Barbara Hambly - 02 TRAVELING WITH THE DEAD
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- Название:02 TRAVELING WITH THE DEAD
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His smile had been-almost-a living man's smile. The shadow in those dragon eyes was suddenly, fleetingly, a living man's fear. "Tomorrow night will be soon enough to cross, to walk and listen in the darkness, to see what more can be descried at nearer quarters." He drew his cloak more closely around him, a subconscious gesture, the white of his gloves against the dark wool like frost on black rock.
"But it is clear to me that something very strange is taking place in this city, and I had rather our romantic friend had not cried aloud, even in English, regarding hunting and killing and the drinking of blood. I think it best such things not be spoken of, not even here in Pera. Not even by light of day."
Twelve
The voices of the muezzins woke Asher: "There is no God but God; Mohammed is His Prophet..." He knew the words, but could not tease them from the somber roll of sound.
Arched windows had at one time opened all along the room, five times the length of its narrow width, but centuries ago these had been bricked shut. The windows in the drums of the five shallow domes above were, as far as he could ascertain, barred with silver, though it was hard to be sure. By day he heard no voices, no clip of donkey hooves or creak of wheels from below, and only occasionally and far off, the barking of Constantinople's infamous dogs. Now and then the wind would bring him a street vendor's cry in sawed-off Romaic Greek. Day or night, the closest sounds were the squawking of the seagulls and the yowl of cats.
Through the lattice the sky was the color of tiger lilies, the light momentarily a soft and fading salmon hue on the blue tiles that ringed the domes.
Asher did not face Mecca-though he'd deduced in what direction it lay-nor repeat the words intended by the muezzin, but sitting among the cushions and blankets of the divan, he prayed. He was very frightened.
The light in the room had deepened when he finished, bleeding away to shadow.
Because of the domes, the room filled with darkness from the bottom up. In the center of the floor the rectangular, blue-tiled basin of what must have been a fountain or fish pool seemed fathoms deep in the gloom, a horror from which anything might emerge. Asher scratched a match that he took from his pocket, to light the wick of one of the few bronze lamps that still occupied the serried ranks of niches in the wall.
The glow did little to dispel the dreadful brooding dimness. He reached for his watch to wind it, as was his habit, but of course it had been taken, along with the silver chains that had protected his wrists and throat.
He dressed and washed, and stowed the bedding in which he'd slept in one of the room's shallow cupboards, listening all the while to night fall within the silent house. In full dark-enough so that a white thread could not be distinguished from a black, as the Koran said-he heard the key turn in the old- fashioned lock.
He moved as far from the door as he could and deliberately willed his mind not to feel, not to succumb to the odd, lazy distraction of the vampire power. Still he did not see them enter the room. He had the vague impression that he had dreamed once about standing in a darkened gallery, watching a door inlaid with brass and ivory as it began to open...
But it seemed to him that one moment he was stepping back against a pillar, and the next, they were all around him, binding his wrists behind him with narrow silk cord. Their eyes in the lamplight were the eyes of rats, their flesh dead clay on his. They had not fed.
"So who are you, Englis?" asked the one who had been pointed out to him last night as Zardalu. Beardless, boneless as an empty stocking, he had red-painted fingernails and a Circassian's bright blue eyes. "Yesternight I took you for one of the Bey's mikaniki, and I thought, This is one he intends to make one of us, to look after this thing they make in the crypts, this dastgah." His eyes slid sidelong at Asher under painted lids; and knowing they could hear it, Asher tried to calm the pounding of his heart.
"And now the Bey has given us other instructions concerning you. What are we to think?"
"You really think he'd join another to us for the sake of one of his experiments?" Jamila Baykus-the Baykus Kadine, she had been called, stick-thin with a strange, disheveled wildness that was somehow very like her namesake owl- put her head to one side and considered him with enormous demon eyes. Half her hair was braided or curled, dressed on jeweled combs, the rest hanging in a huge malt-colored tangle to her thighs. Pearls were caught in it, like shells glimpsed in a jetsam of kelp; she had a necklace of rat bones and diamonds around her throat. "Is that what you are, Englis?" The finger she reached up to touch the underside of his chin-for she was no taller than a twelve-year-old English girl-was like a twig brought in from out-of-doors, icy with the ice of the night.
"He said we weren't to question him." That was Haralpos, a one-eyed tough who had been a janissary. He held up a scarf, fine cotton, creased and filthy and patched with dark stains.
"And did he say I was not to question you?" Asher had studied Persian and enough Arabic to approximate the thick Osmanli they spoke and make himself understood.
Zardalu's eyebrows tweaked into circumflexes of malicious delight, and his fangs gleamed in a smile. "Oh, what a clever Englis. Of course you may question us.
Who are we but your fellow servants of the Deathless Lord?"
"He said silence," Haralpos insisted. The dark Habib and the voluptuous and silent Russian girl, Pelageya, stirred uneasily. Asher knew of whom the janissary spoke and knew the others had a right to be uneasy. "He said to walk in silence, like the fog. Would we have this infidel cry out to be saved?"
"Would it do me any good if I did?" countered Asher. He turned to Zardalu, whom he sensed to be the most dangerous of them, and asked him, "What dastgah is this?" The word meant a scientific apparatus, which could mean anything from an astrolabe to a chemical experiment.
"How should I know that, Englis? The Deathless Lord has put up silver bars across the cellar which lies beneath the old baths that are no longer used. He has veiled the place with his mind, to keep us from thinking about it, even as he has veiled this entire city." The sweet alto voice sank lower, and as the vampire leaned close, his hair and clothing breathed patchouli and decay.
"He has veiled the place, yet still we feel the cold of the ice that he has men bring in during the day for his experiments. We smell the naft, the alkol, the stinks of what he does... even as we hear the footfalls of the workmen, down below in the crypts, as we sleep. Does he think we do not?"
"Come," Haralpos said impatiently. "Now." He reached out with the scarf, and Zardalu touched his wrist.
"Our friend James has said-may we call you James, Englis?- that he knows better than to cry out. The Bey will surely punish us if he escapes, and so even an escape's attempt will mean-oh, not death-" His cold knuckle brushed the scars under Asher's ear. "-but surely some unpleasant experiences with tweezers, or water, or hot sand." The red nails clinched suddenly hard on the earlobe, cutting stronger and stronger like the grip of a machine, Asher gritting his teeth, shutting his eyes, forcing his mind away from the pain. Just when he thought the claws were about to tear away the flesh, Zardalu released him and smiled a fanged smile as he opened his eyes once more. "And he knows he will not escape."
There was blood on Zardalu's nails. The vampire held Asher's gaze with his own as he licked them slowly clean.
They led him out into an open gallery two floors above a courtyard paved in stone. An old han, or caravansary, Asher guessed as they descended the long flights of tiled steps. A solitary lamp burned in a wall niche at the bottom of the flight, outlining the arch of a short passageway that led through and down into an octagonal vestibule whose mosaic floors, though long defaced, still showed parts of Byzantine figures. He had crossed that vestibule yesterday afternoon, in the midst of the men who had surrounded him in an alley of the market district, a knife pressed to his back. They had said nothing to him, but had not needed to. The age of the place, as much as the absence of lamps from the niches and mirrors from the walls, had told him what house he had been brought to.
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