Read Her Vampyrrhic Heart Online
Authors: Simon Clark
KILL! KILL! KILL! KILL!
Soon Danby-Mask, along with its population of loathsome men, women and children, would be destroyed.
KILL! KILL! KILL! KILL!
Tony had never felt joy like this before. His joy would be even greater when he saw his own family being torn to bloody pieces by this mighty beast of which he was just a humble part.
H
is blood boiled with fury. Even so, Owen concealed his anger from Eden Taylor that Sunday afternoon when they walked through Whitby. He clowned around for her on the harbour wall, adroitly concealing his absolute rage.
But why oh why had Kit been a total bastard? Why did he stand there outside the hospital and tell me that my own brother murdered his uncle? Why?
Owen wanted to punch Kit. He wanted to inflict real hurt. Had Kit gone crazy? What drove him to make such an insane accusation? Tom would never hurt anybody.
Later, he and Eden ate Thai food in a little restaurant (normally, he'd have chosen burgers over Thai, but he wanted to impress Eden, and appear sophisticated and worldly). The food was delicious. He'd never tasted prawns like these. Then again, Eden might have been that extra ingredient that made everything taste so wonderful.
When they left the restaurant Eden said, âPenny for them.'
âPardon.'
âPenny for your thoughts.'
âOh. It shows.'
Her smile was a sweet one. âYou're worried about Jez. That's only understandable. It proves you're a nice person, too.'
Then she kissed him.
A
t the same time that Owen and Eden kissed in Whitby, and Tom and June travelled in the direction of Danby-Mask, the crow flew high above the River Lepping. The river â a glistening, black vein â threaded itself through the forest. Some legends say that crows are the eyes of the gods. Through a crow's eyes the gods could watch human beings as they worked, laughed, sang songs, fought their battles, or walked with the ones they loved. As the crow glided above the forest its sharp eyes glimpsed the secret entrance to the cave where the vampires slept by day. The bird glided low over the river as mighty Helsvir broke its surface. Spray flew into the air as the creature, studded with dozens of human heads, lunged out on to the shore where the poacher was setting snares for roe deer.
Soon, the screaming man had been dragged into the water. Helsvir, the creature made from the bodies of the dead, would dismember the poacher and weave parts of the corpse into its own flesh. The beast was a living mosaic â if this protector of the Bekk family line could ever be described as living.
T
he winter gloom was closing in by the time Tom parked the van in the garage at his parents' house. Neither his mother nor his father was home, which suited him fine â and saved on explanations why this dark-skinned, blue-eyed woman was with him.
He and June followed a footpath that took them through trees that had been turned into dark, looming sentinels now that winter had stripped them of their leaves. Roots burst out of the ground. They'd trip anyone not taking care. If someone did fall, there were plenty of jagged rocks. Easy to shatter a kneecap if you fell on those. This part of the forest had taken a violent dislike to human beings, or so it seemed to Tom. The place was anything but people-friendly.
He said, âJune, take care when you walk by the river. Keep as far away from the water as possible.'
Helsvir ⦠am I warning her about that creature? After all, I know it spends time in the river. Swimming there like a killer shark.
But there are other dangers, too.
Tom explained as they walked: âThe banks crumble under your feet sometimes. It's happened to me before. One second I was walking on what seemed like a solid footpath, the next it broke away and I ended up tumbling head over backside into the water.'
She laughed, then her face became serious. âSorry. I'm sure that isn't as comical as it sounds.'
âThe River Lepping can be a real psychopath.'
âHow can a river be psychopath?'
âBecause sometimes it pretends to be a pleasant stretch of water, but it's trying to lull people into a false sense of security. So they'll get too close then ⦠wham!' He clapped his hands together like a trap springing shut.
June shot the river wary glances, perhaps wondering if it might find a devious way of dragging her in. âCome to think of it, there is something menacing about the Lepping. Have you seen how black the water is?'
âLiquid darkness.' He shivered, as if cold, dead fingers stroked his neck. âThat's what I always think when I see it. Liquid darkness. The river hides all kinds of unpleasant surprises. You might walk through what looks like shallow water, no more than ankle deep. The next step could drop you into an underwater ravine that's ten feet deep.'
âIt's claimed lots of lives?'
He nodded. âSometimes I'm asked to search the riverbed for bodies.'
They walked in silence after that. Already, dusk had invaded this murderous terrain. Shadows grew darker. Sometimes the gloom required them to reach out their hands to make sure they didn't walk into a tree trunk. The pungent scent of the forest grew stronger.
All of a sudden, June spoke the words that stopped Tom dead. He stared at her in shock.
June repeated her remarkable statement: âI've decided to bring my mother here.'
âThat's impossible.'
âI've made up my mind, Tom.'
âYou told me she's a sick woman.'
âMy mother's not sick.' June spoke softly. âShe's dying.'
âI'm sorry to hear that, butâ'
âOver the last few hours I've been thinking about her.' June had clearly made a decision. âThere's no other alternative. I'll bring my mother here. She can see her husband.'
âHusband? June, the man's a vampire. A monster. He'sâ'
âHe's also my father, Tom.'
âDear God. You can't be serious!'
âThere's no need to shout.'
âJust look at this!' He spun round, flinging out his arms, gesturing at the forest and the forbidding river â that liquid darkness that had claimed so many lives. âI can't even bring a vehicle to the cottage. Can your mother walk through this kind of terrain? If she can't, what do you propose then?'
âI'll carry her by myself if I must.'
With a determined expression, she continued walking. Tom followed.
Damn it, she's crazy.
Before he could stop himself he started to yell.
âJune, listen! You can't bring an invalid into a place like this! Feel how damp and how cold it is â that alone could finish anyone who's seriously ill to begin with.'
âI've made my mind up, Tom.'
âWhat the hell do think your mother will do, if we could even bring her to the cottage? Do you really think she's going to have some kind of touching reunion with her husband?'
âShe could see him from a bedroom window.'
âLike Juliet cooing to Romeo from the balcony?'
âIf you're not going to take this seriously â¦'
âI am taking this seriously.'
âThis is the last chance I have to save my mother's life.'
âSave her life? You'll kill her!'
June lashed out. The slap stung his cheek. Tom furiously grabbed her by the arms. Her blue eyes flashed as she glared up at him. The sound of the river seemed to grow louder, almost becoming a roar, and Tom realized that was actually the sound of his blood thundering through the arteries in his neck.
âI'm not allowing you to turn your mother into a corpse,' he thundered. âIt's enough for my conscience that I'm letting you risk your life. Don't you get it? Our lives are in danger! We might not survive until morning! Or we might end up becoming vampires, too!'
âTonight, I plan telling my father the truth about my mother â and yes, he might be some kind of bloodsucking monster, but if she sees him that might heal her broken heart. I know it sounds crazy. But if she knows that Jacob Bekk was forced to return here because of a curse, then she'll know that he didn't dump her.'
âIt's impossible. I won't let you bring her here.'
âPlease, Tom. Please â¦'
The bushes parted as a figure loped through on to the path. June reacted with shock. Instinctively, she pressed her body to Tom's as if seeking his protection.
âHey, Tom. I've been looking for you ⦠uh â¦'
Tom recognized the figure in front of him. âOwen.' Releasing his grip on June's arms he took a step back. Too late, already Owen Westonby had seen him with June, and already the sixteen-year-old had misconstrued what they were doing. No doubt he interpreted their closeness as a romantic cuddle by the water's edge.
âOwen? Is there anything wrong?'
âNo ⦠well, yeah ⦠I need to talk to you, Tom.'
âIt'll be dark soon.'
Owen repeatedly glanced from Tom's face to the face of the stranger next to him. The beautiful dark-skinned woman with the striking eyes that were a brilliant blue. âTom. This is important.'
Tom took a deep breath. Damn it, already his plans had begun to fall apart. June had told him that she wanted to bring her mother here ⦠into the vampires' lair! That was just crazy. Now Owen stood there wearing an expression of total anxiety.
After taking another deep breath, Tom nodded. âOK, Owen. But it's important you're back home before it gets dark.'
Owen nodded. Tom knew what the kid was thinking:
Tom wants to get rid of me as quickly as possible so he can be alone with this woman.
Life was becoming more complicated,
and dangerous
, by the moment. What the next few hours would bring, only God â and maybe the devil â knew.
S
EX.
Owen's staring at me
, Tom thought,
and that's why he thinks I've brought this woman to the cottage. He's telling himself that I want him out of the house so I can rip her clothes off ⦠he couldn't be more mistaken, more wrong, more than one million miles off target. June's bait. We're going to use her to lure the vampires here â¦
Tom had lit the fire and a golden light filled the lounge. Outside, the night was drawing closer.
Tom hurried through the introductions. âOwen, this is June Valko. June, this is my brother, Owen.'
âNice to meet you, Owen.' June held out her hand.
Owen had been brought up to be polite, and with impeccable politeness shook her hand. Though his expression suggested he wished the woman wasn't here.
âTom, I'd like to freshen up,' she said, âbefore we â¦'
Owen's eyes widened; he clearly expected her to say:
before we
make love
.
June, however, completed the sentence as: âbefore we have something to eat.'
But the damage had been done. Owen clearly expected the pair to have a raging two-person orgy the moment he left.
Tom asked, âWhat did you want to tell me, Owen?'
âRight ⦠uh.' He glanced at June.
June picked up her shoulder bag. âIf you can just point me to the bathroom?'
âFirst door at the top of the stairs. The next door on the right is the spare bedroom. Put your things in there. You can ⦠sleep there ⦠my room's the one opposite.' Damn it, those words of his sounded so stilted. So bloody awkward, too; sounded like he'd read them from a card.
After she left the room Owen raised his eyebrows.
âJune's a friend. She's staying over.' Tom cleared his throat. âI don't want to rush you, but you need to get back home before it gets dark.'
âSo you keep telling me.'
Tom could imagine Owen racing back to Mull-Rigg Hall where he lived. He'd scramble through the door blabbing to their mother at the top of his voice.
Tom's got a strange woman in the cottage. He almost threw me out of there. Already he'll be DOING IT with her!
These thoughts burned inside Tom's head. Of course, it didn't matter if Tom had women to stay here. He was single â and had been for five years ever since his bride, Nicola, vanished.
âTom? Something on your mind?'
âUh?' Grunting, Tom turned to his brother. âNothing.'
âYou were staring into the fire like you'd lost your Rolex in there or something.'
âWhat did you want to see me about?'
âJez. He's had an accident.'
âOh, no. Is he hurt?'
âBashed about a bit â his arm's broken.'
âI'm sorry to hear that. Is he at home?'
âHis head smashed into the steering wheel; they're keeping him in hospital overnight for observation.'
âSteering wheel? He was driving?'
âYeah, his dad's truck.' Owen sat down on the sofa. The worry on the kid's face was clear to see. âIt gets worse.'
Tom felt cold inside. âHow much worse?'
âJez is sixteen. Too young to drive. He doesn't have insurance, either. Also â¦' Owen swallowed. âThe cops think he caused an accident yesterday. They found him near the wreck of a minibus.'
Tom whistled. âMy God. I saw news about it on television. The passengers are missing.'
âJez's dad is convinced the police will charge him with dangerous driving and killing the people in the bus.'
âYou weren't with him, were you?'
âNo ⦠look there isn't a mark on me.'
âI'm your brother, Owen. I care about you, so you'd tell me if you were involved in the accident, wouldn't you?'
âDad can vouch I was home when the accident happened.'
Tom couldn't hide his relief. âThank God for that.'
âBut what about Jez? He'll go to prison, won't he?'
âWhat did Jez say?'
âWhat he told me was strange ⦠I mean
really
strange.'