City of Night
Duchaine’s kitchen from the Rombuk Monastery, prepared to release the priest from this vale of tears, as he had promised, even though he had already learned of the Hands of Mercy from Pastor Laffite.
The priest had left lights on. The two coffee mugs and the two bottles of brandy stood on the table as they had been when Deucalion had left almost two hours ago, except that one of the bottles was now empty and a quarter of the other had been consumed.
Having been more affected by assisting Laffite out of this world than he had expected to be, prepared to be even more deeply stirred by the act of giving Duchaine that same grace, he poured a generous portion of brandy into the mug that previously he had drained of coffee.
He had brought the mug to his lips but had not yet sipped when his maker entered the kitchen from the hallway.
Although Victor seemed to be surprised, he didn’t appear to be amazed, as he should have been if he believed that his first creation had perished two centuries ago. “So you call yourself Deucalion, the son of Prometheus. Is that presumption… or mockery of your maker?”
Deucalion might not have expected to feel fear when coming face-to-face with this megalomaniac, but he did.
More than fear, however, anger swelled in him, anger of that particular kind that he knew would feed upon itself until it reached critical mass and became a rage that would sustain a chain reaction of extreme violence.
Such fury had once made him a danger to the innocent until he had learned to control his temper. Now, in the presence of his maker, no one but he himself would be endangered by his unbridled rage, for it might rob him of self-control, make him reckless, and leave him vulnerable.
Glancing at the back door, Victor said, “How did you get past the sentinels?”
Deucalion put down the mug so hard that the untasted brandy slopped out of it, onto the table.
“What a sight you are, with a tattoo for a mask. Do you really believe that it makes you less of an abomination?”
Victor took another step into the kitchen.
To his chagrin, Deucalion found himself retreating one step.
“And dressed all in black, an odd look for the bayou,” Victor said. “Are you in mourning for someone? Is it for the mate I almost made for you back then—but instead destroyed?”
Deucalion’s huge hands had hardened into fists. He longed to strike out, could not.
“What a brute you are,” said Victor. “I’m almost embarrassed to admit I made you. My creations are so much more elegant these days. Well, we all have to begin somewhere, don’t we?”
Deucalion said, “You’re insane and always were.”
“It talks!” Victor exclaimed with mock delight.
“The monster-maker has become the monster.”
“Ah, and it believes itself to be witty, as well,” said Victor. “But no one can blame your conversational skills on me. I only gave you life, not a book of one-liners, though I must say I seem to have given you rather more life than I realized at the time. Two hundred years and more. I’ve worked so hard on myself to hang on this long, but for you I would have expected a mortal span.”
“The only gift you gave me was misery. Longevity was a gift of the lightning that night.”
“Yes, Father Duchaine said that’s what you believe. Well, if you’re right, perhaps everyone should stand out in a field during a thunderstorm and hope to be struck, and live forever.”
Deucalion’s vision had darkened steadily with the escalation of his rage, and the memory of lightning that sometimes pulsed in his eyes throbbed now as never before. The rush of his blood sang in his ears, and he heard himself breathing like a well-run horse.
Amused, Victor said, “Your hands are so tightly fisted, you’ll draw blood from your palms with your own fingernails. Such hatred is unhealthy. Relax. Isn’t this the moment you’ve been living for? Enjoy it, why don’t you?”
Deucalion spread his fists into fans of fingers.
“Father Duchaine says the lightning also brought you a destiny. My destruction. Well… here I am.”
Although loath to concede his impotence, Deucalion looked away from his maker’s piercing gaze before he realized what he’d done.
“If you can’t finish me,” Victor said, “then I should wrap up the business I failed to complete so long ago.”
When Deucalion looked up again, he saw that Victor had drawn a revolver.
“A .357 Magnum,” Victor said. “Loaded with 158-grain jacketed
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher