‘Cure!’ She spat the word out. ‘Why don’t you try curing yourself! There is no cure, Necroscope! Surely you must know that by now?’
He nodded, took a chance and inched closer yet. And: ‘Yes, I do know,’ he answered. ‘But in a way I did cure you. You had a vampire in you, the sort the Wamphyri called a “mother”. If you had spawned so many vampires, in the end it must diminish you, kill you. Am I right?’
‘We’ll never know, will we?’ she growled.
Harry stood directly before her, less than a pace away, well within the arc of her gauntlet. ‘So you came to kill me.’ He nodded. ‘But surely you can see I’ve suffered my own change? And surely you know in your heart that I was never your enemy, Karen? I was merely innocent. In my way.’
She stared hard at him for a moment, narrowed her eyes a little, then nodded and smiled. But it was more a sneer than a smile proper. ‘I’ve found you out!’ she said. ‘I sense your door, Harry! You took me there once, remember? You carried me from the garden to my aerie, all in a moment. And now there’s another door right here beside you. Would you dare stand so close without it? If so, then do it. Show me how “innocent” you are.’
He shook his head. ‘That was then,’ he said. ‘As for now: whatever I might wish to be, I can only be Wamphyri! Precious little of innocence in me now . . . about as much as there is in you? Yes, the thing within advised me to conjure a door, for my protection. Or for its protection? But the man which I still am tells me I don’t need this safeguard, that it makes anything I might say to you – the things I want to say to you – a mockery. And while I live, the man in me has the upper hand. So be it!’
He threw caution to the wind, collapsed the Möbius door and opened his mind wide to her. In a few moments she read or scanned all that was written there, for he kept nothing hidden. But in telepathy, to read is often to feel, and most of all she felt his pain: as great and greater than her own. And his loss – all of his losses – whose total was so much more. And she saw how lonely and empty he was, which brought her own loneliness and emptiness into proper perspective.
But . . . she was a woman and remembered certain things. As his right hand closed in the curve of her waist at first gently, then possessively, so she bent her elbow at his side until her open gauntlet leaned loosely against his back and upper-left arm. And she said, ‘Do you recall the time I told you how I’d lusted after you? In how many ways I lusted after you? Like a woman, perhaps – but certainly like a vampire! And do you remember when you trapped me in my room, how I tried to lure you? I went naked, writhing, panting, thrusting at you – and you ignored me. It was as if your flesh was iron and your blood ice.’
‘No,’ he husked in her ear, drinking in the natural musk of her body, drawing her to him and bending down his head to her. ‘My body was flesh and my blood was fire. But I had set myself a course and must run it. Now . . . it’s run.’
She felt his need swelling to match, to intensify, her own – so much need – and was aware of his heartbeat like a hammer against her breast. ‘You . . . you’re a fool, Harry Keogh!’ she whispered, as he crushed her even tighter. And every nerve of her body thrilled as Wamphyri instinct demanded that she scoop her gauntlet into the flesh and bone of his back and spoon it out, then reach inside and slice his heart to a crimson-pumping geyser. Thrilled, yes, and thrilled again – in astonishment – when she relaxed her hand so that the weapon fell from her fluttering fingers, fell loose to the ground!