Meier and Charlotte: A Beginning | By : thecert Category: +S to Z > Vampire Hunter D Views: 2843 -:- Recommendations : 0 -:- Currently Reading : 0 |
Disclaimer: I do not own Vampire Hunter D, nor any of the characters from it. I do not make any money from the writing of this story. |
There was freedom in flying. Sometimes Meier no longer had the spirit for it; he would look out from the towers of his castle at the green pastures and rolling hills, and even feeling the wind tease his cape wouldn't tempt him to spread his arms into it and take flight.
Flying had been a feat of great pride when he was younger, a skill he had discovered by accident on acquiring a cape of pterosaur hide. He doubted that vampires and pterosaurs were genetically related, yet when he wore the cape he could feel a bit of the aerial creature it once had been; it was almost like a second skin rather than a garment. Acting on a logical extension of this observation, he had tested his limited shape-shifting ability and found that he could, in a sense, merge with it: the heavy membrane would spread out to wings more than double his own arm span, and a tensing of muscles sharpened their edges to a most effective weapon. The wings caught the wind as well for him as they had for the original owner. At first he'd had his share of crashes—the damage had of course been more to his pride than his body—but the hide seemed to be as resilient as he was; or perhaps just as he merged with it, it merged with him and took on some of his vampiric invulnerability.
Over time, he had pushed this skill to its limits. On several occasions he used the largest interior spaces of the castle as an obstacle course (to his father's unconcealed consternation) to try his wings' maneuverability, and his success in these endeavors had inspired one particularly foolhardy foray, in which he skimmed just under sun's first rays, then dove to safety before the sunrise that lit the higher atmosphere reached the ground.
It had all been grand fun for a much younger vampire, one who lived with his parents in their castle and socialized with his peers: the young (or at least young-looking) men who tried to force him from the air in good-natured rivalry, the beautiful women who tried to get him out of the cape for reasons that had nothing to do with his aerial powers. But that had been many years ago, and now even pleasures were too much effort, sometimes, when there was no one to see, no one to return to—no one to share. And Meier would stare over the fields and forests for hours, only half mindful of what his eyes saw in the darkness.
Perhaps it was a kind of desperation that drove him to the town of the humans. Certainly it was not any prospect of companionship. With very few exceptions he and they had avoided each other. They were of different kinds, of different worlds, and the streets and alleys of the town, the tree-rows of the orchards at its outskirts, were too narrow to contain the span of his great cape-wings. (He preferred such a rationale to thinking of the crosses that spiked the rooftops.) And yet sometimes he did fly there, simply because it was neither his castle nor the open countryside.
It was not in town proper but at a mansion on a plantation not far outside it that Meier's attention was simultaneously drawn by two things: a great misshapen tree, and screams. He probably would not have noticed the tree otherwise, but it was almost as if the screaming had sprung from it. Meier nearly stalled as his wings half folded; the screaming was succeeded by sobs—distinctly a woman's—and a man's voice shouting, "Slut! You're nothing but filth, do you hear me!" And this was followed by a cracking sound and something between a scream and a sob.
Meier shifted his hands out of wing form and hooked his long nails into the ugly tree. Half clinging and half perching, he was able to see in a window, where a woman staggered into view, only to be grabbed by one shoulder, spun around, and struck so hard blood spurted from her face, even as she sobbed again.
It must have been the blood. Meier scarcely knew it was his own body that leaped forward, through the window with a shattering of glass that he never heard. He didn't feel the shards rebounding from his skin. He only knew there was something horribly out of kilter in what he had witnessed. The next thing he knew, he was between attacker and victim: the former a crumpled heap on one side of the room, the latter clutching her face and staring at him, tears streaming down her cheeks and blood dripping off her chin. For a long moment she was too surprised to move, suddenly confronted by this pale demon, skin nearly as white as his hair, eyes gleaming like coals, and taloned hands twitching reflexively at the edges of his dark cape. Then she found herself enough to back away as far as she could, breath coming hard, then sobs again.
"Don't cry." Suddenly Meier felt very lost. The blood scent unsettled him, and her terror evoked a kind of fury—he didn't want to be the object of that terror, and he shouldn't, not after—
He looked to the man, who was breathing but not moving. He had been flung against a vanity and lay in a twisted heap, half against it, half on the floor.
"Don't hurt him," the woman finally managed to sputter. "Please don't hurt him. Please."
This was bizarre beyond all describing. Her clothing had been torn, her hair was in disarray, and Meier could see redness from several blows—as well as the blood, of course. This man had done these things, and in a span of only a few minutes.
"Why? He's—" Meier wasn't certain how to describe what had come just before "—he's hurt you."
She shook her head as best she could with a hand trying to stanch her bleeding, and overcame her fear of the intruder enough to edge around him and kneel by the fallen man. "Father?" Her voice was unsteady, and not from fear for herself. "Father, please be all right." Another little sob, and she started crying in earnest. "What have you done to my father?"
Kept him from killing you crossed Meier's mind in a way too dim to work itself into speech.
"He's hurt you terribly," Meier said.
"I don't care. It is my fault. I—how could you do such a thing?"
"Don't cry." Meier didn't know why her tears were tearing a hole in his heart, but somehow stopping them seemed more important than understanding, more important even than the blood that had run down her forearms and was dripping off her elbows. "Why should he do such a thing? Why should he do such a thing and live?"
"It's none of your business!" she screamed, and the man gave a soft groan. She fell on him, hugging him. "Oh, Father, you're going to be okay."
"Here now—" Meier put a hand on her shoulder, and she pulled herself away from his touch and stood, blood and tears and all, defying him with reddened eyes.
"Leave him alone! Haven't you done enough?!"
"No," Meier said softly. "I don't think I have. Very well; I won't hurt him any more. But ... he really is your father?"
"Of course he is!"
"What's your name, girl?"
"Charlotte." It was a whisper of fury. "Charlotte Elbourne."
Somehow that caught him, the woman's saying her name. Charlotte Elbourne was not much shorter than he; she would have been a fine figure of a woman without blood smearing her face, and with her deep brown hair in neat plaits, instead of flown all astray, a little plastered to one cheek by drying blood. Her eyes ... Meier had to tear his own eyes away then, for the red rims surrounded orbs of polished amber that he wanted to look at ... and he had other things to look at.
"Charlotte Elbourne, I'll do him no more harm. But I won't have you treated so shamefully. Out of my way—no, stop that; I don't need to lay a hand on him."
Usually vampires gave their hypnosis its full force by biting victims and drinking their blood. Meier had drawn blood: a trickle ran from the slack mouth beneath a heavy white mustache; it mixed with saliva in a small pool on the floor. But Meier had no wish to taste this man's blood, or come into contact with any part of him. He furrowed his brow, summoning the telekinetic power of his aura; to Meier's relief, it had the desired effect of bringing the man to semi-consciousness. And that was all he needed.
"Hear the voice of truth," he said, his own voice ringing with conviction. "Your daughter Charlotte Elbourne is a good girl. You do not want to harm her. You cannot harm her. She is sweet and gentle, and everything that befits a woman of her station, she should have. You will always know these things."
Meier's head fell forward; the effort of waking the man and holding his mind without the taking of blood to support it had been immense. An uncanny prickling under his skin made him look up—and he gasped and backed away, nearly stumbling and finally catching himself on the window frame. Charlotte Elbourne had wiped some of the blood off her face, and somewhere she had found a cross—a tiny pendant on a gold chain, but it was enough. She held it up with an unsteady hand.
"Get out!" Her voice was something between a snarl and a sob. "Go back to hell where you belong!"
Meier made no argument but turned and launched himself from the window ledge, arms melding to cape with a speed that surprised even him. His wingtips barely touched the lawn in the single downstroke that pushed him properly into flight. He felt cold to his bones. The antipathy between crosses and vampires was ancient, unexplained—and for his kind, eerie. Were they, as the humans said, spawn of hell? Meier doubted that there was such a place as hell, for all the store the humans seemed to set by the idea of it. But the discomfort that the tiny trinket inspired in him was no myth, and he was glad to be away from it.
Vampires were creatures of earth, and Meier wanted that solid and reassuring touch beneath his feet just now. He landed near the edge of a field and within easy sight of his castle's towers, and wrapped his cape about himself. The evening's events flowed and re-flowed through his mind, and he tried to grasp what had passed so quickly and so disturbingly. He didn't know what to make of the man's mental state or his acts. He hadn't been punishing the girl for any real misdeed; Meier had no idea what made him so sure of that, but he was. And yet the girl—Charlotte Elbourne—had defended her attacker, her father. It was, he supposed, something to do with the peculiarities of the human mind or emotions; humans were vulnerable to each other, and somehow drawn and even attached to each other, in a way foreign to vampire nature.
She loved him. He had struck her and drawn her blood, and she loved him. Meier pulled his cape more tightly about himself at the thought, so incongruous—that he had no desire to hurt her, despite the rich scent of blood in the air, but she had driven him away, even though—
Meier wondered why the thought of it pulled at something within him, so that the cocoon of his wings and the very strength of the earth gave no solace.
Perhaps it was as well that Meier knew no other vampires to ask about such things. The likely response would have been scornful amusement at concern over the affairs of humans, and downright hilarity at surprise that one human would ill-treat another. Humans had always had a talent, and a penchant, for cruelty. Meier first thought he'd rather never see the place again—not the room where glass and blood had fallen, not the ugly tree, not even the town full of lights that he had skirted to fly there. His castle he understood: he knew every inch of its halls and towers, every crack in the surface of every painting, every thread in the weave of every tapestry. He loved his home, even though he had grown weary of knowing it so well over the centuries. Previously it had always been a shelter, and he found comfort in that familiarity. Comfort eluded him now. The girl's sobs and the spurt of her blood, the near-dizziness of exercising influence, and then being driven out even though he'd made no move, no threat against her...
It was a house like any human house, now with the quiescence of sleep, for it had taken Meier a large portion of the night to screw his courage to the sticking point and travel there. In fact, he had previously made several abortive flights, but his wings, like his resolve, had faltered before he completed the journey. The mansion was surrounded by a sort of park—carefully tended grass, stone-lined walkways that crunched softly underfoot, great trees like the one he had perched in that night—well, trees the same size. But the park did not afford him a particularly good view of her window, and at last, somewhat timidly, he made his way to the twisted old tree. He didn't need his wings; he simply leaped up to the limb that served as a perch, and his grip grew rigid. The broken window had been repaired—and the tiny cross that Charlotte had held glittered on one of the sashes, its chain twisted about a finishing nail.
Meier trembled a little. He had come all this way to see ... to see that the woman was all right, he thought, for he desperately wanted her to be. And this greeted him—the cross, and behind it drapes pulled shut.
He had to catch some bit of her. If not sight—
Meier dropped down from the tree and traversed the lawn cat-silent to place his ear against the wall below her room. There were all the soft noises of a house—mice and moths and settling beams—and the gentle rhythm of humans breathing as they slept. The breathing he could hear best was hers—it had to be. It was so near, and no other was. Meier leaned on the wall and listened, his own eyes shut as he imagined the rise and fall of her chest, the smoothness of her face—without the smear of blood he had seen—the scent of her skin—he could scent her now, and he inhaled that freshness of youth.
He wished he could see her. Just see her. Even sleeping. Surely she wouldn't keep the curtains closed always.
To prove this, Meier nerved himself to make his visits to the house earlier in the evening. Like most vampires, he was patient; he knew he literally had forever. He frankly hoped the little cross would fall down or deteriorate, or be removed in the process of cleaning or painting or some other homely procedure. But the cross, it seemed, was as persistent as he, and Meier kept his distance and averted his eyes as he stood vigil in the evenings and heard the household go to sleep. From time to time he did wish he had tasted her blood, for that would have given him a tenuous connection to her mind. He could have willed her to open the window, to look out and speak to him, tell him she was all right now, tell him she was safe and happy...
But he didn't want to command her or even influence her. Whatever she did, he wanted it to be her own doing. Even if it was drawn drapes and a cross at her window.
And one night as Meier walked somewhat dejectedly in the park, it did happen. He heard, even through the glass and at that distance, the soft hiss of rings on the curtain rod; he stopped in his tracks, face lighting up with hope, and didn't run but teleported in a blink to the lawn under that dark window. Charlotte was there—evidently she'd been unable to sleep and was gazing into the night.
Now that Meier's hopes were realized—at least in part—he scarcely knew how to proceed. And so he stood and looked. The branches of the great tree broke the moonlight to uneven shadows; Meier had no way of knowing that he was effectively camouflaged and thus concealed from human eyes, or he might not have been able to gaze for so long on that sad and somewhat sleepy but still beautiful face. It never occurred to him that it was rude to stare, even unseen. He drank in the sight unmoving—and his knees went a little weak when she actually opened the window and leaned on the sill to look out.
"Charlotte." When she didn't respond, he realized he had barely whispered; his mouth was dry, his throat tight, and he swallowed and tried again. "Charlotte?"
All vestiges of sleepiness vanished from her face as she gave a little screech and glanced about wildly, looking for the source of the unexpected voice. Meier's alarm nearly mirrored her own, and he quickly stepped nearer. "Charlotte, it's all right. I won't hurt you."
When Meier moved, Charlotte was able to pick out his form amid the other pale shapes of moonlight, and she blanched almost moon-pale herself. "You."
"Yes." Meier kept his voice soft, even though he could not altogether prevent it from trembling.
"What—what do you want?" Fear and anger mingled oddly in her tone.
"To see that you're safe," Meier replied. "That's all."
"Why couldn't you have left us alone! You're a monster!"
"I couldn't—" His voice faltered, fell nearly to a whisper. "I couldn't watch what I saw ... and leave that alone." Then, tone even lower: "There are monstrosities that my kind has no part in."
Charlotte may not have heard his last statement; he had indeed spoken very softly, and she was crying now. "Father could have died because of you. You broke his back!"
Meier wouldn't have regretted it if he had done considerably worse, but it didn't seem prudent to mention as much. He softly said, "He could have done you great injury."
"I would have been all right! My arm healed after—" Charlotte stopped in mid-sentence; the history of her father's abuse didn't bolster her position. "Because of you, my father will never walk again."
Meier looked at her eyes. "Because of me, your father will never beat you again."
With an inarticulate cry of rage, Charlotte slammed the window shut—Meier noted bitterly that the little cross held firm—fastened it with a snap, and yanked the drapes closed as well. They trembled as if bristling with her anger—or shaking with the sobs Meier could plainly hear, muted as they were. They tore at him, drawing his own face taut in the moonlight. He stood unmoving on the lawn until long after they ceased—and that was long—and indeed, through Charlotte's several unsuccessful attempts to fall asleep, until her breathing was quiet at last.
Meier wished peace would fall to his heart so quickly.
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