God // Lestat de Lioncourt (
hellraiser) wrote2013-04-28 06:17 am
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Memory #3 - Trivial Positive - Body-switching lessons with David.
Earned Day 242
Form: A bunch of ripe cherries. Three cherries in the bunch.
Shareable: 3/3
Shared with: N/A
Taken: No
THE plane ride would have been another absolute nightmare, had I not been so tired that I slept. A full
twenty-four hours had passed since my last dreamy rest in Gretchen's arms, and indeed I fell so deep into
sleep now that when David roused me for the change of planes in Puerto Rico, I scarce knew where we
were or what we were doing, and for an odd moment, it felt entirely normal to be lugging about this huge
heavy body in a state of confusion and thoughtless obedience to David's commands.
We did not go outside the terminal for this transfer of planes. And when at last we did land in the small
airport in Grenada, I was surprised by the close and delicious Caribbean warmth and the brilliant twilight sky.
All the world seemed changed by the soft balmy embracing breezes which greeted us. I was glad we had
raided the Canal Street shop in New Orleans, for the heavy tweed clothes felt all wrong. As the cab bounced
along the narrow uneven road, carrying us to our beachfront hotel, I was transfixed by the lush forest around
us, the big red hibiscus blooming beyond little fences, the graceful coconut palms bending over the tiny
tumbledown hillside houses, and eager to see, not with this dim frustrating mortal night vision, but in the
magical light of the morning sun.
There had been something absolutely penitential about my undergoing the transformation in the mean cold
of Georgetown, no doubt of it at all. Yet when I thought of it-that lovely white snow, and the warmth of
Gretchen's little house, I couldn't truly complain. It was only that this Caribbean island seemed the true
world, the world for real living; and I marveled, as I always did when in these islands, that they could be so
beautiful, so warm, and so very poor.
Here one saw the poverty everywhere-the haphazard wooden houses on stilts, the pedestrians on the
borders of the road, the old rusted automobiles, and the total absence of any evidence of affluence, making
of course for a quaintness in the eye of the outsider, but something of a hard existence perhaps for the
natives, who had never gathered together enough dollars to leave this place, even perhaps for a single day.
The evening sky was a deep shining blue, as it is often in this part of the world, as incandescent as it can be
over Miami, and the soft white clouds made the same clean and dramatic panorama on the far edge of the
gleaming sea. Entrancing, and this is but one tiny part of the great Caribbean. Why do I ever wander in other
climes at all?
The hotel was in fact a dusty neglected little guesthouse of white stucco under a myriad complex of rusted
tin roofs. It was known only to a few Britishers, and very quiet, with a rambling wing of rather old-fashioned
rooms looking out over the sands of Grand Anse Beach. With profuse apologies for the broken airconditioning
machines, and the crowded quarters-we must share a room with twin beds, I almost burst into
laughter, as David looked to heaven as if to say silently that his persecution would never end!-the proprietor
demonstrated that the creaky overhead fan created quite a breeze. Old white louvered shutters covered the
windows. The furniture was made of white wicker, and the floor was old tile.
It seemed very charming to me, but mostly on account of the sweet warmth of the air around me, and the bit
of jungle creeping down around the structure, with its inevitable snaggle of banana leaf and Queen's Wreath
vine. Ah, that vine. A nice rule of thumb might be: Don't ever live in a part of the world which will not support
that vine.
At once we set about to changing clothes. I stripped off the tweeds, and put on the thin cotton pants and
shirt I'd bought in New Orleans before we left, along with a pair of white tennis shoes, and deciding against
an all-out physical assault upon David, who was changing with his back turned to me, I went out under the
graceful arching coconut palms, and made my way down onto the sand.
The night was as tranquil and gentle as any night I've ever known. All my love of the Caribbean came back
to me-along with painful and blessed memories. But I longed to see this night with my old eyes. I longed to
see past the thickening darkness, and the shadows that shrouded the embracing hills. I longed to turn on my
preternatural hearing and catch the soft songs of the jungles, to wander with vampiric speed up the
mountains of the interior to find the secret little valleys and waterfalls as only the Vampire Lestat could have
done.
I felt a terrible, terrible sadness for all my discoveries. And perhaps it hit me in its fullness for the first timethat
all of my dreams of mortal life had been a lie. It wasn't that life wasn't magical; it wasn't that creation
was not a miracle; it wasn't that the world was not fundamentally good. It was that I had taken my dark
power so for granted that I did not realize the vantage point it had given me. I had failed to assess my gifts.
And I wanted them back.
Yes, I had failed, hadn't I? Mortal life should have been enough!
I looked up at the heartless little stars, such mean guardians, and I prayed to the dark gods who don't exist
to understand.
I thought of Gretchen. Had she already reached her rain forests, and all the sick ones waiting for the
consolations of her touch? I wished I knew where she was.
Perhaps she was already at work in a jungle dispensary, with gleaming vials of medicine, or trekking to
nearby villages, with miracles in a pack on her back. I thought of her quiet happiness when she'd described
the mission. The warmth of those embraces came back to me, the drowsy sweetness of it, and the comfort
of that small room. I saw the snow falling once more beyond the windows. I saw her large hazel eyes fixed
on me, and heard the slow rhythm of her speech.
Then again I saw the deep blue evening sky above me; I felt the breeze that was moving over me as
smoothly as if it were water; and I thought of David, David who was here with me now.
I was weeping when David touched my arm.
For a moment, I couldn't make out the features of his face. The beach was dark, and the sound of the surf
so enormous that nothing in me seemed to function as it ought to do. Then I realized that of course it was
David standing there looking at me, David in a crisp white cotton shirt and wash pants and sandals,
managing somehow to look elegant even in this attire-David asking me gently to please come back to the
room.
"Jake's here," he said, "our man from Mexico City. I think you should come inside."
The ceiling fan was going noisily and cool air moved through the shutters as we came into the shabby little
room. A faint clacking noise came from the coconut palms, a sound I rather liked, rising and falling with the
breeze.
Jake was seated on one of the narrow saggy little beds-a tall lanky individual in khaki shorts and a white
polo shirt, puffing on an odoriferous little brown cigar. All of his skin was darkly tanned, and he had a
shapeless thatch of graying blond hair. His posture was one of complete relaxation, but beneath this facade,
he was entirely alert and suspicious, his mouth a perfectly straight line.
We shook hands as he disguised only a little the fact that he was looking me up and down. Quick, secretive
eyes, not unlike David's eyes, though smaller. God only knows what he saw.
"Well, the guns won't be any problem," he said with an obvious Australian accent. "There are no metal
detectors at ports such as this. I'll board at approximately ten a.m., plant your trunk and your guns for you in
your cabin on Five Deck, then meet you hi the Cafe Centaur in St. George's. I do hope you know what
you're doing, David, bringing firearms aboard the Queen Elizabeth 2."
"Of course I know what I'm doing," said David very politely, with a tiny playful smile. "Now, what do you have
for us on our man?"
"Ah, yes. Jason Hamilton. Six feet tall, dark tan, longish blond hair, piercing blue eyes. Mysterious fellow.
Very British, very polite. Rumors as to his true identity abound. He's an enormous tipper, and a day sleeper,
and apparently doesn't bother to leave the ship when she's in port. Indeed he gives over small packages to
be mailed to his cabin steward every morning, quite early, before he disappears for the day. Haven't been
able to discover the post box but that's a matter of time. He has yet to appear in the Queens Grill for a single
meal. It's rumored he's seriously ill. But with what, no one knows. He's the picture of health, which only adds
to the mystery. Everyone says so. A powerfully built and graceful fellow with a dazzling wardrobe, it seems.
He gambles heavily at the roulette wheel, and dances for hours with the ladies. Seems in fact to like the very
old ones. He'd arouse suspicion on that account alone if he weren't so bloody rich himself. Spends a lot of
time simply roaming the ship."
"Excellent. This is just what I wanted to know," said David. "You have our tickets."
The man gestured to a black leather folder on the wicker dressing table. David checked the contents, then
gave him an approving nod.
"Deaths on the QE2 so far?"
"Ah, now that's an interesting point. They have had six since they left New York, which is a little more than
usual. All very elderly women, and all apparent heart failure. This is the sort of thing you want to know?"
"Certainly is," said David:
The "little drink," I thought.
"Now you ought to have a look at these firearms," said Jake, "and know how to use them." He reached for a
worn little duffel bag on the floor, just the sort of beat-up sack of canvas in which one would hide expensive
weapons, I presumed. Out came the expensive weapons-one a large Smith & Wesson revolver. The other a
small black automatic no bigger than the palm of my hand.
"Yes, I'm quite familiar with this," David said, taking the big silver gun and making to aim it at the floor. "No
problem." He pulled out the clip, then slipped it back in. "Pray I don't have to use it, however. It will make a
hell of a noise."
He then gave it to me.
"Lestat, get the feel of it," he said. "Of course there's no time to practice. I asked for a hair trigger."
"And that you have," said Jake, looking at me coldly. "So please watch out."
"Barbarous little thing," I said. It was very heavy. A nugget of destructiveness. I spun the cylinder. Six
bullets. It had a curious smell.
"Both the guns are thirty-eights," said the man, with a slight note of disdain. "Those are man-stoppers." He
showed me a small cardboard box. "You'll have plenty of ammunition available to you for whatever it is that
you are going to do on this boat."
"Don't worry, Jake," said David firmly. "Things will probably go without a hitch. And I thank you for your usual
efficiency. Now, go have a pleasant evening on the island. And I shall see you at the Centaur Cafe before
noon."
The fellow gave me a deep suspicious look, then nodded, gathered up the guns and the little box of bullets,
put them back in his canvas bag, and offered his hand again to me and then to David, and out he went. I
waited until the door had closed.
"I think he dislikes me," I said. "Blames me for involving you in some sort of sordid crime."
David gave a short little laugh. "I've been in far more compromising situations than this one," he said. "And if
I worried about what our investigators thought of us, I would have retired a long time ago. What do we know
now from this information?"
"Well, he's feeding on the old women. Probably stealing from them also. And he's mailing home what he
steals in packages too small to arouse suspicion. What he does with the larger loot we'll never know.
Probably throws it into the ocean. I suspect there's more than one post box number. But that's no concern of
ours."
"Correct. Now lock the door. It's time for a little concentrated witchcraft. We'll have a nice supper later on. I
have to teach you to veil your thoughts. Jake could read you too easily. And so can I. The Body Thief will
pick up your presence when he's still two hundred miles out to sea."
"Well, I did it through an act of will when I was Lestat," I said. "I haven't the faintest idea how to do it now."
"Same way. We're going to practice. Until I can't read a single image or random word from you. Then we'll
get to the out-of-body travel." He looked at his watch, which reminded me of James suddenly, in that little
kitchen. "Slip that bolt. I don't want any maid blundering in here later on."
I obeyed. Then I sat on the bed opposite David, who had assumed a very relaxed yet commanding attitude,
rolling up the stiff starched cuffs of his shirt, which revealed the dark fleece of his arms. There was also quite
a bit of dark hair on his chest, bubbling up through the open collar of the shirt. Only a little gray mixed in with
it, like the gray that sparkled here and there in his heavy shaven beard. I found it quite impossible to believe
he was a man of seventy-four.
"Ah, I caught that," he said with a little lift of the eyebrows. "I catch entirely too much. Now. Listen to what I
say. You must fix it in your mind that your thoughts remain within you, that you are not attempting to
communicate with others-not through facial expression or body language of any sort; that indeed you are
impenetrable. Make an image of your sealed mind if you must. Ah, that's good. You've gone blank behind
your handsome young face. Even your eyes have changed ever so slightly. Perfect. Now I'm going to try to
read you. Keep it up."
By the end of forty-five minutes, I had learned the trick fairly painlessly, but I could pick up nothing of David's
thoughts even when he tried his hardest to project them to me. In this body, I simply did not have the
psychic ability which he possessed. But the veiling we had achieved, and this was a crucial step. We would
continue to work on all this throughout the night.
"We're ready to begin on the out-of-body travel," he said.
"This is going to be hell," I said. "I don't think I can get out of this body. As you can see, I just don't have your
gifts."
"Nonsense," he said. He loosened his posture slightly, crossing his ankles and sliding down a bit in the
chair. But somehow, no matter what he did, he never lost the attitude of the teacher, the authority, the priest.
It was implicit in his small, direct gestures and above all in his voice.
"Lie down on that bed, and close your eyes. And listen to every word I say."
I did as I was told. And immediately felt a little sleepy. His voice became even more directive in its softness,
rather like that of a hypnotist, bidding me to relax completely, and to visualize a spiritual double of this form.
"Must I visualize myself with this body?"
"No. Doesn't matter. What matters is that you-your mind, your soul, your sense of self-are linked to the form
you envision. Now picture it as congruent with your body, and then imagine that you want to lift it up and out
of the body-that you want to go up!"
For some thirty minutes David continued this unhurried instruction, reiterating in his own fashion the lessons
which priests had taught to their initiates for thousands of years. I knew the old formula. But I also knew
complete mortal vulnerability, and a crushing sense of my limitations, and a stiffening and debilitating fear.
We had been at it perhaps forty-five minutes when I finally sank into the requisite and lovely vibratory state
on the very cusp of sleep. My body seemed in fact to have become this delicious vibratory feeling, and
nothing more! And just when I realized this, and might have remarked upon it, I suddenly felt myself break
loose and begin to rise.
I opened my eyes; or at least I thought I did. I saw I was floating directly above my body; in fact, I couldn't
even see the real flesh-and-blood body at all. "Go up!" I said. And instantly I traveled to the ceiling with the
exquisite lightness and speed of a helium balloon! It was nothing to turn completely over and look straight
down into the room.
Why, I had passed through the blades of the ceiling fan! Indeed, it was in the very middle of my body,
though I could feel nothing. And down there, under me, was the sleeping mortal form I had inhabited so
miserably all of these strange days. Its eyes were closed, and so was its mouth.
I saw David sitting hi his wicker chair, right ankle on his left knee, hands relaxed on his thighs, as he looked
at the sleeping man. Did he know I had succeeded? I couldn't hear a word he was speaking. Indeed, I
seemed to be in a totally different sphere from these two solid figures, though I felt utterly complete and
entire and real myself.
Oh, how lovely this was! This was so near to my freedom as a vampire that I almost began to weep again. I
felt so sorry for the two solid and lonely beings down there. I wanted to pass up through the ceiling and into
the night.
Slowly I went up, and then out over the roof of the hotel, until I was hovering above the white sand.
But this was enough, wasn't it? Fear gripped me, the fear I'd known when I did this little trick before. What hi
the name of God was keeping me alive hi this state! I needed my body! At once I plummeted, blindly, back
into the flesh. I woke up, tingling all over, and staring at David as he sat staring back at me.
"I did it," I said. I was shocked to feel these tubes of skin and bone enclosing me again, and to see my
fingers moving when I told them to do it, to feel my toes come alive hi my shoes. Lord God, what an
experience! And so many, many mortals had sought to describe it. And so many more, in their ignorance,
did not believe that such a thing could be.
"Remember to veil your thoughts," David said suddenly. "No matter how exhilarated you become. Lock your
mind up tight!"
"Yes, sir."
"Now let's do it all again."
By midnight-some two hours later-I had learned to rise at will. Indeed, it was becoming addictive-the feeling
of lightness, the great swooshing ascent! The lovely ease of passing through walls and ceiling; and then the
sudden and shocking return. There was a deep throbbing pleasure to it, pure and shining, like an eroticism
of the mind.
"Why can't a man die in this fashion, David? I mean why can't one simply rise into the heavens and leave
the earth?"
"Did you see an open doorway, Lestat?" he asked.
"No," I said sadly. "I saw this world. It was so clear, so beautiful. But it was this world."
"Come now, you must learn to make the assault."
"But I thought you would do it, David. You'd jolt him and knock nun out of his body and . . ."
"Yes, and suppose he spots me before I can do it, and makes me into a nice little torch. What then? No, you
must learn the trick as well."
This was far more difficult. Indeed it required the very opposite of the passivity and relaxation which we had
employed and developed before. I had now to focus all my energy upon David with the avowed purpose of
knocking him out of his body-a phenomenon which I could not hope to see in any real sense- and then go
into his body myself. The concentration demanded of me was excruciating. The timing was critical. And the
repeated efforts produced an intense and exhausting nervousness rather like that of a right-handed person
trying to write perfectly with the left hand.
I was near to tears of rage and frustration more than once. But David was absolutely adamant that we must
continue and that this could be done. No, a stiff drink of Scotch wouldn't help. No, we couldn't eat until later.
No, we couldn't break for a walk on the beach or a late swim.
The first time I succeeded, I was absolutely aghast. I went speeding towards David, and felt the impact in
the same purely mental fashion in which I felt the freedom of the flight. Then I was inside David, and for one
split second saw myself-slack-jawed and staring dully-through the dun lenses of David's eyes.
Then I felt a dark shuddering disorientation, and an invisible blow as if someone had placed a huge hand on
my chest. I realized that he had returned and pushed me out. I was hovering in the air, and then back in my
own sweat-drenched body, laughing near hysterically from mad excitement and sheer fatigue.
"That's all we need," he said. "Now I know we can pull this off. Come, once again! We're going to do it
twenty times if we have to, until we know that we can achieve it without fail."
On the fifth successful assault, I remained in his body for a full thirty seconds, absolutely mesmerized by the
different feelings attendant to it-the lighter limbs, the poorer vision, and the peculiar sound of my voice
coming out of his throat. I looked down and saw his hands-thin, corded with blood vessels, and touched on
the backs of the fingers with dark hair-and they were my hands! How hard it was to control them. Why, one
of them had a pronounced tremour which I had never noticed before.
Then came the jolt again, and I was flying upwards, and then the plummet, back into the twenty-six-year-old
body once more.
We must have done it twelve times before the slave driver of a Candomble priest said it was time for him to
really fight my assault.
"Now, you must come at me with much greater determination. Your goal is to claim the body! And you
expect a fight."
For an hour we battled. Finally, when I was able to jolt him out and keep him out for the space of ten
seconds, he declared that this would be enough.
"He told you the truth about your cells. They will know you. They will receive you and strive to keep you. Any
adult human knows how to use his own body much better than the intruder. And of course you know how to
use those preternatural gifts in ways of which he can't possibly even dream. I think we can do it. In fact, I'm
certain now that we can."
"But tell me something," I said. "Before we stop, don't you want to jolt me out of this body and go into it? I
mean, just to see what it's like?"
"No," he said quietly. "I don't."
"But aren't you curious?" I asked him. "Don't you want to know . . ."
I could see that I was taxing his patience.
"Look, the real truth is, we don't have time for that experience. And maybe I don't want to know. I can
remember my youth well enough. Too well, in fact. We aren't playing little games here. You can make the
assault now. That's what counts." He looked at his watch. "It's almost three. We'll have some supper and
then we'll sleep. We've a full day ahead, exploring the ship and confirming our plans. We must be rested and
in full control of our faculties. Come, let's see what we can rustle up in the way of food or drink."
We went outside and along the walk until we reached the little kitchen-a funny, damp, and somewhat
cluttered room. The kindly proprietor had left two plates for us in the rusted, groaning refrigerator, along with
a bottle of white wine. We sat down at the table and commenced to devour every morsel of rice, yams, and
spiced meat, not caring at all that it was very cold.
"Can you read my thoughts?" I asked, after I'd consumed two glasses of wine.
"Nothing, you've got the trick."
"So how do I do it in my sleep? The Queen Elizabeth 2 can't be more than a hundred miles out now. She's
to dock in two hours."
"Same way you do it when you're awake. You shut down. You close up. Because, you see, no one is ever
completely asleep. Not even those in a coma are completely asleep. Will is always operative. And will is
what this is about."
I looked at him as we sat there. He was obviously tired, but he did not look haggard or in any way
debilitated. His thick dark hair obviously added to the impression of vigor; and his large dark eyes had the
same fierce light in them which they always had.
I finished quickly, shoved the dishes into the sink, and went out on the beach without bothering to say what I
meant to do. I knew he would say we had to rest now, and I didn't want to be deprived of this last night as a
human being under the stars.
Going down to the lip of the water, I peeled off the cotton clothes, and went into the waves. They were cool
but inviting, and then I stretched out my arms and began to swim. It was not easy, of course. But it wasn't
hard either, once I resigned myself to the fact that humans did it this way-stroke by stroke against the force
of the water, and letting the water buoy the cumbersome body, which it was entirely willing to do.
I swam out quite far, and then rolled over on my back and looked at the sky. It was still full of fleecy white
clouds. A moment of peace came over me, in spite of the chill on my exposed skin, and the dimness all
around me, and the strange feeling of vulnerability I experienced as I floated on this dark treacherous sea.
When I thought of being back in my old body, I could only be happy, and once again, I knew that in my
human adventure, I had failed.
I had not been the hero of my own dreams. I had found human life too hard.
Finally I swam back into the shallows and then walked up onto the beach. I picked up my clothes, shook off
the sand, slung them over my shoulder, and walked back to the little room.
Only one lamp burned on the dressing table. David was sitting on his bed, closest to the door, and dressed
only in a long white pajama shirt and smoking one of those little cigars. I liked the scent of it, dark and sweet.
He looked his usual dignified self, arms folded, eyes full of normal curiosity as he watched me take a towel
from the bath and dry off my hair and my skin.
"Just called London," he said.
"What's the news?" I wiped my face with the towel, then slung it over the back of the chair. The air felt so
good on my naked skin, now that it was dry.
"Robbery in the hills above Caracas. Very similar to the crimes in Curacao. A large villa full of artifacts,
jewels, paintings. Much was smashed; only small portables were stolen; three people dead. We should
thank the gods for the poverty of the human imagination-for the sheer meanness of this man's ambitions-and
that our opportunity to stop him has come so soon. In time, he would have wakened to his monstrous
potential. As it is, he is our predictable fool."
"Does any being use what he possesses?" I asked. "Perhaps a few brave geniuses know their true limits.
What do the rest of us do but complain?"
"I don't know," he said, a sad little smile passing over his face. He shook his head and looked away. "Some
night, when this is all over, tell me again how it was for you. How you could be in that beautiful young body
and hate this world so much." "I'll tell you, but you'll never understand. You're on the wrong side of the dark
glass. Only the dead know how terrible it is to be alive."
I pulled a loose cotton T-shirt out of my little suitcase, but I didn't put it on. I sat down on the bed beside him.
And then I bent down and kissed his face again gently, as I had in New Orleans, liking the feel of his roughly
shaven beard, just as I liked that sort of thing when I was really Lestat and I would soon have that strong
masculine blood inside.
I moved closer to him, when suddenly he grasped my hand, and I felt him gently push me away.
"Why, David?" I asked him.
He didn't answer. He lifted his right hand and brushed my hair back out of my eyes.
"I don't know," he whispered. "I can't. I simply can't."
He got up gracefully, and went outside into the night.
I was too furious with pure stymied passion to do anything for a moment. Then I followed him out. He had
gone down on the sand a ways and he stood there alone, as I had done before.
I came up behind him.
"Tell me, please, why not?"
"I don't know," he said again. "I only know I can't. I want to. Believe me, I do. But I can't. My past is ... so
close to me." He let out a long sigh, and for a while was silent again. Then he went on. "My memories of
those days are so clear. It's as if I'm in India again, or Rio. Ah, yes, Rio. It's as if I am that young man again."
I knew I was to blame for this. I knew it, and that it was useless to say apologetic words. I also sensed
something else. I was an evil being, and even when I was in this body, David .could sense that evil. He
could sense the powerful vampiric 'greed. It was an old evil, brooding and terrible. Gretchen hadn't sensed it.
I had deceived her with this warm and smiling body. But when David looked at me, he saw that blond blueeyed
demon whom he knew very well.
I said nothing. I merely looked out over the sea. Give me back my body. Let me be that devil, I thought. Take
me away from this paltry brand of desire and this weakness. Take me back into the dark heavens where I
belong. And it seemed suddenly that my loneliness and my misery were as terrible as they had ever been
before this experiment, before this little sojourn into more vulnerable flesh. Yes, let me be outside it again,
please. Let me be a watcher. How could I have been such a fool?
I heard David say something to me, but I didn't really catch the words. I looked up slowly, pulling myself out
of my thoughts, and I saw that he had turned to face me, and I realized that his hand was resting gently on
my neck. I wanted to say something angry-Take your hand away, don't torment me-but I didn't speak.
"No, you're not evil, that's not it," he whispered. "It's me, don't you understand. It's my fear! You don't know
what this adventure has meant to me! To be here again in this part of the great world-and with you! I love
you. I love you desperately and insanely, I love the soul inside you, and don't you see, it's not evil. It's not
greedy. But it's immense. It overpowers even this youthful body because it is your soul, fierce and
indomitable and outside time-the soul of the true Lestat. I can't give in to it. I can't... do it. I'll lose myself
forever if I do it, as surely as if. . . as if. . ."
He broke off, too shaken obviously to go on. I'd hated the pain in his voice, the faint tremour undermining its
deep firmness. How could I ever forgive myself? I stood still, staring past him into the darkness. The lovely
pounding of the surf and the faint clacking of the coconut palms were the only sounds. How vast were the
heavens; how lovely and deep and calm these hours just before dawn. I saw Gretchen's face. I heard her
voice. There was a moment this morning when I thought I could throw up everything-just to be with you... I
could feel it sweeping me away, the way the music once did. And if you were to say "Come with me," even
now, I might go... The meaning of chastity is not to fall in love ... 7 could fall in love with you. I know I could.
And then beyond this burning image, fault yet undeniable, I saw the face of Louis, and I heard words spoken
in his voice that I wanted to forget.
Where was David? Let me wake from these memories. I don't want them. I looked up and I saw him again,
and in him the old familiar dignity, the restraint, the imperturbable strength. But I saw the pain too.
"Forgive me," he whispered. His voice was still unsteady, as he struggled to preserve the beautiful and
elegant facade. "You drank from the fountain of youth when you drank the blood of Magnus. Really you did.
You'll never know what it means to be the old man that I am now. God help me, I loathe the word, but it's
true. I'm old."
"I understand," I said. "Don't worry." I leant forward and kissed him again. "I'll leave you alone. Come on, we
should sleep. I promise. I'll leave you alone."
Learned
--After leaving Gretchen, David found me and took me to the Caribbean.
--"I felt a terrible, terrible sadness for all my discoveries. And perhaps it hit me in its fullness for the first time that
all of my dreams of mortal life had been a lie. It wasn't that life wasn't magical; it wasn't that creation was not a miracle; it wasn't that the world was not fundamentally good. It was that I had taken my dark power so for granted that I did not realize the vantage point it had given me. I had failed to assess my gifts. And I wanted them back. Yes, I had failed, hadn't I? Mortal life should have been enough!"
--What a hypocrite am I.
--But, regardless of all of that, James has been observed onboard the QE2 and we are tracking him down.
--David is a good friend ;_;
--David is also really handsome for a man of his age.
--And now telepathy/body-switching practice!!
--It's long and tedious and exhausting, but eventually I get the hang of it.
--At one point I even shove David out of his body and get to experience being an old man :O!!!
--Though, near the end he seems to show some reluctance at the thought of youth...
--After a swim, I kiss him and--he pushes me away, though he wants to. I remind him of his youth, and he can't separate the thought that I am still an evil being.
--No, it's because he's in love with me.
--And I'm in love with him too.
Memory Effects
+ 400 Acclimation to warmer climates
+ 500 Hypocrisy
+ 500 Self-derision
+ 5000 Ability to read body language
+ 1000 Determination/confidence in own ability
+ 50000000 sdfgkjfkd david ;; <3?!?!
Form: A bunch of ripe cherries. Three cherries in the bunch.
Shareable: 3/3
Shared with: N/A
Taken: No
THE plane ride would have been another absolute nightmare, had I not been so tired that I slept. A full
twenty-four hours had passed since my last dreamy rest in Gretchen's arms, and indeed I fell so deep into
sleep now that when David roused me for the change of planes in Puerto Rico, I scarce knew where we
were or what we were doing, and for an odd moment, it felt entirely normal to be lugging about this huge
heavy body in a state of confusion and thoughtless obedience to David's commands.
We did not go outside the terminal for this transfer of planes. And when at last we did land in the small
airport in Grenada, I was surprised by the close and delicious Caribbean warmth and the brilliant twilight sky.
All the world seemed changed by the soft balmy embracing breezes which greeted us. I was glad we had
raided the Canal Street shop in New Orleans, for the heavy tweed clothes felt all wrong. As the cab bounced
along the narrow uneven road, carrying us to our beachfront hotel, I was transfixed by the lush forest around
us, the big red hibiscus blooming beyond little fences, the graceful coconut palms bending over the tiny
tumbledown hillside houses, and eager to see, not with this dim frustrating mortal night vision, but in the
magical light of the morning sun.
There had been something absolutely penitential about my undergoing the transformation in the mean cold
of Georgetown, no doubt of it at all. Yet when I thought of it-that lovely white snow, and the warmth of
Gretchen's little house, I couldn't truly complain. It was only that this Caribbean island seemed the true
world, the world for real living; and I marveled, as I always did when in these islands, that they could be so
beautiful, so warm, and so very poor.
Here one saw the poverty everywhere-the haphazard wooden houses on stilts, the pedestrians on the
borders of the road, the old rusted automobiles, and the total absence of any evidence of affluence, making
of course for a quaintness in the eye of the outsider, but something of a hard existence perhaps for the
natives, who had never gathered together enough dollars to leave this place, even perhaps for a single day.
The evening sky was a deep shining blue, as it is often in this part of the world, as incandescent as it can be
over Miami, and the soft white clouds made the same clean and dramatic panorama on the far edge of the
gleaming sea. Entrancing, and this is but one tiny part of the great Caribbean. Why do I ever wander in other
climes at all?
The hotel was in fact a dusty neglected little guesthouse of white stucco under a myriad complex of rusted
tin roofs. It was known only to a few Britishers, and very quiet, with a rambling wing of rather old-fashioned
rooms looking out over the sands of Grand Anse Beach. With profuse apologies for the broken airconditioning
machines, and the crowded quarters-we must share a room with twin beds, I almost burst into
laughter, as David looked to heaven as if to say silently that his persecution would never end!-the proprietor
demonstrated that the creaky overhead fan created quite a breeze. Old white louvered shutters covered the
windows. The furniture was made of white wicker, and the floor was old tile.
It seemed very charming to me, but mostly on account of the sweet warmth of the air around me, and the bit
of jungle creeping down around the structure, with its inevitable snaggle of banana leaf and Queen's Wreath
vine. Ah, that vine. A nice rule of thumb might be: Don't ever live in a part of the world which will not support
that vine.
At once we set about to changing clothes. I stripped off the tweeds, and put on the thin cotton pants and
shirt I'd bought in New Orleans before we left, along with a pair of white tennis shoes, and deciding against
an all-out physical assault upon David, who was changing with his back turned to me, I went out under the
graceful arching coconut palms, and made my way down onto the sand.
The night was as tranquil and gentle as any night I've ever known. All my love of the Caribbean came back
to me-along with painful and blessed memories. But I longed to see this night with my old eyes. I longed to
see past the thickening darkness, and the shadows that shrouded the embracing hills. I longed to turn on my
preternatural hearing and catch the soft songs of the jungles, to wander with vampiric speed up the
mountains of the interior to find the secret little valleys and waterfalls as only the Vampire Lestat could have
done.
I felt a terrible, terrible sadness for all my discoveries. And perhaps it hit me in its fullness for the first timethat
all of my dreams of mortal life had been a lie. It wasn't that life wasn't magical; it wasn't that creation
was not a miracle; it wasn't that the world was not fundamentally good. It was that I had taken my dark
power so for granted that I did not realize the vantage point it had given me. I had failed to assess my gifts.
And I wanted them back.
Yes, I had failed, hadn't I? Mortal life should have been enough!
I looked up at the heartless little stars, such mean guardians, and I prayed to the dark gods who don't exist
to understand.
I thought of Gretchen. Had she already reached her rain forests, and all the sick ones waiting for the
consolations of her touch? I wished I knew where she was.
Perhaps she was already at work in a jungle dispensary, with gleaming vials of medicine, or trekking to
nearby villages, with miracles in a pack on her back. I thought of her quiet happiness when she'd described
the mission. The warmth of those embraces came back to me, the drowsy sweetness of it, and the comfort
of that small room. I saw the snow falling once more beyond the windows. I saw her large hazel eyes fixed
on me, and heard the slow rhythm of her speech.
Then again I saw the deep blue evening sky above me; I felt the breeze that was moving over me as
smoothly as if it were water; and I thought of David, David who was here with me now.
I was weeping when David touched my arm.
For a moment, I couldn't make out the features of his face. The beach was dark, and the sound of the surf
so enormous that nothing in me seemed to function as it ought to do. Then I realized that of course it was
David standing there looking at me, David in a crisp white cotton shirt and wash pants and sandals,
managing somehow to look elegant even in this attire-David asking me gently to please come back to the
room.
"Jake's here," he said, "our man from Mexico City. I think you should come inside."
The ceiling fan was going noisily and cool air moved through the shutters as we came into the shabby little
room. A faint clacking noise came from the coconut palms, a sound I rather liked, rising and falling with the
breeze.
Jake was seated on one of the narrow saggy little beds-a tall lanky individual in khaki shorts and a white
polo shirt, puffing on an odoriferous little brown cigar. All of his skin was darkly tanned, and he had a
shapeless thatch of graying blond hair. His posture was one of complete relaxation, but beneath this facade,
he was entirely alert and suspicious, his mouth a perfectly straight line.
We shook hands as he disguised only a little the fact that he was looking me up and down. Quick, secretive
eyes, not unlike David's eyes, though smaller. God only knows what he saw.
"Well, the guns won't be any problem," he said with an obvious Australian accent. "There are no metal
detectors at ports such as this. I'll board at approximately ten a.m., plant your trunk and your guns for you in
your cabin on Five Deck, then meet you hi the Cafe Centaur in St. George's. I do hope you know what
you're doing, David, bringing firearms aboard the Queen Elizabeth 2."
"Of course I know what I'm doing," said David very politely, with a tiny playful smile. "Now, what do you have
for us on our man?"
"Ah, yes. Jason Hamilton. Six feet tall, dark tan, longish blond hair, piercing blue eyes. Mysterious fellow.
Very British, very polite. Rumors as to his true identity abound. He's an enormous tipper, and a day sleeper,
and apparently doesn't bother to leave the ship when she's in port. Indeed he gives over small packages to
be mailed to his cabin steward every morning, quite early, before he disappears for the day. Haven't been
able to discover the post box but that's a matter of time. He has yet to appear in the Queens Grill for a single
meal. It's rumored he's seriously ill. But with what, no one knows. He's the picture of health, which only adds
to the mystery. Everyone says so. A powerfully built and graceful fellow with a dazzling wardrobe, it seems.
He gambles heavily at the roulette wheel, and dances for hours with the ladies. Seems in fact to like the very
old ones. He'd arouse suspicion on that account alone if he weren't so bloody rich himself. Spends a lot of
time simply roaming the ship."
"Excellent. This is just what I wanted to know," said David. "You have our tickets."
The man gestured to a black leather folder on the wicker dressing table. David checked the contents, then
gave him an approving nod.
"Deaths on the QE2 so far?"
"Ah, now that's an interesting point. They have had six since they left New York, which is a little more than
usual. All very elderly women, and all apparent heart failure. This is the sort of thing you want to know?"
"Certainly is," said David:
The "little drink," I thought.
"Now you ought to have a look at these firearms," said Jake, "and know how to use them." He reached for a
worn little duffel bag on the floor, just the sort of beat-up sack of canvas in which one would hide expensive
weapons, I presumed. Out came the expensive weapons-one a large Smith & Wesson revolver. The other a
small black automatic no bigger than the palm of my hand.
"Yes, I'm quite familiar with this," David said, taking the big silver gun and making to aim it at the floor. "No
problem." He pulled out the clip, then slipped it back in. "Pray I don't have to use it, however. It will make a
hell of a noise."
He then gave it to me.
"Lestat, get the feel of it," he said. "Of course there's no time to practice. I asked for a hair trigger."
"And that you have," said Jake, looking at me coldly. "So please watch out."
"Barbarous little thing," I said. It was very heavy. A nugget of destructiveness. I spun the cylinder. Six
bullets. It had a curious smell.
"Both the guns are thirty-eights," said the man, with a slight note of disdain. "Those are man-stoppers." He
showed me a small cardboard box. "You'll have plenty of ammunition available to you for whatever it is that
you are going to do on this boat."
"Don't worry, Jake," said David firmly. "Things will probably go without a hitch. And I thank you for your usual
efficiency. Now, go have a pleasant evening on the island. And I shall see you at the Centaur Cafe before
noon."
The fellow gave me a deep suspicious look, then nodded, gathered up the guns and the little box of bullets,
put them back in his canvas bag, and offered his hand again to me and then to David, and out he went. I
waited until the door had closed.
"I think he dislikes me," I said. "Blames me for involving you in some sort of sordid crime."
David gave a short little laugh. "I've been in far more compromising situations than this one," he said. "And if
I worried about what our investigators thought of us, I would have retired a long time ago. What do we know
now from this information?"
"Well, he's feeding on the old women. Probably stealing from them also. And he's mailing home what he
steals in packages too small to arouse suspicion. What he does with the larger loot we'll never know.
Probably throws it into the ocean. I suspect there's more than one post box number. But that's no concern of
ours."
"Correct. Now lock the door. It's time for a little concentrated witchcraft. We'll have a nice supper later on. I
have to teach you to veil your thoughts. Jake could read you too easily. And so can I. The Body Thief will
pick up your presence when he's still two hundred miles out to sea."
"Well, I did it through an act of will when I was Lestat," I said. "I haven't the faintest idea how to do it now."
"Same way. We're going to practice. Until I can't read a single image or random word from you. Then we'll
get to the out-of-body travel." He looked at his watch, which reminded me of James suddenly, in that little
kitchen. "Slip that bolt. I don't want any maid blundering in here later on."
I obeyed. Then I sat on the bed opposite David, who had assumed a very relaxed yet commanding attitude,
rolling up the stiff starched cuffs of his shirt, which revealed the dark fleece of his arms. There was also quite
a bit of dark hair on his chest, bubbling up through the open collar of the shirt. Only a little gray mixed in with
it, like the gray that sparkled here and there in his heavy shaven beard. I found it quite impossible to believe
he was a man of seventy-four.
"Ah, I caught that," he said with a little lift of the eyebrows. "I catch entirely too much. Now. Listen to what I
say. You must fix it in your mind that your thoughts remain within you, that you are not attempting to
communicate with others-not through facial expression or body language of any sort; that indeed you are
impenetrable. Make an image of your sealed mind if you must. Ah, that's good. You've gone blank behind
your handsome young face. Even your eyes have changed ever so slightly. Perfect. Now I'm going to try to
read you. Keep it up."
By the end of forty-five minutes, I had learned the trick fairly painlessly, but I could pick up nothing of David's
thoughts even when he tried his hardest to project them to me. In this body, I simply did not have the
psychic ability which he possessed. But the veiling we had achieved, and this was a crucial step. We would
continue to work on all this throughout the night.
"We're ready to begin on the out-of-body travel," he said.
"This is going to be hell," I said. "I don't think I can get out of this body. As you can see, I just don't have your
gifts."
"Nonsense," he said. He loosened his posture slightly, crossing his ankles and sliding down a bit in the
chair. But somehow, no matter what he did, he never lost the attitude of the teacher, the authority, the priest.
It was implicit in his small, direct gestures and above all in his voice.
"Lie down on that bed, and close your eyes. And listen to every word I say."
I did as I was told. And immediately felt a little sleepy. His voice became even more directive in its softness,
rather like that of a hypnotist, bidding me to relax completely, and to visualize a spiritual double of this form.
"Must I visualize myself with this body?"
"No. Doesn't matter. What matters is that you-your mind, your soul, your sense of self-are linked to the form
you envision. Now picture it as congruent with your body, and then imagine that you want to lift it up and out
of the body-that you want to go up!"
For some thirty minutes David continued this unhurried instruction, reiterating in his own fashion the lessons
which priests had taught to their initiates for thousands of years. I knew the old formula. But I also knew
complete mortal vulnerability, and a crushing sense of my limitations, and a stiffening and debilitating fear.
We had been at it perhaps forty-five minutes when I finally sank into the requisite and lovely vibratory state
on the very cusp of sleep. My body seemed in fact to have become this delicious vibratory feeling, and
nothing more! And just when I realized this, and might have remarked upon it, I suddenly felt myself break
loose and begin to rise.
I opened my eyes; or at least I thought I did. I saw I was floating directly above my body; in fact, I couldn't
even see the real flesh-and-blood body at all. "Go up!" I said. And instantly I traveled to the ceiling with the
exquisite lightness and speed of a helium balloon! It was nothing to turn completely over and look straight
down into the room.
Why, I had passed through the blades of the ceiling fan! Indeed, it was in the very middle of my body,
though I could feel nothing. And down there, under me, was the sleeping mortal form I had inhabited so
miserably all of these strange days. Its eyes were closed, and so was its mouth.
I saw David sitting hi his wicker chair, right ankle on his left knee, hands relaxed on his thighs, as he looked
at the sleeping man. Did he know I had succeeded? I couldn't hear a word he was speaking. Indeed, I
seemed to be in a totally different sphere from these two solid figures, though I felt utterly complete and
entire and real myself.
Oh, how lovely this was! This was so near to my freedom as a vampire that I almost began to weep again. I
felt so sorry for the two solid and lonely beings down there. I wanted to pass up through the ceiling and into
the night.
Slowly I went up, and then out over the roof of the hotel, until I was hovering above the white sand.
But this was enough, wasn't it? Fear gripped me, the fear I'd known when I did this little trick before. What hi
the name of God was keeping me alive hi this state! I needed my body! At once I plummeted, blindly, back
into the flesh. I woke up, tingling all over, and staring at David as he sat staring back at me.
"I did it," I said. I was shocked to feel these tubes of skin and bone enclosing me again, and to see my
fingers moving when I told them to do it, to feel my toes come alive hi my shoes. Lord God, what an
experience! And so many, many mortals had sought to describe it. And so many more, in their ignorance,
did not believe that such a thing could be.
"Remember to veil your thoughts," David said suddenly. "No matter how exhilarated you become. Lock your
mind up tight!"
"Yes, sir."
"Now let's do it all again."
By midnight-some two hours later-I had learned to rise at will. Indeed, it was becoming addictive-the feeling
of lightness, the great swooshing ascent! The lovely ease of passing through walls and ceiling; and then the
sudden and shocking return. There was a deep throbbing pleasure to it, pure and shining, like an eroticism
of the mind.
"Why can't a man die in this fashion, David? I mean why can't one simply rise into the heavens and leave
the earth?"
"Did you see an open doorway, Lestat?" he asked.
"No," I said sadly. "I saw this world. It was so clear, so beautiful. But it was this world."
"Come now, you must learn to make the assault."
"But I thought you would do it, David. You'd jolt him and knock nun out of his body and . . ."
"Yes, and suppose he spots me before I can do it, and makes me into a nice little torch. What then? No, you
must learn the trick as well."
This was far more difficult. Indeed it required the very opposite of the passivity and relaxation which we had
employed and developed before. I had now to focus all my energy upon David with the avowed purpose of
knocking him out of his body-a phenomenon which I could not hope to see in any real sense- and then go
into his body myself. The concentration demanded of me was excruciating. The timing was critical. And the
repeated efforts produced an intense and exhausting nervousness rather like that of a right-handed person
trying to write perfectly with the left hand.
I was near to tears of rage and frustration more than once. But David was absolutely adamant that we must
continue and that this could be done. No, a stiff drink of Scotch wouldn't help. No, we couldn't eat until later.
No, we couldn't break for a walk on the beach or a late swim.
The first time I succeeded, I was absolutely aghast. I went speeding towards David, and felt the impact in
the same purely mental fashion in which I felt the freedom of the flight. Then I was inside David, and for one
split second saw myself-slack-jawed and staring dully-through the dun lenses of David's eyes.
Then I felt a dark shuddering disorientation, and an invisible blow as if someone had placed a huge hand on
my chest. I realized that he had returned and pushed me out. I was hovering in the air, and then back in my
own sweat-drenched body, laughing near hysterically from mad excitement and sheer fatigue.
"That's all we need," he said. "Now I know we can pull this off. Come, once again! We're going to do it
twenty times if we have to, until we know that we can achieve it without fail."
On the fifth successful assault, I remained in his body for a full thirty seconds, absolutely mesmerized by the
different feelings attendant to it-the lighter limbs, the poorer vision, and the peculiar sound of my voice
coming out of his throat. I looked down and saw his hands-thin, corded with blood vessels, and touched on
the backs of the fingers with dark hair-and they were my hands! How hard it was to control them. Why, one
of them had a pronounced tremour which I had never noticed before.
Then came the jolt again, and I was flying upwards, and then the plummet, back into the twenty-six-year-old
body once more.
We must have done it twelve times before the slave driver of a Candomble priest said it was time for him to
really fight my assault.
"Now, you must come at me with much greater determination. Your goal is to claim the body! And you
expect a fight."
For an hour we battled. Finally, when I was able to jolt him out and keep him out for the space of ten
seconds, he declared that this would be enough.
"He told you the truth about your cells. They will know you. They will receive you and strive to keep you. Any
adult human knows how to use his own body much better than the intruder. And of course you know how to
use those preternatural gifts in ways of which he can't possibly even dream. I think we can do it. In fact, I'm
certain now that we can."
"But tell me something," I said. "Before we stop, don't you want to jolt me out of this body and go into it? I
mean, just to see what it's like?"
"No," he said quietly. "I don't."
"But aren't you curious?" I asked him. "Don't you want to know . . ."
I could see that I was taxing his patience.
"Look, the real truth is, we don't have time for that experience. And maybe I don't want to know. I can
remember my youth well enough. Too well, in fact. We aren't playing little games here. You can make the
assault now. That's what counts." He looked at his watch. "It's almost three. We'll have some supper and
then we'll sleep. We've a full day ahead, exploring the ship and confirming our plans. We must be rested and
in full control of our faculties. Come, let's see what we can rustle up in the way of food or drink."
We went outside and along the walk until we reached the little kitchen-a funny, damp, and somewhat
cluttered room. The kindly proprietor had left two plates for us in the rusted, groaning refrigerator, along with
a bottle of white wine. We sat down at the table and commenced to devour every morsel of rice, yams, and
spiced meat, not caring at all that it was very cold.
"Can you read my thoughts?" I asked, after I'd consumed two glasses of wine.
"Nothing, you've got the trick."
"So how do I do it in my sleep? The Queen Elizabeth 2 can't be more than a hundred miles out now. She's
to dock in two hours."
"Same way you do it when you're awake. You shut down. You close up. Because, you see, no one is ever
completely asleep. Not even those in a coma are completely asleep. Will is always operative. And will is
what this is about."
I looked at him as we sat there. He was obviously tired, but he did not look haggard or in any way
debilitated. His thick dark hair obviously added to the impression of vigor; and his large dark eyes had the
same fierce light in them which they always had.
I finished quickly, shoved the dishes into the sink, and went out on the beach without bothering to say what I
meant to do. I knew he would say we had to rest now, and I didn't want to be deprived of this last night as a
human being under the stars.
Going down to the lip of the water, I peeled off the cotton clothes, and went into the waves. They were cool
but inviting, and then I stretched out my arms and began to swim. It was not easy, of course. But it wasn't
hard either, once I resigned myself to the fact that humans did it this way-stroke by stroke against the force
of the water, and letting the water buoy the cumbersome body, which it was entirely willing to do.
I swam out quite far, and then rolled over on my back and looked at the sky. It was still full of fleecy white
clouds. A moment of peace came over me, in spite of the chill on my exposed skin, and the dimness all
around me, and the strange feeling of vulnerability I experienced as I floated on this dark treacherous sea.
When I thought of being back in my old body, I could only be happy, and once again, I knew that in my
human adventure, I had failed.
I had not been the hero of my own dreams. I had found human life too hard.
Finally I swam back into the shallows and then walked up onto the beach. I picked up my clothes, shook off
the sand, slung them over my shoulder, and walked back to the little room.
Only one lamp burned on the dressing table. David was sitting on his bed, closest to the door, and dressed
only in a long white pajama shirt and smoking one of those little cigars. I liked the scent of it, dark and sweet.
He looked his usual dignified self, arms folded, eyes full of normal curiosity as he watched me take a towel
from the bath and dry off my hair and my skin.
"Just called London," he said.
"What's the news?" I wiped my face with the towel, then slung it over the back of the chair. The air felt so
good on my naked skin, now that it was dry.
"Robbery in the hills above Caracas. Very similar to the crimes in Curacao. A large villa full of artifacts,
jewels, paintings. Much was smashed; only small portables were stolen; three people dead. We should
thank the gods for the poverty of the human imagination-for the sheer meanness of this man's ambitions-and
that our opportunity to stop him has come so soon. In time, he would have wakened to his monstrous
potential. As it is, he is our predictable fool."
"Does any being use what he possesses?" I asked. "Perhaps a few brave geniuses know their true limits.
What do the rest of us do but complain?"
"I don't know," he said, a sad little smile passing over his face. He shook his head and looked away. "Some
night, when this is all over, tell me again how it was for you. How you could be in that beautiful young body
and hate this world so much." "I'll tell you, but you'll never understand. You're on the wrong side of the dark
glass. Only the dead know how terrible it is to be alive."
I pulled a loose cotton T-shirt out of my little suitcase, but I didn't put it on. I sat down on the bed beside him.
And then I bent down and kissed his face again gently, as I had in New Orleans, liking the feel of his roughly
shaven beard, just as I liked that sort of thing when I was really Lestat and I would soon have that strong
masculine blood inside.
I moved closer to him, when suddenly he grasped my hand, and I felt him gently push me away.
"Why, David?" I asked him.
He didn't answer. He lifted his right hand and brushed my hair back out of my eyes.
"I don't know," he whispered. "I can't. I simply can't."
He got up gracefully, and went outside into the night.
I was too furious with pure stymied passion to do anything for a moment. Then I followed him out. He had
gone down on the sand a ways and he stood there alone, as I had done before.
I came up behind him.
"Tell me, please, why not?"
"I don't know," he said again. "I only know I can't. I want to. Believe me, I do. But I can't. My past is ... so
close to me." He let out a long sigh, and for a while was silent again. Then he went on. "My memories of
those days are so clear. It's as if I'm in India again, or Rio. Ah, yes, Rio. It's as if I am that young man again."
I knew I was to blame for this. I knew it, and that it was useless to say apologetic words. I also sensed
something else. I was an evil being, and even when I was in this body, David .could sense that evil. He
could sense the powerful vampiric 'greed. It was an old evil, brooding and terrible. Gretchen hadn't sensed it.
I had deceived her with this warm and smiling body. But when David looked at me, he saw that blond blueeyed
demon whom he knew very well.
I said nothing. I merely looked out over the sea. Give me back my body. Let me be that devil, I thought. Take
me away from this paltry brand of desire and this weakness. Take me back into the dark heavens where I
belong. And it seemed suddenly that my loneliness and my misery were as terrible as they had ever been
before this experiment, before this little sojourn into more vulnerable flesh. Yes, let me be outside it again,
please. Let me be a watcher. How could I have been such a fool?
I heard David say something to me, but I didn't really catch the words. I looked up slowly, pulling myself out
of my thoughts, and I saw that he had turned to face me, and I realized that his hand was resting gently on
my neck. I wanted to say something angry-Take your hand away, don't torment me-but I didn't speak.
"No, you're not evil, that's not it," he whispered. "It's me, don't you understand. It's my fear! You don't know
what this adventure has meant to me! To be here again in this part of the great world-and with you! I love
you. I love you desperately and insanely, I love the soul inside you, and don't you see, it's not evil. It's not
greedy. But it's immense. It overpowers even this youthful body because it is your soul, fierce and
indomitable and outside time-the soul of the true Lestat. I can't give in to it. I can't... do it. I'll lose myself
forever if I do it, as surely as if. . . as if. . ."
He broke off, too shaken obviously to go on. I'd hated the pain in his voice, the faint tremour undermining its
deep firmness. How could I ever forgive myself? I stood still, staring past him into the darkness. The lovely
pounding of the surf and the faint clacking of the coconut palms were the only sounds. How vast were the
heavens; how lovely and deep and calm these hours just before dawn. I saw Gretchen's face. I heard her
voice. There was a moment this morning when I thought I could throw up everything-just to be with you... I
could feel it sweeping me away, the way the music once did. And if you were to say "Come with me," even
now, I might go... The meaning of chastity is not to fall in love ... 7 could fall in love with you. I know I could.
And then beyond this burning image, fault yet undeniable, I saw the face of Louis, and I heard words spoken
in his voice that I wanted to forget.
Where was David? Let me wake from these memories. I don't want them. I looked up and I saw him again,
and in him the old familiar dignity, the restraint, the imperturbable strength. But I saw the pain too.
"Forgive me," he whispered. His voice was still unsteady, as he struggled to preserve the beautiful and
elegant facade. "You drank from the fountain of youth when you drank the blood of Magnus. Really you did.
You'll never know what it means to be the old man that I am now. God help me, I loathe the word, but it's
true. I'm old."
"I understand," I said. "Don't worry." I leant forward and kissed him again. "I'll leave you alone. Come on, we
should sleep. I promise. I'll leave you alone."
Learned
--After leaving Gretchen, David found me and took me to the Caribbean.
--"I felt a terrible, terrible sadness for all my discoveries. And perhaps it hit me in its fullness for the first time that
all of my dreams of mortal life had been a lie. It wasn't that life wasn't magical; it wasn't that creation was not a miracle; it wasn't that the world was not fundamentally good. It was that I had taken my dark power so for granted that I did not realize the vantage point it had given me. I had failed to assess my gifts. And I wanted them back. Yes, I had failed, hadn't I? Mortal life should have been enough!"
--What a hypocrite am I.
--But, regardless of all of that, James has been observed onboard the QE2 and we are tracking him down.
--David is a good friend ;_;
--David is also really handsome for a man of his age.
--And now telepathy/body-switching practice!!
--It's long and tedious and exhausting, but eventually I get the hang of it.
--At one point I even shove David out of his body and get to experience being an old man :O!!!
--Though, near the end he seems to show some reluctance at the thought of youth...
--After a swim, I kiss him and--he pushes me away, though he wants to. I remind him of his youth, and he can't separate the thought that I am still an evil being.
--No, it's because he's in love with me.
--And I'm in love with him too.
Memory Effects
+ 400 Acclimation to warmer climates
+ 500 Hypocrisy
+ 500 Self-derision
+ 5000 Ability to read body language
+ 1000 Determination/confidence in own ability
+ 50000000 sdfgkjfkd david ;; <3?!?!