Read The Book of the Beast Online
Authors: Tanith Lee
Tags: #Fiction.Sci-Fi, #Fiction.Dark Fantasy/Supernatural, #Fiction.Horror, #Fiction.Historical
A priest came to instruct Helise, a man elderly and superlatively uncomely, as was thought correct in the case of a young girl.
One morning, as they sat in the la Valle vine court, Helise spoke to the priest.
“My betrothed is Lord Heros, the heir of House d’Uscaret.” It was not a question, nor did the priest reply. Until now he had somehow managed not to name the name of the bridegroom, though referring to him always deferentially. “Spiritual father,” said Helise, looking only at her knotted hands, “when I was a child, I was frightened by tales of evil that had to do with—’
“This isn’t the hour to dwell on such foolishness,” said the priest. “You must think only of your duties as a wife. Be wary, my daughter, that you don’t interpose such nasty and aimless chatter.”
“But spiritual father, these tales concerned my husband.”
The priest looked as steadily upon the vines as Helise upon her hands. Neither met the other’s eye.
Tut superstition from your mind, my daughter.”
“But father—I’m afraid.”
The priest inhaled and expelled a noisy breath laden with garlic and kitchen wine. He said, “There have been stories told of d’Uscaret, by the ignorant and stupid, notions instigated by enemies of that valiant house.” Then he paused, as if girding himself, and added, “What have you heard?”
Helise stammered that she could recall no details.
At that, the priest seemed happier.
“If you can remember no absolute, how can you fear?”
Helise attempted to confide that she did not know, yet fear persisted.
But the priest would have none of that. He rebuked her with sins of self-attention and untrust. Would her loving parents give her over to any tainted man? And did she not have faith in her God to protect her?
Helise sat quiescent under this garlicky lesson, until he left off and went on with the others.
It.appeared to her that all with whom she now had dealings, all that were caught up in the train of the approaching marriage, adopted an odd manner. Faces she had been familiar with now looked like masks, and voices did not run .along but went choppily, with words left unsaid. And how often she saw the hands rising and falling upon the breasts, marking there a cross. Did the maids stare nervously sideways at her, as if at one who may be infected with plague? Did her aunt’s singing bird go dumb in its cage at her passing?
The shadow is on me. Am I going to die?
She knew nothing of the real rites of marriage, nothing of sex beyond the untutored flarings of her own body, which she had obliquely discovered by then were dangerous, as they might lead her into unchastity.
Connubiality was this: the husband lay beside his wife all night in the same bed. Sometimes (so certain cousins had assured her) he kissed his wife, even her nakedness, and some men, though surely they were depraved, set their hands on a woman’s private places. Helise had never even seen cats mating. Though once she had beheld a cat in labour, and was appalled. Later on, hearing her brother’s wife shrieking in childbirth, Helise had had some idea why. The angels of God brought the baby. It was God’s will, and His will also that a woman suffer in travail, the female penance for the disobedience of Eve.
Could it be that Heros d’Uscaret would perpetrate on his bride some alarming foul act, something worse even than the embarrassing things that apparently quite normally went on, these lewd kissings and touchings -already mentioned.
Ten nights before her wedding-night, Helise recalled precisely what her maid had said to her: “Satan claims them—shape-changers—
things under the skin
.”
She woke in a bath of sweat, and bit her hands with terror.
Paradys turned out to recognise the wedding processions of the houses la Valle and d’Uscaret, and to catch the sweetmeats and small money retainers might throw the rabble. They were able to watch besides many scores of men on fine horses, dazzling in brocade and gems, some quantities of damsels clothed like graces and strewing petals, musicians with lutes and shawms, and pages with banners.
The bride rode on a dappled palfrey with a headstall of pearls. The girl’s dress was of cloth-of-silver, with under-sleeves of cream silk stitched with brilliants. Her blonde hair fluttered loose but for a jewelled cap of silver daisies and sea-green peridots. Her face was white, but there was nothing uncommon in that.
The bridegroom’s family cantered up, heavy with their colours of sable and viridian. The sigil of d’Uscaret was a cruel preying bird, perhaps a falcon. They were a wealthy house, and bullion clanked on everything, and in the jaunty hat of the young groom was a diamond said to have been dug from the forehead of a dragon in the Holy Land… Otherwise, the hat, the light, the shade, hid the young man’s face, though he cut a brave enough figure. His locks were blonder even than those of the little white bride.
Helise found herself entering the Temple-Church, and acknowledged that the astonishing horror had arrived, was here, about to happen to her.
From the moment of her waking at dawn, through all the preparation of her person, somehow
she
had gone far off. They had bathed and anointed her and clad her in the silver gown—but she had been at a distance, hanging in the air.
As her body rode along the route on the demure palfrey, the wedding music in its ears, the finery flashing at its eyes like drawn knives, her soul was in a trance.
But now the wanderer had returned, was trapped and must participate. There was to be no escape.
The grey pillars of the Temple-Church rose like tree-trunks of a petrified forest. The roof was ribbed - the inner belly of some apocryphal beast which had swallowed the processions whole. Rays of daylight pierced through. From a massive window a bolt of sunshine streamed and smoked.
An angel of white marble shone out in the path, but did not save Helise. Beyond, the Angel Chapel was an underwater cave where she would drown in marriage.
And now she was at the rail, and now she was alone but for one who stood beside her.
It seemed to her that no one else at
all
was there.
No maids-of-honour, no gentlemen, no witnesses, not even the priest. Not even her parents, who had condemned her.
Only this other at her side.
Something—the priest’s injunction—brought them to kneel.
Helise knelt, and her gown rustled and the small jewels clinked against the tessellated floor. And she heard the scuff of a shoe, the brushing of a viridian sleeve.
The blessing was being spoken, the magical water was being sprinkled. Could a devil endure that?
Seemingly yes, for he had not sprung aside, his garments did not singe.
The responses of the Mass drew from her a whisper. At her side a male voice murmured low its clear Latin. A young male voice, younger than the voices of her father and brother.
Surely, a demon could not utter the responses of God’s Mass?
The one beside her had a voice, and now a hand, resting upon the rail. The hand stayed Helise, for it was in shape the hand of a warrior-saint, made thin and strong for the hilt of battle, the clasp of prayer. And on the fourth finger, an onyx ring.
The priest, having changed the wafers to the flesh and the wine to the ichor of Christ, fed them at the rail like two hungry sparrows.
But could a demon take between its lips the body and blood of Heaven?
Now she must stand up again. She must make the correct replies to the questions of the priest. Like all questions, in her experience, the answers were preordained, unavoidable. Only questions that might be answered could ever be asked.
And so, in a few minutes more, she had been wedded, and had barely noticed, puzzling as she was over the paradox of the pale hand with the onyx, and the Host penetrating the intestines of one accursed.
Finally the pale hand itself took her own and on to her finger ran a coil of cold metal, to bind her, and the priest in turn bound her right hand to the pale hand. Tied, she must turn. Or,
they
turned her.
Handfast, Helise looked at her bridegroom, her husband. There before her, straight and slender, his face in a halo of un-coloured hair, was Jehanus, the beautiful, harrowed martyr from off the very wall. Only his eyes were .altered. Their beauty had been brought to life with a green and stellar fire.
Bound fast hand-to-hand with her, he kissed her passion-lessly with his cool mouth. It was a fearsome kiss, for it struck Helise in the breast and heart, into her womb even, down to the soles of her feet, like lightning. As in the Bible, a sword had gone through her. She had never known before what that phrase could mean.
Outside, the crowd shouted. She was put again on to the palfrey. They went up through the City, up to the mansion of d’Uscaret. And sometimes the thrown flowers smote Helise, and some wisps of paper, one of which lodged in her sleeve, and looking at it she saw it was a votive prayer for her safety. But now she did not mind. He rode at her side.
The viridian banners by the doors were garlanded with myrtle. This house was black, like a sarcophagus, and the great hall was black, with old charred flags like broken wings drooping from the rafters. But the candles burned and white damask clothed the tables and he led her to sit beside him.
Helise was happy. Her eyes sparkled and everything had become wonderful. They gave her white wine to drink, and on the gallery minstrels sang like angels.
They banqueted on fowl roasted with figs and cakes of flour and sugar, milk jellies, fish served in their armour, doves in their feathers. There were salads of spinach and beans made into gardens, and castles of rice and pine kernels, and almond puddings sweet as the promise of life everlasting.
A pageant was performed, displaying the prowess of d’Uscaret, her knights and lords, their deeds of valour.
Lilies fell from a canopy.
At the table sat the new father and mother of Helise. He was a dark and peevish man, fretful, who drank until huge drops spurred out on his forehead. The woman was like something cut from wood, having only two dimensions, angular in her tourmaline gown, her silver caul and steeple headdress from which black spiderspun floated.
What did they matter?
At the side of Helise sat Jehanus who was Heros, still and nearly silent, real as all things, given to her by God.
I am his wife, and he is -
He was beautiful as a young divinity. Had she suffered so only to be intoxicated by this ecstasy?
The masque in the hall was now of a girl and youth embraced upon an isle on wheels, while tame panthers frisked about—but they were all men inside the feline velvets. A dim cry floated on the sea of delight:
shape-changer
.
“Come, madam. Now, lady, come with us—’
D’Uscaret’s maids of honour, the young girls of the house, were urging her bashfully, wantonly. She must get up and go with them, to the bridal chamber.
Helise rose and let them lead her out. Their butterfly mutters and touches, playful, childishly-naughty, swirling her through a door and up an inner stair where brands blazed in brackets. A vast heat was on the stair, bringing out the scents of flesh and unguents, and above in the curve of a shadow, the arch, the corridor, great doors carved with falcons, through which they slipped like thieves. And there the room, the room, and the tall wide bed, where tonight she would lie beside her lord.
Now she could reconcile herself with all of it. Yes, she could conjure endless darkness furled in ceaseless embrace. His mouth on hers, his arms about her. And if he should wish more—whatever he wished she would grant.
The girls of d’Uscaret, with sighings and nonsensical acid ribaldries—traditional things they probably did not, all of them, comprehend—disrobed Helise and clad her in a shift of samite, combed out her hair and wove lilies in it. She climbed into the high bed, and they arranged her there like a toy, leaning on the pillows.
At the hour of Matines, the wedding-party bounded up the stair with torches and candles, bells and lyres, bringing the husband to his wife.
The solid doors flew wide, and between them the uproar surged, the lights and sequins and the blowing of tin trumpets. The old men making sour old dirty jests, and the women laughing or compressing their faces. The Lady d’Uscaret was there, like a pillar of flint. Her perspectiveless face also contorted to smile or grimace, but it was like a disc of paper.
Before all the horde, the bridegroom. He made the rest into a dumbshow.
They brought him forward to the bed, and the men instructed him and the women looked away.
The eldest of the maids of honour bowed.
“Your bride is here awaiting you, m’sire. May you have joy of your night.”
Then, hiding their faces coyly, the maids ran away, and the old men tried to catch them going down the stairs, so there were shrieks and a scattering of sugarplums.
With a susurrus of trains and mantles, the doorway sucked back the last of the crowd. The doors were shut.
Heros and Helise, alone now, in the bedchamber.
She sat in the bed, as if in a bank of snow. She knew she must be shy like the gentle female deer. Her heart drummed, and she watched him under her lids.
What would he do now? She did not care, so long as he would lie down with her. She was parched for his nearness, the pressure of his mouth and body. This was true lust she felt, and did not even know it.
But Heros went straight back to the doors, and in came one of his gentlemen. Behind a screen painted with a hunting or hawking scene, the bridegroom was undressed. He stepped out from the screen wrapped in a mantle, and the gentleman took himself away, and again the door was shut.
And now, now surely, Heros would come to her.
But, as if he were alone only with himself, Heros d’Uscaret wandered along the length and breadth of the chamber. He seemed deep in thought. Now and then he hesitated, picking up some article or other.
Once he stood for several minutes reading at an open book on a stand.
Helise did not dare to call to him. To question.
Her suspense became firstly painful, and then sickening, as gradually her trembling warmth died into chill.