"With
Apologies To Bram Stoker"
by Lykos
aka: Ernie Whiting
DISCLAIMER: "Xena: Warrior Princess" and all characters are exclusive property of Renaissance Pictures and Studios USA. The following story is non-profit and strictly fan-fiction entertainment, and no copyright infringement is intended.
If you'd like to tell Lykos what you thought of the story, feel free at il_stregone@juno.com . There is also some violence and rude words...but not much!
This story is fondly dedicated
to Renee OConnor
I
The suns rays were almost blood red as it sat half-hidden
behind the silent and ominous Carpathian Mountains, and the shadows that they
cast were long, cold and unsettling. A soft, ghost-like breeze came from the
northwest, scattering dry, whispering dead leaves and pine needles along the
dirt road and toying with Gabrielles long, golden blonde hair, and gently
caressing her bare, tanned skin with cold, restless fingers that made her shiver
uncontrollably. Her sparkling green eyes, which were usually so lively and expressive,
were troubled now as they swept over the silent, walled-in village as they searched
in vain for signs of life.
Unconsciously, she gripped her fighting staff more firmly in one hand.
"This must be the quietest village Ive ever seen," she said
at last, almost as though she were afraid of further disturbing the already
unsettled spirits of its former inhabitants. In contrast to the nearly oppressive
silence, her soft voice sounded loud in her ears. "I dont know about
you, but this place gives me the creeps."
Sitting before her, Xena cautiously surveyed the village with cool, keen eyes.
"Id like to know why this place is so quiet," she said, her
voice soft and wary. And then, in an effort to soothe her friends nerves,
she added a little more encouragingly, "But look on the bright side, Gabrielle;
with this much peace and quiet, we ought to be able to get a good nights
sleepand maybe even a hot and undisturbed meal."
With her anxiety only slightly alleviated by the idea of food and rest, Gabrielle
added, "I could use a hot and relaxing bath, too."
Xena turned her head to sniff the air near the young blonde, and pretended to
smell something unpleasant. "No lie," she said with an exaggerated
grimace.
Gabrielles expression was stung at first, but it quickly turned to Arctic
resentment.
Xena noticed the look, and grinned a relaxed grin. "Im just kidding
you," she replied.
Gabrielle waited a moment longer, then surreptitiously sniffed at one underarm.
From behind her back, she silently regarded her companion once more with a cold
scowl.
Quietly pleased with having diverted her friends feelings away from apprehension
and toward muted indignation, she returned her attention to the matters before
them. The expression in her cool blue eyes showed nothing more than mild curiosity,
and to any distant observer she would have appeared to be entirely unconcerned;
in reality, all of her senses were on full alert as they slowly entered the
village.
The only sign of battle was the battered double gate; one hung crookedly on
a single hinge, and the other stood wide open with a gaping jagged hole where
the two halves had once met. Nothing else seemed disturbed. Apart from the rutted
tracks of wagons and the dray animals that pulled them, not even the ground
seemed disturbed. Gardens, too, looked healthy and well-tended; not a weed in
sight. Aside from the shattered remains of the gate, the place looked quite
normal and pleasant. What happened here? she wondered.
She shifted her attention from the closed doors and shuttered windows at ground
level to the rooftops, scanning for concealed archers who very possibly could
be aiming long bows at them. She suddenly wished she had left Gabrielle outside,
concealed in the woods, while she had snuck in alone to scout the area. If someone
should suddenly attack, she could pretty well handle any threat by herself;
also, Gabrielle would have been in a much better position to come in as a surprise
force and back her up, if necessary, or to mount up and escape if things got
too hot. Should anything ever happen to Gabrielle, Xena had sworn to herself
long ago, she would never forgive herself; losing her was the only thing that
the warrior truly feared. She was, paradoxically, the warrior princesss
greatest strength and her greatest weakness.
Looking around warily, Gabrielle suddenly said in a soft voice, "I feel
like were being watched."
Xena nodded slightly, silently, just once. She felt it, too.
They proceeded slowly down the middle of the dirt road, watching and listening
carefully. This village wasnt as empty as she had thought. Xena supposed
it was understandable that strangers would regard her from concealment; after
all, it probably was not every day that they spied a black-haired woman, six
feet tall and built like an Amazon, dressed in battle gear of black leather
and tarnished bronze, and carrying a variety of extremely lethal weapons. But
she still didnt like being watched. Not wanting to appear threatening,
she left her sword sheathed and slung behind her back as she held Argos
reins loosely in one hand, but her other hand was resting on her trademark chakram,
which hung on a small hook at her right hip.
Maybe theyre in mourning, she thought as she gazed from one door to the
next. Each door and window was decorated with a white wreath. She had never
heard of white being a color for mourning, but...she had never been in this
land before, either.
She was about to quietly suggest that they turn and get out of here, but something
wafted gently under her nose.
"Smell that?"
"If youre going to tell me again that I need a bath," Gabrielle
said peevishly as she gripped her staff even more threateningly, "Im
gonna" She stopped abruptly when she recognized the aroma. "Stew!"
And then her stomach rumbled like a small avalanche; she hadnt eaten since
last night.
Xena snapped her head to one side at the sound of the voice, and her fingers
had curled around her chakram even before she had processed the words.
"What are you two doing out there?" the young woman hissed in a stage
whisper. "Are you crazy?"
Xena slipped her feet from the stirrups and swung a leg over Argos head,
and slid to the ground. Gabrielle joined her a moment later, hanging back with
her staff to hold the golden palominos reins. She didnt want to
further intimidate the woman by approaching her with a fighting staff; Xena
alone was quite intimidating enough.
The warrior slowly approached the house. She advanced with her hands away from
her sides, clearly empty and demonstrating to the woman that she was no threat.
"Is there something wrong?" she asked. Now she could see part of her
face peering from behind the wreath-trimmed door; an eye, a cheek, one corner
of her mouth. "Whats happened?"
The door opened a little more, and the woman inside revealed the rest of her
face. She could not place the young blonde who was dressed in a short, rust-colored
cloth skirt, a two-tone green bodice and brown leather boots, but her eyes widened
in sudden recognition when they fell on the other woman; the long, rich black
hair and piercing blue eyes, the statuesque physique, the short black leather
battle garments and the tarnished bronze breastplates, the sword and the steel-ring
chakramand the reputation that accompanied themwere known from Troy
to Britannia, and from Macedonia to Crete, and even as far east as the kingdom
of Chin. Some who had heard of her exploits exalted her as the guardian of Amphipolis
and its surrounding territory of Thrace, while others quietly and fearfully
denounced her as a plague upon mankind. Rumors had spread that she had turned
away from hatred and fiery destruction to do good, but many were still suspicious;
a number of her countrymen still called her either the daughter of Hades, Lord
of the Underworld, or the daughter of Ares, the God of War. And try as she might
to shed her bloody reputation, her name still sent a shiver of unrelenting terror
throughout most of the known world.
To most, she was known as Death incarnate.
"Youre Xena!" she said, her voice rising despite herself. "Surely,
the gods themselves must have sent you!" Her eyes darted apprehensively
from left to right. Quietly, she said, "Shh! Come inside!" She motioned
briskly with one hand. "Hurry! Hurry!"
Xena cast a quick backward glance toward Gabrielle. Leaning casually on her
staff, the young blonde silently stared back at her with bewildered eyes, a
slight rising of one eyebrow, and a small shrug of one shoulder. She turned
back and fixed on the woman once more with puzzled eyes.
"Go get your friend; but for the love of the Goddess, be quick about it!"
she pleaded. "Its almost sunset!"
**************************
With Argo securely and comfortably bedded down for the night in the barn behind
the small house, Xena and Gabrielle had dined on rich lamb stew and day-old
bread while sitting at a rough, hand-made wooden table. The rest of the house
was simple, with few decorations; there were plain wooden walls, worn and plain
rugs that covered the earthen floor, a small, candle-decorated shrine opposite
the door, and in the far wall there was a stone fireplace. But in spite of the
simplicity of the house, it was clean and well-cared for. Near the fireplace
there rested a simple and empty cradle; a sentimental reminder, perhaps, of
a child who had once graced the lives of Valeria, their hostess, and her husband.
"Has there been a death in the village?" Gabrielle asked. "Is
that why its so quiet outside? Is that what all those white wreaths are
about?"
Valeria shifted uncomfortably in her chair, clearly uneasy. She cast a quick
glance at the two of them, and then focused on the table before her. "Its
a horde of brigands," she said at last, not meeting their eyes, "under
the command of Prince Vlad. His second in command, Dartylius, rode through here
with them during the last new moon, and took what they wanted of our livestock
and our gardens after butchering two of our men. They also kidnaped several
women and children as insurance against any kind of retaliation, and are holding
them in Vlads castle." She noticed that Xenas gaze had fallen
on the nearby cradle, and she added, "Thats my daughters; shes
one of the hostages now. My husband is one of the two dead."
The look in Gabrielles eyes was one of sympathy and pain. With the memory
of her own husbands death still fresh in her mindPerdicas, who had
been killed the day after their wedding by the murdering psychopath Callisto
she knew what their hostess felt. And dear Gods, she added silently, with
the additional loss of an infant daughter! She reached forward and squeezed
Valerias hand comfortingly.
Xena noticed that Valerias response had not addressed the question about
the wreaths. Would roving bandits have allowed them to hang signs of mourning
on their doors? For now, she decided to let that question go unasked. "Tell
me about this Prince Vlad," she said as her eyes returned to their hostess.
Valeria paused for a long moment, thinking. Wondering if she should tell her
the truth. "There have been stories about him," she replied, "but
theyre just thatstories. Now were plagued by this thieving
bastard Dartylius and his cohorts; they return every few days to replenish their
supplies at our expense, and if we dont give them what they want Dartylius
told us that Prince Vlad will kill the children."
"I think I might have heard of a Prince Vlad once, from another bard,"
Gabrielle said, "but I dont know if hes the same one."
"Theres only one that Ive ever heard of," Xena said. "When
barbarian hordes swept out from Persia and Sumeria, he raised an army and went
out to meet them. He not only defeated them, he literally butchered them. He
was never seen or heard from again, from what I understand; he may or may not
have been killed in battle. Either way, the Prince Vlad Im thinking of
cant possibly still be alive, because these legends are more than six
generations old."
"Unless the gods have intervened somehow," Valeria said. "Maybe
our war god Chernobog is up to one of his old tricks."
Xena thought that over for a brief moment, and quickly concluded that the gods
of Transylvania must be as big a pain in the ass as those of Greece. Or maybe
they were the same gods but known by different names. If they have intervened
and this is the same man, she wondered, why would he take children hostage?
He wouldnt need them; it doesnt make sense.
"Thats a beautiful shrine," Gabrielle said, rising from her
chair to approach it for a closer look. With her hands behind her back, careful
not to disturb the small white statue, the candles and bowl of charcoal and
powdered incense, and the surrounding flowers and plants, she bent at her waist
and regarded it with keen interest while Xena was momentarily lost in quiet
thought. "Whos it dedicated to?"
"Thats for the goddess Kupala," she replied. "Among other
things, shes the goddess of the springs, of healing, and our protector
from evil spir" She abruptly stopped herself. "Ive been
appealing to her since Prince Vlads men invaded, but... well, I had just
about lost faith in her. Until..." She looked away from them, reluctant
to go on and uncertain of their reaction. She desperately needed their help,
but the price could be too high. She felt he had no right to ask them to risk
their lives or... Vacillating between desperation and terror, she just didnt
know what to do.
Gabrielles eyes quickly turned to Xena with a silent question. She was
not surprised to find the warrior gazing back at her with a slight, single,
silent nod.
"Where is this castle you mentioned?"
"Im not sure," she replied. "Im not sure anyone knows;
somewhere north of here, maybe. Its been said that the prince is more
of a legend than a reality; maybe his castle is, too." Valerias eyes
suddenly widened in terror when she realized what the warrior was planning.
"No!" she said. "You mustnt!"
"Why not?"
She glanced toward the door, almost as though she was half-expecting someone
to come bursting through it. Perhaps one of the bandits was standing outside
right now, listening in on their conversation. Or perhaps there was something
even worse than one of the marauders. She struggled for an answer that would
be acceptable to whoever or whatever might be spying on them out there. But
all she could think of was, "Please, you mustnt take any action against
him!"
Xena followed her glance, and saw nothing unusual. If she doesnt want
me taking any action against him, she thought, why did she bother to tell us
her tale? She knew Valeria was withholding something, and she was determined
to find out what it was. She rose from her chair, reached for her sword, and
started for the door.
"Please, no!" she said, her voice almost in a panic as she began to
rise from her chair. "You mustnt!" Now her concern truly was
for the life of the warrior.
Gabrielle returned from the shrine and gently took her hand. "Its
okay," she said reassuringly, but even she was puzzled by Valerias
reaction. "Believe me; Xena can handle anything thats out there."
She quickly pulled the door open. Crouching slightly, and holding her sword
in a two-handed grip, ready to take on Aresor in this case, Chernoboghimself,
she stepped outside to confront whoever was out there.
In the darkness beyond, there was nothing. She stood just beyond the doorway
with her sword ready, back-lit by flickering firelight that emanated from inside
and listening intently with her eyes sharpened against the darkness. But she
could hear nothing; not even the sounds of crickets. There was nothing out there
but absolute blackness and utter, dead silence.
Someone is out there, she thought. Something had frightened the crickets into
silence.
Valeria suddenly bolted from her chair. Gripping the tables edge in a
white-knuckled hold and with her feet rooted to where she stood, she did not
dare to move toward the door. Her eyes were wide in terror. "For the love
of the Goddess!" she screamed. "CLOSE THE DOOR!!"
Xena whipped her head around to impale at her with a sharp scowl. An instant
later, though, the sharpness in her eyes softened only slightly as she realized
that this woman was absolutely terrified of some supernatural thing that could
very well be lurking out there, perhaps even within arms reach. This woman
isnt afraid of any lurking bandits, she thought, shes afraid of
the night itself. She carefully scanned the night-shrouded woods once more;
seeing nothing out of the ordinary, she slowly rose from her crouch and lowered
the sword, and then stepped backward inside once more. Sheathing her sword behind
her back, she stopped abruptly to once more regard the white wreath that had
been nailed to the door.
She finally closed the door and lowered the wooden bar to lock it. Turning once
again toward Valeria, she saw that the woman was already beginning to relax,
now that the door had been secured. Trembling, their hostess took her seat once
more, almost collapsing into it from nervous exhaustion.
Xena watched her suspiciously as she returned to the table. She swung a leg
over the chair to sit, leaned forward, and folded her arms across the chairs
back. "What in Tartarus is going on here?" she demanded softly. "Youre
obviously in fear, and you need our help. Well give it, but youve
got to level with us; we need to know everything you can tell us."
Valerias eyes widened, and she quickly looked away. She didnt want
this woman thinking she was some kind of superstitious fool. "I...I dont
know what you mean." She started to get up and move away.
Xena wanted to grab her by her throat and give her a good shaking. In spite
of her increasing impatience, this was a time for tact and diplomacy, not brute
force. The woman was already frightened enough, and there was no sense in adding
to that fright.
Instead, her hand lashed out and caught Valerias in a grip that was surprisingly
gentle for someone whose reputation was that of a bloodthirsty warrior. "You
know as well as I do that you cant ward off bandits with mere wreaths
of garlic hanging on the doors and windows," she said with a soft voice.
"You talk about brigands, but youre really afraid of something else."
She leaned a little farther forward, trying to capture Valerias eyes with
her own. Her voice was soft and comforting, but her eyes showed unrelenting
determination in getting the truth out of her. Her gentle grip tightened just
a bit, hinting at the potential for bone-crushing strength. "I need your
help to get your villages children back. What is it that youre really
afraid of?"
Valerias eyes stared at the table top. Reluctantly, she raised them to
meet Xenas earnest gaze. Let her think me mad, she thought as the tears
rose in her eyes and as her own grip tightened desperately on Xenas hand.
"Vampir," she finally replied, her voice barely loud enough to qualify
even as a terrified whisper. "Prince Vlad is a vampire."
II
"Vampire?" Gabrielle said as something clutched at her heart with
a cold fist. She glanced nervously at Xena, then back to Valeria. "You
mean, like the Bacchae?"
Xena shook her head slowly. "Not like the Bacchae," she replied softly.
Gabrielle watched her friend for a moment with a growing sense of unease as
she took note of the look in her eyes and the tone of her voice.
"Theyre worse," the warrior added. "Much worse. Bacchae
can be saved, if one is lucky enough; but when youre a vampire, theres
no hope. Vampires are undead creatures that exist only to kill indiscriminately
and to create other vampires. Men, women...even children are targets. And the
easier the target, the better."
"And Prince Vlad isnt alone," Valeria said. "Hes
the leader of this vampire cult that calls itself the Lords of Darkness. Weve
seen nothing of the prince himself; his lieutenant Dartylius has been the one
making all the demands. And Dartylius is the one who killed the two men; he
had them crucified and hung upside down, and then...then he" She
stopped for a moment, choking with emotion. Barely controlling herself, she
continued with a quavering voice, "And then he slashed their throats, and...and
his men drank..." She could not go on.
Gabrielle squeezed her eyes shut and slowly turned her head away in horror and
disgust. And when she turned to Xena, she could see the cold contempt and loathing
in her friends eyesand the barely restrained rage.
They had dealt with Bacchae before . They had even become Bacchae, temporarily,
in order to defeat Bacchus himself. And the memory of their encounter with his
demonic slaves made Gabrielle shudder with both revulsion and dread. Had it
not been for Xenas relentless determination and almost supernatural courage,
she would have succumbed to their evil and become a permanent member of their
clan. Just one of the thousands of times shes saved my butt, Gabrielle
thought. Suddenly, she wanted very much for them to be someplace else
preferably reclining on a quiet, private beach somewhere, basking in the warm
radiance of the sun and sipping at tall frosty drinks, while the cool azure
waters of the Aegean licked deliciously at their toes. Or even in an Athenian
alley, for that matter, dealing with drunks and thieves; or even in Sparta,
and battling against renegade warriorsor fighting against any soldiers
of Troy, as long as they were mortal. Anywhere but here with supernatural creatures
that roamed in the dead of night and fed on the blood of the living.
And if vampires are supposed to be even worse than the Bacchae... Gabrielle
let the thought go unfinished. Suddenly, she could feel the weight of the situation
pressing down on them, like a massive stone from one of the pyramids of El Gîza.
"The others may not be vampires after all," Valeria went on. "At
least, not yet. Weve seen them during the daylight hours, and since they
carry weapons they may feel they need them which means they are probably
not undead. But who knows what promises Prince Vlad has made them?"
"How are we going to deal with him?" Gabrielle asked. "I mean,
if we stop the leader, will that destroy the rest of the cult, like cutting
the head off a snake? And where in Tartarus are we going to find Driad bones
to drive into him?"
"A simple wooden stake will do it," Xena told her. "The problem
is, we have to get close enough to him to use it. We have to get past his guards,
find him during the day while hes still in his grave, and drive it through
his heartand then we have to cut off his head, burn his body, and throw
his ashes into the nearest river." She looked at Valeria. "Theres
nothing we can do tonight; well have to wait for sunrise. During the day
hell be helpless, but the nights are his."
Drive a stake through him? Gabrielle thought with an almost audible gulp of
apprehension. Cut off his head? Oh dear Gods... She had gone with her friend
into battle many timesso many that she had lost countbut this was
different. She didnt like the idea of attacking anyonenot even a
vrykolakaswhile they were helpless. On the other hand, if they gave him
a fighting chance, they would probably wind up dead...if not worse.
Gabrielle took a deep breath to steady her nerves, and let it out slowly. "I
dont know about you," she said at last, with a soft voice and a cold
shiver of dread, "but I dont think Ill be getting a wink of
sleep tonight."
**************************
Gabrielles soft snores drifted across the barn as Xena checked Argos
reins once more. Already dressed for the day, she turned her head to observe
her friend. "Come on, Gabrielle, wake up."
Several feet away, still snuggled in the warmth of her blanket and buried somewhere
under layers of straw, Gabrielle snored again.
A little louder now: "Gabrielle? Wake up; the suns coming up."
The young blonde snored again.
Xena shook her head with a sigh of diminishing patience. Never, in all her years,
had she ever met anyone who was so difficult to wake in the morning. Tracking
her by her soft snores, she went over to her, dropped to one knee, and cleared
away some strawa hip here, a foot there, a shoulder back this waybefore
finding her. She shook her gently. "Wakey-wakey."
A loud, almost porcine snore caught in the back of her throat. She rolled onto
her side to face her, moaned softly once more with a dreamy smile, and continued
to sleep.
This time, Xena shook her vigorously. "Gabrielle!"
"Mmmhmmm..."
She watched her for a moment in exasperation...and then she slowly and fondly
smiled at her. The young bard seemed so much younger and more innocent when
she slept; sometimes, she looked to be no more than fifteen summers old. If
it were up to Xena, she would gladly settle back and watch her sleep for another
hour, and reflect on how this girlwho could be both so youthfully exuberant
yet surprisingly insightfulhad so profoundly affected the warriors
life for the better. It really was a shame that she had to wake her.
And then an idea came to her.
She got down on her other knee, and quietly bent over the sleeping girl so that
her lips were within a centimeter of her ear. Cupping one hand around it and
smiling with mischief, she softly whispered something.
Gabrielle cracked open one bleary, red-rimmed eye, and gazed coldly at her friend.
With a voice that was dry from hours of sleep, she croaked, "Thats
the most disgusting thing Ive ever heard."
Xena didnt try to suppress her widening grin. "It woke you up, didnt
it?" she asked.
She sat up and sighed, and wiped the sleep from her languid eyes. A few stalks
of straw were stuck in her hair; she slowly brushed them out with her hands.
"Xena of Amphipolis," she declared with a slight groan of fatigue,
"you are one sick woman."
Xena laughed softly as she rose to her feet with fluid grace. "Now that
youre awake," she said as she offered a hand to her partner, "lets
eat something before heading off."
Gabrielle reached up and accepted it; with their palms clasped, Xena pulled
her quickly and easily to her feet. "No thanks," she replied. "Youve
pretty well ruined my appetite for the rest of the week."
The barn door suddenly flew open, spilling a wide, golden shaft of early morning
sunlight on them. Both women abruptly turned their surprised and alert faces
toward it, and found Valeria standing in the doorway. There was terror in her
eyes and voice. "Theyre coming!" she announced, her voice a
hissing whisper. "Prince Vlads men have come back!"
**************************
Eight of them had ridden in on horseback. Dressed in black leather and steel
helmets, and badly in need of both a shave and a bath, they were slowly making
their way toward the center of the village. The first thing they had noticed
was the lack of anyone at the front gate to meet them with their supplies.
"Where did everybody go?" one of them asked.
"If they know whats good for them, theyd better get out here
with our food," replied another as they came to a stop.
"We told them what could happen if they decided not to cooperate with us,"
their leader said. "We can either do a house-to-house search, or we can
go back empty-handed and take a chance on trying to explain to Dartylius what
happened. Personally, I think hed rather have the supplies than kill the
brats. Which would you rather do?"
"I think you ought to tell me where Dartylius is," a soft yet deadly
female voice said from behind them, "so I can go talk to him personally
and find out why such a big bad warlord has to hide behind women and children."
The eight of them turned as one toward the source of the voice, and found themselves
staring at a tall, black-haired woman in black leather and tarnished bronze;
standing next to her was a shorter blonde woman in soft suede and cloth of muted
earth tones of green and reddish-brown. The blonde was clutching a fighting
staff and watching them warily, but the black-haired woman merely stood with
her arms folded casually across her chest and her weight shifted to one foot.
Her smile seemed inviting enough, but beneath its warm surface was the coldness
of a predator. They stood between the raiders and the villages exit, cutting
off their only means of escape.
The leader of the group angrily whipped his head toward the source of the voice,
and when his eyes fell on her the fury in them subtly took on an additional
expression of lechery. Licking his lips, he asked, "And who the hell are
you?"
"My name is Xena," the black-haired warrior replied. "Im
a problem-solver."
The eight men dismounted as one, and began to approach the two women. "Xena,
huh? Ive heard of you," the leader said with a slow, bristly and
lascivious sneer of a grin. "Ive always wanted to see how tough you
really are; and Id be willing to bet this is one problem youre not
going to solve." They drew their swords, and with a chorus of wild yells
they attacked.
Without a word, she pushed Gabrielle out of harms way as she reached behind
her back and drew her sword.
The first attacker moved in, charging forward with all the grace of a lumbering
bear. Easily sidestepping the downward, sweeping arc of his blow, Xena lashed
out low with her own sword and gave him a deep, crippling slice behind one knee.
Her bloodstained sword then came back up in a lightning-quick and sweeping,
back-handed arc, and its razor edge sliced neatly across his throat. Blood sprayed
everywhere, staining his tunic and the ground around him.
That settles the question, Xena thought, as to whether or not the rest of these
jerk-offs are vampires.
The rest of them came on almost immediately, filling the air with wild yells
and the flashing of sunlight reflecting from their blades. Blocking his overhead
blow with a sudden ringing of steel on steel, she simultaneously raised one
booted foot and slammed it into the crotch of the second attacker, sending him
to the ground. With a grunt of effort, she swept the sword from Number Three
and sent it flying before she slammed her elbow into his face, crushing the
bridge of his nose and sending bone fragments up into his brain. He dropped
like a stone, and lay unmoving next to Number Two.
Numbers Four, Five and Six were quick to circle around, hoping to catch her
from behind. Crouching slightly with her sword ready, she regarded them with
cold and deadly eyes, wondering who was going to be the first to strike. Rather
than waiting for them to make a move, she suddenly seized the initiative; with
a shrieking and ululating war-cry, she threw herself high into the air in a
forward flip that carried her out of their reach. Twisting in mid-air like a
panther, she turned and landed behind them, and kicked Number Four in his backside
before he could turn around, sending him face-forward into the dry dust. She
leaped again as Numbers Five and Six spun to face her, and kicked them simultaneously
under their chins, snapping their heads backward and breaking their necks before
touching the ground again.
"Get the blonde!" she heard the leader yelling from somewhere nearby.
"Get the blonde!"
Number Four was rising to his feet and turning to rush toward Gabrielle, along
with Number Seven. Shes obviously no warrior, he thought, judging by the
way she was standing there with that terrified look on her face. She was going
to be easy pickings.
Gabrielle raised her staff, holding it horizontally in a firm, two-handed grip,
and with both terror and determination in her eyes she rammed one end into Number
Fours stomach, catching him completely by surprise and driving the air
out of himand possibly rupturing a vital organ or two. The staff swept
to the right with a loud whoosh!, catching him across the side of his head,
and then to the left, sweeping his legs from under him. He fell flat on his
back with a caved-in skull, and did not get up. Damn, he thought before the
light faded from his eyes, that little girl can hit...hard!
Vampire, my ass, Gabrielle thought in pleasant surprise. But that mild elation
was short lived, for Number Seven suddenly rushed her from behind just as his
partner fell to the ground, and grabbed Gabrielles staff. They struggled
for its control, grunting and cursing at each other, and then he suddenly stepped
forward and backhanded her across the face with one fist. The blow snapped her
head to one side and sent her blonde hair flying, and staggered her back a step
as she lost her grip on the staff, and he yanked it away from her. Without quite
going down, she regained her balance as the ringing in her ears faded, and she
found him approaching her, grinning malignantly and twirling her staff in his
hands. "Let me show you how you really use one of these," he growled.
He swung at her, and she skipped backward, pulling in her stomach; the blow
barely grazed her bare midriff. He swung at her again, higher this time, and
missed a second time as she ducked beneath the blow and dodged to the left.
He swung again, and she ducked and dodged again, and he missed once morebut
only because this time she tripped over the either dead or unconscious Number
Four. She landed hard on her side, and rolled over to lay sprawled on her back--and
found Number Seven standing over her with her staff raised high to kill her
with an overhead blow.
He stood over her with malignant triumph in his eyes. With a loud grunt, he
quickly raised the staff a little higher to add some extra momentum to the blow,
and suddenly stiffened as his eyes went wide. He froze for a moment, and then
slowly turnedand Gabrielle saw the chakram buried deep between his shoulder
blades. Number Seven sank to his knees, and with a very surprised look in his
eyes he fell face-first into the dust.
Saved my butt again, she thought.
She scrambled to her feet and retrieved her staff, and went to go help Xena.
The leader was standing in front of her with his sword raised high in both hands
and drawn back, ready to strike. Xena was on one knee before him, with one arm
extended away from her side--and with her sword gripped firmly in her other
hand, plunged to the hilt through his chest. She had taken him out at the same
time she had thrown her chakram to save Gabrielle. She rose and planted one
foot against his chest, and shoved hard to pull her sword free; with a red stain
that quickly spread across his chest, he fell backward to the ground, like a
massive, freshly cut tree.
"Are you okay?"
Gabrielle took a moment to answer. "Yeah," she said at last as her
breath slowed. "Yeah, Im okay. You?"
"No problems," she replied. She knelt and wiped the blood from her
sword on her victims tunic. "Any of these guys still left alive?"
she asked as she rose and slipped her sword into its scabbard behind her back.
She approached Number Seven to retrieve her chakram, and through the corner
of her eye she spotted several villagers who were coming out of their homes,
now that the threat had been neutralized.
"I dont know," Gabrielle replied. "Maybe that one over
there." Holding her staff in a one-handed grip, she pointed with it at
Number Three.
Xena cleaned her chakram on Number Seven, then approached Number Three, who
was curled up on his side, clutching at his groin and groaning in agony. She
knelt on one knee and grabbed the front of his tunic in one fist, and hauled
him into a sitting position. With the speed of a cobra, she released him and
jabbed him on both sides of his neck with rigid first and second fingers of
each hand, collapsing his carotid arteries and jugular veins. She grabbed his
tunic front in one fist again before he hit the ground.
Number Three suddenly found himself in paralyzing agony.
"Ive just cut off the flow of blood to your brain," she said,
softly and menacingly. "Youll be dead within a minute unless you
tell me what I want to know."
With terror in his eyes, he nodded eagerly.
"Where do I find Dartylius and Prince Vlad?"
From somewhere in the depths of his soul came a new rush of savage terror. "Please!
Anything but that!"
Xena sighed patiently. "Times a-wastin."
He didnt know much about any Prince Vlad; he was just some dead guy with
a bad reputation, from what hed heard from the others. But he was all
too familiar with Dartylius, since he had been riding with him for some six
months. And if he informed on the warlord... "Hell kill me if I talk!"
Xena watched him with cold eyes. "Youll die if you dont."
Tears formed in the mans eyes. It was far worse than being caught between
a rock and a hard place. He was familiar with Xenas dark reputation, yet
at the same time he was absolutely terrified of his master; he didnt know
who he feared more.
Gabrielle watched uncomfortably as a trickle of blood began to leak from one
of his nostrils; his sinuses were filling with blood, and it was getting harder
for him to breath. He snuffled once, spraying blood on his upper lip and on
Xenas hand as she continued to hold him in a vise-like grip. Then the
tiny blood vessels in his eyes began to hemorrhage, and traces of blood mixed
with his tears.
"North of here!" he finally blurted. "Up the main road that leads
to this village. Take the left fork when you reach the split; it will lead you
around the side of a mountain and then up into the hills. The entire journey
is just under a days ride."
Satisfied that he was telling the truth, Xena hit him again with lightning speed
and rigid fingers, releasing his blood flow once more. He dropped to the ground,
panting in exertion and terrorand in relief, now that his life had been
spared.
And then she slammed a fist into his face, knocking him out cold. "Tie
this man and gag him," she said, addressing the crowd. "If hes
lied to us, I want to be able to interrogate him again. And get rid of these
bodies before more raiders come looking for them." To Gabrielle, she added,
"Come on; we might still have enough daylight left to find Vlads
castle."
**************************
Down on one knee in the middle of the road, she picked up a green, dry, grassy
lump and crushed it almost into dust between her fingers. "These droppings
must be a couple of weeks old," she said softly, "yet the tracks themselves
look comparatively fresh. Notice the edges? Theyre still well-defined.
Theres obviously been a lot of traffic along this trail."
Still standing next to Argo and holding her reins, Gabrielle watched her friend
with a slightly revolted expression in her eyes. "I hope you remember to
wash those hands before you eat with them," she said.
Xena grinned and shook her head slightly, and then dusted her hands together
as she rose from her crouch. She reached for the reins and Gabrielle handed
them to her, careful not to touch her. "Ive always admired the way
you use humor to deal with an unpleasant situation," she said. Then, more
softly and more seriously, she added, "Youre still upset about my
interrogation technique, arent you?"
"The neck-pinch thing?" Watching her quietly for a moment, squinting
slightly against the brilliance of the late afternoon sun as it shone in her
eyes, she sighed softly. "Not really," she said at last. "Unfortunately--and
thanks to some brainless idiots that are still running loosesometimes
theres just no other alternative but force; that force is the only thing
they understand. I mean, how does one reason with someone who refuses to be
reasoned with?" She sighed in resignation. "At least your way, the
decision to survive through cooperation or to pay for their stupidity and malice
is ultimately theirs." She thought for a moment. "On the other hand,
theres a part of me that still insists there must be another way. I just
have to keep searching for it until I find it."
"Let me know when you do," Xena softly told her as they continued
on.
One corner of Gabrielles mouth curled upward in a tiny smile. "Will
do," she said.
They came around one more bend in the road, and they stopped. Gabrielles
heart raced for a moment in apprehension, and Xenas eyes chilled in cold
determination. Five hundred meters ahead of them, in the silence and the gathering
darkness, lay the castle of Prince Vlad.
III
"Having second thoughts?" Xena asked as they approached the massive
main entrance.
Gabrielle said nothing. Instead, she shrugged slightly with a troubled look
in her eyes. The way the crumbling black walls of the ancient castle seemed
to blend in with the black and craggy mountains that surrounded it, it was difficult
to tell where natural architecture ended and where human architecture began;
and the white mist that slowly drifted before the base of the castle, even in
this late afternoon sun, further obscured the border between nature and the
manmade to create an even more chilling and sinister atmosphere.
She shuddered uncontrollably.
Taking her friends reaction as her answer, Xena said, "I dont
blame you. But its too late to turn back now."
"I dont know," Gabrielle countered softly as she continued to
gaze apprehensively at the castle. "With the proper motivation, I can run
pretty fast."
In spite of herself, Xena grinned a wry grin. She could certainly understand
her friends reluctance, but at the same time she also knew without question
that Gabrielle would never desert her. Over the past few summers, the black-haired
warrior had grown to admire her more than the young bard knew for having stuck
with her for so longand for frequently risking her own life so she could
record the warriors deeds for the ages. Gabrielle might have sounded like
a reluctant partner at times, but in reality she was the bravest person Xena
had ever known. Over the last few summers, she had metamorphosed from a young
and innocent girl to a strong and formidable young woman.
To assuage her apprehension, she asked, "Cmon, Gabrielle. Wheres
your sense of adventure?"
"I think I might have left it in Corinth," she replied, "along
with that bad cheese I ate."
Xena winced sharply at the memory of the cheese incident, and shuddered sympathetically.
"Come on," she said at last, "its not getting any earlier."
**************************
"Look at this art work," Gabrielle said in open admiration, her voice
and their footsteps echoing from the cold, gray stone walls as they stepped
into a vast and formerly majestic entrance hall. There were ancient white statues
standing in the darkened corners, some praying and some dressed for battle;
ancient and imposing weapons, shields, and coats-of-arms hung in shadows, and
ancient family portraits hung with tapestries opposite the broken, empty windows.
The trappings all denoted a former and magnificent wealth and beauty, but their
unkempt conditionstained with mildew and crumbling with decay, and with
layer upon layer of thick dust and ancient, shredded cobwebsnow signified
centuries of neglect.
"We ought to be looking for Vlads grave rather than admiring his
art collection," Xena replied as she cautiously surveyed their surroundings.
She kept wondering why they had not run into any resistance; so far, not a single
cult member had been seen. Not only that, there didnt seem to be any evidence
of any human occupation; the place looked as though it had not been disturbed
in nearly three hundred years. But that didnt mean there werent
any of his forces lurking nearby, ready and waiting for an opportunity to spring
a surprise attack.
There was a long, dust-covered ebony table surrounded by a dozen thickly upholstered
chairs that looked more like small thrones, and the walls were covered with
paintings that reflected considerable talent; where there were no paintings,
there were shelves that contained scrolls and leather-bound booksscores
of them.
Gabrielle stopped for a moment, and touched one of the paintings. "This
is incredible," she said softly. She glanced around at the collection of
scrolls and leather-bound volumes, and then turned to Xena. "Do you suppose
hes read all these scrolls? I mean, someone who reads this much certainly
doesnt fit my idea of a savage warlord."
Xena narrowed her eyes slightly in the fading light as the depth and texture
of the work momentarily captured her attention. The scenery seemed to shift
from day-lit to moon-lit as she shifted the angle of her gaze. The painter was
obviously talented. "Yeah," she said in reluctant admiration. "A
savage with good taste. These could be strictly for show."
"Maybe," Gabrielle said thoughtfully.
Xena moved on from one painting to the next, captivated by the art work and
admiring each portrait in its turn. These really are incredible, she thought.
I wonder who he stole them from.
She stopped suddenly, and her eyes went wide in shock. By the Gods! she thought.
"Gabrielle!" she said, turning slightly. "Come here and take
a look atGabrielle?"
Her friend was gone.
**************************
Gabrielle ran her fingers along one of the shelves. She reached for one of the
many scrolls that stood on end and tried to take it down, but it would not come
away from the shelf. Scowling slightly, she examined the scroll and noticed
that tied around it, above the ribbon that held it shut, there was a thin piece
of wire. Whats this? she thought in mild bewilderment. She tugged a little
harder.
The entire set of shelvesfrom floor to ceiling, and some twelve feet widesuddenly
spun without a sound, sweeping her through the secret doorway.
She didnt even have time to cry out for help.
***************************
"Gabrielle?" Xena strode quickly to where her friend had last been
standing. Had she wandered off down a connecting hall, or stepped into another
room to explore? Not without letting her know, she wouldnt. The shelves
and scrolls looked the same. Had someone silent and stealthy simply crept up
from behind her and abducted her? Or did the shelves conceal a doorway to a
secret passageway, she suddenly wondered, and had someoneor somethingjust
now used it to snatch her friend?
"Gabrielle!" she called out again, her heart now racing with apprehension.
If anything had happened to her... She searched the shelves frantically, with
her ice-blue eyes wide in fear and quickly running her hands over the wood and
parchment, feeling for the activating mechanism. But she could find nothing.
"Gabrielle!"
***************************
She found herself inside another room. It was sparsely furnished and utterly
silent, with only a small table next to the shelves which stood before her,
and resting on it was a small oil lamp. There was a small, dust-covered flint
next to the lamp, which was used for lighting it, and the rapidly fading rays
of the sun shone through a red stained-glass window. The room looked as though
it was bathed in blood.
She spun and pounded her fist against the wall behind the shelves. "Xena!"
she called out, her heart pounding in terror. The last thing she wanted was
to be separated from the warrior in the house of a vampire. She cast a quick
glance over her shoulder at the dust-covered window, and watched in terror as
the last rays of the setting sun faded behind the mountains. "Xena!"
****************************
"Gabrielle! Can you hear me? Gabrielle!"
Silence answered her.
****************************
With a soft, deep-chested lions growl, it watched from a high corner of
the ceiling as the raven-haired woman with the sword slung across her back pounded
against the wall with one fist. It could see her only from behind, so it crept
slowly along the corner to a better vantage point. It paused for a moment to
watch her from the shadows with glaring red eyes; and then, like a luminescent
white mist drifting slowly across a bog, it descended and silently crept up
on her from behind.
****************************
Standing and listening intently in the near darkness, she couldnt tell
if Xena could hear her or not. In sheer frustration, she cursed at the wall
and kicked it once moreas though it would do any good. Rail and flail
as she might, the mute wall and scroll shelves would not even acknowledge her
presence.
Great, she thought with growing fear and frustration. Terrific. Now what am
I going to do? There was worry in her eyes, but she refused to give in to it.
She stood back and stopped for a moment to catch her breath, and forced herself
to think more clearly. It was obvious that brute force was not going to get
her out of here; so instead of beating at the wall with her staff and calling
it a wide variety of imaginative and offensive names, she decided it would be
less of an exertion if she quickly looked for the switch or whatever that would
activate the shelves mechanism and set her free. "I will not panic,"
she told herself softly as she willed her racing heart and breathing to slow.
"I will not panic." She took a deep breath and let it out slowly.
"Calm and relaxed," she whispered, "calm and relaxed..."
Straining her eyes against the encroaching darkness, she reached for the flint,
struck it several times before it caught, and lit the lamp. Raising it, she
took a better look around the room.
The shadows flickered and retreated to reveal more shelves that were positively
jammed with seemingly innumerable scrolls and leather-bound volumes; they must
have numbered in the hundreds, almost bursting the shelves apart. The room was
a library of some kind. Under normal circumstances, Gabrielle would have been
happy to take her time and examine the books and scrolls; to settle comfortably
into one of the wide, over-stuffed chairs and put her feet up to rest the volumes
in her lap as she perused them at her leisure. But her usually spirited sense
of curiosity had been hammered to dust by a sudden and fierce sense of self-preservation.
*****************************
Searching the massive set of shelves for the mechanism that might return Gabrielle
to her, Xena felt a sudden and unsettling chill. It felt as though someone had
carelessly left a cabin door open on a Siberian winters night, rapidly
letting out all of the warmth that had accumulated from the fire in the fireplace
to be replaced with a gust of such intense iciness that it reached into ones
very soul. She could even see her own breath now, as it escaped from her nose
and lips as thick white puffs of vapor, while she listened intently for any
of Gabrielles faint and distant cries for help. At the same time, she
felt someone standing behind her.
She spun quickly and drew her sword with a loud metallic ring, and found herself
facing a tall, elderly man with flowing white hair and a white moustache. But
for one so old, he also appeared to be quite robust and strongly built. He was
dressed completely in black, with the only color on him coming from a sparkling
silver chain and a gleaming green emerald that fastened the cloak at his throat.
"May I help you?" he asked with a mellifluous, baritone voice. He
motioned with one hand, and a pair of torches that hung on each wall suddenly
burst into flames to illuminate the room.
"Yeah," Xena snarled dangerously with her sword at the ready. "You
can tell me what you did with my friend!"
The vampire smiled. "Your friend," he said. "That must be the
annoying young blonde, verbally abusing my library." He took a step forward,
and the bitter and biting cold intensified. When he spoke, Xena noticed, he
left no white puffs of vapor drifting in the air; he was most definitely one
of the walking deadan undead monster, with absolutely no warmth or soul
within him.
She backed up a step, but her sword never wavered; its tip remained aligned
with the vampires throat. "I know who you are, Prince Vlad,"
she said, realizing even as she spoke that such a statement would do her no
good.
"Then you have me at a disadvantage," the vampire said most politely.
It could afford to be polite. After all, this mortal would probably be a quick
kill, and hed have a belly full of rich, warm blood. He might even make
a conversion out of this one.
"My name is Xena," she said, by way of self-introduction.
Prince Vlad looked pleasantly surprised. "The warrior princess of Amphipolis!"
he declared with a charming smile. Suddenly, slaking his thirst for blood didnt
seem to be quite the priority it was a moment ago. Turning his side to her,
he took a couple of slow and deliberate paces that brought him no closer to
her; nor did he retreat. Perhaps, Xena thought, he was trying to distract her
before lunging in for the kill. "And if you truly know who I am,"
he added thoughtfully, "then you must also know that your sword is quite
useless against me."
"Perhaps," she replied. "Im sure youll excuse me
if I dont put it away."
The vampires smile expanded into a wide grin that revealed a pair of glistening,
sharp fangs. "Most understandable," he said, chuckling pleasantly.
He paused for a moment, his thirst completely forgotten now. "So!"
He turned suddenly to face her once more, causing her to jump slightly. "What
brings you, bearing such nonlethal weapons, to my home?"
He had her there; there was no sense in holding him at sword point. Had she
brought a wooden stake, she would have tried to slam it into him by now. But
they had not had the opportunity to make any back in the village, thanks to
the delay caused by the fight with Dartyliuss men, and her plan to improvise
one after finding the prince helpless in his grave had been sidetracked by Gabrielles
sudden disappearance.
On the other hand, she figured as the cold seemed to withdraw just slightly,
maybe she could get in a lucky shot and decapitate the creature.
"First, I want to know what you did with my friend," she said in a
deadly growl. "And then I want to know why youve ordered Dartylius
to kidnap children and hold them hostage. What have the people of that village
ever done to you?"
"Kidnap children?" he asked. For the first time, the vampires
smile vanished; now he looked truly perplexed. "Why would I wanna do that?"
"Youre the vampire; you tell me."
Prince Vlad shook his head. Turning around to pace back, and reminding himself
to enunciate properly, he said, "I have no needor even any casual
usefor children."
"Not according to Dartylius."
"I have no idea of who this Dartylius person is," Vlad
said, "or why he is maligning my name."
Xena smiled skeptically. "Yeah, sure..."
He stopped abruptly and regarded her. "You think I am immune to slander?
You should know as well as I what it takes to dispel an unpleasant reputation."
There was a subtle shift in the expression in her eyes. No mortal would ever
have noticed it, but the vampire did. Hed found a chink in her armor.
"Yes, Ive heard the stories about the villages youve plundered
and razed. The peasants youve killed. The women and children youve
butchered."
The look in Xenas eyes matched her sword; it was cold, sharp and deadly.
"Ive never harmed women and children," she said. "That
was Darphuss idea; my army acted against my wishes when they did that,
and they chose to follow him."
While not seeming to have actually moved, Vlad was somehow closer to her than
he had been a few moments ago. "You and I know that," he said, with
his eyes gazing directly into hers. "But do you think anyone will believe
you?"
"Probably not," she replied, challenging his gaze with her own. "I
may not be able to do anything about that, but it doesnt mean Im
going to stop trying."
The vampire watched her quietly and carefully. Admirable, it thought. "Your
enemies will continue to slander your name," he told her, and as he did
he continued to slowly drift toward her. "But I can help you to outlive
them and the effects their words can have on you, and to correct the record."
"You want to grant me eternal life?" Xena said softly with a slight
smirk. "So I can be remembered as a butcher and a blood-sucking vrykolakas?"
She shook her head slightly. "I dont think so." In spite of
the contempt she felt for the vampire and his offer, though, she was finding
it increasingly difficult to avert her eyes.
Vlad winced slightly at the phrase, but his concentration never broke. Why did
breathers always use that redundant phrase? Of course vampires drank blood!
But calling him a "blood-sucking vrykolakas" was like calling mortals
"food-eating humans." "There can be some definite advantages
to being a vrykolakas," he told her. "You can become a witness to
the ages. Imagine the future history you could see unfolding before your very
eyes." This time, he actually did take a step toward her as his enthusiasm
rose. "Imagine the absolute and gratifying justice of outliving all of
your enemies for generations to come! While they lie rotting in the ground and
feeding the worms, you can revise popular history with the truth, and live on
in glory." He took yet another step toward her. "Next to myself, I
can think of no better administrator of such justice."
"And what of my friends?" she asked. "How many of them would
I leave behind?" That thought alone was enough to make her reject such
an offer...but such considerations did little to dispel the feeling of sinking
into a warm, dark, calm sea. She felt as though she were drowning, yet at the
same time it was almost comforting. Gazing into the princes eyes, she
felt as though she could fall into them...
Without realizing it, the tip of her sword began to slowly drop. "No,"
she said, but the definitiveness of her response did not match the softening
tone of her voice. "Not as a..."
"All the hatred and distrust that others feel for you," Prince Vlad
said in a near whisper, both soothingly and with quiet enthusiasm, as he continued
to approach. "I can make all of that disappear."
She felt herself falling deeper under his spell. She shook her head to clear
it, but it did her little good. She tried to step back, to raise her sword once
more or reach for her chakram, but her arms felt so heavy, like lead weights...
Even with her iron will, she found that she was susceptible to this creatures
influence. She hadnt realized she had fallen into his web until it was
too late.
"I would much rather have you as a willing ally than as a conscripted one,"
Vlad said.
"No," she said again as her swords tip gently met the stone
floor, but it was no more than a weak, half-hearted whisper; almost a soft cry.
She struggled to raise it, but it would not move. If only she had a few more
moments, she might be able to free herself from this demons gaze; to wrench
herself free of the trance, to scream in rage and slice the vampires head
from its shoulders. Xena, who had outsmarted gods and goddesses, who had roamed
from Britannia to Chin and had slain entire armies, and who had repeatedly defeated
not only Callisto but also Ares the very God of War himselfwas now
slipping deeper and deeper into the comforting warmth of the vampires
spellbinding gaze. And struggle as she might to rise to the surface of this
sea of darknessto gasp a deep, desperate breath of air to clear her headshe
just didnt have enough time.
I never thought I would end like this, she thought as the vampire approached
her and finally engulfed her in darkness.
Gabrielle...
**************************
"Where are you?" Gabrielle asked of the scroll that had sent her here.
With the lamp in one hand, she pulled at the individual scrolls with the other,
hoping that she would quickly find it. She was no longer worried about panicking,
nor did she bother trying to calm herself; now she was plain damn mad. "Where
are you, you little son of a Bacchae!" she roared as she pulled at another
scroll.
The shelves abruptly and silently spun, sweeping her with them. With a yelp
of surprise, she dropped the oil lamp and lunged for her staff. The light went
out, plunging her into darkness, and there was a feeling of being swept awayand
then she was standing outside in the dining hall once more. She quickly stepped
out of the secret doors reach, as though it might try to snatch at her
and sweep her back into the secret room once more, and when she safely turned
from it she saw Xena standing some ten paces away, partially illuminated by
the flickering light of a pair of burning torches.
And she was not alone.
The vampire stood before her best friend with its hands on her shoulders. She
slowly tilted her head back and to the side, exposing her throat, and even in
this dim light Gabrielle could see the monsters fangs when its lips parted.
"NO!!" Raising her staff and holding it like a lance, she charged
headlong toward them with her heart pounding in terror and her eyes filled with
fury.
With a loud reptilian hiss of rage, the vampire wrenched its attention away
from its prey and glared at her with blazing red eyes. With gleaming lupine
fangs, the thing demanded, "Who dares to interrupt me"
And then he froze, his eyes wide in astonishment.
With a wild scream, Gabrielle rammed the end of her wooden staff into its midsection.
The undead creatures eyes bulged in surprise, and just as quickly it doubled
over in sudden agony. Grunting with the force that she threw into the next blow,
she swung the staff again with a loud whoosh!, and slammed it into his ribs.
The monster roared again, and before it could counter another blow, Gabrielle
swept the staff low and caught it behind the knees, sending the vampire to the
stone floor.
Xena blinked once and then again as she slowly rose from the warm black depths
of trance. As the black mist cleared from her eyes and mind, the first thing
she saw was Gabrielle pounding furiously at Vlad and screaming in both terror
and rage, slamming the end of her staff savagely against his shoulders and head,
beating him to the floor. She stepped backward and bumped against the long table
as Gabrielle continued her assault, shaking off the dizziness, and sat against
it while trying to regain her wits.
"Hold it!" Vlad shouted, and Gabrielle hit him again and again, slamming
the staff against the side of his head. "Hold it, dammitt, hold it!"
he shouted again, holding out one hand to ward off another blow. "Enough
already! Jeez!"
With perspiration shimmering on her tanned face and brow and trickling down
her neck, and with clenched white teeth and a wild look in her eyes as she held
the staff ready, Gabrielle paused for a moment, panting furiously and looking
for any excuse to continue the beating. After all the times Xena had saved her
life, she didnt feel merely indebted to the warrior; the bond went far
deeper than that.
The thought of this creature laying its hands on her made her raise her staff
once more.
Supporting himself on one elbow, Prince Vlad held his other hand against his
painful ribs. "Son of a bitch, that hurts!" Staring at her in mute
stupefactionBy the Gods! he thoughthe gingerly felt for any possible
breaks. He took a deep breath and let it out quickly; he hadnt taken a
beating like that since before he had become...
He looked up at her again, and the astonished look in his eyes took on an additional
expression of open admiration; he literally could not take his eyes off of the
young blonde. "I havent been walloped like that in over two hundred
years," he said at last, and saw that the raging and terrified expression
in the young womans eyes also contained just a hint of puzzlement. Grinning
at her, he added, "Youre very good with that."
And then he was gone. One moment he was there, prone and helpless before them
on the cold stone floor, and suddenly he dissolved into a glowing white mist,
which quickly slid away with a soft puff of wind.
Both women jumped apprehensively. They spun quickly with their weapons held
ready as they glanced around the room, but he was nowhere to be seen. He was
simply gone.
He suddenly came from behind Gabrielle and snatched her staff from her. "Lets
not have any more of it, shall we?" he said as he strode toward the head
of the table. He dropped the staff onto the polished surface with a loud clatter,
and settled into one of the velvet-covered chairs. Resting one booted foot on
the edge of the table, he tilted slowly back to lean against the wall behind
him, assuming a watchful pose. He no longer saw them as intruders now. Xenas
strength and attitude reminded him a lot of himself, but the young blonde...
By the Gods, he thought again, can it be...?
The two women warily backed away. Resting her hand on her chakram, Xena asked,
"Why is it that a steel sword is useless against you, yet you can be taken
out with a wooden staff?"
Prince Vlad had to tear his attention away from Gabrielle, and as he did he
winced slightly and massaged his bruised ribs. "Maybe because wood was
once a living thing but is no longerrather like me. Yet we both continue
to exist," he replied. "A wooden stake through the heart can kill
us, while a steel blade cannot; evidently, a wooden staff upside the head can
crack our skulls." He winced again. "And our ribs," he added
under his breath.
Gabrielle continued to watch him distrustfully. Her stafftheir only effective
weapon against this creaturewas now far out of their reach and easily
within his, and this thing was fully capable of ripping their throats out as
easily as taking another breath...yet the monster was making no efforts to attack
again.
But that didnt mean it wouldnt.
He motioned them toward a pair of chairs. "Please, sit," he said.
When they made no move toward the offered chairs, he smiled reassuringly. "Please,"
he said, his full attention on Gabrielle. "You have nothing to fear from
me; you have my word of honor on it."
Xena noticed the way he kept watching her, and didnt like it. "What
good is the word of a bloodthirsty vrykolakas?" she asked coldly.
Vlad gazed back at her, and his smile seemed to slip away just a bit. "I
suppose its as good," he countered mildly, "as that of a bloodthirsty
warrior princess."
They were silent for a moment, regarding each other carefully before Xena finally
replied with a soft, "Touche."
In a show of good faith, Vlad somewhat painfully leaned forward and took the
end of Gabrielles staff in one hand, and with a slight wince he extended
the weapon toward her; fixing him with distrustful eyes, Gabrielle paused for
only a moment before quickly snatching it back. Warily clutching the weapon
once more, she and Xena slowly went to stand at the other end of the table as
they kept a watchful eye on their hostbut neither of them took the offered
seats.
Vlad shrugged off their refusal of his hospitality with a barely noticeable
motion. "Suit yourselves," he muttered softly. Fixing his eyes on
them once more, he smiled pleasantly and said, "So, what brings two such
lovely young ladies to my humble home?"
"Why are you kidnaping children and holding them hostage?" Gabrielle
wanted to know. "What have the people of that village south of here done
to you to deserve such treatment?"
He watched her for a moment, studying her. No, he thought at last, but by the
Gods... "My dear..." He paused for a moment, slightly raising one
questioning eyebrow.
"Gabrielle," she said, reluctantly and cautiously.
Vlad smiled charmingly. It wasnt the same diabolical charm with which
he had first regarded Xena; now he was sincerely congenial. "My dear Gabrielle,"
he said, enjoying the way her name rolled from his tongue; he literally could
not speak it without smiling. "As I mentioned to your most formidable friend
here, I have no need of child hostages to obtain what I desire. To expand on
that, I would add that I simply take what I want. After all, who would stop
me?" It was not said with the scorn and spiteful pride that Xena had heard
so many times from so many other warlords; instead, it was simply a statement
of fact, with no more boastfulness than a comment about the weather. Prince
Vlad knew full well what his capabilities were, and he felt absolutely no need
to impress others with them. "But there is nothing that I want from that
village."
Gabrielle watched him for a long moment, noting with some disapproval that this
last statement was tinged with a trace of derision. Finally, she asked gingerly,
"Are you the same Prince Vlad as the general who defeated the Sumerian
and Persian armies two hundred years ago?"
Still reclining comfortably, and now with the pain in his ribs finally ebbing,
the vampire smiled modestly and bowed his head slightly. "I am."
For a long moment, she was astounded; absolutely stunned with awe. Here she
was, in the presence of a living piece of historya slayer of armies who
should have died nearly three hundred years ago, yet who still continued to
live as long as it could feed on the blood of the living and rest in its grave
during the day. For a moment, she felt as though she was about to be overcome
by it all. "By the Gods," she breathed, barely audibly. One hand rose
slowly to her forehead in astonishment, unconsciously brushing back blonde bangs
which flopped back into place, while the implication sank to a new chilling
depth within her soul. Without even realizing it, she slowly and heavily sank
into one of the offered chairs.
And then her awe and trepidation were suddenly replaced with absolute fascination.
Sweet Athena, this is gonna make a great story! She reached for her deerskin
bag and grappled with it. "What happened to you?" she asked excitedly
as she hurriedly searched inside for her quill and a fresh scroll. She spoke
so quickly, her questions nearly ran together in one long stream. "Where
do you come from? How old are you? How did you become a vrykolakas? Whats
your connection with that village"
He silenced her by raising a patient hand, and regarded her fondly for a long
moment. "Are you two hungry?" he asked them at last. "You must
be; I can hear dear Gabrielles stomach rumbling from here. And if Im
going to be interviewed, its going to make for a long night. So Ill
tell you what: Ill go out and get us some dinner. The kitchen hasnt
been used for over two hundred years, but theres plenty of wood for the
fireplace, if you would be so kind as to build a fire." He smiled most
amiably at them. "How does some nice roasted venison sound to you?"
For a moment, even Xena was somewhat taken aback. "Sounds great,"
she replied, almost as surprised as Gabrielle by this sudden turn of events.
A minute ago, the young bard had been battling with him for Xenas life
and pounding at him in murderous rage with her staff; now he was inviting the
two of them to dinner. Was this some kind of an illusion? Had they fallen under
some spell? Was he deceiving them? Or had they misjudged him? Even Xenas
distrust seemed to be diminishing slightly. He no longer seemed to be as much
of a threat to them; as a matter of fact, the warrior began to think that this
vampire might actually be reasoned with. Slowly, she took the seat next to Gabrielles.
"Ill be back shortly; the castle, in the meantime, is yours."
He abruptly dissolved once more, like a vanishing ghost.
The two women jumped once more, and glanced nervously around to be certain that
he wasnt coming up on them from behind. Satisfied at last that they were
truly alone, they stared at each other as they sat silently and motionlessly
for a long, long moment. What had they gotten themselves into?
Looking once more at Vlads empty chair, Gabrielle finally broke the silence
with a soft, "I hate it when he does that."
IV
"The biggest difference between a vampire and a Bacchae," Vlad said
in answer to Gabrielles question, "is that the Bacchae are mindless
sheep; they are slaves, loyal to Bacchus. What makes the vrykolakas so much
more dangerous is our ability to think for ourselves."
The remains of dinner rested on the table before them. Vlad had brought in a
small deer, slung over one shoulder, and the two women had feasted on venison.
The meat had seemed a little dry, and Xena wondered if it was because Prince
Vlad had consumed every last trace of the animals blood before it was
cooked. His hair was now a dark iron-gray, and there were considerably fewer
lines on his face. Nor was his complexion as pale as before; now he looked almost
tanned. Upon noticing the changes in his features, both the warrior and the
bard had vacillated between intrigue and disquiet; and then Xena wondered why
it should bother her. After all, people gain strength from food; it was Natures
way of keeping them alive. And blood was food to a vampire. But mortal humans
dont grow younger after feeding, she told herself, as did this supernatural
beinga being whose reputation was that of a monster.
But then, a lot of people think Im a monster, too, she reminded herself,
so maybe I ought to cut him a little slack.
But that didnt mean she would not continue to keep a wary eye on him.
Even if the steaks had seemed a little dry, they had gone down quite easily
with the wine, in which Vlad had not partaken. "I hope you dont mind,"
he had said as he poured, "but I never drink...wine. But pleaseenjoy."
He had not let their bejeweled, golden goblets run empty.
"Many different people call us by many different names," Vlad went
on. "The Britons call us vampire. To you Greeks we are vrykolakas; to the
Romans we are vampiri, to the Germanic tribes of the far north we are nosferatu,
the Siberians call us vurdelak, my own countrymen call us either vampir or stregoiu...
all names refer to us as the undead. And as to how old I am," he added
with a small smile in Gabrielles direction, "lets just say...Im
far older than most people would believe."
"I take it youve come into contact with a lot of different cultures,"
Xena said.
"Oh, yes. My abundance of spare time has allowed me to travel far from
my native land."
"But if you need your native soil to rest..." Xena began.
Vlad smiled, and said nothing. A moment later, Xena also smiled, understandingly.
Had she been in his place, she certainly would not have limited herself to just
one crate of native soil to be carried wherever she went; she would have secreted
hiding places all over the countryside, all within an easy nights travel
of each other. And with almost three hundred years in which to scatter extra
resting places, Xena suddenly realized that he could travel throughout the entire
world without restraint.
Gabrielle rested her forearms on the table and leaned on them with her own plate
pushed aside. "How did you become a... I mean, Ive heard stories
about how the Bacchae convert their victims by biting them and..." She
was reluctant to go on, unsure of her choice of words. The spinning in her head
brought on by the wine didnt help matters.
Vlad smiled. "I became what I am," he said, "by sheer determination,
consummate stubbornness..." He regarded Xena. "...and the blackest,
most absolute hatred that only you, my dear Xena, could possibly imagine."
He returned his gaze to Gabrielle. "My family was taken from me, and I
swore I would have justice."
Both women watched him intently in the ensuing silence, nearly spellbound by
his words as the flames of the fireplace threw dancing orange light and flickering
shadows across their faces. A loud pop! suddenly came from one of the crackling
logs, startling Gabrielle and causing her to jump conspicuously while Xena continued
to watch their host, searching for even the tiniest hint of boastfulness in
his eyes. She found none.
"My dear ladies," he softly said at last, "you are looking at
the only man to ever fight his way out of the deepest, darkest pit of what my
countrymen call Hell."
A chorus of wolves howled in the distance, and in response Vlads eyes
flared with dark delight. Turning them to gaze toward one of the crumbling stone
windows, he said in a near whisper, "Listen to themthe children of
the night!" He sighed and closed his eyes for a moment as he savored the
wolf songs. "What music they make."
I should write that down, Gabrielle thought, someone might be able to use it
someday.
Xena watched their host for a silent moment, choosing her words carefully. "Prince
Vlad, the people down in the village say you were once a general..."
"Quite true."
"Would you care to accompany us on a scouting mission? Gabrielle and I
need to sneak in and assess Dartyliuss position and strength before we
can actually mount any kind of a rescue mission."
"You can use my home as a base camp, if you wish," he replied, "but
I personally do not care to get involved. Dartylius and his men, and that village,
are of no concern to me."
Gabrielle was taken aback. "How can you say that?" she wanted to know,
her voice earnest and perhaps a little reproachful. "There are women and
children being held hostage, and"
"And where were those villagers when I needed their help?" he demanded
sharply. "When the Persians invaded two centuries ago, they came to me
for helpand I led them to victory! Yes, we were outnumbered, I admit that,
and the battle had been bloody, and many had died; the very ground here was
soaked with the blood of invaders and patriots alike. But because of my leadership
we defeated them!" He was quiet for a moment, forcing himself to be calm
and debating with himself as to whether or not he should be completely honest
with them. "Perhaps I could have dealt a little more humanely with some
of the enemy officers," he went on. "Thinking back on it, I suppose
I should have killed them before I had them gutted like fish and impaled."
Xena sat in stony silence while Gabrielles eyes registered shock as her
blood suddenly ran cold in her veins. Dear Gods, she thought in horror. What
kind of monster was this?
"But I wanted to send the few survivors home to their worthless king with
a powerful message," he went on. "Do not invade these lands
again. Later, some self-avowed critics said I could have been more diplomatic
in my relations with our enemy, but they never offered any better ideas. Instead,
they called me a bloodthirsty monster..." He took a deep breath and let
it out slowly. It wasnt that he ever needed to breathe; it was more out
of habit. "And then a cowardly, undercover force of Persian spies kidnaped,
raped and butchered my Katerina. When I heard about it...well, to say that I
flew into a rage does not even begin to describe what I felt. When I asked for
their help to destroy the enemy once and for allto both wipe them from
the face of the Earth and to obtain justice for KaterinaI was refused
because they had a peace treaty with the Persians." He bared his teeth
in a snarl, his fangs glistening in the firelight. "I was the one who made
it possible for them to have that peace treaty; and when I needed their help,
they turned their backs on me!" Feeling the rage rising once moreand
after noticing the way Gabrielle had jumped at his outbursthe took another
deep breath and forced himself again to be calm. "Whether they hired an
assassin or merely chose one of their own to do the job, I do not know; all
I do know is that I took a sword in the back, courtesy of one of those precious
villagers for whom you seem so concerned."
Gabrielle slowly shook her head, her eyes filled with shock and pain. "Such
hatred," she whispered to herself, so softly that not even Xena, sitting
next to her, could hear her. Such hatred brought on by so much pain... In some
ways she could almost understand it, and that fact frightened her even more.
"No, I do not hate those people down there, for they are merely their descendants,"
Prince Vlad told her. "I simply do not care about them; I have been divorced
from human contact for so long that they mean absolutely nothing to me. I dont
even find their fear entertaining anymore, even with all that garlic that they
cower behind," he added a moment later. "At one time I had derived
a bit of sardonic amusement from that, but over the last century or so I have
been deprived even of that." He snorted mildly in contempt. "As if
mere garlic can ward off a stregoiu... If Id had...hell, if Id eaten
even a tenth of the garlic that those peasants now hide behind, I could have
single-handedly warded off the entire Persian empire."
A tiny, reluctant smile tugged at one corner of Xenas mouth, but Gabrielle
ignored his attempt at humor. "But that was over two hundred years ago,"
she said with quiet earnestness. "The times have changed, Prince Vlad;
people can and do change."
Vlads response consisted of an indifferent arching of one eyebrow and
a slight, dismissive shrug of one shoulder. Clearly, he had no desire to continue
discussing the subject. "Its been so long since Ive had any
human companionship, Ive gotten to the point where Im more comfortable
this way. I have my library, the nights, and my wolves. What more do I need?"
He waved one hand slightly in the general direction of the village. "Certainly
not those dolts." He paused for a moment and watched Gabrielle carefully.
Suddenly, he was acutely aware that he was disappointing her.
He sighed. "Ill tell you what: As a favor to the two of you..."
He paused for a moment as he silently called out to the woods. He rose slowly
and pushed his chair back, and then casually approached one of the windows.
Before long, nearly a dozen huge gray wolves came leaping in through the stone
casement.
Xena leapt to her feet and reached for her sword as it lay on the table. At
the same time, Gabrielle lunged upright and grabbed for her staff. In response
to their sudden movements, the wolves dropped into a startled crouch, pulling
back their ears and snarling.
Vlad stood between them, holding out a staying hand before both parties. "Easy,
easy," he said soothingly, "were all friends here. Relax."
Xena watched carefully, never lowering her sword, while Gabrielleperhaps
unwisely lowered her staff slightly as the wolves slowly rose and relaxed
their defensive postures.
Vlad sought out the alpha male and spoke with it directly. "Theyre
friends," he said. Then, to the two women, he said, "Come on over
and say hi. Dont worry; they wont harm you." He knelt next
to the wolf and softly whispered something in its ear.
The packs leader was the first to sit next to him like an obedient pet
as the two women cautiously approached. Gabrielle was the first to tentatively
reach out one hand so the wolf could smell her, and the wolf responded by enthusiastically
licking it. A moment later, he wagged his tail merrily as he tried to elicit
more caresses from her by excitedly nudging and poking her with his nose. Soon,
both women were surrounded by gray fur, gleaming fangs, and lolling pink tongues.
Gabrielle grinned in surpriseand then yelped slightly in mild embarrassment
as a cold wet nose inadvertently goosed her from behind. "They really are
friendly, arent they?" she asked with a reddening face.
Xena grinned crookedly in spite of herself. She sheathed her sword and carefully
reached forward to scratch the alpha wolf behind one ear.
"Okay, listen up," Vlad said, addressing the pack. "Theres
a camp not far from here; I need you to find it and scout it out for my friends
here, and to tell us all you can about it." He straightened and motioned
with the sweep of an arm, his cloak hanging from it like a huge black wing.
"Now off with you."
In a huge silent wave of gray, the wolves leaped through the windows and into
the night.
And so the first stage of the battle had begun. She couldnt decide if
these wolves were being used as pawns or not; they were being sent out ahead
to assess the enemy, not to sacrifice themselves to it for the good of stronger
pieces. Also, based on her later observations, Xena simply did not believe that
Vlad would callously send these wolves out on a suicide mission.
Not mere pawns, she told herself, theyre spies. Cunning, crafty, invisible
and lethal spies.
Speaking of pawns, she thought as her eyes fell on the nearby chessboard. It
would be a good way to kill some time while waiting for the wolves to return.
"Its been a while since Ive engaged a real general in a bit
of friendly competition," she said at last. She raised a questioning eyebrow
and motioned toward the game with a slight movement of her head. "You play?"
"Its been a long time," he said, with an almost too innocent
smile, "so Im afraid Im not very good at it."
The exaggerated innocence of her own smile matched Vlads, and her reply
was quick. "Neither am I," she said.
As he slowly rose from the table, his sudden, predatory grin didnt quite
hide his gleaming fangs. "Ill blow the dust off the board."
**************************
"What a boring game," Gabrielle complained mildly. "Itll
never catch on." With her elbow on one knee and her palm under her chin,
she sat forward on a dusty, red velvet sofa with Xena close on one side of her
and a dozing wolf on the other. The forest predator was resting its chin on
her thigh, and she gently stroked and scratched the side of its neck with her
free hand. In response, the wolf sighed occasionally with a soft groan of pleasure.
Across the low table, Prince Vlad sat opposite Xena in a velvet-upholstered
chair that matched the sofa.
"Prince Vlad?" Gabrielle asked.
His eyes never left the board. So far, he and Xena were tied with one win each;
the third game had resulted in a stalemate. They were currently engaged in number
four.
"Hm?"
"Um...wheres your...ah..."
He smiled slightly. "Top of the stairs, first door on the left." He
glanced at the wolf and motioned slightly with his head. "Go with her,"
he told it.
Gabrielle rose and headed for the stairs, and the wolf rose with her. "Be
right back."
Thoroughly engrossed by the game, the two players replied, "Mm-hmm."
Gabrielle headed off up the stairs with the wolf leading the way. Torches that
hung on the walls suddenly flared to life as she approached, illuminating her
way and causing her to jump slightly. How does he do that? she wondered. Well,
he is a vampire, she concluded. She slowed her ascent and turned her head to
look at him, and silently observed for a moment as the two battle-hardened warriors
continued to concentrate on the game. But he sure doesnt act like one.
They were silent for several long moments as they gazed at the board. The fire
crackled softly, and the forest outside was filled with night sounds. Six more
moves, Vlad thought with quiet satisfaction, and Ive got her.
Five more moves, Xena thought with an inward smile, and Ive got him. She
was silent for another long moment. Finally, with a soft voice she said, "By
the way; thats some interesting art work you have in the entrance hall."
She pushed a pawn, which served to free a distant bishop. "The painter
was very talented."
"Thank you." Vlad scowled slightly at the unexpected move, and then
his eyes flicked quickly over the board, searching for an imminent attack or
a possible trap. What was she up to?
Surprised by this new bit of information about their host, Xena smiled inwardly
with the realization that Vlad himself had painted the pictures. She had misjudged
him as a savage warlord. "I was especially intrigued by the one painting
at the near end here...the likeness is incredible."
"The similarities are striking, arent they?"
"Virtually identical."
They were silent for another long moment. Vlad finally asked, "Do you think
its possible that when people pass on they can come back in another life
and another body?"
"You mean by reincarnation?" She shifted slightly. Unlacing her fingers
from before her, she left one forearm resting on her knee while she raised her
other hand. Deep in thought, she rested her chin on her thumb with one finger
laying along the side of her face. "I spent a little time in the kingdom
of Chin," she replied at last, "and I heard of a number of religions
that accept it without question. Even Plato thought it might be possible."
She continued to study the board, silent for a long moment. With her free hand,
she advanced a knight, further ruining Vlads plans for victory. "Ill
tell you something, though. Ive had a number of people try to use the
old pick-up line on me, where they tried to convince me that I was their long-lost
lover or wife; it didnt work." She raised her cool, blue eyes from
the board and regarded him firmly. "And Gabrielles a smart woman;
it wont work on her, either. So dont even try it."
Vlad smiled at what he thought might have been just a hint of jealousy in her
tone as he threatened the knight with a rook.
Gabrielle returned a few moments later. Regarding the board, she asked, "Did
I miss anything?"
Vlad smiled, and shook his head. And then he suddenly looked up as he sensed
the return of his wolves. A moment later, they swarmed in to deliver through
wordless communications the information they had acquired. "Forty men tucked
away in a series of interconnected caves perhaps two miles south of here,"
he said, his eyes locked on those of the wolf packs leader. "Theyll
take you there."
"Youre not coming with us?" Gabrielle asked.
Vlad regarded her without feeling. "Theyre not my concern."
"How can you" she began, but Xena cut her off.
"Come on, Gabrielle, you cant make him help us." She took her
arm in a soft yet firm grasp, and gently pulled her along.
Vlad took note of the expression in Gabrielles eyesthe hurt and
the disappointmentbut he refused to let it sway him. That village was
none of his concern. And it was really none of their concern, either. "I
dont understand it," he said at last. "Why are you bothering
with them? Why should you possibly risk your own lives for those strangers?"
"Because we said wed help," Gabrielle replied. "Because
its the right thing to do, and because were not a couple of callous"
She stopped abruptly, suddenly aware that she was treading on dangerously thin
ice. Instead, she gazed reproachfully at Vlad for a moment longer, and then
turned her back on him. "Come on, Xena," she said softly, convinced
that she would never get through to him. The two of them headed out the door
to leave a stunned and stung Vlad Dracula standing alone in the expansive, lifeless
dining hall.
**************************
He had no idea of how long he had been sitting in front of the fire, gazing
into it and lost in deep thought. The wolf that had taken such a liking to Gabrielle
sat beside him, watching him intently. Vlad sighed. "Theyre not my
concern," he said to himself, softly. "If those two want to go rushing
off to save a bunch of worthless strangers, thats their business. But
that village is not my problem." He turned his eyes toward the wolf. "And
I dont care how much she looks like Katerina, I know she isnt her.
So why should I get involved?"
The wolf gazed back at him with an expression that might have been mild reproof.
"What are you looking at?"
The wolf sighed, and blinked.
"Theyre not my problem!" he emphatically told his lupine companion.
"So stop looking at me like that."
The wolf continued to silently stare at him.
At last, Prince Vlad sighed heavily and rose from his chair with a growl of
exasperation. "Oh, all right!"
V
Ten men were down, but that left thirty more to take up the slackand
it was quite possible that Xena and Gabrielle just might be outnumbered this
time. There was little room to fight, and the hostages were held nearby with
swords and daggers at their throats.
Surrounded by a contingent of Dartyliuss men, Xena held her sword at the
ready while Gabrielle covered her back with her staff. With Dartylius sitting
back comfortably and watching the entertainment before him, like a second-rate
caesar in a minor-league Colosseum, the men moved in closer, preparing to strike.
He couldnt believe that such a minor disability could afflict him so greatly.
This cave, with its series of tunnels, had actually become a dwelling of sorts;
and for some inexplicable reason, it was impossible for a vampire to enter any
dwelling without first being invited in. After that, he could come and go as
he pleased, but for that first-time entry he needed an invitation. How the hell
does one receive an invitation to come in and kill all those who dwell inside?
"Hello?" he said from the caves entrance. "Excuse me...hello?"
No one bothered to answer.
He whistled shrilly. "Hey!"
This time, they all turned to address the newcomer.
"Now that I finally have your attention," Vlad said politely, "which
one of you gutless little rat droppings is in charge here?"
Dartylius rose from his chair. "Who do you think you are to come here and
talk to me and my men this way?" he demanded.
"My name is Vlad," he replied. "Viceroy of Targoviste, first
general of the Knights Order of the Dracul, and Prince of Transylvania."
He paused for a moment, and regarded Dartylius like a hairy, disgusting little
dung beetle. "And who the fuck are you?"
Dartylius clenched one fist and reached for his sword. "I am the warlord
Dartylius!" he roared back.
Vlad waited expectantly. "And...?"
Unable to think of anything else to add to his resume, he drew his sword as
he blurted out, "And Im the man whos going to eat your heart!"
Vlad raised a mildly surprised and curious eyebrow. "Indeed?" he asked.
"All the way from there?" He paused for a moment. "I mean, arent
you even going to invite me in first?"
He stared at him with indescribable rage in his eyes. How dare this...this...maggot
talk to the great Dartylius in such a manner? With no more than a nod, he could
have him dragged outside and drawn and quartered. But after a moments
reflection, his outrage began to transform itself into amusement. Whatever else
this Prince Vlad might not have, what he did have was guts.
Slowly, Dartylius began to laugh. A moment later, the rest of his men joined
in. "Sure," he said at last with a chuckle. He stepped away from his
chair and spread his arms expansively in exaggerated welcome, with the firelight
reflecting from the sword in his hand. "Come on in, Prince Vlad. Enter
my humble abode...and meet your destiny at the point of my sword."
Vlad smiled; it was all he needed. "I thought youd never ask,"
he said softly. His smile quickly slipped away and was replaced with a look
of cold, dark, and dangerous determination as he stepped across the threshold.
Two men stepped forward. Each of them seized an arm, lifted Vlad from the ground,
and carried him backward outside once more. Two more men took hold of the massive
wooden door and slammed it shut, and bolted it into place with a heavy beam.
The rest of the men, along with Dartylius, laughed. "So much for that rescue,"
one of them said.
One of the men from outside suddenly screamed in terror, and a moment later
something slammed against the door like a battering ram, shaking the entire
cave. The rest of the men fell silent to stare in wonder at the door. A moment
later, a pool of blood slowly oozed under it, and then a luminous white mist
began to permeate through the cracks and seams of the wood. Dartylius regarded
it darkly. "What the..."
Gabrielle shivered uncontrollably. "Xena," she said softly, "why
is it suddenly so cold in here?" Her breath left trailing, irregular white
puffs of vapor in the air.
Xena slowly shook her head as she remembered that same overwhelming chill that
had swept over her when Vlad had first come up behind her. "These poor
bastards," she said as Gabrielle looked at her. "These poor bastards
dont stand a chance."
The door wasnt even visible now; it was a solid bank of glowing white
fog. And stepping from it, as though the door wasnt even there, Prince
Vlad entered the cave once more. But he wasnt a gray-haired, middle-aged
man, as he had been a moment ago; now his hair was rich and black, his face
tanned and unlined, and his eyes were as cold as death.
Determined to stop this intrusion but uncertain of how, Dartylius pointed at
the approaching Prince Vlad with the tip of his sword. "Somebody kill that
son of a bitch!" he roared.
With a wild yell, the first soldier rushed at him, waving his sword. Vlad brushed
him aside with one hand, as though he were nothing more than an annoying little
gnat, and the slight movement sent him flying backward to slam against the cavern
wall. A second soldier rushed toward him, and Vlad seized him by the front of
his tunic and thrust him away with no more effort than he would use to carelessly
toss aside a rag doll. A third man started to approach, but Vlad held up a warning
finger and then pointed it at him in a sharp jab. After seeing what had happened
to the first two men, the third wisely decided to follow Vlads silent
order to stay put.
The fourth man stepped in front of him, cutting him off from his path like a
boulder in the middle of a narrow road. He was a full two meters tall, and weighed
some 380 pounds; the massive broadsword in his hand must have weighed at least
fifty.
Vlad sighed softly in mild exasperation, and with a slight shake of his head
he rolled his eyes slightly. His hand shot forward like a striking cobra and
seized the behemoth by the throat, and began to squeeze. "I really do find
all of these minor distractions to be most annoying," he said with diminishing
patience as he lifted the man from the floor with barely a hint of effort. "And
I resent having to waste my valuable time by having to deal with them."
He crushed the mans neck and carelessly tossed him aside.
Four men were down, and Prince Vlad hadnt even broken his stride.
With a blood-chilling smile, he turned his gaze on Dartylius and crooked a finger
at him, ordering him to come forward.
That was when the men scattered like a flock of geese. Unlike Dartylius, they
knew when to quit. The warlord, however, snatched up Valerias infant daughter
and dashed off, heading deeper into the tunnels.
Xena took off after him.
Driven by blind panic, another of the men threw away his sword and tried to
follow suit, hoping to escape with his life and nothing more. "Screw Dartylius!"
he told Gabrielle, Prince Vlad, or anyone else who might have been within earshot.
"Ive had it with him and his Lords of Darkness! Im getting
out here, Im going home, and Im going to become a farmer like mom
and dad wanted. I am freaking out of here!" He turned to dash off, but
Vlad seized him by the throat in a killing grip, and squeezed mercilessly.
"Prince Vlad, no!" Gabrielle screamed. "Dont kill him!"
"Why not?" he asked coldly, sneering with contempt as his eyes bored
into those of the terrified looter. "Hes pond scum; hes a worthless
thief and kidnapper, and only the gods themselves know what else hes done
to innocent victims." He slammed the back of the looters head against
the cavern wall and held him suspended from the ground. "Do you really
think I should reward him by sparing his life?"
"Please!" Gabrielle implored once more. " Hes no danger
to anyone now; you dont have to do this!"
With a cold and vicious smile, Vlad squeezed a little tighter, completely cutting
off his air. The looters face turned red and then blue, and his entire
head felt as though it was about to burst apart with hot pressure. Vlad grinned
malignantly, revealing his glistening fangs as the bones in the mans neck
began to grind together.
The soft, quiet voice said, "Father?"
He snapped his head toward the source of the voice as the gooseflesh crawled
across his skin, and his eyes suddenly widened in mute shock.
The young bard was standing several feet away, dressed in that light blue velvet
dress that he liked so much; the one with the sparkling silver lining around
the wide, open neck and shoulders, around the cuffs of the long, tapering sleeves,
and the hem that didnt quite reach the floor. Her hair was loose, cascading
about her shoulders like brilliant golden sunshine, and her sparkling green
eyes were filled with compassion. She took a slow, tentative step toward him.
For the first time in his life, he was struck speechless. Nearly overwhelmed
with sudden emotion, he stared at the vision before him.
"Please, Father," she said, her voice pleading mildly as she took
another step toward him, "let him go. Theres been enough killing
for one day."
Vlad stared at her a moment longer, his mind racing. By the Gods! he thought.
It is her! Suddenly, he was aware of the tears that had welled in his eyes;
and just as suddenly, his murderous resolve began to melt.
Turning his eyes to stare indecisively at the helpless enemy before him, he
still wanted to give in to his raging desire for the revenge of her rape and
murder; but when he turned them back on the young blonde once more, he also
wanted to acquiesce to her plea for this mans life. By his standards,
he had a moral duty to terminate this threat to innocent lifeyet he also
wanted so desperately to please his daughter. Suddenly, he didnt know
what to do.
Without realizing it, his grip on the looters throat began to loosen.
He squeezed his eyes shut and shook his head slightly to clear it, trying to
sort out his thoughts.
"Please," she said once more, her voice soft yet imploring as she
slowly drew even closer.
He turned to face his prey once more, his damp and red-rimmed eyes uncertain,
and suddenly he remembered the day she had asked him for a pony. He hadnt
been able to refuse her then, either. When his wife had died in childbirth,
Katerina had become his entire world, his universe; fearing that he would spoil
her greatly, he could never refuse her as a child. Could he possibly refuse
her now?
And then his eyes blazed to fiery life once more, brighter and hotter than the
very flames of Tartarus itself, as he remembered the day he had found her nude,
battered and violated corpse. He wanted vengeance. Vengeance! And by the Gods,
after more than two hundred years of searching and waiting, his vengeance was
finally at hand. With his screams of rage and agony echoing through his mind
as he had held her lifeless body in his arms, his lips peeled back with a sudden,
lion-like snarl that revealed long, glistening fangs, and the unbreakable grip
he had on the mans throat slowly tightened once more, cutting off his
air. The looter struggled against him, trying uselessly to peel the vampires
cold fingers from his throat.
Vlads face drew closer to the looters, his breath smelling of fresh
blood. "If you ever..." He paused for a moment, still struggling furiously
to contain the rage that was demanding release. His arm trembled not with the
strain of holding the looter from the floor, but with the effort of restraining
himself; he wanted so badly, so desperately to kill himto eviscerate him
and then tear him limb from limb, and to rid the world of one more malicious
piece of criminal excrement.
Trembling under the unimaginable strain of controlling himself, he spoke with
a soft, ominous voice that belied his hellish fury and rumbled deep in his chest,
like the growl of a jungle predator. "If you ever...come anywhere near
my little girl again...I will feed you to my wolves. Handful...by bloody handful."
He held him a moment longer, still using only one hand, and then he suddenly
released his grip. It was a subtle movement, yet one so sudden that it caught
both looter and daughter off guard. Gabrielle jumped visibly while the looter
fell in a heap to the floor. "Now get out of my sight."
With his helmet askew, the looter sat frozen to the spot in absolute terror.
"NOW!!"
He didnt need to be told a third time. He scrambled to his feet and spun
around, and as the brim of his helmet fell over his eyes he slammed face-first
into the tunnel wall. Bouncing hard from it, almost ricocheting like a stone
fired from a sling, he slammed against the other wall with his back. He hurriedly
straightened his helmet, got his bearings right, and raced down the stone corridor
as though he were escaping from the specter of Death itself.
Which, quite arguably, he was.
With a soft sigh of relief, Gabrielle slowly and gently laid one soft, tanned
hand on Vlads arm. "Thank you," she said softly.
The vampire turned so abruptly that he startled the young bard, and he swept
her into a warm embrace. Inhaling deeply, he could smell the familiar smell
of her skin and hair, and he savored the feel of her warm, firm body in his
arms. He then gently captured her face in his hands, and with a soft cry he
kissed both corners of her mouth, her forehead, and both cheeks, and then held
her once more in a protective embrace. It didnt matter to him that she
was dressed once more in the two-tone green bodice and rust-colored skirt; he
knew that his daughter had returned, and that was all that mattered to him.
"Find Xena," he told her softly. "Find her and get those villagers
out of here. There are still things I must do, and you must not be a part of
them."
"Prince Vlad"
"Please, Katerina. Ill be along shortly." He vanished from sight,
leaving a surprised and perplexed Gabrielle standing alone in the cave.
**************************
He was the only one left, and he didnt know what to do. This squalling
brat under his arm didnt help matters any. He thought about killing the
infant, but if he did that he wouldnt have a hostage. On the other hand,
if the kid was dead, Xena wouldnt be able to follow him by its cries.
He could hear her footfalls, faint as they were, but they were growing louder
and she drew nearer.
"Dartylius..." Vlads voice sounded like a soft whisper as it
echoed down the stone corridor.
He raised his sword.
"Dartylius!" the voice roared, sounding as though it was only an inch
from his ear.
A nervous sweat ran down his face and neck, and his eyes were wide in terror.
He spun with the infant in one arm and his sword in his other hand. But still,
he was alone.
"Come out, come out, wherever you are..." The voice sang, and then
chuckled coldly, sending a shudder of terror up the mans spine.
"Who are you?" Dartylius asked, his voice suddenly thin and terrified.
"What are you?"
Vlad suddenly appeared from nowhere and seized him by the throat in a killing
grip, holding the warlord pinned against the wall and his feet clear of the
floor. Taking the child from his arm, he smiled with cold malice. "I am
darkness," he replied, his voice low and soft, and utterly menacing. "I
am the absolute blackness of all your private, childhood terrors." His
face drew even closer, and as it did his eyes blazed once more, like two glowing
red coals bursting into flames. His lips peeled back, and Dartylius watched
in pure horror as Vlads teeth elongated into sharp, gleaming white fangs.
"I am...your...worst...nightmare."
This time, Katerina wasnt here to stop him.
**************************
Xena came around a bend in the tunnel, tracking Dartylius by his hideous screamsand
then they were suddenly cut off by a hollow, wet tearing sound, as though someone
were ripping open a watermelon. She stopped and listened. There were no other
sounds. She took off again, went around another bend in the tunnel, and stopped
when she found herself inside yet another chamberand her eyes widened
in shock and revulsion. By the Gods, she thought with an inward groan.
Gabrielle came up from behind her a moment later. "Everyones safe
and outside," she reported, "but we still havent found"
She stopped when she saw the direction of Xenas gaze. She followed it
with her own eyes, and the expression in them suddenly leapt far beyond horror.
A hand flew to her mouth, either to stifle a scream or to stop the flood that
threatened to rage up from her stomach, and she squeezed her eyes shut as she
quickly turned away to bury her face against Xenas shoulder, trying futilely
to blot out the sight of Dartyliuss corpse hanging pinned to the wall
by a spear like a grisly hunters trophy. There was a wide pool of blood
under his feet; his rib cage had been peeled away and discarded as though it
were a banana skin, and his heart was gone.
Then there was the wailing of an infant, and a rich and soothing baritone voice.
"Yes, yes, I know," it said sympathetically as Prince Vlad came around
a corner with Valerias infant daughter cradled in his arms. "I know,"
he said again. "All kinds of crazy people running around and waving swords...
yeah, theyre gonna hurt themselves, arent they? Yeah..." He
looked up and found Xena and Gabrielle watching him, and he smiled charmingly
as he calmly approached them. "Here," he said to Gabrielle as he handed
her the child. "I think youd better take her. I havent held
an infant in a long time, and I dont want to drop her."
With horror-stricken eyes, Gabrielle hesitated for a moment before accepting
the child.
Vlad noticed the look in their eyes, and his smile slipped a tiny bit as one
eyebrow arched just slightly in puzzlement. "Are you two alright?"
Still uncertain and wary, Xena tapped one corner of her mouth with an index
finger. "Youve got..."
Vlad paused for a moment, and then touched two fingers to a corner of his own
mouth. They came away glistening, sticky and red. With an expression that was
identical to Gabrielles whenever she tried to hide her surprise, his eyes
widened slightly in mild shock, but he recovered quickly. Oh dear, he thought,
what have become of my manners? Without thinking, he quickly sucked the blood
from his fingertips, one at a time, and then smiled in mild embarrassment. "Excuse
me; Ill...go clean up." He turned and disappeared.
It was silent for a long moment. "By the Gods," Gabrielle said at
last, in a shocked and horrified breath of a whisper. She found her voice, and
tried again. "By the Gods, Xena... Is he a man, or a monster?"
Had she looked up at her friend, she would have seen the same question reflected
in the warriors eyes.
**************************
Emerging from the mouth of the cave, he took a deep breath as he gazed up at
the midnight sky, and smiled and sighed in satisfaction. He couldnt remember
the last time he had felt this good, so utterly pleased with himself; not for
having acted through selfishness or personal desire, but for having done something
truly good for someone else merely for its own sake. Helping the helpless and
defending the defenseless were their own reward. He used to believe that long
ago, but with the death of his daughter he had left that path to soothe his
agony with revenge.
But now...
Wow, he thought. Smell that jasmine. He looked around for a moment, and then
spotted the rain barrel. He approached it and dipped his hands, and began to
clean the blood from his lips and chin. He used his sleeve and the bottom of
his coat to blot his mouth dry. And then he leaned forward slightly to rest
his hands on both sides of the barrels edge. Gazing into it, he could
see the bright, rippling full moon reflected in its black, oily surface along
with a multitude of stars. He slowly passed a hand over it, but neither it nor
his face were reflected. In spite of this effort to return to humanity, there
was that eternal reminder that he was not human...and never would be.
The smile slipped away, and was replaced with discouragement. His sigh was as
heavy as his heart.
And then his eyes turned cold. He quietly snarled his curses at whatever gods
that might have been listening, those gods who had given him this dubious gift
of immortality, and then at himself for having accepted it so willingly...and
then he suddenly picked up the fifty-gallon rain barrel with not even a hint
of effort. With a roaring oath of both rage and anguish, he threw it to shatter
explosively against the mountainside; the iron binding rings burst apart against
the stone and the wood splintered, and silvery water sprayed everywhere, staining
the rock wall almost as darkly as the caverns mouth.
He stalked angrily toward the forests edge, and quickly dissolved into
the night.
Epilogue
Gabrielle was still pondering the significance of the portrait in the main
entrance. When Xena had finally had the time to take her to see it, the young
bards eyes had widened in shock. "Dear Gods," she had whispered,
the words barely audible, as she gazed at the portrait of the young blonde-haired,
green-eyed woman in the light blue velvet dress with the silver trim. And then
a moment later she had caught her friend completely off guard with a loud, wide-eyed,
and totally un-bard-like, "Holy shit!!" And the more she thought about
it, with a combination of both dread and fascination, the more she could not
help wondering about the slim, faint possibility that she might really be Vlads
reincarnated daughter. No, she finally told herself, she couldnt be. No
way. But there was still that annoying little hint of possibility that kept
scratching persistently at the back of her mind. While the idea did not exactly
have her nervously pacing the floor and wringing her hands in distress, it was
keeping her from drifting off to sleep.
Which was just as well, because right now she was more interested in standing
guard over the sleeping forms of Valeria and her daughter.
"Everything okay here?" Xena asked softly from the doorway, startling
her just slightly. Across the expansive master bedchamber of Vlads castle,
the windows stood open to admit a gentle breeze and the soft, reassuring sounds
of the night. In contrast to the death-like cold that had permeated the castle
earlier, now it was pleasantly mild.
"Sure, everythings fine," Gabrielle replied, her own voice just
as soft as she regarded the sleeping figures that shared a bed that was literally
fit for a queen. Sitting comfortably in a wide chair next to it, her staff within
easy reach, she raised her eyes to regard Xena. "Have you seen him?"
She shook her head slightly.
She sighed. "This is so weird," she said as Xena slowly approached
her. "I mean, I dont know what to make of him. On the one hand hes
handsome, charming and amazingly intelligent, and extraordinarily devoted to
the memory of his wife and daughter." She paused for a moment as Xena knelt
beside her. "Yet when it comes to dealing with his enemies... Ares and
Dahak are absolutely nothing compared to him." She regarded Xena with troubled
eyes, and when she spoke again her voice was a soft whisper of muted horror.
"Ive never seen such ruthlessness before. Part of me is frightened
to death by him...while another part of me feels safe and warm at the thought
of him being close by. I dont know whether to fear or admire him."
She was quiet for a moment as Xena rested her arm on the chairs arm. She
took Gabrielles hand and squeezed it comfortingly. "I know this is
going to sound weird, but in some ways I kind of hope he isnt gone."
Xena smiled reassuringly. "Its his castle; Im sure hes
around somewhere." She watched her for a long, silent moment. At last,
she said, "You look exhausted. Why dont you try to get some sleep?"
"Naw, Im okay. You look bushed, though."
She shook her head slightly. "Im too restless to sleep. Maybe Ill
check out the kitchen before turning in."
Gabrielle smiled. "Now theres an idea." She squirmed and settled
a little more deeply into the warm, velvety chair with a soft, moaning sigh.
"If I werent so comfortable here..." She looked at her friend
with hopeful eyes.
Xena grinned. "Okay, Ill bring you something." With a sly look,
she added, "How does some nice Corinthian cheese sound?"
Gabrielle winced. "Youre heartless."
Laughing softly, she squeezed her hand once more, then rose gracefully and left
the room.
She sighed again with a contented smile, and regarded the sleeping figures once
more, not thinking about anything in particular. She didnt notice when
the curtains gently billowed inward, though, nor did she feel the soft breezeor
see the luminous white mist that quietly slid in over the windows ledge
and along the floor. But she did feel someones presence once it coalesced
into human form, and when she quickly raised her eyes and found herself confronted
by a black silhouette, she gasped softly and began to rise. Before she could
utter a sound, though, an ashen hand with sharp nails reached out to pass before
her eyes. "Youre very tired," the vampire told her, his voice
rumbling like distant, muted thunder. "Go to sleep."
With a soft sigh, she sank back into the chair and closed her eyes. Her breathing
was slow and regular.
Prince Vlad stepped around her and settled on the edge of the bed. With a pallid
face, glaring red eyes and gleaming fangs, he leaned over the sleeping Valeria
and her infant daughter, and regarded them solemnly. "Listen well and remember,"
he told them. "Regardless of what others may tell you, you and your entire
familyto the last generationare now under my protection."
He rose slowly from the bed, then turned to approach Gabrielle. Silently kneeling
next to her and clasping her palm against his, he observed her for a moment
with merry green eyes and a proud fathers smile. "And as for you,
my young Amazon queen," he said, and his smile expanded into a grin at
the idea that his little girl really was an Amazon. "What can I say?"
He touched her cheek. "I dont know if youre my Katerina or
not; the two of you are so similar, yet so different. You look the same, you
sound the same, you even act the same. But I do know this: Because of you, I
actually feel alive again." He paused for a moment, looking for the right
words. "You have given me back my soul" He stopped again, for
a short moment, as he struggled to control the emotion that was welling up in
his voice before he continued. "and for that I will be forever in
your debt."
Watching silently and unobserved from the shadow of the doorway, her arms folded
and her face concealed in darkness, Xena thought, That makes two of us.
He gently stroked her forehead and then her cheek with the backs of his fingers.
"If you ever need my helpno matter how trivial your desire may seemyou
call to me, and I will be there for you. Thats a promise." He clasped
his palm against hers and kissed the back of her hand. "When I leave you
will awaken, and will remember my visit here tonight as nothing more than a
mere dream." He gazed fondly at her for a moment longer, then leaned forward
and gently kissed her cheek.
She awoke with a slight start as Xena approached her. She looked up at her and
regarded her with quiet concern. "Are you okay?" she asked softly.
"Sure," Xena replied. She settled next to Gabrielle in the wide chair,
and pretended it was fatigue that she was wiping from her eyes. "I decided
I was more tired than hungry." She sighed as she closed her eyes and stretched
her legs, and folded her arms. "You know," she said, "there are
a lot of people who call me the warrior princess; and I think you
need a title of your own."
With her own eyes closed, Gabrielle smiled a wry and sleepy smile. "Oh,
yeah?"
"Yeah. How does Gabrielle the Redeemer sound?"
Soft, skeptical laughter bubbled up from her. "Yeah, right..."
With a smile of her own, Xena regarded the young blonde for a moment. She slid
an arm around her shoulders and pulled her close, and kissed the top of her
head. "I think it fits," she whispered. Gently resting her head against
Gabrielles, she closed her own eyes once more, and a short time later
she, too, was asleep.
The End
"No Corinthian cheese was digested during the writing of this story."