Lincoln nodded weakly. 'If you save Joseph, I will do anything. He's all I have.'
The cantor nodded back and opened the door to Joseph's bedroom. Just before entering, he said, 'Ironic, isn't it?'
'What?'
'The vampire has been drawing blood to doom the boy. Now I shall draw blood to save him.'
Lincoln couldn't stand the sight of blood, but he had to know what was going on. So after a few minutes of pacing around the apartment and saying what prayers he could recall, he entered Joseph's bedroom.
The cantor sat on the bed next to Joseph, holding his hand and cradling his head. Joseph was crying, but his color seemed better. Joseph was singing something, along with the cantor, that Lincoln did not recognize. The cantor stopped when he saw Lincoln.
'Good, Joseph, very good,' he said to the boy. 'Keep singing.'
He stood up and walked over to Lincoln. 'The boy has a way to go, but I believe it is working. I have him reciting the Psalms.'
'How much longer?' Lincoln asked.
'I am not sure. But he is getting better.'
'Yes, but-Cantor, have you had a chance to look out the window?'
The cantor turned to the window; it was dark outside. 'Shabbes is over. I must recite
Havdalah.'
'That's not exactly what I meant. Are you sure Joseph will be cured? According to legend, since he's been bitten three times and sundown has now come-'
The cantor smiled. 'Fear not, Mr. Kliman. Your son should be fine. I don't think there is anything more you need to-'
A loud bang at the window startled the three of them, and Lincoln looked up. For a moment he thought he saw a bat, but then smoke swirled around it and into the room, blocking his vision.
'Oh God. Oh no oh no oh no…'
The smoke curled around the window, and coalesced into a pretty woman with long blonde hair falling over her shoulders. She wore a white V-neck sweater, cut low enough to display her cleavage, and a pair of tight blue jeans. She smelled of sweet perfume. She looked around the room, her red eyes peering out over a pair of dark sunglasses.
Lincoln shouted, 'Go away! We haven't invited you in!'
'Ah, but the boy has, and I have come for the boy,' said the vampire. She smiled, displaying two prominent canine teeth. 'He is mine.'
'You can't have him!' shouted Lincoln. He rushed at the vampire, who laughed and turned to smoke just as Lincoln got to where she had been standing. Lincoln lost his balance and almost fell out the window, but the cantor grabbed him.
The vampire re-formed at the bed. 'Hello, Joseph.' She reached her hand out to Joseph's head; Joseph recoiled, a look of horror upon his face.
'Keep her away!' Joseph shouted.
'Why, Joseph! Is that the way to treat your good friend Lily?' She cupped his chin and stared into his eyes. 'Are you ready to come with me? To become one of us?'
The cantor walked over to the bed and spoke directly into the vampire's ear. 'You are too late,' he intoned. 'The boy is lost to you. I have ensured it. Depart.'
The vampire laughed. 'Do you think I have not dealt with these last minute conversions before? I look into the boy and I see the soul of an agnostic. He has no belief in the God of the Jews. I have encountered many of his type before, brought up unprotected from my magic. He is mine for the taking.'
'Why do you want him?' Lincoln asked. 'Why can't you leave him alone?'
She grinned at Lincoln, showing her long canine teeth. He shuddered. 'Because he is so easy to take, so defenseless. As are so many of your sons.' She turned away, bent over the boy, and began to kiss him all over his face.
'Come, Joseph,' she crooned. 'Forget this religious nonsense. Your dad didn't let it stop him from marrying out of the faith; why should it stop you? Your friends are waiting for you, Joseph. It is time to join us.'
Lincoln felt a chill at the back of his neck, and he turned around to look back at the window. There were definitely figures out there, dark silhouettes hovering outside, waiting for Joseph to join them.
Entranced by his fear of what lay outside, he barely heard Joseph's next words. 'Yes, Lily, it is time to join our friends.' He began to lift himself out of the bed.
'No!' shouted the cantor. 'Joseph, don't listen to her! What about all you have gone through today?'
Joseph snarled. 'You don't understand! Lily and her friends have shown me so much of the world I never knew. We've gone out and had so much fun, every night! I want to live in her world!'
Lincoln broke out of his trance. 'No!' he screamed, and rushed at the vampire. She changed into a bat this time, and Lincoln stopped short. The transformation was too frightening.
' Lincoln!' shouted the cantor. 'Grab her!'
Lincoln broke out of his trance of fear and lunged at the bat, which flew away from him to the other side of the room.
'Now!' the cantor shouted, and jumped to Joseph's side. 'Joseph, you must sing. You must sing the ancient melodies that will protect you from this evil creature, or you will become like her. You must sing of your faith, your belief, in the Lord.
'Sing, Joseph. Sing with me.'
The cantor began to sing, in sepulchral tones. '
Mizmor l'David. Repeat it, Joseph!'
'No, I-'
He grabbed Joseph by the shoulders and shook him. 'Come to your senses! Her world offers you nothing but corruption! You shall lose everything that defines who you are, Joseph. Your background, your ancestors-you will never see your father again.'
'My father,' he said weakly. 'I love my father.'
'Then sing!
Mizmor l'David.'
'Mizmor l'David,' Joseph sang, in a faint imitation of the cantor's voice.
'Louder, Joseph! Listen to the tune.
Hashem ro'i lo echsar. Bin'ot Desheh yarbitzaini al me minuchos yinahalayni.'
Joseph repeated the song, more strongly this time.
The bat turned back into a woman. 'No,' she whispered. 'Stop!'
Lincoln blinked his eyes in surprise. As Joseph and the cantor sang, the room started to glow with a faint, yellow light. It was a soft, comforting glow, like that of the afternoon sun in a perfect blue sky.
'No,' said the vampire, much more weakly. 'Stop, Joseph. If I ever meant anything to you, stop.' She crouched down and covered her eyes with her arm.
Noticing this, Lincoln realized that the light had distracted him. He turned his attention back to the song, and discovered with surprise that he now understood the Hebrew words. He knew what they meant, translating them instantly as they were sung.
'Gam ki aylech b'gai tsalmavet lo eir'eh ra ki atah imadi,' Joseph sang.
Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil, for You are with me.
'Shivt'cha umishantecha haymah y'nachamuni.'
Thy rod and Thy staff, they comfort me.
The glow became brighter, emanating from all around, but as they finished singing it started to gather around the forms of Joseph and the cantor. The light became so bright and hot that Lincoln followed the vampire's lead and shielded his eyes.
Then Lincoln heard the song change. Without any prompting from the cantor, Joseph began singing another psalm. He listened carefully.
'Omar ladoshem machsee umtsudati, elokai evtach bo, kee hu yahtseel'cha meepach yakoosh, midever havot.'
I say of the Lord, my refuge and stronghold, my God in whom I trust, that He will save you from the fowler's trap, from the destructive plague.
Lincoln opened his eyes and looked over his arm. Was the light starting to move towards the vampire?
'Lo teera meepachad lailah…' You need not fear the terror by night…
The light began to coalesce around the vampire. She screamed. 'Joseph! No!'
'…meedever ba'ofel yahaloch.' The plague that stalks in the darkness.
The light surrounded her completely, so brightly that her form was completely covered. Her screams became softer, muffled.
Joseph stopped singing. 'Begone,' the cantor and he said in unison.
Lincoln heard one more loud scream, and the light flared up, forcing him to cover his eyes again. When the light faded from beyond his arm, he looked up again, and noticed three things in succession. First, he saw Joseph, lying on his bed asleep, with all the normal color back in his face. Second, he saw the cantor holding up in front of him a silver
Magen David, a Star of David.
Finally, he looked to where the vampire had last stood. All that was left of her was a pile of black dust, and a pair of sunglasses.
'Perhaps she was sent to test you, Mr. Kliman, perhaps not. I would not even guess.'
It was Monday afternoon, two days later, and Lincoln had stopped by the synagogue to thank the cantor once again.
'At any rate, Cantor, it was your music that saved my son. And your Star of David. I owe you my eternal gratitude.'
Cantor Gross shook his head slightly and smiled. 'It was not merely my music, Mr. Kliman, but what my music represented, where it came from. As for the star of David, it has absolutely no religious significance at all. But I counted on the vampire not knowing that, and I was right. In short, I think your gratitude is well meant, but misplaced.'
'Yes. Well. Cantor, I need to get back home now. I want to check on Joseph.'