Chapter Thirty-One
J.B. was particularly scathing about their
vampire idea.
"Look, I've seen some bits of old vids and read predark comics and
books. So I know what their ideas were on vampires. There was some
writer who had big sellers about vampires, but it was just fiction.
All of it was made up."
"I find your argument strangely unpersuasive, John Barrymore Dix.
If you will forgive me for saying so, the idea that someone has
written fiction about a subject means that the subject doesn't
exist in reality is absurd."
"Course," Mildred agreed. "Man writes a novel about the Civil War.
According to your theory, John, that means that the War between the
States never happened. That what you're saying? It can't be, can
it?"
The Armorer shrugged. "I've traveled the old battlefields,
MillieAntietam, Chancellorsville, Manassas, Shiloh. Load of them in
our travels with Trader. Course they existed. But I never met
anyone who saw a real ghost or a vampire. Reason is, they don't
exist."
Jak had been standing by the fireplace. "Folks in bayous believe
ghosts, J.B., and see them."
"Vampires?"
The albino shook his head. "Don't know vampires. Voodoo believes
them. Walking dead like zombies. Suck blood. Kill with stake in
heart. Or silver bullet. Or cut off head. Or expose in sun.
Vampires don't like sun."
J.B. sniffed. "You're all crazed. Been browsing among the locoweed
for too long."
"What do you think then, love?" Mildred asked. "You got a better
explanation?"
"For the Family? I don't deny for a moment that they're mutie
freaks. But vampires?"
Doc stood with legs slightly apart, thumbs hooked in the
buttonholes of his vest, looking as though he were about to begin a
lecture on The Place of Romantic Poets in a Schismatic
Society.
"Their skin and reluctance to appear in light. That's one. The
locked cellars and attics. Unusual strength. Rotten breath like
moldy earth. That's two and three."
"And four," Dean said, grinning at having caught the old man
out.
"Right. The fact that they don't appear on the film of poor
Johannes. It was a well-known fact about vampires that they didn't
leave a shadow or cast a reflection in a mirror. The blurring of
the film stock is a modern version of that."
"And there was that strange research section, locked away up at the
redoubt. Could be that has something to do with them," Mildred
stated.
"The pallor and weakness of so many of the poor devils from
Bramton." Doc pointed a gnarled finger at J.B. "Oh, ye of little
belief! The evidence is so strong. What we should do is try and
find where in this rambling pile the Family go for the rest from
their evildoing."
"I saw a comic, Doc, where some vampires with pointy teeth lived in
coffins filled with the dirt from a graveyard and drank blood from
girls with big tits. Sorry, Mildred and Krysty. But they did
have"
Krysty held up a hand. "All right, all right. I think we get the
picture."
It was at that moment that Norman had appeared from a door hidden
behind rows of books to announce the news about Ryan being back in
the room upstairs.
RYAN HAD BEEN DOZING, still under the influence of the drug, when
they all burst into the room.
He woke with a start.
"Fireblast! What's?"
"Hello, lover," Krysty said, sitting on the side of the bed,
reaching and holding his hand. She noticed without comment that
Ryan jumped nervously and started to pull his fingers away from her
touch.
"Hi. Don't feel great. Head's like the inside of a lumberjack's
ass."
Mildred perched on the other side of the bed, Ryan knowing it was
her from the faint whispering of the beads in her plaited
hair.
"How about the eye?" she asked casually. "They do anything for
it?"
"No."
"They try anything while you were drugged?"
"No."
"How can you be sure?" J.B. asked, "if you were out colder than a
snow bear's dick?"
"I'm sure, is all. Just what the fuck are you getting at,
anyway?"
"Nothing. Settle down, Ryan. They said they could help you to see
again. So it's not unreasonable to ask you a question about what
they did and how you are."
"Yeah, I guess Sorry." Ryan could hear J.B. take off his glasses
and start to polish them, which he often did when something had
embarrassed him.
"So, what did they do, Dad?"
Dean was leaning on the end of the bed, making it rock back and
forth in a distinctly irritating way. But Ryan held his
temper.
"Nothing. Like I said, they drugged me. But I was conscious all the
time." He fumbled for a believable and convenient lie. "I think
they did try to do something with my eye. They rubbed some kind of
grease on it and stuff like that."
"But it hasn't helped, lover?"
"No." He decided not to mention the odd flashes of light and color
that he thought he might have seen, not wanting to raise anyone's
hopes, not wanting to raise his own hopes.
"Your pants are buttoned up wrong, Dad."
"What?"
The room was flooded with stillness.
Ryan could feel everyone stopping whatever it was they were doing,
all looking at the front of his pants, where Dean was
pointing.
"Boy's right, lover," Krysty said, her voice calm and cool.
"Buttoned up crooked and one of them's not done up at all.
Surprised you didn't feel the draft."
Ryan reached down, his fingers clumsily putting things to
rights.
"Stupe," he said. "Must've happened when I went for a piss on the
way back from the attic."
"Up the stairs on the top floor?" J.B. sounded excited. "They took
you there? What was it like? What did you ? Oh, dark night!
Sorry."
"What did I see, old friend? That your question? Answer is, not a
lot."
"Looks like they got some of that grease you mentioned on the front
of your pants, Ryan." Krysty's voice moved remorselessly from cool
to cold.
"Yeah. I can just feel it with my fingernail."
He hastily changed the subject. "What've you all been doing today?
While I was out of it?"
It took some time to tell him everything, culminating in Doc and
Mildred's theory.
"VAMPIRES."
Krysty patted him on the leg. "Nobody tried to suck your blood, did
they, lover? I mean, like that Mary Cornelius didn't try to suck
your blood?"
The pause was slight enough, but Ryan heard it. Everyone except
Dean heard it.
He tried to ignore it, clearing his throat. "No, she didn't,
Krysty."
"Good. Glad to hear it, lover. So, what do you think of the
theory?"
Ryan lay back. "Sorry. Felt a bit sick again." He closed his eye.
"I reckon it's possible. Like Mildred says, they aren't old ghostly
vampires. I believe they don't exist. I don't believe they ever
existed."
He heard someone walk across the room and tug back the draperies.
From the lightness of the feet, it had to be Jak. But there was a
shaft of brightness that Ryan saw.
Really saw .
This time there was no mistake about it. But he still kept
quiet.
They sat around the bed, talking animatedly about what they should
do.
There was a general acceptance that the Family wasn't a force for
good, therefore it made sense to get away from their house as soon
as possible.
"Dawn," J.B. said.
"Agreed." Ryan looked blindly around the room. "Watch yourselves at
supper and keep close. No wandering. I'm not sure that the Family
is completely finished with us yet. No. Not by a long country
mile."
EVERYONE WENT back downstairs, leaving Krysty and Ryan with some
time alone.
He heard the door close with mixed feelings, hoping that the
subject of precisely what he'd been doing with Mary Cornelius might
not be raised.
"You fuck her, lover?"
So much for a vain hope.
A part of the cement that held Ryan and Krysty together was
honesty. However unpalatable the truth might be, and however much
it might harm their relationship, it never occurred to Ryan that,
faced with a direct question, he should lie.
"She fucked me."
"While you were drugged and tied hand and foot to the bed? Was that
it, Ryan?" The bitterness of betrayal rode at the front of her
voice.
"It was just like that."
"Sure it was. And I just bet you hated every moment of it, didn't
you?"
Again there was the temptation to shift sideways and sort of skirt
around the truth.
"I hated the way they made me do it." He coughed to clear his
throat. "I hate anytime that anyone makes me do anything beyond my
control."
"But you didn't actually hate it when it was going on. That what
you're saying?"
"Not really."
She copied his voice, mocking it. "Not really. Oh, no, Krysty. I
hated being fucked. In fact it didn't work because I never even got
an erection." She changed back to her own voice. "You get a
hard-on, lover?"
Ryan turned on his side, away from her, but she grabbed at his arm
and tugged him back. "Don't you fucking do that to me, Ryan! Not
ever!"
"Sorry, I told you. They drugged me. There were three of them
there. At least three. Thomas and Elric, as well as the woman.
They've got strength that And I was blind. Krysty, I swear I
couldn't have stopped them. It was as close to rape as it can get
for a man."
"All of a sudden, my heart bleeds," she said bitterly. "What
happened to the blaster?"
He sat up, staring blankly at where he thought she was, wondering
with a small part of his mind whether he was imagining seeing a
spark of sunlight burning off her bright red hair.
"The blaster never left my holster. You can't imagine what it was
like. If you'd been tied down and forced to have sex, I wouldn't
behave like this. Blaming me. Hating me. Hurting me even more than
I'm already hurting."
To his dismay, Ryan found that his voice was breaking and his right
eye was brimming with unshed tears.
The silence stretched on and he felt Krysty stand up from the bed
and walk across the room.
"Think running away'll change anything?" he shouted. "Because it
fucking won't!"
The sound of boot heels on the carpet stopped. "I wasn't running
away, Ryan."
"Wellwell, I guess that's something. So, where were you
going?"
"To look out the window. Sort of gather my thoughts together. Work
out just how I was going to tell you that I was sorry for behaving
like I did."
"Krysty." He stretched out his hand toward where he thought she was
standing.
"What is it, lover?"
"Just wondering"
"What about?" She moved back and sat again on the edge of the bed,
her fingers clasping his hand.
"I was wondering."
"You just said that, lover."
"Wondering how you felt about taking off some of your clothes and
climbing into the bed for a while?"
"I feel like that's the best offer I've had for Well, the best
offer today."
They made love three times before a gentle knock on the bolted door
told them that supper was ready.