A Taint in the Blood (11 page)

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Authors: S. M. Stirling

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Their meal came. Adrian thanked the man, threw his card onto the tray and added a fifty-dollar bill; these were hard times, and a lot of restaurants had taken to raking back a share of tips. Then he took a sip of his wine; the cabernet-merlot-petite Verdot combination had just enough acidity to go with the fatty richness of the duck.
“Why is abstract at this point. She . . . there are personal reasons. In any case, she abducted a young lady I’m very fond of. We know she’s taken her somewhere in California, probably the central coast. I need information; all the Brotherhood files on the Brézé properties there, their defenses, layout, everything.”
“Specialized weapons, too,” Harvey put in.
Adrian nodded. “And since this was a personal vendetta on Adrienne’s part, aiding me won’t bring the Council down on you any more than usual.”
“We should help you get your lucy back?” Polson asked.
The air went still. Harvey’s hand made a slight gesture towards his coat before his conscious mind controlled it, prompted by decades of experience with the bubbling edge of violence. Adrian carefully finished chewing and swallowing, laid down his knife and fork, and leaned forward. His gold-flecked eyes met Sheila Polson’s, and locked. After a long moment she looked aside, a slight sheen of sweat on her forehead.
“Ms. Polson, I will say this only once. Ellen Tarnowski was my friend—yes, we were lovers. She was not my
lucy
. I don’t force blood from living humans, and I don’t compel their minds except at urgent need. My sister does. I resigned from your war but I didn’t resign from the personal obligations of a human being. I’d be a pretty poor specimen of a man if I didn’t do what I could for her. Living with myself is . . . hard enough as it is.”
She looked away for an instant, nodded as if to herself, then turned back to him:
“I apologize, Mr. Brézé.” At his surprise, she smiled very slightly. “I actually
am
sorry. You . . . must know how disturbing a pureblood is to someone who can sense the Power.”
“He don’t bother me none,” Harvey said, returning to his rabbit.
“You’re a loose cannon, Ledbetter, and you bent every rule to breaking point haring off to New Mexico that way.”
“I’m also the best field team leader in the Brotherhood, so you’re not going to do anything but scold me.”
She shrugged and went on to Adrian: “Please describe your encounter in Santa Fe, if you would.”
Adrian did; Harvey nodded approval. “He can still do a damn nice after-action report,” he added.
“That Wreaking on the apartment building . . . that is . . . not good news,” Polson said.
“You could say that,” Adrian replied grimly. “If I hadn’t turned it in on itself, when the cascade fell it might have taken out everything within blocks. Driven dozens catatonic for the rest of their lives, at least.”
“It gets harder and harder to fight . . .” Polson half-whispered to herself. Then: “You were using stored blood?”
Adrian nodded, and spoke with careful precision:
“I drink blood only when I must for major Wreakings with the Power.
As do you, do you not?
What is your rating on the Alberman Scale?”
She forced her eyes back to his. “Yes. Red Cross supply. I’m . . . thirty-eight percent.”
“Then you will have some idea of how absolutely horrible an experience drinking cold, dead blood is. It is much worse for me.
Dog-piss
would be more fun.”
Polson nodded, stopping her fork halfway to her mouth. Then she visibly put the memory out of her mind and ate.
“We’re preoccupied right now,” she said. “Believe me, I sympathize with the girl. I’ve done field work. But right now, the whole world is about to come down on our heads. You’ve heard about the Council meeting that’s been called for next year in Tiflis?”
“No, I had not,” he said. “Well, not until last night.”
“You heard that Gheorghe Brâncuşi was executed? Formally the meeting’s to elect his successor.”
Executed
, Adrian thought as he nodded.
Or assassinated, depending on your viewpoint
.
“Harvey told me yesterday,” he said.
“Christ, Brézé, don’t you follow
anything
?”
“It hasn’t been on CNN, nor on the Internet,” he said dryly. “The Brotherhood has me on their shit-list, and pretty well all the Council’s Shadowspawn would kill me if they could and deceive me just for the pleasure of it if they couldn’t. Ms. Polson, what part of
retired
don’t you understand?”
“Then you wouldn’t have heard that they’re going to implement Plan Trimback?”
He looked at her, drank the last of his wine, and said: “No.”
Harvey tore a piece off the baguette and buttered it.
“Usually they couldn’t organize an orgy in a Bangkok whorehouse and they put everything off and off and off because they’re planning on living forever ’n’ figure they’ve got time,” he said, biting into the bread with a crackle. “This time it’s different.”
Polson nodded. “We’re trying to figure out a counter-strategy—”
“Bullshit,” Adrian said crisply.
She glared at him; Harvey grinned and continued methodically demolishing the loaf and mopping his plate.
“I quit because the Brotherhood isn’t a threat to the Shadowspawn,” Adrian said. “It’s a
nuisance
. You kill a few lower-level types—”
“We got Brâncuşi,” she said.
“That was
me
, actually, and Adrian’s right,” Harvey said. “Two members of the Council in thirty years. And that’s . . . what . . . less than half of the number of Council heads who’ve died in faction-fights or family coups. We’re never going to be able to
kill
our way to victory, Sheila. There are just too damned many of them now. And they’ve got the Power.”
“You want to give up too, Ledbetter?” she rasped.
“No. I think we should admit that the Power is here to stay. Sure, if you gave me a magic button I’d push till my thumb got sore. But even the Power can’t undo the past.”
Harvey went on:
“So we need to
use
the Power. Y’know,
you
could have gotten into the Order of the Black Dawn if you’d been around back then. Hell, I might have made it. And we’re not evil . . . well, not most of the time.”
“The
Order
were evil,” Sheila said with flat certainty.
“Yeah, but that’s ’cause they were demon-worshipping shits who figured out they could
become
demons. They’d have been just as evil if all they’d had was knives and bad attitudes.”
He pointed his fork at Adrian. “Guys like Adrian are our hope. The Power isn’t evil either; it’s just a . . . technology.”
Polson took a long breath. “That’s a policy question. We’re here to talk about this one instance. OK . . . I’ll see what I can do. We do have a lot of information about the Brézé family. We’ll get it to you as fast as we can; some of it will have to be dug out of hiding places. But I’m not going to clear everything off our plate just for this.”
“We won,” Harvey said, when she had gone.
Adrian methodically finished the last of his duck. He would be needing his energy, and ordinary food had its part in that too.
“And Ellen is . . . wherever she is,” he said.
He snarled, then controlled the sound. A glimpse at his face in the beveled glass mirror stopped it more effectively. The sharp teeth showed between the drawn-back lines of his lips, and his eyes might have been glowing from a Pleistocene night by the reflected light of a frightened tribe’s campfires.
“Christ, Harvey, I don’t want to do this.”
“You’re going at it awful hard for a reluctant man,” Harvey said.
His blunt fingers made pills from the last of the bread. Adrian gripped the edge of the table until rims of white stood out in his fingernails, welcoming the pain of it.
“Do you know why I’ve spent these years
sitting on a mountaintop
, Harvey? Running, meditating, swimming, talking to people at safe remove through a keyboard. Playing tennis when I felt daring? Because that life . . . life on an even keel . . . is one I can control. I don’t like what this . . . walking armed towards a fight, thinking in terms of threats and counter-threats and strategy—does to me.”
“It ain’t all that much fun, I grant you.”
Adrian shook his head violently. “No. It is entirely
too much
fun, at some levels. I know myself. I was
made
for this.”
“You don’t like you nearly as much as I do, ol’ buddy,” Harvey said quietly, looking away. “Think you might reconsider? You’d be a happier man.

Adrian felt himself smile; the expression in the mirror was worse than the snarl had been.
“Consider my sister, my friend.
She
has an excellent sense of self-esteem, feels comfortable in her skin and enjoys her life.”
Softly: “And she has Ellen. For a whole day now. What has been happening, there, in that creature’s nest?”
CHAPTER SEVEN
S
omethingchirped in her ear. Ellen woke, yawned, stretched, and frowned. The place smelled different from her own bedroom, and not like Adrian’s either, with its faint undertones of expensive tobacco and leather-bound books and juniper. Not bad—fresh linen, flowers, coffee, a spicy scent like eucalyptus—but
different
. She whimpered as memories crashed in on her. Then she realized she was alone in the big rumpled bed, and relaxed. The chirping came again; she turned her head and saw a BlackBerry resting on the pillow next to her.
This is yours,
the note on the screen said.
Schedule loaded. First, go get checkup at clinic: 10:00 a.m. Dr. Duggan fully briefed. Don’t be late or I will spank you.
The time display read 9:00. “Am I going to . . .” she started to mutter to herself. Then: “Of course I’m going to go for this checkup. She’s not kidding about that spanking. I don’t think she means just a pat, either.”
She tore through showering and pulling on the cotton dress and sandals provided, clipped the instrument to her belt and grabbed a fluffy kiwi pastry and a slice of fruit-bread from the breakfast trolley. She scarcely noticed the quiet sumptuousness of the great room and the fixtures, except the painting hung to the left of the bed, Adrienne’s side. That caught her eye, enough to make her bend close for an expert’s quick appraisal.
What a splendid reproduction!
she thought, the professional taking over from the personal for a moment; she’d seen the original during her student years at NYU, on a field trip to France.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a better one.
A small plaque below had a poem inlaid in gold on some dark tropical wood:
 

And when I turned, no face I saw
For the shadow was my own
Death Angel’s shadow.”
 
That was certainly appropriate. The painting was by Schwabe,
La Mort et le Fossoyeur
, with the Death Angel shown as a slender dark-haired woman poised over the old gravedigger in the snowy cemetery, her wings making a beautiful curve like a scythe-blade against the willow-twigs and tilted headstones. Ellen had always liked it, as far as she liked any Symbolist work, and the reproduction was striking; it caught the cruel impersonal compassion on Azrael’s face beautifully. Then she looked more closely, reaching out to touch and then taking back her hand.
“Wait a minute,” she whispered. “Gouache, watercolor and pencil, that’s right. And it’s
old
, not just artificially aged. Look at the structure of the micro-cracks. And the frame is about a century old too! It isn’t a reproduction. My God, the Louvre would never willingly part with this, not for any amount of money!”
Inside her head she could hear:
Oh, quite unwillingly,
chérie
.
That didn’t need any spooky telepathy.
For an instant she sat on the bed, winded and gasping. After shock came a wave of anger; to have something like this hanging in your
bedroom,
exposed to all the possible accidents . . .
The BlackBerry beeped at her, a half-hour warning. She fumbled at it until it came up with a map of the route to the clinic, and ran—that was another thing she could do well, even in sandals—out into the hallway, down a service stair, out a rear entrance, down a long pathway, out through a boundary wall and gate into what looked like a smallish town or large village tucked under the hill where the
casa grande
sat. It wasn’t even far enough to raise much of a sweat, not in the cool springlike weather of a fine February day in the California lowlands.
The clinic wasn’t quite what Ellen would have expected; well-equipped, cheery, an efficient-looking receptionist, a waiting room with the usual magazines and a TV . . . Even the smell was nicer than usual, with flower-and-damp-earth scents wafting through an open window to cut the standard ozone and disinfectant. She had just enough time to stop breathing deeply before:
“Dr. Duggan will see you next, Ms. Tarnowski.”
A renfield doctor willing to sell his soul to the Devil
, she thought, as David Cheung passed her on his way out, with a smirk and a nod and a fresh dressing on his neck.
Or maybe . . . he’s more like a
vet
?
The doctor turned out to be a her, a pleasantly plain middle-aged woman with a slight Scottish burr and a pile of faded ginger hair pulled back severely. She smiled ironically at Ellen’s relief as she ushered her into the examination room. That looked conventional too, if upscale, except for the two replica skeletons in opposite corners. One of the skeletons looked a little odd in ways she couldn’t name.
There were even family photos over the desk, a Chinese man and three striking hapa children, two girls and a boy, at various ages up to the mid-teens.
Connections
, she thought.
Everyone’s story has connections that spin out until they’ve got the whole world in the web. How did . . . they . . . buy or knuckle her? Why’s she working at Hacienda Literally Sucks?

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