Tommy accepted this without question. Before she could switch on the lights in the pitch-black room, he wove through the chairs and tables.
Another of his talents. He sleeps all day. He doesn't need food or drink. And he can see in the dark.
Quickly, he crouched by the radio to turn the shiny brown knob. Seconds later, valves glowed through the vents. Voices burst from the speaker. It seemed like a comedy show. There was something garishly out of place about the play's banter. Beth realized that her tenseness of mood, and the disturbing situation she found herself plunged into, made the broadcast grate on her nerves.
A Scottish husband and wife were arguing.
âSo, Peggy, where do you expect my uncles to sleep the night afore the wedding?'
âThey can sleep in the blinking coal-hole for all I care.'
âThere's a war on, Peggy.'
âWell let them kip down with flipping Hitler. He's as mad as a hatter â he won't mind.'
Tommy knelt before the radio, his arm round the dog's neck. Those alien eyes of his fixed that brown Bakelite box full of voices. Once again, she recalled family dogs from her childhood that had to be put to sleep when they were too ill to continue with their lives. She knew it would be a kindness to release whatever remained of Tommy from that cold shell. But when? And how? And did she have the courage? Those were the questions that plagued her when Alec put his head through the doorway.
âBeth. Eleanor's ready for the demonstration.'
âI'll be right along.'
Beth watched Tommy stroking Sam.
The boy is suffering, too. It would be cruel not to.
Three
Beth Layne left Tommy listening to the radio. Thoughts weighing heavy on her mind, she descended the steps into the cellar. Alec and Sally were there. The man kept adjusting the eyepatch, as if he found it impossible to find any degree of comfort with it. Sally shot frightened glances in the direction of the iron grate in the floor. A cool draught, which carried odours of the sea, oozed from it. Beneath the grate, a pit of shadow. A blackness that suggested that ghostly forms would find it to their liking. A lair from which to strike.
Eleanor stepped into the light of the single, naked bulb. She had donned the rubber apron and was fastening the buckles up her back. âAh, good, everyone's here. Then let's make this quick. We might be running short of time.'
Sally appeared happier that Beth had joined them. âHere, let me, Eleanor.' She fastened the buckles for her.
âThank you, Sally, you're a dear. Will you bring me the gauntlets, too?'
Alec said, âYou don't have to do this, you know?'
âOf course, I do. You must learn the vicious nature of this chemical.'
âNo, I mean you don't have to fight this battle yourself.'
âWhat do you suggest?'
âThe police.'
âEven if the police believed me, there is a curfew.'
âSo? Wait until morning?'
âMy dear Alec. We don't have the luxury of waiting until morning. Those creatures attacked last night. They'll do so again tonight.'
Alec clenched his fists in exasperation. âDamn it, woman. Why didn't you go to the authorities before now? You've known about those monsters for twenty years.'
Sally finished buckling the apron. âDon't be hard on Eleanor, Alec.'
âDon't be hard on her? Ye Gods. Why wait until now, Eleanor? Were you frightened of telling the truth? Did you think the police would arrest you?'
Eleanor's eyes flared. âAlec. I'm afraid of nothing! Yes, I prevaricated. But until recently Gustav and the rest were, to all intents and purposes, inactive. They didn't attack people. Yes, they might have slaked their thirst on animals, but humans? No. Absolutely not.'
âWhat changed them?'
Beth knew the answer. âThe war â that's what changed them, Alec. Temptation was placed in their way. I know, strictly speaking, they're not like movie vampires: they don't fear crucifixes or sleep in coffins, but they do crave blood.'
âAnd they suppressed that craving,' Eleanor added. âBut when men are tumbling out of the sky from exploding aircraft, or sailors being washed ashore from wrecked naval ships, with the blood still in their veins, then what are the wretches supposed to do? How would an alcoholic cope with a crate of whisky being delivered to his door every day?'
âThey're monsters, Eleanor. Not humans with addiction maladies.'
âGustav Kirk is, at heart, a good man. He tried to stop the others attacking innocent people. He denied himself human blood.'
âBut it was Gustav Kirk who attacked the army sergeant in Hag's Lung.'
âThat was when he was sprayed with the man's blood. Momentarily, he lost control.' A tear rolled from Eleanor's eye. âGustav tried so hard.'
âAs you tried so hard with Gustav,' Alec murmured.
âWhat do you mean? Tried so hard with Gustav?'
âTried
not
to fall in love with him?'
âI don't love him.'
âNo?'
âNo!'
Alec gave one of those if-you-say-so shrugs.
Eleanor took the rubber gauntlets from Sally. âI know that I can't just sit back and hope the danger will go away. The reality is this: vampires have invaded our world. There are more trapped in the sump cavern. Soon they will escape. If they do, the town will be overwhelmed. Whitby will become Vampiric. My parents accused me of being timid, of lacking courage. I proved them wrong. I will prove to you that I will act, without concern for my own safety, to destroy the vampire menace. But I need your help. So I will demonstrate the weapon I have devised.' She stepped back into the shadows. âWait here for a moment, please. But
do
stand well back. This will be dangerous.'
Eleanor headed through a doorway into the basement wine cellar.
Beth whispered to Alec, âWe're in this together. We've got to stand by Eleanor.'
âWe could still phone the police.'
âDuring a curfew?'
âYes.'
âYou really think they'll send men here to the hotel?'
âIf they won't, then I'll go to authorities in the morning. I'll tell them everything.'
In the cold tones of a prophet of doom Sally uttered, âBy then, who will be left among us to reveal anything?'
Beth pressed her lips together. A chill that seemed unearthly in its intensity forced its way up her spine. The breeze blew harder from the grate. With it came the whisper of the sea â a sound like conspirators drawing up plans of attack.
A moment later, the strange silhouette of Eleanor in the long rubber apron appeared. Although she wore gauntlets, she didn't bother with the gas mask this time. In both hands, as if she carried an offering for the gods, she approached with a glass bowl, the kind you might eat strawberries from on a summer's day. In the bottom, a little of the blue liquid. Eleanor set the bowl on the stone floor. She noticed that Alec had glanced at the table, and now clearly wondered why she'd gone to the trouble of putting the bowl at her feet.
âThis is X-Stock.' Eleanor indicated the blue liquid. âIn chemical terms, it's a cousin of Hydrogen Peroxide. Alec, you asked yourself why I didn't put the dish on the table. If I had, and spilled it on to the wood, you wouldn't live long enough to know the answer.'
Sally ventured, âThe chemical will react with the wood?'
Both Alec and Eleanor showed surprise at Sally's knowledge of chemistry.
âI'm not all about make-up and movies, you know.' She blushed. âI remember my chemistry lessons at school. Mr Patterson dropped a tiny piece of potassium in a bucket of water and it sort of danced on the surface, flashing and shooting out sparks. It burnt a hole in Mr Patterson's necktie.'
âThis stuff is volatile . . . incredibly volatile,' Eleanor told them. âIt's what scientists would describe as hypergolic. Meaning it reacts with organic matter. Wood, cotton, wool, skin, muscle, bone.'
Alec nodded. âHence the rubber apron and gloves.'
âAnd they have to be a specially treated synthetic rubber at that.'
Beth eyed the blue liquid. âSo you've put X-Stock into the bottles? You plan to use them to bomb the vampires?'
âForget wooden stakes and crucifixes. The only way to deal with our Vampiric friends here in Whitby is by beheading, or dismemberment, or incineration.'
Sally shuddered. âAnd I don't expect you'll persuade one of those things to stand still long enough for you to chop off its head?'
âExactly.'
Alec frowned. âAre you sure this chemical will work?'
âOnce you see it in action you will agree wholeheartedly that X-Stock is the perfect vampire killer.' Eleanor adjusted the apron's rubber collar so it was raised high enough to cover the bottom of her jaw. âI read the kind of books that my contemporaries don't. I love books about ancient civilizations, exotic islands, faraway places, and I like to read about experiments in rocket travel. I came across a journal of the British Interplanetary Society; they planned to build a rocket fuelled by X-Stock. There would be a tank of this blue liquid, which would be sprayed into a combustion chamber; there it would hit another spray of fluid; this would be kind of organic soup. The resulting chemical reaction should blast a rocket into space. Anyway, enough of the theory. Sally?'
Sally shrank back. âYou don't want me to touch that blue stuff, do you?'
âHardly. But I'd like one of the hairs from your head.' Eleanor gave a grim smile. âOr at least one that's already adrift.'
Sally, wide-eyed and apprehensive, plucked a stray hair from her sleeve, then handed it to Eleanor.
âEverybody stand back,' Eleanor warned.
Then she released the hair from her gloved fingers. It drifted down towards the bowl of blueness. The whisper of surf, echoing up the tunnel, grew louder. Did some unseen intelligence experience their sense of anticipation, too?
Beware, one and all, Tiw is watching.
The impression of being spied upon whispered along Beth's taut nerves, as her gaze fixed on that single hair floating down towards the bowl. Everyone held their breaths. Apart from Eleanor, nobody knew what would happen next.
The second the strand touched the X-Stock its molecules attacked the organic molecules of the hair. With a loud pop that hurt Beth's ears, the hair vanished in a ball of white flame. Sparks shot from the bowl as far as the basement ceiling. By the time the pungent smoke had cleared there was no sign of the hair. Only that deceptively tranquil blue liquor remained.
âImagine half a pint of that fluid hitting a human being,' Eleanor told them. âOr, rather, one of the vampires. It doesn't just melt flesh â the stuff ignites it.'
âIgnites?' Sally exclaimed.
âIt explodes it!'
Eleanor gave another of her dry smiles. âMy dear, I couldn't have put it better myself. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'll put this dish somewhere safe.'
Soon Eleanor was back. She eased off the heavy gloves.
From Sally's expression she only too clearly envisaged the damage the X-Stock could inflict. âEleanor? Are you sure you can't use those white powders of yours to cure the vampires? After all, they worked on that bite on my arm.'
âIt's far too late, I'm afraid. The physiognomies of the infected people have changed too much. The vampirism is embedded into their bodies at a cellular level. Sally, would you be a dear?' Eleanor turned her back in order to display the buckles running down her spine. Sally quickly went to work, unbuckling the garment. With a sigh of regret, Eleanor explained her plan. âTonight. The vampires will return to the hotel. I'm sure of it. I'll open the gates to the backyard. They will try and enter through there. We station ourselves at the upper windows. Once the vampires are inside the yard, we throw the bottles down on to them.'
âWill that work?' Beth asked.
âYou saw what the X-Stock does to organic matter. Whatever the vampires really are, biologically speaking, I can't say for sure, yet they are still bones and meat covered with skin.' She shrugged herself free of the apron. âNow, I suggest you go to the kitchen and make plenty of coffee. It's going to be a long night.'
Sally and Alec went upstairs, leaving Beth alone with Eleanor.
âYou go along, too, Beth. I'll just finish up here.'
âI've been thinking about Tommy.'
âOh?'
âWe have to do the same to him, don't we?'
Eleanor appeared shocked. âDouse him with X-Stock, you mean? But he's harmless.'
âYes, harmless, but Tommy is trapped in that monster. Don't you see it? There's the ghost of a little boy locked inside that thing.'
âYou do know what the chemical will do to his body?'
âTommy is a prisoner inside an abomination. If we are humane, we will stop him suffering.'
âYou are a brave woman with a good heart.' Eleanor squeezed her arm. âI wish to God that you'd come here years ago. I could have done with a friend like you.'
âSo? Tommy?'
âYou're right.'
âWhen shall we do it?'
Eleanor crimped her lips together until she reached a painful decision. âGo upstairs now. Ask Tommy to come down here. Say we want to show him something.' Her voice became more strained as she added, âBeth, I'm warning you. The effects of this chemical on the boy will be . . . well, I don't have to describe how terrible, do I?'
Four
âTommy. I want to show you something I've found in the basement.'