'Apart from prostituting myself to a demon,' she reminded him sharply.
There was that. Zane found it very hard to accept the notion of her being intimate with a demon, but the Truthstone had confirmed her statement. 'Why did you do that?'
'To learn the black magic. My father wouldn't teach me, of course. He wanted to keep me clean. The man I respect most — and I deliberately deceived him! Now what do you have to beat that?'
It was Zane's turn to breathe deeply. 'I killed my mother.'
Now she gaped. 'You can't mean that!'
Zane held up his Truthstone, which remained dark. 'I did it. Then I wasted my inheritance gambling, and tried to replace it by embezzlement.' And now his Sinstone glowed more brightly than hers.
'You have made your case,' Luna said. 'But I still have more total evil than you, because —
'Because you took some of your father's burden of evil,' he said quickly. 'He thought you were in balance, including his evil, but you're not. Where does that put you?'
'Destined for Hell,' she admitted. 'Of course he didn't know about my other evil. He thought I was pristine, so a twenty-five percent share of evil from him would not imperil my status.'
'And, in fact, you are about seventy-five percent evil — or at least, that's what's charged against your soul,' he said.
'Close enough.'
'I'm surprised he didn't check your balance and catch you at it.'
Her smile was wan. 'Men are easy to deceive.'
Zane studied her with new appreciation. 'You seem pretty good to me.'
'Your Truthstone is glimmering,' she advised him.
So it was. 'I guess that's a half-truth. You do seem good to me, but that business about the demon — ' He paused, watching the stone. It was dim. 'Wasn't there some other way to learn the magic you wanted? Study a book, or something?'
'A book!' she exclaimed scathingly. 'Black-magic texts are illegal!'
'But you can find them on the black market.'
'My father would have known. Only black magic could counter his black magic, even to the limited extent of concealing this information from him.'
It would indeed require special measures to hide something from a magical grand master, Zane realized. So maybe she had required input from Hell. Still — 'Why did you want black magic if your father said no? You always obeyed him in other things, didn't you?'
She winced. This betrayal of her father was evidently an extremely sensitive matter to her. 'It always fascinated me. I knew the power my father had, and I wanted — ' She broke off, for her Truthstone was glimmering. 'Oh, fudge! I should have set that stone down.' She took another breath. 'I was afraid for my father. Some of those minions of Hell — they frightened me. I don't mean little child-bugaboo- type frights; these things were truly, fundamentally evil and they had such power, such malign awareness — you really can't appreciate such horror unless you find it near. I knew they regarded my father as a rare prize, and though I also knew he was smarter than they, still he was riding the tiger. I didn't want to see my father damned, and I knew he would be, but there was no way I could help him unless I learned more about his business. So I learned all I could, legitimately — and some of the things in the legitimate, unexpurgated texts gave me screaming nightmares — then finally I had to move on into — you know, and the only coin I had to offer was — you know.' This time her stone was quiescent.
Zane considered. 'I think I could get to like you pretty well. I know I'm nothing special, but — well, can we set another date?'
She seemed surprised. 'Date?'
'Go out for a walk, or to eat — a pretext for being together, for talking some more.'
'You can have what you want right now,' she said, her voice sharpening. 'You don't have to clothe it in romance.'
'I don't think so.'
'It's true! Try me. After the demon, nothing you want will be so bad.'
Zane cringed inside to think of her opinion of the needs of men. She really had not had much experience in this regard, and no doubt thought of the demon as nothing more than an exaggerated man. 'I want your respect.'
She tilted her head, peering at him quizzically. 'My what?'
'Your respect. You have mine. Your father was right; you are a good person. I don't care how the sin ledger stands. There seem to be a number of artificial standards of good and evil that don't really relate to true merit or demerit. Maybe the official system of classification has failed to keep up with the changing nature of our society. You haven't done anything I consider really wrong, except — well, even the demon, if you only did it to help your father — and you did help your father, because without your help he would have gone directly to Hell without passing Purgatory. So it was more like a sacrifice.'
'A virgin sacrifice,' she agreed, glancing at Zane with a new appraisal. 'It's the only type that kind accepts. It was horrible.'
'So I suppose after that, no ordinary man represents a threat to you. Certainly I don't. But a woman who would do that to protect her father — I'd just like to know you better, that's all.'
'Yet you killed your mother,' she pointed out. 'What do you care about anyone's parent?'
'I cared about her,' he said, somewhat stiffly. 'But she was dying anyway, and in pain, and she knew it was hopeless; when she asked me to — I just had to do it, that's all, even though I knew it was a crime and a sin that would damn me. It wasn't right to let her suffer any longer.'
Luna's eyes narrowed. 'Just what happened?'
'Oh, you wouldn't care to hear — '
'Yes, I would.'
Zane closed his eyes, suffering in retrospect. 'She was in the hospital, and her hair was falling out and her skin turning rough like that of a lizard, and there were tubes and wires and things going into her and coming out of her in a continuous violation of her body, and different colored fluids bubbling, and gauges pulsing with every breath she took and every beat other heart, so that any stranger passing by could read at a glance the most intimate secrets other functioning. She would have died long since, from mortification as much as physical failure, but the artificial heart and kidney and stomach wouldn't let her. She had periods of disorientation, and these were getting longer. I think sometimes she hallucinated. But on occasion she was lucid, and that was when the horror of it was clear.
'One time when I was visiting and she saw the nurses were away, she whispered to me the truth. She was hurting physically and mentally and emotionally, she felt degraded by all the paraphernalia, and she just wanted to die before she ran down her estate entirely with the medical bills, so I would have something to inherit. I didn't tell her that all the money was already gone and that the debt was mounting horrendously; even her life insurance would hardly cover it. She begged me to make them let her die so she could be in peace at last. She had come to hate life. She was in such misery and so urgent about it that I promised. Then she lapsed into more hallucinations — I think she was reliving something that happened a long time ago, in her childhood — and talked of picking flowers and getting stung by a bee — and I had to go. I knew the doctors would never let her die in peace; it was part of their code to make a patient suffer as long as humanly possible. So I bought a penny curse — it was all I could afford — and set it on the heart machine where it wouldn't be seen and left. Two hours later I had the call: she was dead because of equipment failure.
'The hospital thought it was at fault and offered to settle out of court, and I let them think that, because it eased the medical bill considerably. But I knew I had killed my mother and that my soul was damned. I tried to pay off the remaining bill by gambling, hoping to multiply the money I was supposed to use for those debts, but I lost it all and tried to steal from my employer to gamble into enough to square everything, but I was caught, so I lost my job and had still more sin on my soul and debts on my account. I skipped town, went to Kilvarough, set up a new identity, and sort of scraped along for several years with my guilt and grief, still hoping for some source of money to square things, hoping maybe to marry money, until this other business — '
He stopped. 'I think I've said too much.'
Luna was watching him intently. 'That Truthstone never flickered.'