Chapter Twenty-Five
They found that there was a new figure at the
head of the long table, sitting with Elric at his right hand and an
empty chair to his left.
There was no doubting his kinship with Elric, though Krysty
thought, as she helped Ryan to a seat, that either of them could
have been related to Jak.
The only real difference in their appearance from that of the
teenager was in height. The two members of the Family were much
taller than Jak. Elric was around six feet three inches tall, and
the new member of the clan close to six and a half feet.
But both men were almost skeletally thin, with red-tinted eyes and
hair as white as Sierra snow. Both had the same strange skin, pale
as wind-washed ivory, with an odd delicacy to it, like the finest
lace.
As the outlanders were shepherded in by the ever-attentive Norman,
the two members of the Family both stood, the older one more
slowly, as if his joints pained him. Krysty guessed that he was in
his forties, but he seemed much more frail than Elric. He was
staring at his guests with such intensity it worried her. She chose
not to mention that to Ryan.
"Do sit down, outlanders. I am Thomas Cornelius. Welcome to Bramton
and our home."
"You the father of Elric?" Dean asked.
"Yes, I am," Thomas replied.
Simultaneously Elric Cornelius said, "No, he isn't."
They looked at each other with a flash of what Krysty thought was
anger. Then both of them offered brilliant smiles, revealing
amazingly white and perfect teeth, one of the rarest sights in
Deathlands, where most people had lost most of their teeth by the
age of thirty.
"Yes, he is," Elric said.
Simultaneously Thomas Cornelius shook his head. "No, I am not his
father."
"Want to try a third time?" Ryan asked sarcastically. "Mebbe both
give us the same answer this time around?"
By now everyone was seated and the older Cornelius had gestured to
Norman to begin serving the food.
He spoke to the company, gesturing with his hands. Mildred looked
away, feeling that the long, bony fingers with the carefully
manicured, sharp-tipped nails were almost hypnotizing with their
fine elegance.
"Perhaps I should explain straightaway, to remove any ambiguity or
confusion, just who we all are and how we come to be
here."
"Be nice," Ryan said laconically, wincing as Krysty kicked him
under the table.
"I understand your unhappiness, Ryan Cawdor. We have been poor
hosts. Indeed, you will probably not meet all of the Family until
tomorrow. Some are away and some busy flying about their own
business."
Doc was watching the fragile-looking man speak. There was a nagging
suspicion about what was going on in Bramton and in the mansion on
the cliff top, but Doc knew better than to engage his mouth before
his brain had functioned. From where he sat, Elric was clear in his
direct line of sight, and he could have sworn that he detected a
thin-lipped smile at Thomas's words.
It was there, and then it was gone, like a late frost under the
rising sun.
Perhaps it had never been there.
Doc kept his silence.
Thomas was still speaking. "I hope that Norman has looked after
you. The weather has been inclement today, I'm afraid. We never saw
the sun at all." It was said with heavy regret.
Doc thought he saw the same fleeting grin from the younger
albino.
Why? he thought.
"I gather the food has been less than adequate. This is because our
tastes as a family are not as other people, and the kitchen gets
little practice of cooking for norms. Neither Elric nor I will dine
with you here."
The first course was a mix of what looked like local trout, with
bread-fried catfish, served on a bed of boiled rice with snow peas
on the side.
Krysty quietly told Ryan what it was, and how good it looked. "Best
we've seen since we got to this place," she said, biting off a
slice of the baked trout. "Mmm, that is so good."
"There is wine," Norman said, bringing around a dark green bottle,
frosted with the cold. "This is from the oldest part of the
cellars." He poured out a glass for everyone, hesitating at Dean,
waiting for a nod of approval from Krysty.
Doc snatched up the long-stemmed crystal goblet and swilled the
pale gold liquid around, dipping his beaky nose into it, inhaling
deeply and sighing.
"It's a Sancerre. And a very good one unless I totally miss my
guess."
Norman giggled. "You're the first visitor in the past fifty years
to know that. Wait until you try the Lafitte with the roast
beef."
Doc smiled, sipping appreciatively at the French wine, glowering at
Dean, who'd gulped his half glass down in what seemed a single
mouthful.
Thomas waited for a few moments before resuming his little
speech.
"I take it from your reaction that we have got it right. The people
in the kitchen will be told.
"Now" he spread his hands expansively, "you came here through the
mat-trans system in the old Redoubt 47, did you not?"
It was a bombshell.
Ryan paused, a forkful of food halfway to his mouth. He heard his
son gasp with shock, and someone else dropped a fork. Doc was his
guess.
He actually smiled at the foolish way his mind was operating,
wasting a fraction of a moment on wondering who'd dropped a fork,
when they were sitting at a table with someone who'd guessed their
most secret secret.
Or, he quickly figured, someone who actually knew their biggest
secret.
For twenty beats of the heart, nobody in the room spoke a word. The
only sound was a high-pitched giggle from Elric Cornelius, which
was echoed by Norman.
Finally it was Thomas who spoke again. "I have no need to ask you
if this is true. Even if I wasn't already certain, your reactions
would have screamed it out as plainly as if it were daubed on that
wall in letters ten feet high."
Elric suddenly began to clap his hands, very slowly. "Excellent,
Thomas. I told you that the outlanders would sit there with what
was the old expression? Ah, yes, with egg on their
faces."
Ryan's mind was racing now, in full combat mode, examining and
rejecting dozens of hypotheses and possible scenarios, trying to
see how dangerous the information was, and how seriously
compromised it might make them.
But he couldn't see a major threat two men and a butler and a few
zombielike servants, no sec men and no sign of any blasters against
them.
"You are calculating whether we present any threat to you, Ryan,"
Thomas said, smiling. "I can almost hear the wheels spinning inside
your brain."
"You backtracked us?"
The papery face creased into something of a smile. "An intelligent
guess. Partly true. I see no reason to tell you more than that."
The smile vanished. "What greatly interests all of us is the extent
to which you have mastered the controls. Where did you learn the
secrets of Project Cerberus?"
"Upon my soul!" Doc exclaimed, pushing back his chair. "How
did"
Ryan interrupted him. "Enough, Doc. Let me do the talking
here."
"Of course, my dear fellow. Of course. But scarcely anyone now
living can have knowledge of Cerberus."
"Or Chronos," Elric teased.
"Or Overproject Whisper," Thomas stated.
"Or Enterprise Eternity," Elric added.
"No!" Thomas shouted. "I told you before that we do not mention
that. Not to anyone."
"It can't hurt."
Both of them stood, glowering at each other, their eyes seeming to
glow like burning rubies.
Thomas threw back his head and hissed at the younger man like an
enraged panther. "No more!" He pointed a long-nailed finger. "Leave
us, now."
"You don't have the authority without the rest of the
kindred."
Thomas dropped his voice to a whisper, sitting and sipping from a
goblet of a red wine, so dark that it was almost purple, staining
his lips. "Do it," he said quietly.
Elric stalked to the door without a word, jostling Norman out of
his way, pausing in the entrance to the dining hall and spinning to
face the company. He bowed low from the shadows, his black clothes
making him almost invisible.
"I was foolish," he said calmly, seeming completely in control.
"Thomas was correct. My mention of Enterprise Eternity was
unwise."
The door opened and closed, and he was gone.
Ryan knew that Doc wouldn't be able to resist asking the question.
And here it came, reliable as the sun in a summer
wheatfield.
"Might I ask you about Enterprise Eternity?" he said. "I am not
familiar with it. Was it something that was being researched in the
redoubt nearby?"
"It was. You failed to penetrate into the main part of the complex,
did you not?"
Ryan nodded, assuming the question was being addressed to him. "We
did. You found the open door." He made it a statement. "That was
the first time any of us had ever encountered the mat-trans unit.
That was what the signs said it was called."
"Indeed?" Ryan could almost see the raised snowy eyebrows, hearing
the undisguised note of disbelief riding in the calm, gentle
voice.
"Indeed, Thomas."
"Where did you make the jump from?"
"Jump?" Ryan gave himself a mental pat on the back for hurdling
that one.
"What they called utilizing the gateways. How did you find yourself
in the system?"
"Accident. Mind if we leave it at that? Just slammed the door in a
hidden fortress and that sort of triggered something. We all passed
out and when we came around we were someplace else. You know how it
works? Or how many there are of them? Be good to control something
like that. Give a man real power."
"It would, Ryan. We know much, but that is a secret that has
escaped us."
While the conversation had been going on, the first course had been
finished, and plates piled high with roast beef were brought in.
Norman had served the Lafitte, getting a nod of delighted
approbation from Doc.
Thomas had eaten nothing, contenting himself with sipping at his
own wineglass.
After the discussion about the gateways he appeared to lose
interest in the whole gathering, sitting with his snowy head
slumped down on his chest, tapping at his goblet with the end of
his forefinger.
Like Elric, Thomas was dressed completely in black, with a shirt of
satin and pants of velvet tucked into polished black knee
boots.
A slender golden chain encircled his neck, holding a medallion that
looked to Krysty like a silver ankh. Every now and again Thomas
would lift a hand to it, as though to reassure himself that it was
still there.
The last course was a choice between a steaming cherry cobbler and
a pecan pie, with or without cream. Most of them chose helpings of
both.
With cream.
Thomas ate nothing.
Mildred noticed that the hooded eyes kept turning to Jak, as though
Thomas were trying to work something out about the albino
teenager.
Finally he leaned forward and spoke to the young man. "Jak
Lauren?"
"Yeah," the youth said, wiping a dribble of cream from his chin
with the sleeve of his coat.
"Your age?"
"Sixteen, going on seventeen."
"You have always had that hair and those eyes?"
"Sure."
"And you have lived only sixteen years. And every year you grow
older, do you, Jak?"
"Course. Everyone does."
Thomas nodded, smiling gently at Jak. "Everyone does, lad. Indeed.
My own words to myself, a hundred times a day. Everyone
does."
He stood and walked slowly around the long table, patting Jak on
the shoulder, whispering something to Norman as he reached the
door.
"Tomorrow you will meet everyone. And I look forward to seeing your
film, Johannes Forde."
The door shut behind him.
"How did he know about the film?" Forde said.