Read The Watchtower Online

Authors: Lee Carroll

Tags: #Women Jewelers - New York (State) - New York, #Magic, #Vampires, #Women Jewelers, #Fantasy Fiction, #Horror, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #New York, #General, #New York (State), #Good and Evil

The Watchtower (37 page)

BOOK: The Watchtower
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He could be woken, he told me, but I should only do so in an emergency since he would need all his resources when we reached Pointe du Raz. Since being bored out of my mind in a dark box with a nearly dead man for twelve hours wasn't an emergency (I tried to read the Brittany guidebook or sketch in my notebook, which were in my backpack, but it was too dark), I let him sleep, but the moment the coach stopped and I smelled ocean, I sprang from its confines as if escaping my own tomb ...

... and nearly killed myself by falling over a cliff into the sea. The coach was stopped on a narrow track clinging to the side of a rock cliff.

"Why did you stop here?" I asked in my fractured, modern-day French.

The driver said something completely incomprehensible and jabbed a finger ahead of us. Peering around the front of the coach, I saw what the problem was. A large chunk of the road ahead had crumbled into the sea. Its remnant wasn't wide enough for the carriage to pass. We'd have to continue on foot--I could see our tower destination below the road, not far off--only Will couldn't do that until the sun had set.

Shading my eyes, I looked out to sea where a fiery orange sun hung just above an island a few miles offshore. It would set in a half hour or so. We'd just have to wait.

I conveyed this to the surly driver in a combination of hand signs and fractured French that made him sniff with the same disdain I'd encountered in a dozen waiters in Paris. Some things never change, I thought, sitting down on a rock to watch the sun set. As it descended toward the island, it seemed to settle for a moment at the top of a tower that stood at its center. The sight reminded me of something ... after a moment I realized what. The ring Will wore--the one he had taken from Marguerite--was engraved with a tower topped by an eye surrounded by rays. I had learned last year that it was the symbol of the Watchtower. Was it a coincidence that the tower on the island looked so much like it?

I took my Brittany guidebook out of my backpack and looked up the Pointe du Raz. The island, I saw right away, was the Ile de Sein, which local legend claimed was the last remnant of the mythic island of Ys.

Monsieur Lutin had told me that the
fees de la mer
--the boat people--came from Ys. Could the tower on the Ile de Sein be the original Watchtower?

What happened next suggested to me that it was.

The sun dropped below the peak of the tower, filling its top chamber with orange light. A ray of light, like a flaming arrow, shot out of the tower and headed toward the mainland where I stood--almost directly at me, but not quite. The beam of light reached the next promontory to the north, where another tower stood, and turned the glass on top of that tower a fiery red, so bright I had to close my eyes against the glare.

Behind my closed eyes I still saw the island tower, only the red light in my vision came from a fire burning from its battlements. Out of the fire shot a blazing arrow. I tracked its passage across the sea, across an impossible distance, itogress reflected in the black ocean, until it landed in the tower at Pointe du Raz. Immediately a fire burst into flame from the top of the second tower. Seconds later an arrow was shot from that tower, arcing south toward another promontory. Suddenly I was watching the scene from far above, my vision granting me a bird's-eye view of the whole peninsula, and I could see the arrow reach a third tower and set ablaze there a third bonfire. I watched as the entire southern coast of Brittany was dotted with blazing signal fires, and then--as my view expanded--I watched the line of fires extend across France, stretching toward Paris. This, I understood, was an ancient alarm system created by the sisterhood of the Watchtower to warn humanity of some coming danger. But what was the danger? What was coming?

I opened my eyes, alert to the threat, but the scene in front of me was utterly peaceful. The ocean had gone eerily still. The last streaks of red were fading into the calm water. A lone figure below on the beach waded through the crimson-flecked waves scooping up handfuls of water like a playful child.

"What an idiot," a voice behind me pronounced.

I turned and found Will, his face absorbing the last purple vestige of dusk. He was looking down at the figure on the beach with utter disdain. I looked from figure to figure and realized they were the same man.

"I thought that the red light on the water was a sign of my ultimate ascension to immortality. Little did I know what evil was about to come across on that bloody, watery path."

"The vampire? It came across the sea?"

Will nodded, lifting his eyes from his past self on the beach, who now left the water and began walking toward the tower.

"Marduk." He pronounced the name in a hoarse whisper that startled me. I'd never seen Will look so afraid of anything before. "A bloodsucking demon from the maws of hell. He terrorized Europe during the Dark Ages, leaving a trail of devastation wherever he went. Eventually the Watchtowers captured him and trapped him beneath their strongest tower--the tower of the Ile de Sein. He could only be summoned with the box and the Watchtower's ring, which I foolishly gave to Dee."

Will turned and watched his past self enter the tower. "I hesitated at the last minute. I almost didn't give them to him. If I followed him up into that tower now, I could stop him ... me ... and I would never become
this
."

"But then you and I would never have met," I said.

He wrenched his eyes away from the tower and looked at me with a bittersweet tenderness. "Would you regret that so very much, Garet? Have I brought you anything but grief and danger since we met?"

"You saved my life from the manticore," I said, shuddering at the memory of the stone statue that Dee had brought to life. "And later you saved me from Oberon's spell of paralysis."

"But if Dee had never gotten possession of the box, he would never have needed you to open it in 2008. You would never have been dragged io this world."

"If we start messing around with the past, who knows what effect our actions might have. I might never have been born."

Will touched my face and sighed. "You're right. We can't risk making any changes. It's just ... I wish I could erase the evil I've done over the last four hundred years. I wish I could come to you cleansed of my sins. As innocent as that man who's climbing the stairs to the top of the tower right now."

"The one you just called an idiot?" I asked, moving closer to him. He wrapped his arms around me and I nestled against his chest. He felt as cold as marble. He hadn't fed since last night in Maeve's tomb, and he'd need his strength to battle the vampire Dee was summoning.

Just then we heard snores from the direction of the seated driver and glanced up at him, to see that he seemed to have fallen sound asleep. We smiled at each other, and then I curled my hand around the back of Will's neck and brought his lips down to mine. He kissed me--but guardedly. His whole body was rigid. When I tried to guide his lips to my neck, he pulled back.

"No, Garet, it's too soon after I fed from you last. You'll need your strength, too ... and besides ... we're out of time. Dee has set the box in the window. Look."

Will turned me around by the shoulders and pointed me toward the tower. At first I saw nothing but its dark, monolithic shape rising above us. All light had gone out of the sky, but then the moon appeared over the top of the tower, spilling a wash of silver that glinted at the highest window. A ray of silver light burst forth from the window and streaked across the sky toward the Ile de Sein. Far off at sea an answering beacon flared, a mirror image of the fiery arrow I'd seen in my vision, only this signal was deathly cold. The flash of light was followed by a long, low moan, like a foghorn ... or some ancient leviathan bellowing from the deep.

"The signal from the box has awoken him. He's coming."

I stared at the sky, expecting a winged shape, but saw nothing except inky storm clouds massing in the west beyond the lit tower on the Ile de Sein. To the east the sky was clear. The moon had now risen high enough to light a silver path across the sea. The ocean, calm a few moments ago, churned. The swath illuminated by the moonlight looked like river rapids.

Then I realized that it was only this part of the ocean that was disturbed. Something was moving through the water. Something either very big or very strong. Or both.

"He's here." Will pulled me away from the edge of the cliff and toward the coach. "It's better if you wait inside the coach. I don't want you anywhere near that
thing.
"

But my eyes were glued to the churning surf. Surely nothing in reality could be worse than what my imagination was conjuring from beneath those waves.

I was wrong.

The thing that crawled out of the surf was far worse than anything I could have imagined. The moonlight caught its thousand scales, edging them with razors. When it stood up on webbed feet, seaweed streamed from its limbs like a torn funeral shroud. Only when it began its lumbering slither across the beach did I see that the streamers of seaweed were actually long eels that sprouted from its head. Sharp fangs curled out of its open mouth.

"That creature attacked you and made you a vampire?" I asked as Will pushed me into the coach.

"You thought all vampires looked like the ones in movies?" Will asked, his face set and grim. "That's the monster that spawned me. It lay beneath the ocean for a thousand years, feeding off the creatures of the deep, its teeth and appetite growing. As he fed from me, he started to look more human--and God knows if I hadn't killed him, he might have grown human-looking enough to pass among humans again. The thought of drinking that creature's blood..." A look of revulsion passed across Will's face. "I don't want you to see me do it," he said, looking into my eyes. "Promise me you'll stay here."

"But what if you need help--"

He barked a short, mirthless laugh. "With
that
thing? Please, Garet, just promise me to stay here."

"Okay, if you promise not to take any unnecessary chances. I want you back."

He looked at me as if he wasn't quite sure he believed me, but then he gave my hand a sharp squeeze. "That's what we both want." Then he disappeared into the night.

* * *

Will had told me to stay in the coach, but he hadn't told me not to watch out the window. When I drew back the curtains, I could make out Will's figure on the edge of the cliff, his face white in the moonlight and his eyes riveted to the tower window. I couldn't see the tower, but I didn't have to. I could read the horror going on in there from the expression on Will's face. How badly he must have wanted to stop it! That was himself--his younger, more innocent self--up there, making the biggest mistake of his life. Given the chance, who wouldn't take back his worst mistake?

A cry of pain rent the night and I guessed that hideous creature had attacked young Will. I saw my Will take a step forward to the edge of the cliff, his arms tensed against the wind, poised to leap up to the tower. But then he let his arms fall. A long, despairing moan from the tower rode the wind, a cry so anguished the gulls in their cliff aeries tried to drown it out. Even the waves on the beach seemed to crash in answer to that cry, the ocean coiling back in outrage at the young man's pain. My Will bowed his head. His face, white a moment ago, was black with tears of blood.

He dashed them away angrily and tensed again. Another cry came from the tower, this one infuriated. This was young Will attacking the creature who had made him. Then a bellow like the one that had come from the sea before ... cut short as Will and Marduk appeared at the window struggling, Will's hands wrapped around Marduk's throat ...

Then
my
Will was gone. One moment he was poised on the edge of the cliff, the next moment he had vanished. Just as quickly I was out of the coach, running down the footpath to the beach. I'd listened helplessly to young Will cry out in pain; I couldn't sit by while
my
Will battled this demon.

I reached the beach just as Marduk hit the rocks beneath the tower. The impact shook the ground so hard I stumbled on the sand. When I got up, my Will was standing over the beast. I ran to him, unable to stop myself. I had to see if the creature was really dead. I reached Will and looked at where he was staring.

For a moment I thought there had been some awful mistake. That Marduk had won the battle and thrown young Will to the ground where he lay now broken on the rocks, instead of the reverse. Somehow, some little thing Will and I had done had changed the course of events, and
this
time the creature had destroyed young Will. Any moment now
my
Will would vanish into the vortex of time, dissolved into grains no more substantial than the sands beneath our feet. And what would happen to me? Where would I be if I'd never met Will Hughes?

But after a moment when neither of us vanished into the vortex of time, Will spoke. "He was stealing my face. Look..."

I glanced down and saw that although the broken figure below us had Will's face, he still had the webbed fingers and reptilian skin of Marduk. Will laughed. "I thought he was stealing my beauty.
That's
what finally made me angry enough to fight back. That's how vain I was. But he wasn't just stealing my
looks,
he was stealing my
identity
.
See?
"

Will knelt beside the creature and lifted a limp webbed hand. Patches of human skin had grown over the scales. One of the fingers was beginning to detach from the webbing. On it was a ring. The silver ring with the swan insignia, identical to the one I was wearing.

"I wasn't even wearing this ring in 1602, but somehow it knew the ring was part of who I was. What kind of demon is it that can suck a man's essence out along with his blood?"

I shivered. "I don't know, but I know it's a good thing it's dead. Look, it's beginning to decay." I pointed to a webbed foot. Scales were flaking off and blowing away in the wind. "We don't have much time. You have to..."

I couldn't even say it. The thought of drinking from that ...
thing
turned my stomach. What if Morgane had been lying? What if drinking from Marduk didn't make Will human, but made him like
Marduk
? I reached for Will to stop him, but he had already bared his fangs and bent his head to Marduk's neck. An instant before Will's teeth sank into the creature's neck, Marduk's eyes opened.

I screamed.

But it was too late. Marduk's fangs sank into Will's neck instead, his half-human, half-webbed fingers clamped over Will's skull. Will flailed, unable to free himself. I kicked the creature but it was like kick slimy concrete wall. I looked around desperately for a weapon, but nothing was on the beach but flimsy driftwood and nothing on my person but a flouncy dress ...

... pinned with Marguerite's brooch. I tore it off. The pin was long and sharp, but it would feel like a mosquito bite to Marduk. But maybe if I stuck it someplace vulnerable ...

I gripped the brooch in my right hand with the pin sticking out between my index and middle fingers, the way my mother had taught me do with my house keys when I was walking home alone on city streets, and drove it into Marduk's right eye.

He loosened his bite on Will's neck enough to scream, giving Will just enough leverage to get out of his grip and bash his hand hard up against his nose. Cartilage splintered like a lobster's claw in a nutcracker. Will grabbed the creature's shoulders and slammed its head back against the rock. Another chitinous crack--but the creature still had its claws in Will. It used them to flip Will over his own head. Will's body hit the stone base of the tower and slid down limply to the ground.

I tore my eyes off Will and looked back at the creature. He was standing, listing to one side on one webbed flipper and one human foot. Human flesh rippled over reptilian scales like Saran wrap stretched over garbage. His face was a wreckage of scale and flesh out of which Will's eyes--one whole, one bloody--stared at me. A human mouth stretched over razor-sharp fangs. It was smiling.

"Well met, Watchtower," it rasped. "I'd stay to get better acquainted, but I'm not at my
best
. I promise, though, that we'll meet again."

He bowed stiffly at the waist, tattered seaweed and eelskin dangling from his ragged hair, then he half limped, half slithered toward the north side of the tower, where he was pulled into a waiting coach by someone inside. Lamplight flared at the coach window, revealing a coat of arms painted on the door--three rearing wolves across the top and two on the bottom flanking diagonal lines with crosses--and in the window, a pair of yellow eyes. I recognized the coat of arms and the eyes as belonging to John Dee, but that wasn't all I recognized. A third man was in a friar's robe, his hood pushed back to reveal a face lit up by the lamplight. Oddly enough he was much older than when I had last seen him, but I still recognized Roger Elden from the Hotel des Grandes Ecoles.

BOOK: The Watchtower
4.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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