“Why don’t we find out?” growled Larissa. “Or are you just going to bore everyone to death?”
Valentin stared at her for a long moment, then burst out laughing.
“Oh, my child,” he said. “I’m not here to fight with you. If I wanted you dead, surely you realise that you already would be?”
“Then what do you want?” asked Jamie, stepping forward. “Why are you here? Why did you do this to these people?”
A momentary look of confusion passed across the ancient vampire’s face, before realisation dawned on him.
“You think I attacked this place?” he asked. “My dear Mr Carpenter, you must think so little of me. No, the vampires who did this departed more than twenty minutes since. I can take you to them, if you wish to destroy them?”
“Why would you do that?” asked Jamie. “They’re your own kind. They’re the same as you.”
Valentin’s face clouded with anger. “There is no one the same as me,” he hissed. “No one.” Then his smile returned. “I just thought you might be interested. That is what you do, after all, is it not? Destroy vampires?”
“That’s what we do,” said Kate, firmly.
“Indeed. And I’m sure you all do it wonderfully well. But I’m afraid you are no match, no match whatsoever, for what is coming. Which is why I’m here, enjoying this pleasant conversation with you all.”
“We know what’s coming,” spat Jamie. “We know about Dracula. Why aren’t you at his side where you belong?”
“Because I choose not to be,” replied Valentin, smoothly. “I choose instead to be here with you three fine young people.”
“Why? What do you want from us?”
“I want to help you, obviously.”
“Stop talking in riddles!” shouted Jamie. “Tell me what you want!”
Valentin’s smile disappeared. “Mr Carpenter, I have no intention of spending the foreseeable future fighting a war that will likely result in the deaths of the majority of the people on this planet.
I enjoy my life, and to be entirely honest with you, I enjoy people. They are so admirably determined.”
“And?” asked Jamie. “Where do we come in?”
“I’m offering you a deal,” replied Valentin. “I’m offering to help you defeat Dracula, and my dear brother. Once they are destroyed, you will give me complete immunity from the attentions of your organisation, and all its equivalents, in perpetuity. I want to be free to continue to live my life, for as long as it lasts.”
“Never,” growled Larissa. “We will never give you a licence to murder innocent people.”
Valentin smiled at her. “Believe me, little girl, the tiny number of souls that I require to fulfil my appetites pales into insignificance compared to the thousands and millions who will die if Dracula is allowed to regain his full strength.”
“I don’t care,” said Kate, and the strength in her voice almost broke Jamie’s heart. “That’s not what we do. Ever.”
“Really?” asked Valentin, his voice as slippery as a snake. “I see something in your friend’s eyes that tells me he thinks differently. Don’t you, Mr Carpenter?”
Jamie’s stomach squirmed, as he realised that the ancient vampire was right.
He
was
thinking about it, thinking how if what Valentin was saying was true, then the youngest of the three brothers’ power could help to even the odds. He was thinking about what would happen if he arrived at the Loop with the world’s third oldest vampire beside him, promising to help them defeat his master. But he was mostly thinking about Dracula; he had seen Alexandru Rusmanov up close, felt the elemental power of the ancient monster, like a terrible force of nature, and his stomach was churning at the thought of a vampire who was allegedly so many times worse.
“Jamie?” said Larissa, grabbing his shoulder and spinning him to face her. “Tell me you aren’t considering this? Please?”
Jamie looked over her shoulder, to where Kate was staring at him with an expression of disgust, then back to his girlfriend’s pale, crimson-glowing face.
“What if he’s telling the truth?” he replied. “If we don’t find Dracula and Valeri before Zero Hour, then we’re going to need all the help we can get. He could be useful.”
“You’re right, Mr Carpenter,” said Valentin, from behind him. “I could be.”
“We can’t trust him, Jamie,” said Larissa, her voice full of pleading. “We could never, ever trust him. Not for a second.”
“I know that,” said Jamie. “Of course I know that. But I destroyed his brother, and he’s standing here talking to us. Maybe he means what he says.”
Behind Jamie, Valentin’s eyes flared momentarily red at the mention of the destruction of Alexandru. “Listen to him, girl,” the ancient vampire suggested. “He is your superior, is he not? I trust the youngest Seward made him so for a reason.”
Valentin, who had more than four centuries of experience at reading people and situations, had chosen his words carefully, and they had exactly the effect he had intended. The mention of Jamie’s rank hit Kate and Larissa hard, and their faces betrayed them; Kate’s mouth curled down at the edges, as though she had tasted something extremely sour, and the red light in Larissa’s eyes dimmed as she released her grip on Jamie’s shoulder. Jamie saw it all, and felt his heart harden.
To hell with you then,
he thought.
It’s not my fault. I didn’t ask for any of this.
“I believe him,” he said. Kate and Larissa opened their mouths to protest, but Jamie never gave them the chance.
“Enough!” he yelled, his voice astonishingly loud in the empty room. Surprise burst on both of the girls’ faces, their eyes wide, their mouths perfect circles. Jamie had never spoken to either of them in such a way, and neither of them had been prepared for it. He saw his chance, and pressed his advantage.
“I’m the leader of this squad!” he shouted. “Not either of you! Me! If you have objections, you can make them back at the Loop. If you want to file a complaint against me, I’ll take you to Seward’s office myself. But for right now, just SHUT THE HELL UP AND LET ME DO MY JOB!”
He stared at them, his breath coming in harsh bursts, like a panting dog. Adrenaline was coursing through him, and he was hoping that one or other of them would challenge him.
But neither girl said a thing. Larissa and Kate just stared at him, expressions of painful disappointment on their faces. He returned their stares for a long moment, then turned back to the end of the room.
“Valentin Rusmanov,” he said, and the ancient vampire inclined his head. “I’m placing you under arrest, for transportation to the Department 19 central facility. The decision to accept or refuse your offer is not mine to make, and I give no guarantee as to what that decision will be. Is that clear?”
“Perfectly,” replied Valentin, a beaming smile rising on to his handsome face. “I am confident that I can convince Mr Seward of the merits of a truce between us.”
“Good. I doubt our usual restraining harnesses will have much effect on you, but I’m going to ask you both to wear them anyway, as a show of good faith, if nothing else. Is that going to be a problem?”
“Not at all, Mr Carpenter,” said Valentin. “It will be our pleasure.”
Jamie led his squad and his prisoners back into the corridor, and down the stairs to the second floor. The adrenaline was wearing off, and he was starting to feel sick about the way he had spoken to his friends. But it was too late to do anything about it now; he would just have to hope that the journey back to the Loop would give them enough time to begin to understand why he had done what he had.
“Kate,” he said, as they reached the doorway to the second floor. “Please can you go and collect Ted from his room?” There was a note of pleading in his voice, which he hated, but if Kate heard it, she gave no indication. She didn’t even look at him as she pushed through the door and disappeared down the corridor. She returned less than a minute later, leading Ted by the hand. The old man was looking at her with an expression that was close to love.
He didn’t think she was going to come back for him,
realised Jamie, looking at them.
He told her he believed her because he knew she needed to go. He didn’t think she meant it.
They made their way down the stairs, a ragtag collection of humans and vampires. Larissa, Valentin and Lamberton floated above the linoleum-covered stairs, the two ancient vampires wrapped in the black crosses of their restraining belts. Jamie, who had the cylindrical detonator in his hand, Kate and Ted, who could have flown but didn’t yet know how, took them slowly, one at a time. Valentin and his servant were talking in low voices, as were Kate and Ted. Larissa was staring straight ahead, her eyes fixed anywhere other than on Jamie, who descended alone.
In the cold air of the delivery yard, Ted began to shiver, and Kate wrapped her arms more tightly round him. Valentin watched her, a look of fascination on his face. Jamie led them out through
the gate, to where their van was idling on the tarmac, waiting for their return. As they walked towards it, Jamie heard raised voices at the end of the alley, and turned in their direction.
“Helmets,’” he said, instantly.
The three Operators slid their sleek black helmets back on to their heads and watched as a policeman bustled down the road towards them, the two officers who had spoken to them trailing behind him. He was a large man, and his stomach swung heavily from side to side as he approached in a fast walk that was almost a run. He started to shout when he was still several metres away from Jamie.
“Stop right there!” he demanded. “Stop, I tell you!”
He reached the strange collection of figures that were standing beside the van, and as he caught his breath, he looked at them, his eyes wide.
“I don’t know who the hell you think you are,” he spluttered. “Or who the hell you spooks are working for. But I’ll be damned if you’re going to come into my town and—”
He got no further.
Jamie lunged forward, grabbed the man by the throat and slammed him hard into the wall. The two other policemen recoiled, as Jamie squeezed his fingers deep into the fat of the man’s neck.
“Question me again,” he snarled, “and I will make the rest of your life a misery. Do you understand me?”
The policeman gurgled something incomprehensible; his eyes were full of terror as he stared at the blank purple visor in front of him.
“Do you understand?” Jamie repeated, anger coursing through his veins like liquid fire. “Nod if you understand. Nod right now if you—”
Then suddenly his feet were no longer on the ground, and his grip on the policeman’s neck slipped. He was hauled into the air, where he dangled impotently; he could not see who was holding him, and he bellowed to be let down, to be let down immediately. For a moment, nothing happened, then he was gently lowered back to the tarmac of the alleyway.
He spun round as soon as his feet touched the ground, and was shocked to find himself staring into Larissa’s pale, beautiful face. She had never used her supernatural strength on him, not even on the first day they had met, in the park near the canal in Nottingham, the night his mother had been taken from him. But she had used it now, and she was looking at him with an expression of such concern on her face that he almost had to turn away from it.
“Jamie,” she said, softly. “This isn’t you. Why are you acting like this?”
He stared at her, his face burning with anger and embarrassment, then shoved her aside and strode towards the van. He slid open the doors, climbed up into the vehicle and ordered everyone else to do the same.
Larissa cast an expression of despair at him, but stepped into the air and floated slowly towards the van. Kate led Ted in the same direction, as Lamberton slid smoothly into the air. He was the second one inside the vehicle, landing gracefully in one of the moulded seats and looking expectantly at Jamie.
But Jamie didn’t return his gaze; he was watching Valentin Rusmanov.
The ancient vampire was staring at the brick wall beside the wooden gate they had emerged from, where two familiar green words had been painted. As Jamie watched, Valentin took a deep
breath. Then his eyes flashed red, so quickly that Jamie barely saw them change, and he spat on the graffiti.
Less than a second later he turned to Jamie, his eyes already back to normal.
“Shall we go?” he enquired politely, and floated up into the van.
Valeri Rusmanov stood rooted to the spot and watched with rising panic as his master destroyed his study.
Dracula’s rage – a churning, elemental fury that burned so brightly it had once called something dark and terrible out of a dimension other than our own, that had condemned thousands of men and women to agonising, indecent death – boiled out of his pores like a cloud of hungry fire. He had asked only a single question after Valeri had passed on the news he had received from his informant inside Blacklight, news that he was still struggling to come to terms with himself; the unthinkable revelation that his younger brother Valentin had betrayed them, had voluntarily sided with Department 19 against them.
“Is your man sure?” Dracula had asked.
Valeri, his heart gripped with fear at the likely outcome of his reply, had nonetheless told his master the truth.
“Yes, my lord,” he had replied. “He says his information is one hundred per cent reliable. Valentin has gone to them.”
There had been a moment of silence, in which Valeri had felt the air thicken and begin to shimmer. Then Dracula had leapt up from the sofa on which he had been convalescing for almost three
months, and let loose a bellowing howl of outrage that had blown out every window in the study, sending the glass tinkling on to the lawn outside in a jagged, glittering rain.
He had launched himself across the room, tearing at the walls as he went, gouging long claw-tracks in the old wood, and wrenched the huge oil-painted portrait of the three Rusmanov brothers down from its place on the wall above the fireplace. He had torn it to shreds, his hands little more than a blur, then hurled the pieces through the wall that stood between the study and the chateau’s grounds. The slivers of frame and ancient canvas had been thrown with such force that they had exploded through the wood, leaving a spray of tiny holes that let the cold night air in; it looked as though someone had loaded a shotgun with buckshot and fired it.
Now he was rampaging through Valeri’s bookcases, a dark blur, barely identifiable as human. Books and parchments, documents and maps – all were obliterated by his frenzied, tearing hands and nails, exploding into the air and falling slowly to the floor like drifting snow. As Valeri watched, completely dumbfounded by the news about Valentin, but filling rapidly with concern at the sight of his master exerting himself so terribly, the door to the study flew open and Benoît, the elegant French vampire who had served as Valeri’s valet for more than a decade, thundered into the room.
“My lord!” he shouted, over the noise of the carnage. “What on earth is happening in here? I was worried that you were being attacked.”
Valeri raised his hand towards the butler, and Benoît fell instantly silent. The two vampires stared into the snarling hurricane that was Dracula; as the shelves that had held his now decimated library were smashed to splinters, a fine rain of blood began to fall to the floor beneath Dracula’s blurred feet.
My lord
, thought Valeri.
This fury is unsustainable.
“Master!” he bellowed. The screeching, howling tornado spun to a halt, and Dracula stared at him, his eyes like jet black fire, steaming and burning in their sockets.
“You dare call for me?” he snarled, and took a step towards Valeri. “Like you would a dog? As I call for you? Your manners have deteriorated in my absence, Valeri. Perhaps a lesson is—”
Dracula stopped in the middle of his sentence, a strange look crossing his face. The ancient monster’s chest was hammering up and down, his face covered in sweat, and his arms and shoulders were visibly trembling with fury. Then he staggered backwards, and Valeri had time to notice a drip of blood fall from one of his master’s ears, before a thick gout of dark red blood exploded from Dracula’s nose, and his body began to fall apart.
Blood burst from his hairline, running in rivers down his face, as though a crown of thorns had been forced atop his head. Crimson liquid jetted from beneath his fingernails, and as his eyes lost their fire, they began to bleed too, dark red tears bubbling in the corners and cascading down his cheeks. Valeri watched, horrified, as a patch of skin on his master’s neck dissolved, so quickly and smoothly it was as though it had never been there at all, displaying the tendons, muscles and the pale knot of his spine through the widening hole. Then he moved, praying it was not already too late.
In a single stride he crossed the room and, without wasting even a second to give his faithful servant the apology he deserved, tore Benoît’s head clean from his shoulders with one smooth jerk of his arms. The head came free with an audible pop as the spine separated; the butler’s face was a mask of utter surprise.
Valeri hurled the decapitated head aside, and grabbed the headless
torso of his companion. Blood was gushing from the open neck like water from a fire hose, splashing against the study’s high ceiling; Valeri shoved his hand into the gaping wound, feeling the warm blood soak his entire arm, and hauled together the erupting ends of the carotid artery and the jugular vein, holding them tightly closed in his superhuman grip. He lifted Benoît’s body effortlessly in his other hand, and flew to his reeling master.
Dracula was staring up at Valeri with a look of dying outrage on his face; one of his eyes had fallen in, and his face and neck were a sickening patchwork of missing sections of skin, dissolving muscle and disintegrating bone. Blood was coursing out of the bottom of Dracula’s tunic, and was pooling in huge quantities round his feet. His mouth was trying to work; Valeri could see the muscles moving clearly, but could not make out the words his master was trying to form. He ignored them; whatever Dracula was trying to say was not important now.
Valeri grabbed his master’s jaw, feeling with terrible panic and revulsion the way the flesh gave beneath his fingers, as though it was tissue paper. Dracula’s one remaining eye managed to look affronted at this invasion, but he had not the strength left to attempt to resist. Valeri pulled his master’s mouth open, realising with calm horror that he could see the study wall through the widening holes in the back of Dracula’s head, then shoved Benoît’s neck towards his master’s mouth, and released his grip on the throbbing, pulsing wounds.
Blood sprayed into Dracula’s mouth in a roaring crimson torrent. The effect was instantaneous; Dracula’s missing eye bubbled back into place, and both burst into flaming red. Valeri felt the flesh beneath his fingers begin to solidify, like cooling wax, and then his master’s hand flew up from his side, and pushed him away across
the study. He skidded to a halt and watched as Dracula buried his face in the gushing flow of blood, and drank and drank.
Minutes passed.
Valeri stood silently, waiting to do his master’s bidding, as he had been all his adult life. Dracula sucked and bit and chewed at the stump where Benoît’s head had been; the butler’s neck and hands were quickly turning blue as blood left the cooling body in huge gulps.
Eventually, Dracula stood up, and let the servant’s body fall to the ground.
Valeri’s master’s face was appalling; it was coated thickly in blood, which dripped heavily on to the study floor. Dracula threw back his head and took a deep breath, then released it as a guttural groan of pleasure; he looked more like his old self than at any time since his resurrection. The air around him seemed to vibrate with power, as though he was at the centre of a strong electric field, and his arms and shoulders rippled with new muscle. He slowly lowered his head, and regarded Valeri with a wide smile. Then he seemed to remember the headless body lying at his feet, and gave it a curious look.
The butler’s head was lying where Valeri had thrown it, in the far corner of the study; it had landed upright, and appeared to be watching the events with a look of genuine hurt on its pale face.
Dracula glanced at it, at the body it had been attached to, then raised one of his feet, and stamped it through Benoît’s chest, crunching through the butler’s breastbone and squishing his heart to mush. With a series of low thuds, the body burst; there was so little blood left in it that it did little more than fold in on itself, before disintegrating beneath Dracula’s foot. The red in the ancient
vampire’s eyes flared briefly with pleasure, before he turned his attention to Valeri, who had not moved.
“I cost you your servant,” said Dracula. “I apologise.”
“Do not trouble yourself, master,” replied Valeri, his voice thick with worry. “Servants come and go, as they always have.”
Dracula glanced around the study, and appeared to notice for the first time the damage he had inflicted upon it.
“Did I do this?” he asked, softly. He did not appear to be directing the question to Valeri, who remained silent. “I do not remember.”
The world’s first vampire walked slowly across the study, his head lowered with confusion. He sat down heavily on the edge of the chaise longue, and looked at Valeri.
“This group that your brother has allied himself with,” said Dracula. “They are the descendants of the men who pursued me?”
“Among others, master. They have become significantly more numerous than that, across the years, as I told you.”
Dracula nodded. “You know where they reside?” he asked.
“Yes, master,” replied Valeri. “I have the location of their headquarters.”
“And you have never seen fit to deal with them? You have never simply wiped them from the map?”
Valeri hesitated. “Master, Blacklight is both well-manned and well-armed. They monitor the skies around their base for a hundred miles in every direction, and the ground for ten. A frontal assault has never seemed strategically wise.”
Dracula laughed, a short snort of derision.
“You always were a coward, Valeri,” he said. “You never had any real stomach for battle, unlike your brothers. There was a reason I always placed you in charge of our defences; you never possessed the audacity necessary for a decisive attack.”
“I’m sorry I disappointed you, master,” replied Valeri, his jaw set firm.
The hurt in Valeri’s voice was audible, and Dracula’s face softened as he registered it.
“I’m sorry, my old friend,” he said, his voice low. “You never did, and I would not have you think otherwise. The battles we won, we won together. Always remember that.”
“I do, master,” said Valeri, proudly.
“Do you have the stomach for another?” asked Dracula. “Will you take a company of our kind, go to this Blacklight and do what needs to be done?”
“I will, master.”
“Bring me their commander, alive. I would speak with the man who presumes to hunt us. Leave no one else drawing breath. No one.”
“What of the other descendants of your enemies, my lord?”
“They are nothing to me,” said Dracula. “The men I would take revenge on are all dead. Kill them all, and let us close this unhappy chapter of our history.”
“I understand, master.”
Dracula nodded, then narrowed his eyes.
“I’m ordering you to kill your brother, Valeri,” he said. “Does this not perturb you?”
Valeri smiled at his master, a thin look of pure wickedness.
“Not in the slightest, master.”