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Authors: Linda Lafferty

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House of Bathory

BOOK: House of Bathory
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ALSO BY LINDA LAFFERTY

The Bloodletter’s Daughter

The Drowning Guard

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

Text copyright © 2014 by Linda Lafferty

No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

Published by Lake Union Publishing, Seattle

www.apub.com

ISBN-13: 9781477808641

ISBN-10: 1477808647

Cover design by
the
BookDesigners

Library of Congress Control Number: 2013914136

F
OR MY BELOVED SISTER
N
ANCY
L
AFFERTY
E
LISHA
(
BECAUSE
D
AISY SAID
I
HAD TO
)

CONTENTS

Prologue

PART 1

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

Chapter 52

Chapter 53

Chapter 54

Chapter 55

Chapter 56

Chapter 57

Chapter 58

Chapter 59

Chapter 60

PART 2

Chapter 61

Chapter 62

Chapter 63

Chapter 64

Chapter 65

Chapter 66

Chapter 67

Chapter 68

Chapter 69

Chapter 70

Chapter 71

Chapter 72

Chapter 73

Chapter 74

Chapter 75

Chapter 76

Chapter 77

Chapter 78

Chapter 79

Chapter 80

Chapter 81

Chapter 82

Chapter 83

Chapter 84

Chapter 85

Chapter 86

Chapter 87

Chapter 88

Chapter 89

Chapter 90

Chapter 91

Chapter 92

Chapter 93

Chapter 94

Chapter 95

Chapter 96

Chapter 97

Chapter 98

Chapter 99

Chapter 100

Chapter 101

Chapter 102

Chapter 103

Chapter 104

Chapter 105

Chapter 106

PART 3

Chapter 107

Chapter 108

Chapter 109

Chapter 110

Chapter 111

Chapter 112

Chapter 113

Chapter 114

Chapter 115

Chapter 116

Chapter 117

Chapter 118

PART 4

Chapter 119

Chapter 120

Chapter 121

Chapter 122

Chapter 123

Epilogue

HISTORICAL NOTE

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

BIBLIOGRAPHY

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Prologue

S
ARVAR
C
ASTLE

H
OUSE OF THE
N
ADASDY
H
ORSEMASTER

W
ESTERN
H
UNGARY

O
CTOBER 31, 1589

I
n the first minutes, the midwife Agota did not notice anything strange. Her purple-veined hands cradled his head, the baby slick and silent. She smiled at the infant as his eyes opened, blinking at the dim candlelight.

“He is a Magyar, sure enough,” she said, admiring his eyes.

The mother groaned, her pelvic muscles still contracting.

“His eyes will be green as his grandfather’s,” the old midwife said, nodding in admiration.

Sarvar Castle would rejoice tonight, for at last a son was born to the Master of the Horse.

But as she prepared to sever the umbilical cord, the old midwife gasped. Her hands, still stained in warm blood, flew to her face.

The mother pulled herself up, sweat dripping into her eyes.

“What is wrong?” she groaned. “Speak, Agota!”

The old woman shook her head. A second later the babe bawled, a hearty bellow from his tiny lungs.

The mother held out her arms, begging for her baby.

The midwife swaddled the baby in a clean linen sheet, stopping once to drag her withered fingertips over her body in the sign of the cross. Then she thrust the baby into his mother’s arms. He quieted immediately, staring silently into his mother’s eyes.

“Look, Mistress!” Agota dug her wrinkled pinkie finger under the baby’s tiny lips. He mewed in protest.

The mother saw what had so disturbed the midwife. Under the lips was a full set of tiny white teeth, fully formed. “He is a Taltos,” hissed the old woman. “One of the Ancients!”

Agota pried open the tightly balled fist of the infant’s right hand. Her breathing resonated in the small room, still heavy with the scent of sweat and birth.

“Only five fingers, blessed mercy!” she said.

It was the baby’s mother who tenderly loosened his left fist. It was she who discovered the sixth finger.

“It is the sign!” she cried. “What shall I do? What will become of him?”

The candle guttered, a draft crawling under the door. Rain pelted the thick leaded glass.

“Show no one your babe,” said Agota. “If the Habsburgs learn, they will dash his brains out.”

There was a knock on the door. The midwife and her patient exchanged looks.

“Send him away!” the mother whispered. “Let no one enter this chamber.”

The midwife nodded. She opened the door only a crack. One of the stable boys stood outside.

He doffed his cap, revealing dark hair studded with bits of straw and oat chaff.

“The Horsemaster would like to meet his new—excuse me, is it a son or a daughter?”

Agota hesitated, her old tongue licking her cracked lips before she spoke.

“Tell the Master he is the proud father of a healthy baby boy. But the Mistress is still weak and begs he visit her later, when she is fit to receive him.”

The door shut quietly. The midwife waited, listening to his retreating steps. Then she slid the bolt.

The mother clutched the baby close to her breast.

“No one shall learn this secret but my husband,” she said. “Swear to me you will tell no one and carry this secret to the grave!”

“Mistress, I swear by all that is Holy,” murmured the woman. “A Taltos is a divine power. I would be cursed should I bring any harm to this babe, for they are of powerful blessed magic.”

The young mother swept back her sweaty hair, her eyes unfocused as she thought.

“I shall feign sickness and the baby’s as well. I shall allow no one to visit.”

“Still there will be talk. You must go away, far from this kingdom,” said the midwife. “And I will cut off the sixth finger, this very day.”

“My baby!”

“Hear me, mistress. Either the Church or the King will seek him out. Even the Bathorys themselves might fear him. The mistress Erzsebet who has married Master Ferenc is—strange.”

“What do you mean?”

The old woman’s face twitched.

“She has cruel ways—” Agota looked over her shoulder, whispering these last words. “There is more of Transylvania in her than Hungary. The Ecsed Bathorys would put this baby to death, for they fear the power of a true Hungarian Taltos.”

“But he is innocent!”

The baby nestled against his mother’s breast now, nursing gently. She felt only the gentle pull of the newborn’s lips, like the sweep of a brook’s current, sensing his tiny teeth only as the rocky bottom in a wave of sweet kisses.

“You must leave Sarvar until the babe is five. That is when the baby teeth are set in the jaw of a normal child.”

“But the finger! The wound that is left?”

“Say the child tangled his hand in a well rope. Or the slip of a kitchen knife as he reached for a carrot piece.”

“So much deception!”

“You must protect your son.”

The mother nodded, her face etched in misery.

“And watch for the signs,” said the midwife. “He will see things we mortals cannot. The Taltos are possessed in a waking dream, going between the human and spirit worlds. And they communicate with animals, especially horses.”

The young mother closed her eyes. “At least his father will be thankful for that.”

PART

-1-

Chapter 1

C
ARBONDALE
, C
OLORADO

O
CTOBER 31, 2010

D
aisy.”

Alone in her office, Dr. Elizabeth Path murmured the name of her patient, her chin propped in her cupped hand. Her mother hated it when she did that. “Sit up straight,” she’d snap.

The oak office chair the psychologist had inherited from her father creaked as she hooked her ankles around the base. She gazed out her office window at the light dusting of snow on Mount Sopris.

The fingers of her left hand absently twirled her wavy brown hair into a thick rope stretching below her collarbone. Her mother hated that, too. “Fidgeting,” she called it. Bad enough for a woman nearing forty to have hair past her shoulders, but then to play with it like a child! And such pretty blue eyes—wear some makeup. What are you saving yourself for?

Mom
, thought Betsy.
What a piece of work
.

The digital clock transformed into a new minute, a ghostly parade of time dissolving into the black background. Betsy had exactly thirty-three minutes until her patient arrived. She had no answers for Daisy. No answers for Daisy’s desperate mother, either.

Damn it. An image of her father crossed her mind, a look of disappointment in his sky-blue eyes. “Listen, Betsy. Hear what lingers in the air unspoken.”

Unspoken, yes, Papa. I can hear “unspoken.” But what can anyone hear in utter silence?

Betsy needed to find something, anything to break through the silence of Daisy Hart. The sullen girl refused to offer anything more than listless sighs and shrugs, her black fingernails rending larger and larger holes in her dark fis
hn
et stockings.

She would cough occasionally, closing her kohl-rimmed eyes so tightly she smeared her cheekbones black. Betsy would see a flash of that one canine tooth that hadn’t been corrected with braces, incongruous amid an otherwise perfect row of straight, white teeth.

Session after session, Daisy’s strangled cough echoed in the little Victorian parlor Betsy’s father had converted into an office for his own psychiatric practice years ago. The Viennese clock would chime the hour and her Goth patient would rise without saying a word and leave.

Silent as a ghost.

Daisy was an enigma, all wrapped up in a black crepe bow. And her psychologist had not managed to untie the convoluted ribbon.

Betsy shifted the copy of
A Jungian Analysis of Dreams
on her lap. Fres
hn
ess, purity. Daisies symbolize illumination, enlightenment, a reflection of the sun.

That only told her about Daisy’s parents’ state of mind when she was born, but nothing about the girl herself.

Betsy pressed her thumbnail against her front teeth, thinking.

Freud tended to interpret dream symbols literally, but for Jung it was the personal feeling associated with the symbol that was the key.

Betsy leaned over to her laptop, in the autumn light that streamed in the south-facing windows. She typed “Daisy” in a dream analysis website, the kind that would leave fellow analysts sneering in disdain. It was like reading a horoscope in the local newspaper.

Still, when a patient presented a dilemma, it was a sinful pleasure to cast off her formal training and indulge in a quick chuckle.

Her computer screen filled with diet ads: grossly shrinking and swelling bodies beckoned on the right margin. Tarot card readings flashed in neon colors.

T
O SEE A DAISY OUT OF SEASON IS TO BE ASSAILED BY EVIL IN SOME GUISE.

She looked out the window at snow-capped Mount Sopris. Almost imperceptibly, she shook her head.

She Googled again.

D
REAM
M
OODS
T
O DREAM OF WALKING IN A FIELD OF DAISIES REPRESENTS GOOD LUCK AND PROSPERITY.
S
OMEONE WILL BE THERE TO OFFER YOU A HELPING HAND AND SOME GUIDANCE FOR YOUR PROBLEMS.

Ha!
Betsy thought.
Offer me guidance! That’s a good one. Daisy couldn’t guide herself out of a hall closet.

Betsy’s short fingernails clicked over the keyboard. One more try.

T
ATTOO
S
YMBOLOGY
—W
HAT

S
B
EHIND THE
T
AT
?
D
AISY IS THE SYMBOL OF SISTERHOOD.

Betsy snorted, the way her father loved to hear her laugh. The laughter was swallowed in the silence of the empty house.

Winter was near. A few remaining aspen leaves quivered in clusters of bright gold on the branches. Fallen leaves rustled dry and curled, chasing each other across Main Street, crushed to crackling bits under the occasional slow-moving car. Overnight all the remaining leaves could wither and the ground freeze rock hard.

Betsy was desperate to get outside. The warmth of autumn did not linger in the Colorado Rockies. Snow was in the five-day forecast.

There was just this one patient—Daisy—to see before she could close her laptop and head out into the last of the sunshine. Hurry up, damn it!

Still another quarter of an hour. She opened her e-mail and read her mother’s brief message again.

B
RATISLAVA AND THE
S
LOVAK COUNTRYSIDE NEVER CEASE TO ENCHANT ME.
I
GO TO VISIT
C
ACHTICE
C
ASTLE TOMORROW, HOME OF THE INFAMOUS
C
OUNTESS
B
ATHORY.
I
WILL SEND YOU A POSTCARD, DARLING.

Betsy closed her eyes. She stifled a sob, biting her fist. How could her mother be so nonchalant, so callous?
Enchant
her? It was not a decade ago that Betsy’s father had died in a car accident in Slovakia. How could her mother bear to go back?

Enchanting?
What the fuck was wrong with her mother?

Betsy drew a breath. Her mother, a historian and professor, had loved Eastern Europe long before she married the handsome Slovak-born Jungian psychiatrist. No doubt the Bratislava she spoke of was the Bratislava of seventeenth-century Habsburg Hungary, the heart of her research. The death of Betsy’s father had not stained that image. Dr. Grace Path’s eyes and ears would not see her husband’s blood streaking the rocky ground. His widow would see only the Court of Matthias II, Holy Roman Emperor.

Grace’s research was what she had left. Who was Betsy to deny her that?

There was a knock on the door and then the sound of retreating steps. Through the window, Betsy could see a well-dressed, shapely woman in her midforties—only a few years older than Betsy herself. Jane Hart, Daisy’s mother. And her coming to the door—even if only to knock—was a significant event. In the weeks Daisy had been coming to Carbondale, Jane had never visited the office, as if afraid of some kind of contamination. She would drop her daughter off, then pick her up again when the session was finished, never leaving her car.
She’s afraid of infection,
thought Betsy.
As if she’d pick up a mental illness by crossing the threshold.

Betsy quietly moved closer to the window to listen in as Jane argued fiercely with her daughter. Discourse between a mother and a patient was a powerful tool in analysis. Besides, this was the first time she had ever heard her patient speak more than monosyllables. Daisy fingered a gold cross around her neck as she shook her head stubbornly.

“I don’t need to see a shrink,” she said. “I’m not crazy. I’m tired of this shit!”

“I’m not saying you’re crazy. But you have a problem, and it’s damned lucky you didn’t choke to death last weekend.”

“Would that have made you happy?”

Jane ignored that. “And look how you’re dressed! And that crap on your lips. It looks like smeared chocolate.”

Daisy tossed her jet-black hair in defiance, the scowl on her matte-black lips setting deep creases in her white makeup.

“You think I should wear some kind of peachy-fake, come-fuck-me lipstick like yours?”

Jane’s body went rigid, her hands curled into bony fists.

“I’m calling your father,” she snapped. She pulled a ruby-red cell phone from her purse.

“Dad has
nothing
to do with this!”

Betsy noticed the crack in the girl’s voice, registering a jolt of fear.

Her mother pressed speed dial. “I want him to know exactly how you are behaving.”

Daisy snatched the phone from her mother’s hand and threw it into the street. “Fuck it, Mother. I’ll go, OK? Just leave Dad out of this!”

The girl stalked toward the front door, leaving her mother to scramble after the phone and then follow.


Bitch!”
Daisy muttered.

Betsy straightened the papers on her desk and prepared to greet her patient.

“Betsy,” began Jane, brushing past her daughter into the little Victorian house, “things have gotten
worse
, not better since Daisy started with you!”

Betsy did not answer at once. She caught Daisy, still poised on the threshold—not in, not out, that was Daisy all right—watching from the corner of her eye. Now that her analyst was the object of Daisy’s mother’s anger, she was worthy of interest.

“How are you helping her?” Jane demanded. “And look at all the papers and clutter in your office! I don’t get the impression you are professional—”

“How have things gotten worse?” Betsy finally said, answering Jane’s question with one of her own.

Betsy watched mother and daughter stare at each other, fury in their eyes. Neither one of them blinked.

“What happened?” Betsy asked.

Again neither answered. The autumn air was suddenly filled with an animated conversation in Spanish from the Mexican grocery next door to the office.


¿
Quiere algo m
á
s, Señora?
” said a singsong voice.

Betsy beckoned Daisy to step into the office, closing the door quietly behind her. The cheerful Mexican voices were shut out, the resulting silence ominous.

“Well? What do you think, Daisy? How have I failed?” Betsy asked.

Daisy shook her dark hair, obscuring her eyes.

The psychologist turned. “Jane?

Jane began picking at her manicured nails. Betsy caught a whiff of expensive perfume.

“I don’t know why she won’t tell you,” she said. “It happened
again
, damn it!”

“What happened?”

Jane looked at the door, as if contemplating a quick exit. Then she set her lips firmly deciding to answer.

“She almost choked to death over the weekend. She was strangling on her own spit—”

“That’s NOT what the doctor said!” interrupted Daisy. “You always get everything so freaking wrong!”

Betsy kept her expression neutral. Something had finally provoked her patient to speak with true emotion. “Why didn’t you call me?”

Jane looked at Betsy, exasperated, but with a flash of terror in her eyes. The psychologist interpreted it as real fear, not an affectation.

“I had to take her to the emergency room. They gave her a muscle relaxant so she would stop choking. She couldn’t breathe!”

“What was the drug?”

“I don’t remember. I can find out.”

Betsy turned to Daisy.

“Did it work?”

The girl snorted in derision.

“And they found no obstruction in your throat?” Betsy wanted to provoke an answer. Anything. “Any irritant? Hot peppers or vinegar? Any cleaning fluids? Ammonia?”

Daisy just stared, playing ferociously with the charm bracelet on her wrist.

“Daisy—don’t be rude. Answer her! There was nothing,” said Jane. “You know that. That’s what this is all about.”

“So what did they decide was the cause?” Betsy asked.

Jane looked down at her nails again. This time she managed to chip off a fleck of the polish.

“Nerves, they said. A psychological problem. That’s why we’re here, isn’t it?”

“Oh, bullshit Mother!” shouted Daisy, stomping her heavy boot on the wood floor. “The only reason we’re here is because you think I’m weird. You hate me and you hate the Goth world.”

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