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Authors: Amy Plum

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TWENTY-FIVE

“‘CLAY TO FLESH,'” I REPEATED, MY THOUGHTS
suddenly percolating with a memory that I couldn't quite place. And then I remembered where I had seen those words. “There was an inscription in Latin under one of the wall paintings in your family's archive that mentioned
argilla
and
pulpa
,” I said to Bran. “It showed this curled up figure lying in what I thought was a tub . . . but now that I've seen the thymiaterion, I'm sure that's what it was! You must know the one I'm talking about,” I urged.

Bran shook his head. “During my one visit, I stayed long enough to lay my mother to rest and take account of the books and objects there. I didn't have time to study the paintings.”

I suddenly remembered the photo I had taken. “I took a picture of it with my phone,” I began eagerly, and then seeing the dark look on Bran's face, I hesitated. “I'm sorry. But I wasn't going to show it to anyone else.”

He considered this but still looked upset.

“Well, let's have a look,” said Papy.

As I fished through my bag, my mood plunged. “It's in my suitcase back at Mr. Gold's house,” I said. “In any case, I took a photo of the whole wall. I doubt the inscription would be legible from the distance I got the shot.”

“Do you remember any other details from the painting?” Mr. Gold asked.

“Yes,” I said, looking to Bran for his approval.

“Go ahead, child,” he said, sighing. “I can allow the divulgence of my family's secrets in an emergency like this.”

Reassured, I said, “From what I can remember, there was a flame-fingered
guérisseur
in it, as well as several revenants, and it looked like they were carrying out a magical procedure. There was definitely fire—someone holding a torch. And a revenant had cut his arm and was bleeding into the bowl.”

“I think I have a couple of funereal urns with the same type of image,” said Mr. Gold, rubbing his chin. “There are so many mystical ceremonies whose meanings were lost with time. The urn in question displays one of several that I've always wondered about.” Buzzing with excitement, he led us away from the thymiaterion toward a table holding several dozen stone containers, each the size of a mailbox.

“These are the ancient Roman version of funeral urns, used to store the deceased's ashes after a cremation,” he explained. “Here's one showing what I suspected was a golem, which would fit your description of a curled up figure,” he said, pointing to a container carved with a creepy-looking scene.

“Golems!” Papy exclaimed. “Kate and I were just talking about golems the other day. That makes complete sense!” he said.

We gathered closer to inspect the carving. Almost identical to the wall painting in the
guérisseur
cave, it showed a doll-like figure with no hair or features curled up in a circular bowl, the same size as the bowl of Mr. Gold's thymiaterion. Next to it, a figure with a fiery halo cut her arm with a knife and let the blood drip upon the doll, where it spread in a puddle around the hunched-up golem. Another woman—this one with no halo—leaned over with her mouth next to the figure's head. Her lips were puckered in an “O” shape and seemed to be blowing on the golem's face.

Beside her, a man held his hands above the creature's legs. Five flames flickered above his head as well as the end of each fingertip, and above his hands hovered a cloud of fire. A fourth figure with no visible halo stood behind them holding a box in one hand and a flaming torch in the other.

“It looks like a step-by-step guide on how to give a wandering soul”—I pointed to the fiery cloud—“a body.” My heart was racing so fast I felt like I was going to have a heart attack if I didn't calm down. We might have actually found our answer!

I think you might be right
, came Vincent's words. From his breathlessness, he sounded just as excited.

Bran started bouncing around nervously. “Just looking at that image is awakening something in me. Something primal. I believe we're on the right track.”

I glanced at Jules, and saw that his sullen look had been replaced by one of hope. Meeting my gaze, he shuffled over next to me and squeezed my hand. “I thought we were on a wild-goose chase,” he whispered. “Not that I minded, free trip to New York and all. But now I think . . .”—and the way his eyes were lit up with excitement I could finish his sentence for him—
this could actually work
.

“‘Man of clay,'” quoted Bran, who was closely inspecting the urn with Papy and Mr. Gold. “I'm thinking this means we must shape a golem like this one out of clay and lay it in the thymiaterion.” He pointed to the bathtub-shaped thing on the relief, and I noticed for the first time that it was lifted up off the ground, perhaps at waist height to the standing figures. The woman breathing on the figure was standing on a box in order to reach.

“‘Immortal blood' means a revenant must pour his blood onto the clay man,” Mr. Gold added, pointing to the bleeding bardia.

“That would be me,” volunteered Jules, squinting doubtfully at the image. “Looks like a hell of a lot of blood there.” He looked around at us. “No problem, of course. Just a comment,” he said defensively.

“I can do the breathing part,” I said. I had felt pretty useless up to this point, so I jumped at the chance to be involved.

“And it seems that I will be transferring the aura of Vincent into the clay body,” Bran concluded, looking up from the box to a spot in the air right next to my head.
So that's where he is
, I thought with a thrill.
He's been next to me this whole time.

“I'm guessing the golem must be lit by fire,” commented Mr. Gold. “It comes last in the list of symbols on the thymiaterion, and would explain the torch he's holding,” he said, indicating the man in the background.

“We still have the mystery box,” stated Papy, pointing to the other hand of the torch-bearing revenant.

“What could it be?” I mused.

“Boxes can represent all sorts of things from temptation to empty space to imprisonment,” Papy said, glancing at Mr. Gold, who nodded his agreement.

“I hate to interrupt all of the deep thinking going on here,” Jules commented, renewed purpose animating his voice, “but Vincent has just reminded me that we're working within a pretty tight time frame here—which ends whenever our illustrious enemy decides to click her fingers and call his spirit back. Let's start on the mud sculpture and get this show on the road.”

“Right,” said Mr. Gold. “It's lucky the thymiaterion is here in the museum. The restoration studio on the next floor has a supply of clay. Jules can help me bring down some boxes on a hand truck.”

“But what about the box symbol?” I asked.

Mr. Gold pulled a heavy set of keys out of his pocket and began searching through them. Finding the one he was looking for, he looked up and met my eyes. “Without a clue as to what the box represents, we're going to have to take our chances and work without it.”

“But . . . ,” I began, and then stopped as I heard Vincent's words: Mon ange
, we're running out of time.

As our group scattered, I couldn't help thinking more about the mystery box. Even if we had all the “ingredients,” I wondered if the ritual would really work. We were flying by the seat of our pants here. Using only guesswork, how could we hope to succeed at something this complicated?

I pushed my doubts aside. This was our only hope. What could it hurt to try?

 

It was almost two a.m. before we were finally assembled in a circle around the thymiaterion. Although the collection was pretty well isolated from the rest of the museum, Mr. Gold was worried about lighting something as large as the golem on fire. He had been scuttling around, shutting off all the smoke detectors he could find.

Papy and Bran had been busy plundering the museum's reference books while I helped Jules and Mr. Gold with the clay. My grandfather joined us now with a look of frustration. “I could find no lead on the box symbol,” he said regretfully. Taking his appointed place, he picked up the torch Mr. Gold had assembled out of a broom handle tightly wound with kerosene-soaked cloth at one end. Jules struck a match and carefully lit it, and it ignited so violently that both he and Papy staggered back a step in surprise.

The flaming torch cast long shadows, animating the army of statues stationed around the room. The clay man lay curled up inside the bowl of the incense burner, smooth-skinned and bald-headed.

Mr. Gold had formed the hands and feet in simple paddle shapes, pointing out that the golem carved on the funereal urn had no fingers or toes. But Jules had a fit when he saw it, and insisted it be as realistic as possible. He said it offended his artistic sensibilities to see his friend represented in such an unflattering manner. He went to town on the whole thing and when he was done it resembled Vincent in a slightly generic fashion. Although the figure was strange-looking, it seemed fragilely human, like a sleeping child. And the thought that Vincent's spirit might enter it and bring it to life moved me in an almost visceral way. I reached out and brushed its cool, smooth surface with my fingers.

Bran had taken off his glasses. He said that the kind of sight he needed didn't require them. Without them he seemed frailer, more human and less cartoonish. He looked like any middle-aged man, although he had managed to keep his pitch-black hair, and his face looked scarily gaunt now that his eyes weren't magnified. “Are we ready?” he asked, glancing blindly around the room.

“Vincent, are
you
ready?” I asked.

I couldn't be more ready, my love
, he said.

I nodded to the others.

“Then, please proceed,” responded Mr. Gold.

Bran raised his hands over the lip of the chalice and positioned them above the golem's legs, focusing his gaze on the air above it, where I suspected Vincent was. He stood that way for a minute or so, and then glanced over at Jules. “Go ahead,” he urged.

“Aren't you going to say anything?” asked Jules, confused.

“Like what? An incantation? I'm a healer, not a sorcerer,” huffed Bran.

“Okay then,” Jules said, sounding nervous. He draped his arm over the side of the chalice and brushed it with the dangerous-looking sculpting knife. Gritting his teeth, he glanced at me.

I raised my eyebrows.

“What?” he said defensively. “Okay, I don't mind getting hurt for someone else, but I'm not used to self-mutilation.”

“I could step in as your replacement if you'd prefer,” offered Mr. Gold.

Jules shook his head. “Vince, you owe me big-time for this one,” he said. Then, sucking his breath through his teeth, he cut swiftly and deeply into his forearm. Holding it over the clay figure, he let the blood stream over it while uttering a string of colorful curse words.

I stepped onto the top rung of the stepladder that was pushed up against the cup. Leaning over, I pursed my lips and blew a breath of air like I was throwing a kiss toward the clay man's mouth.

You're so sexy when you breathe on me
, the words came.

I sputtered. “Stop making me laugh, Vincent, or you're going to come back to life with no lungs.”
If this bizarre ceremony even works
, I thought. I tried to force the pessimism out of my head and blew another breath toward Clay Vincent.

“And now the fire,” said Mr. Gold. Jules and I drew back as Papy stepped forward and touched the flaming torch to the clay.

“Now is probably not the best time to point out that wet clay doesn't light,” muttered Jules as the flames sputtered where Papy touched the blood-drenched mass. Then—all of a sudden—the fire took on a life of its own and my grandfather jumped back as the body began to burn.

“It's working,” I gasped, my heart racing as I leaned back to avoid the flames.

“I can see his aura expanding and rising up into the room,” Bran said excitedly. “Now it needs to come down and inhabit the body,” he said, placing his hands as close to the flames as he dared.

“Come on, Vince, let's do this thing,” murmured Jules, as he grasped his wound to staunch the flow of blood.

Kate
, I heard.

“Yes, Vincent?”

Something's wrong.

The fear in his voice made my blood run cold. “What?”

Something's happening. It's like I'm in little particles that are all flying away from each other. It's wrong. I'm disappearing.

“STOP!” I yelled. “Something's going wrong!” I leapt down off the stepladder and grabbed the bucket of water that Mr. Gold had insisted on having handy, in case the fire got out of control. I flung the water over the top of the chalice, and the flames extinguished with a long hissing sound.

“Vincent!” I yelled. “Are you still there?”

“What happened?” Bran asked. He looked dazed.

“Vincent said he was disappearing. That he was spreading out.”

“Dispersion,” said Mr. Gold. Bran whipped his head around to face the revenant. “Dispersion of wandering souls. The third gift of the flame-fingers. You said you'd never heard of it. Well, I think we just figured out how it worked.”

TWENTY-SIX

“WHAT THE HELL IS DISPERSION OF WANDERING
souls?” I asked, my voice shrill with panic. I was shaking and felt like I was going to throw up. “What just happened to Vincent?”

Papy appeared by my side and wrapped his arm around me protectively.

“There were two ways to treat wandering souls,” I heard Mr. Gold say. “Either re-embody them or disperse them. Not all of us revenants deal well with living forever. In modern times, some even opt for suicide. But
guérisseurs
in ancient times were said to possess the gift of letting a bardia's spirit go while it was volant, essentially dispersing it to the universe.”

“So Vincent's just been . . . dispersed?” I choked out as tears flooded my eyes. “How do we get him back . . . from the universe or whatever?” I was so paralyzed by fear that I couldn't even feel my body. If Papy hadn't been supporting me, I might just have fallen over.

No,
mon ange
. I'm still here
, came Vincent's voice. It was weak and came in through my brain waves as barely a whisper.

“Oh, thank God. He's still here,” I announced. My tears flowed unchecked and I sank down to sit on the floor, resting my head on my knees. I felt like I had been picked up, shaken, and dropped to the ground, my shock and relief were so intense.

Papy fished his handkerchief out of his pocket and leaned over to hand it to me.

Bran staggered backward and sat down on the ground and Mr. Gold joined him, putting an arm around his shoulder and saying, “It's okay, Monsieur Tândorn. He's still here.”

Jules stooped over to sit on the ground next to me, holding a towel to his arm. Seeing the blood, I forgot about my own distress. “Let me help you,” I offered, and grabbing the first aid kit Mr. Gold had set aside for the purpose, I cleaned and dressed his wound.

“Well, that was a huge success,” Jules said, taking in big gulps of air. “Not only did I undergo massive blood loss, but I almost had a heart attack.”

“We're not giving up,” I said, ignoring the horrifying thought that was endlessly looping in my mind:
You were
that
close to losing Vincent forever
. “We just have to figure out what we did wrong. I'll bet it has to do with the box symbol. We're missing something.”

Papy spoke up. “I realize that we are in a terrible rush, and necessarily so. But now that we know how perilous this procedure can be, wouldn't it be better to break for the night and rethink everything in a calm fashion?”

Everyone agreed. It scared me that the more time went by, the more likely Violette was to call Vincent back. But plowing ahead without additional information was too dangerous.

“You okay, bud?” Jules said to the air, and listening, he gave a weak smile. “He says it's the second time in the last few weeks that he's been on the brink of permanent destruction. He's getting used to it.”

Trust Vincent to have a sense of humor at a time like this. I knew he was just trying to make the rest of us feel better. He must have been scared out of his wits.

I thought for a moment, then turned to Mr. Gold. “I'd like to see if that quote under the wall painting is visible,” I said. “It was longer than the verse Bran quoted. Maybe that would hold the clue.”

“I've booked you rooms at a hotel a couple of blocks away,” he responded. “But if you want to use my computer to download and magnify the image . . .”

“I have my laptop with me,” responded Papy. “We can have a look in the morning.”

“As for you, Jules, I alerted a house of our kindred located in Brooklyn that you would be staying,” Mr. Gold said. “I thought you'd prefer that to a hotel, since I was told you met several of them a few years ago at the London convocation.”

Jules nodded weakly. “That sounds perfect.”

“Good. Then I'll phone a doctor to meet you at their house to stitch up your arm.”

As we left the museum, Mr. Gold hailed a taxi for Jules. Then, stopping first at the apartment to get our luggage, Bran, Papy, and I followed Mr. Gold down the street to a small hotel on Park Avenue.

I was so tired by this point that I felt like I was sleepwalking. Now that the urgency of our task had passed, my body was suddenly aware that it had been awake for a day and a half. I stumbled into the hotel room, ripped my clothes off, and fell into bed.

 

Vincent stayed with me for the night, whispering an earnest
Je t'adore
as I fell asleep, and greeting me with
Bonjour, mon amour
when I opened my eyes in the morning. I glanced at the clock on the nightstand. It was barely six a.m. and I was wide-awake.

Have I ever told you how cute you are when you sleep?

I moaned and rolled over, pulling the covers over my head. “I don't feel cute. I feel jet-lagged,” I said sleepily, and then remembering what happened the night before, I sat up, instantly alert.

“The question is . . . how do
you
feel?”

If I had a body, I would say “weak.” But it's more like I feel very scattered. Not together. I guess you could say “faded.”

“Oh my God, Vincent, that really scared me last night. I almost lost you.”

But you didn't
, he insisted.
I'm still here. And we'll figure this out and try again
.

I knew he was trying to comfort me, but all I could feel was fear. If we tried again and he dispersed . . . , well, that would be the end. Which wouldn't be fair. Because we were just beginning.

I knew we couldn't last forever; my own mortality put a limit on the time we had together. Eighty years—or whatever the life expectancy was now—had always seemed like a nice long time, before I met immortals. Not now.

There were so many things Vincent and I hadn't done. More than ever, I wanted to connect with him. To hold him in my arms, be held by him, and get as close as two people possibly can. To give him all of myself and take what he gave me. But that wasn't even an option now. And, judging from the way things went last night, might never be.

Vincent quickly changed the subject, as if he could see my black thoughts.
Your grandfather and Bran are already having breakfast in the café downstairs. They slipped a note under your door.

“Not much use for a note when they could have just left a message with my immortal answering service,” I said.

Very funny.

“Turn around. Or leave. Or whatever,” I said, throwing the covers back and rearranging my T-shirt. “I have to get dressed.”

I'm not looking
, Vincent assured me.

“Yeah, right,” I said, self-consciously ripping my T-shirt off and pulling some fresh clothes out of my suitcase. “How many times have you seen me naked?” It was something I'd always wondered but never had the chance to ask.

I'm a gentleman
—Vincent said—
not a stalker. I always let you know when I'm in the room
.

“How many times?” I insisted.

I swear to you, Kate. I would never take advantage of my situation like that. Maybe a bit old-fashioned of me, but I don't want to see you until you invite me to.

I couldn't help but grin. Vincent was so chivalrous. I doubted that most boys my age would have passed up an opportunity to see a girl naked—if the girl was sure never to find out. Chivalry: one of the advantages of dating a teenager who had been around since the olden days.

There was a silence.
Not that it hasn't been tempting
.

“Vincent!”

Can I look now?

“Yes, I'm dressed,” I said.

Do you know the phrase
“Un rien te va”
?
Vincent asked me.

“No,” I confessed.

It means you look good in anything. I think you look even sexier first thing in the morning than when you've spent time beautifying.

My smile took up my whole face. “I think that's about the nicest thing a boy has ever said to me.”

Just saying what's true
, Vincent said.

“You're lucky I can't jump on you right now,” I commented.

I disagree
, he said.

I had felt a yearning for Vincent's body before. But never when he wasn't there to touch. And now I wanted to touch him more than ever. To be touched by him. Maybe that was because it wasn't possible, but I had a feeling that it was more than that. We had waited to make love because I hadn't felt ready yet. But this brush with death—with Vincent's eternal disappearance—had made me realize that that kind of connection with Vincent was what I wanted. If I was given the chance again, this time I would choose yes.

Trying to clear my head of impossible dreams, I picked up my purse and the room key and began heading out the door when I suddenly remembered my phone. I hadn't even taken it out of my suitcase when I arrived because I wasn't sure I had international service. Plus . . . who was I going to call?

“Wait a second, Vincent. I'm just going to check that picture,” I said, sitting back down on the bed. “I don't even know if it turned out, since the cave was so big and my flash was pretty weak.”

I clicked on the camera icon, and there it was: the last picture I had taken. It had worked. Although dark around the edges where the flash hadn't reached, the middle of the painted wall was clearly visible . . . I expanded the image with my fingertips . . .
and
in focus!

“Oh my God, Vincent? Do you see?”

Yes!
he said.
It's hard to read at this size, but if we loaded it onto your grandfather's laptop, I think it would be legible.

“Let's go, then!” I said.

Papy and Bran were sitting behind empty cups of coffee, studying a piece of paper. Seeing me arrive, Papy poured a cup from the pitcher on the table and set it on the place setting next to him.

“No time for coffee!” I said. “The picture from the cave. It worked! We need your laptop, Papy.”

My grandfather handed me his room key and I was back with the laptop in minutes. Plugging my phone into it, I waited a second until the image popped up, then selected the painting with the re-embodiment and cropped everything else out.

“The image is very similar to what was on Theodore's urn,” Papy agreed.

“Can we see the words more closely?” Bran asked, leaning in toward the computer.

I zoomed in, and the inscription filled the screen. As Papy began translating it from the Latin, Bran scribbled it down on the piece of paper.

 

A man of clay is only mud

Until his brother spills his blood.

Mortal breath will animate

The dead's own ashes re-create.

Once these elements combine

The cooling flames will entwine

Spirit with inanimate form

For wandering soul to be reborn.

 

“The dead's own ashes? Does that mean Vincent's ashes?” I asked, a cold wave of alarm washing through me.

“That's what it seems to suggest,” Papy said. He cleared his throat and looked uncomfortable. “Is there any way for us to get Vincent's ashes?”

“I seriously doubt it,” I said. “It's been days since Vincent was burned.” I felt sick. I couldn't believe we had come this far only to run into an unsolvable problem.

“Maybe Violette kept some of his ashes. For some sort of use?” Bran suggested doubtfully.

No
, I heard Vincent say.
To both suggestions. I was there afterward. And I saw one of Violette's people sweep my ashes into a bag and dump it in the trash. It was one of the more horrifying things I've experienced
.

I transmitted this to Papy and Bran, and they both fell silent.

“Ashes,” I said, thinking it through. “That must be what the symbol of the box represents.”

Papy nodded. “And do you remember the carved image on the side of Theodore's funereal urn? The man with the torch held a box in his other hand. It makes sense. Ashes were kept in stone boxes—such as the boxlike urn presenting that very re-embodiment scene.”

I chose a muffin from the bread basket and munched in silence while the men studied the picture. “Bran, what was your poem again?” I asked.

He turned the paper over to show the verse already transcribed onto the page: That's what he and Papy had been studying when I arrived. I read it out loud:

 

Man of clay to man of flesh

Immortal blood and human breath

Traces do the spirit bind

Flames give body ghost and mind.

 

I studied it for a minute and said, “Where Papy's poem mentions ‘ashes,' Bran's mentions ‘traces.'”

“Well, I translated the original Breton word as ‘traces,' but it also means ‘remains,'” Bran said, interest flickering in his eyes.

“Ashes. Remains,” I said, my brain working at double speed. “The ceremony needs something of Vincent to bind his spirit to the clay figure. Otherwise his spirit is dispersed.”

And then it hit me. “I have something!” I shouted, rising to my feet and tugging at the cord around my neck. From under my shirt, I pulled the pendants that I never took off: the
signum
and the memento mori that Jeanne had given me. The men looked at me quizzically as I held the locket toward them. “It holds a lock of Vincent's hair.”

Adrenaline coursed through my veins, making me want to sprint back to the Met, dragging Papy and Bran with me, to try the ritual again. I couldn't believe I had been wearing the missing puzzle piece around my neck for the past few days.

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