saying was the truth. The Captain, being compassionate, granted my request to be left alone to recover - so long as I didn't leave Sick Bay. Invisible, shimmering shields of energy blocked the doors, silently and efficiently. Where they thought I would go was beyond me. I couldn't venture into the areas of the ship where people slept or lived - not without being invited. They returned my personal effects - my knife, my wand, my pouch and phials - at my insistence. The head of security, a gruff bumpyforeheaded guy, wanted to keep the knife. I insisted and the Captain made him give it over. What was a knife, they thought, to phaser pistols? What was a stick to “stun”? What harm could it possibly do, the Doctor said, to give me back my archaic toys? What harm indeed. I almost laughed. I may have giggled a bit. I put my hand over my mouth, and maybe a titter escaped around the cracks between my fingers. I got lots of funny looks and clamped down on it. I put my wand back in its new sheath on the front of my leather belt, and the knife in the back in its, and counted my phials twice. None were missing. Jack's coins were still there, and Legolas' comb, part of Trieze's rose and all the other odds and ends I'd gathered from all the worlds I'd visited. My little portable museum of memories past and people failed. I turned the comb over and over between my fingers. Then I asked for a mirror. I stared at the round, plastic framed piece of glass. It was amazing that something so simple - foil, mercury, glass - could make you hurt so much. What Lucard had said was true. My eyes were brighter now. Vaguely violet-er. More Elf-Like. Like I had plucked them from someone else's face and put them in my own - alien and bright and oh so empty. The person who stared out at me from the mirror hardly looked like someone I recognized at all. It was more than just the eyes. Gone was the slightly chubby girl with too many freckles, a mop of rusty-coloured hair, and dull blue eyes trapped behind bookish glasses. In her place was a thin, angry, pale woman with a weariness in eyes too blue, eyes that had seen too much, and long sun-reddened hair in elvish braids. I didn't like the person I saw in the mirror, the taught lines of wariness and hurt and anger around my eyes and mouth, so I made my reflection go away. It was easy. I just had to not want to see me, and then I didn't. It faded from the glass, like oil sinking to the bottom of a crystal clear cup of water. So easy to make all the pain and all the hurt and all the anger just vanish. And if I couldn't see it, it wasn't real. I threw the mirror at the wall. It shattered on the clean white bulk head and it made such a pretty shower of silver shards that I laughed, and laughed, and laughed. And felt nothing. ===== I lay on the bed and stared at the ceiling. My eyes were open but they saw zilch. The frizzling sound of the electrical door between us faded. I heard a soft voice beside my head. “Do you want to talk about it?” the woman with the cascade of dark curls said. She smelled worried and just that tiny bit afraid. I liked the fear. It smelled like food. “No,” I said. “Are you hungry?” Yes, lean over. “No.” “Do you want anything?” “Nothing you can get for me.” She took this tactless comment as an offer to sit down. She hitched a turquoise slicked hip up onto the foot of the bed. “What do you want? You'd be surprised - the Enterprise is very well equipped. Any food, any drink, we can get you anything.” I sat up and glared at her, with eyes that were too blue, eyes that weren't mine. “I want my soul back,” I said. It was cruel. It made her doe eyes widen. More fear. It tickled my nose, stroked my beast. I smiled and she saw the corner of one sharp, retracted eyetooth. Her heart skipped once, only once. She was too well trained to let me see her fear, but she couldn't keep it from my nose. “Your what?” “My soul. I want it back. Can you give me that, blood bag?” “Nobody took your soul,” she said, but her words were uncertain. Her mind was contradicting what her heart told her. That part of her deep inside, ingrained in her DNA, that lost, ancient reptilian monkey thing that had to run from the tigers before man discovered speech and fire and spears. “Nobody can steal souls.” “You're wrong,” I said, and lay back down again. “He did. It's gone and I'm a monster.” I tucked my hands under my head, comfortable, content in the knowledge that I was now totally irredeemable. It kept everything in me cool and calm and dead. No turmoil. No nightmare-box. “You're not a monster,” the almost-but-not-quite afraid woman said. “No matter what anyone did to you, it doesn't make you a monster.” “I nearly killed the man I loved. I was damned by a creature that shouldn't exist. I have hurt people willingly, gleefully.” “Yet I sense regret in you,” the woman said. “Strong regret - hurt and pain and guilt. Monsters don't feel guilt.” “Get out!” I screeched and my eyes blazed yellow. She got out. The frizzling sound again and I was a prisoner once more. ===== “Are you hungry?” a different woman tried. This time the woman had red hair and the blue uniform of a doctor. “Yes,” I said. She sighed with relief. “What would you like?” “Blood. OB Negative. Hot.” I sat up and smiled at her. She backed away slowly and put up a force shield between us. I laughed, and laughed, and laughed, and my stomach cramped with emptiness. My veins burned and I laughed. Maybe I would starve to death. That was a nice thought. I liked that one. Starving to death had something of poetry to it. ===== ”There once was a lady from Niger,” I sang softly to myself, twirling my wand over my knuckles, through my fingers, under my palm and around again, over, and over, and over. I lay on my back on the medical bed, swinging my foot off the side in time to the beat. “Who rode off on the back of a Tiger.” “Where did you learn that song?” the woman with the dark hair said. She was sitting in a chair on the other side of the invisible field. It kept me trapped in the alcove with the one bed as surely as a cross on a lintel. “Dunno,” I said, interrupting my recitation. “But I like the moral.” “Oh?” “Cautionary tale,” I said with a shrug. “Against what?” “They came back from the ride With the lady inside And a smile on the face of the Tiger. Don't get to comfortable around things with fangs.” ===== “You haven't eaten anything four days,” the red-head doctor said. “Please, don't force us to inject you with proteins.” I laughed. My skin felt tight and too hot, my insides empty and cold. The shakes would start soon. The cramps already had. “That won't do a thing. I'm a monster. I only drink blood.” “You're not a monster!” the woman said firmly. “You just--” “—have no heartbeat, don't breathe, and have no vital signs,” I finished for her. She blinked. “Blood,” I said. “Hot. C'mon, before I start to seizure here.” A cup of blood so hot it steamed appeared in an alcove in the wall. She timidly, cautiously turned off the force field. The large, dark, intimidating man with the bumpy forehead stood behind her and looked warning. I winked at him. The doctor gave me the blood and I blew on it as if it were tea. Then I downed it in one long pull. “Aaaah,” I said, wiping the back of my hand across my lips. My fingers started to tingle. It wasn’t enough to thaw me out, but it was enough to take the edge off. “Much better.” I handed her back the empty cup. “Anything else I can get you?” she asked softly. “Revenge?” I said. She backed away. “How bout my sanity? I sort of miss that. What about home, that would be nice. I'd really like to get home.” She seized on the one thing that seemed remotely plausible. “Where is your home?” “On the other side of the TV screen,” I said, and laughed again when she put the force field back up. “You sure do think I'm dangerous.” “No,” she denied firmly. “We're just afraid you'll do something to hurt yourself.” I unclipped my knife from my belt and held it aloft, letting the fluorescent lights overhead play over the keen edge of the blade. Gimli had shown me how to sharpen it with a whet stone that I now kept in my pouch. “What?” I said, rolling up the sleeve of my other arm. Cash had looked so cool doing it. “Like this?” I pressed the tip of the blade deliberately against the skin of my wrist. “No, don't!” she cried, and I jerked back hard. The silver burned. She dropped the force field, and the bumpy-headed man rushed in, twisted the knife from my grip. The doctor grabbed my bleeding arm and called for help. The buff guy put my knife into a pocket at his hip. I plucked it out again deftly and put it back in my sheath at the small of my back without his ever noticing. I shoved them both away with a yellow-eyed grin. They sprawled on the floor and looked up at where I was sitting primly on the bed. I licked the blood off my arm in a long, languorous line. The wound, fresh and angry red, stared out at them. Then, slowly, it began to knit together. If I had not made the wound with silver, it would have been closed in seconds. As it was, it took minutes. But that was still faster than anything either had seen before. “How did you do that?” the doctor asked. “Ask the man who murdered me,” I lisped back around my fangs. “I'm tired now, go away.” I lay down and ignored them and the muted whispers and their putterings until I went to sleep. ===== “So that's where you're hiding,” the man in the red and black pyjamas said. “I might have known it was aboard the Enterprise. Jean-Luc certainly attracts more than his fair share of interesting situations.” I rested my hands on my hips and glowered. I was getting pretty sick of strange people showing up in my dreams. “Who are you? You're not Lucard and you're not Jean-Claude and you're not the guy with the sword.” “The ‘guy with the sword’ isn’t here right now.” The man standing before me raised an eyebrow. “I am Q.” I appraised him dubiously. “The guy makes stuff for 007?” He frowned. “No. What are you?” “A Mary Sue.” He nodded once and folded his hands into the wide sleeves of his jacket. “Ah, that explains it. I wondered why the entire universe suddenly realigned to make you the focal point.” I grimaced. “Not entirely reassuring,” He smiled. “Well, you're certainly something else. I've never met a Mary Sue with your distinct lack of interest in her Suedom.” “You've met others?” He pressed his blueish lips together and said nothing, a shit-eating grin on his face. I hate those kinds of grins. “You cold?” I asked. “No,” he said. “But you are. I rarely take poetic license when describing humans, but your heart is like ice.” “Better ice than broken,” I shot back. “And check your radar, I'm not human.” “Of course you are,” the man said. “Oh, I know the word for your kind of human is 'Vampire', but really, your whole species likes to sub-categorize far too much. No other race is so narcissistic as to name a whole sect of you something entirely different. You're still the same species. Oh, you don't eat food or breathe air, and your body is nothing but a corpse, but you are still a human being. I'd congratulate you, but there's nothing particularly congratulatory about being something so... base.” I woke screaming. Of course you are. You're still the same species. You're still human. When I finished screaming, I did a lot of thinking instead. ===== “I'm sorry,” I said. I was standing on my side of the force field, looking suitably abashed. “I said a lot of needlessly cruel things. I... haven't been myself lately.” Counsellor Deanna Troi exchanged a glance with Doctor Beverly Crusher. “We forgive you,” the empath woman said. “Now, would you like to tell us why you've felt so standoffish?” I shrugged and sat down on the table. “Well, here's the thing. I was ripped away from my home by a man who may or may not have raped me, but who definitely changed my cellular structure. He made me into something else, something I don't want to be. He violated my body, violated my mind, and then violated my corpse. I escaped him and I've been traveling fruitlessly for almost a year now in an attempt to find my own home again. During my travels I have been hunted, hated, haunted, trapped, punished, hurt, and worse than all of that, loved. Worse, because those people never really loved me, they just loved what I am, and there's nothing I could do about it. It just makes me feel more and more like a lying bitch with everyone of them I capture. I'm tired of being in the middle of all the disputes, all the rivalries, and all the major plot points. I ended up killing a man to stop a war and while it was the right thing to do, it's been eating at me. I also nearly killed a man in the midst of making love to him, because of my craving for blood. He trusted me and I hurt him. His blood messed with my mind, made me delirious, gave me nightmares and confidence and I don't know which is worse. Now I'm slowly being ground down, weary of this life on the run, scared that I'll never find home, and taking it out on whoever is closest to me. So, you see, it's not your fault that've been so horrid,” I said, clapping my hands together, startling both of them enough to make them jump, “I simply have misplaced aggression and a fear of being closed in cages or trapped which combined to made me use the two of you as an outlet for my frustration and scapegoat targets for my anger.” “Erm,” the Counsellor said. I smiled brightly. “Thanks for the talk. I really needed that. I feel better, now. Bye!” And I shattered a phial against the side of the bed. ===== The place I ended up was beautiful in the way that carefully groomed gardens are beautiful. Avenues of green foliage intersected crowded roads of rubbery cement and puddles. A garden, in a major metropolis, somewhere. I could see the outline of sky-scrapers above the canopy of the trees. I could hear the distant, muffled sounds of vehicles and horns, chiming trucks and shouting salesmen. The faces all around me had high cheek bones, caramel coloured skin, dark, almond eyes, and straight black hair. I crept out of the shadows of a copse of the spindly, almost bare trees and towards the crowds. The park was simply filled with people - Asian people with conservative fashion sense, on their way to work, walking with their families, talking into their cell phones, pausing to bow and shake hands and converse. I stepped out in the middle of the thoroughfare and stared up at the sunny sky above me. It felt nice to have the heat of a real sun on my skin again, rather than the sickly bluish glow of the fluorescent lights in the Sickbay. People walked around me, ignoring me totally or giving small little nods to the tourist. I felt revitalized. I felt fresh. Hell, I felt like myself again. I had needed that temper tantrum back in “Star Trek”. I had needed to rant and rail and generally feel sorry for myself. Now I was ready to move forward, to move on, to get going. I had two blank phials left. I decided, recklessly, that I would use them both, one right after another. I would spend today in this lovely park, sleep on a bench, feed from a homeless guy, and be gone the next afternoon. I didn't even care where I was. I wasn't going to stop any more. I wasn't going to make friends. I wasn't going to meet lovers. I was going to keep my head down and plough through. The decision was made. My stomach twisted slightly at the thought of how alone I was going to be for the next... however long it took. I ignored it. I had made my choice and that was that. I was going to get home dammit and I would have no more Triezes or Legolases sitting on my heart or gnawing at my conscious. I was done with being curious, enjoying the ride. I felt paradoxically light, freed, happy... and heavy with sorrow. It would be lonely, yes. I would have to be callous. But I would be unscathed. A little girl, clinging with sticky fingers to her mother's hand looked up at me, her liquid eyes huge. “Nihao,” I said softly, smiling with my lips closed to hide my fangs. “Mama mama!” the little girl exclaimed excitedly. “Gaijin da!” Her mother hit her head gently, in a reproachful manner. “Anno konnichi wa,” her mother urged her. The girl gave me a sticky smile. “Konnichi wa!” she repeated. “Konnichi wa, Gaikokujin-san!” “That's not Chinese,” I said to myself. I had expected to be in China. The woman looked confused, so I waved and let her and her daughter go on their way. “Japanese,” a strong, deep voice said behind me. I turned. He was at least six feet, maybe taller, completely defying my thought of what a typical Japanese man looked like. He was slim, attractive, dressed in a very distinguished dark coloured suit. He wore it like a uniform; proudly. His hair was black, carefully styled to be piecey - edgy without looking punk. Anime-like. He wore a pair of sunglasses so dark I couldn't see his eyes, even though the day was slightly cloudy. “Japan?” I repeated. “Thanks.” “Are you lost?” he asked, and his English was nearly flawless. He had no problems with his 'l's and 'r's, and I was impressed. “A little,” I admitted. “Where am I?” What happened to not making friends? I scolded myself. I'm not, I argued back. I'm chatting up my potential meal. “Ueno Park,” the man said. “That's in almost the centre of Tokyo.” “Ah.” I smiled and scratched my head. “Are you going to a convention?” he asked, nodding towards my Elvish garb. “Is that Cosplay? Or are you looking for Harujuku?” I blinked, and looked down at myself. I did look like a costumed freak from a fantasy convention. Or one of the famous Harujuku girls who dress in Lolita-gothic clothing and hang around the stone bridge at Harujuku station on Sunday afternoons in Tokyo. I grinned sheepishly. “No. I... it's a long story. I sort of lost my luggage,” I lied, “and this was all I could get my hands on.” The man laughed, and his laugh was pleasant, safe. Just that tiniest bit sexy. I got goosebumps. What happened to no more Triezes or Legolases? “I see,” he said. “Well, I think the boots are very flattering.” I thought they had been too, and I was secretly thrilled. He isn't a Trieze or a Legolas. I wasn't masochistic enough to let myself fall for someone all over again, especially after what had just happened with Legolas, but flirting was very nice. This man was good for my ego. He suddenly stuck out his hand, “If you have lost your luggage, I assume you've probably lost quite a deal of money as well. Allow me to treat you to lunch?” I smiled and took his hand. A sort of electric shock ran up my arm, giving me goosebumps. He smiled. “Sure,” I agreed, “that sounds great. My name is Marie. Marie Susan.” “I'm Seishiro Sakurazaka,” he said. Book Twelve: Tokyo Babylon Chapter Thirty-Three: “The Keeper of the Cherry Blossom Burial Mound” Seishirou-san was absolutely charming. His gentle voice and attentiveness went a long way towards helping me crawl out of my Legolas-induced funk. We sat in the shade of a striped awning, on the sidewalk outside of a small café in the Akihabara area. He smoked Lucky Seven cigarettes and I didn't breathe unless I had too, but even then I found the disgusting habit rather charming. We sipped coffee and though he had offered to buy me lunch, I managed to convince him that he needn't waste his money on an eight-hundred yen sandwich for me. I stripped off my cloak and outer tunic, leaving the Gondorian silk blouse and the thick grey hose and boots, and felt less like a cosplaying reject for it. Tokyo, Seishirou-san told me, was unseasonably hot this April. I agreed. He told me that I should visit the Imperial Palace grounds, and Tokyo Tower, if I hadn't already. I agreed. He drank his coffee and ate a slice of cake and told me that he had a weakness for sweets, and smiled from behind a pair of dark sunglasses that he never removed and smoked. And I hung on his charm, on his wit, on his blithe grins and his easy compliments and wondered how exactly I would manage to get this wonderful, cheerful man in a business suit that must have been boiling him in private. “What do you do, Seishirou-san?” I asked him. “I'm a veterinarian.” “Oh,” I said, “why did you choose that?” “Someone I... knew. He loved animals. It inspired me.” “What does this someone think of your career now?” Seishirou-san smiled and for the first time, it seemed slightly disingenuous. “I have not spoken to him in eight years. Not since his sister died.” “Oh,” I said again. “Don't be sad for me, Marie-san!” he laughed. “I am not.” “Don't you miss him?” I asked. “No,” he said. “Oh. Are you avoiding him?” “No.” I shifted in my seat, slightly uncomfortable by his sudden candour. “Do you think you'll ever speak to him again?” “Perhaps,” he said. He tapped the dead ashes off his cigarette, revealing the bloody flame that danced at his fingertips. Harmless looking, but deadly all the same. “In 1999. At the appointed time.” He levelled a look at me through the glasses. I had the queer, hairraising sensation that he was looking right through me. “And what will you do at the end of the millennium?” he asked me softly. The question held extra meaning, I knew it did, but I couldn't figure what kind. “Party like its 1999?” I said glibly, with a small shrug. I had already lived through 1999 once. Y2K didn't scare me, if that's what he meant. He made a small sound, as if confirming something to himself. “No grand plans. You are not a Dragon.” I blinked at this non sequitor. “Dragon?” Nope. I didn't think I was a dragon. In fact, I was pretty sure I was a Vampire. He laughed again and waved his cigarette in a strange circle, dismissing my confusion. “Forgive me, an error in my translation. I meant to ask if you were dating someone.” Sure, okay. 'Dating' and 'Dragon' sounded sort of alike. I got them confused all the time. Ri-ight. “No,” I said. “Not any more.” The silence and the smoke lingered in the air between us from his hand motion, and for the briefest of moments, it seemed to make the shape of an inverted pentagram. A tickling sense of not right began to pluck at my mind. Somehow the sun set. I hadn't noticed it. The chill wash of my undead power returning to me gave me shivers. Seishirou-san asked if I was cold, and I lied and told him I was. I put my tunic back on, but kept the belt under it to hide the knife from any police who may catch me in the open. “Have you seen the sakura yet?” Seishirou-san asked, pulling me out of my niggling worry. “Sakura?” “Cherry Blossoms, forgive me. They are spectacularly stunning at night. Why don't we go to the corner store, buy some wine and some more cakes, return to Ueno-koen, and have our own private hanami?” “Hanami?” “Blossom Viewing Party.” And here I had thought that the clichés of drunkard Japanese salary-men crowding into parks in April to recite spontaneous, contagious, inebriated haikus at pink flowers had been just a stereotype. “Sure,” I said, because getting him alone was what I had wanted all along. “Sounds fun.” ===== Turns out that convenience stores in Japan sell wine with screw tops in the refrigerators beside the cola. Huh. This really was an amazing country. Seishirou loaded up on sakura-flavoured kit-kat bars, cheap wine, sake, and some pre-wrapped cheesecakes, and Lucky Seven cigarettes. I offered to help carry the bag and he declined, saying that it was wrong for the lady to do the heavy lifting. I told him a few cakes and a bottle of wine wasn't exactly heavy lifting, but he would hear none of it. I hated the title ‘Lady’, now. We walked back to the park in companionable noise, talking about nothing in particular. “Is it true that salary-men wear their ties around their foreheads when they're drunk?” I asked, thinking of several anime I had seen. Seishirou-san laughed. “Yes, I've seen it. Do they do that where you are from?” “Gods, no,” I said quickly. “They'd be too embarrassed.” I looked at him out of the corner of my eye. “Have you ever done it?” He laughed. “No. It's undignified.” And Seishirou-san struck me as very dignified. We reached the park, and though there were rows and rows of cherry trees that were lit by the giant flood lights, revellers sitting on blue tarpaulins or on picnic blankets shouting and laughing, Seishirou-san kept walking. “There's an empty spot there,” I said, pointing, “Or there.” “No, no,” he said. “Far too loud, wouldn't you agree? And all the men would come to stare at the gaijin. It's unseemly. Surely you don't want that kind of attention?” I nodded. He had a point. “Where are we going then?” I asked. “Somewhere else.” I laughed. “You have a favourite cherry tree?” I teased. He stopped for a millisecond. I got the distinct impression that he was blinking at me in confusion, but I couldn't see his eyes behind his dark sunglasses. Finally, he resumed walking. “Yes,” he said softly. “I have a favourite. The most beautiful one in the park. Her blossoms are so dark they are almost red. Would you like to see her?” “Yes,” I said. “Sounds lovely.” We walked for a few silent minutes. I shivered again, wondered what this faint feeling of wrongness was and why it kept plaguing me. I tried to shake it off, shoved it to the back of my mind where it became a faint tickle. Seishirou-san stopped, and I turned to look up at the tree whose thick, knobbly branches we were standing under. I gasped. The blossoms really were so dark as to almost be red. “It's gorgeous,” I breathed. “I'm afraid I have no blanket,” Seishirou-san said as I started up at the faintly glowing petals. Wordlessly I handed him my cloak. I felt him take it, heard him spread it own the ground. Heard the clink of the bottle, the rustle of the plastic bag, the faint hiss of the carbon escaping a twist-top. “Will you sit, Marie-san?” I tore my eyes away from the strangely hypnotic flowers. They were bobbing in the wind, petals curling like fingers saying come here, come here. I turned to Seishirou-san. He was seated on the edge of my cloak, his blazer jacket folded neatly on a protruding root. I sank down onto the fabric beside him. He handed me the wine and I lifted it to my lips. I intended to merely wet my mouth with it, but he was watching me too closely, so I swallowed. I passed it to him and he did the same. I reached out a hand to the trunk of the tree, ancient and sturdy and beautiful. I touched the bark. There was a sound. A sigh. A sigh? No, a scream. Faint and high and ghostlike. Barely there. I frowned, pressed my fingers harder against the bark. It got a little louder, but I wasn't sure. It still sounded faint, like the breeze through branches. Was I imagining it. “What is wrong?” Seishirou-san asked, and I jerked back my hand guiltily. “Nothing,” I breathed. “I ... I thought I heard....” He smiled. “Thought you heard what?” He handed me the wine again. “Nothing,” I said. I drank. He drank. A single petal fell, floated gently, landed on the back of my hand, which was resting on my knee. “She likes you,” Seishirou-san said gently. I lifted the petal, stared at it. The feeling of not-right increased fractionally. “I like you, too,” he said. I looked up, would have met his eyes, save for the glasses. I felt loose, suddenly, as if the wine had really affected me. Not drunk, but relaxed, trusting. Content. Satisfied. Satisfied and not. I wanted, suddenly. Wanted. Wanted something. Someone. I wanted to see his eyes. I reached out and he didn't flinch back. I took the arms of his sunglasses gently between my fingers, pulled them away, folded the arms tenderly and set them aside. I looked back up, wanted to see what colour his eyes were. One was a deep, dark black-brown. The other was a white marble. I gasped. “It disturbs you?” he asked softly. I reached up, brushed fingertips along the skin beside the corner of his fake eye, across his eyebrow. “No,” I said. “There's no scar. What happened?” “A woman took it.” “Took it?” “Stabbed it.” “Why?” I breathed. He leaned into my touch, rubbing his cheek against my palm. Breathed into my palm. His skin was warm, his expression blissful. Perfect. Everything it should be. Exactly as a lover ought to look. The wrongness prickled but I didn't care. There was something too perfect about him, something almost too rehearsed, to clinical, but I ignored it. No, we were seducing each other. I was just being paranoid. Afraid of another Legolas. No. Go away. And it did. “Protecting someone,” he said. “My friend.” “The friend who left?” “Yes. I broke his heart.” He leaned forward, and my hand slid over his ear, into his thick black hair. His nose hovered near mine, his breath sweet from the cakes and the wine and desire. “Help me forget,” he groaned. I closed the gap. Kissed him. Opened my mouth to him and let him in. Forget, forget, yes, yes, forget under the lovely red petals with a lovely glass-eyed man. But which eye was the fake one? Which one shone with real emotion. Any emotion? “Is there someone you're trying to forget?” he whispered softly, his finger tracing a slow, hot line from the centre of my forehead, down my nose, to pause at my lips. 'Yes,” I breathed. I kissed the tip of his finger, closed my eyes. “Shall I help you forget him?” “God, yes. Please.” I wrapped my arms around his neck, tugged him closer, rubbed my hip against his knee. “Oh, my. Begging. Say that again.” “Please,” I groaned against his mouth. Tongue flicking. “Please.” “Very well,” he said into my mouth. I felt the tips of his fingers press against my breast, over my heart. “Because you beg so prettily.” And then he thrust his hand through my rib cage. ===== This wasn't like my normal dreams. I was floating. Floating in darkness. There was no up, no down. No gravity. There was a light. Far off in the distance. I kicked my feet, moved my arms through the nothing. Swimming in black. The light came closer. It was a hazy sphere of whitish glow. It surrounded, enveloped... no, emanated from a tree in the center. It was gnarled, old. Tough. Enduring. Thick across the trunk. Three people could clasp hands around it. Spindly, knotted branches shot in all directions, thin and brittle, shooting up from limbs as thick as my thigh. Big enough to sit on. There were no leaves on this tree. Only flowers. Vivid glowing red-pink flowers, no bigger than a quarter, with serrated petals and a soft scent. The fell from the flowers in a shower, blown by a breeze that did not exist, that I did not feel. The petals swirled up, taunting, beckoning. I kicked my feet again, moved closer. I stood on the light, by the roots that dove into the darkness. The blossoms danced around me, circling, circling, hypnotic and calm and... beautiful. The glow came from the undersides of the petals. Some of them shimmered off into the darkness, specks of pink like fireflies in June, bobbing over rushes that weren't there. A petal brushed over my cheek, a lover's caress. Wanting me. “Hello,” I told the tree. The light pulsed and in its branches I saw a falcon. A sleek, sleepy looking bird of prey. “Hello,” I told the falcon. It blinked one wet marble eye at me. I looked down at myself - I was wearing blue sneakers with purple legwarmers. Black, pinstriped pants, a grape-coloured turtleneck sweater under an olive faux-suede button down shirt. I touched my clothing. Clothing that I had not worn since the night I'd died. “Am I dreaming?” I asked the bird. “This isn't like my dreams usually are. Have you seen the man in black? Maybe... maybe I'm dead.” The bird puffed up its feathers and settled them, turning its head to get a better look at me with one eye. I moved closer and the bird cocked its head, opened its beak at me. I could see both eyes now. One was a clear, marble white. “Maybe I am dead,” I told the bird. “That wouldn't be so bad, I guess. Done that once already. Or maybe I'm dreaming. Maybe this whole thing has been a bad dream, and when I wake up I'll be at home in my bed, and still have that essay due for F--'s literary theory class. Maybe I'm not a Mary Sue at all.” The bird twitched its head to the side. It looked curious. “Explain?” I echoed. “It's a long list. I'll bore you.” It's feather's puffed and settled. “Okay. A Mary Sue is a ...a fictional character, you see. A fictional character created by a fan - and inserted into a pre-established fictional world. Out of cannon. New and strange and... a diva. Poorly written.” The bird made a noise. “Maybe I'm poorly written, how would I know?” I said. “I'm just the Sue. I'm not the author.” It blinked. “My author? Dunno. Don't wanna think about it. Haven't got one. I'm real. I'm not a Sue. I'm different. I don't fill the requirements. Not a twin, no purple eyes, no special magical pet. Not annoying. Am I annoying?” It blinked again. “Thanks. Am I dead yet?” It cocked its head in the other direction. “Oh, okay.” Noise. “The whole thing?” Noise. “Okay.” I sat on a protruding root, held up a finger, and began to count. “One, the Mary Sue is sexually attractive to all canon characters, regardless of their sexual orientation or availability. Two, often has violet eyes or eyes that change colours. Three,” I held up a third finger, “Is adept at any sort of fighting or magic wielded by the canonical characters, often surpassing the canonical characters in ability with little to no practice or previous experience.” The bird flew down from its perch, landed at my feet. Staring, fascinated. “Four, she is the centre of the plot, the key player in any battle, and is the only one who can 'save the day'. Five, she is often the reason for the main conflict in the plot, whether inadvertently or as a central figure. Six, she is immediately accepted into the canonical character's inner circle of friends and confidants, no matter how unsociable or closely guarded said circle of friends is in the cannon.” The falcon walked a few steps closer, head bobbing to help it keep its balance, one eye trained on my face. It opened its beak, made a noise with its blue tongue. “Seven, the Mary Sue character exists for the Suethor's wish fulfillment. The Sue looks like the author wishes she looked, acts like the way she wishes she could, says what the author wishes she could say, and creates an environment within the cannon in which things that the Suethor wishes would have happened in the cannon does. Eight, the character is either previously unrecognized by the fandom's central protagonists and antagonists, or drops in from 'reality'. Eight, she is ardently desired by the villain despite there being no advantage or reason for the villain to want said Mary Sue.” The falcon pushed its head up under my hand and I stopped counting on my fingers, ran my fingernails through the oily, soft feathers on the top of its head instead. “Nine, she is witty and snarkish, and no matter how lame said wittisisms are, the canonical characters akin the Sue's sense of humour to that of a Comedy God. (i.e. Joss) Ten, she s often able to shift shapes, or has a friend or magical pet that can shift shapes. Eleven, is related to a major character that is not the romantic interest, and said relation is often used as a haphazard excuse to introduce the Sue to the canonical characters/ future romantic interest. Twelve, the character has a tragic past that they 'get over' cheerily, suffering neither post-traumatic stress, Stockholm syndrome, or other disorders or phobias brought on by their past experiences.” Something near my heart began to hurt. The muscle throbbed. The bone ached. The bird rubbed closer to me, content and cooing. Something was wrong. I wanted to stop. To shut up, to jump away from the glowing tree and the creepy falcon. I couldn't. It was a dream and I couldn't escape. “Thirteen, Mary Sues rarely scar, or if they do, it is in a cool place in a meaningful pattern. Fourteen, Mary Sues mope, brood, or pout, but only for as long as it takes for the canonical characters to distract her. Long-term guilt or pain is rare in a Sue.” I kept talking, couldn't put my hand over my mouth, couldn't stop the tumble, the waterfall of words now, all my secrets spilling out, out, water from a fountain, blood from a fatal wound... “Fifteen, the surrounding canon characters are made to act out of character by her presence. Fourteen, somehow the Mary Sue character 'saves the day' in unlikely ways that leave the cannon characters stunned and amazed. Lastly, the Mary Sue often was given a name with a relevant 'hidden' meaning.” “What a marvellous power,” the bird under my hand said. I jerked away. Tried to stand, couldn't. Something was wrapped around my ankles. Something thing and knobbly, painful. Something twisting and squeezing. The bird laughed, flew back onto its branch, watching with wet, greedy eyes. “Power, power,” it chirruped. I looked down. The roots of the tree were crawling up my legs. I screamed, tried to struggle away, tried to break the branches, but they moved away from my reaching hands, too fast, too thick. Branches dipped down, lashed my wrists, yanked my arms out and above my head, slammed me back against the tree. Crucified. “Want it,” the bird said. I woke. ===== I was still in the deadly embrace of the tree. Our picnic was spilled, forgotten on my cloak. Seishiriou was standing in front of me, eyes flicking from the blood coating his hand and wrist, to my breast. I rolled my eyes downwards, terrified of what I would see. The gaping hole was mostly closed, a glistening patch of raw red flesh and torn tissue. I gagged, sucked in a breath and winced at the wracking pain it caused. My shirt was torn in an almost perfect circle, the width of Seishirou's arm. Slick with dripping gore. “Wha... why did you do that?” I asked, my mind a fog, my world a daze. “To kill you, silly girl,” he said. “But you did not stay dead.” “Don't die easy,” I coughed, and blood came up with the words. “As I see. Oh, you really are remarkable. Perfect for what I want.” I lifted my eyes to him now, felt the tears well in their depths. Hurt. Betrayed. Killed, harmed, preyed upon by my lover, the one person I was supposed to be allowed to trust. Hurt me, hurt me, when he was supposed to love me. I was his Legolas and it hurt. Turned the tables. “Want me for what?” I asked softly. “My tree. It hungers.” Oh, god. “Do you have a favourite Cherry Tree?” “Yes.” “But why me?!” I wailed. The branches wrapping around my wrists tugged tighter and I winced. “The Mary Sue is the centre of attention,” Sesheriou said, running the back of his knuckles lightly over my cheek. I gasped at the words as much as I did the chill of his touch. He chuckled at my horrified reaction, a smile twisting the side of his mouth. “The Mary Sue saves the day. The Mary Sue is put through the worst emotional torture and seems to come out just fine.” “How do you know this?!” He paused in his continued stroking up and down the side of my face, his fingers lightly on the scar. “I felt the magical balance of the world shift when you arrived. I went to investigate who you were. Who do you think the bird in your dream was?” I didn't bother answering him. We both knew the answer, already. Seishirou pressed his palms against the smooth bark of the tree, on either side of my head. He bent his elbows, as if he were about to do a press-up, and hissed directly into my ear: “But you forgot one very important thing: the Mary Sue is always ardently desired by the villain.” He kissed me, thrust his tongue between my teeth, lapped at the blood. He didn't want the kiss, he wanted the magic in the fluid. I tried to snap my teeth shut on him and he was gone too fast. “Let me go,” I said. Demanded. “Right now. Let me go or I will make you hurt.” “You can't hurt me,” he said. “You are a Mary Sue and you are ineffectual and pointless. I want you and I will take you, and I will add your power to my own and she will be satisfied.” I snarled. I snapped my fangs at him, letting my eyes flush gold, and he laughed. Pressed his hands together, one red, one pale, and laughed. I changed. My body shrank, too fast for the tree to loop around. I pushed myself off of the trunk, screeching in fury, trying to burst his eardrums and scratch his face. He caught my furry body in one hand, started to squeeze. I changed back, dropped all my weight onto him, kicked him in the chest and rode his falling body into the ground. Pinned his arms to his sides with my knees, wrapped my hands around his neck. He laughed. The tree shivered, repressing movement, waiting. Watching. He laughed. “Stop it!” I screamed. He stopped. Took a breath. Waited. Watched. Calculated. “Would it make you happy to kill me?” he asked softly, his cheerful tone never wavering. It was damned eerie, how he never sounded mad or angry or upset. I didn't like it. My hands tightened marginally around his throat, threatening. Warning him to shut the hell up or I really would do it. I would kill him. But I wouldn't drink his blood. I never wanted any part of this man inside of me. Ever. If he felt my grip tighten, he didn't seem all that concerned. “Do it,” he urged. Grinning. “You are so close to the edge. Loose your human heart. Drink me, take my darkness. Close the gap, Marie-chan. Make your pain end. Kill me!” His eyes got wider, but his tone got softer. “Become the Sakurazukamori. Take the power from me. Feel nothing. Feel nothing. For once and for all. End the pain.” And all I had to do was squeeze. If I killed him, I would replay the Sakura tree for his death by taking his place. I knew this. I didn't know how I knew it, but I knew. My knuckles were white, my hands shaking from the opposing desire to shatter his spine and shove him away. Kill him. Become Sakurazukamori. Feel no pain. Feel nothing. Never get home. The thought galvanized me. I sprang to my feet, stumbled back away from him. He sat up slowly, as if there was a hinge in his waist, and coughed once. Coughed because strangled people are supposed to cough, not because he had to. I picked up my cloak, shook off the cake crumbs, put it on. “You couldn't do it,” he said. His voice almost held the ghost of faint disappointment. “I won't feed you to your own tree,” I said. I took a shaking step away, twitching fingers reaching for my pouch, scrabbling with the heavy button in the leather. Panting, desperate. Panicking. My heat fluttered, my lungs labouring even though I didn't need to breathe. Panicking. He stood. He raised his hand and I gasped. “If you won't feed me to the tree, then I will feed it you,” he said calmly, casually. “No!” I shrieked, “no, no!” I couldn't... why wouldn't I get my pouch open?! What was wrong with me? My fingertips felt numb, my body heavy. Seishirou grinned, marking an elaborate pattern in the air. My knees shook, threatened to go out from under me, my hand gone numb. “No, no,” I sobbed. I sobbed. The red tears sprang out of my eyes, tracking hot paths on my cold face. “Won't let you,” I growled, “won't, won't.” I pulled, I tugged. I gripped the button in my palm and yanked - it tore off. I was crying harder, my whole torso heaving, panicked, scared, scared, and so so cold. And so close. I fished, slanted my eyes to the side, sought a blank phial with questing, numbed fingers from the pile at the bottom of the cloth sack. Found, closed fingers on it, found it, found it, found it. Squeezed. Screamed as the broken glass cut into my skin. Screamed and sobbed and laughed in delight at the confusion that sprang into Seishirou's one real eye. Gone. Fuck you. I left a piece of my sanity under that cherry tree. In Seishirou's bloody hand. …and I think I left it willingly. Books Thirteen and Fourteen: Pride and Prejudice / Highlander: The Series Chapter Thirty-Four: “Quickening” I ended up somewhere quiet and English. It was all carefully cultivated woods and sculptured ponds and wild roses. I sat in the shade and picked the glass out of my hand and cried, and cried and cried. That had really been it. I had almost really died, right there. Died all the way. Permanent-like. For real. Died because I couldn't kill him first. Didn't want to. The sound of someone walking through tall grass yanked me out of my self pitying thoughts. I wrapped my hand around the handle of my knife, at the small of my back. I peered out between the trees and watched Colin Firth peel down to his undershirt, then jump into a pond. My, my, I thought to myself. Darling Bridget was right. Good. Good. Nothing scary here. Nothing worse than Miss Bingley, and her I could handle. Safe. Oh, god. Safe. I didn't bother them. Lizzie would have enough to deal with that day. I melted back into the shadows and passed my twenty four hours peacefully snoozing lightly to avoid the nightmares, waking myself up if they started to turn dark. I rested under the green shade of the trees, perfectly content knowing that not a one of them was a Sakura. Safe. I slept and the man in black was there, but he said nothing. ===== I landed lightly on my feet in the middle of a crowded street. I tensed, hand on my dagger hilt, ready to lash out, to fight to escape the crush of a lynch mob. No one stopped to gape at me, no one cussed or screamed, or even pointed at my strange, bloody clothing. Huh. I straightened slowly, letting go of my hidden weapon. Yay for the cynical city-dwellers of the world. I wrapped my cloak around me to hide the gaping hole in my tunic and shirt and looked around. I was in the midst of a twilight crowd of shoppers, lovers, and tourists. One glance up and down the street revealed a river banked on both sides by cement, pleasant paths, cobblestones, little trapped trees, and elegant six storied apartment buildings. The sidewalk was filled with quaint little shops, cafes with chairs and tables that poured out onto the street, and striped awnings. All around me, French buzzed in my ears. I walked across the road, dodging the manic city drivers in their absurdly tiny European cars, and leaned against the railing that separated me from the water. I stretched up on my tip toes and narrowed my eyes at the cylindrical building that sat upriver of me. It was on an island in the middle of the water, lights glowing in between the flying buttresses and from the eyes of the fearsome stone gargoyles. “Well, I'll be damned,” I muttered to myself. “Notre-Dame.” Beside me, an older British man and his wife, who were also enjoying the view, turned to look at me. “It's quite the sight, isn't it?” the woman asked in her rolling, lyrical accent. “Sure is,” I said. “Are you American?” the man asked. “Canadian,” I corrected. “Everyone makes that mistake. The accent is similar. How do I get to the Cathedral?” The woman pointed. “There's a bridge a few blocks that way.” “Thanks!” I said, and pushed myself away from the railing. I jammed my hands into my pockets and began to stroll. “Wait!” the man called, “The church is closed to tourists at this hour.” “I know,” I said with a grin. “I just wanted to go look at it. I can't go in it, anyway.” The man and his wife shared a puzzled glance. “Why not?” the woman asked. I laughed. “I'm a Vampire. The crucifixes would never let me past the front door.” They both went pale at the same time and turned away from me. God, I was such a cruel bitch sometimes. I loved it. ===== As I walked towards Notre-Dame-de-Paris, the most famous cathedral in all of literature, I wondered what fandom I could possibly be in. It was too early-nineties to be “Hunchback”. I had already visited “Phantom of the Opera”, so I knew I wasn't there. Unless my theory of fractal realities had been true. It certainly would explain how Galadriel's Mirror functioned - it showed the result of choices as they were played out in other dimensions. I was running through the possibilities in my head when a severe headache suddenly descended on me. The sheer agony of it was nothing compared to the shock. I couldn't believe I could feel something that hurt this much. I stopped and leaned against the railing, the heels of my hands pressed against my temples, as if I could hold my head together and keep it from cracking apart. Good God, I thought, What the Hell is this? I haven't had a headache this bad since I was alive… As suddenly as it was there, the buzzing, scalding pain was gone. Had it been because of a slip-shift I had done too soon? Was it the slip-sickness again? No, I didn't think it was. It certainly didn't feel the same. The sickening vertigo was not present - this wasn't stomach-roiling dizziness, this was hot-poker pain. And it had vanished so fast. But then again, every injury I got healed fast, and every kind of pain too. It had to have been a really spectacular migraine for me to have felt it at all. Maybe I had been shot in the head. I hadn't heard a gun go off. I touched the back of my skull. I didn't feel anything wet. I remained leaning against the railing, resting back on my elbows. I craned my head back to put my face to the sky, my neck one long arched line. It felt good to stretch like that and I took a deep breath and let it out slowly, closing my eyes. God, that had hurt. I wondered why it had happened. Then I felt something cold, sharp, and metallic press against my throat and stopped wondering. I had something more important to worry about. Slowly, ever so slowly, I lowered my chin until my head was level. I opened my eyes and found myself staring into cold green ones, like chips off of an iceberg. A man stood right in front of me, far too close for comfort. I cussed to myself. I had been too wrapped up in the pain to hear or smell his approach. And now I was going to pay for it. He had a wicked little switch blade pressed against the skin of my neck. “In the alley,” he said, jerking his head to indicate the one right behind him on the far side of the road. I heard him speak French and still understood him. Apparently, I hadn't lost what I had gained by feasting on French thieves in the Phantom's fandom. That was a nice discovery. “I have no money,” I said truthfully. “I'm not going to mug you,” he replied, and his face split into an ugly smile. Suddenly, I felt less confident. My stomach dropped a little, and I allowed myself to panic, just a bit. He wanted something, and it wasn't money. Did he know what I was? Had he seen me arrive? No. No, it couldn't be that, could it? “I hear I'm a lousy lay,” I said, but quieter. I realized that his own arm was blocking the view of the knife he held from the passers by. To anyone around us, we looked like lovers having an intimate conversation on the banks of the Seine. “I don't want that, either,” he whispered, then reached down and twined his fingers in mine, to make me hold his hand. To continue the illusion. With a tug he yanked me across the road, and I let him only because I didn't want to be hit by a car. We reached the far side of the road and I let him pull me a few steps into the darkness of the alley before I put on the brakes. I'm a Vampire - when I don't want to go anywhere, no one is strong enough to make me. No human, at least, and this man was human because the moment I stopped moving he couldn't budge me an inch. He let go of my hand and turned to face me. He looked angry, and I was feeling slightly more confident. I had the ability to keep him from pushing me around. The knife was worrisome, as was his interest in me and the mysterious reason behind it, but he wasn't anything I couldn't handle. I hoped. The sun was setting at my back, and in a few moments I would have all my powers at my call. He had just pulled his own doom into the alley behind him. Darkness was my place, and I was the predator here. He frowned at my grin and reached into the inner lining of his coat. At first I thought he was going to draw a gun, and tensed for the shot I knew would come. I wasn't relishing the thought of the feeling of a bullet ripping through my body, but I knew it couldn't kill me. Seishirou's fist hadn't killed me. It wasn't close enough to sunset yet for me to be able to escape the bullet. I was surprised to see not a gun, but a full sized Italian rapier come out of his coat. “Where the Hell were you keeping that?” I asked, incredulous, and his reply was to snarl and lunge at me. “Are you Doctor Who?” I danced out of the way, circling around behind him, moving away from the street and the prying eyes of passers-by. He turned to face me and I took a few steps backwards to draw him further into the shadows. Just a minute more and I could fight back. This guy was pissing me off, and I decided that turn about would be fair play. He was trying to prey on me, so I would make him my supper. He lunged again, thrusting the blade at me artfully. He wasn't going for style, but functionality. He wasn't trying to fight me, he was trying to kill me. I sank as far back into the shadows of a dumpster as I could, and called out, just a voice in the darkness, “This is hardly fair, you know.” I paused to take a breath and watched him turn in a circle, trying to figure out where my voice was coming from. His night vision was no where comparable to mine. With a shuddering sensation, I felt the rushing wash of power tingle over me, like cold water and electricity all at once. I let my eyes burn yellow, let my fangs extend. Finally. “You're armed and little old me is outmatched.” “Draw your sword,” the man snarled, “and face me!” “Are you deaf or just stupid?” I asked, moving carefully and slowly within the shadows to avoid making a sound with my booted feet. Good thing I was still wearing Elven boots. They were excellent for sneaking. “Did I not just say that I'm unarmed?” Okay. Total lie because I had my knife and my wand, but he didn't know that. I could have pulled my wand, but I didn't want to risk making enough noise doing it for him to locate me. He turned to where I had been standing and plunged his sword into the shadows. I was several steps away, but now I was getting worried. To have figured out where my voice had been coming from just by two sentences, he was better than I thought. I entertained the notion of just slipping down into my bat form and flying away, finding dinner somewhere else, when he turned quickly and shoved his sword on an upward diagonal into my chest. I choked back a little scream. Jesus god that hurt! And what's with guys impaling me lately? I liked it better when they were all trying to screw me... I felt his blade scrape against my rib cage and shrieked pain. I took a step forward as he tried to withdraw the blade to keep it from moving. My hands spasmed around the hilt - he kept trying to pull it out, to jiggle it free and it shook my bones. I clutched at it, trying to make him hold still. It hurt, god, it hurt so much… He kicked me in the chest and it sent me spiralling backwards, off the sword, and slamming into the brick wall behind me. I smacked my head and hit the grimy pavement hard. I saw blackness and couldn't tell if my eyes were closed or not. He came at me, the sword raised above his head for a killing blow, and there was nothing I could do about it. “There can be only one!” he said, smiling down at me triumphantly, and the look of sheer shock on my face made him pause. Well, that, and he had just noticed the glowing yellow eyes. “Christ, what are you?!” he yelped, and I took the opportunity to spring to my feet. “Christ has nothing to do with me,” I said and with a little spurt of preternatural speed, snatched the sword from his hand. I shoved him backwards and he hit the alley wall opposite me and hit the ground in a daze. I raised the sword above my head and stalked towards him. Blood streamed down my chest, across my leg, pudding on the pavement. My fingers and toes were going cold. I paused at his feet and waited for him to look up at me, his eyes unfocussed and glassy. He was concussed. But he was coming out of the daze quickly - he, too, healed fast. “If I let you go, right now,” I said, “Will you come after me again?” He snarled, “Yes! I sensed a very unique Quickening in you. I want it!” “Fine,” I said, and swung downwards. His head left his body. After all, decapitation is the only way to kill an Immortal. Anyone who had watched “Highlander” knew that. I watched the white mist collect around his corpse, and suddenly feared what I knew was about to happen next. When an Immortal is decapitated, it releases what is, in essence, their soul and/or memories. That is called the Quickening. The Quickening erupts from the corpse in a violent electrical storm and basically fries the nearest Immortal and fills them with their dead opponent's essence. What worried me was that he had obviously sensed me as he senses other Immortals, with that buzzing headachy feeling. And that's what my mini-migraine had been. And if he had perceived me as an Immortal, then the Quickening was about to as well. I did not want this guy inside me. I dropped into my bat shape and pushed off against the brick wall of the alley, flapping as hard as I could to escape the lightning. I was too late. The arcs of energy slammed into me and I was startled back into my human form. I had been well above the building, and I dropped from the sky as the lightning chased me down, slamming into my body in waves of pain and pleasure. I shrieked as I fell. I slammed into the pavement hard, felt bones break, my head crunch, the electricity dancing through my nerve endings, making me jerk like some sick cracked puppet. My head felt like raw hamburger, spilling all over the pavement. It felt like it would go on forever and I wanted to die. And then it was gone, just like that. For a brief second I was not myself. This man whom I had beheaded - I had not 'killed' him, it was self defence, he was Immortal, it didn't count, I told myself hastily - was in my head. I knew his name, his life, I had his memories and suddenly, I had all his sword skills, too. I sat up slowly, carefully, feeling bits of me snapping back into place, the wounds closing, the bones fusing. My brains were back inside my head. And then suddenly the migraine was back. I could smell a man behind me and ignoring the pain in my head, I reached out and snatched the dead Immortal's sword off the ground, where I had dropped it. I lifted it and spun around on my knees, raising the blade to point at his chest. He held up his hands, startled, at said, “Don't shoot. I come in peace.” I snarled at him. I couldn't see his face for the light behind his head from the street lamp, and I didn't like that. “Come into the alley where I can see you,” I said. He took an obliging step forward and lowered his hands. He jammed them into his pockets. “That was quite the nasty fall,” he said, and I detected the faint brogue of a long forgotten accent on his voice. “I'm not here for your head. My name is Duncan.” I stood warily, keeping my eyes on him and my hands wrapped in a white-knuckled grip around the rapier. “Duncan?” I repeated. “Yeah,” he said. “Nice eyes, by the way.” He sounded casual, but he smelled nervous. I closed my eyes and willed the glow of the beast out of them. When I opened them a blink later, they were blue. “Whoa,” Duncan said, and I saw his pasted-on-smile falter. “Yeah,” I said. “Whoa.” ===== “That's quite the hole in your shirt,” Duncan said. He held said punctured shirt up to his face and stared at me through it. It was roughly the width of a man's arm, ringed in blood and dried-on pieces of my inside-bits. I snuggled down into his couch, pulling the fluffy terry cloth robe up around my ears, revelling in the feeling of being clean, clean, clean. Denying the pain that was illustrated in the shirt. Hot showers were lovely, lovely things and I resolved to never ever slide to somewhere without them ever again. “What do you want me to do with this thing?” Duncan asked. “Burn it,” I suggested. “Do you have another shirt?” “Even if I didn't, do you really think I could wear that one out in public?” He looked at the perforated, Middle-Earthian silk. “Point taken.” He moved over to the small, free-standing wood stove in the middle of the room and pitched it in. “Pity,” he said, “the material was really nice. What was it?” “Gondorian, I believe,” I dead panned. He blinked at me. “Riiiiight,” he said. “I'm just gonna go see if Amanda's left any shirts here that may fit you. Failing that, I have numerous big fluffy sweaters.” “Big fluffy sweaters work for me,” I said. He walked out of the room, and I was impressed. I had been in the re-fitted barge that Duncan MacLeod called home for a whole hour and he had yet to ask me, even once, how an Immortal like me could turn into a bat. The man has patience in spades, I'll give him that. While I was waiting for Duncan to come back into the room, I reached over to the book shelf beside the arm of the couch and plucked “The Fellowship of the Ring” out of the pack. I began to flip through it, until I found the Council of Elrond. “Poncey hypocrite,” I said to the first page that had Legolas' name on it. There. I felt much, much better. Now... what to do about dinner? Book Fourteen: Highlander: The Series Chapter Thirty-Five: “Try Me” The migraine came back. I clutched my head and tried to will it away sooner. At least I knew what it was, now. Though I didn't know why the Quickening buzzed between my ears, as if I was an Immortal. Maybe it was because I was a type of Immortal? Maybe the difference that the guy in the alley had felt was my Vampirism? Could Duncan feel the difference? Or had it been just he residual magik of the slide that had twinged the stranger? My thoughts threatened to stray to the man I had murdered -self defence, it wasn't murder- and how I now carried a part of him in my body. No, no, down into the nightmare-box with you, sir. Keep all my other deaths and betrayals company. “Mac?” an accented male voice called down into the barge over the screaming pain in my head. It faded as he got closer. To enter the boat-house, a guest had to go up a gangplank to reach the deck, and then down stairs though a square hole in the ceiling. “Mac, you here?” the voice called. “In the bedroom,” Duncan shouted back. The sound of footsteps beside the entrance hesitated. “... you got company?” “Yeah.” “Oh... ah... I'll come back later,” the voice said. I giggled. “What? Why, come down and join us,” Duncan replied. “...what?” I felt pity for the man at the door. “Duncan is in the bedroom,” I called up. “I am on the couch. Dressed.” “Oh. Oh,” the man said. Then one black hiking boot appeared on the top stair, followed by its mate. Slim legs in tight blue jeans. A bulky fisherman's sweater, just a bit too loose. Long neck, narrow shoulders, thin, scholarly face. Surprised hazel eyes. Close-cropped dark hair. Well, hello dinner, I thought, smiling. Ask and ye shall receive. “Uh, hi,” the man said, rubbing his hand on his thigh to rid it of any barge-railing-grime, then coming forward to proffer it, “I'm, ah, I'm Adam.” “Nice to meet you Adam, I'm Marie.” We shook, then he went directly to the fridge in the galley and took out two beers. “You want?” he said, craning his head to hold up a third beer. He shook it gently, temptingly. “Nah,” I said. “Don't drink... beer.” “Mac's got wine,” he said, closing the door with a little bump of his slim hips. I smiled. “Should you be offering Mac's booze?” The man laughed and sat down beside me on the couch. He put his feet up on the old trunk that served as coffee table and popped the top of a beer bottle on the lip of the cabinet beside him. The scores in the worn wood suggested that Adam had been opening his beers this way for a while now. The other beer stood waiting, perspiring patiently, for Duncan to come and claim it. “You're not holding any, so I would say that Mac has been remiss in his duties as a host, and it is my duty to amend that.” He smiled at me and it was such a nice smile. So mischievous. I raised an eyebrow. “What a considerate friend,” I said. “I am,” he agreed, taking a swig of beer. “Too considerate.” “Glad to see you two are getting along,” Duncan said from the top of the stair. He tossed me a shirt and I plucked it out of the air easily. “You met before?” “Nope,” I said. “I just got here.” I stood up and crossed paths with Duncan, me going into the bathroom to change, and him going to take up my vacated spot on the couch. He gave his friend a sideways look when he noticed that his fridge had already been raided, then sighed and opened his own beer. “Make yourself at home,” Duncan said with a touch of the ironic in his voice. “Mi casa es su casa,” I head Adam say as I shut the door behind me. I shed the terrycloth robe and shrugged into the tight black, highnecked tee-shirt. Duncan had also been considerate enough to leave me a bra on the sink. It was a bit big, just a tad too loose, but it was better than showing. I put this on, and looked at myself in the mirror. Everything was so tight looking. The Elvin pants were still fine, so I had kept them, but they were more thick tights than trousers, and even the boots were cut close. But with the black shirt I looked like a ballet dancer. I wandered into Duncan's room and found a grey button-up shirt that was way too girly to be his, and put that on over top. Much better - now I didn't look so much like a spandexclad superhero. I shuddered at the thought. Yeah, me, Marie Susan, Vampire Superhero. My code-name could be Crimson Moonlight and I could have the supernatural ability to make villains fall all over themselves trying to get me out on a date. Ha. I had to roll up the sleeves because Amanda was taller than me, and I left the shirt undone. Then I went back into the main room. “How'd I look?” I said, doing a little twirl. “Very nice,” Duncan offered platonically. “Yowza,” Adam said appreciatively. I liked his answer better. “Nice belt.” “Gift from a friend,” I said. Adam pointed to the book I had left on the end-table. “Fan of Tolkien?” he asked. “No,” I said, crossing the room to join him and Duncan. Wishing I could get drunk. “Not any more.” ===== “When did you get to Paris?” Adam asked as I perched on a chair opposite the couch. Duncan had jumped up and offered me his place, but I was more comfortable on the far side of the old trunk from the two Immortal men. It was my understanding, having watched the show off and on for a few years, that Immortal men tended to try to seduce anything that obliged. Combined with Sueism, this whole situation was just asking for a few problems. And I wasn't ready. Not for shit like that. Not after Seishirou had No. Sort that into the box. Smile. Answer the man. “Today,” I said. “But I've been before.” “Yeah? When?” Good question. “Um. 1890s?” I offered dumbly. “What happened to you?” Duncan asked, pointing at the punctured Elvish frock draped across the back of another chair. The hole and blood were clearly visible. I had kept it in hopes of being able to patch it up, but looking at the damage now, I didn't think it would be possible. The dead Immortal's sword lay beside it. Now mine, I supposed, though I hadn't cleaned it nor had a sheath for it. I wouldn't take it with me, because my knife and my wand were enough and I couldn't be sure I wouldn't be arrested for carrying it around in public in the next world. But they thought I was Immortal, and every Immortal needed a sword, so I'd kept it. For now. “Guy stuck his arm though my chest,” I said. I wanted it to sound flip, but my throat was suddenly too tight and my heart was fluttering wildly, trying to escape the essence memory of being impaled on the Sakurazukamori's hand. Duncan's eyes bugged out. “All the way through?” “Yup.” I smiled through my teeth. Adam winced. “He the guy you beheaded?” I shot him a look. “Duncan told me when you were changing.” Hm. I turned the glare to him. “What?” he asked innocently. “I'd never seen anything like that before. I was getting a second opinion.” I rolled my eyes. “No, the guy whose Quickening I took was not the guy who impaled me.” Adam sat up. Now he was a little concerned. I didn't know much about Adam, save for his biggest dirty secret, and the fact that he was a total survivalist. If he thought there were Immortals out there shoving their arms through other people's chests, he would probably go find a cave to hide in until someone'd taken the psycho's head. Duncan, on the other hand, would seek the man out directly. “What happened? Why?” I shrugged. “He knew what I was. Wanted my power. Thought a ritual murder would give it to him.” Adam set down his beer, licked his lips, and rubbed his palms on his thighs. This was getting less and less like the kind of situation he wanted to be a part of. “Don't worry,” I said casually. I smiled thinly. “He's dead, too.” No, he's not, my inner voice chided me. Not here, can't get here, I snarked back. Close enough. Adam picked his beer back up and sprawled back into the couch once more. “So, getting back to the glowing eyes and the bat thing,” Duncan nudged gently. “Your imagination,” I said. He snorted and Adam lot out a sort of deep chuckle. “I'm a witch,” I tried again. The laugher increased. “Fine, I'm a Vampire.” By this time they were howling. I let them. “Seriously,” Duncan said. “Seriously,” I echoed back, straight faced. This made the mirth fade a bit. Adam was still smiling, but there was a new wariness in his eyes. “I don't believe you,” Duncan said stonily. “Believe me or not, I'm not much with the caring right now,” I said with an eloquent shrug. Duncan stood and began to pace. Adam and I regarded each other coolly over the trunk. He finished his beer and set down the bottle, then reached for Duncan's half finished one. I made a face. “Not like I'm gonna die from his cooties,” Adam said. It was true. Abruptly, Duncan grabbed his coat. “I gotta make a phone call,” he said. “I'll be back soon.” “Say hi to Joe for me,” Adam said casually, but there was a crackling tension in the air. Duncan was going to go talk to his friend Joe Dawson about me. Joe was a Watcher, a secret organization that Immortals weren't supposed to know about that kept discreet tabs on Immortals and their Game. He would ask Joe about me, see if I was on file. Try to figure out if I was pulling his leg. If I was dangerous. Duncan nodded at Adam, “You gonna be okay here? I have dinner in the fridge.” Will you be able to watch her? What if she is a Vampire and tries to eat you. “Tosh,” Adam scoffed. “Eat your food? We'll be fine. I know how to call in for pizza.” I can handle myself. I don't believe she's a Vampire. I'll call you if I need you. I watched this secret communication with interest, and then Duncan was gone. An empty silence hung heavy and slightly awkward between Adam and I. “So... why don't you like the Lord of the Rings?” he finally asked once he had finished the second beer. He picked up the novel and flipped through it, eyes skimming but not reading. “Dated a guy once,” I said. “Reminded me a lot of Legolas. Kind and smart and thoughtful and handsome and I thought... well, I thought a lot of stupid things.” “Like?” “Like he loved me.” Adam's face grew sympathetic. Slightly pitying. On anyone else it would have aggravated me. But I was talking to the World's Oldest Living Immortal. From him, it was therapeutic. Adam Pierson was about 5 000 years old. If anyone knew anything about loosing love and being hurt, it was him, and the thought that he understood soothed me. “What changed?” I shrugged, frowning. Feeling petulant and angry and hurt and like I wanted to curl up in a ball and cease to exist. Thinking of Legolas still made me feel like a naughty child, like a horrid monster, like a failure. Like all the things he had accused me of being. “He found out what I was.” “Ah,” Adam said softly. A world of infinite understanding was nestled in that single syllable. “I thought,” I admitted. “I had thought that this one time, it wouldn't have mattered. That all the bullshit, all the magic, all the clichés and conventions and inevitability hadn't trapped us this time. I thought he had loved me.” Adam sat forward, rested his elbows on his angular knees. “You thought he loved you. All he loved was the illusion. You thought you'd found happiness, finally. A place. But you think you can never have either, because of what you are.” He still thought I was an Immortal. I could tell by the tone in his voice. But Adam wasn't wrong. “And that's the crux of it, isn't it?” I said softly. “These are the sorts of things that people like me are allowed to want. But never allowed to have.” “Is that something you're resigned to?” Adam asked softly. “Is it something I should be resigned to?” He sat back, laying against the cushions. “The complete and utter void of satisfaction or happiness in one's life?” There was a long pause. “No. No, I don't agree. It doesn't matter who you are, what you've done, or how long you've lived; everyone has the right to pursue happiness.” “Because the alternative is unthinkable,” I whispered. He sat up slowly, green eyes wide, face slightly pale. Tense. Every muscle a burning rope screaming at him to run, a taught line of bone and carefully controlled panic. “How do you know about that?” he hissed. It was a good question. Those had been the very words that had convinced Alexa, his 69th wife, to finally allow him to date her. Alexa, who had been dying, even as he had endured and courted her. Alexa, whom a terminal illness stole from him before a year of their marriage had even passed. And he had known it was coming. She had told him and he had loved her anyway. Their bower had been her deathbed. I met his horrified gaze square. He looked like a rabbit. He smelled like food, suddenly, and I was reminded that I had planned to use him as my pomme du sang tonight. That I had not fed in a day. Telling him I was Vampire was one thing. Telling him that I knew he was Methos and that his entire world was a cultish sci-fi series that had ran on cable in the early nineties was something else entirely. I settled on half-truths. If I could convince him I was a Vampire, maybe he would believe in mind-reading. Or alternate realities. No need to tell him he was a fictional character played by a Welsh ex-trampoline champion. “You wouldn't believe me if I told you,” I settled on. “I told you I was a Vampire and you laughed at me.” “Yeah?” he said. There was no malice in him. The scent of fear spiked, then ebbed. It was overshadowed by the tang of curiosity. “Yeah.” He leaned forward, eyes practically glowing in their intensity. “Try me.” Book Fourteen: Highlander: The Series Chapter Thirty-Six: “A Tour of Paris” I found Methos sitting on the steps of Notre-Dame cathedral, elbows on his knees and chin on his laced fingers. His scent had been fresh on the breeze, easy to track. I took my time wandering after him, enjoying the crisp Parisian night, giving him the chance to absorb what had just happened. What I had said. I walked across the stone courtyard outside of the massive, night-lit cathedral, pausing momentarily at the little stone marker that said “pointe zero” - the place from which all distances in France are measured - and looked to my right. Yes, there, across the quay was Adam Pierson's second hand book shop “Shakespeare and Company”. The yellow and brown sign was just visible through the green foliage of the trees along the curb. I smiled at the thought of all the priceless (probably waterlogged) scrolls and wines in its hidden basement, then turned to look at Methos. He was watching me with wary, narrowed hazel eyes, his lips a tight line. His instincts were probably warring between fight and flight, though his brain was probably telling him to just chop my head off already. I stood still and watched his face get harder as he struggled with accepting that I knew who and what he was because I was from an alternate reality. He wasn’t taking it as badly as Jareth had, but he hadn’t been as accepting as Remus, either. He had listened to everything I had said. Then he had stood up, his face and unreadable marble sculpture, and walked out of the barge. “Trying to avoid me?” I said, gesturing to the church behind him. “No,” he said. “I'd go inside if I wanted that. It's quiet here.” “Thinking then.” “Yeah.” I sat down beside him without being invited. For a long moment we sat in silence. We both stared straight ahead, and I listened to the soothing pattern of his slow, thoughtful breathing. It helped to soothe my own jangled nerves. “There's no such thing as Vampires,” he said, suddenly. I blinked and turned to face him. “You may know I'm Methos. Maybe you read the chronicles. And you may even be from an alternate reality. But I don't believe in things that go bump in the night. I'm five thousand years old - if they existed, I'd have heard about them by now.” Apparently he hadn’t met the demon that killed Richie yet. Hm. “Oh, yeah?” I said. I grinned wide, flashing my retracted canines. He blanched slightly, but said nothing. If I could get him to accept that I was a Vampire, that may explain why he took the appearance of the demon in season five so well. “Willing to bet on that?” He dropped his hands and his posture relaxed slightly. I guess he had decided that I was no longer a major threat. The acrid, delicious scent of fear ebbed away, though he remained slightly tensed, ready to jump up if I did anything unwelcome. He leaned his elbows back against the step above him, and made a smug face. “What will you bet?” he asked. I thought. I didn’t have much of anything to offer. Very little cash, no material things. But I could steal money easily enough. I could get him something. I could get him drunk. And if he was drunk, I could go back to my original plan - having Methos for dinner. Mmmm. Vintage. “A meal,” I said at length. “If you can prove to me that Vampires aren't real, I'll buy you dinner at any restaurant you want.” He raised an eyebrow. “Any restaurant? As expensive as I like?” I could see the hamster in the wheel gaining speed. I raised my eyebrow to match. “With beer after beer until you slide under the table.” “I'm Immortal. I don't get drunk fast.” “I know.” One side of his mouth quirked up. “Okay. And if you win?” “Same. You provide a meal for me.” He thought about the implications of that. “Expensive restaurant, all the booze you can drink, yadda yadda?” he asked warily. “No,” I said. “If I win, we'll still go to the restaurant, and you'll still get your expensive meal.” He sat up again and cocked his head. He narrowed his eyes again, as if trying to figure out where he could be missing the loophole. He gave up trying to puzzle it out and asked, “So where do I loose out?” I grinned. “Afterwards you have to take me back to your place.” His mouth spread into a sly smile that matched mine. “Still not seeing where I loose out.” “And let me drink your blood.” His smile faltered. The colour drained from his face a little bit. “From the neck?” he whispered. “I'm a little touchy about my neck. Understandably.” “Anywhere is fine,” I said. He swallowed heavily. “Ah, okay,” he agreed reluctantly. “Either way, I'm getting a nice dinner with a pretty lady, aren't I?” I nodded. He stuck out his hand and I shook it. We had a deal. “Now,” he said. “Prove Vampires exist.” “What proof would you accept?” He stared at the church behind me. I shuddered. He was uncomfortable with the thought of me drinking his blood, and this was his revenge. He wanted to make me uncomfortable, too. Carefully, I stood on shaking legs. “You realize that if this all goes horribly wrong, I could be consumed in holy fire in a matter of seconds?” I said. I tried to sound flip, but my heart was in the back of my mouth, trying to escape. He stood as well, following me to his feet. “I'll pull you back and toss you in the Seine. I won't get my free beer if you're dead.” I snorted. Slowly, I walked up the steps towards the door. This would be the first time I had ever attempted to enter a holy place since my death. The door was unlocked, and I pushed it open slowly, letting it creak. A night support staff protected the cathedral's treasures and granted midnight petitioners absolution of their sins, so the church was always open to those who sought God's solace. I wondered if I would be allowed inside. Maybe God didn't care about my Vampirism. Maybe the only reason Lucard and his Zombies couldn't get inside the church back in Luxembourg wasn't because of their biology, but because of their sins. Because they were murderers and metaphysical monsters. Which didn't say much for me, his daughter. Would being Lucard's kin automatically make me a sinner too? Was my soul - if I even had one still - tarnished by his touch? Or would the fact that I beheaded a man not four hours ago do it? Other Immortals could go into churches after taking heads, why couldn’t I? I put a hand out it front of me, and stepped forward slowly. If I was stopped, I resolved, it was due to my biology and not my actions. I was not evil. I was a horrid bitch and I was cranky and an slightly unethical - but I was not evil. Almost immediately, I felt resistance. I had held a secret hope in my heart that the cathedral would let me in. Methos' proof be damned, I wanted proof for myself that I was not a monster. It was getting harder and harder to be human. I needed it. And it was denied me. My guts churned. The back of my eyes stung. I wanted in so badly, and I couldn’t. I wanted proof that God, whoever and wherever he was didn’t hate me for something I’d had no control over. I’d been raped and murdered. I hadn’t chose this. Surely He wouldn’t punish me for being a victim. But He had. He was. I was at a church, wanting His forgiveness, proof of His love. And I couldn’t get in. It wasn't like walking nose-first into a brick wall, more like trudging through rapidly thickening oatmeal. I thought if I pushed hard enough, maybe had the right leverage, I could get inside. Maybe. In that moment, the Christian God died for me. Fine. I hadn’t been all that religious before. But if He didn’t want to talk to me, then I wouldn’t give Him the time of day either. I didn’t need Him, anyway. I had gotten this far without Him. The air before me crackled blue and I jumped backwards, eyes wide. A crucifix inside began to throb a white colour and I dove to the side to avoid a streak of light that lanced out the open door. Methos yelped and ducked. The white energy, frustrated, dissipated in the crisp night air. “Proof enough?” I asked, panting, back pressed against the carved lintel. Adam stood and stared down the church at the nave, and the cross that had stopped glowing. “No,” he said. He went inside and I didn't bother to try to watch where he went for fear of getting my block knocked off by another stray bolt of holy lightning. After a few moments, Adam came back out. His left hand was glistening. “What did you doooooaaargh!” He had grabbed my hand and burned all the flesh he'd touched. I shoved him away and threw myself backwards, changing into my bat shape to keep myself from going splat when I hit the paving stones. I flapped in a wildly spinning circle, the pain in my wing too much to bear. I dropped to the stones on human hands and knees and howled, clutching my blackened skin. “Oh, god, oh, god, I'm sorry,” Methos said, rushing towards me, wiping his wet hand on his sweater. “I didn't think it would actually do anything!” “What the fuck did you do?!” I snarled and he stopped so fast it looked as if someone had cast the leg-locker on him. He stared at me, his face completely white, mouth working but no sound coming out. I know what scared him. My eyes were glowing a violent gold, so bright in my agony and fury that I could see the shadows cast in sharp relief on the pavement below me. My fangs were distended, sharp and white and glistening as I bared them at him. “What was that?!” I snarled. “H-holy water,” he said softly, jumping at the sound of his own voice. “Fuck,” I snarled. “Just… don’t do it again.” I pulled myself to my feet and when he moved forward to help me, I let him. He guided me to the edge of the island and I jumped over the stone railing and landed on the narrow stones at the bottom. Digging my fingers of my good hand into the stonework, gripping with my toes through my boots, I dipped my burning hand into the soothing, filthy water of the Seine. When all the Holy Water was gone and the throbbing ache had subsided, I pulled out my hand and inspected it. The flesh was still burnt black, hanging in oozing strips from my muscles and bones. I looked like an H-Bomb victim, or the guy from Survivor: Out Back. The skin was healing, already, but slowly. It hurt. With a frustrated snarl, I leapt back up the wall, landed lightly on the railing, then hopped down. Methos took a step back and stared at me. “I sure as hell believe you now,” he said. I snorted. “But you had to burn most of the flesh off my hand to get there?” He shrugged slightly, as if he had wanted to shrug but stopped himself halfway. “You could have been faking the door.” “And the lightning bolt?” “Stray Quickening?” “Huh,” I said, looking at my hand. Around the edges, the blackness of scorched flesh had begun to recede, like ink being sopped up in a sponge. “You're mad at me,” he said softly. “Of course I'm mad at you!” I snapped. “You burned my hand with Holy Water!” He grasped my wrist gently, turned my blackened hand over between long, gentle fingers. He touched the skin gently and I hissed at the ache it caused, but didn't pull away. He had been a doctor before, and more than once, and I could see his clinical gaze sweeping over the damage. “It's healing,” he said. “Slower than an Immortal would - no lightning. I guess you are a Vampire.” He looked up and smiled sheepishly. “Of course, the whole turning into a bat, leaping over walls, and glowing eyes sort of helped me come to that conclusion as well.” “Hmph.” “I'm sorry,” he said. He went back to poking gently at my hand. “Does it hurt?” “Yes.” “Oh. Is there anything I can do to help you?” “Actually, yes.” He raised his eyes to my face. “What?” “I need a donation. Helps it heal faster. Think of it as being an appetizer.” “A-appetizer?” His breathing quickened and his heartbeat sped up. “You mean me?” “No one else around,” I said. “Call it payback.” I grinned. My fangs were still extended. I grabbed his wrist and before he could protest, jerked it towards my mouth. He cried out at the sharp movement, and the painful stab of my teeth. So there, I thought nastily. Serves you right. The cry turned into a low groan as I began to suck. His other hand groped and found my shoulder, and he balled his fist in my grey shirt. After a few mouthfuls, I pulled away, licking the blood from my lips and watching as blue lightning flashed over the wound, searing away the damage. Electricity tingled inside of me, and I supposed I had absorbed a small part of his Quickening with his blood. I wondered if it would try to find its way back to him, like a thunderstorm's lightning bolt that had only completed half of its circuit. I wondered how much of his Quickening I would take with his blood when I fed from him later. If it would try to find a way back to him, or if my body would absorb it. I wondered if he had even felt it depart. I let him go and he clung to me to stay upright, eyes little slivers of white under fluttering lids. Oops. Guess he had liked that a little more than I had anticipated. Maybe Methos was into kinky blood play. If that was true, tonight just got a whole lot more interesting. He shook himself all over and stared down at my hand. It was almost perfectly healed now, itching with the tightness of new skin. He looked down at his wrist, also healed, a blood smear the only trace of what my teeth had done to him. “Uh,” he said softly. “Is it okay for me to admit that I'm a little turned on right now?” I laughed and punched him in the arm. ===== “You seriously want to have dinner on the Eiffel Tower? ” I asked. He shrugged, closing his cell phone. He had just called Mac to tell him not to worry about us, and that he was taking me out to dinner. Duncan asked if he was okay, if he had found out if I really was a Vampire. Methos had looked smug and said he had found out. And? Mac had demanded. His reply had been to hang up. Adam raised his face to the sky, following my gaze to the grid-iron monstrosity. “Haven’t eaten there yet. Figured I ought to sometime before it rusts and falls to ruin, and you offered to pay.” I shook my head, resigned. “You sound like you have experience.” “The grilled lamb outside of the Library of Alexandria was supposed to be phenomenal. If I have any regrets, its that I never got around to trying it.” I laughed. “Right. Okay. Up we go then.” He pointed to the south pillar elevator. “Entrance is there. We’re going to Le Jules Verne, on the second floor.” I walked beside him, shaking my head again. “Is that seriously what its called? That’s so… sci-fi.” “Says the Vampire.” He grinned. I grinned back, “To the world’s oldest living critter.” “ 'Critter'?” I laughed. We took the elevator up to the second deck of the tower and disembarked. “Er,” I said suddenly. “Aren’t we gonna need reservations?” Adam looked at me. “What, you can’t hypnotize them into giving us a table?” “I’m a walking corpse,” I said, “Not David Copperfield.” He stopped and looked thoughtful. “Got a fistful of hundreds?” I looked at the thousand bucks I had managed to scam off of a street mug I had chased down on the way here. Methos had been suitably impressed with my ability to attract the right kind of thief by looking vulnerable and touristy, and secondly with my ability to kick the crap out of him and intimidate him into handing over his evening’s profits. “May be able to swing it,” I said, “But if the price list is too high, we might have to skip desert.” “Hm,” he said. I rolled my eyes. “Fine - I’ll try the hypnotism thing.” I caught the eye of the maitre d'. Now. In ‘Dracula: the series’, Lucard had never out and out hypnotized anyone. He had planted strong suggestions in weak willed minds, and could freeze his prey with his stare. I already knew I could freeze people, but I had never really tried to force new thoughts into a human brain. I wondered how much of what Lucard could do had to do with Vampirism and how much with the spells and magiks he seemed to dabble in. And if I did discover a talent for manipulating a person’s thoughts, then how much more of my humanity might be stripped away? The Maitre d' looked at our less than black-tie attire and wrinkled his nose. Asshole. Right, now I didn't feel so bad trying to mess with his mind. “Excuze-moi,” I said sweetly in French. He raised his eyes to mine and I snagged him. behind me I heard Methos suck in a breath as the Maitre d's posture slumped slightly and his eyes glazed over. He looked like a rabbit. Mm. “I want a table for two. I see you have one by the window. You will happily give it to us,” I suggested in French. I tried to put force into the words. I suppose if this didn’t work, I could just cast the Imperius curse on him. The Maitre d' blinked, sucked in a breath, hesitated. Looked like he was fighting. “Not woooorking...” Methos singsonged in English. “Shut up. Sir, you will happily give us that empty table because the man standing behind me is an American movie star. Your favourite one.” Methos guffawed and covered his mouth with his hand. That seemed to have done it. I released the Maitre d' by looking away. At first the sneer remained. He looked me up and down and stared at his seating chart. “I am sorry, but there are no empty tables right now, but if--” He stopped talking when he spotted Methos behind me. His face went white and his jaw dropped. “I… are you…?” he said in hesitant English. “Are you who I zink you are?” Methos came forward and shook the flustered Maitre d's hand. “Ah shurly am,” he said in a fairly impressive approximation of a southern drawl. It was my turn to guffaw. “This pretty lady here has always wanted to dine in a famous tower, and I thought, heck, while I’m in Paris, why don’t we check out that fine Jules Verne place?” He frowned slightly and drew back his hand. “Course, if you ain't go no free tables, we’ll go somewheres else.” “Non, non!” the Maitre d' said hastily. “I.. .I vill zee vhat I can do…” He scurried away and Methos turned to me, face cracked in a huge smile, chuckling like a madman. “Oh, this is too fun,” he said in his own international accent. The Maitre d' himself showed us to a cozy table in the very corner of the restaurant. It was framed on two sides by glass paneling. All of Paris spread out before us, twinkling and silent. The décor was black and white - we both had comfortable black leather chairs, and the china was black, stark against the white linens. A single nosegay of bright magenta flowers jumped out of the contrast. A bucket of fine champagne was already cooling in a brushed silver stand beside our table, and I raised my eyebrows at Methos. “I’m an ACT-or, dahling,” he drawled. I grinned. “It’s, euh, on ze house,” the Maitre d' said, indicating the champagne. “Shall I open it for you?” “Please,” I said. With a graceful twist of his hand and a loud pop, the alcohol that was probably worth as much as my last ten paycheques was poured into our glasses. “If you need anyting, anyting at all,” the Maitre d' simpered, looking at Methos, “Please don’t 'esitate to call for me.” With that, he swept away. Methos and I held our glasses up. “Cheers,” he said. “To a successful scam.” I laughed. “And a free meal, possibly.” “Two free meals,” he corrected, scratching his neck nervously. Our glasses touched, and I watched him sip. His slender throat, a lickable column of pale flesh, arched gracefully as his adam's apple bobbed. Mmm. Distracting. I smelled the Champagne, wrenching my eyes away from his neck. Like wine, within the initial scent of the bubbling liquid was the thousands of subtle nuances that made up the alcohol. Sunlight on fields, fresh crisp autumns, rainstorms and soil. I took a small, luxurious mouthful, groaned, and closed my eyes. Oh, this was way better than Trieze's wine. I swallowed happily, my whole body warm and content with the orgasmic sensation of tasting the entire life-span of the grapes, then opened my eyes. Methos was watching me with much the same slack-jawed lust as I had been ogling him as he drank his champagne. “You can drink that?” he asked, clearing his throat in an attempt to cough away the huskiness that had dropped into it. “I’ll have to, eh, get rid of it later,” I admitted, trying to put it delicately. “But it tastes divine.” He leaned forward, lowering his voice and folding his hands over his unopened menu. “Better than my blood?” he asked. I leaned forward to meet him. “No,” I said. “The champagne is good, but you’re quality. Vintage.” He blushed furiously and pulled back. “I … uh… what does it taste like?” “Blood,” I said. “But better. Delicious. Like the most wonderful food in the world - the sweetest wine, chocolate, blackberries and strawberries and every delectable thing there ever was. Only it just tastes like blood. With you - you tasted like comfort and satisfaction and … I don’t know. Something older - purer. Closer to the source, you know? Your blood was clear and heady and … crisp. Like drinking straight from a mineral spring instead of the bottled stuff.” “Older and purer?” he repeated. His voice was hushed. I shrugged. He seemed to be contemplating this. “Do Immortals taste different from Mortals?” “Yes,” I said. “From what I can tell, Immortals have a bit of a kick to their blood.” He raised both eyebrows. “A kick?” “Like sticking my tongue in an electric socket.” He smiled, nodded, understanding. “The Quickening.” “Probably,” I agreed, having more or less come to that conclusion myself. The Maitre d' swept down, re-filled our glasses, and took our orders. “Ah want the most ex-pensive thang on yer menu,” Methos drawled. “And for the miss?” the Maitre d' asked, pen poised above his notepad eagerly. “Steak tartare,” I said. “As blue as possible.” The Maitre d' struggled not to make an 'ew' face. Methos coughed to cover a laugh. “In fact,” I said, enjoying the Maitre d's expression, decided to cop a line from The Tenth Kingdom, “Don’t even cook it. Show it the oven, let it get scared, then bring it to me. Mooing.” The Maitre d' nodded and beat a hasty retreat. Methos and I laughed for maybe five minutes straight. The patrons around us glared, annoyed with our disturbance, but we ignored them. “Making a statement about your identity?” he asked, around the last of his chuckles. “Maybe. What do you think yours will be?” I asked. “Dunno, but I’m looking for ward to the pleasant surprise.” We chatted aimlessly for ten minutes before our respective dinners arrived - his was an incredibly fanciful looking fresh salmon with all sorts of interesting little trimmings and a thick white sauce - and the topic came back around to Vampires and Immortals. “So, you could sense him like an Immortal does, and you took his Quickening?” Adam asked in the same whispered tones we’d been conversing in all night. “I’m as surprised as you,” I admitted, licking the blood from my fingertip. My steak had indeed been as raw as possible and still within the food safety codes of France. It had bled all over my plate when I had poked it with a fork, and I was happily taking my time scooping it up on the sopping pieces of meat. The potatoes and vegetables I ignored. “Perhaps when you arrived in our reality, you were sensed as something 'other' and slotted into 'Immortal' because that was the closest identifiable thing to what you are,” Methos suggested. “That puts an onus of sentience on the universe,” I pointed out. He sipped his champagne. “True. Maybe we sense you as an Immortal because you are one. Of a sort.” I shrugged. It was possibly. Honestly, I thought the main reason was probably because I was a Mary Sue, but I didn’t tell him that. He had swallowed enough of my story for one night, and I honestly didn’t see the point in telling him that the only reason he was as attracted to me as he was had nothing to do with my personality. I had long since stopped drinking my champagne, so when he was done, he reached over the table and took mine. I signalled the waiter and asked for the desert menu and a second bottle of champagne. He brought both promptly and as Methos finished up his meal, then my vegetables, I perused the pictures of the cakes. “Something you want?” he asked. “I’m picking something for you,” I said. “Why don’t I get to pick?” He pouted. “I’ll be the one eating it.” “Because I’m the one paying for it, and I want to see if I’ll be able to taste it in your blood.” His heart skipped a beat again, as it had every time we had wound the conversation back around to what was going to happen later. His face and posture betrayed nothing. “Fine,” he said. “I like chocolate.” ===== An hour and a half later found me three hundred and ninety-six euro dollars poorer -about five hundred American dollars - and Methos and I meandering pleasantly through the night-time Trocadero Gardens outside of the Palais du Chaillot. We climbed the white stone stairs that lead up to the Palais and turned to look at the Tower in its illuminated garishness. “It’s hideous,” he said gently, wrapping an arm around my shoulders and pulling me against his chest. I enjoyed the warmth the proximity of his body lent, so I didn’t push him away. Beside us, a pair of tourists shot him a dirty look and walked away. “C’mon,” I said. “Let’s get back to your place.” “Why?” he said, blowing deliciously warm air at my neck along with the words. “Cause I'm cold. And I'm hungry.” Book Fourteen: Highlander: the Series Chapter Thirty Seven: “Dijiin” I fiddled with the flap on my pouch all the way back to Methos' place. It hung open, gaping slightly, and every time I moved too fast I was afraid my phials would fall out. Which was silly because I had the soft leather pouch inside of the tough leather belt-pouch. But I was still concerned. “I guess I have to get a new button,” I said to myself. “I may have one. Did it fall off?” he asked, leaning across my body to look. I turned slightly, lifting my hip to show him. “No, I had to tear it off. Couldn't get it opened. I was in a bit of a panic.” I smiled a bit lamely. He cast me a fishy eye, but didn't comment. I touched my wand, the top poking out of its little sheath resting on my thigh, and then the hilt of my dagger, hiding underneath the tail of the grey shirt I had borrowed from Duncan's closet. Just for reassurance. We walked the rest of the way to Methos’ apartment in relative silence, both of us watching the humans around us. They were punk kids out trolling, lovers strolling in the nippish night, late workers heading home, or early workers heading to their jobs. It was somewhere around midnight, I guessed, but I had no watch of my own. Even if I did get one, it would never be right. I never shifted at the same time - one place it was midnight, another, noon. It was almost better that I didn't have a watch. I didn't like the idea of having a constant time reminder of how long I had been gone. Nine months now? I forgot… And it suddenly struck me, the way that things strike you when you realize that your life is strange: I'm a Vampire. I've been gone for nearly a year. I am walking beside the oldest living man and I fully plan on drinking his blood within the hour. I am not human. It was sort of odd to realize that we were the only two things amid this sea of humanity. At least, it was odd to me. I guess Methos'd had far longer than my nine months to get used to the idea. I pulled the Elven cloak around me to ward off the sudden chill that froze my bones. It had nothing to do with the weather. Methos put a comfortable arm around my shoulders and pulled me close to him to share his body heat, and I appreciated the gesture. He still smelled of the delicious combination of champagne and chocolate and cream sauce and salmon and under all of that… a freshness, a purity that other people did not have. Like mineral water from a spring long dried up, untainted. He smelled of dusty summer days and electrical nights. He smelled wonderful and as satisfying as that taste of him in Notre-Dame's courtyard had been, I wanted more. I wanted everything he could give, because all I could do anymore was take. And he was Immortal - he could give and give and give and I would never have to fear killing him. If I could get him to like it. That was the main problem. Although, with the way his eyes had rolled up into his head when I had sucked on his wrist earlier, I wasn't too concerned about it being a big problem. Methos' apartment was located within view of the Eiffel Tower, the rightmost on the third floor of a quaint white building. We entered the building over a slightly flimsy metal catwalk and stopped at an equally flimsy plastic and wooden door. Vertical mainlines hung over the plastic to block the view of inside. “Not the kind of door I expected you to have,” I said. “Oh?” He didn't look up from his coat pockets, where he was searching for his keys. “Yeah - I expected thick, wooden... iron bars and a giant lock.” He snorted and found his keychain. He fitted one into the lock. “I'll feel anyone truly dangerous coming,” he said as he twisted the key around. “Anyone else I figure I can probably handle.” “True,” I agreed. Though, if it wasn't by some fluke that he could sense me, then I would have been able to sneak in, and he wouldn't have been able to handle me. Actually, no, I amended mentally. I wouldn't have been able to sneak in. As I had just been forcefully reminded. Adam opened the door and walked inside without a glance back over his shoulder or a word. I was left standing on the outside of his threshold, a barrier of invisible porridge between me and his home. I couldn't get in. Most people nod at you, or give a vague gesture with their hands, or say “c'mon in,” or “make yourself at home.” All of which is good enough to count as a formal invitation, according to my Vampire nature. Methos said none of these, did nothing. He walked in and shucked his coat and turned to where he thought I should be. “Marie?” I waved from the door way, wiggling my fingers sheepishly. “What's wrong?” he asked. “Gonna invite me in?” He blinked. The colour drained from his face slightly, and his eyes looked momentarily like ... well, like prey. Like he was scared. He had been thinking about the nooky to come, I suppose. And not about the meal. He had forgotten that I was not Immortal. I was undead. “Uh ... enter and welcome?” he said slowly. I grinned, and made a show of stepping though the doorway. The invisible porridge dissolved. “Thanks,” I said. “But why does everyone insist on quoting Stoker when they realize I want in?” His face went a little paler. “You've read Dracula, then?” “Of course. Had to for school.” “...oh. I... can I take your coat? Cloak?” I handed over my cloak and he hung them both up. He had some wire hangers dangling from a metal stairway by the door. I wondered where the stairs went - up to a bathroom or something, I supposed. A loft? Maybe a kitchen, because there didn't seem to be one on this main level. I wandered into his 'living room'. The whole place was open concept, so there was really no living room, per say, just a place with chairs, a TV, a table, and a desk. A laptop hummed on the desk, its screen blinking through a false starscape screensaver. His apartment was clean and painted all white. It seemed rather large for his “Adam Pierson” identity to afford, but it was balanced by how sparsely it furnished. Several large pieces of heavy, oldlooking things collected dust on bookshelves and propped things up, but other than that there was no evidence visible that Methos was Methos. I don't know what I had been expected - his old armour from his days as a Horseman mounted in the corner? A wall of black and white early photos on metal plates? Methos was into hiding. His apartment looked like any other nondescript apartment filled with Ikea-inspired second hand furniture and the odd archaeological find. There was nothing to betray who or what he was. Though I suspected a few historians would go into fits if they saw some of the stuff lying around. I wondered if he had a hoard somewhere - a pile of his own things tucked away in a warehouse somewhere. Old weapons and scrolls and Ming vases. He didn't seem the sentimental type, but he did seem like the sort who never threw anything out, in case he needed it later. Hm. I wondered how many times he had re-used the same sheath or breastplate or helmet over the centuries. Methos walked past me, to the floor-to-ceiling windows that filled the far wall. I sat at the computer and touched the mouse, and the screensaver vanished. “Oh, my,” I said under my breath, eyes wide. I hear the metallic rasp of the curtains being drawn and turned to Methos. “So you don't fry in the morning,” he offered lamely. “Aw, that's sweet,” I said, and meant it. “But I won't.” “Be here in the morning?” “Fry. I can walk out in the daylight, you know. Dracula could, since we're talking about the book. I just can't get fangy.” He blinked and walked over to me. “ 'Fangy' ?” “I mean, I don't have my powers during the day.” “So... ever meet Dracula?” “You're assuming he's real,” I said, trying to keep the tone light. Just the mention of that dirtbag's name made me want to scream and throw things. But Methos was talking about Stoker's Dracula, who was not the same person as my Lucard. Methos came over and perched a butt-cheek on the armrest of the chair I was in. “Isn't he?” “Real enough to give me this,” I said, and pointed to the scar on the left side of my neck. The tissue was white and slightly raised, and in the shape of an adult man's upper teeth. Two prominent, circular scars marked where his fangs had gone in. Methos touched my cheek and jaw gently, carefully angling my head so he could see the scars better by the light of the computer screen. I closed my eyes - I didn't want to see the pitying expression on his face. “Ouch,” he said softly. “Yeah,” I agreed. “What's this long line, here?” One blunt finger softly traced a wide scar that bisected the teeth marks. It was a ghost of a touch. “Here and here, that's the fangs... here's the bicuspids... but I don't know what that is.” My voice caught, croaking in my throat, and I forced the whispered words around it. “His tongue.” He let go, fingers twitching. “My God, Marie.” I pushed him away then, because I couldn't stand the sympathy in his voice. It made me feel ashamed. Dirty. Used. He smelled like melancholy. “It was a long time ago. I've had worse since,” I said, trying to get away from the topic. “Though, it was all after, so I healed up completely.” A slender hand rested over my left breast. Not sexual, but gentle. “Like an arm through your chest?” “Among other things.” “Ah.” Then his eyes fell on the computer screen. All the blood that had drained from his face earlier seemed to rush back into his cheeks. “...ah.” I gestured to the flashing screen, glad for the distraction. I didn't want to talk about Lucard, especially when I was about to do something to this man beside me that was a painful, throbbing reminder of what I had become. “The world's oldest Immortal is into net porn?” I asked smugly, following his gaze back to the screen. “I think I may be impressed.” Methos snapped the laptop shut. I had to move my fingers quickly to keep from getting pinched. I laughed and he looked mortified. “Nothing to be ashamed of,” I said. “We're all only human.” The blush got hotter. “I was... ah... researching,” he offered lamely. “Researching what?” “The guy on the left is Immortal,” he said. “Wanted to see if I recognized him. He's heading towards Paris next month, for a shoot. I mean, that's what his Watcher says.” “On the left?” “You know - with the piercing.” “Suuuuure,” I said, and stood. I reached out and undid the button of the dress shirt peeking out of the top of his oversized sweater. The blood in his body moved out of his face and to somewhere lower. He swallowed hard. “So, this research. Care to show me what you've learned?” The sly, self-confident grin returned. He lifted his hands and let them rest gently on my hips. “Do I even get a kiss? Or are you going to skip straight to the bloodsucking?” “Oh, kisses I can do,” I said, went up on my toes, and proved it. It was a slow, languorous kiss, all tongues and promises. I pulled away when he was nearly out of breath. I had kept my mouth sealed against his, slowly suffocating him. Adam sucked in a breath and sighed, and it was a contented sound. “Is that a promise of kink to come?” he murmured against my hair. His fingers tightened on my hips. “Only if you want it to be.” He chuckled. “Anywhere but the neck is fine.” “Good,” I said, and gently pushed him towards the bed. He unbuckled my belt as we sashayed, and dropped it onto the nightstand. As I had noted earlier, Methos' apartment was open concept - no partitions between the areas. The bed was a raised mattress and pillows with no headboard in the middle of the back rectangle. It was at least three good feet away from any wall. I wondered if he ever fell out. The sheets were a crisp white, and his duvet black with gold leaf and flowers. It looked like a tapestry. Maybe it was. Methos let me back him towards it. When his calves hit the bed, he sat down heavily, hands now on my elbows. He pulled me down for another kiss and I leaned forward. While I was thoroughly distracted, he yanked once, twisted his body, and I was suddenly under him on the bed. “Smooth,” I said. He smiled. Then he reached behind him. There was a hissing sound and suddenly his sword was levelled at my throat. I swallowed. “... what are you doing?” I asked in a small voice. “Are you scared?” he asked. His eyes were serious, but there was an empty grin on his face. “Don't, Methos,” I said. “You're dangerous,” he said. “You could kill us all. You could kill me.” I levelled a glare on him. He turned the blade and lifted the sword away. He looked away, baring his neck deliberately. Here was the test - would I lunge up and bite? I didn't. He leaned away from me, tucked the sword under the bed. He came back and looked down at me, arms on either side of my head. “I'm not impressed,” I said. “And I'm not stupid,” he countered. “I had to be sure.” “Did I pass?” I snapped. He sighed and settled himself a little more firmly over me. His knees were hot on either side of my hips. He leaned down and pressed another kiss on my lips, and I frowned. I didn't kiss back. “Ruined the mood, have I?” he said. “Suppose we should just forget about this.” I raised an eyebrow. So that was his game. “You sly bastard,” I said. He sat up, a look of false innocence pasted on his face. “Moi?” “You tried to scare me so I wouldn't drink from you!” The blush threatened again, and I found it delectable and endearing. To think, a five thousand year old man could blush. I sat up too; touched the side of his face with what I knew was, for him, a cold hand. “If you're really uncomfortable with this,” I said, “we can forget it.” He took a deep breath and blew it out of his nose. “No. I lost the bet.” I lay back down and looked at the wall. “That's all? It's just... the bet?” He looked suitably contrite. “Well, you're damn sexy, too. I just... well, I'm scared. I don't want it to hurt.” “It won't.” “What if you don't stop? What if it kills me?” I pushed him off of me. I stood up and began to walk towards the door. “Marie!” he said. “If you don't trust me, then there's not point in doing this,” I called back over my shoulder. “I'll go find a rapist. There's always plenty of those around.” “Marie.” “FYI: If I had really wanted to kill you, I'd have done it by now, you know.” “Marie.” I stopped and turned to look at him. He was sitting on the edge of the bed. He had removed his shirt and his sweater. “Come back,” he said softly. “You don't trust me.” “I never said I didn't trust you,” he said. “But you're scared.” He grinned sheepishly. “Well, it'll be the first time anyone's drunk my blood.” I snorted. “Scared about getting your Vampiric cherry popped?” He went red again. “It’s the first time I’ve had any sort of cherry popped in centuries.” “You sure you want this?” I whispered, all seriousness now. “Can you make it not hurt?” he asked softly. “I can make it feel like the ninth layer of hell,” I said truthfully. “Or I could make it feel like the highest peak of heaven.” “I vote heaven. Come back.” I came back. I kissed him again, softly, on the lips. “I can disguise it,” I said. “We could make love. I could bite down when you're caught up. Distracted.” “No,” he said, and his voice had dropped to a husky whisper. “I don't want to be surprised. Do it now, where I can see it.” I knelt down, in the vee of his thighs, and ran my fingers up his stomach. “Uh...” he said. “You said not the neck.” “Yeah, but there is worse!” I giggled. “I was aiming for above your nipple,” I said. I dropped my hands to his fly. “But if you're really curious about--” “--no!” he yelped. I laughed again. “Bitch,” he said, but there was a warmth in his tone. “Fair revenge,” I said. Then I sat up on my knees, kissed first one nipple, then the other, tugging playfully with my teeth. He groaned, threw his head back and let his eyes slide closed. I ran my hands up the outside of his thighs and even though he still had his jeans on, I could feel his heat. “Hold still,” I whispered, cold breath against his wet skin. Goosebumps jumped out under my mouth. He raised his head, looked down his nose to watch me, ran a hand trough my hair, cradled the back of my neck. Made me feel wanted again. And it had been so hard to not be wanted. “Do it,” he panted. I closed my eyes, let the beast out. Felt my eyes burning yellow against my eyelids, felt my teeth descend. I turned my head to the side slightly, ran the tip of one fang over the skin over his heart, a quick, clean cut, but deep. He hissed, stiffened all over. His fingers curled in my hair. The other hand was grabbing fistfuls of his duvet. I sealed my lips around the wound and pulled. “Fffffffuck,” he hissed. I smiled. I ran my tongue over the wound and swallowed. I sucked again. “You ... you weren't lying,” he said. “This...is damn good.” I swallowed, pushed against his shoulders, shoved him down onto his back and crawled on top of him, of our legs dangling over the edge of the mattress. I lifted my bloody lips from the cut and pressed them against his ear. “Toldjaso,” I couldn't resist saying. “Take ... get your shirt off....” he panted, tugging at the hem, trying to push it off my shoulders. “Why?” “Wanna return the favour.” “Ha.” ===== “So, you have magic,” he clarified, whispering warmly in my ear. I squirmed a little and rolled over to face Methos. “Yeah - Harry Potter style, mostly.” “Who's Harry Potter?” I laughed. “Never mind. It's mostly, you know, wand work.” I reached over him and retrieved my wand from my holster, which had somehow ended up draped over the headboard. Methos took advantage of my reaching and kissed the tops of my breasts. “Stop that,” I said. “Why?” “Cause I was gonna show you magic.” “This can be magic.” I laughed again. “You're arrogant.” “I'm five thousand years old. I know a few 'tricks' of my own.” I snorted. “Well, you gonna show me?” I settled back down beside him, and he turned to watch my hand. “Turn something into a frog.” “I'm not that skilled in Transfiguration. All I know is duelling charms.” “Okay - duel something.” I pointed at the front door. “Swish and flick and Alohamora.” The lock, which Methos had set, clicked open of its own volition and the door swung inwards quietly. Methos went pale and sat up. “Wow,” he said. “That would be useful.” “I'm sure Amanda would kill for it.” “Cheerfully.” “Can you close it again?” “Sayanohamora.” The door swung closed with a tiny rusty squeal and the lock re-engaged. “Wow,” he said again. He rolled to the side, trapping me under him, a wily grin spread over his aquiline face. He settled his forearms on either side of my head. “Got anything else?” I leaned up and lapped at a cold smear of blood I had left above his right nipple. The wound was long-healed. Inside me his Quickening danced and arched, and I felt the electricity prickling though my skin everywhere he was touching me, slowly zapping back into him through my pores. I wondered if Methos could feel it. Probably not, or he would have said something by now. “Sure, what do you want?” “Can you grant wishes?” “Yeah,” I said. It sounded irritated, even though I really wasn't. Well, maybe a little. “I'm a fucking dijiin, alright? I'm a wish granting genie. Let me wiggle my nose and get right on that.” “That was Samantha.” Methos pointed out. “Jeanie nodded.” I rolled my eyes. There was a short silence. He rolled off me. “You're angry.” “No, no,” I said, and took a deep breath. “I was just ... suddenly reminded of all the other times people had just wanted something from me. I'm fine.” There was another silence. “Could you though?” Methos asked slowly. “Grant a wish?” I shrugged. “Depends on what it was.” He thought about it seriously for a moment. For a second, Adam Pierson, grad student and understudy Watcher slid away. Methos, Death on a Horse, who'd lived five thousand years and lost 69 wives, sat before me. “I want out of The Game,” he whispered. “Can you do that?” I blinked. I sat up, forcing him to do the same, and met his eyes. I had expected Adam 'I'm Just Another Guy' Pierson to want something like a really smooth beer or another Queen album. Instead he had gone and asked for something heavy. I blew out a sigh and ran a hand through my not-sleep mussed hair. “Outta the Game?” I repeated. He nodded. “You know what that is, right?” “Doi. I know what that is.” I thought. The surest way to get him out was to get him away. “Yeah, I could do it,” I said after a pause. “I could do it easy.” He narrowed his eyes at me. “That was too simple. Catch?” “Nothing serious.” His eyes narrowed further. “I won't let you take my head. I don't want out that way.” “Doi again.” He shifted back a bit to rest back on his arms, his legs sneaking into the space under the knees of my own. “And I'd still be myself? And Immortal?” “Well, yeah,” I said. I nodded. “So what is the catch?” “You would leave this place,” I said honestly. “You would leave and never be able to see your friends ever again. No more Boy Scout, no more Blues Man, no more Our Lady of Lightfingers. You could never come back.” “Ever?” “Ever.” He touched his fingers to his lips gently. “That is a catch. But I'd be out of the Game, no one would know I was Immortal? No one would go after my head?” I felt a smile pulling at my lips and let it bloom. “Well, I never said that. It depends on who you piss off. Obviously, if the place is unsuited to you, you could move on with me again. Travel until you found a place to your liking. But you may never be able to return.” He blinked. “Never?” “Maybe once,” I said. “But once you came back here, you'd never be able to leave a second time.” “Come? Leave?” I reached out and ran my hand over his knees. “You'd come with me.” “To an alternate reality?” “Yeah.” “...can I choose which one?” “No,” I said. “Wherever we end up next. There's no direction to it, far as I can tell. Well, unless you wanted to go to one of the place I've been already. But trust me; most of them are fraught with their own kind of conflicts.” “But I would still be Immortal and out of the Game.” “Yeah. You'd travel with me.” “Travel.” “I travel a lot. You could come with me until you find a place that works. But once I left you somewhere, it would be highly likely that you'd never see me again.” “What, so you're Doctor Who?” I blinked at him. “So I could never change my mind back,” he clarified. I could brew him six phials keyed for home, but I didn't dare leave him the recipe. Methos was intelligent and savvy, but I didn't trust him to use them with any sort of responsibility. He was silent for a long time. “Can I think about this?” “Of course,” I said. “I won't be going anywhere any time soon.” One eyebrow ratcheted up a few notches. “Oh? Why's that.” I let the hand on his knees slide higher. “Because this is the first reality in a while where no one has tried to actively kill me, cure me, or capture me, and I'm sort of liking the vacation.” He made a face when my hands got high enough. “That...ah... that all?” “Well, and I have an excellent pomme du sang here.” His eyes closed and his smile got lazy. “Blood apple? I kinda like that. Where's that from?” “A place you never want to visit, trust me,” I said, and leaned forward and kissed him. Books Fourteen/ Fifteen: Highlander: The Series / Inu Yasha Chapter Thirty-Eight: “Will You Bear My Child?” “So you weren't shitting me when you said that the porn star was Immortal?” I said, reaching across the table to pour Methos another beer from the pitcher. Mac lifted his glass and his eyebrows, wiggling both a bit, and I refilled his glass too. I had a red wine in front of me, because I didn't want to offend Joe, the owner of the bar we were in, and I didn't want to get annoyed by the serving staff. As long as there was something in front of me, they wouldn't keep asking me if I wanted anything. I wasn't drinking the wine, but I enjoyed the complicated, gentle scent that wafted up from the ruby beverage. “Porn star?” Mac echoed and Methos turned a delectable shade of red. “He left his computer on a naughty website,” I said with a wicked grin. “Called it 'research'.” Duncan MacLeod snorted. ”Smooth, Old Man,” Mac said. “Who is he?” Methos, who had been chugging his beer to hide his embarrassment, stopped and said, “Tristan Korvir. About two hundred - coming to town for a 'shoot'.” “Thinking of looking him up?” Mac asked, unable to resist teasing. “For old time's sake? Maybe get a few pointers?” “Sod off,” Methos said brightly. “I'm thinking of going on a nice, quiet little vacation to a monastery while he's here. Never met him, and I don't much care too.” “Oh,” I said softly. “A monastery?” People who were shacking up with Vampires only went to monasteries to get away from said Vampires. Maybe Methos didn't know that I couldn't go with him? Maybe he had forgotten about Notre-Dame? Or maybe he had decided that last night was not good after all, and that he didn't want to be around me any more and he was running away. Maybe I had scared him. Maybe he didn't trust me after all. I guess I didn't blame him for wanting to run away from me. I mean, he didn't get to be five thousand years old by doing stupid things. Methos shrugged. “Immortals can't fight on Holy Ground.” “Oh,” I said again. “Why?” he asked. “What's wrong with wanting to vanish for a bit?” “Well... I hope you enjoy it,” I said. “Well, you're coming too, aren't you?” Methos asked in a 'duh' voice. “Who else would be willing to feed you?” He waggled his eyebrows in what he probably thought was a smug way. It just bugged me. Anger suddenly flared, hot and shameful. I was insulted. “Feed me?” “Yeah - I don't know many people willing to lay passive for a creature of the night.” He grinned and I got even angrier. Mac laughed, then he caught sight of my face and shut up quickly. I slammed my palms down onto the table top and stood, furious. “I'm not such a hideous monster that I can't get someone alone long enough to feed!” I snarled, “And I don't need your pity fucks either!” Fuck him anyway! I stormed out of the room, out onto the street. “What the hell was that?” I heard Methos say as the heavy door swung closed slowly behind me. “Vampires can't go into monasteries,” Mac hissed back. “And you made her sound like some sort of ugly demon that you pity. It was condescending, Old Man.” “Oh. Oh, crap.” I leaned back against the wall, crossing my arms under my breasts, and scowled up at the sky. I was radiating fury. A few early evening walkers crossed the street to avoid me. It probably had something to do with the glowing yellow eyes. I could hear Methos' heartbeat, smelled his by-now familiar scent coming towards the door. I didn't want to talk to him. But, short of turning into a bat and taking off into the night, I couldn't keep him from saying what he was going to say. And I didn't want to tuck tail and run. I was no coward. The heavy door to La Blues Bar opened cautiously beside my elbow. Methos peeked his head out. “Marie?” he said in a low voice. “I'm sorry,” he said. “I didn't mean it. Come back inside.” I turned my face to him and he gasped. “You're really angry,” he said, pointing out the obvious. “Your eyes are... are... burning.” I frowned, then blinked. They were blue again. “Better,” he said. “Come inside.” He held out his hand to me. “Marie, please. I said I'm sorry. I wasn't thinking.” “No,” I hissed, and I could hear the Vampire in my voice. “You weren't.” He flinched but kept his hand out. “C'mon, Marie. You know what kind of fumblemouth I can be, sometimes. I think you're a wonderful girl and I'm not letting you feed out of some sneering pity. I enjoyed it, you know that. We won't go to a monastery. We'll go to Bora Bora, how's that? Tonight.” My reply was cut off by a migraine. “Oh, damn,” Methos cussed. We both swivelled our heads, looking for someone who would also be looking for us. The porn star Immortal was standing on the opposite side of the street, his hands in his pockets and a grin on his face. At least, I thought it was the porn star - he was hard to recognize with his clothes on. I couldn’t see his piercing. He crossed the street towards us in swift, ground eating strides, and came to a stop on the kerb. Obviously he didn't want to get too close. “I came here for MacLeod,” the man said, “And I find two other mousies instead. Wonderful.” “Mice,” I replied. He frowned. I grinned, feeling the anger I'd had for Methos being redirected for this guy. I very much didn't like him, just because he was such a prat, and I did more or less still like Methos, so it was better to be angry at the porn star. “The plural for mouse,” I said with a condescending sigh, “is mice, numbnuts. You're two hundred years old and you never figured that out?” Methos tugged my sleeve and hissed, “Quiet.” The porn star flicked aside his coat and I caught a glimpse of his sword hiding in its sheath. He put his palm over the pommel, gripping it with knuckles that were slowly turning white. “What do you want with MacLeod?” Methos asked cautiously. He was fiercely protective of his friends, because he had so few. And had lost so many. If the grip on my arm was proof of anything, he was beginning to consider me one of those friends. It was a sort of a possessive grip though, and I resented it. What, Methos didn't think I couldn't take care of myself? Pffft. I'm a Vampire, practically indestructible and had magics and strength beyond the normal. This Korvin guy couldn't hurt me. “Needed a pick-me-up before I start filming,” Korvin said, the cocky smile trying to break past his glower of annoyance. “But either of you will do.” I stepped forward. Methos tried to haul me back, but even against his five thousand years' worth of sword training, I was stronger. “I'll do it,” I said. “Marie.” I flashed Methos a fanged smile. “I'm in the mood to kill something.” ===== “You're pretty cocky for a young 'un,” Tristan-Korvin-The-Porn-Star said back over his shoulder. I shrugged and kept following him to the empty park. The sun was just a few hours past setting, but the stars and moon provided enough light for me. Korvin tripped slightly on a tree root and I smiled. The night was pitch to him, and the park had no illumination. This was going to be easier than I thought. I could melt into the shadows, get behind him easily... “Saw your pictures,” I said, instead of answering his verbal challenge, “Did it hurt?” “What?” “That piercing?” He laughed. “Yup. And I gotta get it re-done every few weeks so it doesn't close up.” “Youch,” I said, wincing. Korvin turned to me and drew his sword. I stopped and drew mine. We looked at each other. “So you didn't answer me. You're pretty sure of yourself, Miss Marie. Why'd you come out here?” “I'm pissed off. I need to get rid of this aggression.” He drew his sword and swung it in a wide arc, practicing, trying to intimidate me. I was too far away to hit, but it hadn't been intended as a strike. “By having your head taken?” I shrugged, “That would solve it, wouldn't it?” He twirled his sword in his hands. “Think you're good enough to take my head?” “Dunno,” I said. “We'll see.” He bent his knees, got lower to the ground, gripped the hilt in two hands. Prepared to fight. “Your Quickening feels... young. Strange.” I smiled. “Maybe there's a reason I feel strange.” “Oh, yeah?” I grinned, let the power tingle over me, let my eyes burn yellow, my fangs spring out. “Yeah,” I said. He swallowed hard. ===== Methos found me about twenty minutes later, licking the blood off my wrists. “What the hell did you do?” he whispered, walking out of the shadows. I had heard him coming, so he didn't startle me. I didn't turn around to watch him approach either. He walked right past me towards Korvin. What was left of Korvin, at any rate. It was very bloody, hard to tell that it had once been human-shaped. My inherited sword was stick straight up out of where his heart might have been, if I hadn't moved it around by mistake. I felt much, much better. “Think he's still alive,” I offered. He probably was, as I hadn't taken his Quickening. Methos turned back to look at me, and his face was white, his hazel eyes wide. “He'll hurt like hell if he is.” “Serves him right,” I said. “He tried to chop my head off.” “You answered his Challenge. That's what Immortals do when they fight.” “Well, not Vampires.” I finished cleaning one hand and moved onto the other, stroking my pink tongue over my knuckles like a cat. I spat out the tiny pieces of flesh that still clung to them. Methos ran a hand though his hair. “Jesus, you're psycho.” “I'm not psycho.” I said calmly. “Marie, you beat him into a bloody pulp. Literally, I may add!” I dropped my hands to my sides. “... Fuck you.” He rolled his eyes and heaved a sigh. “Now don't get tetchy. You take things too personally.” “Tetchy?!” “Marie, listen, this anger, this aggressiveness.” He took a step forward, grabbed my hands, folded them between his own, rubbed his thumbs over the backs of my hands as if it would soothe me. It only made my short hairs rise. “This is classic textbook post traumatic stress - someone hurt you so you want to hurt everyone else to make yourself feel better. To make yourself stop feeling alone.” “I don't feel alone.” “Why do you think you slept with me last night? You were scared. Someone put their hand through your chest - that would terrify anyone. It's the same reason all those kids were conceived during the bombing of London. People wanted to affirm that they were alive.” “I'm not alive,” I spat. “Same concept.” He tightened his grip slightly, took a step towards me, “Marie, you're hurting. Let me help.” I wrenched my hands away. There was a soft popping sound, and I think I had dislocated his fingers. He winced and prodded a few back into place. “I repeat: Fuck. And: You, Doctor Adams.” He reached for me again, and I dodged. “Marie.” He sounded almost condescending, and even a little bit worried. “I don't need your help because I'm not hurting! I'm not weak! I can't afford to be!” “Marie, please, listen to yourself.” I'd had enough. I wasn't a headcase and I certainly wasn't going to be his pet project. I decided suddenly that I didn't want to stay here any more. Not with his condescending, not with his judging, not with his headpicking. “I'm leaving now,” I announced. “If you still want your wish from your bed-warming genie, here's your last chance. Coming?” Methos looked at me long and hard. “...no.” “Fine,” I said. He opened his mouth, licked his top lip thoughtfully. “Will you ever come back?” I ripped out a handful of his hair and he yipped. I wrapped them in a tissue from my pocket and jammed it into my pouch. “Maybe,” I said. “We'll talk then,” Methos promised. “When I see you again. When you're... calmer. We'll talk, okay? When you come back. When, not if.” I snorted. Then I slid. ===== I was sitting under the shade of a primordial, virgin forest, enjoying the solitude and the chance to nap and trying very hard not to think about what Methos had said. The distinctive sound of clunking armour and heavy footsteps jostled me out of sleep and to my feet. “Who's there?” I called out, hand on the hilt of my knife at the small of my back. “Kanojo wa doko?” the other voice called back. I buttoned my trap and followed the sound of the heartbeat and the direction the voice had come from. I picked my way carefully over the huge roots, through the tall grass, trying to stay as quiet as possible. Which could be pretty damn quiet. I came on the clearing behind them. There were two, dressed in some sort of exotic armour I didn't recognize until they turned around. More dark eyes, high cheekbones, caramel skin. “Back in Japan,” I said softly. They heard and turned to face me. “Aii!” one shouted. “Kami!” “Baka,” said the other. “Kanojo wa youkai, desu yo!” They raised their swords at me. “Hello, dinner,” I said back. ===== I left them dazed but alive by their own campfire, and struck off in a direction that seemed to be west. I don't know why I chose west. Seemed as good a direction as any. I walked through the night, tasting the lingering flavour of their blood and keeping my ears peeled. I wanted to know if I could understand Japanese, the way I had understood French, just from the blood. If I could, it would be invaluable, as I seemed to be making a habit of showing up in Anime. Understanding Japanese might keep me out of messes like the one with Seishirou. The scent of wood smoke drifted to my nose, and I stopped. Lifting my head into the air, I located the direction it was coming from and crept through the underbrush towards it. I was full now, but I wanted to test my theory. I stopped at the edge of a clearing, well out of the circle of light the fire cast. Around the fire sat four adults and one red-haired child. One of the men was dressed all in swirling robes of indigo and black, and the other in an old-fashioned style hakama and haori in violent red. His hair was ridiculously long and completely white. His face, however, was youthful, so his hair was not white because he was old. The other two were women, one in a set of twentieth century style pajamas, sitting on an unrolled sleeping back, and the other in a green and magenta kimono. The man with white hair had two pointed dog ears on the top of his head, and eyes as yellow as mine, fangs that were just as long. He flicked one of the ears in my direction. I sank further into the brush and stopped moving. Luckily I had not heartbeat and no breathing to give me away. “What is it, Inu Yasha?” the girl in the pyjamas asked when he flicked his yellow eyes at me. And I could understand her. Yippee. I did a little mental dance. “Nothin',” Inu Yasha lied. I retreated into the night and left them in peace. For now. ===== In the morning, I returned to the clearing only find the fire cold and dead and the company of travelers gone. The gurgling of a river caught my attention and I thought how nice it would be to try to scrub off before looking for them again. I recognized them - the anime I was in, because it was an anime, was called “Inu Yasha”. It would be interesting, I thought, to spend the day following them, to see what they were doing. To make it easier, I shouldn’t smell like dead porn star. The last shower I'd had had been in Duncan's barge. I frowned. So much for my promise to never slide into a realm with no running water. Hot running water. The stream in question turned out to not be a stream, but a fullblown natural-occurring onsen. A hot spring. Japan was peppered with them, but in my time they were all enclosed in wooden structures and lined with marble and cement, and you had to pay a fee for the right to bathe. Here, it was all free game and there were lots of big boulders to sit on. I shivered all over, relishing the thought of sinking into the steaming water and soaking there until the meat fell off my bones. With a surreptitious look around, I stripped and folded my clothing into a neat pile on the bank. I wound my hair up in a bun and stuck my wand in it - this would keep my hair off my neck and a weapon nearby. I didn't want the knife to rust, so I left it behind. Dipping a toe into the water, I sucked in a breath. It was hot. It was lovely. I put my foot down, followed with the other, and waded out to the side of the hot spring where a wall of rocks offered a nice shelf for sitting. I relaxed back as far as the stone seat would allow and closed my eyes. “Mmmmm,” I sighed. “Mmmm,” another voice echoed. High, female. Not an echo of my own voice. Someone else. I opened my eyes, strained my ears. “Indeed, Kagome-sama,” said a male voice. I inhaled and recognized the mixed scents of the travelers from last night. “I'm glad we got Inu Yasha to stop,” Kagome said. “I'm covered in bug-demon guts.” “Did you know, Kagome-sama, that this was the very hot spring where I first laid eyes on you?” The woman sucked in a breath. “I thought we met on the mountain path, when you stole my bike.” The man chuckled, and I realized he must be the one who had been in the indigo. I had heard the one in red speak, and it wasn't the same voice. “Oh, no, I saw you with your Shikon Shard here first.” “Miroku,” she said, her voice suddenly steely. It held a promise of pain. “I was naked. And it was around my neck.” “Heh heh,” he chuckled uncomfortably. “Pervert,” she said. “Now, now, Kagome-sama,” he started, and there was a note of pleading in his voice. “I am just a man. How was I to resist looking at a lovely bathing water nymph like yourself?” There was a resounding crack, like a palm striking a cheek. “Keep your hands to yourself!” Kagome snapped. “I'll, uh... I'll just go around the corner here for my bath, shall I?” the man said, his voice getting closer. I sank low in the water. Shit. I was too far away from my clothes and it was mid-morning and I couldn't transform into a bat. All I could do was sit there and wait for Miroku the Pervert to come around the corner. He was concentrating on his footsteps, so he didn't see me at first. “Um,” I said, and he looked up, eyes snapping wide. “Hello,” he said. He did a very good job of covering his surprise. He slipped immediately into Casanova instead. “Hello,” I said back. “I'm terribly sorry,” he said. He had a bright red spot on his face, where Kagome had slapped him. “I did not know you were here.” “That's fine,” I said. “Close your eyes.” He closed his eyes obediently. I waded over to the shore and jumped out quickly. I snatched my clothing into a pile and ducked behind a dense bush. “May I look?” he called out. “Yeah,” I said, struggling into my pants while my skin was still damp. I heard the slosh of water and Miroku came up to the bank, unabashed by his nakedness, and folded his arms over the grass and rested his chin on them. He was looking up at me with a smile. “You're beautiful,” he said. “Uh, thanks?” “Are you a youkai?” he asked. “I don't sense any yoki, but you could be very high or very low level. Or maybe you're a hanyou?” “Me? A half demon?” I came out of the bush holding my belt, my pants and shirt on but not the over shirt or my socks or boots. I sat down beside him, admiring the sculpted lines of his bare shoulders, the long line of his back, the rounded buttocks made swirly by the water. Hell, if he was going to display, I was going to look. “No.” “But your hair, your blue eyes,” he said. “I'm gaikokujinn,” I said. “A foreigner, ah.” He rubbed his chin thoughtfully, flexing his pecs slightly. “I've never met a foreigner. You cannot tell because I am not wearing my proper clothing, but I am a monk. I am very trustworthy.” I snorted. “It's true,” he said, looking mock affronted. “I've never met a foreigner.” I had snorted at the part about being trustworthy. “No?” He reached out and took my hands in his. “I think you are the most lovely woman I have ever met. Can you imagine how adorable the child of a Gaijin and a Nihon-jinn would be?” I winced, knowing what was coming next. “Miss, will you bare my child?” He yelped when I smacked him firmly across the face. Then the monk grinned. ===== “I'm Miroku,” he introduced himself later, when we were all sitting around another campfire, our hair drip-drying. “And I'm sorry for what I said earlier.” Ri-ight. Kagome had heard his little cry and come barging around the corner to try to come to his rescue, only to find me standing over him and scowling. She had immediately switched to apology mode and invited me to join them for a late lunch. Miroku had then stood up and proclaimed it an excellent idea and Kagome turned away and covered her eyes with a scream. I got myself a good eyeful, 'cause obviously he wouldn't have stood up if he didn't want me to. People want to affirm that they are alive. Miroku slept with any woman he could. He was dying, slowly, of a demon's curse. And me - I was taking comfort where I could. Because I needed it. He then caught me looking and flashed a mischievous grin. I returned it. Because it was better than feeling alone. “Would you like to help me catch the fish, Miss...?” “Marie,” I had supplied “Marie-sama,” he had repeated. “Will you be naked?” I had asked. “Do you want me to be?” “Might be a little cold, in that stream,” I had pointed out. Thoughts of shrinkage had skittered across his face, easy to read, and he had said, “I will dress first.” And he had. And we had gone to the stream and I had batted fish out onto the bank where he had cracked them swiftly over the head with the butt of his staff and said a prayer for their souls. And then grabbed my ass. I smacked him again. We went back to the camp and I was introduced all around Kagome, Inu Yasha, Sango, the other woman, and Shippou the little kid who was really a baby fox demon. I was offered a seat and my share of the fish and rice and took both to be polite. I had seen this anime, “Inu Yasha”, about this and of demon hunters up to about episode forty before it had become redundant and annoying and I had stopped. I knew these people fairly well, but as Seishirou and Legolas had taught me, the characters from the movie or book weren't always exactly the same in “real life.” Miroku made as many passes at me as he could possibly squeeze in, and Sango looked more and more furious with each one. Well, what did she have to complain about? She kept saying no. As the band was heading home after successfully exterminating a demon that morning, they were free to sit around all afternoon to talk. It was a pleasant enough pass-time to me, though Inu Yasha seemed itching to go. “If we're gonna make camp here tonight,” he'd spat, springing to his feet, “I'll go find some boar or something.” He bolted out into the forest. I wondered if it was my proximity that was making him uncomfortable. The rest of us stayed and traded stories until Inu Yasha came back just before dark. By then Sango had made another meal of rice and berries that Shippou had scavenged. I pretended to eat again, listening with rapt wonder at Sango's tales of demon extermination and Miroku's stories of the women he had chased. I told my own fabricated tales, tales about weeks at sea on the ship, being wrecked on a beach and wandering Japan for the past few years on my own. “Your Japanese is very good,” Kagome said. “It's had to be,” I replied. Then she leaned over. “Don't stick your chopsticks straight up in the rice,” Kagome whispered in my ear. I blinked down at what I'd done. I had only wanted somewhere to put the utensils to keep them from touching the ground and sticking them in the rice had seemed like the best way. “Why not?” I whispered back. I let my gaze flick around the circle of faces, and took in the horrified look on Miroku's face especially. The others were startled but understood that as a foreigner I probably didn't know any better. The monk was furious and sickened all at once. What the hell had I done? “Doing that makes your rice an offering to the dead,” Kagome explained. “It makes it unfit to eat.” “Unfit to eat?” “Only the dead can eat that rice now. It would be blasphemy otherwise.” “Ah,” I said, nodding my head in understanding. And then I got a wicked little idea. Carefully, making sure that everyone was watching, I removed the chopsticks. Sango sighed a breath of relief, obviously thinking I was about to set the bowl of rice aside. Instead I carefully picked up a small ball of the sticky white grains and, balancing between the two sticks, popped it into my mouth. I grinned at them, chewing with a relish. Kagome sat back. Inu Yasha's ears flattened against his head and Sango let out a little gasp of horror. Miroku's reaction was best of all. He shot to his feet, his own meal tumbled and forgotten in the dirt, and turned on his heel. He put his back to me, so I couldn't see his face, but I could tell by the furious beating of his heart and his heavy breathing that he was angered beyond belief. “Why did you just do that?!” Kagome hissed. I put the chopsticks back into the rice, point-up, and set the bowl aside. “You said my rice had become an offering for the dead,” I said softly. I could hear an audible growl from Miroku and the entire line of his body tensed up, as if he was ready to turn around and flatten me with his fist. “Yeah!” Inu Yasha snarled. “What part'a that didn'tcha catch?” I turned my biggest and best smile on the half-demon. “The part that says anything about me being alive.” There, I thought at Miroku, now hit on me, you pervert. ===== It was several hours before Miroku would let me near enough to him to apologize. It retrospect, it had been a cruel thing to do. Miroku hadn't deserved to find out that I was just an animated corpse that way, and the others had had enough problems with animated corpses to make my little stunt not-funny. The minute I had mentioned the 'not alive', Miroku had taken off into the darkness of the forest around us. The Japanese forests of old were think and ancient, filled with whispering trees and myths that wound themselves around every branch as if the Gods of Nippon were here and watching us. Knowing this reality, they probably were. The others all looked at me as if I had spontaneously turned my skin inside out and Inu Yasha had let out a not-so-inaudible 'tch' accompanied by an irritated ear-flick. “I knew you reeked like blood,” he snarled, crossing his arms and turning head away. “You were the one I smelled last night.” Shippou had crawled up into Kagome's arms and looked at me with wide bright eyes, scared and shaking a little but trying to be brave. He said nothing and he didn't need to - I understood well enough. Sango actually reached for her weapon but before she could take a slice at me, I backed up to the edge of the firelight where it would be hard to aim at me in the darkness. “What are you?” Sango snarled, “Another of Naraku's sick puppets, brought to life with the Shikon Shards?” Oops. I had forgotten about Sango's little brother. Kohaku, his name was, had been killed a little over a year earlier by Naraku, the villain of this tale. Naraku was a semi-demon himself who sought to use the power of the scattered shards of the Shikon no Tama, a powerful gem, to make himself a full blooded demon and rule Japan. This was Inu Yasha's wish as well, save for the part of ruling Japan. Well, it used to be his goal - now that he was falling in love with Kagome, I wondered if he wouldn't choose to remain a half demon. He would offer to become fully human for her, but I knew Kagome wouldn't have it. She loved him in spite of his furry ears - or maybe because of them. Kohaku and Sango were both from a very powerful family of warriors, and when Naraku had killed Kohaku, he had inserted a Shikon shard into the boy's still wet wound and brought his body back to life. But this new Kohaku had no memory of his old self. His body was there, but his mind was gone. Naraku, the bastard, regularly pitted Sango against this corpse of her little brother. On top of that, Inu Yasha's former lover Kikyou was also regular trouble for this not-so-merry band, and once a very powerful demon prince had brought Inu Yasha's mother back from the dead in order to lure Inu Yasha into a trap. The Demon Prince had then killed Inu Yasha's mother all over again, right before his eyes. So, yeah, I guess I could understand how my little joke could rub the wrong way. I stood just outside the circle of firelight and said, “I'm sorry. That was really tasteless of me.” “Are you really dead?” Kagome whispered. “Do you hear my heart beating, Shippou-san?” The little fox demon shook his head slowly, his eyes growing, if possible, wider. “Are you here from Naraku?” Sango insisted, climbing slowly to her feet, her stance wide and ready to lunge at me. She held her sword tightly in her hand, ready to draw it from it's sheath in a quick, deadly movement. “No, I'm not,” I said. “And I'm not a reanimated corpse either. I'm a…” I trailed off here, uncertain how to continue. Did I dare tell the truth? Would they trust me if they knew that I was a vampire? “I don't know what I am,” I lied. Inu Yasha's ears twitched, but if he detected the falsehood, he said nothing. “I got sick one day, and fell asleep. I was told I died. When I woke up, I was as I am. My heart doesn't beat, I don't breathe save to speak, and I haven't been ill or aged a day since.” No one said a thing. They just stared at me. “Right.” I rocked back on my heels and rubbed my hands together. “Well, I know a 'fuck off' when I see one. I'll just go apologize to Miroku-dono, and then I'll… vanish.” I didn't really need to apologize to Miroku. But I decided to follow through with it just because... well, just because I felt a little funny about this whole encounter. Something tugged in my chest, and I realized belatedly that I was feeling slightly guilty. Hm. I turned my back to the firelight and walked into the thick forest, vanishing just as I said I would. Well that certainly hadn't ended the way I had hoped. Oh, well. Can't win 'em all, can you? ===== I found Miroku standing on the bank of a deep, swift river. He was throwing leaves one by one into the water and watching as they were swept away. His staff was leaning against a nearby tree trunk. The tree was so close to the river that its branches dipped down to drink. I moved up behind him silently. The monk had tremendous spiritual powers and although I knew I had not made a sound, he tensed and said, “Stay away from me.” Now that he knew what I was, I'm sure he had no problem sensing me. “I just came to apologize,” I said softly. I stood a few paces behind his shoulder, staring at the back of his head, at that cute little gravity-defying ponytail. “What I did was cruel and tasteless.” He let another dried leaf flutter into the water. Together we watched it touch the water, and be swept down stream. As it rounded a corner and floated out of sight, Miroku finally said, “Actually, if I had been prepared for it, it would have been kind of funny.” “It's sorta what I was aiming for.” I snorted. “Glad you think so, at least. You seem to be the only one.” “I could imagine how my companions would be…unimpressed.” I snorted again. “That's a nice way of putting it.” Finally he turned to me, letting the dried leaves in his hands fall to the forest floor. The brown streaks of soil peeking out from under the foliage showed that he had probably picked them up from there. He took a small step forward, a serious expression in his brown eyes. “Why didn't you tell me?” he asked, and his voice was soft and sincere. “Tell you what?” I asked, “My life story? Jeeze, Miroku, I just met you…” I stuck my hands in my pockets, made uncomfortable by the serious expression in his eyes. He shifted uncomfortably from one foot to the other. “Well, no but… I mean… I'm a monk, so I thought maybe you came to me to…I don't know…” “Find a cure?” I supplied. “Get blessed? Be purified?” He bit his lip and nodded. I had never seen him look so… humble and abashed before. “I mean, I know what I said earlier, everything about the… the child, and all, but you know… most women don't take me seriously when I say that. At best I get a slap on the cheek, at worst…” he trailed off and scratched the back of his head nervously. “But you didn't slap me. I ...” he stepped forward again and gingerly lifted my hand out of my pocket so he could twine his fingers around mine. “I thought, maybe that… at first I mean… you genuinely seemed to… but, it was just this, wasn't it? This… cold.” I shook my head. “Okay, rewind and play again, this time without hitting the mute button every five words.” He blinked, confused. “What?” “Totally what I feel. I have no idea what you're getting at.” He sighed heavily and released my hand. He took a step back and made a small bow from the waist, his hands firmly at his sides. “I'm sorry I misinterpreted you actions earlier,” he said to his feet. “My most humble apologies. You have sought me out as a Man of God so that I may help you find peace, and I have been… making unwanted advances.” I shook my head, smiling, and allowed a small chuckle to escape. The little laugh broke through, bubbling up to the surface and out of my mouth and Miroku looked up, confused and more than a little hurt. What now? His expression seemed to say. As if you haven't hurt me enough, now you laugh at me. “First,” I said, holding up one finger under his nose. “If you were such a holy man, I wouldn't be able to touch your skin.” I touched the tip of his nose to prove my point and then held the unburnt digit up to his eyes. “I don't doubt that you're powerful, but it's strong blind faith that burns me and hey, look, no burnt flesh. You travel with a youkai and a hanyou - you're anything but blind. Second, I haven't come for you to 'gain peace'. I've tried that once already and it damn near killed me all the way. The only way to do that is to kill me once and for all, and I'm not ready for that yet. I have to get home first. Third…” I reached out and grabbed his shoulders and kissed him hard on the mouth. When we parted, there was a funny glazed look in his eyes and a blithe smile playing across his lips. “No one said anything about unwanted advances.” Miroku shook his head gently as if to clear away a haze as I took a step back and felt my heart beat a few times with the thrilled feeling of what I'd just done. Rarely was I ever emboldened enough to do what I had just done without intending the receiver to be my evening meal. “But, you…ah…” he muttered, trying to make sense of what had just happened. “I ...um….” “Articulate, aren't you.” “You're only dead if you think you're dead,” Miroku suddenly whispered in my ear. “I can't bare you children,” I whispered to him, “and my body is dead, but… my heart is still very much alive, Miroku.” He stared at me, flabbergast. Then he blinked, shook his head again, and then ran the fingers of one hand through his fringe while he put his other hand on his hip. “And here I make fun of Inu Yasha for being in the exact same predicament.” “What predicament?” “How do you love a dead woman?” I smiled sadly. “Gently, and just for one night.” “One night?” he repeated softly. “I have to go in the morning, and before you ask, you'll probably never see me again.” “Ever?” I shook my head. “But. Tonight. I just need to be... touched.” “Loved?” My smile got sadder. “I don't believe in love any more. There's no such thing.” That roguish smile played at the corner of his lips again. He reached out for me, and I didn't shy away. “Then I guess I better not waste any more time…” I just wanted to be touched. In a way that didn't hurt. I wanted it so badly... Book Sixteen: StarGate: SG-1 Chapter Thirty-Nine: “Human” Days passed. I found a dark hostel and curled up in the corner and didn't know where I was and certainly didn't care. My night with Miroku had been wonderful, but I was now feeling terrible for what I had done to his friends. Guilty. And he made me feel worse by asking me to go back with him to see them in the morning - to talk to them, to make up. To become a member of the band. And just like that the Mary Sue is accepted into the main character's innermost circle. Fuck that. I wasn't going to stay in medieval Japan and hunt demons for the rest of my unlife. I told him I had to go and he got angry and asked if our night together had meant nothing. I'd touched the puncture marks on his neck and lied when I said “Yes.” But I had to go. Something else was nagging me too, something that I hadn't realized before. I'd slept with him. And Methos. And Legolas. I could feed without screwing around. Why was I doing it? What the hell was wrong with me? I never used to be such a slut. In fact, I had never really slept with anyone before Legolas... unless, Lucard had... No. Was this because I was a Vampire? Was this something I'd had done to me? Or was it the Mary Sueism wearing off? Or was it that I was just so goddamned lonely and I just wanted to be held, to be told that I was special and beautiful and... and for a few moments ... to feel loved? Touched in a way that didn't cause pain. For once. I did, with Miroku. He treated me with nothing but gentleness. He could give me the warmth I needed. And that scared me. Because I couldn't let myself be seduced into staying somewhere. I couldn't depend on anyone but myself. I had to get home. The people who really loved me, not because I was a Mary Sue but because they loved me, must have been frantic with worry. I had to get back to them. For them. And for me. I had to. I left Miroku alone, and in my mind his words echoed - you're only dead if you think you're dead. What, so all of this was my fault? All these hurt feelings and pain were just because I wasn't thinking positively any more? Yeah, right! So I shoved the thoughts away, down into the box, and fortified my mental walls by recalling all the people who had wronged me. The people who had annoyed me. The goddamn men who I thought I could connect with and never did. Fuck Methos. Fuck Miroku. Fuck Legolas. Fuck Jareth. Fuck Spike. Fuck Jean-Claude. And double-fuck Lucard. Goddamn mother fucking men. I slid, and, slid, and slid. “Going home,” I told myself each time I closed my eyes against the white flash of light. “Going home,” I told myself each time I patiently waited in a park or in a cheap hotel room for a day. Checked a newspaper to see if I was there yet. “Going home,” I told myself. “Don't need anyone.” “I don't need anyone.” The mugger I was stalking was startled to hear my voice in the blackness. “Who's there?” he called, fear escalating his voice an octave. “Nobody, not any more,” I said as I sank my teeth into him. “Going home,” I whispered wetly against his torn flesh, “It'll all be fine when I get there. It'll be all over. Going home. Not a psycho. Not a monster. Not desperate to not be alone.” And I left him alive to prove it to myself. ===== One day, I woke up in a hotel room that I didn't recognize and reached for my knife. It was under my pillow. I don't know what woke me up. It wasn't the nightmares. Hadn't had those in a while. Not since I'd stopped... caring. I was half poised in a stance ready to jab or cut whoever it was that was in my room. My eyes stabbed around in the darkness, I stilled all breathing, waiting, listening to see who was there. After a few long, tense moments, I realized nobody was. I sat up in the bed and stared at my hands. What that hell had that been? One little groan from the building and I was ready to murder someone. Was I that on edge? Was I that… unbalanced? Sure, I had isolated myself this past little while - slipped as fast as I could, avoided people, avoided sunlight and warmth and.... humans. In that moment I realized that I had become someone…different. I wasn't who I was any more. I wasn't who I had been when I had started this whole mess. How long ago had that been - a year? Two years? Maybe longer? I couldn't tell any more. I should have kept a note pad and ticked off days. How long was my hair now? Past my shoulders, at least. I wanted a haircut, but worried that if I did I would loose the one thing I had reminding me of the passage of time. I no longer aged. I'd lost weight. My hair was all I had. I was lost. I was cold. I was alone. I was a monster. I had beaten a man to a bloody pulp, hunted people in alleyways, robbed muggers, cut of a head, and slept with a monk. I needed to find me again. Me, Marie Susan Brooke. Not the Mary Sue. I had a scalding shower and dressed and decided to go for a walk. I didn't even know the name of the town I was in. I didn't know the reality. I didn't even know the time. It was the afternoon, I think. Maybe it was morning. I'd been ghosting in and out of realities without caring to look around me. I was so focused on getting home that I was forgetting to live. I was forgetting who I was. Why I was even trying to get home. So focused. Too focused. I was going to be here for a month. I needed to brew more potion. I couldn't stay holed up, paranoid and solitary, for a whole month, could I? No. I resolved to discover the name of the town, to find a good coffee shop and spend the day there people watching. I would play human for a day and maybe it would help me get my humanity back. When had been the last time I had spoken to someone? Touched someone? Miroku, maybe, but surely that had been no more than a week ago. Or two? Or had it been a month? Ten worlds? Twenty? Too damn long. ===== I didn't find the name of the town before I found the café, so I figured I'd get the name later. I walked up to the bar and ordered the cheapest thing on the menu, inquiring about free re-fills. They didn't do them, so I would just have to nurse. I mean, I was just going to puke it all back up come sunset anyway, right? No point it spending the meagre cash I had on something I couldn't ingest. Would have to rob someone soon, if I wanted any more money. If I wanted a nice hotel room in the next world. Unless I skipped out without paying my tab. Hm. I could start staying in the pricey places that didn't make you pay until after, but to do that I may need valid ID and credit cards. Didn't have either. I picked a seat at a table that faced the door and the large window that looked over the sidewalk. I sat back and pretended to sip. My attention wandered for an hour or so. I organized my pouch for another twenty minutes. I eavesdropped on a lover's quarrel for ten, and then a friend comforting another over another friend who had said horrible things about her needlessly. The only other occupied table in the café with a silent occupant was filled by a skinny guy with darkish hair and round glasses. He was hunched over and ungodly amount of textbooks so I assumed he was a student. He was muttering to himself in Latin. Probably translating. “Semper ubi sub ubi. No, that can't possibly be right...” He had his back to me, so I couldn't see his face. Every time the waitress walked past, he looked up just slowly enough to miss catching her eye. The fifth time this happened I started thinking about flagging her down just to tell her to go serve him. I heard him mutter, “Waitress kree, dammit.” I blinked. Kree? No. No way. I had been in this realm for three days already and I hadn't… of course. I shook my head, called myself an idiot, and stood. I grabbed my cup and walked past the main counter. I picked up the waitress' coffee pot and shot her a glare when she protested. “One of us has to do your job,” I snarked. Then I walked over to the man and poured him a fresh cup. “Thank god,” he said, “Didn't think it'd work.” I smiled, set down the pot on a bit of space I cleared on his table after filling my own cup. I sat down in the chair directly across from him and smiled. “It didn't.” He frowned. “Oh. Ah. Oh. Um… thank you.” “You're welcome, Doctor Jackson.” He blinked at me through his glasses. “Do I… know you?” I shook my head. “No. But I know you.” “You do?” “Your work, I mean.” I smiled my most charming smile. “Questioning when the pyramids were built, and by whom. Dissertations on dead civilizations. I've read lots by you. Recognized you from the pictures on your dust-jackets.” I could see the gears working in his head. Doctor Daniel Jackson was currently employed by the US Air Forces, working on a top-secret project known as “StarGate Command.” (of course, I wondered why he had top secret documents like the passages he was so obviously trying to translate outside of the base or his apartment, but maybe he had just been feeling cooped up. I could sympathize. Daniel was trying to re-humanize himself this afternoon too.) “StarGate Command” was a secret military institution, along the lines of Area-51, which strictly speaking didn't exist. They dealt in alien technology, war-lords from other galaxies, and the Fate of All Mankind. Not exactly the type to employ archaeologists? Said aliens seemed like to pretend to be ancient Gods, and their languages were what we would call the dead ones - Sanskrit, Mesopotamian, Babylonian, Ancient Greek, and Egyptian. Dr. Daniel Jackson worked for the government as a translator, anthropologist, and general “explain-stuff” guy. Right now, I could guess fairly accurately that Daniel was wondering if I was with a counter-intelligence operation known as the NID, or if I was an alien spy, or if I really was just a fan of his pre-military work like I said I was. Well, I was a fan of his character on the television series “StarGate SG-1”. That counts. Right? He decided that I was the latter, and smiled and shook my hand. I giggled, trying to sound like the university student I looked like. Am. Was. Whatever. “I'd ask for your autograph, but I have no book with me.” He blushed. “I… uh… I can sign something else… a napkin?” I shook my head. “S'cool. What are you doing here Doctor? On Sabbatical?” He leapt at my offered excuse. “Extended,” he said. “Got… friends here. Just… you know…” I gestured to the piles of paper around me. “Personal Research Project.” The university student in me automatically capitalized the words. Something deep in my gut twisted when I realized that I hadn't been a student in more than two years. Longer than that, maybe. Didn't I have an essay due? I shoved down the imminent panic attack and pasted on a fake smile. “Yeah.” I continued to smile and used my feigned curiosity in the subject to peruse some of the papers. It was all in languages I didn't speak. Thanks to the Slipping, I'd learned more than a handful. Daniel set aside his work, carefully folding his papers into a briefcase before turning his attention to me. Top secret, and all that. “So, you're an… archaeology student.” I shook my head. “Dramatic Literature, actually. But I love dabbling in Classical History and Languages. I'm a nutter for mythology.” He laughed. “If you only knew.” If you only knew. “You know, I've always wondered about your pyramid theories,” I ventured. Yes, I was feeling reckless and dangerous. But I had come to this café resolving to get my humanity back. The best way to do it seemed to be to play with fire a little. The last half dozen worlds had been boring, I'd made myself numb, detached. I hadn't done anything fun since my little romp with Miroku the Pervert Monk and that had been... what... weeks ago? Longer? I was going to have an adventure. It was about damn time I looked up at what was going on around me. Besides, I wanted to see the StarGate. “Wondered what about the theories?” Daniel asked, flattered by my attention. “Well,” I grinned and leaned across the table to whisper to him, “Did you hear about the 1928 Giza excavation?” Outwardly, his expression didn't change. But I heard his heart speed up, his breaths come a little faster. Of course he had heard of them - they had excavated the StarGate at those digs. A doorway that he himself had figured out how to open. A door way to the stars. “Off and on,” he said softly. “Nothing tangible.” “I heard a great story about it. A myth. About what was supposed to be buried there, I mean.” “Something was supposed to be buried there?” He was growing paler now, his hands shaking slightly. Oh, I was cruel. I was toying with him. I was playing cat and mouse and being a total Vampiric bitch and loving every second of it. “According to the stories, the Old Gods of Egypt were … cruel.” “Cruel?” “Yeah - bad gods. Not fit for ruling. It's said that a rebellion happened and they humans kicked out the Old Gods and somehow shoved them into heaven.” “Heaven?” “Well, they used this doorway called the Gate to Heaven. I don't think the translation of the word is correct - he must have been using the bad book.” I smiled and he swallowed hard. He had said much the same thing himself in the movie. “I don't know enough of the glyphs to know the right word, though. Then the people buried it and in an attempt to consecrate the ground, built the Sphinx and pyramids there.” I smiled my most winning smile and he was frowning slightly. Probably trying to figure out if he'd ever read the story somewhere and just missed it. “Of course, if you want to be a kook, you can say that the Old Gods were aliens and the Heaven's Gate was some sort of… interplanetary travel thingy. But then you'd be proving those nutters who believed Aliens built the pyramids true.” In this reality it was true. Daniel knew that as well as I. He was uncomfortable and anxious looking and I feigned checking my watch. “Ah! Lookit the time,” I said, and stood. I pulled the pen from his hand and wrote down the name of my hotel and room number on a spare napkin, along with my name. “I'd love to have coffee again with you sometime, Doctor,” I said, knowing full well that he would run to StarGate Command immediately and try to figure out who the hell I was and how the hell I knew about the ‘gate. “Call me.” He studied the napkin, “Marie Sparrow?” I nodded. What? So I liked to play with last names when I checked into the motels and inns. Don't judge me. He folded it and carefully put it in his jeans pocket. I bid him good afternoon and left the café smiling. Oh, and by the way, the name of the town was Colorado Springs. ===== I was woken in the middle of the night by the sound of footsteps outside of my door. I figured they belonged to someone who was staying down the hall, turned over, and tried to get back to sleep. Sleeping at night had the advantage and disadvantage of providing me with a lighter sleep than if I'd kept regular Vampire hours. Advantage because I could wake easier if there was a nightmare or a problem. Disadvantage because everything else woke me, too. I'd been dreaming about the man in the black leather with the sword again, and I wanted to recapture the dream. We hadn't said anything to each other yet, and I wanted to see if he would speak to me this time. I let a yawn curl my tongue and jammed my shoulder under the flat hotel pillow and tried to settle again. The footsteps had stopped outside of my door, and made a slight scuffling sound on the carpet. I frowned. I sat up and looked at the door. Concentrating, I counted three heartbeats outside, and the controlled breathing of three someones waiting for something. I swivelled my head, turning my ears to the windows - yes, there were three folks there, too. Hm. The tiny scrape of metal on metal jarred my ears. The door handle jiggled. Picking the lock. Hm. I considered laying down and faking sleep, but the people at the window probably saw that I was awake already. I considered reaching for my knife and my wand. If the people outside had radios, then the people inside would probably already know I was up. If I armed myself, they would be more aggressive in their entrance. Maybe shoot me. Hm. I made a show of stretching, stood, and walked into the bathroom. I had left my day clothing in there, sleeping in the complimentary bathrobe. I flushed the toilet to mask any sounds and erase any doubts as to why I got up, and quickly slipped on my street wear. My knife was under the pillow, my wand and phials in the belt on the bed stand. The bathroom door was beside the bed. They were still picking the lock. I was confident I could reach at least one of my weapons before they managed to fire theirs. Timing it, I opened the door to the bathroom and stepped into the room right about the same time as three guys in Black Ops gear. I put my hand on the handle of my wand casually, as if just leaning on the bed stand. “Don't move!” one of the men hissed. All three guns jumped up and aimed at my chest. Hm. One man hung back and closed the door. Ah - this was supposed to be secret. If it hadn't, the order to stay still would have been shouted and they would have asked the management to let them in. “You could have just knocked,” I said conversationally, not moving. The men blinked. Clearly, I had been waiting for them - I was dressed, and awake. They were not prepared for this, and it threw them for a tiny loop. “You... you're under arrest,” one of the men said, hauling his brain back onto the script. “Please come with us.” “What for?” I asked. “Classified.” I rolled my eyes. “C'mon guys. You don't honestly expect me to be all cooperative if you don't at least hint at what I've done wrong.” They exchanged another glance. One of them pressed two fingers to his ear and listened. I could hear the tinny voice over his radio clear as day - “Tell her a little. Security breach.” The man nodded, dropped his hand back to his M-90 and said, “Possible security breach. Please come with us.” I smiled. “You know, just a thought but - if I hadn't actually breached any kind of national security, don't you think this stunt might have provoked me into it?” The voice on the other end of the radio barked out a laugh, then clipped it off. Something made a high-pitched ringing sound and I couldn't resist adding, “And you may want to answer your cell, sir.” On the other end of the wire, the man sucked in a breath and hissed out, “Fuck.” “Swearing is naughty, too,” I said. “Didn't your mama ever tell you that?” The Black Ops guys looked about ready to piss themselves. They were scared now. I could hear what their CO was saying and I shouldn't be able to. They knew I was something beyond what they could probably handle. But I wanted them to arrest me. I still wanted adventure. I wanted to use its thrill and it's danger to remember who I was. “Right,” I said. “Can I put on my belt before we go? Don't want my pants to fall down. Its very undignified, you know. Hardly fitting of a prisoner of the United States of America's Black Ops.” The ops guys exchanged a glance, then the guy closest to me nodded and said, “Slowly.” I looped the leather through my belt loops and buckled it at a snail's pace. “I have a knife,” I said. They stiffened as one. “It's under my pillow. I suspect you don't want me to keep it, but I'm rather attached to it and loath to leave it behind. I don't mind someone else carrying it.” I pointed at the pillow, where my knife lay, and stepped aside. Carefully, one of the ops guys stepped forward and poked at the pillow as if he expected a bomb underneath. When the pillow didn't go kablewie in his face, he prodded it aside with the barrel of his weapon. “Confirmed, sir,” he said. “Take it,” the leader said. The Ops guy did. The leader gestured with his M-90. “This way, Miss Sparrow,” he said, pointing towards the door. “Walk slowly. If you run, we shoot. If you scream, we have chloroform. We're taking the stairs to the basement level.” “Joy,” I said, and walked out of the room ahead of him with my hands empty and at my sides. “Guess I get my exercise for the night.” I let them direct me silently up the hall, watching with wary eyes. I noticed that the red lights on the security cameras were off. Once we were in the narrow stairwell, I could have turned around and socked the guy behind me. I could have taken a few bullets in the effort to wrest my knife from the man holding it in his black glove. I could have changed into a bat, flown upwards to the roof. I could have escaped. I didn't want to. I wanted to go to Cheyenne Mountain, the nearest military base, where they would undoubtedly take me. I wanted to go where the StarGate was. Book Sixteen: StarGate: SG1 Chapter Forty: “Lies and Truths” “You can take off the blindfold now.” I lifted my hands to the swath of dark fabric covering my eyes and pushed it up over my head. I dropped it into my lap and tried to smooth down my bed- and bandana-head hair. I also used the motion to look around the room. It was smallish - just big enough for three or four to sit comfortably with a wide table separating them. Close enough to be intimate and far enough away that I couldn't reach out and punch the person opposite me. The walls were concrete, painted what I suppose they thought was a soothing grey, but I had always associated with cheap dorm rooms. The floor was painted too, bare and cool. There was a white-shaded yellowish light bulb hanging from a solitary cord too far up to reach, and a darkly mirrored window to my right. I turned and stuck my tongue out at it. There was a well-scuffed stainless steel table before me, bolted to the ground so it couldn't be tossed around by irate prisoners. There were also two matching chairs, also bolted down. I was in one. A fit looking man in his late forties or early fifties was in the other. He was wearing the drab olive ensemble of military personnel with no particular place to go. A black tee-shirt was under the open shirt, stretched just enough to betray that although this man may have deep smile lines around his mouth and deeper squint-lines around his eyes, he was by no means a senior citizen. He had another earpiece in, the flesh-toned wire threading down the side of his neck and into the collar of his shirt. If I hadn't been looking for it, I wouldn't have seen it. His hair was cropped short, but not drastically so, and was a light blondy brown which may or may not have been going grey. His dark eyes reminded me of a dog's - deep, thoughtful, playful, perhaps, but wont to bite if provoked. I have seen those eyes sparkle with laughter, and burn with fury. I knew this man. This was Colonel Jonathan “Jack” O'Neill, the Commanding Officer of the StarGate 1 team. The team was comprised of Major Samantha Carter, an Air force officer who specialized in Astrophysics and mechanical doohickies. The third member was Teal'c, an enemy alien-turned-ally with a large physique and a child-like fascination with Tau'ri (Earth) popular culture. The fourth and last member was Doctor Daniel Jackson. Colonel Jack O'Neill looked at me over the top of the clip board he held in his hand. He finished scanning what was written on it, obviously stalling in order to make me twitchy. It didn't make me twitchy, it just gave me a few seconds longer to admire the fact that I had guessed right - they had brought me to the StarGate Command Centre in Cheyenne Mountain, just as I'd hoped they would. “Would you care to explain why you were making… soup… in your hotel room?” O'Neill asked archly, once I had returned my gaze to his face. Oh, goody. Straight to the interrogation! I wondered who my Good Cop would be, or if O'Neill thought it was supposed to be him. I smiled as winningly as possible and said, hands folded neatly on my knees, “Room service sucked?” He levelled an unimpressed glare at me over the bare, stainless steel table. “With Dandelion and butterfly wings?” My smile thinned. “It's a delicacy?” O'Neill snorted. “Who was on the phone?” I asked. His heartbeat sped up slightly, but his face didn't change. I leaned across the table. “If I were you, Colonel,” I said in a stagewhisper, “I'd be less worried about the soup and more worried about how exactly it is that I knew that the Black Ops guys were coming.” O'Neill set aside the clipboard, face-down, and folded his arms on the table, leaning forward to match my posture. “And how did you know that they were coming, Miss Sparrow?” “Brooke,” I corrected. “Marie Susan Brooke.” O'Neill blinked. “The name you gave to Doctor Jackson was Sparrow.” “Yeah, that's the name I checked into the hotel under,” I said, “how else was he supposed to find me? Or, you know, you guys. Either was fine, I guess.” I scratched the side of my nose. “Gonna ask me why I did that?” “I figure you're about to tell me.” O'Neill snorted again. “I'm starting to sense a pattern here.” “See, now that's why you're all in charge and stuff,” I said. “Being smart and all.” His grin grew. “Flattery will get you everywhere. Clearly, you made a point of telling Doctor Jackson where you were staying in order to make it easy for us. You also told him just enough to make it clear that you know more than you should, but not enough that we may shoot first and ask questions later.” “Which wouldn't really work on anyone but me,” I pointed out. I saw O'Neill's face tighten and added, hastily, “Don't worry, not a snake.” I lifted my shirt just enough to expose a smooth expanse of stomach. “No x scar.” “Ri-ight,” he said. He turned his head towards the mirror on the wall and barked, “Carter?” In his earpiece a woman's voice said, “Not sensing anything. Teal'c either, sir.” “Toldjaso,” I said before he could relay the message to me. He lifted a hand and tapped the earpiece with one blunt finger. “You can hear her?” “Every word.” “Huh.” He narrowed his fathomless eyes at me. “So what are you and why did you want in here so bad?” I shrugged. “Who said I wanted in here?” “You freaked out Doctor Jackson and all but drew us a map and handed out invitations.” He waved at me in a 'there ya go' gesture. “You wanted to be captured. Why?” I sat back, took a deep breath. I let it out slowly, then took in another. “Well, it worked easier than just walking in, didn't it? Nobody pointed guns at me at the security checkpoints and demanded mountains of ID.” “Fer cryin' out loud,” O'Neill said under his breath. I'm afraid and ashamed to report that I made a tiny, teeny, fangirly 'squeeee' of glee at hearing his signature catchphrase. “What was that?” he asked, eyebrows galloping up into his fair hair. “Sorry,” I apologized hastily. “A little fangirl got out. Listen, Colonel, how about this. I'll tell you everything you want, all of it. In return, you just let me do what I wanted into the base to do.” He sat back as well, and crossed his hands across his stomach, a hard gesture of reluctance that physically closed himself off from me. “And what's that?” “You let me see the StarGate.” His eye bugged out and he managed to catch himself before his jaw dropped to the table top. I heard the people in the next room make various sounds, and then the echo of their noises followed a few seconds after in O'Neill's ear. “Well?” I said, when everyone simmered down a bit. “I just want to see it. I don't even want to go through it.” “How do you know about it?” O'Neill growled. “Nuh-uh,” I said. “Show me first, then I'll tell you.” O'Neill stared at me. Then he got up and left the room, taking the clipboard with him. The doors and walls were heavy enough that although I could hear the muffled murmurs of him talking with people in the hall, I didn't know who or what was said. At length, a fit, pretty woman with short shaggy blonde hair entered the room. She was holding my knife and one of my phials. This made me less happy. They had made me give up my belt, though I had managed to stuff my wand up my sleeve, when we had arrived at the base. “This is a very strange knife,” she said. “Yes, it is, Major,” I agreed. She blanched. No where on her uniform was her rank written, so how could I have known it? I smiled in what I hoped was a disarming way. “It was a gift, too, so please treat it nicely. I don't want to get it back with any chips.” She frowned. “What makes you think we'll give it back? It's illegal for any citizen to carry a sharpened blade longer than six inches.” “Once I've seen the StarGate and you ask your questions and I've answered them, you'll give me my knife back,” I said. “You're confident, aren't you?” she said. “Not afraid of anything.” The smile wavered. “I wouldn't say anything, but... not a lot.” She lifted the phial and I tensed. “You're afraid of this,” she said softly. “I can see it in your eyes.” I was watching the phial carefully. It was a keyed one, and the word “Lab” was written across it in thick ink. I'm sure Major Samantha Carter had no desire to meet the Goblin King so I said, slowly, “What I fear, Major, is what will happen if you drop that.” “So it is an explosive?” she said. “No,” I corrected. “It's a phase shifter. Drop that and you'll end up in an alternate reality. And not the one where you have long hair and were married to O'Neill.” Her whole face went white and for a moment I thought she actually would drop the phial, her hand was shaking so bad. Then she got a hold of herself, turned on her heel, and left the room. There was more talking. I grabbed a handful of my own hair and began to pick at the split ends. There was an embarrassing amount, and I thought I'd better try to find a salon and at least get a trim. I still wanted to keep the long hair, but the dead ends had to go. At length, Doctor Jackson stuck his head into the room. “He-hello,” he said, shutting the heavy metal door behind him. It made a clicking sound. He rubbed his palms on his pants. “Hi Doctor Jackson,” I said, dropping my hair. “Guess this makes you the Good Cop, eh? I'm Sorry.” “Sorry?” he echoed, pushing up his glasses. “What for?” “For using you to get in here.” He shrugged. “Not the first time it's happened,” he said with a small laugh. “I daresay not.” “You, ah... you want coffee?” he asked, making a short, jerking gesture towards the door with his thumb. “Nah, don't drink...coffee,” I said. I'd always wanted to use that pastiche line. It made me grin and made him furrow his brow. If it had been Teal'c I had said that in front of, he would probably have raised his eyebrows. That was Tealc's version of a shriek of surprise. He was very... un-emotive. Not to say that he didn't have a sense of humour. I'm sure he would have snagged the Vampire joke in a second. Daniel sat in the chair that O'Neill had vacated and intertwined his fingers in a small ball. “So, who are you, Ms. Brooke?” I chuckled. “I like how they've sent in each of you to try to get something out of me. It's kinda neat. Will Teal'c be next?” Daniel frowned and pushed up his glasses. “How do you know about Teal'c?” “How could I not? He's a little hard to miss. Look, Doctor Jackson, I'm enjoying the one-on-one time, but seriously... I meant what I said to O'Neill. I want to see the StarGate, and then I'll answer anything you want.” “And you'll explain what you were making in your hotel room, and where the knife came from, and how you knew about the Black Ops guys and can hear things normal people never could, and know so much about the SGC?” “All of it,” I swore. He shifted his fingers a bit. “And why you claim to possess little glass tubes that are actually phase shifters?” “Yup.” “And all you want to do is see the 'Gate?” “Yup.” “...really?” I let one corner of my mouth curl up. “Is that really so hard to believe, Doctor? I know about it. I want to see it. Can you fault me?” He matched the little smirk. “No, I guess not. Right.” He stood, “I guess I'll... I'll go talk to General Hammond.” “Thanks, Doctor. Just so you know, I really am a fan,” I said as he walked towards the door. He paused. “Really?” “Really. And I don't think semper ubi sub ubi was in fact the correct translation.” He coloured and chuckled again. “Actually, I think it was. It was a list of things that a mother was told to advise her daughter on the occasion of the daughter's first public outing in ancient Novidunum.” I chuckled too. He left the room. There was more talk in the hall. All told, I figured about an hour passed. I was far underground - 27 stories or so, if I remembered correctly - and I couldn't feel the passage of the sun as keenly as I usually did. It was probably about dawn, give or take. I wasn't about to extend my fangs or turn into a bat just to find out. I certainly wouldn't be able to do so without the people in the mirror-room next door seeing, and if I did it too close to day, then I may be stuck like that until the next nightfall. A queer thought struck me and I lifted my face to the security camera and winked at it. I wondered if they could see me or not. All four members of SG-1 and General Hammond entered the room. No one was carrying anything. I stayed where I was. “Right,” the General said. “Give me one good reason to trust you.” I sat up straight. “Because I am a traveler from a separate reality where you and all you do is a television show called 'StarGate: SG-1' which is immensely popular, and, may I add, way freakin' better than 'Wormhole X-treme'.” There was a five second vacuum of utter, shocked silence. Then O'Neill threw up his hands and snarled, “Oh, yer kidding me!” Sam's mouth was opening and closing, but she said nothing. Hammond looked like I had just smacked him in the face and Daniel had somehow pulled a pen and notepad out of thin air and was frantically scribbling. Teal'c raised just one eyebrow - not too alarmed - and took a small step forward. “You watch this television program?” he inquired stoically. “Yes,” I said. “Every Wednesday night at eight o'clock. Or, rather I did.” “Did?” Daniel asked without looking up from his notes. “Before I started sliding into alternate realities by mistake.” Sam and Daniel exchanged a glance. “Tell us about it,” Sam said. “Show me the 'Gate,” I said, standing firm. They exchanged another glance. “Tell us enough to give us reason to trust you,” Hammond amended. “Fine, okay,” I said. Then I did. For ten minutes they were silent as I recounted my first encounter with Lucard, leaving out the part about what may or may not have happened to cause my nightmares. I also left out the Vampire bit. I told them that I had escaped into Harry Potter. I pulled my wand out of my sleeve and did a few simple spells to prove it. I levitated Hammond's ID from his pocket and unlocked to door without touching it. I pointed to the camera above us and asked Colonel O'Neill to ask a techie to count how many people were in the room. “Five,” he said. I closed my eyes, willed my reflection to appear. O'Neill made a strangled sound and said, “Six.” I pointed to the mirrored wall. No one had thought to check my reflection there yet. They looked, I waved, and then willed my reflection away. It blobbed off the mirror, like it had been sucked back like oil bubbles. Sam ran a hand through her hair, stole three sheets of Daniel's note book, and produced her own pen from a pocket and began to scribble. I told them about Jean-Claude and Jareth and breezed through everything else until the present with a simple, “And I keep searching for home, staying where I can in the shadows, and interacting as little as possible. You'll get the full story, like how I can do the mirror thing, when I see the 'Gate.” Hammond's cheeks had gone red, but the rest of his face was pale and beaded with sweat. O'Neill was frowning, resting one hip on the table. Teal'c was listening silently, as still as a sentinel. Daniel and Sam looked up, startled by the sudden silence. “So, if you don't usually tell people,” Daniel said at length. He sketched a rough circle in the air between us with his hand, “Why tell us?” “I like you guys,” I said. “You're stand-up folks. And you know, you have experience with this whole phase-shifting thing. Thought you may be able to give me a hand.” “That's all?” O'Neill said. “All of this mystery and manoeuvring for a simple 'gimmie a hand'?” “Would you have believed me if I had just waltzed up to the mountain and started screaming over the security cameras?” “Well... no,” he said, voice disgruntled. “But what makes you think we actually believe this whole bit about being able to shift into books and movies and stuff?” I grinned. “Gee, lemmie think. You've all visited a separate reality, had a TV show made about you, were cloned, swapped bodies, met clone kid Jack, fight aliens on a daily bases, and have had your minds transferred into robots. I'd venture a guess that you're fairly used to dealing with weird shit and coping with bizarre situations. And I was pretty sure one of you would figure out at least that I wasn't human eventually.” My grin got wider at their gobsmacked expressions, “Besides... I really wanted to meet you guys and talk and stuff, and I didn't want to have to be all guarded and un-blunt about it. Oh, and for the record--” I turned to O'Neill, “Maybourne is an asshole and Anise is a raging bitch.” Jack grinned. “My kinda gal,” he said. “I'm convinced.” ===== Ten minutes later I was standing in the StarGate Command Briefing Room, waiting with the rest of the base for SG-7 to make their reappearance on the metal ramp below. The everything-proof window of the room looked down onto the StarGate, three floors below, perched rather unceremoniously on it's side on the concrete with a single ramp leading up to the circle. The klaxons blared, the lights turned red, and a voice announced over a PA system, “GDO code confirmed, it's SG-7.” On the right of me, General Hammond, the rotund bald man in charge of the SGC spoke into a phone, “Open the iris.” Down below me, on the cement floor of a supposedly abandoned missile silo, a large flat disc of titanium slid back to reveal an ancient metal ring six times as tall as me, and covered all over with glyphs so old the Ancient Egyptians' had had no idea what they'd meant. The centre section of the ring spun from left to right, like an oversized combination lock, pausing to click the correct sequence of symbols into the seven spiky bits that stuck out the side. There was a flash of white, then a swirling, watery vortex appeared in the middle of the ring, suspended magically in a vertical position. A long plume of spray shot out from the centre, swelled, and shrunk back into the surface of the 'water'. Tiny ripples bounced away from the impact point, and the 'water' became a smooth pool of glowing, refracting, sparkling liquid. “Da-yam, that's cool,” I said, appreciatively. Beside me Jack raised a sardonic eyebrow every-so-slightly. The unspoken What is? was loud and clear. I gestured vaguely at the StarGate with my palms. “Just the whole, whirly, spinney, vertical water.... thingy.” He snorted. Ri-ight. “So,” Jack said, rubbing his hands together. “We have vats of coffee, a mountain of donuts, and piles of notepads and tape recorders. Ready to spill your guts?” He gestured at the long wooden briefing table behind us, and I saw that he wasn't exaggerating. Daniel was already sitting, his hand eagerly on the 'record' button of a tape player. I walked over to the coffee pot and peered in. “What's wrong?” Sam asked. “Prefer tea? Coffee's the vice of choice around here, but I think someone may have some chamomile stashed away.” I turned and said, “Actually, I hate to be a bother, but I haven't had anything to ...um... 'eat'... since about this time yesterday.” Jack grinned and sat down, grabbing a powdery sugar donut off the plate. His gestures were loose, friendly, but I could still see that his guard was up. As much as I was being treated more or less like a guest, I knew I was still a prisoner. Now that the sun had rose, I wouldn't be able to leave without a lot of fuss, bullets, and not a little amount of bleeding. Not that I wanted to leave. For now I was content to be the prisoner of the SGC. There were two guards posted at each door and SG1 were all armed, so it's not like I had a lot of a choice, anyway. Jack licked the sugar off his top lip and said, “Anything you want, ask. It's the Air Force's tab. Pizza, Chinese?” “Blood,” I said. He choked. Teal'c pounded his back with a blank face. “B-blood?” Daniel asked. “I prefer it hot,” I said. “But right out of the bag is good, too.” “Bag?” Sam echoed. I mimed holding something in front of my mouth, “Yeah, with a straw. Like a juice box.” “This is going to be a long day, isn't it?” Jack said, finally breathing again. He set down the rest of his donut. “Yeah,” I agreed, sitting down in the plush black chair beside him, “Yeah, it is.” Book Sixteen: StarGate: SG1 Chapter Forty-One: “Drafted” Several long hours later found us all staring at each other around the long briefing room table. The large, brushed steel coffee pot was empty, the last of it congealing in Daniel's stained cup. All that was left of the donuts was a few crumbs and a liberal dusting of confectioner's sugar. There were two pizza boxes - one was empty, and one held one last slice that Teal'c was trying to eye without looking like he was eyeing it. Two completely filled cassette tapes sat beside Daniel's elbow, carefully labelled and snapped into protective cases. The third and last was whirring with a faint electrical whine in the tape recorder in the centre of the table. Sam's notepad was filled with black and red squiggles, swirls, and combinations of numbers three lines long. Daniel's was stuffed past the margins with cultural questions, notes in at least three different languages, and sketches of buildings I had described. Jack's was filled with doodles of ray guns and flying saucers. Teal'c and Hammond's were bare. Beside my elbow were two empty plastic bags, the kind they keep in emergency room refrigerators for 'just-in-case'. They had been cold, which had been refreshing, but had killed the taste a bit. I still preferred it hot. And they had indeed arrived with a straw from the base canteen. And a Private who was rivalling Kermit in shade. “...and then I heard Daniel say 'kree' at the waitress,” I wound down, “and the rest, as they say, is history.” General Hammond sat back in his chair and put a hand on his forehead, as if trying to keep all the startling information I had just imparted from spilling down his face. It was the first move anyone had made in about an hour and it snapped the others out of their trances. Jack arched his back, stretching, and winced when it made a popping sound. Daniel cracked his neck, picked up his coffee cup, looked at what was inside, and set it back down again. Teal'c blinked. Sam ran her hands through her hair and scrubbed at her eyes. I folded my arms on the table. “So. Do you think you'll be able to help me out?” Daniel cleared his throat with a light cough, and said, “Maybe.” “Maybe?” “After I've had time to digest this.” “And I've reviewed these notes and the tape, and maybe could I have one of your phials?” Sam said, and the light was lit in her eyes again, eager and ready to solve a new puzzle. “After you've slept,” General Hammond corrected. “After we've all had some rest. Miss Marie, we'll assign you some guest quarters. Understand that we'll still have to post a guard outside of your room.” “That's fine,” I said. “I understand. Big Bad Vampire who knows too much. It's all good.” We all stood. I turned to Sam. “So. Can I have my knife back now?” She grinned. “Yeah. Sure.” ===== “I think this counts, O'Neill!” The shout startled me. About seven hours and a nap later, I had been on my way from the showers to the small, bare room I had been given for my quarters. There was no one else around, so it wasn't anyone shouting at me. I zeroed in on the sound - it was coming from a closed door to my left. I couldn't scent who the people were, but I thought I recognized the voice that was screaming. I paused, and looked around surreptitiously. There were no other people heading in my direction, so I sidled up to the metal door and pressed my ear against the crack. “We should have been informed,” the shouter went on. “And apparently you were,” Jack snarked back. “We don't bother telling the NID anything anymore - your spies do all the work for us. No point wasting the paper and getting the writer's cramps.” The other man made a wordless, frustrated sound in reply. “Look, right now we got nuthin', Maybourne,” Jack said. Just the confirmation that the shouter was the man I thought he was made my hackles rise. “She's been here all of a day. When we have something to report, we would have.” “I want to speak to her,” Maybourne insisted, cutting Jack off. He said the word 'speak' as if it was a code. Which is was. For Colonel Maybourne and the NID, “speak to” usually amounted to “lay out and vivisect”. “She doesn't want to 'speak' to you,” Jack shot back. This could go on forever, I knew, and would probably climax in some NID spy trying to haul me off in the middle of the night. To by-pass the whole cloak and dagger thing, I thought it may be best to just talk to Maybourne. It wasn't the wisest of ideas, and he would know what I looked like, but it seemed better to be able to speak with him head on, first. Maybe threaten or scare him into staying away. Not that it would work. If the NID was determined to get their mitts on what I had, then they would. Period. It was just a question of whether it would be before Jack and SG-1 finished analyzing the potion. And I had finished brewing it. The batch I'd had going in my hotel room was effectively ruined. I'd missed adding the dew at a vital stage, and now it was just as Jack had accused it of being - soup. I wasn't too concerned. The old one had only been three days old. After my shower I had planned on changing back into my civvies and, with Daniel and Teal'c (one to take notes and one to make sure I didn't run away), we were go into Colorado Springs and collect what I needed to start a new batch. Well, batch and a half, cause I was going to give three phials to Sam for study. I wanted to key one for Inu Yasha with some of the dried blood that I had gently scraped from Miroku's shoulder after our lovemaking, which would leave me with five blanks. If I had the time, that is. If I was going to head of the NID and their inevitable attempt to kidnap me and turn me into Fox's next “Alien Autopsy” star, the best way to do it was to converse with Maybourne and either a) convince him I was too normal to bother or b) convince him I was too damn scary to tangle with. I wasn't quite sure which way I was going to go, but I decided now was as good a time as any to interrupt. I opened the door, and poked my head in. “Actually,” I amended, and both men jumped. Jack's hand shot down to his gun and it was out of its holster before he recognized me. Maybourne looked by turns startled, breathless, annoyed, then pleased. “I'm free now. I don't have to meet Daniel and Teal'c until two.” Jack made a face. I winked. The face became a smile. I sidled into the room, and shut the door behind me. Maybourne's expression turned oily. A smile as false as my appearance of breathing bloomed on his face, looking strange and uncomfortable to be there. “You must be the SGC's guest,” Maybourne said, taking a step forward and extending his hand. I didn't take it. Instead I let my face take on the blank, china-doll look that I had learned from Jean-Claude and cocked my head to the side. I regarded his hand as if it were a mouse, and tried to look like a snake that was hungry. Maybourne shivered and his arm recoiled. Behind Maybourne, Jack made a funny choking sound. “I'm Colonel Maybourne,” he tried again. I let my eyes rake up his body from his hand, lingered at the jugular, and then met his eyes. “I'm Marie,” I said, in what I hoped was a silken, Bride of Dracula tone. Jack started to turn white. I could hear his fingers twitch on the gun, the patter of his heart speeding up slightly. But Maybourne was worse. He had just realized that there was something very off about me, and I tried to press the supernatural advantage. I didn't go so far as to lick my lips, but thought really hard about how little and easy to kill he would be for a Vampire like me, gifted with Elfblood and werewolf's magic, and hoped it translated to my face. Maybourne's heart started jackhammering and the sweet, slightly acrid scent of fear rolled off him like a bank of fog from a dry ice machine. Sweat beads popped up on his upper lip and forehead and this time I did flick my tongue out a bit, tasting the new, enticing saltiness on the air. It made something inside me quicken and though my heart did not beat, blood was suddenly pounding, throbbing in my ears. Itching, aching want pulled at my veins and I longed to scratch. Though I had consumed a pack of blood before my shower, I was suddenly empty, a hollow dark thing wanting to be filled with Maybourne's heat and fear and vulnerability. The blood had been blood, but it had been dead, cold - there had been no scent to it, no personality, no life. No heat. My teeth itched. I felt my eyes burning and closed my lips against the faint rasp of fangs descending. My vision changed, and he was person no more. He was blood in a bag of skin, easy to rupture. I wanted to chase him. I wanted him to run, to wobble and slosh, and I wanted to run after him, sleek and silent. How nice it would be to chase him through these twisting halls, like running down a rabbit in Jareth's Labyrinth. Desire was hot inside of me. I could catch him when I wanted to, let him run, the pounce from around a blind corner. Tear at him, lick the gobbets of blood from under my fingernails with a long, pink, content tongue. Slaked and satisfied in the exertion. Yes, a silken, golden-grey voice said inside of me. It made my skin stiffen - goosebumps and hairs jumping rigid. Yes, take him. Don't deny what you are. He' s yours, if you want him. They all are. Humans are things to take, to collect, to enslave, to kill. The voice sounded like Alexander Lucard. No. I whispered to the voice. No, never, not like you, not a monster, never, never, never. “No,” I said out loud, so quietly that perhaps they didn't hear it. There was a clicking sound. My game of predator-prey was becoming a little too real and I blinked, cutting Maybourne out of my field of vision. Maybourne let out a little, strangled sound of sucking breath and took a small step backwards, the hold of my eyes no longer pinning him to the floor. I looked up at Jack, and saw that he was sighting down his upraised gun at me, over Maybourne's shoulder. The click had been Jack snapping the safety to the side. I took a deep, shaking breath and pushed it back out through my nose. “You... wanted to speak to me?” I said. “I... y-yes,” Maybourne said softly, trying to clamp down on the jittery feelings invading him. I strode purposefully away from the door, and sat in a metal chair facing a desk - there was a little 'O'Neill' name plate on it and I realized I was in Jack's office. The move deliberately unblocked Maybourne's escape route, which served to bring the tension level of the room down a bit, and also put me physically below him, lower and at a disadvantage because he was standing and I was not. Had I been human, this would have been a real advantage. As it was, the false comfort of the illusion was enough for Maybourne, but Jack knew that I could lash out and rip off his face before either man could squeeze off a shot. Jack's gun wavered, his arm following me from behind the other Colonel. Maybourne couldn't see what he was doing, and that was probably a good thing. No need to broadcast to the enemy that your 'guest' and hopefully new ally actually scared the living shit out of you. I blinked, swallowed hard, and felt the gold, the predatory vision, drain away. With it went all my adrenaline and I suddenly felt weary, exhausted, and far, far older than my twenty-something years. I slumped in the chair, turned tired blue eyes to Maybourne, and waited. He swallowed heavily, opting to stay where he was. Jack lowered his gun, but didn't put it away. “So what did you want to say?” I prompted Maybourne. “I... uh... ah...” he fumbled verbally. I watched and waited as he tugged at his uniform, putting it to rights, simultaneously straightening his scrambled, prey-thoughts as well. When he looked back up at me, he was calm, his mind as crisply pressed as his suit. “That was entirely unnecessary,” he said with the oily smile. “I'm your friend.” “The people who are my friends are the people who earn my trust. So far, Colonel,” I said, enjoying the look on his face when I threw his script out the window, “you haven't done anything to endear me to you. Let alone trust you.” “But you trust Colonel O'Neill?” Maybourne asked, and a little bit of ice was crusting over the oil in his tone. “Who pointed a gun at you.” Guess he had noticed after all. “Yes,” I said quickly and immediately. Which startled both men. They didn't expect me to be so ready to accept Jack as one of my most trusted confidents. Jack had known me a little over twentyfour hours and I had actually done little to prove myself trustworthy. But I had known Jack for years. I had watched him go from the sullen, angry, suicidal man who had lost his son and sabotaged his own marriage, to a wise-cracking, intelligent, adjusted and reliable soldier and dear friend to the rest of his team. Jack was compassionate and he could be counted on. “I trust Jack with my life,” I said softly and meant every word of it. “And the lives of those around me. Jack knows that he has to do what he has to do, and if it includes hurting me to protect others, then I can't fault him for it. In fact,” I lifted my eyes to meet Jack's. His face was closed off, a steely unreadable look, “if ever a time comes when I endanger anyone, I hope he does shoot me.” He nodded once, slowly, sagely. Maybourne looked annoyed. “That would be a waste,” Maybourne said. “Hardly,” I said. “But I guess our definitions of what is and isn't a waste are wildly different.” “Come with me,” Maybourne said, and I knew he was only requesting now because he didn't have the power to demand. Yet. “You don't belong here, cooped up underground. Something like you should have space.” I think he was trying to make it sound appealing. “Something like me?” I echoed. “What am I? A free range chicken?” Jack snorted. “Besides,” I licked my lips slowly, eyes lingering on Maybourne's neck again, “I like the base. Full of dead ends and blind turns. Like a rabbit's warren. Probably great fun to hunt in.” Maybourne went a single shade paler. Then he got angry. He saw, now, that I was playing with him. Trying to scare him, and he flushed with embarrassment at being caught in it. Maybourne scowled. “Watch your manners,” he hissed. I gave him my best shit-eating grin. “I am, ducks.” His scowl got deeper, and he turned on his heel and stalked out. He paused at the door. “You will be seeing me again.” “My heart would be broken if I didn't.” He looked about to flip me the bird, and instead stalked out into the hallway. As he was going out, General Hammond came in. “Colonel,” he said. “I just heard that Maybourne was here and - what is Marie doing here?” “Entertaining me,” Jack said, grinning. He turned to me. “That was your best behaviour?” Jack said, and it was evident that he found the thought that I had being good hilarious. “What constitutes bad behaviour?” I shrugged and sat back in the chair, sprawling bonelessly, satisfied with my little victory. “Fireballs up asses?” Jack's eyes began to twinkle. He glowed. “You could do that to Maybourne? Really?” “Colonel!” General Hammond scolded. Jack matched my grin. “I'm just asking,” he said. ===== “It only looks like magic,” Sam insisted as I used a wingardium spell to levitate Doctor Janet Frasier's stethoscope off the side table and into her hand. “It's really technology.” Frasier studied the stethoscope, decided she had seen weirder, and put it on. I had fetched it for her because the medical assistant (what did you call a male nurse, anyway?) had been on the other side of the room when Frasier had asked for it. She settled the plastic buds into her ears, and I obligingly rolled up my shirt and let her press the cool metal disk of the listening device against my chest. It was cold but so was I, so it wasn't much of a shock. I snorted. “Sure, and it only looks like I turn into a bat.” Frasier's face, which had looked extremely puzzled when she couldn't find my heartbeat, raised to meet mine. “Can you do that?” “Yup.” “Just like in 'Dracula'?” I winced and tried to make it look like I hadn't. “What's wrong?” Frasier asked. “Did I poke something?” “Nothing physical,” I assured her. “I just really dislike the 'D' word.” She made a funny face. “The 'D' word.” “We have a history,” I said. “A not nice history. And to answer your question, yes, just like that.” She took a step back. “Could you do it now?” I closed my eyes and tried to search inside myself for the power. “Nope,” I said. “Still daylight.” I opened my eyes and looked at Sam. “What time is it?” She checked her watch. “About five twenty.” “What time does the sun usually set nowadays?” Frasier and Sam exchanged a glance. “Seven, maybe?” Frasier offered. “And I assume this medical investigation will take longer than an hour and a half?” Frasier shifted her weight from one foot to the other. “Possibly.” “Okay. I'll do it at the end, then,” I said. “The bat thing.” Sam's grin got wider. “Can I watch?” “Sure,” I said, “I don't see why not. But I don't think you'll find any scientific explanation for a lot of what I do. I'm a creature of darkness,” I said bluntly, without any of the Lugosi melodrama that such a pronouncement was often made with. “I am what I am and even I don't know how it is that I can do what I can do.” “Great - I'll be back in an hour,” Sam said, and shot towards the door. Probably to make more notes. I shook my head, “That girl,” I said. “She has no romance in her. Doesn't believe in a spec of magic, does she?” Frasier shared a lingering smile with me. “My daughter, Cassie, says the same thing. Says Sam doesn't believe in unicorns.” I let Frasier roll up my sleeve and wipe a cotton ball of rubbing alcohol over the inside of my elbow. I thought that was hilarious. Like a few germs could kill the likes of me. “It's a shame,” I replied, watching her press the tip of the needle against my skin. “They do exist. Don't take too much or I'll get hungry again.” Frasier blinked, then laughed. “Right, okay. So, unicorns?” “Mmm-hmm,” I said. “I know they're real.” “How do you know that?” Frasier asked, eyes on my arm, intent on drawing the blood steadily and painlessly. I barely felt it. “I exist, don't I?” She made a wordless sound of agreement as she withdrew the needle. “If Vampires exist, then Unicorns should too,” I said. “It's practically a rule. And I know one hundred percent that they were in the forest outside of the place where I learned how to cast charms.” Frasier came at me with a fresh needle. “Cassie will be glad to hear that. Have you ever seen a unicorn?” Her question made me stiffen slightly. “Sorry,” she said, absentmindedly assuming that her pricking me had been the cause. “No, it' okay,” I said softly. There was a long, quiet pause as Frasier filled and withdrew the second needle. “So, have you?” she asked as she capped the two phials of my blood and labelled them for study. I crossed my arms over my stomach, suddenly chilled in a way that had nothing to do with my recent blood loss. “No,” I said softly. “They only appear to the innocent.” ===== After I had turned into a bat and back again, repeatedly, for first Frasier, then Frasier and Sam, then Frasier and Sam and Daniel, then Frasier and Sam and Daniel and Teal'c and Jack and Hammond, I called a halt to the whole kafuffle and told them I was bloody exhausted and hungry to boot. I wanted to rest for the night. I wanted to have a full stomach, so to speak, and I wanted it hot. Mostly, I wanted them to stop poking, prying, and prising. I was okay with being a guinea pig but enough was enough. “Right, out!” Frasier said amiably, but in a tone that brooked no argument. Everyone grumbled and made their way to the door, but Daniel lingered. “We were going to out to dinner, if you wanted to come,” he said. “Place in the city. We passed it this afternoon, the steakhouse?” “Sounds nice,” I said. “If you don't mind swinging by the bad side of town first.” “What do you want there?” he asked, pushing up his glasses. “A rapist, if I can find one,” I said, with a wicked little smile. “I like the irony of preying upon a man who preys on women. But any old thug will do.” Daniel smiled nervously. “To kill?” “To feed from,” I corrected. “I don't kill.” “Ah, okay,” he said. “I'll, uh... run it by Jack.” ===== We reached the bad part of town, and Jack stopped the car. “You have the map to the restaurant?” he asked as I climbed out. I patted my pocket. “If you take off now, the General will have my balls,” he added, for colour. “I'll meet you there, I swear,” I said. “I won't take off.” “I'd still feel better if Teal'c was with you.” “No offence, Teal'c,” I said, craning my head around the passenger seat of the truck which I had just vacated, to the back seat which the Jaffa in question filled like a silent mountain. “But you'd scare off the sort I'm looking to attract.” “No offence taken, MarieSusan,” he said, one eyebrow traveling up to hide behind the hat pulled low on his forehead. “And what sort's that?” Jack asked. “The kind that would like to rob and possibly molest a sweet, innocent, helpless, nubile thing like me.” I batted my eyelashes at Jack and pouted sexily. He snorted and rolled his eyes. “Helpless. Yeah. Right. I'm sure that's what Maybourne thinks, too.” “Maybe,” I said, and turned away from the truck. “See you in an hour.” ===== “The Nox!” Sam said and slammed the handle of her steak-knife into the table with such force that it created a dent. From behind the bar, a waitress frowned. “The whosis?” I said, looking up from the glass of wine I had been sipping slowly, enjoying thoroughly. “Wait, the guy from the lab back at Wolfram & Hart?” “Where?” Jack asked. “Never mind,” I mumbled. “Of course, the Nox,” Daniel chimed in, babbling excitedly. “Their technology looks like magic, too. That could be it. They could maybe tell us how you were pulled from your reality. Maybe they know the sigil Lucard's zombies used. Maybe they could send you home. Maybe they could even cure you. They can raise the dead, you know.” Jack made a 'lets not talk about top-secret stuff at the dinner table' face and Daniel and Sam both looked suitably chastised. “Trust me when I tell you there's not technology involved,” I said. I pulled my wand out of its sheath and poked Daniel's shoulder with it. It sputtered once of its own volition, a small spark of red, like a firecracker. “It's just cherry wood, with a core made of a kitsune tail hair.” “Kitsune?” Jack asked around a mouthful of mashed potatoes. “Japanese Fox spirit,” Daniel supplied, rubbing his shoulder, “and watch where you point that thing.” ===== It took nearly a full month for the clearance to come from the President of the United States. Without it, I wasn't allowed to travel through the StarGate. I don't know what they told him, only that they promised it wasn't the truth. They also contacted the Asgard, but as usual, no one was replying right away. We decided that the Tokra didn't need to know about me or what I could do just yet. Save that for after the visit with the Nox. I used that month to relax, to re-start the potion with Sam and Daniel hovering over my shoulders, bottle the first batch and show them how to do it for the next, and to get in a little sparring with Teal'c and Jack. Between Legolas, Miroku, and the nameless Immortal I had beheaded, I was fairly efficient with my knife, though lacking in finesse, and I wasn't bad and beating someone with my fists either. I was keen to try a Bo, and Teal'c knocked me flat enough times to realize that although Miroku had been very proficient with it, it didn't mean I automatically was, too. I had the knowledge, but not the skill, and certainly not the practice. It took years of repeating the same motions for the body to remember it, for the muscles to slide smoothly and automatically. Practice that I hadn't put in. Yet. I had all eternity ahead of me to do it, I thought as I worked my way awkwardly and clumsily through a kata that I had gleaned from Miroku's blood. I wasn't sure if that was a comforting thought or not. Beside me, Jack was holding a punching bag still and Teal'c was knocking him backwards half an inch every time he hit it. “I don't think I want a cure,” I said suddenly. I didn't stop my kata, but Jack looked over at me. Teal'c was halfway through a punch, and couldn't stop in time and clocked Jack in the side of the face. Jack hit the mats and Teal'c and I both rushed over to see if he was dead. He wasn't. He was sitting up slowly, holding his jaw and scowling mightily at his friend. “My apologies, O'Neill,” Teal'c said with a bit of a grin teasing the corners of his mouth. “I did not intend to hurt you.” “Accident, Teal'c, its fine,” O'Neill said, the scowl fading a bit. He turned to me. “What do you mean, you don't want a cure?” I held out my hand and levered Jack to his feet. He swayed once and put out my arms just in case, but he blinked, shook his head, and seemed to be fine. “Daniel said that the Nox may be able to cure me.” “Do you not want this cure, MarieSusan?” Teal'c asked. I shrugged. “The last person to try to cure me nearly killed me all the way. And she was an Elf Queen. She had real magic and your Nox only have technology that looks like magic.” “Perhaps technology will succeed where magic alone has failed,” Teal'c suggested diplomatically. “Perhaps,” I said, but it was clear that I wasn't convinced. “What's the big deal?” Jack said, “So if you die, they bring you back.” He started to stagger towards the gym door. “You ever die, Jack?” I asked waspishly. He paused and looked back over his shoulder at me. “Yeah, I have,” he said. “So you can see how I'm not to keen to do it again.” He frowned. “Yeah.” I walked over him and grabbed his arm, and put it over my shoulders to balance him. “Let's get you a big bag of frozen peas for that face,” I said. “Subtle topic change,” Jack said. “I know. I'm a master.” ===== The next day I was standing at the bottom of the ramp, staring up at the swirling water mass in the centre of the StarGate that was the event horizon of a wormhole. Jack patted my shoulder with more force than was strictly necessary. I glowered at him and he answered it with a brilliant smile. A livid purple mark the same shape as Teal'c fist stained his jaw. “Aren't scared, are you?” he said. “I've never been reduced to atoms and transported across the galaxy before,” I shot back. “Tingles a little!” he said, and ran up the ramp. I rolled my eyes and followed. It did tingle. ===== In the middle of the wormhole, something happened that shouldn't have. I stopped. I don't know how I knew that I had stopped, only that I knew that I was not longer going forward. I was hanging, unbreathing in an airless place, suspended on nothing. The nothing was thick and felt like jelly or porridge, or the force that kept me out of churches. I was staring at something. It was a silver blob. The bob pulsed, as if breathing, then stretched thin. It grew, up and sideways, until it was the same size as me. It was a mirror. I stood there, staring gap-mouthed at my reflection. It was me, but not me. She was not as skinny as I had become, her cheeks rosier and fuller, like mine had been back when I was human. Her eyes were still the painfully bright blue-violet that the elf-blood had turned them, but they were not the same wide rounds of shock mine were. She looked as if she had been expecting to see me. Her hair was shorter, slightly curled from humidity or damp or just a style I had never thought to try before. The not-me was dressed like something out of a fairy-tale; high boots and hose and a jerkin over a doublet tight enough to squash her breasts and give her a boyish shape. Not me was wearing my belt, our wand held defensively in one hand. There was a girl behind her, a girl I'd never seen before in my life. She was slightly pale, her hair a dark curtain that fell forward and sort of hid her quick hazel eyes. She raised a hand and pushed a shining lank behind her ear. She too was dressed from a fairy-tale a kirtle and skirt and bloused sleeves. It pushed her bosom high and flattered her long neck. “Marie?” she mouthed, though I could hear no sound. Not-me narrowed her eyes, but did not turn around. “Marie?” the girl mouthed again. “Wrong mirror,” Not-me mouthed. I snorted. “You're telling me,” I said. A smile quirked at the side of her mouth, and I saw Not-me's fang flash for a brief second before she stepped out of view of the glass. With my reflection gone, the connection snapped, and I was sent spinning into the blackness of the wormhole. ===== I woke, I don't know how much later, with a throbbing headache. “Ow,” I said, and sat up. It was followed quietly by a small “fuck,” then another “ow,” as I probed the swollen lump at the back of my head. Then I looked down. There was a long piece of metal protruding from my chest. “Oh, oh, ow,” I said. “I'd say,” Jack said from behind me. “How'd you do that?” “Fell,” I said, and my voice sounded bubbly. “Don't move!” Sam shouted and tried to shove me down onto my back. Above me Daniel looked anxious and Teal'c, expressionless. “You fell into a discarded pile of scrap metal,” she said. “It was left by the gate.” “Better than a discarded pile of firewood,” I said, staring down my nose at the gruesome wound. “Then I'd just be poofed.” “Stop talking!” Sam snapped. “We have to go get Janet.” “I'm fine,” I said. “Just take it out.” “What?” Daniel asked, looking suddenly five shades too pale. “Get it out,” I said. “And I'll be fine. Now please, it's uncomfortable.” Teal'c stepped forward. “Now, wait,” Sam said. “Shyaddup, Carter,” Jack said amiably, watching with wide eyes. I lay back down and Teal'c braced his foot against my shoulder. He wrapped his big hands around the end of the metal and yanked. I shrieked because it hurt. Sam was immediately on me, wadding up her shirt and jamming it into the wound. I shoved her away and growled, “Get the fuck off me, I don't want the cloth healing into my skin.” She stumbled and landed on her rump, looking affronted. I sat up and looked down at my chest. I pulled aside the torn ends of my black shirt for their benefit and watched their faces as I healed instead of my wound. When it was all over and I felt myself again, Jack took a step back and whistled. No one said anything as I pushed myself onto my feet and buttoned up my olive over shirt to hide my exposed bra. “Well, that was fun and amusing,” I said. “Shall we go see Quark now?” Sam stood and jammed her bloody over shirt into her pack. “Who's Quark?” “Never mind,” I said. ===== “You know,” Jack said conversationally as we wound ourselves through a forest that looked suspiciously like British Columbia. We were on our way to the village of the Nox, hidden deep in the brush of the woods. “It's always been my prerogative to add a fifth member to the team if I chose too.” Oh, I certainly didn't like where this was going. “You don't say, Jack,” I said cautiously. “And why haven't you?” “So far I've had no reason. Now I do. I choose you.” I snorted, hands on my hips. “What am I? A pickachu?” Jack looked confused. Teal'c's lips twitched in what may or may not have been a grin. “Never mind,” I amended. “Why me?” “Who wouldn't want a team member who can't die?” “Fabulous - so I'd be the one getting shot all the time to save your asses. No thanks. Besides, I'm not in the Air Force. You can't recruit me.” Jack grinned back, knowing he had me in a corner here. “The Air Force has the legal right to draft any American citizen with the specific skills required for a particular situation.” I grinned back. “I'm Canadian.” His expression fell. “People make that mistake often - the accent is similar.” Jack's face started to turn purple. “Besides, I'm dead. Doesn't that technically make me a non-citizen?” “Undead,” Daniel corrected with a polite cough. “Quiet, Angel-Boy,” I snapped at him. “Angel-boy?” Sam repeated with uncertainty. “He Ascended. Went in the general direction of Up.” Now Daniel began to turn funny colours. “I... I never,” he sputtered, “I never had wings.” I turned my evil grin on him. “Sure? You lost your memory. Never had a halo or a harp?” “I'm sure!” “Must have been boring, then,” I said. “Ever have poker nights?” Daniel's shade of purple almost matched Jack's. I wondered how many more quips it would take to get him there. “Sure,” I ploughed forward, “Ascended Poker nights. I bet you owe Yoda and Cordelia money.” Books Sixteen: StarGate: SG1 Chapter Forty-Two: “Unforgivable” Planet P3X-774 was covered entirely by a thick, almost primeval, deciduous forest. The trees were straight and tall, building a canopy of green over our heads. The tiniest sound echoed like a pen dropped in an empty cathedral. I itched. The dried blood on my skin itched. The mosquito bites I kept getting itched. And something inside of me itched. Something that could smell the other creatures around us, even as they scented me and ran; knew me for a predator; knew me for something unnatural. They ran and I wanted to give chase. It felt so liberating to be out in the open air for the first time in almost a month. The first, faint tuggings of hunger, the feeling of my veins being too tight under my skin, were starting to nag me. I had fed well and heavily from Doctor Fraiser's refrigerated emergency plasma before I had donned the drab olive off-duty uniform of the SGC and tumbled through the 'Gate. But when I had come out the other side, I mysteriously had been the only one to be injured when I landed. I had lost some blood in the accident - not enough to be unlife-threatening, but enough to make me slightly peckish again. And how was it that I had been the only one to shoot out of the event horizon, tumble down the stairs, and land in the Sharp Things set off to one side? Curse of the Mary Sue, I supposed. Kept things interesting. Everyone else had just walked out of the 'Gate, but whatever I had seen, whatever had made the “you're-not-invited-porridge-sensation” happen to block me from the world had been, when it had vanished all of my denied momentum had acted, I supposed, like a sling shot. Now, there was a scary thought. I was denied access to churches. What if the StarGate had been placed in a temple or some other such place and I couldn't get in? Or worse, in someone's residence? Would the 'Gate have allowed me through? I could have been stuck in deep space. And the wormhole is only one way - you can't turn around and go back if you find a locked door. The 'Gate could only establish a stable wormhole for about half an hour. If I couldn't have gotten out and couldn't have gotten back, when the wormhole dissipated I'd have been left somewhere out in the universe to implode. Suddenly the thought of staying in this fandom and traveling with SG1 was getting less and less appealing. Then there was the mirror in the wormhole itself. What had that been? I had never seen anything like it on the show. Well, no, I guess I had, just never in the wormhole. The SGC had in its possession a mirror. Daniel had touched it during a mission and had been transported to a parallel reality. Sam and I had already discussed the possibility that this mirror could get me home and had concluded that although this mirror could send someone to alternate realities, they were all realities within this particular fandom. The mirror would never lead to Anita Blake's world, or Inu Yasha's. Only to variants of StarGate. So what had that mirror been doing in the midst of the wormhole? It had sort of looked like something from Gaiman's MirrorMask. I shuddered at the thought - could there be an anti-Marie out there somewhere? Was she, perhaps, back in my home reality, living my life and screwing it up? I didn't like that thought, and so I stopped thinking it. “What's the frown for?” Sam asked, to my left. I jumped a little, because I hadn't heard her switch places with Jack. “Just thinking,” I said. It was true, but I didn't bring up the topic that disturbed me most, and instead went back to the first. “My nature doesn't allow me to enter any church at all, or any domicile without an explicit invitation from the one who resides there.” Sam cocked her head and scratched behind her ear. “You sure about that? It may just be a psychosis, you know.” “Pretty sure,” I said. “It feels like walking through porridge. Somewhere around the doorjamb, the porridge just gets too thick to struggle through.” “You've tried?” “Yup - at a few people's places, and at Notre-Dame Cathedral.” The notepad and pen appeared in her hands again and she was squinting at it as she walked. “What about the SGC?” “I think dragging someone in blindfolded and in cuffs is a pretty clear invitation.” “So it doesn't have to be verbal?” “No.” I reached out and grabbed Sam's elbow just as her boot connected with a root and she stumbled. “Ah, thanks,” she said, flushing slightly with embarrassment. “Watch the road, Carter,” Jack snapped, but there was amusement in his voice. Abashed, Sam put away the notepad. ===== About twenty minutes later, I was staring at what looked like Armin Shimmerman in a bad hippie wig. He looked like a sloth - moss and flowers had twined themselves into his long white hair, living, making him look part nature-child, part-woodsprite. He stood solemnly in a glade, his hands folded in front of him passively, but with a note of quiet strength. “Why have you returned here?” he asked. His tone was gentle but firm, like a parent not-quite-scolding a child. Very different from the obnoxious Quark or the hateful Principal Snyder, the two roles I was most familiar with this actor in. It gave me a bit of a turn. Jack, who had been standing in front of me, protectively, stepped aside. “Our new friend here needs some help,” he said. Anteaus, Armin, looked at me with narrowed eyes. They flicked up and down, lighting briefly on my pouch, lingering longer on the wand clutched in my hand. I didn't hold it up, like I was about to shoot anyone, but I liked having my fingers around it just in case. “You are not Tau'ri,” he said softly. “And yet are.” I bristled. The hell I wasn't. Q himself had told me I still had my human heart, and I was inclined to believe the shallow, comforting sneer of an omnipotent alien over the gentle negative appraisal of an almost-omnipotent one. “If you mean 'human',” I said with a bit more force than I had intended, “then yeah, I am, sort of. Only dead. Ish.” “Y'see,” Daniel jumped in hastily, to maintain diplomacy. “She's been changed. Something about her DNA structure has been altered and we thought, you know, maybe you knew how to fix her? Or-or, you know, help us fix her.” Anteaus blinked at him. “You know we will not share our technology with the Tau'ri until you have grown.” Daniel tried not to look affronted. “Yeah, no, we know that. We don't want you to give us anything, we just want you to point us in the right direction, more or less. Or, you know, just give it a whirl yourselves.” “And why should we cure her ailment?” I was about to jump in with well, you know Daniel, I'm not so sure I want a cure anymore, but Jack put his hand on my shoulder and shook his head minutely. I got the message and swallowed my protest and let Daniel go on. “We thought it would be, you know...a nice favour,” he finished lamely. “Why come to the Nox?” Anteaus asked. “Why not the Asgard? They are more versed in biological ailments.” Jack grinned sideways. “Well, you know, my buddy Thor is always so hard to get on the phone.” “Besides,” Sam pointed out, “she has magic.” Now Anteaus looked interested. “Magic? True magic?” Sam made a dismissive gesture. “Technology like yours, technology that looks like magic.” “It is magic,” I insisted. Sam said nothing. “Show me,” Anteaus said. I pointed my wand at a pile of brush beside him and said, “Inflamare.” The wood caught fire in a flashing spark, the flame swelling upwards in the shock of oxygen. Anteaus stared at it and it was just as suddenly doused. “Something else,” he said. I pointed up. “Lumos solem.” A flare of bright light popped into existence, like a firecracker, dazzled the sky, and dissipated. “More,” Anteaus insisted. “Wingardium Leviosa.” A satchel attached to Anteaus' belt floated towards me, and would have landed in my hand had it not been tied firmly. I plucked Daniel's glasses off his face, and ignoring his 'hey!' of protest, smashed them against the ground. “Occulus repairo.” I put them back on Daniel's nose. “Hey, you fixed the scratch in the left lens,” he whispered, surprised. “More,” Anteaus said. “Anything else I have,” I said, “are meant to be duelling jinxes. I could put someone under a full body bind, or make them start to vomit slugs, or turn their knees into jelly, but I don't think anyone would appreciate that.” Anteaus smiled softly. “Can you kill with your spells? Can you cause pain?” SG1 looked slightly shocked by the question, but I understood why he asked it. He knew it was magic. I could see it in his eyes. He knew it wasn't technology; that this wasn't something he could replicate, and he wanted to know how dangerous it was. How dangerous I was. If I were to be captured by the Gua'ould, be made into a weapon, or if I choose to attack the Nox on my own, Anteaus and the others would have no defence save to kill me. He was testing the water, now. How honest would I be? How honourable? Would I tell him the truth? Would I show him my worst? Would I trust him? “Yes,” I said flatly. Daniel made a soft choking sound, and both of Teal'c's eyebrows shot up. “With the three Unforgiveables. The Crutacious Curse, the Imperius Curse, and the Killing Curse.” Anteaus met my eyes and I knew what he was going to ask me. “I don't want to,” I said, before he could ask. “I must see it.” In the thicket behind Carter I could smell a small, white rodent that I assumed was P3X-774's version of a mouse or a rabbit. I whirled around and shouted “Stupefy!” Carter squealed and jumped out of the way of my wand and the rodent froze. There was a small crash of leaves and twigs as it fell onto its side. “What the hell do you think you--!” Carter and Jack both began in unison. “I wasn't aiming at Sam,” I said, and went over to the brush. I dug around the foliage, and came up holding the critter by its ears. I brought it back to the semi-circle SG1 and Anteaus had created. “You sure about this?” I asked. “Yes,” he said. “Finite Incantatum.” The rabbit-mouse squealed in horror and jerked around, able to move again. It bunched its muscles, ready to bound back into the forest, and I said, “Crucio.” It screamed. Have you ever heard an animal scream? It's a primal, heart-wrenching sound. Like a baby wailing. It sounds human and that makes your soul scream in unison. Sam went deathly pale. Daniel went green. Jack's fingers clutched his P90 so tightly that his knuckles were bright white. Even Teal'c looked queasy. “Enough,” Anteaus said. “Finite Incantatum.” The poor creature collapsed on the ground, exhausted and panting. “The next one,” Anteaus ordered. “Imperio.” The rodent stood up on its hind legs, curtsied like a ballet dancer, and proceeded to tap-dance like the WB frog. Smiles threatened at the comical sight, and it just made the humans feel sicker when they realized that the creature was scared shitless. “I can make it do anything you like,” I said. “I can make it climb a tree. I can make it stand on it's head and recite Shakespeare. I can make it drown itself. I can make it go home and rape and murder its own children.” “Enough.” “Finite Incantatum.” The critter collapsed again. “The last one,” Anteaus said. “No.” Daniel's voice was horse with horror. “No. I don't want to see it.” “We've seen enough,” Jack agreed. “That's it. Let it go.” Anteaus looked at me and the message was clear. I had to do it, or he wouldn't help me. I had to kill it so he knew what it looked like. So they could see it and know it and try to find a way to stop it if I ever went against them, willingly or not. So I did the one thing I had never done. I used my magic to kill. “Avada Kedavra!” Green light flashed. SG1 covered their eyes. When they opened them again, the creature was stiff and cold. Daniel turned around and puked into the bushes. Anteaus hadn't moved. “Now bring it back,” he said. I stared at him, hard and long. “You know I can't.” Anteaus cocked his head to the side. “Yet you live. You walk and talk. You have died, I see it in you. Yet you are not dead. Animate it as you are animated.” “I can't,” I said. “Not after death. It only works while it's still alive.” Anteaus knelt by the creature, waved his hand over it. It twitched once, squealing in terror, then shot off into the brush, warm and alive and terrified. He stood up, brushed the globules of dry clay from his knees and said, “I cannot help you. This problem is beyond what I know.” “Thought so,” I said, re-sheathing my wand. “Thanks anyway.” Anteaus bobbed his head gently, as if bowing. I turned around and started to head back the way I came. “That's it?” Jack asked, his voice low and unhappy. “That's it,” I called back over my shoulder. “You guys coming?” ===== The walk back to the StarGate was silent and filled with brooding thoughtfulness. Nobody seemed inclined to talk. Not to me, not to each other. At the bottom of the stairs, I picked up the piece of metal that had impaled me. My blood was still on it, partially dried. “Don't want to leave this behind,” I said. “Something could lick it and then we'd be in a whole universe of annoying.” “Why did you do that?” Sam said. Everyone knew she wasn’t talking about me retrieving my temporary impalement buddy. I smiled sadly. “He needed to see it. You wouldn't understand.” Daniel snorted. “If it makes you feel any better, that's the first time I've ever cast the Killing curse.” Jack didn't miss a beat. “But you've cast the other two before.” “Yes,” I replied truthfully. Teal'c pressed the sequence of chevrons that would lead back to Earth in a thick, strained silence. The 'Gate whirled and the event horizon flashed into existence. Jack pressed the button on a device in his hand to let SGC know that it was us and not hostile aliens returning, and then SG1 went through. I walked up to the surface, and took a breath. “Please let me not see that mirror again,” I said. I closed my eyes and stepped forward. There was no mirror, only the feel of my booted feet on the meshmetal of the ramp at the SGC. When I opened my eyes again on the other side of the StarGate, my world was still dark. “Hey - what's going on?” I asked. “I can't see. Jack?” Something sharp and long jabbed into the back of my neck. There was the hiss of a hypo. I had just enough time to mutter, “Aw, you're fucking kidding me,” before I hit the floor and the darkness slipped over my consciousness too. ===== I woke with a throbbing headache and a parched throat. The hunger pangs alone told me that I had been out for at least three or four hours. I struggled to raise my head, and it felt like trying to lift a hundred-pound anvil with just my neck. I cracked open one gummy eye, which watered as if I'd gotten sand in it, and looked around. I was tied to a metal chair that was bolted to the ground. The ropes were thick, and bound me completely to the chair, looping over and over again from shoulder to waist. My arms were pulled back behind me, almost painfully, and under the thick ropes I could feel a pair of too-tight handcuffs cutting into my flesh. My legs were cuffed to the legs of the chair. On a table beside me I saw, laid out carefully, almost with artistic care, my knife, my wand, and my pouch. The pouch had been emptied, all the phials lined up neatly with their labels facing out, the items in the tissues sorted through and put in little piles, arranged in plastic baggies with zip locks. The recipe list was laid flat, smoothed out against the table. There was also a gun, a tranquilizer gun with darts the size of my finger, and several needles that were wide, meant for taking blood. There was also a tray with an assortment of implements that looked like an award jumble of tools alone - a metal nail file, a pair of needle-nosed pliers, a small metal hammer, a number of different sized wicked sharp scalpels - but together made an impressive array of torture devices. I swallowed heavily. “You're awake,” said an electronically disguised voice from speakers high above me. The sound echoed through the room and I got an idea of the size - small. Big enough for me, and the table, and for another person to move around me comfortably with out brushing the walls. I assumed they were watching me through a window, because I was consciously not projecting a reflection, so as to be invisible to whatever recording devices they had. I wondered vaguely if I could make my shadow vanish too, like the legends said. Make the light go right through me instead of refracting back. That was probably the first step towards being able to transform into dust in the moonlight, the way Stoker said Dracula could, but the thought unnerved me. I didn't want to be insubstantial. When I was a bat, at least my mind and heart and soul were all still inside my body. But if I had no body, what would keep my spirit from slipping away...? A piercing light blinked on, distracting me from my thoughts, stabbing into my eyes to try to blind me, make me uncomfortable and unable to follow the movements of anyone in the room. That's okay, I could track anyone who came in by smell and sound, so I closed my eyes and shut out the light. “Don't go back to sleep,” the voice said “M'not,” I mumbled, my tongue feeling fuzzy and heavy. “Light hurts. Feel hungover. C'n I brush m'teeth?” The voice laughed. “Miss Brooke, really,” said the man. “We are trying to torture you, here.” “Figured,” I said. “Though if I have bad breath, it's not me that'll suffer.” There was an aborted snort of laughter. “This will be interesting.” “Sure will,” I agreed. “Though, you're gonna have to do better been through worse than a light ‘n a chair.” “You're not a morning person, are you?” the voice asked. “You're very sullen when you wake up.” “I'm a night-owl,” I said. “Is it morning?” “I'm not telling you the time, Miss Brooke,” the voice said. “What's the point of sensory deprivation and isolation if I tell you the time?” “Don't matter,” I said. “Feels about late afternoon to me.” Indeed it did, with the irresistible tug of sunset pulling closer, and the dry tightness of my hungry body. They had known their stuff, I'd give them that much. Even a Vampire would have trouble breaking out of these bonds given the lack of leverage and the draining effect of the tranquilizer. On the other hand, I could change my shape. Hopefully they didn't know that. The only people who had seen it had been Hammond, Frasier, and SG1, and I knew they weren't NID spies. I would just have to hinge my escape on the bet that the NID didn't know I could change into a bat. Of course, if any of them had read 'Dracula', then they might have guessed. Perhaps that's why the room was so tightly sealed and so small. It'd make it easy for them to come at me with a net. “Look,” I said, “I know how these things tend to go. I've watched spy movies. You want me to spill my deepest, darkest secrets, tell you anything and everything, or you're going to do lots of nasty, humiliating things to me. I get that. It's cool. All I ask is a drink before we start. I'm parched and your dart didn't help. I feel like shit, and when I feel like shit I get cranky and insolent. When I'm unhappy, everyone is unhappy.” There was a pause. Someone opened a slim, low door behind me. They came around to the front holding a water bottle. It was opened, with a straw inside. The person was wearing a dark suit, buttoned up all the way, and a pair of dark glasses that I guess they assumed was supposed to mask the man's identity. Like I cared who he was. “I don't drink water and you know it, Maybourne,” I said, glaring at the man. “I want him.” The hand holding the water started to shake. I smiled toothily. “Give me him and I'll cooperate.” There was a low buzz, like voices discussing while I hand was cupped over the microphone. Then the electronic voice said, “Do as she asks.” “What!?” the man yelped. “Do it.” He scowled, set down the water bottle, and looked at me with apprehension. I couldn't see it in his eyes, but it radiated from his tight posture like nuclear glow. “Come here,” I said. He took a step closer. “Don't be shy.” I grinned and he balked at my teeth. “Come on, if I have to be uncomfortable, so do you. Straddle my knees.” The man went white. “What, your wife won't approve?” I sneered. “Come on, buddy, you won't crush me.” Nervously the man sat on my knees, holding himself up on his toes. “Scootch closer,” I said. “Pretend as if you actually like me.” He moved forward until his chest was pressed against the ropes. I shifted deliberately, pressing my thigh up against the inside of his and he made a small sound, like a whimper. The sharp sent of desire spiked then faded slowly. “Now,” I said huskily. “Kiss me.” “Wh-what...?” he said. “Come on, Romeo,” I chided. “What's wrong? No one ever let you play with the female prisoners before? Kiss me. Take advantage of me. I can't fight back.” He lifted his hands slowly, brushed the tips of his fingers across my shoulders and up my neck. I shivered at the feel of his burning skin against my own, and he shivered because I was so cold. He leaned down slowly, as if to give me plenty of time to jerk back. When I didn't, he softly, gently pressed a chaste kiss to my lips. “That,” I said when he withdrew slightly, “sucked. If you are married, your wife must be a very lonely woman. Unless she's screwing the milkman.” He scowled, and my insult had the intended effect. He grabbed a painful handful of my hair, mashed his mouth against my own, and thrust his tongue halfway down my throat. Much better, I thought. Then I snapped my teeth down. He shrieked in surprise and I held on. He wiggled, trying to break free, and the muscles tore more in my relentless grip. He stopped trying to pull away, realizing that I would take his tongue right off if he fought any more, and stilled. I let go. He tried to withdraw and I tightened my jaw and sucked. The blood that had pooled in my mouth burned its way down into my chilly pit of my stomach, and exploded outwards into my body in a tingly feverish rush. I groaned and ran my tongue over his, licking and sucking and swallowing the gush of red. I took my fill and let him go. The man sprang off my, clamping his hand over his mouth, screaming wordlessly. A slow trickle made a hot path over my bloody lips and down my pale chin, like any Vampire from the movies. I flicked my crimsoncoated tongue out to try to catch it and failed, leaving a small smear in the corner of my lips. “Yummy,” I said. And I didn't feel the least bit guilty. Served the NID fucker right. The man ran out of the room, knocking over the water bottle in his haste. The clear contents spilled all over my feet and I frowned. I hated having wet, cold, feet. Another man came in, dressed identically but without the blood running down his face, and picked up one of the thick needles off the table. “Fine,” the electronic voice said. “If that's the way you want to do this, then let's do it.” The man jammed the needle into my neck and I screamed. ===== Three very very painful and long hours passed. I was hanging limply in the chair, letting the ropes support me, because I certainly couldn't sit up on my own. I was ravenous. They had taken all the blood I have stolen from the man, and more besides. There were long cuts on my cheeks that were healing slowly because I was so literally drained. At first they had healed fast, the precise, deep gashes the man had cut. He had pulled out a stop watch. He timed how long each cut took to heal, making notes on a clipboard. Then he cut, and cut, and cut. When he was finished with the scalpel, he moved onto a cigarette. He blew the smoke deliberately in my face and I stopped breathing to block out the stench. Then he put it out on my forehead. He timed the burn's healing process, then did it again, and again. When the cigarette was finished, he jammed his fingers into the hinge of my jaw and forced my mouth open. With the pliers he tugged at my fangs, forcing them to extend. It hurt, the muscle wasn't squeezing. It felt strange and violating. He pulled at them, tugged to test their strength, and then put a block of dental clay in my mouth and told me to bite down. When I didn't comply, he kneed me in the jaw hard enough to make me see stars and leave tooth marks on the clay. He did the same with a piece of plastic, which I snapped in half, and a sheet of steel, which my razor fangs tore through. “C'mon,” I taunted, “Stick your dick in there, and I'll show you how sharp my teeth are.” He picked up one of the guns and slammed the butt hard against my cheek. I felt the bone shatter, skin tearing off in a flap, muscle ripping, and screamed. Then he aimed the gun at my heart and pulled the trigger. ===== I woke when the sun set. The tingling rush of my powers returning to me was accompanied by the feverish heat accelerated healing. “Welcome back,” the voice said. “Fuck you, Maybourne,” I returned. I rolled my eyes to the side. Yes, my belt and phials and knife and wand were still there. I counted the phials, and none were missing. What luck. “Where's my friend?” I asked. “Which one?” the voice asked. “Either.” “One is still getting stitches. The other went for a coffee.” “Lovely,” I said. “I'm hungry again.” “Oh, no,” the voice said. “I don't think we'll let you do that again.” “Worth a try.” I grinned, hoping he could see it. “Ah, here is your second friend now. He's having fun, you know. He rarely gets to have this much fun. He says that his playmates break too easily.” I heard the footsteps outside the door. “Joy,” I said, and took a deep breath. The rattle of the handle turning was my cue. I concentrated, felt the hunger burn as I used up the last of my strength for this stunt, and slipped into the shape of a bat. It was fast, barely a flicker. I was a bat, and I shoved myself into the air, twisted, and landed on human feet. With a move too fast for them to catch I seized my pouch, swept everything from the table into it including the gun and torture tools, snatched my wand and knife both in the other hand, and was a bat again. “Get her, get her!” the electronic voice screeched. I darted out the door, over the head of my torturer, through his grasping fingers. I burst into the hall, winging desperately above the hands grasping for me, sticking as close to the ceiling as possible. Someone got wise and a bullet whizzed past my sensitive ear. The passage of the bullet stirred the air and I faltered. I found a window and aimed for it. It was closed, but that wasn't about to stop me. I smashed through the glass, sending shards flying into the sky like a gruesome parody of a splash, and was in the blessedly clear air of early evening. Up, up, up I flew, far above where human hands could reach me and human eyes could see. And far, far below I could hear a loud and resounding, “Fuck!” ===== The van was made conspicuous by its very inconspicuousness. It was driving slowly, without its lights on, towards the house in the woods I had just escaped. There was only one road, so it was easy to tell where they were headed. I dropped down and flapped along side the van. It was going just a touch faster than I could fly, so I hooked one of my finger claws into the sill, the one that I knew would hold my knife and wand when I transformed back, and dug in. My claws became fingers, curled around the hilt of my knife, the handle of my wand, and the open window of the van. There was a loud bump as my now much larger body banged against the side of the van. “Hi Jack,” I said to the driver. Jack screamed. Then he slammed on the brakes so hard I was sent tumbling into the road, rolling with the momentum that the van had transferred to me. I stopped after a few head-over-ass cartwheels and lay splayed on the road, seeing birdies fly around my head. “Fer cryin' out loud!” Jack snarled at me, climbing out of the van and slamming the door behind him. A dozen black ops guys swept out of the back like shadows and were all around me, pointing their guns in my face. “Hello,” I said. “Marie?” Daniel called out, pushing past the soldiers. He paused when he saw my face. “Jesus Christ, what did they do to you?” I lifted a hand, touched the still-healing wound from the brutal pistol whip, the thin, skinny cuts, then the burned pocks on my forehead. “Experiments,” I said. “And by the way, better point those things that way,” I said to the soldiers. I could see Teal'c behind them, already raising his staff weapon in the direction I was pointing. “Cause here they come.” ===== The resulting firefight was hasty and messy and had the NID crouched in the trees on the left side of the van, and the SGC guys ducking behind either the van or the trees to the right of it. Jack and I got pinned beside a wheel. “Listen, Jack,” I said, between popping my head under the carriage of the vehicle to fire off a few 'stupefy's where I could. “I think I'm gonna take off. This is all about me, so you know - if I'm not here, it'll stop.” “Naw,” Jack said with a smile. “I still really, really want to shoot Maybourne. You being here is just extra incentive.” I laughed. It felt good to laugh. Something heavy and pained inside me, something that had been growing since the first slice on my face, shattered in the face of the laughter. It felt good. Really good. “I'll come back,” I said. “You guys have the second batch of potion, some of my blood and stuff. For research. I'll just be in the way if I stay.” “I meant what I said when about wanting you on the team,” Jack said, squeezing off another few rounds. “I know,” I replied. I slid my knife and wand back into their sheathes to free up my hands. I opened the pouch and withdrew one of the unkeyed phials. “Another time, maybe.” I promised. “Keep an eye out for Trieze?” “I will, and you better!” Jack snarled. “You gotta teach me the fireball thing!” “Definitely. Bye!” “Bye!” he shouted back and sketched a quick salute. I snapped one back, then threw the phial down at my feet. And, oh, to see the look on Maybourne's face when he realized I was gone, and he had no way to follow me. I'd have to ask Jack what colours it had turned when I came back for a visit. Book Seventeen: Nightwalker: Midnight Detective Chapter Forty-Three: “Exterminated” When I opened my eyes again, I found myself in the midst of a park in a metropolitan centre. It was just after sunset, I guessed. Maybe half an hour. That was nice, I wanted the darkness right now. Meant I could go for a stroll, find a mugger. Feed. Carefully I checked around me, to make sure no one had seen me arrive, and that I had not left anything behind. All my pieces were where they should be. I pulled the back down on my olive jacket to make sure that the knife sheath was hidden, then sorted through my pouch to put all the phials back in their little leather holders, and keep them form jostling around. The new weapons - the scalpel, the pliers, the file, and the gun - I wasn't sure what to do, so I put them at the bottom and padded them with strips torn off my already-ruined black shirt so they wouldn't break a phial by mistake if I ran. The little plastic baggies were wonderful, kept all my collection of things separate and secure, and I wondered why I hadn’t thought of it myself earlier. I touched the wooden comb through the plastic softly, then shoved it away, under the gun. I wished I didn't look so much like a military officer gone AWOL, but there was no helping it, so I strolled out of the shadows of the scrub I had been standing in and jammed my hands into my pockets. I was only a few steps before I recognized the parkland around me. Oh. Oh, no. This was Ueno Park. I was back in Tokyo. But how was this possible? I began to pelt it towards the nearest park exit, weaving between the late-evening amblers with the grace of a mogul-runner. I had to get out of the park, before Seishirou and his bloody Tree sensed me. How, how, how had I ended up back in the world of “Tokyo Babylon”? Never before I had doubled up on a reality. And I'd made a point of not keying a phial for here! The thought that this proved that I could double realities made my stomach drop - I may never get home if I had to keep repeating all the same worlds. There was a loud shrieking sound behind me, undercut with a vicious animal snarl and I paused. It sounded like someone was being attacked. I hesitated. I could abandon the person to their fate and escape. Maybe Tree-san was feeding. If Seishirou was distracted, then I could run. But could I really let someone just die? I hesitated. There was no point in me sticking my neck out for someone else, was there? What good would barging into the middle of whatever it was bring? Trouble, that's what it would bring. Big Mary Sue trouble. All it ever brought me was trouble. I was indecisive just long enough for the person to scream again. It sounded high, terrified. The sound of someone scared so badly that their whole world fractures. Someone faced with the impossible to comprehend. Someone who had probably been a lot like me a few years ago. Aw, fuck. I was still on an adrenaline rush from the firefight, my face itching with the healing and my stomach empty and burning. I was jittery and felt pretty damn invulnerable. I had survived being tortured by the NID. I could take on the Sakurazukamori. I made for the sound of screaming, drawing my knife and my wand from their sheaths as I sprang over low concrete walls and park benches. I skidded to a halt in a thick part of the woods, far from where Tree-san was but right were the terrified cries had originated. The person screeched again and I was able to pinpoint their location. Plunging recklessly into the shadows - not like there was anything around that could really hurt me - I dodged a tree and stumbled over something solid and hot. The something solid roared as I bashed into it and flung me to the side with a swipe of its… talons? I sprawled onto the forest floor, all elbows and knees. I shook my head, throwing off the momentary fuzziness, and looked up. A woman was pinned to the ground by a big, blackish, red-eyed, gargoyle…thingy. Well, that was new. The woman was struggling madly, and I sprang up. “EXPELLERAMUS!” I snarled and with a flick of my wand the gargoyle was off her and halfway across the wood. I ran forward and helped the woman up. She seemed scratched and bruised, bleeding a bit, but all in one piece. “Run!” I told her and stepped between her and the gargoyle. It was struggling back to its feet, and trying at the same time to avoid any patches of strong sunlight that cut between the foliage. But it was a huge heavy thing with a strange centre of gravity and it couldn't quite get upright. I watched it warily and tracked the progress of the woman by listening to her footfalls. When I could no longer hear her, the Gargoyle howled in frustration and with a final kicking squirm levered itself to it's feet. “You've lost me my body!” it screamed at me through its beak-like mouth. Its voice sounded like nails on a chalkboard and I cringed. It plunged towards me faster than I had expected it to, and I tried to wave my wand again. There was a loud snapping sound as it batted away the weapon. My wand skittered away into the woods and I curled at the waist and cradled my wrist. The snap had been my bones breaking. The Gargoyle lifted its claws to strike the final blow and I reared up with the knife firmly clenched in my other hand, and aimed for its ribcage. The blade slid into the skin and skidded against stone-like bone. Normally pure force would have been enough for me to snap a rib with my strength. This was not 'normally'. The knife slid and grazed the bone and I was shook with the teethrattling jar of the vibration. The creature roared again and broke my other hand with a solid thump. I fell to my knees before it, both hands useless, my head swimming from the pain and my vision dotted with stars. I felt the talons wind into my hair and give a yelp-inspiring tug. “Like to play with knives, little girl?” it hissed, and I felt the cool metal of my own blade press against the flesh under my chin. “Not with silver!” I shrieked. The gargoyle gouged deep and jerked hard. I felt the skin split. I felt the blood boil forth. I coughed and there was a wheezing sound and the air that had been in my lungs seeped out of the wound instead of making it up to my mouth. I tried to scream. I tried to suck in the air. The blood was leaving fast, too fast. My fingers and toes were numb and the numbness was spreading rapidly. My wrists and then my ankles were cold, oh god, I was so cold. If it reached my heart, this frigid coldness, I knew that would be it. Something hit me hard in the side of my face and I blinked a few times in confusion before I realized that the something was the ground. Fragile suddenly, when I had been so sure of my invincibility. Arrogant fathead. I could see the curled toenails of the blackened creature, feel its hot breath on my shoulder. It was laughing. I struggled to move, to take back the knife, to hit, to beg, to scream. I flopped like a fish on the ground, frustrated and helpless. Dirt and the fragments of last year's leaves and twigs ground into the cut and I made another wheezing sound that had started as a scream and finished a pathetic mewl. I could feel my blood pooling under my cheek, hot, burningly hot, but getting cold fast, oh so fast. And then there were other voices, howls, the ringing sound of gunshots far too close to my sensitive ears. I sobbed at the sound. Oh, it hurt! I watched a pair of white-booted feet bound over me and scurry after the gargoyle. It was trying to flee but it was wounded too, bleeding it great black pools, gushing acid that ate at the leaves and made them smoulder. Something red and phosphorescent hit it between the eyes and it fell. It fell to the ground mere inches from where I lay. For a moment we locked eyes, this thing of shadow and I, and it laughed. “I will see you in the Darkness,” it said, and then it ceased to exist. It melted into an oozing puddle. All that was left was the red spear that had impaled it. That too dissolved and I could smell the blood as it evaporated. It had been made out of crystallized blood. I moaned as it vanished into the air, groaned for the loss of it. My insides were churning, gnawing, my body was eating itself in its sudden starvation. Stupid, stupid, I told myself. Should have kept your nose out of it. Better her than you. A man with brown shoes and dark Windsor blue pants came and stood beside me. “She won't survive those wounds,” said White Boots. She was the one with the gun, I could smell the oil and the powder. Her voice was hard, brooked no argument. A cop, she sounded like, or career military. “She dropped these,” said Brown Shoes. “Look at this. Is it a magic wand? And this… this is a beautiful knife… I think it may be made out of—ouch!” There was a low hissing sound and the unmistakable reek of burnt flesh. “Shido, you idiot!” screeched White Boots. “It's made out of Silver!” said Brown Shoes/ Shido the idiot. I could hear the capitalization of the words. “Why the hell would someone like her be stupid enough to carry around a knife made of Silver?” “What do you mean?” White Boots said, sounding as confused as I felt. “Someone like 'her'?” My head was getting too heavy to stay attached any more, and my vision was growing dark. I wanted to scream. I wished I could scream. I didn't want to go into the darkness forever! I didn't want to go to a place where I couldn't wake up from my nightmares! “She's a Vampire,” Shido said. “To carry around a knife like this… it looks like the Nightbreed used that to cut her throat. The wound won't heal right unless we get it cleaned out and get some blood into her fast.” White Boots hesitated. “Remind me why we should help a Vampire?” Shido made an exasperated sound. “She rescued the woman, didn't she? We're not all horrible denizens of evil.” “Alright,” White Boots said. I felt hands turn me over and I whined, the closest I could come to a scream. Fingers pried back my lips, only I couldn't see anything anymore. Something hot and rich and wonderful hit the back of my throat and I swallowed. It oozed out of the gash in my throat before it could get all the way down. A burningly hot mortal hand jammed itself against the cut and I screamed for real this time. The hand didn't move, and when I swallowed again, this time it made it to my stomach. The heat spread like molten lava into my extremities, making the ragged torn ends of the gash tingle, and I swallowed more. I wanted to glut myself on it and strained upwards. I wound the hot, writhing thing in my arms and tore into its flesh with my sharp, sharp teeth. “Get her off me, Shido!” White Boots screamed and I felt someone tugging at my shoulders. I wasn't going to let go. I wasn't going to die. I didn't care. I wanted it. I wanted all of it. I was going to make myself sick on it. And then something hit the back of my head hard and the world plunged into darkness. Don't let the Sakurazukamori find me, I thought desperately before I could think no more. ===== I woke on a worn green couch with a thin cotton blanket covering me. It smelled vaguely of stale tobacco and old coffee. It was stuck in the dried blood on my hands and face. I opened my eyes slowly and tried to take in the bleak, sparse office around me. I gasped as the movement of turning my head ripped the fabric from my skin. The sound drew people close and I heard White Boots say, “Easy, now. Take it easy. You've had a rough few days.” “Few days?” I croaked. I sat up slowly and raised my hand to my throat. The skin there was intact and smooth, as if I hadn't just had my throat slit. It scared the bejezus out of me and I took my hand away. When I looked at the hand it was clean, and shaking. Vulnerable, pale, too thin. I felt like glass, a vase cracked and glued back together by an unskilled, though well meaning toddler. I should be dead. Dead. Goddamn you Alexander Lucard! I thought and choked back my tears. Goddamn you to Hell. And goddamn the Nightbreed for reminding me what it feels like to be scared, to be prey. The people who belonged to the voices and the heartbeats I could hear came around to the front of the couch where I could see them. White Boots had a look of concern on her pretty, late twentysomething face. She had a phenomenal curtain of dark blue hair that fell to her waist. I took in her dark slanted eyes and her caramel coloured skin and realized that she was Japanese. Luckily I could still speak it. “What do you mean, a few days?” I demanded in the difficult language. To one side of her stood a nervous school girl with shockingly red hair, also down to her waist. On the shoulder of this school girl was a tiny, Barbie-doll sized woman wearing nothing but her own green skin. She had chartreuse hair and the wings of a bat, and she was frowning at me. Hell, she was a mini-demon and she was looking at me like I was a freak of nature? I blinked and turned to the man to White Boot's other side. He was still dressed in the dark Windsor blue suit, with a tan vest and a red lace tie. He had a startlingly long ponytail of bright lavender hair and wide emerald eyes. He was not Japanese, but when he answered my question, it was in the language: “You've been recovering for the last few days. That Nightbreed got you pretty bad with your Silver knife. Are you alright?” I thought about nodding my head, and then thought better of it. “Yeah, I'm fine,” I said, and it chilled me to the pit of my stomach to know that I was telling the truth. I was perfectly and physically intact. But I’d had my throat slit. Something ugly and dark reared up inside of me and I pressed my hands over my mouth in an effort to keep it in. Something from deep inside me. Something that I had been shoving down and ignoring for so long that even remembering it was there hurt. I bent double and moaned, making the keening sound of a wounded animal. My god, what was wrong with me? I was healed. I shouldn't be so sick. Shido touched my shoulders gently. “Are you sure?” “Just… a bit… nauseous,” I stuttered from between tight lips. I was afraid that if I opened my mouth too wide the darkness would come screaming out of me. I hurt. Real hurt. Inside hurt. And I hadn't hurt in so long... ===== I passed the rest of the night in contemplative silence on Shido-san's couch. The woman, White Boots, went away to her job, and the young girl puttered about in the kitchen ensuite. I was in Shido-san's office. He was a private detective (what was it with Vampires and crime fighting?) who specialized in taking cases that involved 'The Night Breed'. Essentially, the Night Breed were demons, boogies, and other things that go bump-splat-screech in the night. The gargoyle I had fended off the woman had been one of these Night Breeds, bent on capturing a human body and soul to act as his own host. Shido and Yayoi, White Boots, had been chasing it through the forest. They'd heard the mortal woman screaming, then had seen me streak out of the foliage, leaping over the benches and roots faster than a human could. At first they feared I was another Night Breed, seeking to join the kill. A few moments later, the woman had dashed past them, going in the opposite direction. Riho, the young girl, had doubled back and gone to protect her. Apparently she was a Vampire, too. When they had arrived in the clearing and realized that I was fighting against the Breed, they had taken it upon themselves to save my unlife. They had explained all this to me and I had sat silently and said nothing, taking it all in with blank eyes and a china-doll face that would have done Jean-Claude proud. Yayoi, he had explained, worked for the Night Officers Division, the NOD, a special department of the Tokyo Police Force that dealt specifically with the Unexplained happenings of the dark. Shido the Vampire Private Detective was her secret weapon. When I didn't say anything else to them, or rather, anything at all, Riho had put the blanket around my shoulders and everyone had scattered to their own tasks. I wasn't being rude. I was just too... shattered to speak just yet. I contemplated what they told me silently. I had been killed. By a demon. By something I thought I could easily squash. I had overestimated my own abilities, my own invulnerability. Both physically and emotionally and mentally. All the strength that I thought I had, that I thought I had cultivated, had crumbled. It was a candy coating, thin and brittle and fake, and not a real kind of strength at all. Inside was still mushy and human and scared. Yayoi bid the company good-bye, put on her jacket, and moved to the door. When she touched the doorknob, I felt compelled to call out to her. I said, “Have you heard any reports of a semi-sentient Sakura tree in Ueno Park that consumes the souls of the dead buried underneath it and transfers that in the way of magical powers to the dark onmiyouji that protects it?” She blinked at me, obviously shocked by my sudden decision to speak and gobsmacked by the apparent randomness of my question. “Uh. No,” she said hesitantly. “But, I'll... uh... look into it.” “Don't,” I said emphatically. “Stay away from the Sakurazukamori, if you find him. He's definitely news of the bad kind. If you kill him, the Tree will take you and make you take his place.” She frowned at me, but nodded and left. The remaining three occupants of the office waited for me to say or do something else, and when I didn't, they went about their business, leaving me alone with the waking nightmares in my head. That had been several hours ago. I was still sitting on Shido-san's couch in his office, watching him to his paperwork. It was more interesting than thinking. And more sanity-inducing. One of the things I'd been thinking about over the past several hours was where I thought I was. I came to the conclusion that Yayoi would not find any evidence of the Sakurazukamori. I was in a different Anime. And how did I know it was Anime? Well, the purple hair of the bishonen hero, for one. Said bishonen was currently peering at me over his file folders. He caught me looking at him and cleared his throat. He set down the folders. “Are you really okay?” he asked. “Yeah,” chimed in the green Barbie, who had introduced herself as an Urban Fairy named Guni. “You sure don't look it!” Indeed, I didn't. I was huddled in the cheap blanket on the couch, not breathing. My neck hurt - not from the cut, but from the phantom memory of having my throat slit. I was thinking of Wesley Wyndam-Price and his smiling scar. I was thinking about being beheaded by an Immortal. I was trying damn hard not to think at all. Riho poked her head out of the kitchenette and eavesdropped. What she was still doing in there I had no idea - it's not like any of us actually drank coffee. They were all waiting for my answer. Well, what the Hell was I supposed to say? I'd had my throat slit! I squeezed my eyes shut and hid my face in my knees. A took a deep and sucking breath, expecting it to make a burbling sound, shocked and scared when it didn't. I felt like I was choking, which was impossible. And with every single, shivering, furious cell of my body I was hating, hating hating Alexander Lucard for doing this to me. Riho and Guni exchanged a glance. Then Guni and Shido did. Guni sighed and flew into the kitchenette and Riho closed the door behind her. I could hear their muted whispering through the door, but not their words. Shido set aside his papers and came around his desk to sit on the couch on the opposite side of the coffee table from me. My pouch, wand, and knife had been laid carefully on the table between us. The gun was there, too, but the clip was missing. He reached out and picked up the knife gingerly. He turned it in the light of the overhead lamp, watching the glint travel up the blade. I always made a point of keeping it sharp. “This is quite a knife,” he said softly. “Silver?” I didn't look up. “High-quality mix of iron, steel and silver.” Shido whistled. “Good for Fey, Breeds, and Vampires. I'm impressed. Where did you get it?” “A werewolf gave it to me.” I could feel his incredulous stare burning into the top of my head. “Uh, okay,” he said. I heard him set down the knife and shift forward in his seat. “Do you wanna talk about it?” I didn't have to ask what he meant by 'it'. “No,” I croaked. “I'm just... angry.” “What for?” Now I did look up at him. Shido was sitting forward, resting his elbows on his knees, a look of concerned interest on his face. I'm sure he thought it made him look sympathetic. To me, it made him look like my errant childe Trieze and I pulled back with a sharp intake of breath. He blinked. “What's wrong?” “Nothing,” I said hastily. “Can you just... not sit like that? Gives me the willies.” He shifted back a bit reluctantly, obviously confused but willing to comply. He crossed his knees and rested his arm on the back of the worn green couch. “Better?” “Yeah, thanks. You just... it made you look like... someone I know.” He nodded. He waited a respectful length of time, then asked, “So, why are you angry?” Mentioning it made the emotion flare hot again, like a puffed breath on embers, and I felt my face flush. “It's nothing, really. It's just... well, I don't know what kind of relationship you have with the person who made you a Vampire, but right now I really, strongly dislike the man who did this to me.” Shido nodded knowingly. “That's a very polite way of saying you hate someone so much you want to kill them. You really hate him for what he did. Without your permission. Having your throat cut is a painful reminder of what he did to you, and what he took away.” I nodded miserably. He chuckled. “Sounds like you and your maker get along about as well as my maker and I.” “Oh, you try to kill him every chance you get too?” I snarked, hoping to shock him or hurt him or... I don't know, make him be not so nice. He only laughed louder. “Yeah, pretty much.” “Oh.” And then I felt miserable again for being such a bitch. “Listen,” Shido said amiably. “Obviously this was distressing for you. We don't have to talk about it if you don't want. You don't have to talk at all, if you like. You're welcome to just chill out here for a bit, okay? I'm gonna be here until dawn, trying to finish up some casework, so you can hang out until then. If you want company, I know Riho will be happy to provide it, and if you don't, we'll leave you alone.” “Thanks.” “Don't mention it. Let me know how you feel in a few hours, and we can talk again. Figure out what to do with you for the day.” “Thanks.” Shido went back to his desk, and feeling thoroughly exhausted from the emotional exertion of just holding a conversation with the lavender-locked cutie, I decided to try to have a nap. If the nightmares got to bad, I'm sure Shido would wake me. I didn't expect Shido-san to suffer from nightmares of his own. I expected even less to awaken in the middle of one of his. Goddamned Elf Blood. Book Seventeen: Nightwalker: Midnight Detective Chapter Forty-Four: “Dreamwalker” When I opened my eyes, the room was entirely dark. At first, I thought that Shido-san had closed all the shutters and turned off the lights. Then I remembered that the shutters had been wooden slats and wouldn't have shut out the light of the street lamps so completely. I sat up slowly, trying to figure out what the hell was going on. I looked down at myself. The couch I was on, the table, everything had vanished into a swirling pool of black. Well, this is fucked up, I thought. I watched in fascinated horror while the blanket slipped off me, sliding into darkness. I tried to grope for the table. I wanted my wand, and a lumos light. The table was gone. I frowned and stood. The minute I lost contact with the couch, it ceased to exist, too. I leaned down and waved my hand around, but all I felt was empty air where it should have been. Definitely fucked up, I decided. Had I gone insane, finally? It had taken long enough. I heard a keening moan from behind me, and turned to find the source. Nope, not insane, I thought, taking in the odd scene playing out before my wide eyes. But pretty darned close. There were only two other people in this dark void. One was Shidosan. The other was a man that I did not recognize. He was taller than Shido by half a head, or at least I thought he was. It was hard to tell, with the way he was bent over Shido. One of his arms was wrapped around Shido's waist, and he had his chest pressed against Shido's in an unmistakable lover's embrace. What didn't look so much like a lover was the glowing crimson whip - the man had its handle gripped tightly in his gloved fist, the lash wrapped tightly around Shido's neck, bending his head back in such a way as to render him vulnerable and reliant on the man's embrace to remain upright. Shido's hands were fisted in the shoulders of the man's trench coat, in a grip I was certain had started as an attempt to shove him off, but had quickly moved into fists clenched in pain. The man had his fangs set in Shido's throat. His long, wavy blond hair spilled around the two of them like an angel's halo, but I knew that this man was no angel. Shido was the one making the keening sound, a noise caught between pleasure and fury. A long, thin line of blood so red it nearly glowed dripped slowly down Shido's pale, slender throat and I caught myself before I could lick my lips. The man with the blond hair ducked to lap a smear up the side of Shido's neck, not allowing the precious, delicious drop to escape down the open vee of his shirt. Slowly, carefully, I tiptoed towards the man in the trench coat. I laced my fingers together, and raised my hands above my head. In the absence of both my wand and my knife, I still had my brute Vampiric strength. I slammed down my fists with as much force as I could muster. The blow buckled the attacker's knees and slammed his chest into Shido's. Shido let out a whining grunt accompanied by what sounded like the snap of his ribs. Oops. Too hard. The man with the blond hair pushed Shido away, letting his victim fall to the ground, and whirled to face me, hair swirling around him like a cloak. His normally handsome, aquiline face was contorted with fury, his eyes a deep gold to rival my own. His fangs were impressively long and dipped in gore. “How did you enter this dream?!” he snarled, and I could hear the faint trace of Transylvania in his accent. Shido coughed, and blood speckled his lips. “She ...w-wa...sss.... in...in the room,” he hacked. “Get out, C-Caine...” The man, Caine, straightened slightly, interest replacing fury on his face. “You must be a Breed, then,” he said slowly. “No,” I said. “Now get the hell out of Shido-san's dream, you bastard.” Caine stood up all of the way and had the nerve to laugh in my face. “My, my,” he said gently. “What makes you think this is not your dream?” I let the colour of my eyes match his. “You're not the man in black, and you're not my regular nightmare.” Caine smiled. I very much did not like his smile. “Regular nightmare?” he echoed. “No!” Shido-san cried, and then suddenly he, too, enveloped in the black. “Hush, love,” Caine said to the vanishing Shido. I took an aborted step forward, then stopped. Shido was gone and there was nothing I could have done. “Where did he go?” I asked. “Into a deeper sleep,” Caine said simply. His eye narrowed, tried to catch mine, and I hastily looked away, and down at my feet. No way was I going to be careless enough to let him into my mind. “He has come to no harm,” Caine assured me, but I still wouldn't look at him. “Get out of my head, then,” I snapped. A sudden, cool touch on my cheek startled me. Caine was right there, brushing the pads of his fingers down the side of my face. “Look at me, lovely,” he crooned and this time I could not look away fast enough. My skin was suddenly too hot, too tight. I wanted to itch. I wanted to scratch it off, but I could not move. I wanted to scream and run, but I could not even draw breath. Not out of some sort of paralysis that Caine's gaze had induced, nor out of mind control... No, it was pure, irrational fear that kept me rooted to the spot. Behind Caine's left shoulder stood Alexander Lucard. “No!” I shrieked, and the piercing echo of my own cry drove me into action. Had to get away. Lucard was grinning at me, a vicious, smeared slice of white and red. His grey eyes pierced the back of my skull, brought screaming panic bubbling up from the depths of my nightmare box. The box burst open and everything came rushing out of my mouth in a wild, shattering screech of animal panic. I dug my heels into the floor, pulled back. Caine's hand on my wrist held me, would not let me go let me go letmegoletmego! “Peace!” Caine commanded. “Peace! He is not real!” Not real? I took another breath to scream, swallowed it, sucked on it, looked, really looked. Lucard was not moving. He was standing there, all his weight on one slender hip, his dress shirt open but immobile. The beads of blood from a cut over his left nipple should have succumbed to gravity, but had not. The fly of his pants was also partially open, as if it had been carelessly and hastily zipped. This was not Lucard. This was an image of Lucard. This was Lucard as I remembered him. As I feared him. The roiling, sudden panic transmuted swiftly into a nausea so violent, I turned my head to the side and vomited. ===== Wondering is the single most distracting, stress-inducing habit of the human animal. Wondering keeps humans up at night. It causes nightmares, tossing and turning, and mumbling in sleep. It causes sleep apnoea and insomnia. Wondering is a disease whose symptoms include excessive listmaking, absent-mindedness, pacing, car accidents, frustration, waspishness, tension headaches, knotted muscles, high massagetherapy bills, and ulcers. Wondering breaks up couples, destroys marriages, and lines the pockets of many a private investigator. Wondering is, perhaps, the most disastrous infection to affect humans. The flu, perhaps, is the most contagious, cancer and AIDS the most deadly, and the common cold the most annoying, but it is the wondering that is the most persistent and in the end, negatively affects the most aspects of a person's life. The undead were no different. Wondering is what had kept me dashing, kept me hiding, kept me moving, kept me awake at night. I have been running. For years. And I wasn't running home. And I wasn't running after Trieze. I was running from Lucard. I was running from what he might have done to me. I was running from my own wondering. I was a Vampire. I was lost. These things I could accept. These things I understood. These things I had tangible proof of. These things were a concrete part of my reality. But the other things, the things he had done while I had been unconscious, the things I didn't remember because I couldn't or because I didn't want to. The things that were intimate and violating, things that involved blood, kisses, and an act so intimate I shuddered to think on it - my own murder. To kill someone was terribly intimate, and violently violating. To hold a person in your arms and be the reason that their eyes dim slowly before fluttering shut in a last, rattling gasp... And, then, to force one's own will, one's own blood, one's soul into another... it was a worse crime than rape. With rape, only the body is violated, is invaded and used. It was like using a person as a living dildo or vibrator with no care for their emotions or feelings. The emotions are hurt, raw and betrayed and open and scoured, but in time the wound heals over. Reminders can sting like salt under the scab, but the victim can learn to forgive themselves for what they could not help, for what they had no control over. What Lucard had done to me surpassed rape. It went beyond my body and emotions - he violated my mind, thrust his fingers into my brain and pawed, and poked, and took what he wanted. He touched my most intimate places, my thoughts and fears and hopes, with soiled, uncaring, unkind hands. Thoughts I only shared with those I trusted. With those I loved. Thoughts he took and turned over roughly and scoffed at and tossed aside. He made me feel small and worthless. And that was a worse violation than what his hands and tongue may have done, because he had used me as a person, as a brain, and not just a body. Secondly, he violated my soul, laid hands on my essence and dragged down, forced it back into my cold body. He defiled my corpse and denied me my death. These were the things that fed my nightmares, my insecurities, my wonderings. And until I saw Caine with his teeth set in Shido's flesh, until I had watched someone else suffering as I had suffered, as I was still suffering, the physical aspect of Lucard's intrusion had not bothered me so much. It had always been about the blood, about my mind and my soul and my end that had caused my nightmares. Lucard may have used my body in order to firm the connection that his teeth and tongue and blood had begun, to act as another bridge for his soul to gain access to mine. He had threatened rape, touched me in ways that were unwelcome in order to dominate me, to scare me, to wedge himself firmly in a superior position. For Lucard it hadn't been about sex. It hadn't been about lust. It hadn't been about using me to satisfy himself. It had been about making me obey. Making him the master and I the slave. So you can imagine my reaction to seeing Lucard standing right in front of me. ===== The problem with Vampires is that the simple act of merely attaining nourishment is such an intimate act. It is far more intimate than sex because of what we touch, and take, and feel. Like death. A Vampire dominates their prey, sweeps through their mind, ghosts into their soul and manipulates pain into pleasure even as they steal from a body. Thieves of blood. Thieves of pleasure. Thieves of lives. Feeding is far more profound than sex can ever be. Bodies part once sex is over, but the blood remains a part of the Vampire forever, and the human from whom it was taken can never get it back. At least, not as it was. To feed was also to touch. To hold and to caress and kiss. A Vampire's lips have to touch skin. Their breath has to waft over the wound. Their chests have to crush against the chest of their victim, and any squirming done inevitably becomes a sort of slow sexual writhe. Thus, Vampires become creatures who become accustomed to expressing themselves with tangible, affectionate touches, even outside of feeding. Vampires come to rely upon physicality to communicate, especially since their bodies are dead and it takes so much to actually feel anything. They become very touchy-feely, desperate for the warmth of another body, for the press of another. Sex for Vampires is affirming. It is proof that they are not trapped, alone, in their own corpse. That they are needed and wanted. Touching becomes their primary means of understanding relationships. I, on the other hand, was the antithesis of this. I didn't like to be touched. I may have been raped. I certainly had not welcomed anything done by Jean-Claude. The first time I'd had sex, I had been rejected. I'd had my throat slit. I didn't want to be touched. I hated it. I disliked any touch I hadn't initiated. I hated now, more than I had before, because of what the Breed had done to me. Even Legolas' gentle caresses or Methos’ playfulness would be unwelcome now. This caused a slight problem. I, by my conditioning, disliked touching. Caine, by his, felt naturally inclined to gently stroke, to sit closely, to feel. I was bent over, the sour taste of bloody sick fumes ghosting in my throat, gasping like a fish. Sucking in the air, shaking all over, shoving, shoving everything back away away back in the box now. Caine's fingers were gently resting on my heaving shoulder, and my skin was crawling like Sam's pony's. “Don't touch me,” I snarled, stepping away from the patch of darkness where I had been ill. It vanished into the gloom. Caine chuckled, but removed his hands. “It is just an image,” he said. I frowned, and wiped the back of my hand across my lips. I wanted to use the fist to punch him, but didn't dare get to close for fear he may pull something or someone else out of my head. “And how about you get out of my head, you bastard.” He laughed. “Seriously,” I said, hands on my hips to keep the twitching of an anxious fist from decking him. “What fucking right have you got to come into my mind and conjure that?” I pointed to the frozen Lucard. “And while we're on the topic, what right have you got to just take a jaunt through Shido's mind, either?” Caine's smile sank slightly, but the glimmer stayed in his eyes. Not angry - yet. But slightly annoyed. “I made Shido what his is,” Caine rumbled, and his voice, though lacking the magic of Jean-Claude's or the affection of Legolas', still made my short hairs jump to attention. “Shido is therefore mine. Mine to watch over. Mine to protect. Mine to guide. Mine to command.” “Yours to rape?” This time the smile sank all the way. “To seduce.” He lifted his shoulders slightly, a sensual, dismissive gesture. “Once ... yes, once Shido enjoyed my caresses. Once he panted for me. Once he yearned for my hands on his flesh, my teeth inside of him, his blood on my tongue. I am merely reminding him that all of our time together. Enticing him to return.” I raised an eyebrow. I licked my lips and wished I'd had some gum. “By strangling him with a whip and forcing yourself on him?” Cain scratched his cheek absently. “Shido is stubborn. But he only resists for a short time.” I shuddered all over. It sounded depressingly familiar. Vampires were indeed creatures addicted to touch, and even I, I had realized, was not immune. I had let Jean-Claude, and Captain Jack Sparrow, and any number of others touch me in ways, and for a longer time, than I ever would have before. I had craved it. Perhaps this had also been the reason I had slept with so many men, when before I had been early terrified of any boy touching me at all. Though now, my nature was at odds with the mental repulsion of any touch. Caine sensed my repulsion. “Do you resist?” he asked, his voice low and slightly husky, vibrating in his chest. “Are you like my dear Shido? Or do you behave? Do you do as your Master, your lover, orders?” He reached out and touched Lucard's shoulder. The fabric of his shirt depressed, rumpled under Caine's fingers, but Lucard did not move. “He is handsome,” Caine pressed softly, “is he not? Is he kind? Does he guide you gently?” My teeth were clenched so tightly my jaw hurt. I forced myself to take a seething, hissing breath. “He stole me from my home, stole my sanity, stole my thoughts, and then stole my death. I want to kill him.” “Tsk,” Caine said. “What we are should not be a punishment.” “And yet,” I spat. Caine chuckled again. “So you hate it, this life?” “Yes,” I said, but my voice trembled. I had hated it, that much I knew. I had hated it when I had asked Arwen to take it away. But I think I was afraid to die, now. I had done some terrible things, and if there was some sort of final judgment... Even if there wasn't, dying hadn't been so pleasant the first, or second time around. What I had told Jack had been true—I didn't want to be cured. I was scared. If I were to become human now, I may never be able to survive Slipping. Dumbledore had been correct: what I am was a blessing for a Slipper. The man who had invented the potion I used probably had died very quickly, if he had entered any of the situations I had. So, I didn't want to be human again. Not yet. But I, at the same time, refused to embrace the carnality, the lethality of my other side. I was not human. But I was not a Vampire, either. Not really. Did I hate what I was? Not particularly. But did I hate what was associated with it, what came with it? Yes. The back of Caine's fingers were cool and gentle when they brushed over my cheek, slowly bringing my out of my thoughts. His skin was cold, but a warmth blossomed in my chest. A warmth born of need to touch. A warmth I hadn't felt in a long time. Not since Legolas, surely, and before that, not since I was alive. And it hurt. Oh, god, did it hurt. The phantom pain of my slit throat, my nightmare-box in my gut, the tear of Lucard's tongue in the flesh of my neck, and the hot wrench of my heart breaking. “So closed up,” Caine whispered, lowering his face slightly to meet my gaze with his amber eyes. “It must hurt. We are not creatures to live in isolation, my sweet. We need each other. Lovers. Masters. Children.” “...no.” “Yes. Just as I long for Shido, so he longs for me, deep inside, and just as you will not deny me because you, too, yearn for affection, for warmth.” He tilted his head to the side, tucking a single, soft finger under my chin, tilting my head up. “For a touch.” He kissed me. Wet, open mouth, but slow and warm and kind. It was nice. It was better than nice. Caine was right. I was lonely. I was so empty inside. I wanted to be touched. I wanted to be loved. To be accepted. God, I wanted to rest. I wanted to sleep in the arms of someone who cared, who could protect me but not smother me. I wanted to know that I could stay. Like the blood warmed me from the stomach out when I fed, so Caine's kiss blazed a trail of heat from my lips down, rivulets of fire and sensation. I desired Caine. Not because of who we was, or what he looked like, or even how he spoke. Because he desired me. Because he touched me. And it was nice. And it wasn't the most comfortable, but right now I didn't care. The small, quick, jagged prick of his fang on the inside of my bottom lip shattered the illusion of mutual desire sharply. Caine did not want me. He did not care. He was using my insecurity to stop me, distract me, to get at Shido by getting me gone. I jerked back. My lip was bleeding freely. I raised my left hand to the cut, touching the cold blood. It froze my fingertips, and any ardent passions that may have been flaring froze as well. “Bastard,” I said softly. Caine smiled and licked my blood off of his own bottom lip. “Perhaps,” he said. “But if you give into it, you'll suffer less,” he chided. “Enjoy it. Enjoy me.” “What?” I snapped. “Become your lover? That what you offering?” Caine shrugged slightly, a sensual ripple of his torso. “Is that what you want?” His grin widened. “Shido is a generous soul. I'm sure we can come to some mutually beneficial... arrangement.” “No thanks,” I hissed. “Shido doesn't want you and neither do I. You're too damn arrogant.” Caine laughed. “And that, my dear, is what you prefer.” He tried to step forward again, hand up to touch me, and I bared my fangs at him, hissing warningly. He stopped, frowning mightily. He dropped his hand. “Very well,” he said. He gestured at me. “Fall into a deeper sleep and I will take my time with Shido.” I felt the tug of the darkness, the sweet nothingness where no nightmares plagued me and no thoughts swirled. And I wanted to go there. I wanted to make it stop hurting. But the heavy crush of cold and flickering, licking heat in my chest flared and I pushed back. “No,” I said. I had gotten very good at waking myself up from nightmares. I woke. I was on the ratty green couch in Shido's office. The table was there. So was my knife. And my wand. Shido was asleep in his chair, whining and writhing. His top hat had been knocked aside and lay askew on the ground. Caine was on the desk, Shido's wrist in his mouth and his knees on either side of Shido's hips. I stood slowly, gently picked up my wand, and aimed at Caine's back. “Lumos Solem!” Caine shrieked, releasing Shido instantly and bowed backwards, hands scrabbling at the wide patch of burnt clothing and bubbling skin that splashed across his back. Served him right. He turned, kneeling on the desk, the gentleman façade crumbling under the vicious, visceral reaction of a wounded animal. He lunged for me, his hands bent into talons, his teeth bared. I raised my wand and he hesitated. “Want another one?” He cut a look between me and Shido. Then he faded out of existence. The last sound I heard was the slow hiss of the beginning of a laugh. ===== “Are you saying that I should just... get over it?” I repeated, aghast. Shido shrugged. “If you don't, it'll eat at you for the rest of eternity.” I grabbed my head, which had just started to throb, and groaned. “Let me get this straight. I should just... forget what Lucard did to me and just smile or some other shit?” Shido shook his head. “No, of course not. Don't forget. But don't let it control you. So bad things happened. Bad things always happen. The problem is that you are letting bad things continue to happen.” “Bad things continue to happen to you, too,” I pointed out sourly. Shido sat forward on the couch opposite me and settled his hands on his knees. “I am past Caine. I am angry that he stole my memories, but in same ways I am also grateful. I don't remember anything of my life before becoming a Vampire - at least, not much - so it has made it easier for me to move on. There are things I regret and things I am ashamed off, yes. And yes, Caine does come around and... ahem... bother me when it suits him.” “That's a nice way of putting it.” He smiled softly. “But I have my own life. And despite the occasional 'blast from the past', Caine and what he did to me plays no part in it. I have my job, I have Guni and Yayoi and Riho. This is my city and my life and I am comfortable here. I have found a place.” I frowned and crumpled lower into my chair. “And I've been letting Lucard control me, my thoughts and my actions, and he's not even here.” Shido only smiled sadly. “You changed your sleeping habits because of him. How many Vampires do you know that sleep during the night?” I chuckled, but it was a weak, sad sound. “Stop letting him dictate your actions. That is why you're sitting here, moping, isn't it? Instead of out there, trying to get home. Trying to find Trieze?” Shido stood, picked up his top hat from the table between us, and put it on. “Feel free to say here for a while. I have to go out - Yayoi called me about a body she wants me to see. Just... don't brood, okay?” I frowned, looked at my feet, and didn't answer. ===== I hated to admit it, but I think Shido was right. Counting my phials carefully, I tried to decide whether or not I wanted to slide just yet. I agreed with Shido that perhaps it was time I stopped running from what Lucard had done to me, and start accepting it. I needed a break. I needed to sit and think about things. Maybe write things down. Maybe find a place where I could be safe for a while. Now I had to decide if I wanted to do it here, or move on and hope that wherever I went would be calm enough for what I needed. In the end it was the memory of Caine's touch on my face that made me decide to slide. I would never have a peacefully day's sleep knowing that he could take a stroll through my head any old time he wished. And the point of the coming exercise was to get rid of nightmares. In the next world, I could find a nice anonymous hotel room and brew more potion, and think in peace. Open up my nightmare box and see what was inside. When that was done... I wasn't sure where I would go then. Would I still try to get home? Was there even a point anymore? I had been to more worlds than I could remember - I had been traveling like this for years. I was sick to death of looking over my shoulder every time I walked outside. I was sick of being constantly on my guard. I was sick of running, sick of hiding, sick of lying. I was sick to death of everything. If I did stop Sliding... if I just chose one world and stayed there... Could I ever be happy like that? Could I truly make a choice like that without regret? I decided that was a decision for another day. I would do my musing about Lucard. Then I would think about my life. ===== I bid my goodbyes to Shido, my most gracious host, at dawn. Yayoi put the clip back in my gun, but this time it was filled with silver shot. Shido handed me a small ink bottle filled with his own blood. “In case you ever want to visit again,” he said with a soft, gentle smile. “We'll complain about our Masters and I'll teach you how to manipulate your blood into weapons.” “Sounds useful,” I said. “I promise, I'll be back.” “After you find your home.” He touched my chest gently, palm over my heart. “After I find home,” I agreed and we both knew that neither of us meant the place where my parents lived. ===== The place I landed would have been idyllic if it hadn't have been so run down. The chicken coop looked new, rough-hewn in a way that told me that this place had no machines and only the rudest of hand tools. So was the fence, and there were patches of fresh reeds on the thatched roof that told me someone had been up there doing repair work recently. It was a farm. Or rather, it was trying very hard to be a farm. Hand-made furniture dotted a dusty but still serviceable porch out in front of a squat fat house of timbers and thrushes. The barn, to the left of the farm house, had succumbed to time and fallen to ruin, most of the roof caved in, and the laneway was overrun with weeds and muddy ruts from a cart. A cow, a crude bronze hoop through its nose and its horns unshorn, looked up at me from its own pen, completely unconcerned with my sudden entrance. From within the house I heard a yelping bark of a small dog, so I wasn't surprised when a Welsh Corgi mutt with one grey eye and one blue eye came pelting out of the door and at me, yipping it's head off. “Horse!” I heard a rumbling voice shout from inside the house. The pounding of feet followed it. “Horse, come back here, dammit!” The dog stopped at my feet and yipped and yapped and generally thought it was being intimidating. I bent down and touched its head and the dog immediately changed from threatening to welcoming. It licked my hand and fawned. It tried to wag its stubby tail, and the whole back end of the critter swung back and forth. A tall man with darkly tanned skin came to the door. He was wearing home-spun slacks, loose and dirty, and juxtapostically fine black leather boots. He had no shirt on, but a flashing silver earring dangled from his left lobe. Not that he needed a shirt. Mrrrowrr. His hair was shorter, shot through with grey at the temples, and he wore no sword, but I recognized him immediately. He recognized me, too. He leaned arrogantly against the doorjamb and hooked his ankles together. He stared at me in an altogether too leering way. I slowly stood up from the crouch in the laneway, to Horse's dismay, and stared at him back. “Took you long enough,” the man from my dream said. Book Eighteen: Xena: Warrior Princess Chapter Forty-Five: “Dead Like Me” “Well, are you coming in?” he asked from the doorway. “Or would you rather stand there all night? Horse would love it, he's very needy.” I looked down dumbly at the corgi jumping up and down by my thigh. He was turning circles mid-air in his ecstatic welcome. Then I looked at myself. Not exactly the best state to be meeting someone I've been dreaming of off and on about for the past few months. The bottom of my shirt was torn in strips. The gun and scalpels weighed heavily in the bottom of my pouch. Pulling, as if to announce their alien presence in this technologically limited world. There were leaves in my hair still. The knees of my BDUs were stained with soil and crushed grass and my own gore. I was more than acutely aware that there was blood all the way down the front of my shirt. I had zipped up my olive-coloured jacket to cover the stains from the Breed slitting my throat, but I had a feeling that this man would know anyway. It made me acutely uncomfortable, and I rubbed the smooth, scarless skin of my throat. He watched my hand move with narrowed, predatory chocolate eyes. His look was hungry, dangerously sexy, the way I remembered it from the handful of dreams that had been scattered throughout the last few months. I never remembered what we said to each other, outside of that first dream in Middle-Earth, but I always woke the feeling of his eyes on me. Still on me, even though I was awake. He saw more than what his eyes could show him. But that's because, like me, he wasn't human. Or, hadn't been. Also like me, he was now changed. The last time I had seen him, he had been Ares, God of War. Now he was Ares, the Mortal Farmer. There was a single straw in his hair, butter yellow against the same fly-away black almost-curls, evidence of mortal toil. But now his hair was streaking elegantly with grey. It had been cropped short but was gaining back its length. His chest was bare, still well sculpted and temptingly tanned, but he held himself slightly off kilter, nursing an ache that he would never have known before. I felt like whacking myself in the forehead. How could I have missed who he was? How had I seen him so many times, conversed with him, and not recognized him? The black leather, the flashing sword-shaped earring, the goatee. They were iconic. Hell, this man was an icon in and of himself. Perhaps that was the logic of dreams; you didn't know what you thought you didn't know. What you didn't expect to know. I expected to not know him, so I hadn't. You really don't know who I am? he had asked. But I did. I mean, I did now. Now that I was standing in his laneway. He was Ares. Kevin Smith. The late. And this was season six of Xena: Warrior Princess. “Well?” he prompted again. “I've got a fire going, and there's fresh wine and bread. Greta brought over cheese last night. I can kill a chicken, if you want.” “You were expecting me?” I asked softly. He chuckled softly. “Marie, I'm a God.” “Were,” I corrected without thinking, then wished the words back. He winced once and then shrugged the offence away. “You know my name?” “You told me.” “I did? But I didn't tell you that I don't eat bread or cheese or... chickens.” He chuckled again, then slapped his broad thigh. Horse yipped excitedly and ran towards the house, skidding into it through the vee of Ares' legs. Shaking, I followed. ===== The fire was high and welcoming. Though it wasn't cold yet, the sun was setting and a chill was spreading over Ancient Greece. I declined everything but the wine and stared around me at the old farmhouse, clutching the crude wooden cup of Dionysian blood. Appropriate, that the nick-name for the potent drink was the very substance that I thrived on. Once, long ago, Xena and her brothers had lived in this house with their mother and grandparents. That had been almost thirty years ago. When her brothers had all died in battle and Xena left to become the blood-thirsty Warrior Princess, the farm fell to ruin. The barn collapsed and the roof sprung holes in the thatch. The table disintegrated, the mice ventilated the plaster walls, and the floorboards sank. Their mother abandoned it, bought a taverna in town, and lived there. The farm died slowly, but those were glorious days for Ares, God of War. Xena, his half-mortal daughter (supposed), and sometime lover, was a spitfire of anger and passion. She was a skilled and dangerous warrior, both in combat and in scheming. She could kill or paralyze or maim as she chose, with a single blow, with a swift cut of her arm and a high pitched, devil's shriek. The whistle of her deadly chakram was the last thing many a man heard, and the sound that rung in their ears as they crossed the river in Charon's boat. And Ares had loved her. Loved her ruthlessness, loved her anger, loved her insanity, loved her skill. Possibly he had loved the woman, but who's to say? Then something happened. Xena fell in love. She had a son. She slaughtered a town and met the accusing eyes of a blonde, orphaned child. She gave it up. Xena: Warrior Princess, wanted to be warrior no more. She divested herself of her amour and weapons, was ready to return to her mother and the farm. She couldn't. Her town did not want her, her mother disowned her. So Xena took up her chakram and her sword again and vowed instead to protect, rather than kill. To make amends for what she had done. To stand by the sides of her newforged friends. She abandoned Ares and his worship, and the God of War and Insanity never forgave her. Until her dying day and into her reincarnations, he badgered her. He tried to seduce her back to the side of violence, to trick her or blackmail her. He did all that he could to make her his again - his Princess, his warrior, his devotee. His wife and lover if he could. And when that failed, he stood by and watched her slaughter the other Olympians. He saved her daughter's life by giving up his own Godhood, proved his love for her tenfold, and she walked away from him because he had hurt her too much. And then he was mortal, alone in the world and unable to take care of himself, and a target. Xena relented and brought him here, to her old farm, where she disguised him as a farmer and helped him find a new life. Together they repaired the roof, the fallen timbers, the sunken floor. But they could not repair what they had once had. He asked her one last time to stay and she could not, for she loved another, and so he was left alone. Alone. Cold. Waiting. Waiting for the only other person in the world who knew who he truly was; the only other person who had ever conversed with him civilly, who was on par with his own intelligence. Whose powers and abilities did not frighten him, and whom his own Godhood had not frightened or cowed. The only other person who understood what it was like to be ripped from the only home you had ever known, the only life, and be forcefully changed. Me. ===== I rolled the wine around in my mouth, tasting the sunlight, the rain, the soil and the toil, relishing it as I always did. Ares was beside me on a fur on the floor. I was sitting cross-legged and staring into the fire. The part of me that was Miroku was tempted to meditate. I assumed the fur had once been a bear and wondered if Ares had slain it himself or if he'd simply bought it. Either way, it was very comfortable. He'd put some sort of padding under it - a few blankets or pillows. “I'm sorry I have no chairs,” he said. He was stretched on his side out beside me on the fur, resting his head on one hand, propped up on his elbow, and didn’t look all that sorry at all. He rather seemed to be enjoying showing off his physique. He had toed off his boots and his feet were bare, and for some strange reason that seemed a terribly intimate thing to me. Perhaps too intimate for someone I had just met in person for the first time ten minutes ago. “They were all so broken I just used them as firewood. Haven't gotten around to getting more.” “I like this,” I said, trying to keep the strange nervousness out of my voice. What had I to be worried about? It's not like he was a God anymore. I ran the fingers of my free hand over the soft fur. “It's comfortable.” He smiled out of the side of his mouth. Horse, who was laying in front of Ares' stomach enjoying a prolonged scratch between the ears, whined once to agree with me. “You sure just the wine is enough for you?” Ares asked. I looked sideways at him. “You sure the whole time we spoke I never told you that I can't eat anything?” Ares grinned. “I was always busy discussing other things.” I rolled my eyes. Since entering his house, Ares had told me a whole string of things to try to get me to sleep with him immediately. How it was destiny, how he had been waiting, how he was lonely, and he'd made dinner and a fire and everything, and shouldn't I get out of those strange stained men's trousers? This wasn't the magic of Suedom that was turning him horny - this was just Ares. He had been born a God, the ultimate symbol of ancient Greek masculinity: strong, skilled in battle, hairy, chiselled, and virile. As a mortal he still possessed the physical features, and the matching sex drive. Also as a God, he had understood most relationships in very simple terms - mortals were either something to ignore, something to be worshipped by, something to control, something to kill, or something to screw. Seeing as I was not to be ignored, couldn't be controlled, didn't worship him, and was a bad idea to kill, that only left one option. I shifted away from Ares slightly, putting myself deliberately beyond arm's reach. He may know me from my dreams, but I didn't know him. I didn't trust him either. Ares could be selfish. He looked out for number one, and number one was Ares. The only other person he truly loved, in my opinion, had been Xena. Look what he had done to her. And as much as I had become rather prolific with my bed partners in the past few months, I wasn't going to sleep with him either. Shido had pointed it out to me, and even Caine had men