The Reader’s Circle which Lady Dúccesci suggested proved
popular with both the high born and the Caretaker women of Southern Gallifrey.
The weekly meetings were a joy to Marion and were just what she needed
to help her recover from the ordeal of being trapped in the ruins of the
school. The ladies read dozens of texts each week and discussed them at
length.
Only Marion and Lily knew there was a secret member of the Circle. When
they visited Destri, on what was becoming a monthly fixture in their calendar,
now, he had read all of the books to himself.
“The English Gothic Movement!” he said as they sat outside
his cottage on a fine, warm afternoon. “How did that go down with
the likes of Lady Arpexia and her daughter, or Lady Dúccesci?”
“Talitha found it rather a change from the works of DH Lawrence,”
Marion replied. “She seemed taken with A Picture of Dorian Grey.
But Valena Arpexia preferred Dracula and her mother took to Frankenstein.”
“I didn’t really like any of them,” Lily pointed out.
“Even though they are finely written pieces of literature. They
all seemed to lean too much towards a dark and terrible nature that is
too often seen in the universe.”
“And you have a heart of pure light and goodness, my dear sister,”
Destri told her. “But Marion, you are also a creature of light...
And yet, you chose these works from your world to disseminate among your
friends.”
“They are stories about darkness,” Marion admitted. “And
yet, they are about the triumph of light, too. Those good, fine, brave
people who defeated Dracula, even though one of them died in the attempt,
knew the satisfaction of vanquishing evil.”
“That one was Marion’s favourite text, too,” Lily pointed
out.
“Well, it has special meaning for me,” she replied. “Kristoph
quoted from it the very first night we met. And we kissed for the first
time on that cliff at Whitby that features so prominently in the story.
And we visited Bistriz on our first honeymoon, when we were married by
Earth law.”
“There,” Destri said to his sister. “The darkness of
that tale will never penetrate Marion’s soul. It has too many pleasant
connotations for her.”
“I just kept thinking of our own legends about such dark creatures,”
Lily said.
“There are vampires in Gallifreyan literature?” Marion asked,
surprised. “I have never come across them.”
“There are books,” Lily said. “And poems, sagas that
tell of the heroism of those Time Lords who fought against the darkness.
I used to enjoy them until I learnt the truth behind the poetry and the
romance of it all.”
Marion was puzzled. But Destri clearly understood.
“Most Gallifreyans know those sagas about the Great Vampires,”
he said. “But only a very few scholars would know the full, unvarnished
truth that is to be found in the rare texts that exist in the great Academy
libraries.”
“In the history?” Marion’s eyes were wide with fascinated
horror. “But that would mean that vampires are real. The one comfort
of reading Dracula is knowing it is nothing more than a very convincing
tale written by...” She laughed softly. “Kristoph calls him
a pale faced Irishman who ought to have gone out in the sun more often.
But... on Gallifrey... such things are HISTORY?”
“Ruben made a study of the Great Vampires when he was a student,”
Lily said. “He read all of those ancient texts. He was fascinated
by the dreadful things. Thank Rassilon it was just a phase he went through.
He specialised in Political Law in the end and left all that behind him.”
“Perhaps I should have got myself in less trouble if I had stuck
to history and left politics alone,” Destri said in a quiet voice.
It was possible, sitting together, talking about literature with the Gallifreyan
sun shining and a cool, salty breeze coming from the ocean, to forget
that this idyllic spot was a prison and Destri – or Ruben as Lily
always called him, now, was its only prisoner. But he would remind them
from time to time, as if he, himself, did not want it forgotten. Like
Frankenstein’s creation who went to his own death admitting his
guilt, and seeking only the peace of oblivion, Destri did not seek to
avoid his punishment even for a brief time. These social visits were granted
to him through the intercession of the Lord High President himself, but
he would never take advantage of them even for a momentary illusion of
freedom.
“I think you’re going to have to tell me about these Great
Vampires,” Marion said, if only to prevent Lily from dwelling too
much on her brother’s situation. “I am surprised Kristoph
has never shared the tale with me, really.”
“Kristoph wouldn’t know as much about them as I do, even though
the main protagonist of the tale was his own ancestor. As I said, it is
a think only for dedicated scholars. These events belong to a different
era and different Time Lords. At that time, it was common then for Oldblood
families to have more than one son. It was expected that one of them would
inherit the property and the family line and the other would be a warrior,
dedicating himself to the defence of Gallifrey and the galaxy itself from
the forces of darkness.”
“That is exactly the opposite of the Gallifrey I know,” Marion
pointed out. “There isn’t even a standing army, now.”
“Times have changed greatly. And, in my view, for the best. That
terrible war that your husband and others of his generation gladly enrolled
for... I still believe it should not have been fought… we are scientists
and scholars, observers and chroniclers, not war mongers. But... as I
said, Gallifrey was different seven generations ago. Our Warrior class
was heralded. And the greatest of them all was Chrístõ de
Lœngbærrow.”
“Kristoph’s ancestor?”
“The first of his bloodline. He was already the victorious commander
of the legions who won the First Time War. That’s another complex
story known only to scholars, and we need not dwell upon it, except to
say that it cost many lives to protect the secret of time itself from
those we judged unworthy to have it. As for De Lœngbærrow, of course
he was the obvious choice to lead the new campaign against the Great Vampires
and their minions.”
Lily shuddered as if she really didn’t want to hear this. But at
the same time she was clearly paying attention. It was the same revulsion
and attraction combined as watching a scary film or reading a book like
Dracula.
“There are legends that say the Vampires and Time Lords are related
species. That is not true. What is certain, is that they were a powerful
race in their own right. While we harnessed the power of the vortex, making
ourselves one with time itself, space was their domain. They developed
ships that could cross galaxies in mere minutes. But they were not explorers.
They were devourers of worlds. They were already giants in proportion
to most humanoid races to begin with, the adults as much as eight or nine
feet tall. But their bloodlust hastened their natural evolution into even
more fearsome creatures. They were as near immortal as even we recognise
such terms. Nothing could kill them. Certainly not the weapons of the
peoples they conquered. They laid waste to great civilisations, wiping
out whole species. A few were allowed to live, but only as slaves... and
as food... cattle. An even fewer number were turned into lesser vampires
who served the Great Ones in return for power over the slave races and
extended lifespans. And then they turned their lustful eyes upon Gallifrey.
They would have defeated us and taken the secret of time. The whole of
Creation would have been at their mercy if they had succeeded. But our
warriors fought. Our technology, now used only for peaceful uses, was
put to building weapons of war, great space ships that travelled through
the vortex and sought out the Great Vampires. They built their lairs deep
beneath the soil of the cursed planets they had despoiled. But the Time
Lords built weapons capable of reaching them. The ancient scrolls that
I studied told of space borne bow ships manned by brave young warriors.
These ships screamed down through the atmosphere, then through the rocks
and soil of the planet’s surface, until they penetrated the black
hearts of the Great Vampires themselves.”
“Wow,” Marion said. “That... sounds amazing. And...
they defeated the evil... the Great Vampires?”
“They did. But... Marion... this is the thing that grieves my sister,
which grieves me, and which... when I was still a student... turned my
hearts away from the very idea of warfare. It is what isn’t told
in the sagas. Those brave men who piloted those bow ships... Can you begin
to imagine the speed, the stress on the body as the ships ploughed through
the ground... the force of the impact. They defeated the Great Vampires,
oh yes. They struck a great blow for the forces of light throughout the
universe. But at the cost of their own lives! These men knew that they
would die – unlike your Mr Quincy Morris in that fascinating fictional
account, who was an unforeseen casualty of the battle. But like him, they
considered their sacrifice worthwhile for the greater good.”
“Oh, no,” Marion answered. “But... no. Even in Human
history, suicide missions are regarded as a terrible thing. And it was
Kristoph’s ancestor who commanded them...”
“Don’t let that sour your pride in his great lineage,”
Lily told her.
“Indeed, do not,” Destri assured her. “The same scrolls
that detailed these deeds record his disgust at the tactics he was forced
to employ and his protests to the High Council that fell on ears deaf
to all but victory in the face of such an enemy. Indeed, Gallifrey was
a different place, then. The unwavering patriotism of the brave was exploited
shamelessly. And when I saw young men of stout hearts and unshaken loyalty
to Gallifrey’s cause getting ready to fight a new war in my own
lifetime, can you wonder that I could not stand by and wave them off with
a smile?”
Lily put her hand on his gently and said nothing. His motives for the
act of treason for which he was so singularly punished were one subject
usually avoided during these visits.
“Dark tales, dark history,” Lily said. “I
am glad we have sunshine and fresh air this day to vanquish the darkness
in our hearts. And Marion brought a new batch of books for you to read
for our next visit. The Love Sagas of Rivinia V. In the reading circle
we are going to be comparing them with the works of the Earth writer D
H Lawrence and expecting Talitha Dúccesci to have much to say on
the matter.”
“And I shall enjoy imparting my own views on the subject when I
see you again,” Destri told her. “Marion, my dear, let us
put the darkness away now and we shall drink your English tea in the sun
and try the cake you brought all the way from Liverpool for me.”
“Yes,” Marion agreed. “I think that
would be a very good idea.”
|