The baron watched this outrage without comment not because it was simply the Nobility's everyday manner of “feeding,” but because the display had a traumatic effect on him due to his genetic makeup and personality. But the instant Taki's head jerked back and he saw the pair of raw and swollen wounds at the base of her neck and the vermilion stream that spilled from them, he ran toward the pair like a wild horse.
It was a split second later that the ground beneath his feet, or rather, the floor of the entire hall, suddenly sank. Unable to do a thing, the baron fell dozens of yards. What awaited him was cold water. Gurgling loudly, it sucked him under and shoved him away.
The legends spoke of this. How vampires weren't able to cross running water.
As the baron desperately worked his arms and legs, his ears caught a haughty laugh, and voice bellowed down to him, “If you are in fact any part Nobility, you can drown down there. But if you should happen to be spared, you shall be cursed for all eternity!”
-
D and May were out on the edge of town in an abandoned shed that housed a water wheel. But though the enclosure might be described as a shed, it was hardly on the scale for merely using the water wheel to mill flour. The wheel itself was easily three hundred feet in diameter. It literally stretched up into the heavens like God's very own lathe. Beside the shed, the river that even now kept that great fifteen-feet-thick disk in perpetual motion flowed by at an appreciable pace. It would've been more correct to call the shed where D and May were a power station. Although the village had switched over to more efficient solar power two decades earlier, the vast interior of the building still contained everything from enormous energy transformers to countless machines, tools, and even living quarters.
It was on one of the beds in the aforementioned accommodations that D lay. After rescuing May, he'd raced out to the edge of the village and entered this place when they happened upon it. May had gone into the kitchen to look for some tea, and putting the kettle on an electric heater there was fortunately still enough power to run, she'd returned for a moment to find D lying down. Since he was hardly the sort of young man who'd take it easy and let a little girl do all the work, May decided to peek in on him and see what he was up to, and she was shocked by what she saw. From the chest of D's black raiment, three plants with crimson blossoms had sprouted. This Frontier maiden immediately realized they were the color of blood. The flowers drained D's blood so they might gain that mysterious luster.
The girl was frozen in astonishment when D ordered her, “Go someplace else.”
Seeing the slim scalpel he held in his hand, May raced over despite herself, shouting, “No, we've got to get you a doctor!”
“A doctor can't cure this,” D said. “Besides, if we take too long, our pursuers will catch up with us. And Vlad has probably heard about us by now.”
The Hunter explained the situation to the eleven-year-old girl. That in itself was proof that he viewed her not as a child, but as a woman who dwelt out on the Frontier.
“And you plan on taking care of thatâalone?”
“Go,” D told her.
“No, I wanna help!”
“There's nothing you can do.”
“Even if there were, would you tell me?” she shot back, not even sure why she had spoken. Perhaps it was some feminine instinct that compelled her to rise to the challenge and not let this gorgeous young man get the better of her. “You just hold on a minute. I'll go fetch some hot water.”
Hastily returning to the kitchen, she transferred the steaming fluid in the kettle to a larger pot, added water from the tap, then wrapped both arms around it and staggered back to where a truly ghastly scene was unfolding.
D had already carved one of the stalks out of his own flesh with the bloody scalpel and was about to start in on the second. The roots of the flower he'd thrown down on the floor looked to be nearly three feet in length, and when she thought about them burrowing through his body, May nearly dropped the pot. What's more, the blood that leaked from the roots had collected in a small puddle on the floor.
Saying nothing, D moved the scalpel through the flesh around the second stalk as if he were merely sketching a circle. May's eyes were riveted. As if fearing what would come next, the red blossom's petals trembled. Grabbing hold of its roots, D yanked it right out.
An indescribable cry assailed the girl's ears. A scream unleashed by the flower.
“Wait,” she called out to D as he was about to set to work on the third stalk, and once she'd set the pot down on a simple table, May fainted dead away.
The next thing she knew, she was lying in bed. Though the lights had been extinguished, a watery light filled the room, and there were birds singing outside. It was dawn.
Realizing that she must've been unconscious all night, May got out of bed. Although the bed on which D had lain and the floor were both soaked with blood, the pot was gone. The girl thought he must've carried it off again so that she wouldn't see anything more unpleasant than necessary when she returned to her senses.
“D?!”
Exiting the living quarters, she found the door to the shed open. May scurried out into the still-feeble light. Wooden steps ran from the main entrance down to the riverbank, and the girl was surprised to find a figure in black standing by the side of the loudly gurgling flow. The wind fluttered the hem of his coat.
“D!” she called out to him, but on finally noticing the massive shape above her, May looked up and froze in her tracks.
She'd ridden the great Ferris wheel at the sprawling amusement park in the western Frontierâbut this was five times its size. A cold, wet mist struck her faceâspray sent out by the water wheel. Once the sun rose high enough, she wondered if the shadow of the water wheel would cut across the whole village of Krauhausen, or even cover it completely.
It was soon thereafter that her attention shifted from that imposing sight to the young man by the water's edge. Though the Hunter didn't even turn to look at the girl as she ran toward him, May neither thought that he disliked her nor that he was cold. No matter how he might comport himself from day to day, hadn't he raced to her aid like a genie when her life was in danger? Having been there right by his side, she knew better than anyone how he'd risked his life in doing so, for the pain he'd suffered from the bloody blossoms the night before was something he'd been subjected to in the process of saving her. And although she wanted to thank him at the very least, she couldn't find the words. The young man in black had a sternness about him that blocked any attempt to approach him. May wasn't exactly sure why that was the case.
D suddenly turned in her direction. His chest was covered by his black raiment, as if nothing had ever happened.
“D . . .”
That was the only word she could form. There were a million things she wanted to say. However, the gorgeous young man was there, as powerful as any mountain. And the rescue, the monstrous flowers, the blood that had been sucked from him, the intense operation he'd performedânone of that mattered.
“Something flowed past here last night,” D said.
“Huh?”
“By the time I got out here, it'd already gone by, thoughâ”
Eyeing the glittering water, D then started back toward the shed.
May didn't follow him. She wanted to let the morning breeze blow over her.
As he was disappearing into the shed, the sunlight shone onto his beautiful form. On the opposite side of the riverâfrom the far depths of the forestâthe morning sun was beginning to rise. For a second, it occurred to the girl that perhaps D had been out there waiting for the dawn. And although she had no particular reason for feeling as much, May found that notion profoundly sad.
-
III
-
The village of Krauhausen was bisected by two rivers, one running from east to west and the other from north to south. Flowing, oddly enough, in almost straight lines, the two rivers intersected at Vlad's ancient castle. The crystal-clear waters were drawn underground beneath the heavy ramparts, the river from the east exiting to the west and that from the north coming out again in the south. As might be imagined from the proportions of the water wheel, the current was quite strong, and not a year went by without a number of people drowning not only out between the mountains but also in the village itself. The villagers had dubbed the river running north to south the Pierce, and the one from east to west the Spear.
Downstream along the Pierce, a bizarre little booth had been set up since early in the morning. A pair of chairs sat on opposite sides of a folding table. Although this was a common arrangement for fortunetellers, there wasn't the customary crystal ball or astrological charts. The only thing that sat on the table was a small mirror.
There were quite a few travelers either hastening into Krauhausen or merely passing through in the wee hours of the morning, and they couldn't help but notice the booth. At first, most would get a look in their eyes that said,
What's the story with this?
but on noticing the person who stood beside the booth, they'd be taken aback, staring rather intently at the proprietor's face until their eyes met. At that point, their expression would once more be one of shock, and the travelers then wasted little time in leaving.
In the hour or so since dawn, ten travelers and three wagons had passed the booth, and all of them had displayed the same reaction. And then the eleventh and twelfth came alongâa father accompanied by his daughter, by the look of them. Though the father was about to keep right on going, his daughter stopped in her tracks and pointed at the man who stood beside the booth.
“Look, Papa. That manâhe's really pretty!”
Having business that night in another village, the father was clearly in ill humor as he turned to look from further down the road, but as he did so, his eyes went wide. Was he dreaming? The man who stood there was wearing a coat that borrowed all the colors of the rainbow. Since the father knew that Krauhausen was a bustling village, the sight of a man wearing such an insane riot of hues didn't make much of an impression on him, but the face was another matter. Quite longâto the point where some might describe it as a horse faceâit was still graced by round eyes, a nice high nose, lips as long and thin as blades of grass, and nigh-translucent skin. No matter how you looked at it, it was a face that was the very embodiment of youthful beauty. Knowing all the while that it wasn't the kindest thing to do, he began to compare him to the daughter by his side. However, his daughter didn't mind in the least, as she was completely absorbed by the man's performance.
His performance?
In one hand the man had a three-tiered cosmetic case, while he gripped a brush between the fingers of the other and was in the process of making up his own face.
“Voilà ! Finished!” he said as he took the brush away from his eyelashes.
The father and daughter gasped.
On closer inspection, his eyes were too narrow and their lids were weirdly broad. Although his nose ran in a nice sharp line, his nostrils were permanently flared out to either side, making his nose seem like a naked figure sitting cross-legged in the middle of his face. And his lips looked like plump sausages that'd been glued onto him. Yet he appeared to be the most dashing lad in the land.
That was the power of makeup. Eye shadow that looked positively moist cast shadows, and foundation that duplicated subtle skin tones had been spread to make the three-dimensional lines of his nostrils lie flat in two dimensions. Needless to say, those faint wisps of lip came from the way his lipstick had been applied.
“What do you say, miss?” he said, gesturing to a seat, which the girl then headed for with unsure steps.
“Hey! Joanna!” her father shouted in an effort to stop her.
“Never fear. I'm Chlomo, a makeup artist who works exclusively with travelers heading into town. My whole purpose is to make your lovely daughter even more beautiful. As far as payment goesâI don't want any money.”
“No charge?” the father said, a penurious grin flitting across his lips, but he quickly wiped it away, adding, “I don't know . . .”
“I wanna do it,” his daughter pleaded, staring at the tough-looking man wearing makeup.
Under greater scrutiny the true face of the manâChlomoâbecame apparent. And it was for this very reason that the wondrousness of the makeup he'd applied put her feminine instincts into overdrive.
Up until now, every traveler who'd passed by had been male.
While there was some insistence along the lines that it would be fine and it was free, the father still found the guy vaguely unsettling, but on reconsideration he knew this couldn't be some kind of monster out first thing in the morning. Ultimately, he had no choice but to let the girl do as she wished.
Having the daughter take a seat, the artist settled into the chair across from her and set to work. Her makeup was complete in under a minute. In addition to being executed at an alarming speed, the job was also peerless in its precision. The eye brush flashed out; the powder puff sprinkled iridescent powder.
“How do you like it?” Chlomo said as he held a mirror out for her, having returned to his own unadorned horse face. No doubt he'd decided that as a dashing young man, he'd be hard pressed to impress the girl no matter how much he improved her appearance.
“It's incredible!” the girl exclaimed with delight. She had to wring the words from her throat. With eyes of peerless allure and cheeks as pink as cherry blossoms, the face reflected in the mirror could be none other than that of Venus newly born from the foam of the sea.
“What do you think, sir?” Chlomo said, but the girl's astounded father was unable to form a reply. He appeared dumbstruck by his daughter's transformation, or, worse yet, filled by an emotion of an entirely different sort.