rose from the throne. The violin fell from Lestat's hands as he saw her; like a dancer,
she wrapped her arms around him, drew him to her, bent to take the blood from him, while
pressing his teeth to her own throat.
It was rather better than he had ever imagined-such clever craft. Now the figure of
Enkil awakened, rising and walking like a mechanical doll. Forward he came to take back
his Queen. Lestat was thrown down on the floor of the shrine. And there the film ended.
The rescue by Marius was not part of it.
"Ah, so I do not become a television celebrity," he whispered with a faint smile. He
went to the entrance of the darkened store.
The young woman was waiting to let him in. She had the black plastic video cassette in
her hand.
"All twelve of them,'* she said. Fine dark skin and large drowsy brown eyes. The band
of silver around her wrist caught the light. He found it enticing. She took the money
gratefully, without counting it. "They've been playing them on a dozen channels. I caught
them all over, actually. Finished it yesterday afternoon."
"You've served me well," he answered. "I thank you." He produced another thick fold of
bills.
"No big thing," she said. She didn't want to take the extra money.
You will.
She took it with a shrug and put it in her pocket.
No big thing. He loved these eloquent modern expressions. He loved the sudden shift of
her luscious breasts as she'd shrugged, and the lithe twist of her hips beneath the
coarse denim clothes that made her seem all the more smooth and fragile. An incandescent
flower. As she opened the door for him, he touched the soft nest of her brown hair. Quite
unthinkable to feed upon one who has served you; one so innocent. He would not do this!
Yet he turned her around, his gloved fingers slipping up through her hair to cradle her
head:
"The smallest kiss, my precious one."
Her eyes closed; his teeth pierced the artery instantly and his tongue lapped at the
blood. Only a taste. A tiny flash of heat that burnt itself out in his heart within a
second. Then he drew back, his lips resting against her frail throat. He could feel her
pulse. The craving for the full draught was almost more than he could bear. Sin and
atonement. He let her go. He smoothed her soft, springy curls, as he looked into her
misted eyes.
Do not remember.
"Good-bye now," she said, smiling.
He stood motionless on the deserted sidewalk. And the thirst, ignored and sullen,
gradually died back. He looked at the cardboard sheath of the video cassette.
"A dozen channels," she had said. "I caught them all over, actually." Now if that was
so, his charges had already seen Lestat, inevitably, on the large screen positioned
before them in the shrine. Long ago, he'd set the satellite dish on the slope above the
roof to bring them broadcasts from all the world. A tiny computer device changed the
channel each hour. For years, they'd stared expressionless as the images and colors
shifted before their lifeless eyes. Had there been the slightest flicker when they heard
Lestat's voice, or saw their very own image? Or heard their own names sung as if in a
hymn?
Well, he would soon find out. He would play the video cassette for them. He would study
their frozen, gleaming faces for something-anything-besides the mere reflection of the
light.
"Ah, Marius, you never despair, do you? You are no better than Lestat, with your
foolish dreams."
It was midnight before he reached home.
He shut the steel door against the driving snow, and, standing still for a moment, let
the heated air surround him. The blizzard through which he'd passed had lacerated his
face and his ears, even his gloved fingers. The warmth felt so good.
In the quiet, he listened for the familiar sound of the giant generators, and the faint
electronic pulse of the television set within the shrine many hundreds of feet beneath
him. Could that be Lestat singing? Yes. Undoubtedly, the last mournful words of some
other song.
Slowly he peeled off his gloves. He removed his hat and ran his hand through his hair.
He studied the large entrance hall and the adjacent drawing room for the slightest
evidence that anyone else had been here.
Of course that was almost an impossibility. He was miles from the nearest outpost of
the modern world, in a great frozen snow-covered waste. But out of force of habit, he
always observed everything closely. There were some who could breach this fortress, if
only they knew where it was.
All was well. He stood before the giant aquarium, the great room-sized tank which
abutted the south wall. So carefully he had constructed this thing, of the heaviest glass
and the finest equipment. He watched the schools of multicolored fishes dance past him,
then alter their direction instantly and totally in the artificial gloom. The giant sea
kelp swayed from one side to another, a forest caught in a hypnotic rhythm as the gentle
pressure of the aerator drove it this way and that. It never failed to captivate him, to
lock him suddenly to its spectacular monotony. The round black eyes of the fish sent a
tremor through him; the high slender trees of kelp with their tapering yellow leaves
thrilled him vaguely; but it was the movement, the constant movement that was the crux.
Finally he turned away from it, glancing back once into that pure, unconscious, and
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