The Queen of the Damned
shield from her the secrets of his own mind.
     
    "Blessed Pandora," he said scornfully. "What do I care about the Mother and the Father? What are they to me? What do I care about your precious Marius? That he calls for help over and over! This is nothing to me!"
     
    She was stunned. Marius calling for help. Azim laughed. "Explain what you're saying," she said. Again laughter. He turned his back to her. There was nothing she could do but wait. Marius had made her. All the world could hear Marius's voice, but she could not hear it. Was it an echo that had reached her, dim in its deflection, of a powerful cry that the others had heard? Tell me, Azim. Why make an enemy of me? When he turned to her again, he was thoughtful, his round face plump, human-looking as he yielded to her, the backs of his hands fleshy and dimpled as he pressed them together just beneath his moist lower lip. He wanted something of her. There was no scorn or malice now.

 
    "It's a warning," he said. "It comes over and over, echoing through a chain of listeners who carry it from its origins in some far-off place. We are all in danger. Then it is followed by a call for help, which is weaker. Help him that he may try to avert the danger. But in this there is little conviction. It is the warning above all that he would have us heed."
     
    "The words, what are they?"
     
    He shrugged. "I do not listen. I do not care."
     
    "Ah!" She turned her back now on him. She heard him come towards her, felt his hands on her shoulders.
     
    "You must answer my question now," he said. He turned her to face him. "It is the dream of the twins that concerns me. What does this mean?"
     
    Dream of the twins. She didn't have an answer. The question didn't make sense to her. She had had no such dream.
     
    He regarded her silently, as if he believed she was lying. Then he spoke very slowly, evaluating her response carefully.
     
    "Two women, red hair. Terrible things befall them. They come to me in troubling and unwelcome visions just before I would open my eyes. I see these women raped before a court of onlookers. Yet I do not know who they are or where this outrage takes place. And I am not alone in my questioning. Out there, scattered through the world, there are other dark gods who have these dreams and would know why they come to us now."
     
    Dark gods! We are not gods, she thought contemptuously.
     
    He smiled at her. Were they not standing in his very temple? Could she not hear the moaning of the faithful? Could she not smell their blood?
     
    "I know nothing of these two women," she said. Twins, red hair. No. She touched his fingers gently, almost seductively. "Azim, don't torment me. I want you to tell me about Marius. From where does his call come?"
     
    How she hated him at this moment, that he might keep this secret from her.
     
    "From where?" he asked her defiantly. "Ah, that is the crux, isn't it? Do you think he would dare to lead us to the shrine of the Mother and the Father? If I thought that, I would answer him, oh, yes, oh, truly. I would leave my temple to find him, of course. But he cannot fool us. He would rather see himself destroyed than reveal the shrine."
     
    "From where is he calling?" she asked patiently.
     
    "These dreams," he said, his face darkening with anger. "The dreams of the twins, this I would have explained!"
     
    "And I would tell you who they are and what they mean, if only I knew." She thought of the songs of Lestat, the words she'd heard. Songs of Those Who Must Be Kept and crypts beneath European cities, songs of questing, sorrow. Nothing there of red-haired women, nothing. . . .
     
    Furious, he gestured for her to stop. "The Vampire Lestat," he said, sneering. "Do not speak of this abomination to me. Why hasn't he been destroyed already? Are the dark gods asleep like the Mother and the Father?"
     
    He watched her, calculating. She waited.
     
    "Very well. I believe you," he said finally. "You've told me what you

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