Read Her Vampyrrhic Heart Online
Authors: Simon Clark
âOK. They're vampires.'
âPardon?'
âThere's no subtle way to tell you. All I can do is hit you with the brutal truth. The man that attacked me is a vampire. The people who have put us under siege are vampires.'
Those blue eyes of hers gave the front door a sideways glance. He knew she was calculating her chances of making a dash for the door in order to escape from Tom â a man she clearly had decided was a lunatic.
âDon't even consider trying to escape,' he told her bluntly. âYou wouldn't last two minutes out there.'
âVampires ⦠you said vampires. That's â¦' her voice dried for a moment. âUnusual.'
âYou don't believe in vampires?'
âDoes anyone outside a psychiatric ward?'
âI didn't believe in vampires once. I do now.'
âTom. I'd like to phone the police. Will you let me do that?' She eased the phone from her jacket pocket.
âMy plan was to explain everything methodically.' Something rustled against the other side of the front door. âBut as you know only too well circumstances have changed. You need to hear the truth, and quickly, because the truth might save you.'
âOK.' Her finger got ready to hit some phone numbers.
âDon't do that.'
âThe police will put an end to this. They'll arrest those guys out there.'
âNo,
those guys out
there
will attack the police. You'll have the blood of innocent police officers on your hands.'
âI'm sure they can handle all kinds of trouble, Tom.'
âEven the police can't defeat vampires.'
âThere's no such thing as vampires, Tom.'
A thud against the door made her flinch.
He said, âNow's not the time to give you the full Bekk family history, or how and why the family is cursed. But this is the condensed version: the ancestors of the Bekks were Viking invaders. They came to England from Denmark over a thousand years ago.'
âIs that so?' She was clearly humouring him.
He added wood to the fire, which blazed in that vast cavern of a fireplace. âThe Bekk ancestors made a pact with the Viking gods. The gods would protect them, providing they stayed loyal to the pagan faith. Consequently, the Bekks were protected from hostile Englishmen by a monster that the Viking gods made out of dead bodies.'
âWhy are you trying to frighten me?'
âI'm not trying to scare you. I'm giving you information that will improve your chances of survival. Forewarned is forearmed. Do you understand?'
âI really am scared now.'
âListen. Although the Bekks were protected, they were also cursed. If one of them moved away from the valley for long enough, or married someone who didn't worship Viking gods, then that person gradually turned into a vampire.'
She shot Tom a startled glance.
âThat's right,' he told her. âIf any Bekk man or woman shunned their family heritage they were transformed into something that wasn't human.'
âNo.'
âSo can you work out what I'm suggesting?'
âNo. Stop it.'
âYour father moved away from this valley and married your mother. Then he went missing after coming back here.'
âYou're insane.'
âThat means he's probably outside right now. He's one of those things laying siege to the house. Your father is a vampire.'
June began punching numbers into the phone at frantic speed. Tom launched himself at her and snatched away the phone. She fought back, her eyes blazing with sheer ferocity. With all her strength she tried to throw him off balance.
âYou liar!' she screamed. âI should have let him kill you!'
Although he didn't want to hurt her, he gripped her wrists tightly to prevent her from attacking him.
Both suddenly froze. They'd heard the sound of something sliding over a hard surface followed by a crash. Straight away, the sound was repeated.
âThose are tiles being broken,' he hissed. âThey're on the roof.'
âWhoever they are, they aren't vampires ⦠they're not ⦠they can't be.'
âThey are vampires. One of them is likely to be your father. What's more, it was almost certainly your father who attacked me by the river. Until tonight the vampires never even approached me. You see, June, your father misunderstood when I grabbed hold of your hand. He thought I was attacking you.'
Her eyes fixed on his face. Yes, there was horror there. He saw hope, too. The woman had begun to believe that she might have found her missing father.
Before he could speak again, he heard another sliding sound. Only this time it seemed to come from inside the house. He turned round just in time to see something plunge down the throat of the chimney and into the fire. A pair of bare feet crashed into the burning logs, sending up a shower of sparks. Both he and June stared in shock. For there, in that pyramid of flame, crouched a figure.
The man remained crouching there, staring out of that vast hearth at them. His eyes were completely white ⦠no sign whatsoever of a coloured iris ⦠instead a fierce black pupil in each eye fixed on them. Oblivious to the searing heat, he stayed there, bathed in flame.
She gasped. âTom? Is that my father? Jacob Bekk? Is that him?'
âI don't know.'
âWhy doesn't he come out of the fire? It must be killing him.' She held out her hands, ready to help him step out of the murderous heat.
âJune! Stay back!'
âHe's burning!' she cried. âMy God! He's burning!'
The ragged clothes the creature wore ignited. Even his skin seemed to catch light. Yet still he crouched there. Not moving. Not making a sound. All he did was stare into her face.
Then he moved. For a terrifying moment Tom thought he'd attack them. But with the speed of a cat, the vampire climbed back up the chimney, his hands and feet scratching and scraping the stonework as he went.
Tom opened the window blind. The vampire hit the dirt outside the house with a thud. Sparks flew. The vampire burned brightly. Even so, he didn't give any sign of being in pain. Instead, he raced away into the night. As he ran, he resembled a fiery comet that flew just above the ground. June stood beside Tom, watching the fireball race through the trees until it dwindled to a spark of light that grew smaller and smaller before vanishing completely.
âWas that my father?' June's eyes swam with tears. âWas it him?' Trembling, she sat down on the sofa â there she spoke the words that shocked Tom to the core: âIf it is him, how do I find him again?
And how can I take him back to my mother?
'
A
t the same moment that Tom Westonby and June Valko watched the fireball dwindle as it raced away into the darkness, Owen Westonby had to remind himself why he sat there in Kit's house. Kit had told Owen and Jez that the mysterious pod was an automatic camera. But waiting for the battery to be charged so they could find out what the device had filmed had become a kind of torture. As Jez neatly put it, âThis waiting around is boring the bones out of my arse.' For a while, they'd amused themselves by throwing to one another a dried-up orange that Owen had found on the floor behind the sofa. But that soon lost its entertainment value.
âThat's it.' Jez headed for the door. âI'm not waiting for Kit any longer. I'm going home.'
Before he reached the door, however, Kit appeared. âI need to be quick. The battery's been damaged; keeps losing its juice.'
âIt better be worth it,' Jez grunted. âThe last bus goes in twenty minutes.'
âThis'll only take two â¦' Kit plugged the lead from the pod into the TV. âTrust me, what you'll see is worth it.' As he'd done before he used a chopstick to activate the mechanism inside the damaged cylinder. âHere goes.' Kit sounded excited. âWe have lift-off.'
The TV screen flashed from black to blue. Following that, an image of trees appeared with the river flowing in the background. At the bottom of the screen a clock recorded the time and date.
âWhy's the picture weird?' Jez wasn't convinced that this would be worth his time.
âThe camera had been set up to operate automatically at night when an animal triggered the sensor. The image looks odd, because the camera's on a night setting. It's using infrared as a light source, so it's basically a flat, black and white image. If there's any light at all, it's exaggerated to the point where it becomes a brilliant glare.' Kit talked like an enthusiastic teacher presenting a fascinating science experiment. âSee the flashes on the river? That's moonlight being reflected in the water.'
Owen studied the TV screen. âSo every time an animal comes in range it sets the camera running?'
âYup.' Kit pointed at the bottom right-hand corner of the screen. âYou can just make out a fox there. Notice the high angle. Someone must have fixed the camera to a tree trunk at about head height.'
The fox glanced in the direction of the camera. Infrared mode made it look as if electric lights had replaced its natural eyes. An effect of the moonlight being reflected from the animal's eyes, of course. The fox paused to scratch its ear with a back leg then scuttled off. More shots followed. They captured glimpses of creatures that made the forest their home. A pair of badgers rooted through fallen leaves. A boar trundled past, snorting loudly. After that, shots of roe deer, a water vole, more foxes, and a stag heading down the river bank to take a drink. Each creature possessed those unnaturally bright electric light bulb eyes as a result of the night setting on the camera exaggerating the natural moonlight.
âMaa ⦠annn â¦' groaned Jez. âI live in the countryside. I see animals like this every day.'
âWait.'
âI've had enough, I'm going home.'
âAny second now.' Kit's eyes fixed on the television, completely absorbed by the images.
The screen blinked as the camera cycled through to the next shot. At first nothing appeared other than the black and white view of trees and the river. Owen heard something, however. Crunching. Rustling. The sound of a large animal shouldering its way through the trees. The sound grew louder, then a loud crunch: wood snapping. After that, an altogether more mysterious sound came from the TV.
âIs that whispering?' Jez took a close interest now. âCan you hear whispering?'
Kit nodded. âLots of people whispering, that's what I thought, too.'
The sounds grew even louder. A tree creaked as some hugely powerful force pushed it aside. And yet Owen still didn't see what caused the sounds. Not for another five seconds, that is. Suddenly the camera shook. The tree to which it was fixed must have been subjected to a violent shaking.
After that, it arrived. A huge, humpbacked silhouette. If the camera had been placed at head height then this creature, whatever it was, must stand higher than a human being. The whispering intensified. As if a dozen people whispered furiously amongst themselves. Apart from the black silhouette, the body that passed in front of the camera was featureless. That is until pairs of bright lights sprang from it. For all the world, it looked as if bright light bulbs had been embedded in the beast.
âTell me if I'm wrong,' Kit said quite calmly and slowly, âbut am I right in thinking those are eyes? Lots and lots of eyes.'
C
alm after the storm â¦
That's how this time felt to Tom Westonby. Earlier that night a figure had climbed down the chimney and had remained in the fireplace as if the flames were no more harmful than warm bathwater. After staring into the face of June Valko the creature had scrambled up the chimney again. Now here they were, in the calm after that extraordinary event â that is to say, an extraordinarily disturbing and frightening event.
The fire still burned brightly, filling the living room with light. June sat on the sofa, a mug of coffee in her hands. The woman gazed thoughtfully at the burning logs in the fireplace, no doubt still haunted by what she'd experienced tonight. Tom occupied an old leather armchair. An outsider might have thought Tom and June were relaxing there â a contented couple, sleepy and ready for bed. Tom knew they were anything but sleepy. Yes, they were emotionally and physically exhausted. However, neither would allow themselves to fall asleep tonight. Too much had happened. June must be in turmoil â her world had been turned upside down.
In a low whisper she asked, âWill he be dead? Because he was there in the fire, wasn't he? The man ⦠the thing ⦠that you said was my father.' Her expression suggested she was mentally replaying what she'd witnessed earlier. âA man wouldn't be able to stand in all those flames and not be hurt, would he?'
âThe heat wouldn't have caused much damage. After all, he's no longer human.'
âYou used the word “vampire”.'
âTo be more accurate, vampire-like. Those things out there don't run away from crucifixes or garlic, their reflections can be seen in mirrors. But they do avoid daylight, and they do use blood. I say “use”, because I don't believe they ingest food like any otherâ'
âOf God's creatures?'
He nodded.
June gazed at where those bare feet had slammed down into the fire. âWhat if he comes back? What then?'
âMy feeling is that your father ⦠if that was your father ⦠needed confirmation of what he saw out there in the forest before he tried to drown me.'
âYou mean he wanted to take a second look? To make sure it was me?'
Tom nodded again. âDid you recognize him?'
âNot with all those flames rushing up over his face. Besides, I've never actually met him. He'd gone before I was even born. All I've got are photographs.'
âDid you have at least an impression that it might be your father?'
June gave a shudder that went down to the roots of her bones. âHis eyes ⦠my God ⦠I might have recognized those, because they're as blue as mine in the photos. But his eyes were white, completely white, apart from the pupil.' Her chest heaved as if she were close to having a panic attack. âI've never seen anything as terrifying.'