Chapter 17
There was a powerful taste of cloves in my
mouth, and I’d been mummified in my own duvet. When I stirred in my
wrappings, the bed’s old springs gave slightly.
“Shh.” Matthew’s lips were at my ear, and his body
formed a shell against my back. We lay there like spoons in a
drawer, tight against each other.
“What time is it?” My voice was hoarse.
Matthew pulled away slightly and looked at his
watch. “It’s after one.”
“How long have I been asleep?”
“Since around six last night.”
Last night.
My mind shattered into words and images: the
alchemical manuscript, Peter Knox’s threat, my fingers turning blue
with electricity, the photograph of my parents, my mother’s hand
frozen in a never-ending reach.
“You gave me drugs.” I pushed against the duvet,
trying to work my hands free. “I don’t like taking drugs,
Matthew.”
“Next time you go into shock, I’ll let you suffer
needlessly.” He gave a single twitch to the bed covering that was
more effective than all my previous wrestling with it.
Matthew’s sharp tone shook the shards of memory,
and new images rose to the surface. Gillian Chamberlain’s twisted
face warned me about keeping secrets, and the piece of paper
commanded me to remember. For a few moments, I was seven again,
trying to understand how my bright, vital parents could be gone
from my life.
In my rooms I reached toward Matthew, while in my
mind’s eye my mother’s hand reached for my father across a
chalk-inscribed circle. The lingering childhood desolation of their
death collided with a new, adult empathy for my mother’s desperate
attempt to touch my father. Abruptly pulling from Matthew’s arms, I
lifted my knees to my chest in a tight, protective ball.
Matthew wanted to help—I could see that—but he was
unsure of me, and the shadow of my own conflicted emotions fell
over his face.
Knox’s voice sounded again in my mind, full of
poison. Remember who you are.
“Remember?” the note asked.
Without warning, I turned back toward the vampire,
closing the distance between me and him in a rush. My parents were
gone, but Matthew was here. Tucking my head under his chin, I
listened for several minutes for the next pump of blood through his
system. The leisurely rhythms of his vampire heart soon put me to
sleep.
My own heart was pounding when I awoke again in the
dark, kicking at the loosened duvet and swimming to a seated
position. Behind me, Matthew turned on the lamp, its shade still
angled away from the bed.
“What is it?” he asked.
“The magic found me. The witches did, too. I’ll be
killed for my magic, like my parents were killed.” The words rushed
from my mouth, panic speeding their passage, and I stumbled to my
feet.
“No.” Matthew rose and stood between me and the
door. “We’re going to face this, Diana, whatever it is. Otherwise
you’ll never stop running.”
Part of me knew that what he said was true. The
rest wanted to flee into the darkness. But how could I, with a
vampire standing in the way?
The air began to stir around me as if trying to
drive off the feeling of being trapped. Chilly wisps edged up the
legs of my trousers. The air crept up my body, lifting the hair
around my face in a gentle breeze. Matthew swore and stepped toward
me, his arm outstretched. The breeze increased into gusts of wind
that ruffled the bedclothes and the curtains.
“It’s all right.” His voice was pitched
deliberately to be heard above the whirlwind and to calm me at the
same time.
But it wasn’t enough.
The force of the wind kept rising, and with it my
arms rose, too, shaping the air into a column that enclosed me as
protectively as the duvet. On the other side of the disturbance,
Matthew stood, one hand still extended, eyes fixed on mine. When I
opened my mouth to warn him to stay away, nothing came out but
frigid air.
“It’s all right,” he said again, not breaking his
gaze. “I won’t move.”
I hadn’t realized that was the problem until he
said the words.
“I promise,” he said firmly.
The wind faltered. The cyclone surrounding me
became a whirlwind, then a breeze, then disappeared entirely. I
gasped and dropped to my knees.
“What is happening to me?” Every day I ran and
rowed and did yoga, and my body did what I told it to. Now it was
doing unimaginable things. I looked down to make sure my hands
weren’t sparkling with electricity and my feet weren’t still being
buffeted by winds.
“That was a witchwind,” Matthew explained, not
moving. “Do you know what that is?”
I’d heard of a witch in Albany who could summon
storms, but no one had ever called it a “witchwind.”
“Not really,” I confessed, still sneaking glances
at my hands and feet.
“Some witches have inherited the ability to control
the element of air. You’re one of them,” he said.
“That wasn’t control.”
“It was your first time.” Matthew was
matter-of-fact. He gestured around the small bedroom: the intact
curtains and sheets, all the clothing strewn on the chest of
drawers and floor exactly where they’d been left that morning.
“We’re both still standing, and the room doesn’t look like a
tornado went through it. That’s control—for now.”
“But I didn’t ask for it. Do these things just
happen to witches—electrical fires and winds they didn’t summon?” I
pushed the hair out of my eyes and swayed, exhausted. Too much had
happened in the past twenty-four hours. Matthew’s body inclined
toward me as if to catch me should I fall.
“Witchwinds and blue fingers are rare these days.
There’s magic inside you, Diana, and it wants to get out, whether
you ask for it or not.”
“I felt trapped.”
“I shouldn’t have cornered you last night.” Matthew
looked ashamed. “Sometimes I don’t know what to do with you. You’re
like a perpetual-motion machine. All I wanted was for you to stand
still for a moment and listen.”
It must be even harder to cope with my incessant
need to move if you were a vampire who seldom needed to breathe.
Once again the space between Matthew and me was suddenly too large.
I started to rise.
“Am I forgiven?” he asked sincerely. I nodded. “May
I?” he asked, gesturing at his feet. I nodded again.
He took three fast steps in the time it took me to
stand up. My body pitched into him just as it had in the Bodleian
the first night I saw him, standing aristocratic and serene in Duke
Humfrey’s Reading Room. This time, however, I didn’t pull away so
quickly. Instead I rested against him willingly, his skin
soothingly cool rather than frightening and cold.
We stood silent for a few moments, holding each
other. My heart quieted, and his arms remained loose, although his
shuddering breath suggested that this was not easy.
“I’m sorry, too.” My body softened into him, his
sweater scratchy on my cheek. “I’ll try to keep my energy under
control.”
“There’s nothing to be sorry about. And you
shouldn’t try so hard to be something you’re not. Would you drink
tea if I made you some?” he asked, his lips moving against the top
of my head.
Outside, the night was unalleviated by any hint of
sunrise. “What time is it now?”
Matthew’s hand swiveled between my shoulder blades
so that he could see the face of his watch. “Just after
three.”
I groaned. “I’m so tired, but tea sounds
wonderful.”
“I’ll make it, then.” He gently loosened my arms
from around his waist. “Be right back.”
Not wanting to let him out of my sight, I drifted
along. He rummaged through the tins and bags of available
teas.
“I told you I liked tea,” I said apologetically as
he found yet another brown bag in the cupboard, tucked behind a
coffee press I seldom used.
“Do you have a preference?” He gestured at the
crowded shelf.
“The one in the black bag with the gold label,
please.” Green tea seemed the most soothing option.
He busied himself with the kettle and pot. He
poured hot water over the fragrant leaves and thrust a chipped old
mug in my direction once it was ready. The aromas of green tea,
vanilla, and citrus were so very different from Matthew, but
comforting nevertheless.
He made himself a mug, too, his nostrils flaring in
appreciation. “That actually doesn’t smell too bad,” he
acknowledged, taking a small sip. It was the only time I’d seen him
drink anything other than wine.
“Where shall we sit?” I asked, cradling the warm
mug in my hands.
Matthew inclined his head toward the living room.
“In there. We need to talk.”
He sat in one corner of the comfortable old sofa,
and I arranged myself opposite. The steam from the tea rose around
my face, a gentle reminder of the witchwind.
“I need to understand why Knox thinks you’ve broken
the spell on Ashmole 782,” Matthew said when we were settled.
I replayed the conversation in the warden’s rooms.
“He said that spells become volatile around the anniversaries of
their casting. Other witches—ones who know witchcraft—have tried to
break it, and they’ve failed. He figured I was just in the right
place at the right time.”
“A talented witch bound Ashmole 782, and I suspect
this spell is nearly impossible to break. No one who’s tried to get
the manuscript before met its conditions, no matter how much
witchcraft they knew or what time of year they tried.” He stared
into the depths of his tea. “You did. The question is how, and
why.”
“The idea that I could fulfill the conditions of a
spell cast before I was born is harder to believe than that it was
just an anniversary aberration. And if I fulfilled the conditions
once, why not again?” Matthew opened his mouth, and I shook my
head. “No, it’s not because of you.”
“Knox knows witchcraft, and spells are complicated.
I suppose it’s possible that time pulls them out of shape every now
and again.” He looked unconvinced.
“I wish I could see the pattern in all this.” My
white table rose into view, with pieces of the puzzle laid on it.
Though I moved a few pieces around—Knox, the manuscript, my
parents—they refused to form an image. Matthew’s voice broke
through my reveries.
“Diana?”
“Hmm?”
“What are you doing?”
“Nothing,” I said, too quickly.
“You’re using magic,” he said, putting his tea
down. “I can smell it. See it, too. You’re shimmering.”
“It’s what I do when I can’t solve a puzzle—like
now.” My head was bowed to hide how difficult it was to talk about
this. “I see a white table and imagine all the different pieces.
They have shapes and colors, and they move around until they form a
pattern. When the pattern forms, they stop moving to show I’m on
the right track.”
Matthew waited a long time before he responded.
“How often do you play this game?”
“All the time,” I said reluctantly. “While you were
in Scotland, I realized that it was yet more magic, like knowing
who’s looking at me without turning my head.”
“There is a pattern, you know,” he said. “You use
your magic when you’re not thinking.”
“What do you mean?” The puzzle pieces started
dancing on the white table.
“When you’re moving, you don’t think—not with the
rational part of your mind, at least. You’re somewhere else
entirely when you row, or run, or do yoga. Without your mind
keeping your gifts in check, out they come.”
“But I was thinking before,” I said, “and the
witchwind came anyway.”
“Ah, but then you were feeling a powerful emotion,”
he explained, leaning forward and resting his elbows on his knees.
“That always keeps the intellect at bay. It’s the same thing that
happened when your fingers turned blue with Miriam and then with
me. This white table of yours is an exception to the general
rule.”
“Moods and movement are enough to trigger these
forces? Who would want to be a witch if something so simple can
make all hell break loose?”
“A great many people, I would imagine.” Matthew
glanced away. “I want to ask you to do something for me,” he said.
The sofa creaked as he faced me once more. “And I want you to think
about it before you answer. Will you do that?”
“Of course.” I nodded.
“I want to take you home.”
“I’m not going back to America.” It had taken me
five seconds to do exactly what he’d asked me not to.
Matthew shook his head. “Not your home. My home.
You need to get out of Oxford.”
“I already told you I’d go to Woodstock.”
“The Old Lodge is my house, Diana,” Matthew
explained patiently. “I want to take you to my home—to
France.”
“France?” I pushed the hair out of my face to get a
clearer view of him.
“The witches are intent on getting Ashmole 782 and
keeping it from the other creatures. Their theory that you broke
the spell and the prominence of your family are all that’s kept
them at arm’s length. When Knox and the others find out that you
used no witchcraft to obtain the manuscript—that the spell was set
to open for you—they’ll want to know how and why.”
My eyes closed against the sudden, sharp image of
my father and mother. “And they won’t ask nicely.”
“Probably not.” Matthew took a deep breath, and the
vein in his forehead throbbed. “I saw the photo, Diana. I want you
away from Peter Knox and the library. I want you under my
roof for a while.”
“Gillian said it was witches.” When my eyes met
his, I was struck by how tiny the pupils were. Usually they were
black and enormous, but something was different about Matthew
tonight. His skin was less ghostly, and there was a touch more
color in his normally pale lips. “Was she right?”
“I can’t know for sure, Diana. The Nigerian Hausa
believe that the source of a witch’s power is contained in stones
in the stomach. Someone went looking for them in your father,” he
said regretfully. “Another witch is the most likely
scenario.”
There was a soft click, and the light on the
answering machine began to blink. I groaned.
“That’s the fifth time your aunts have called,”
Matthew observed.
No matter how low the volume, the vampire was going
to be able to hear the message. I walked to the table near him and
picked up the receiver.
“I’m here, I’m here,” I began, talking over my
aunt’s agitated voice.
“We thought you were dead,” Sarah said. The
realization that she and I were the last remaining Bishops struck
me forcefully. I could picture her sitting in the kitchen, phone to
her ear and hair wild around her face. She was getting older, and
despite her feistiness, the fact that I was far away and in danger
had rocked her.
“I’m not dead. I’m in my rooms, and Matthew is with
me.” I smiled at him weakly. He didn’t smile back.
“What’s going on?” Em asked from another extension.
After my parents died, Em’s hair had turned silver in the space of
a few months. At the time she was still a young woman—not yet
thirty—but Em had always seemed more fragile after that, as if she
might blow away in the next puff of wind. Like my aunt, she was
clearly upset at what her sixth sense told her was happening in
Oxford.
“I tried to recall the manuscript, that’s all,” I
said lightly, making an effort not to worry them further. Matthew
stared at me disapprovingly, and I turned away. It didn’t help. His
glacial eyes bored into my shoulder instead. “But this time it
didn’t come up from the stacks.”
“You think we’re calling because of that
book?” demanded Sarah.
Long, cold fingers grasped the phone and drew it
away from my ear.
“Ms. Bishop, this is Matthew Clairmont,” he said
crisply. When I reached to take the receiver from him, Matthew
gripped my wrist and shook his head, once, in warning. “Diana’s
been threatened. By other witches. One of them is Peter
Knox.”
I didn’t need to be a vampire to hear the outburst
on the other end of the line. He dropped my wrist and handed me the
phone.
“Peter Knox!” Sarah cried. Matthew’s eyes closed as
if the sound hurt his eardrums. “How long has he been hanging
around?”
“Since the beginning,” I said, my voice wavering.
“He was the brown wizard who tried to push his way into my
head.”
“You didn’t let him get very far, did you?” Sarah
sounded frightened.
“I did what I could, Sarah. I don’t exactly know
what I’m doing, magic-wise.”
Em intervened. “Honey, a lot of us have problems
with Peter Knox. More important, your father didn’t trust him—not
at all.”
“My father?” The floor shifted under my
feet, and Matthew’s arm circled my waist, keeping me steady. I
wiped at my eyes but couldn’t remove the sight of my father’s
misshapen head and gashed torso.
“Diana, what else happened?” Sarah said softly.
“Peter Knox should scare the socks off you, but there’s more to it
than that.”
My free hand clutched at Matthew’s arm. “Somebody
sent me a picture of Mom and Dad.”
The silence stretched on the other end of the line.
“Oh, Diana,” Em murmured.
“That picture?” Sarah asked grimly.
“Yes,” I whispered.
Sarah swore. “Put him back on the phone.”
“He can hear you perfectly from where he’s
standing,” I remarked. “Besides, anything you have to say to him
you can say to me, too.”
Matthew’s hand moved from my waist to the small of
my back. He began to rub it with the heel of his hand, pressing
into the rigid muscles until they started to relax.
“Both of you listen to me, then. Get far, far away
from Peter Knox. And that vampire had better see that you do, or
I’m holding him responsible. Stephen Proctor was the most easygoing
man alive. It took a lot to make him dislike someone—and he
detested that wizard. Diana, you will come home
immediately.”
“I will not, Sarah! I’m going to France with
Matthew.” Sarah’s far less attractive option had just convinced
me.
There was silence.
“France?” Em said faintly.
Matthew held out his hand.
“Matthew would like to speak to you.” I handed him
the phone before Sarah could protest.
“Ms. Bishop? Do you have caller ID?”
I snorted. The brown phone hanging on the kitchen
wall in Madison had a rotary dial and a cord a mile long so that
Sarah could wander around while she talked. It took forever to
simply dial a local number. Caller ID? Not likely.
“No? Take down these numbers, then.” Matthew slowly
doled out the number to his mobile and another that presumably
belonged to the house, along with detailed instructions on
international dialing codes. “Call at any time.”
Sarah then said something pointed, based on
Matthew’s startled expression.
“I’ll make sure she’s safe.” He handed me the
phone.
“I’m getting off now. I love you both. Don’t
worry.”
“Stop telling us not to worry,” Sarah scolded.
“You’re our niece. We’re good and worried, Diana, and likely to
stay that way.”
I sighed. “What can I do to convince you that I’m
all right?”
“Pick up the phone more often, for starters,” she
said grimly.
When we’d said our good-byes, I stood next to
Matthew, unwilling to meet his eyes. “All this is my fault, just
like Sarah said. I’ve been behaving like a clueless human.”
He turned away and walked to the end of the sofa,
as far from me as he could get in the small room, and sank into the
cushions. “This bargain you made about magic and its place in your
life—you made it when you were a lonely, frightened child. Now,
every time you take a step, it’s as though your future hinges on
whether you manage to put your foot down in the right place.”
Matthew looked startled when I sat next to him and
silently took his hands in mine, resisting the urge to tell him it
was going to be all right.
“In France maybe you can just be for a few
days—not trying, not worrying about making a mistake,” he
continued. “Maybe you could rest—although I’ve never seen you stop
moving long enough. You even move in your sleep, you know.”
“I don’t have time to rest, Matthew.” I was already
having second thoughts about leaving Oxford. “The alchemy
conference is less than six weeks away. They’re expecting me to
deliver the opening lecture. I’ve barely started it, and without
access to the Bodleian there’s no chance of finishing it in
time.”
Matthew’s eyes narrowed speculatively. “Your paper
is on alchemical illustrations, I assume?”
“Yes, on the allegorical image tradition in
England.”
“Then I don’t suppose you would be interested in
seeing my fourteenth-century copy of Aurora Consurgens. It’s
French, regrettably.”
My eyes widened. Aurora Consurgens was a
baffling manuscript about the opposing forces of alchemical
transformation—silver and gold, female and male, dark and light.
Its illustrations were equally complex and puzzling.
“The earliest known copy of the Aurora is
from the 1420s.”
“Mine is from 1356.”
“But a manuscript from such an early date won’t be
illustrated,” I pointed out. Finding an illuminated alchemical
manuscript from before 1400 was as unlikely as discovering a
Model-T Ford parked on the battlefield at Gettysburg.
“This one is.”
“Does it contain all thirty-eight images?”
“No. It has forty.” He smiled. “It would seem that
previous historians have been wrong about several
particulars.”
Discoveries on this scale were rare. To get first
crack at an unknown, fourteenth-century illustrated copy of
Aurora Consurgens represented the opportunity of a lifetime
for a historian of alchemy.
“What do the extra illustrations show? Is the text
the same?”
“You’ll have to come to France to find out.”
“Let’s go, then,” I said promptly. After weeks of
frustration, writing my keynote address suddenly seemed
possible.
“You won’t go for your own safety, but if there’s a
manuscript involved?” He shook his head ruefully. “So much for
common sense.”
“I’ve never been known for my common sense,” I
confessed. “When do we leave?”
“An hour?”
“An hour.” This was no spur-of-the-moment decision.
He’d been planning it since I’d fallen asleep the night
before.
He nodded. “There’s a plane waiting at the airstrip
by the old American air force base. How long will it take you to
get your things together?”
“That depends on what I need to bring with me,” I
said, my head spinning.
“Nothing much. We won’t be going anywhere. Pack
warm clothes, and I don’t imagine you’ll consider leaving without
your running shoes. It will be just the two of us, along with my
mother and her housekeeper.”
His. Mother.
“Matthew,” I said faintly, “I didn’t know you had a
mother.”
“Everybody has a mother, Diana,” he said, turning
his clear gray eyes to mine. “I’ve had two. The woman who gave
birth to me and Ysabeau—the woman who made me a vampire.”
Matthew was one thing. A houseful of unfamiliar
vampires was quite another. Caution about taking such a dangerous
step pushed aside some of my eagerness to see the manuscript. My
hesitation must have shown.
“I hadn’t thought,” he said, his voice tinged with
hurt. “Of course you have no reason to trust Ysabeau. But she did
assure me that you would be safe with her and Marthe.”
“If you trust them, then I do, too.” To my
surprise, I meant it—in spite of the niggling worry that he’d had
to ask them if they planned on taking a piece out of my neck.
“Thank you,” he said simply. Matthew’s eyes drifted
to my mouth, and my blood tingled in response. “You pack, and I’ll
wash up and make a few phone calls.”
When I passed by his end of the sofa, he caught my
hand in his. Once again the shock of his cold skin was counteracted
by an answering warmth in my own.
“You’re doing the right thing,” he murmured before
he released me.
It was almost laundry day, and my bedroom was
draped with dirty clothes. A rummage through the wardrobe yielded
several nearly identical pairs of black pants that were clean, a
few pairs of leggings, and half a dozen long-sleeved T-shirts and
turtlenecks. There was a beat-up Yale duffel bag on top of it, and
I jumped up and snagged the strap with one hand. The clothes all
went into the old blue-and-white canvas bag, along with a few
sweaters and a fleece pullover. I also chucked in sneakers, socks,
and underwear, along with some old yoga clothes. I didn’t own
decent pajamas and could sleep in those. Remembering Matthew’s
French mother, I slipped in one presentable shirt and pair of
trousers.
Matthew’s low voice floated down the hall. He
talked first to Fred, then to Marcus, and then to a cab company.
With the bag’s strap over my shoulder, I maneuvered myself
awkwardly into the bathroom. Toothbrush, soap, shampoo, and a
hairbrush all went inside, along with a hair dryer and a tube of
mascara. I hardly ever wore the stuff, but on this occasion a
cosmetic aid seemed a good idea.
When I was finished, I rejoined Matthew in the
living room. He was thumbing through the messages on his phone, my
computer case at his feet. “Is that it?” he asked, eyeing the
duffel bag with surprise.
“You told me I didn’t need much.”
“Yes, but I’m not used to women listening to me
when it comes to luggage. When Miriam goes away for the weekend,
she packs enough to outfit the French Foreign Legion, and my mother
requires multiple steamer trunks. Louisa wouldn’t have crossed the
street with what you’re carrying, never mind leave the
country.”
“Along with having no common sense, I’m not known
for being high maintenance either.”
Matthew nodded appreciatively. “Do you have your
passport?”
I pointed. “It’s in my computer bag.”
“We can go, then,” Matthew said, his eyes sweeping
the rooms one last time.
“Where’s the photo?” It seemed wrong to just leave
it.
“Marcus has it,” he said quickly.
“When was Marcus here?” I asked with a frown.
“While you were sleeping. Do you want me to get it
back for you?” His finger hovered over a key on his phone.
“No.” I shook my head. There was no reason for me
to look at it again.
Matthew took my bags and managed to get them and me
down the stairs with no mishaps. A cab was waiting outside the
college gates. Matthew stopped for a brief conversation with Fred.
The vampire handed the porter a card, and the two men shook hands.
Some deal had been struck, the particulars of which would never be
disclosed to me. Matthew tucked me into the cab, and we drove for
about thirty minutes, leaving the lights of Oxford behind us.
“Why didn’t we take your car?” I asked as we headed
into the countryside.
“This is better,” he explained. “There’s no need to
have Marcus fetch it later.”
The sway of the cab was rocking me to sleep.
Leaning against Matthew’s shoulder, I dozed.
At the airport we were airborne soon after we’d had
our passports checked and the pilot filed the paperwork. We sat
opposite each other on couches arranged around a low table during
the takeoff. I yawned every few moments, ears popping as we
climbed. Once we reached cruising altitude, Matthew unsnapped his
seat belt and gathered up some pillows and a blanket from a cabinet
under the windows.
“We’ll be in France soon.” He propped the pillows
at the end of my sofa, which was about as deep as a twin bed, and
held the blanket open to cover me. “Meanwhile you should get some
sleep.”
I didn’t want to sleep. The truth was, I was afraid
to. That photograph was etched on the inside of my eyelids.
He crouched next to me, the blanket hanging lightly
from his fingers. “What is it?”
“I don’t want to close my eyes.”
Matthew tossed all the pillows except one onto the
floor. “Come here,” he said, sitting beside me and patting the
fluffy white rectangle invitingly. I swung around, shimmied down
the leather-covered surface, and put my head on his lap, stretching
out my legs. He tossed the edge of the blanket from his right hand
to his left so that it covered me in soft folds.
“Thank you,” I whispered.
“You’re welcome.” He took his fingers and touched
them to his lips, then to mine. I tasted salt. “Sleep. I’ll be
right here.”
I did sleep, heavy and deep with no dreams, waking
only when Matthew’s cool fingers touched my face and he told me we
were about to land.
“What time is it?” I asked, now thoroughly
disoriented.
“It’s about eight,” he said, looking at his
watch.
“Where are we?” I swung to a seated position and
rooted for my seat belt.
“Outside Lyon, in the Auvergne.”
“In the center of the country?” I asked, imagining
the map of France. He nodded. “Is that where you’re from?”
“I was born and reborn nearby. My home—my family’s
home—is an hour or two away. We should arrive by midmorning.”
We landed in the private area of the busy regional
airport and had our passports and travel documents checked by a
bored-looking civil servant who snapped to attention the moment he
saw Matthew’s name.
“Do you always travel this way?” It was far easier
than flying a commercial airline through London’s Heathrow or
Paris’s Charles de Gaulle airport.
“Yes,” he said without apology or
self-consciousness. “The one time I’m entirely glad that I’m a
vampire and have money to burn is when I travel.”
Matthew stopped behind a Range Rover the size of
Connecticut and fished a set of keys out of his pocket. He opened
the back door, stowing my bags inside. The Range Rover was slightly
less deluxe than his Jaguar, but what it lacked in elegance it more
than made up for in heft. It was like traveling in an armored
personnel carrier.
“Do you really need this much car to drive in
France?” I eyed the smooth roads.
Matthew laughed. “You haven’t seen my mother’s
house yet.”
We drove west through beautiful countryside,
studded here and there with grand châteaus and steep mountains.
Fields and vineyards stretched in all directions, and even under
the steely sky the land seemed to blaze with the color of turning
leaves. A sign indicated the direction of Clermont-Ferrand. That
couldn’t be a coincidence, in spite of the different
spelling.
Matthew kept heading west. He slowed, turned down a
narrow road, and pulled to the side. He pointed off to the
distance. “There,” he said. “Sept-Tours.”
In the center of rolling hills was a flattened peak
dominated by a crenellated hulk of buff and rose stone. Seven
smaller towers surrounded it, and a turreted gatehouse stood guard
in front. This was not a pretty, fairy-tale castle made for moonlit
balls. Sept-Tours was a fortress.
“That’s home?” I gasped.
“That’s home.” Matthew took his phone out of his
pocket and dialed a number. “Maman? We’re almost
there.”
Something was said on the other end, and the line
went dead. Matthew smiled tightly and pulled back onto the
road.
“She’s expecting us?” I asked, just managing to
keep the tremor out of my voice.
“She is.”
“And this is all right with her?” I didn’t ask the
real question—Are you sure it’s okay that you’re bringing a
witch home?—but didn’t need to.
Matthew’s eyes remained fixed on the road. “Ysabeau
doesn’t like surprises as much as I do,” he said lightly, turning
on to something that looked like a goat track.
We drove between rows of chestnut trees, climbing
until we reached Sept-Tours. Matthew steered the car between two of
the seven towers and through to a paved courtyard in front of the
entrance to the central structure. Parterres and gardens peeked out
to the right and left, before the forest took over. The vampire
parked the car.
“Ready?” he asked with a bright smile.
“As I’ll ever be,” I replied warily.
Matthew opened my car door and helped me down.
Pulling at my black jacket, I looked up at the château’s imposing
stone façade. The forbidding lines of the castle were nothing
compared to what awaited me inside. The door swung open.
“Courage,” Matthew said, kissing me gently
on the cheek.