Blood Canticle - Anne Rice [84]
“Whatever his feelings for us,” Rowan said, “he chose to disappear. He chose to keep his future secret.”
Mona was sobbing against Quinn. It broke Michael’s heart to see it.
Stirling spoke up, his voice assuming a reverent authority:
“Mona,” he said, “the Talamasca began to search for Ash and Morrigan almost immediately. We tried to do it in an unobtrusive way. But we searched. We found some evidence that they had visited Donnelaith. But after that, the trail went cold. And please believe me now when I tell you again: we’ve never found the slightest trace of them anywhere.”
“That’s actually quite surprising,” I said.
“I’m not speaking to you,” cried Mona, glaring at me and then drawing close to Quinn as if she was afraid of me.
“Some evidence of them should have turned up,” I said, “no matter what happened to them.”
“That’s what I’ve always thought,” said Michael. “For two, three years we lived in dread of their surfacing in some catastrophic way. I can’t tell you all my fears. I thought: what if the young ones bred out of control? What if they rose up against Ash? What if they committed murders? And then when we stopped living in fear and started to search, nothing.”
Dolly Jean chuckled again, bringing up her shoulders and letting her head sink down and rocking back and forth. “Walking Babies can kill humans easy as humans can kill Walking Babies. They could be breeding somewhere, breeding like fire, spreading in all directions, hiding in the valleys and the hills, in the mountains and on the plains, traveling over land and sea, and then comes the ringing of a loud bell, and they all walk out all over the world at the same time and they shoot one human being apiece, bang, and they take over the entire planet!”
“Save that for Tante Oscar,” said Rowan under her breath with a cool lift of her eyebrows.
(I winked at Dolly Jean. She nodded and wagged her finger.)
Michael looked directly at Mona and leaned in towards her as he addressed her.
“I hope we’ve given you what you need,” he said. “As for the files, I’ll see that they’re all copied and delivered to you wherever you like. They’ll prove our efforts to track down every lead. We’ll give you every scrap of paper we have on Ash Templeton.”
“Of course,” said Dolly Jean, “they could both be stone-cold dead in the grave like Romeo and Juliet! Two Walking Babies all wrapped up in each other’s arms, just rotting away somewhere to cartilage. Like maybe he couldn’t stand her ranting and raving and all her plans, and he tied a silk stocking around her neck and—.”
“Stop it, Dolly Jean!” cried Mona. “Don’t you say another word or I’ll scream!”
“You’re screaming now, be still!” whispered Quinn.
In my heart of hearts I entered into a debate with myself, and then I spoke:
“I’ll find them,” I said quietly.
I startled everyone.
Mona turned to me resentfully. “Just what do you mean by that!” she demanded. Her handkerchief was full of blood tears.
I looked at her as disdainfully as I could, considering how tender and pretty she was, and how wicked and fiendish I was, and then I looked across the table at Rowan.
“I want to thank you all for sharing your secrets with us,” I said. I looked at Michael. “You’ve trusted us, and treated us as if we were sinless and kind, and I don’t know that we are. But I know that we try to be.”
A slow broad smile lit up Rowan’s face, extraordinary to behold. “Sinless and kind,” she repeated. “How marvelous are those words. If only I could work them into a hymn and sing it under my breath day and night, day and night. . . .”
We looked at each other.
“Give me a little time. If they still exist, if they’ve parented a colony, if they’re anywhere in the wide world, I know those who will know where they are—without question.”
Rowan raised her eyebrows and looked off thoughtfully, and the smile came again—a lamp of loveliness. She nodded.
Michael seemed vaguely stimulated by my words, and Stirling was curious and respectful.
“Sure enough,” said Dolly Jean, without opening her eyes, “you didn’t think