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The True Blood of Martyrs

Rachel Caine




  THE TRUE BLOOD OF MARTYRS

  An original short story by Rachel Caine

  The invitation to Jinx’s funeral came in the mail on Saturday before Halloween. It arrived in a gold-lined envelope the color of heavy cream, but the sheet of paper inside was black printed with silver ink.

  You are invited to join

  Mr. Ivan Jenks

  for a celebration of his death

  beginning at Midnight, October 31

  in this Year of Our Lord 1997

  and ending promptly at dawn

  All Saint’s Day.

  The address below was that of a very old graveyard, one so old it had long ago been abandoned by those who thought cemeteries should resemble suburban back yards. The Elysian was an overgrown tangle of leaning headstones, memory heavy as jasmine in the air.

  I thought in sheer disgust, oh, not again. I picked up the telephone and dialed his number, listened to the hollow rings. After three of them the receiver lifted with a click, and Jinx’s cool, faintly English voice said, "Helen, I’ve been expecting your call."

  "It’s not funny," I said. "I’m not coming."

  "It’s not meant to be funny, and of course you will. You always do, Helen. Don’t feel obliged to bring anything. I can’t take it with me."

  And he hung up, a gentle, definite disconnection that left me standing in the middle of my kitchen with the telephone in my hand. I should have been angry with him, or at the very least annoyed. I was afraid.

  I had known him for more than five hundred years.

  The blurring growl of the engine soothed my anger. I drove out to one of the freeways, a marvelous wide stretch of blacktop where I could fly in peace.

  Why? There was no answer to the question. The Jinx I knew was a creature of air and fire, full of impenetrable hungers. He was subject to bizarre fits of melancholia and spasms of drama, and his humor could only be called twisted.

  Few, if any of the others, understood that Jinx’s little funerals were not jokes.

  I left behind the glaring amusement-park brilliance of the city doing a smooth, purring 90 miles an hour. My mind emptied. The night closed around me, softened by the stars, and it seemed at this hour that I was indeed flying, through a space that held no other life.

  I closed my eyes and allowed my flesh to begin to mist. I went weightless. I heard the growl of an oncoming engine and kept my eyes closed, squeezed them shut until tears leaked from under the lids and whipped back cool on my cheeks, driven by the wind through the open window.

  A truck horn blared. I felt the hot wash of headlights and heard the indignant squeal of tires as the oncoming truck locked its brakes and swerved to avoid me.

  Perhaps I would hit it. My eyelids trembled, my hands spasmed on the hot softness of the steering wheel, but I held my eyes tight shut.

  I heard the trucker screaming curses as I floated away into the night, the smell of burning oil and rubber hot in my nose. I opened my eyes and saw an unbroken silent roadway ahead, the stark white stare of the moon, and I laughed.

  I laughed until it frightened me.

  I stopped at an all-night gas station. Spoiled child that I am, I long for the days of uniformed servants and smiling Texaco men wiping dust from my windshield. I bore the self-service pump in silence, presented my card to the teenaged clerk, and turned away to stare into the darkness. Moths fluttered like tattered leaves in the lights. I closed my eyes and listened to the whisper of their wings.

  "Ma’am?" The boy interrupted the music with his harsh Texas drawl. "Here y’go. Sign ri’ chere."

  He pushed the slip across the counter toward me. I signed it and looked up at the video camera that jutted its arrogant chin from the wall.

  It was a simple matter to erase it. They’d find nothing but black when they attempted to play it tomorrow, or the next day, when the county sheriffs finished their pitiful investigation and the boy was buried. I kept both copies of the gas receipt and put them in my purse.

  "Ma’am? Ah need th’ white copy – "

  "No you don’t, " I soothed him, reached across the counter and put two fingers precisely at the pulse on his neck. He froze, staring at me; he’d be thinking wild thoughts of pornographic fantasies, Penthouse Letters come to life. "You don’t need anything at all."

  I pulled him across the counter and bit. His soul flowed over my tongue, hot and red and tasting of the oil under his fingernails. His name was Clarence, and his brother had always called him Clare before his brother was hit by a train and his mother got so tired all the time, her fingers shaking as she sewed little pieces of needlepoint to sell and his friend Mary Ellen pregnant and crying on his shoulder asking him to marry her but he couldn’t he wouldn’t and Mary Ellen gone on a bus to California and no goodbyes, ever again.

  He faded out of me like a whisper. I swallowed the last of Clarence and let his flesh slip out of my hands. His chin hit the counter hard enough to crack bone but it didn’t matter and would never matter to Clarence again.

  The night of October 31 dawned cloudy, the air icy as it whipped around corners to surprise. Children avoided the houses of strangers. A brave few skipped and giggled in darkness, trailed by cloaks made of folded sheets and comet-sprinkles of glitter.

  I was determined that I wouldn’t pander to Jinx’s insanity this time. I would not be a witness. But as the hours slipped by, as the night grew quiet outside my door and hunger made me restless, I was seized by a need to see him. What if it was the last time? What if I failed him, after all these years?

  I reached the Elysium Cemetery less than an hour from sunrise, shading my car under a huge oak tree from the fitful moonlight. As I walked the little distance to the creaking iron gates – padlocked still – I heard the sounds of a party in progress.

  I misted through the bars with little thought, and shrugged off the inevitable discomfort as I joined the solid world again. I took the chalk-white, overgrown path under looming branches and past damp, empty-faced angels hovering over darkness. I hated cemeteries. How very like Jinx to find the one thing I could not abide.

  There were about ten gathered in a small clearing toward the back of the graveyard; they’d spread out blankets, like hungry picnickers at midday. I knew them all, of course; there were not so many of us that we were strangers. Charity McCollum gave me a quick glance and nod, no more greeting than that; we had never been close. Luther rose from where he sat at her side, came to me and took both hands to kiss. He was an old-fashioned gentleman, was Luther, impeccable in Regency dress and old world manners. I wondered where the devil he’d found the costume he wore tonight – fantastic silver and blue.

  There was blood smeared over his face and down the side of his coat. They had, indeed, been dining, though not productively – no mortals about. The more perverse among us – like Luther – fed upon other vampires merely for the entertainment value. It had the same value as a thirty mortal drinking seawater.

  "Helen, my dearest love, where have you been? It’s simply been ages." Luther’s forced cooing reminded me of bad melodramas put on in the prisons in France, where aristos like Luther had waited for the kiss of Madame la guillotine. "I wish you’d keep in touch. I never know what you’re doing."

  "I’ve been busy," I said, kissed his cold, marble-blue cheek and tasted the scent of his last kill rising like perfume from his skin. A boy, about twelve. If I concentrated, I knew that I’d be able to unroll that life like a carpet into the darkness. "Where is he?"

  "Jinx?" Luther made an elaborate gesture with one lace-frothed hand. "Over there. Preparing." He rolled his eyes, and I had to agree with him; this was worse than a joke, it was pointless. There was no death for us. No end.

  There never had been. Jinx
knew that better than anyone.

  I saw that the picnickers, in the fashion of vampires who grew bored, had begun to turn on each other. That was no doubt where the blood on Luther’s face came from. We danced this little dance, our kind, out of the lazy cruelty of boredom; death was a party game, no more or less intriguing than charades. There was even an air of seduction to it – it was the only way we had to connect, as predator and prey.

  One or two of those who’d come were young, far younger than I – they had the studied ennui of children who’d grown up knowing how a vampire should act. They were also far more solid than I, or any of the others; they were closer to mortality, their flesh heavy on them. One of them was frightened enough to tremble as Charity rose with ethereal grace and trailed ghostly fingers over her neck.

  I dismissed the spectacle of the youngster’s death, because someone was approaching out of the mists behind her.

  Jinx.

  He had come dressed for a funeral – a simple, elegant black suit, a white shirt, a tie. None of Luther’s overdone fancy dress, though Jinx would have looked more at home in it. There was something essentially antique about him that even Luther could never hope to attain.

  He was a small man, really, but he’d been born to a time when men did not grow so large. Slender, broader in the shoulders than was immediately apparent. His soft blonde hair feathered across his forehead a shade too long for neatness and too short to please current tastes.

  I had always loved the lazy elegance of his eyes. The sad humor.

  He came around the vampire-child and Charity, who were locked in a silent, desperate embrace of pain, and held out his hand to me. I took it, not knowing quite what to say; this was a different greeting from an old friend, almost formal.

  "What do you want most in the world, Helen?" he asked me. Unexpected question. I struggled for the proper tone of sarcasm in my reply.

  "Eternal peace at last? Do I get a prize?"

  He smiled. Sadness in his pretty eyes.

  "Perhaps you will," he said. "Come with me."

  We walked off from the party a bit, into a white whisper of fog. Jinx perched on the elaborate marble arm of a cross, and I leaned on the shoulder of a blind angel. He looked up at the fitful sky and shook his head.

  "It’s never quiet anymore," he said. "That’s what I miss most, I suppose. The quiet. When I was breathing you could lie in the fields and listen to the wind and be so alone in the world."

  He was talking about the constant, grinding whisper of life; even here, in this tangled garden of the dead, we could hear the bustle of all those mortals moving. Hearts pounding. So many of them now. So few of us.

  "There’s no point in dwelling on it. You’ll become like – " I didn’t have to finish, he knew who, or what, I referred to. We had no name for them, officially, but Jinx and I called them the Frozen. They were so old they were worn smooth by the currents of time. Over time, though their features did not change, they acquired an eerie sameness, like eroded statues, and they were so faint in moonlight we saw shadows through them, as if they were made of milky glass.

  They terrified all of us, because we knew they were our future.

  "I spoke to one," Jinx said. He looked down at the ground, poked an idle toe into the dirt of the grave. "They do remember words, some of them. He didn’t remember his name."

  The thought of going up to one of the Frozen and striking up a conversation was so ludicrous, so unsettling, that I laughed. He glanced up at me, eyebrows up, and resumed his excavation of the final resting place of Charles Wallace Debbs.

  "I’m sure it was a fascinating conversation," I said. "Once you get them started, I’m sure they just ramble on and on about the good old days. Jinx, for pity’s sake, the Frozen don’t talk. They stare. You’re delusional."

  "This one spoke." Jinx’s voice was so soft I had difficulty separating it from the wind. "He’s old, Helen, he knows things we’ve forgotten. He told me how to die."

  I had heard him say it before, more times than I could safely remember. I’d been told before I’d ever met him that Jinx had died by his own hand in mortal life; what a cruel joke, to be resurrected into this existence for eternity. How very discerning of God. As if in retaliation for that cosmic jest, death had been Jinx’s continuing passion ever since.

  He had, before this same appreciative audience, had himself drowned, burned, dismembered, and on one extremely memorable occasion served himself as a funeral entree. He had been buried with his head removed and the Host inserted where his heart had been cut away. He had been staked through the chest, in the grand old Hammer Films tradition.

  I did not think I could bear to watch it again, most especially to watch him rise again the next night, whole and untouched and tragically disappointed. And yet, with all of eternity stretching out in front of me, what choice did I have? One could only spend so much time with mortals before time began to drag like insistent hands, wearing you away, scouring you smooth. Within our demented ranks, we could pretend, for a time, to be alive yet – and pretend that a future among the Frozen did not loom ever closer.

  "So what is it this time?" I forced sarcasm into my tone; he would expect it from me. We’d ever been flint and stone. "You know, I haven’t seen a really good Crucifixion in a long time. You’d make such a lovely suffering Christ. Or how about acid? Very entertaining. And I’m sure you haven’t tried drawing and quartering in a few hundred years, though I’m not sure where we’d get the horses – "

  "I’m serious," he said. I shook my head and sighed.

  "You always are, with me. You know they think you’re a clown, don’t you? All of them? They come here to laugh at you." And I can’t bear that, I wanted to tell him, but that was a confession that went too deep. Jinx did not encourage that kind of intimacy, and for that matter, neither did I.

  Jinx smiled that charming, slightly odd smile of his, eyes wickedly amused. "They come here because there’s nothing else to do but think about eternity. And kill. I don’t mind it that they laugh; at least they still can. You don’t laugh enough, Helen."

  "Ha," I said, "ha. I have nothing to laugh about, now, do I?"

  Jinx didn’t reply. His eyes gestured behind me. I turned to see – nothing. Trees shifting uneasily in the wind. Dead leaves fluttering. Marble angels staring.

  Not an angel.

  A Frozen.

  He was naked, the palest tinge of blue in the white of his skin, and there was no more sense of life from him than from the marble I leaned against. I shivered as I moved closer to Jinx. I hadn’t sensed even a hint of the Frozen’s approach.

  There was no smell on him, either. No sense of a kill, either recent or fading. It was as if he had never lived at all.

  "Want to laugh now?" Jinx asked. I shushed him with chilled fingers on his arm.

  "What does he want?"

  Jinx shrugged in reply. He seemed perfectly at ease. After what felt like a cobwebbed eternity, the Frozen’s head might have moved a fraction. Or not. I never saw his eyes move, but by some slow process he began to look at me. It was the most uncomfortable stare I had ever endured, like the unblinking attention of a god.

  He wasn’t the only one who’d come. No sense of their arrival, no sound, but there were more Frozen in the shadows. One was a woman, her body thinly covered by a torn gauzy robe, her tangled hair fluttering in the wind. I almost recognized her, and was afraid to follow that train of thought. It was so hard to focus on their faces, eroded into sameness by time.

  Jinx, looking on this chilling and remarkable sight, checked his wristwatch and said, "We still have a little while. I wonder if – "

  He hesitated. Jinx, who never hesitated. The strangeness of it drew me even from my unnerved study of the Frozen.

  He couldn’t meet my eyes. "I wonder if you’d do me the honor of a dance?"

  "A dance?" I blurted. "Here? Now?"

  "We never did dance before," he said, and still without meeting my eyes, he pushed himself to his feet and he
ld out his hand to me. "Please."

  No music. No room to dance, and why in the hell did he think I’d want to dance at a moment like this? I was exasperated and off balance, and could think of nothing in the world I wanted less to do.

  Until he raised his eyes and looked at me.

  I was all elbows and angles, unused to this kind of closeness; I felt it in Jinx too, a different stiffness of his body where it touched mine. His hands around my waist held me at a precise, almost religious distance. I rested my arms awkwardly on his shoulders as we began to slowly move, no rhythm at all, both painfully aware of the ridiculous truth.

  Jinx began to move more confidently, drawing me with him; his hands relaxed on me and pulled me just a shade closer. I didn’t remember the last time I’d danced – surely never danced like this – but all the same he led me into a slow, delicate waltz around tombstones. Around us the world turned like an unwinding clock, the faces of the Frozen reflecting moonlight and emptiness. I closed my eyes to them and, without any conscious thought, rested my head on Jinx’s shoulder.