very long and I was home and back in my library. I loved books. I still do. There are rooms of this house which are full of them, and I have houses elsewhere that are full of them. I never really knew battle.”
Marius stopped. He leant forward and brought the water up to his face as Thorne had done before, and he let the water run down over his eyelids.
“Come,” he said, “let’s be done with this pleasure and go for another. Let’s hunt. I can feel your hunger. I have new clothes for you here. I have all you need. Or would you stay longer in this warm water?”
“No, I’m ready,” said Thorne. It had been so long since he had fed that he was ashamed to admit it. Once again he rinsed his face and hair. He ducked down into the water, and came up, pushing his wet hair back from his forehead.
Marius had already climbed out of the tub, and held out for Thorne a large white towel.
It was thick and roughened and perfect for mopping the water off his blood drinker skin which never absorbs anything. The air of the room seemed chilled for one moment as he stood on the stone floor, but very soon he was warm again, rubbing fiercely at his hair to press the last droplets out of it.
Marius had finished with the task and now took a fresh towel from the stack and began to rub Thorne’s back and shoulders. This familiarity sent the chills through Thorne’s limbs. Marius rubbed hard at Thorne’s head, and then he began to comb the wet hair free of tangles.
“Why is there no red beard, my friend?” asked Marius, as the two faced each other. “I remember the Norsemen with their beards. I remember them when they came to Byzantium. Does that name mean anything to you?”
“Oh, yes,” said Thorne. “I was taken to see that wondrous city.” He turned around and accepted the towel from Marius’s hands. “My beard was thick and long, even when I was very young, let me assure you, but it was shaved the night that I became a blood drinker. I was groomed for the magical blood. It was the will of the creature who made me.”
Marius nodded. But he was far too polite to say her name, though the other young one had brashly spoken it.
“You know it was Maharet,” said Thorne. “You didn’t need to hear it from your young friend. You caught it from my thoughts, didn’t you?” Thorne paused, then went on. “You know it was the vision of her that brought me out of the ice and snow. She stood against the Evil Queen. She bound the vampire, Lestat, in chains. But to speak of her just now takes the breath out of me. When will I ever be able to speak of her? I can’t know now. Let’s hunt, and then we can really talk to one another.”
He was solemn, holding the towel against his chest. In his secret heart, he tried to feel love for the one who made him. He tried to draw from the centuries a wisdom that would quench anger. But he couldn’t do it. All he could do was be silent, and hunt with Marius now.
3
I n a large painted wooden room full of many painted cabinets and chests, Marius offered the clothes—fine leather jackets with small buttons of bone, many lined with silvery fur, and close-fitting pants of wool so soft Thorne couldn’t see the weave of it.
Only the boots were a little too small, but Thorne felt he could endure this. How could such a thing matter? Not satisfied, Marius continued to search until he found a large pair, and these proved more than serviceable.
As for the costume of the times it wasn’t so different from Thorne’s old habit of dress—linen for the fine shirt next to the skin, wool and leather for the outer garments. The tiny buttons on the shirt intrigued Thorne, and though he knew that the stitching had been done by machines and was a common thing, nevertheless it delighted him.
He had a dawning sense of how much delight awaited him. Never mind his dark mission.
As Marius dressed, he chose red once more for his jacket and for his hooded cloak. It intrigued Thorne, though he had seen