Read Silver in the Blood Online
Authors: Jessica Day George
“Of course, Doctor,” the queen said.
She rang for a maid to assist Dr. Ionescu. When she came,
the maid bobbed a curtsy and held out a tray for the saucers, oblivious to Lou.
As they were leaving, Dr. Ionescu turned to Dacia one last time. Dacia and, she noticed with surprise, Lou.
“I did not mean to offend,” he said stiffly, and gave a little bow.
“I understand,” Dacia said as graciously as she could manage.
And she did. It must have come as a nasty shock to imagine that he was going to soothe some ailment of the queen'sâa fever, perhaps, or a bout of indigestionâonly to find that there were creatures of local legend in the palace, and that they needed his help.
“I don't think you do,” Dr. Ionescu said. “IâI loved your mother very much, once.” His hand rose to his ear again. “But she was a Florescu.”
And then he followed the maid out, leaving both Dacia and the queen at a loss.
To my beloved and noble parents,
Think of me with fondness, if I do not survive the coming night, and forgive me if I have offended you. I aligned myself with the Society, despite Father's wishes, because Grandfather and Uncle Joseph turned my foolish head with talk of fighting for the side of righteousness, and of adventure and glory to be had. Instead I have found horror, and sorrow, and now (if you are, indeed, reading this letter) death, though I do not blame Grandfather, nor my uncle. I chose this for myself, and must see it through to the end.
It grieves me that I shall not see you again. It grieves me that the side of the right may not win this battle. And it grieves me to say that I cannot see the world as starkly as Grandfather does anymore. Is everyone born to power a villain? Have these so-called monsters against which we battle chosen the path of darkness? Were they free to choose their path at all? These questions plague me.
Mother, if I die, I beg of you to send Grandmother's amber necklace, which she left to me, to Miss Maria Louisa Neulander of New York City. I know that it was to be given to my future bride, but as there may not be a future bride, I wish this young lady to have it as an apology for the many ways in which I wronged her.
Farewell, my father. Farewell, my mother.
God be with you.
Your devoted son,
Theophilus Xavier Arkady
(Written this 17
th
day of June, the year of Our Lord, Eighteen hundred and ninety-seven)
Night was falling, and Lou was losing herself.
She had to concentrate to hold herself into a column of Smoke. Her bodyâher Smoke bodyâwanted to simply dissemble, to waft away on a million currents of air. If it did that, she knew, she would be nothingness.
It must not happen
, she told herself firmly.
You are Maria Louisa Neulander. Be strong. You are approximately five feet, two inches tall. Hold yourself together. You are curvaceous of figure, a houri!
Just thinking that word sent a scandalous thrill through her. She concentrated on that, on the memories of meeting Mr. Arkady . . . Theo! So dark and dangerousâstrange to think that he was only a year or two older than she, and yet his life held so much more. He didn't spend days shopping or going to parties; he was trying to help people by fighting againstâ
No. She was dissolving. Thinking about what Theo was fighting against, namely her family, was dangerous territory. She had to try something else.
Distressed, she moved around the sofa, wanting to shift from foot to foot in anxiety the way she had when she was younger. The movement forced all her particles together, and she froze in shock. Was that the key? If she kept in motion, would she hold together? She soared around the room, and found that it was true.
Dacia rose in alarm, following her progress around the room. “Lou, are you all right?”
How could she answer? She tried to speak to Dacia as she had spoken to Radu the night before, but Dacia didn't hear her. Was it because Radu had been in his Claw form then? Or was it because she had been forced into the Smoke now? Either way, she could not communicate with her cousin. Nor had she any desire to spend the night swirling around the room like a deranged ghost. There had to be a way she could be of use. After all, they were expecting an attack, and who could say how large Prince Mihai's force would be?
Of course.
She could spy on Mihai. She could find Lady Ioana and the rest of the family, and uncover their preparations. She might even find the cure for what had happened to her. And if she didn't . . . well, she would figure out some way to tell Dacia what she discovered.
Lou went to Dacia and caressed her cousin's cheek with a tendril of Smoke by way of reassurance. Then she went to the window and flowed out a crack between the pane and the frame, and she was in the open air.
Letting her body go as much as she dared, she filtered herself through the air, searching for a sound, a scent, a flavor, that
she recognized. Lady Ioana, Prince Mihai, even Radu would do to lead her to their enemies. She let the wind carry her down and around, skirling through the trees that filled the park around Peles Castle.
It was afternoon now. Mihai's force had to be nearby, if they were going to attack at night. An army marching through the streets would attract attention, even if they waited until nightfall. Mihai was too clever for that, she thought. He would have brought his men in slowly, and hidden them somewhere. Vlad the Impaler had come a day in advance, and scouted out the sultan's army himself. It was unlikely that Mihai could disguise himself well enough to get into the palace, but perhaps one of hisâ
There!
It was Radu, down by the cathedral. It was a very old cathedral, with a monastery surrounding it, and the king had promised to build a larger church for the monks as soon as construction on the palace was finished.
Lou drifted down slowly, pulling herself together into a denser column, but hovering close to the roof in case someone looked up. She crept close so that she could hear Radu and waited for him to say something useful.
But Radu didn't say anything. He was standing across from a monk. The monk's black robes were so faded they were almost purple, and the curly hair hanging below his cylindrical hat was snarled. He held out a hand, and Radu handed him a purse. The monk tucked it into his robes, signed a cross over Radu, and left the monastery.
Lou waited, but nothing else happened. Radu kicked at the
pavement, shoved his hands in his pockets, and then went over to the church and peered through one of the windows. That was all. Lou could not figure out what he was doing, and then something else struck her: Where were the other monks? The devout coming to worship? Where were the sightseers, stopping to admire the centuries-old frescos within the church before they toured the palace? The monastery was empty, except for herself and Radu.
Oh, Radu! What have you done now?
Unable to wait any longer, with her Smoky body threatening to dissolve again, Lou wafted down and hovered in front of Radu. He looked at her glumly.
“Hello, Princess LouLou,” he said. “Are you spying for the king and queen?”
Lou did her best to pull herself into a human shape, and nodded. She might as well tell the truth; it was hardly a secret.
He took off his coat and held it out to her. “Do you want to change back and talk? The others won't be here for a few more minutes.”
Others?
Lou silently cursed with frustration. She wondered if she could talk to him in wolf form, but how could she get him to transform? She decided to try something else, and touched him on the cheek.
What others? Just Mihai, the Draculas, and the Florescus, or were there more?
He shook his head. “You have to change back, or I'll have to change, in order to have a conversation. You and Dacia left the estate before we could tell you more about our talents.”
There was no accusation in his voice, just simple statement of fact. And he obviously didn't know that she couldn't change back.
Now she shook her head, trying to make the motion look frantic, willing him to guess that something was wrong. She gestured around the bare courtyard, trying to ask what he was doing here, who was coming, wondering how much information he would give her.
“All right,” he said, shrugging back into the coat. “I suppose you saw me pay the priest?”
She nodded.
“All the monks have gone on a holy retreat, thanks to Mihai's generous donation,” Radu said, rolling his eyes. “Their cells are all empty.” He pointed to the wooden doors spaced evenly around the courtyard. “Do you understand?”
She nodded again. She understood very well. This was where they would conceal their force: in the church.
Radu half turned, listening. “I think they're coming,” he said, his voice hoarse. “Go, and tell Dacia and the others . . . quickly!”
But Lou didn't want to go, not just yet. Radu's face was deathly white, the dark circles under his eyes standing out against his pallor. Why didn't he leave? Even if he couldn't bring himself to help King Carol, why did he help Mihai? She held out a hand to him, trying to convey her concern and confusion. He looked at her with dull eyes, and she made a beckoning gesture, willing him to come with her, to change into a wolf and flee into the forest, anything but help Mihai in his evil scheme.
“I can't . . . don't you see?” His voice quavered and broke like
a boy's. “This is all I have. I can't go to New York and pretend it never happened. This is my home, my life. Perhaps that makes me a coward; but if so, then that is what I am, and I admit it freely.” He looked at the gate once more. “Go, please,” he said, buttoning his coat as though he were putting on armor.
Now Lou went, wondering if it was possible for her heart to break when her heart was nothing but Smoke. She understood more than Radu could know. There was comfort in familiarity, but there would be no peace for her in New York society, familiar as it was, not anymore. She was just as trapped, only her cage was prettier.
She began to glide up and over the monastery wall, when Radu ran a few steps forward and called out, “Mihai is at the Hotel Sinaia!”
“What are you shouting about?” Uncle Horia marched into the courtyard.
Lou hid herself by spreading thin and clinging to the roof tiles, straining with her whole body to listen to them.
“I couldn't remember the name of the hotel,” Radu said, his face turning red. He was a terrible liar. “The one where Prince Mihai is staying. Then it came to me, all of a sudden.”
“Why do you need to know?” His father cuffed him on the shoulder. “Your business is here, just keep your mind on that.”
“I've paid the priests,” Radu protested. “There's nothing left to do.”
“Then pick a cell and wait,” Uncle Horia said. “We've lost those girlsâI can't lose you, too!” There was unexpected emotion in his voice, but Lou couldn't decide what it was. Anger? Regret?
Radu started to turn away, then turned back. “But, Father, don't you think that means something? There's a Smoke after all these years, and she refuses to help Prince Mihai? Perhaps it is a signâ”
“I don't believe in signs,” Uncle Horia said roughly. “I don't believe in prophecies, either! I do believe that we're in a mess of trouble, and we'll be lucky to get out of it alive. Now wait for the others!”
Radu fled, and so did Lou.
She realized that Uncle Horia and Radu didn't know that Lady Ioana had killed the girls who were the Smoke. Perhaps Lady Ioana had only told Aunt Kate so that she could test Dacia and Lou? That cheered Lou: she hated to think Uncle Horia's soul was as black as Lady Ioana's.
Busy with these thoughts, she swooped right over the Hotel Sinaia before she noticed it, and had to flow backward to one of its chimneys. She poured down the chimney and hovered in a fireplace, feeling for voices.
In one room, a stout Hungarian man and his wife were arguing.
Two sisters from Targoviste were plotting to sneak away from their governess and see two young men they had met that morning on a walk.
Lady Ioana was ordering Aunt Kate to find Dacia and bring her back to the hotel.
Lou followed her grandmother's voice until she was coiled just inside the flu of the fireplace in Lady Ioana's room. Or perhaps it was Prince Mihai's room; she could taste his presence as well.
“She is our queen,” Aunt Kate said stiffly.
Lady Ioana made a surprisingly rude noise. “Come now, Katarina! You are not mindless animals, foraging in the woods! You fought with the girl, she won. Stop weeping in the corners and do what you were born to do.”
“Which is what?”
Lou was startled by the bitterness in Aunt Kate's voice.
“To help the Dracula family return to greatness,” Lady Ioana snapped. “If Dacia wants to be a true queen, she'll come with you. If she doesn'tâmake her come. This is her destiny!”
“Is it?” Aunt Kate said, half to herself. “I wonder. And, I do beg Your Highness's pardon, but do you need a wife to ascend the throne?”
“If you are reluctant to assist me, Miss Florescu,” Prince Mihai said, “I would rather you left. I cannot afford to have anyone involved that I cannot rely on.”
“You may rely on me,” Aunt Kate said, after a long pause.
“Then bring me your niece,” Prince Mihai said, as if it were the most reasonable request in the world. “I would rather Dacia, but the other one, the Smoke, would also serve.”
“The Smoke?” Lady Ioana's voice was sharp. “She is not the queen for you.”
Lou would have shaken her fist at the old woman if she'd had a fist. Of course Lady Ioana didn't want the Smoke, the natural leader of the Florescus, as queen!
“Very well, if it must be Dacia, get her for me!” Mihai smoothed his hair, and Lou saw that his hands were shaking and his eyes looked strange. Had he been drinking?