The Vampyre  Pair 
By  Kabuki 
July  2000 
Spoilers:  IwtV 
Characters: Louis,  Claudia, Theodore (OMC) 
Disclaimer: Louis and  Claudia belong to Anne Rice and Knopf Publishing 
respectively. Theodore is  mine. 
Comments: Please.  Don't be stingy. 
"But first on Earth,  as Vampyre sent, 
Thy corpse shall from  its tomb be rent; 
Then ghastly haunt thy  native place, 
And suck the blood of  all thy race; 
There from thy  daughter, sister, wife, 
At midnight drain the  stream of life; 
Yet loathe the  banquet, which perforce 
Must feed thy livid  living corpse. " 
-- George Gordon, Lord  Byron "The Giaour" 
Theodore glanced up once again at the tiny figure so engrossed in  her 
regular volumes. The librarians had long ago left off their polite  words to 
the 
girl, suggesting children's books in favor of Latin texts on  death and 
damnation. How could such a small child be capable of even  lifting, let alone 
reading 
or comprehending such texts? It was a mystery  to the young author, and even 
though he was technically on holiday in the  relatively new section of American 
soil purchased fairly recently from  Napoleon, he was tempted to write a poem 
or story passage about the  fascinating youngster. 
He had been watching the girl for at least five nights from a safe  and 
unobtrusive distance as she turned yellowed pages of archaic writing  with her 
tiny 
hands. Her eyes moved over the pages more swiftly than any  of the scholars 
Theodore had ever chanced upon, and her determined manner  evidenced in pursed 
lips and drawn brow made her all the more a curious  figure. She was almost 
always alone in the mammoth library, save for a  lone gentleman of good stature 
and fine profile that spoke softly to the  child as though intimately 
aquatinted. Both figures were of fair  complexion and aesthetically pleasing 
components; men and women alike gave  both figures a brief glance each time 
they 
appeared. Reason would proclaim  the pale, dark-haired man the father of the 
child, 
yet their features were  different enough to beg otherwise. Somehow, Theodore 
found himself  shuddering when the pair were together, or as the child cast 
the people  about her a musing glance. Her eyes were somehow disturbing, as 
though  they were not orbs to relay vision, but the reflection of a soul far  
beyond the frame in years. They told of age in the youth beheld in such a  
dusty 
place, of maturity to a level of restlessness. It would have been  peculiar in 
any woman, but it was particularly disturbing to sense within  the eyes of a 
child. 
The more Theodore watched the pair, stealing glances over random  books of 
prose, he felt as though some part of him recognized and,  stranger still, 
shrank from the presence of the man and girl. Not human, the instincts seemed 
to  
whisper. The very idea was unheard of in a learned man of science and the  
modern world, yet superstition seemed to be the stronger force in his  mind. 
One 
evening, after observing the child for an entire night and  finally watching 
her depart from the building, Theodore swallowed his fear  and pride in 
exchange 
for a glimpse at the material that would so  enrapture a child-thing's mind. 
Though he had been prepared for whatever  he might come across, the subject of 
the massive volume was unsettling to  be sure. The supernatural, vampires, 
death, and folklore; all were the  focus of the various books left behind by a 
child that by all appearances  should have been no more than five years of age. 
 
What would a child want with such  information? 
It was weeks before Theodore chanced upon the unsettling pair once  again, 
and in the most peculiar of instances. He was boarding a ship to  further his 
vacation into the Old World, to seen the Mediterranean Sea and  the countries 
bordering it. The sea air would clear him mind of poisoned  thoughts and 
nonsensical ideas, or so he hoped when he booked passage  after a close 
encounter 
with a bizarre young man not three nights after  his strange discovery at the 
library. He had not ventured to the place  again, deciding that whether 
supernatural phenomenon existed or not would  be the subject for a scientist of 
sound 
standing instead of a writer with  one foot since placed firmly in the realm of 
fantasy. Fear had washed over  him in waves, and no amount of philosophical 
dialogue nor scientific fact  could make the young American feel the contrary. 
He felt as though the  world had shifted perceptibly leaving a gaping wound 
where logic had once  reigned, for if such beasts as vampires existed in the 
guise of mortal men  and children, what other creature must slink through the 
darkest night  invisible to the mortal eye?  
Three nights after his epiphany concerning the existence of the  
supernatural, Theodore had been the subject of an unwelcome visit. He had  
avoided the 
library at all costs until that eve, when doubt began to  slither into his 
brain. 
Had he imagined the entire event? How could a  simple child evoke such fear 
and loathing from a modern learned man? After  much deliberation and a small 
glass of fine scotch, Theodore found himself  walking briskly toward the 
building in which his strange encounter had  occurred. Perhaps, he thought, the 
fear 
and disillusionment could be  banished by revisiting the very spot of the 
encounter and, if the need  arises, conversing with the child or gentleman. 
Surely 
once he had spoken  to them, the fear would be dismissed and scientific 
reason would reaffirm  herself in his mind as law.  
It was on this brisk walk, however, that Theodore found himself  assaulted by 
a pale thing in the dark. Emerald eyes flashed in the night,  giving only the 
briefest of warning before the attack. As the beast  wrestled him into an 
alley Theodore had the vague notion that he was being  dragged away to his doom 
by a black panther. Dark, glossy hair fell into  his face as the creature began 
to do something pleasurable to his throat,  and only when the thing stepped 
back did Theodore find himself shrieking  in horror. The creature before him 
was no jungle cat, but the gentleman  who had so often accompanied the 
child-thing to the library. "Vampire," he  gasped, then raced away as his 
assailant 
stared in surprise and wonder.  Locked in his room, Theodore waited for the 
man, 
the vampire, to attack  again like a beast that has gotten the taste of man in 
it's jaws. Had it  attacked him because of his spying, or simply at random? 
Had the monster  recognized him, was that why it relinquished its fatal bite so 
abruptly,  or had it simply been surprised that a mortal might recognize such 
 wickedness? Dawn arrived, and no attack had come. It was then that  Theodore 
booked passage on a vessel to the Old World. He had to escape the  Americas 
at any cost, for the creatures obviously lived here. Perhaps  safety could be 
sought on another continent with an ocean between himself  and the threat he 
had only narrowly escaped. 
After boarding and making himself comfortable in his cabin weeks  later, he 
fell into a deep sleep for no apparent reason. Upon awakening it  was dark out 
and the land could no longer be seen from the deck of the


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