To Sleep With Evil Read online

Page 8

Bards followed behind, singing joyous proclama­tions. Villagers lined the streets, showering the bride with flower petals. After the procession had passed through this gauntlet, the entire crowd celebrated the event, indulging in food, wine, and song until their very souls had been sated. When at last the sun touched the horizon, the conveyors lifted the couple again and carried them home, straight to the wedding bed. The bearers retreated then, of course, but all through the night, friends and family passed below the bedroom window to tease the lovers with bawdy jokes and songs of procreation. Everyone reveled in the cel­ebration. When the cock crowed, the villagers knew it would be time to resume their simple, quiet routines.

  Remembering how she had once anticipated that day, Marguerite felt something precious had been stripped from her. It was not her dead beloved she missed; her grieving for him had ended when she began her journey to Donskoy's land. Rather, she missed the familiar traditions, and she longed to wrap herself in the comfort of ritual. The coming wedding— her real wedding—might be steeped in ritual, but she sensed there would be nothing familiar or comfortable about it.

  Marguerite's eyes snapped open as someone coughed at the front of the chapel. The priest stood at the altar once again. He had removed his hood, revealing a hairless head so white that it glowed and pulsed in the flickering light. Donskoy stepped out of the shadows and took his place beside the priest, who beckoned to Marguerite. She began to walk down the aisle, as if stepping into a dream.

  When Marguerite passed the first pew, she glanced to see who would witness this union. Ljubo and Yelena sat near the back of the room. She passed ten empty rows beyond, most of them gray with dust. Zosia and Ekhart sat just before the foremost pews, which, of course, would have been reserved for family, had any attended. The onlookers continued to stare ahead, not meeting her gaze. Mot even Zosia turned to smile reassuringly upon her. It was if Marguerite were to be wed among the dead. A gentle rasping echoed through the church; it was the sound of her own gown, dragging across the cold stone floor. She longed for music. Donskoy would not have shared this desire, of course; he had said as much to her earlier.

  As Marguerite neared her betrothed and the priest, she studied their unwavering eyes. Donskoy's were wide and reddened. The priest's were pale and almost colorless, save for a tinge of pink. White lashes adorned them like a dusting of snow. His brows lacked color as well. An albino, Marguerite thought.

  The priest lifted a red sash from the altar and slipped it around his neck so it draped over his chest. As he turned, the light from the candles danced across his smooth skull, creating a cap of writhing tat­toos. He began chanting in an ancient tongue.

  The albino motioned for her to kneel, and she sank dutifully to the ground. The cold, hard stone stung her knees, but she didn't mind; a numbness had begun to permeate her body. Donskoy took his place at her side. When she looked at him, his eyes were closed, his thoughts seemingly elsewhere. He must have sensed her gaze, however, for he turned and took her hand reassuringly. His soft glove caressed her fingers as he leaned forward to whisper into her ear.

  "I will translate," he murmured, "so that you under­stand the ceremony and its meaning." He squeezed her hand gently. "It is really very quaint, full of tradi­tion and lore, I hope you will enjoy it."

  The albino lifted a necklace of white petals from the altar and placed it around Marguerite's neck. Their spicy-sweet scent enveloped her, prickling her nostrils.

  "A mark of your chastity," said Donskoy, "and a symbol of your fidelity in the future."

  The priest droned on as he placed a wreath of net­tles around Donskoy's neck.

  Donskoy returned to her ear and said softly, "To ensure my potency, though I shall not need it." He kissed her tenderly upon the cheek, and for the first time, she felt relatively at ease. It was not to last.

  The priest drew a shining blade from the folds of his robe and passed it through the air, making a pattern like a star. Candlelight glinted on the steel as he took Marguerite's hand. She braced herself in anticipation of the sharp pain to come, but felt only the barest caress as he stroked the blade across her palm. The surgeon-priest released her and she stared at her unmarred skin. At first, the cut seemed merely sym­bolic, a mere brush, not a breaking of her fragile shell. Then, slowly, a thin red line appeared. Marguerite held her hand aloft and watched the blood as it brimmed in the gash, then trickled in streams down her arm until it merged with the sleeve of her gown and disap­peared. Presumably, the priest cut Donskoy as well; she was too dazed to watch.

  Lord Donskoy turned to face her directly and raised his hand as if to touch an invisible barrier; instinctively Marguerite did the same, mirroring his gesture. He pressed his gloved flesh against her bare skin—palm to palm, finger to finger, wound to wound. He spread her fingers and slipped his own between them, clasp­ing her hand firmly. The priest made a cryptic pro­nouncement, then began to wind a strip of ivory linen snugly over their touching hands and wrists. The damp cloth smelled of sulphur and smoke. Mar­guerite's skin grew hot beneath it.

  Donskoy's voice was deep and slow. "And so we are bound in flesh," he said.

  The albino lifted the pair of silver goblets from the altar and presented one to each of them. Dark red wine filled the vessels, viscous and gleaming. Don­skoy spat into Marguerite's goblet, then thrust his own under her lips. She returned the gesture awkwardly. When she had finished, a tiny strand of saliva escaped from her mouth. There was no discreet way to remove it. She had no hands free; one hung at her side, bound to Donskoy; the other held the gobiet. To her astonishment, Donskoy leaned in quickly, licking her mouth with a darting tongue. It was so deft, she hardly felt it. His arm snaked itself gracefully around hers and they sipped the warm, bitter liquor while entwined. The wine caressed her throat and descended slowly into her body, pooling in her stomach.

  "And so we are bound in spirit," Donskoy mur­mured, his lips now moist with the red stain.

  They drank until the goblets were empty. Marguerite swayed as the priest took the vessels away, and she felt Donskoy's firm grasp holding her in place.

  "One final stage, my dear," he whispered hoarsely, "a rite of fertility. Then we will be done."

  The priest withdrew a long, slender needle from his sash. Marguerite's eyes grew wide with alarm. She wriggled once in Donskoy's embrace before regaining her self-control.

  Zosia stepped forward with a tiny pillow,, upon which a small, dark egg was resting. The priest pricked both ends of the shell, then returned the nee­dle to his sash. Marguerite sighed with relief, glad that she was not the one to be pierced. Zosia presented the pillow to the priest, then retreated. Donskoy gingerly picked up the egg.

  He smiled knowingly at Marguerite. "Take half into your mouth and hold it gently with your lips," he instructed. "I am to blow the white through. Do not crush the shell or lose your hold, or you will bring bad luck upon us both." Donskoy winked and whis­pered in her ear. "I do not believe it myself, of course. But it is only proper we appease the priest and his so-called gods."

  Marguerite suppressed the urge to laugh at this assertion. Propriety certainly varied with the territory. She took the egg as it was offered, and wondered sud­denly whether Donskoy's first wife had undergone the same ceremony. Marguerite pushed the question aside. It would not do to think of the dead while cele­brating a marriage.

  Donskoy put his lips to the other side of the shell, leaning in gently. It was the most peculiar kiss Mar­guerite could imagine. There was nothing sensual about the exercise; she had to concentrate fully upon holding the egg and adjust to Donskoy's every change in pressure so as neither to let it drop or be crushed. She feit the contents of the egg slipping into her throat. Donskoy pulled away from her, and the priest retrieved the half-empty shell, crushing it force­fully beneath his foot.

  The priest motioned for the couple to rise. They stood facing one another, still bound at the wrist. As the albino slowly unwound the gauze from their skin, Lord Donskoy leaned forward and kissed her
inti­mately. When at last he released her, Marguerite's fin­gers were stiff and sore. No evidence of her cut palm remained, and the priest was gone.

  "Congratulations," announced Donskoy. "You are my bride. Until death do us part, you are mine."

  The four onlookers held their palms to the sky and rapidly snapped their fingers. Apparently, this counted as applause.

  Her husband turned to the audience as if he were addressing a large crowd. He flung his arms wide to embrace them ail, crying, "And now, my friends, we must celebrate!" Then he turned to Marguerite, grin­ning wildly, "Ah, yes," he said in a low, guttural tone. "And now we must feast!"

  Ljubo shambled to the wall and flung open the first shutter. A glorious shaft of light entered through the blue glass and pierced the room. He proceeded to the next window, and then each in turn, until he had flooded the chapel with a riot of colored rays—red, blue, green, and gold. Marguerite's heart lifted with each new exposure.

  Lord Donskoy put his arm around her waist and began steering her down the aisle. It was not until they reached the last pew that she noticed a fifth guest had entered the chapel.

  In the back row, well away from the windows, sat an elegant young woman in a jet traveling cloak. She looked like a porcelain doll with dark curls, ghostly skin, and enormous green eyes. A wide red ribbon encircled her long, slender neck.

  As Donskoy led Marguerite toward the door, the woman's lips parted in a perfect smile. "Congratula­tions," she said, mouthing the word so slowly that Mar­guerite could see her shining white teeth and her tender pink tongue. The word itself was barely audible.

  Donskoy stopped and stared, as if surprised to dis­cover the new guest. Then he nodded curtty to the woman and swept Marguerite across the threshold.

  SIX

  After departing the chapel, Marguerite and her new husband entered the keep alone. A single torch flick­ered far ahead, a feeble beacon shining across a sea of blackness. She found herself nearly blind, but Don­skoy seemed unaffected by the murk. He slipped his arm around her waist and led her up a narrow sloping passage, sweeping her along as the wind carries a leaf. When they had walked for several minutes, he paused, drawing her aside.

  "How do you feel?" he asked, pressing her back against the cool, damp wall.

  "A little strange," she replied. Strange, yes, and somewhat unraveled—still loose from the wine, per­haps. But not so loose that she had forgotten the woman in the chape!.

  Donskoy stroked her cheek with his glove, then lifted a handful of her hair to his nose. "In a good way, I trust," he said. He snuffled the hair softly, then drew a lock over his tongue.

  The gesture seemed oddly bestial, and Marguerite knew that she should reply, but her own tongue had become heavy and uncooperative. "Yes," she said finally. "In a good way."

  Donskoy's fingers slid to her shoulder, drawing her gown aside. The hand slipped to her waist, resting on her hip, as his teeth scraped teasingly across her bare collarbone.

  He has announced a feast, Marguerite thought. Per­haps I am to be it. Perhaps, after all, there will be no jubilant celebration, and no one to ferry me to a care­fully appointed wedding bed. Lord Donskoy intends to seal our union in the dungeons. She braced herself.

  Donskoy pulled away, smirking slyly. He winked, not saying a word, then straightened her gown and patted her shoulder. They continued their winding ascent.

  Marguerite smiled. It appeared that her husband had a sense of humor. In a corner of her mind, a great door was slowly closing, locking out the past. Admit­tedly, Donskoy was mercurial and the apparent prod­uct of arcane traditions, but he was not the horror she had fled in Darkon. Isolation and despair had made him rough; he would mellow in time. She would help. And they would succeed as man and wife, if left unim­peded—if no one interfered.

  "Who was the woman in the chapel?" Marguerite asked boldly. She already suspected the answer.

  "The woman?" Donskoy's voice was casual. "That was Zosia who joined us at the altar."

  Marguerite kept her tone equally casual and light. "No, the woman in the back of the chapel. Wearing the black cloak."

  "Ah." He paused briefly. "An unexpected guest."

  "You did not invite her?"

  "Not directly."

  Marguerite found this curious. "I hope i am not the cause of some misunderstanding. Certainty I would welcome any friend of yours to the castle."

  "How generous," said Donskoy curtly. "And how amusing that you consider such invitations within your purview." His tone remained light, yet it carried a subtle note of warning. She had asserted herself too forcefully.

  "I only mean to say that I look forward to meeting any friend of yours, and that you do not have to worry about my reception. I shall entertain any visitor with the same graciousness as you do yourself."

  Donskoy gave a throaty chuckle. "That is generous indeed."

  "Is our guest Jacqueline Montarri?"

  Lord Donskoy halted abruptly, his fingers pressing into her waist. "How do you know that name?" he asked. His tone was soft, yet measured.

  "I saw Miss Montarri yesterday morning. I saw her only briefly, and Zosia told me who she was." Mar­guerite did not reveal that she had seen Donskoy as well,

  "Zosia speaks far too freely."

  Marguerite answered chattily, as if deaf to any underlying tension. "Actually, Zosia told me very little. Just the name, and that Jacqueline Montarri is an old friend."

  "I see ..."

  They walked on, and Marguerite patiently awaited his next response.

  "Well, it doesn't matter," Donskoy added resolutely. "Jacqueline's presence comes as something of a sur­prise, but you would have become acquainted with her soon enough. She visits quite frequently. I must warn you that she may seem rather coarse, despite her elegant exterior."

  Marguerite was not at all surprised by this last revelation.

  Donskoy continued, "She will join us for the feast I have planned. My associates are already waiting in the great hall to meet you. We shall celebrate the marriage."

  "Your associates?" Marguerite asked. The term was peculiar. Certainly a lord might have henchmen, sol­diers, hirelings . . .

  "Loyal followers," explained Donskoy, "companions even before J became a lord. But that is the past. And now, we look forward."

  Without warning, they had gained the foyer, Don­skoy led her to the opposite side, to a pair of wide doors. "Ready?" he asked.

  She nodded.

  He flung open the doors, exposing the castle's great hall. Marguerite gazed in awe at the immense cham­ber before her; it was at least four times the size of the room in which they had previously dined. She felt as though she had shrunk. The ceiling vaulted upward through the next two levels of the keep, past a narrow gallery and into the shadows. A row of chandeliers descended from this darkness—spiders of iron and wood, dangling from strands of rusty chain, their legs aflame with myriad candles. An enormous, gaping fireplace glowed in the left wall. Smoke and ash whirled before the open hearth like gray snow stirred by a sudden draft.

  At the far end of the hall rose a dais supporting the lord's high table, which was freshly dressed in white linen. Marguerite noted that table seemed small; but perhaps this was intentional, to make the lord seem large. Twin rows of rough-hewn tables and benches created a broad aisle that led directly to the honored position. All of the tables were empty, save the pair just before the platform, which were occupied by about two dozen men, sullen and silent. Marguerite felt a catch her throat.

  A man in a black and red doublet rose from his seat, lifting his palms toward the ceiling. He began to snap his fingers. Slowly, the other men followed suit, one by one, until the room was filled with a sound like a hundred pebbles dropping.

  Donskoy gripped Marguerite's hand. "Smile," he said. "And show them how tovely you are, how full of life."

  He led her forward across the herb-strewn planks, past the empty dust-covered tables, past the grimly nodding men and up the shallow steps to the da
is. All the while, Donskoy's followers continued to snap their Fingers. The lord took his place in the thronelike chair at the center of the table, before an eiegant saltcellar made of silver. He motioned for Marguerite to sit beside him. Then he raised his hand, and the men ceased their strange applause, taking their seats as well. They began to murmur softly among themselves, throwing the occasional glance in Mar­guerite's direction. One of the men nudged his com­panion and whispered into the fellow's ear, then both laughed darkly.

  From this new vantage point, Marguerite could bet­ter view her audience. They formed an incongruous picture of fine clothing and imperfect bodies. One man was missing his right eye and half his face; it had caved in along a terrible scar. Another had only one hand; the left arm ended in a fingerless stump. A third had a hump. Others seemed less tattered, but even the fittest suffered some small deformity, such as a cauliflower ear or a blind white eye, or a profusion of sores and boils.

  Smiling stiffly, Marguerite whispered a question to her husband. "Do these people live in the castle?"

  Donskoy chortled. "No, my dear," he said, patting her hand. "Rest assured. My associates may lodge here on occasion, but they devote most of their time to ... ah, watching the borders of my land. They pre­fer the wild, and I admit I prefer the solitude. You have nothing to fear from them. No doubt they are jealous, but they would never dare harm my pretty wife, if that's your fear. They are not as rough as they seem."

  Marguerite breathed a sigh of relief.

  Her husband continued, "Of course, they are easily summoned, should I require them. They are always close at hand."

  The places had already been set and the wine poured, with full jugs resting on each table. A pewter platter and mug lay before each man, while Donskoy and Marguerite were to dine with fine silver and goblets of precious red glass. The men were already drinking. As soon as Donskoy had taken his seat, they had returned to their libation and chatter. Yelena rustled in through a door behind the dais and added a third setting at the end of the high table. Marguerite raised a brow, recalling the uninvited guest, the woman.