stirred inside her by Lestatâs gaze. Perhaps he had worked a vague charm, and she was giving forth her deepest thoughts.
âBut you, young man,â she said, âIâm your Aunt Queen from now on and forever, certainly; but what is your name?â
âLestat, Madam,â he answered, pronouncing it âLes-
dot,
â with the accent on the second syllable. âIâm not really very famous either. And I donât sing anymore at all actually, except to myself when Iâm driving my black Porsche madly or riding my motorcycle at a raging speed on the roads. Then Iâm a regular Pavarottiâ.â
âOh, but you mustnât go speeding!â Aunt Queen declared with a sudden attack of pure seriousness. âThatâs how I lost my husband, John McQueen. It was a new Bugatti, you know what a Bugatti isâ (Lestat nodded), âand he was so proud of it, his fine European sports car, and we were racing down the Pacific Coast Highway One, and on an unclouded summer day, screeching around the turns, down to Big Sur, and he lost control of the wheel and went right through the windshield. Dead like that. And I came to my senses with a crowd around me, only inches from a cliff that went sheer down into the sea.â
âAppalling,â said Lestat earnestly. âWas it very long ago?â
âOf course, decades ago, when I was foolish enough to do such things,â said Aunt Queen, âand I never remarried; we Blackwoods, we donât remarry. And John McQueen left me a fortune, some consolation, Iâve never found another like him, with so much passion and so many happy delusions, but then I never much looked.â She shook her head at the pity of it. âBut thatâs a dreary subject, all that, heâs buried in the Blackwood tomb in the Metairie Cemetery; we have a large tomb there, an inspiring little chapel of a tomb, and Iâll soon be in it too.â
âOh, my God, no,â I whispered, with a little too much fear.
âYou hush now,â she said, glancing up at me. âAnd Lestat, my darling Lestat, tell me about your clothes, your odd and bold taste. I love it. I must confess that to picture you in that frock coat, rushing along on a motorcycle, is quite amusing, to be sure.â
âWell Madam,â he said, laughing softly, âmy longing for the stage and the microphone is gone, but I wonât give up the fancy clothes. I canât give them up. Iâm the prisoner of capricious fashion and am actually quite plain tonight. I think nothing of piling on the lace and the diamond cuff links, and I envy Quinn that snappy leather coat heâs wearing. You could call me a Goth, I think.â He glanced at me very naturally, as though we were both simple humans. âDonât they call us snappy antique dressers Goth now, Quinn?â
âI think they do,â I said, trying to catch up.
This little speech of his made Aunt Queen laugh and laugh. She had forgotten John McQueen, who had in fact died a long time ago into stories. âWhat an unusual name, Lestat,â she returned. âDoes it have a meaning?â
âNone whatsoever, Madam,â Lestat answered. âIf memory serves me right, and it does less and less, the nameâs compounded of the first letter of each of my six older brothersâ names, all of whomâthe brothers and their namesâI grew up to cheerfully and vigorously despise.â
Again, Aunt Queen laughed, plainly surprised and utterly seduced. âSeventh son,â she said. âNow that confers a certain power and Iâm deeply respecting of it. And you speak with a ready eloquence. You seem a fine and invigorating friend for Quinn.â
âThatâs my ambition, to be his fine friend,â said Lestat immediately and sincerely, âbut donât let me intrude.â
âNever even think of it,â Aunt Queen offered. âYouâre welcome