15
Thracians - Undead in the Med - Szgany
Later, Mцbius came calling:
Harry? Listen, my boy, I'm sorry I've been so long. But those mental doors
of yours were giving me real problems. However, and as you well know, the more
difficult a problem is, the more surely it fascinates me. So, I've been in
conference with a few friends, and between us we've decided it's a new maths.
What is? Harry was bewildered. And what friends?
The doors in your mind are sealed shut with numbers! Mцbius explained.
But they're written as symbols, like a sort of algebra. And what they
amount to is the most complicated simultaneous equation you could possibly
imagine.
Go on.
Well, I could never hope to solve it on my own - not unless I cared to
spend the next hundred years on it! For you see, it's the sort of problem
which may only be resolved through trial and error. So ever since I left you
I've been looking up certain colleagues and passing it on to them.
Colleagues?
Mцbius sighed. Harry, there were others before me. And some of them
were a very long time before me. But as you of all people know, they haven't
simply gone away. They're still there, doing in death what they did in life.
So I've passed parts of the problem on to them. And let me tell you, that was
no simple matter! Mercifully, however, they had all heard of you, and to my
delight they welcomed me as a colleague, however junior.
You, junior?
In the company of such as Aristotle, Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler, Galilei,
Sir Isaac Newton, Ole Christensen Roemer . . . even I am a junior, yes. And
Einstein a mere sprout!
Harry's thoughts whirled. But weren't they mainly astronomers?
And philosophers, mathematicians and many other things, said Mцbius. The
sciences interlace and interact, Harry. So as you can see, I've been busy. But
through all of this there was one man I would have liked to approach and
didn't dare. And do you know, he came looking for me! It seems he was
affronted that he'd been left out!
So who is he? Harry was fascinated.
Pythagoras!
Harry was stunned. Still here?
And still the Great Mystic, and still insisting that God is the ultimate
equation . . . But here Mцbius grew very quiet. And the trouble is,
I'm not so sure any more that he's wrong.
Still Harry was astonished. Pythagoras, on my case? My mother told me
there were a lot of people willing to help me. But Pythagoras?
Mцbius snapped out of his musing. Hmm? Yes, oh yes!
But . . . does he have the time for it? I mean, aren't there more pressing
- ?
No, Mцbius cut him short, for him this is of the ultimate
importance. Don't you realize who Pythagoras was and what he did? Why, in the
6th Century b.c. he had already anticipated the philosophy of numbers! He was
the principal advocate of the theory that Number is the essence of all things,
the metaphysical principle of rational order in the universe. What's
more, his leading theological doctrine was metempsychosis!
Lost, Harry could only shake his head. And that has something to do with
me?
Again Mцbius's sigh. My boy, you're not listening. No, you are, you
are! It's your damned innumeracy which makes you blind to what I'm saying! It
has everything to do with you. For after two and a half millennia, you
are living proof of everything Pythagoras advocated. You, Harry: the one flesh
and blood man in all the world who ever imposed his metaphysical mind on the
physical universe!
Harry tried to grasp what Mцbius had said but it wouldn't stand still for
him. It was his innumeracy getting in the way. So . . . I'm going to be OK,
right?
We're going to break down those doors, Harry, yes. Given time, of course.
How much time?
But here Mцbius could only shrug. Hours, days, weeks. We have no way of
knowing.
Weeks doesn't cut it, Harry told him. Neither does days. Hours
sounds good to me.
Well, we're trying, Harry. We're trying . . .
In the heights over Halmagiu, close to the ruins of his castle, Janos
Ferenczy, bloodson of Faethor, ranted and raved. He had brought Sandra and Ken
Layard up onto the sloping crest of a wedge of rock that jutted out into
space, a thousand feet above the sliding scree and the steep cliffs of the
mountainside. The night winds themselves were disturbed by Janos's passion;
they blustered around the high rock, threatening to tear the three loose and
hurl them down.
'Be quiet!' he threatened the very elements. 'Be still!' And as the winds
subsided, there where the clouds scudded like things afraid across the face of
the moon, so the enraged vampire turned on his thralls.
'You.' He drew Layard close, gathered up the skin at the back of his neck
like a mother cat holds its kitten, thrust him towards the edge of the sheer
drop. 'I have broken your bones once. And must I do it again? Now tell me:
where is he? Where - is - Harry - Keogh?'
Layard wriggled in his grasp, pointed to the north-west. 'He was there, I
swear it! Less than a hundred miles, less than an hour ago. I sensed him
there. He was . . . strong, even a beacon! But now there is nothing.'
'Nothing?' Janos hissed, turning Layard's face towards his own. 'And am I a
fool? You were a talented man, a locator, but as a vampire your powers are
immeasurably improved. If it can be found, then you can find it. So how can
you tell me you've lost him? How can he be there, and then no longer
there? Does he come on, even through the night? Is he somewhere between? Speak?
And he gave the other a bone-jarring shake.
'He was there!' Layard shrieked. 'I felt him there, alone, in one place,
probably settled in for the night. I know he was there. I found him,
swept over him and back, but I didn't dare linger on him for fear he'd follow
me back to you. Only ask the girl. She'll tell you it's true!'
'You - are - in - leagued Janos hurled him to his knees, then
snatched at Sandra's gauzy shift and tore it from her. She cringed naked under
the moon and tried to cover herself, her eyes yellow in the pale oval of her
skull. But in another moment she drew herself upright. Janos had already done
his worst; against horror that numbs, flesh has no feeling.
'He's speaking the truth,' she said. 'I couldn't enter the Necroscope's
mind in case he entered mine, and through me yours. But when I sensed him
asleep, then I thought I might risk a glimpse. I tried and ... he was no
longer there. Or if he was, then his mind was closed.'
Janos looked at her for long moments, let his scarlet gaze burn on her and
penetrate, until he was sure she'd spoken only the truth. Then -
'And so he is coming,' he growled. 'Well, and that was what I wanted.'
'Wanted?' Sandra smiled at him, perhaps a little too knowingly. 'Past
tense? But no longer, eh, Janos?'
He scowled at her, caught her shoulder, forced her down beside Layard. Then
he turned his face to the northwest and held his arms out to the night. 'I lay
me down a mist in the valleys,' he intoned. 'I invoke the lungs of the earth
to breathe for me, and send up their reek into the air, to make his path
obscure. I call on my familiars to seek him out and make his labours known to
me, and to the very rocks of the mountains that they shall defy him.'
'And these things will stop him?' Sandra tried desperately hard to control
her vampire scorn.
Janos turned his crimson gaze on her and she saw that his nose had
flattened down and become convoluted, like the snout of a bat, and that his
skull and jaws had lengthened wolfishly. 'I don't know,' he finally answered
her, his awful voice vibrating on her nerve-endings. 'But if they don't, then
be sure I know what will!'
With three vampire thralls (caretakers, who looked after his pile for him
in his absence and guarded its secrets) Janos went down into forgotten bowels
of earth and nightmare, to an all but abandoned place. There he used his
necromantic skills to call up a Thracian lady from her ashes. He chained her
naked to a wall and called up her husband, a warrior chief of massive
proportions, who was a giant even now and must have been considered a Goliath
in his day. Both of these Janos had had up before, for various reasons, but
now his purpose was entirely different. He had given up tomb-looting some five
hundred years ago, and his appetite for torture and necrophilia had grown
jaded in that same distant era. While still the Thracian warrior stumbled
about dazed and disorientated, crying out in the reek and the purple smoke of
his reanimation, Janos had him chained and dragged before his lady. At sight
of her he became calm in a moment; tears formed in his eyes and trickled down
the leathery, bearded, pockmarked jowls of his face.
'Bodrogk,' Janos spoke to him in an approximation of his own tongue, 'and
so you recognize this wife of yours, eh? But do you see how I've cared for her
salts? She comes up as perfectly fleshed as in life - not like yourself, all
scarred and burned, and pocked from the loss of your materials. Perhaps I
should be more careful how I gather up your ashes, as I am with hers, when
once more I send you down into your jar. Ah, but as you must know, she has
been of more use to me than you. For where you could only give me gold, she
gave me -'
' - You are a dog!' the other shut him off, his voice cracking like
boulders breaking. Leaning forward in his chains, he strained to reach his
tormentor.
Janos laughed as his thralls fought hard to keep Bodrogk from breaking
loose. But then he stopped laughing and held out a glass jug for the other to
see. And: 'Now be still and listen to me,' he commanded, harsh-voiced. 'As you
see, this favourite wife of yours is near-perfect. How long she remains so is
entirely up to you. She is unchanged from a time two thousand years ago, and
will go on the same for as long as I will it - and not a moment longer.'
While he talked his creatures made fast Bodrogk's chains to staples in the
wall. Now they stood back from him. 'Observe,' said Janos. He took a glass
stem and dipped it in the liquid in the jug, then quickly splashed droplets
across the huge Thracian's chest.
Bodrogk looked down at himself; his mouth fell open and his eyes started
out as smoke curled up from the matted hair of his chest where the acid had
touched him; he cried out and shook himself in his chains, then crumpled to
his knees in the agony of his torture. And the acid ate into him until his
flesh melted and ran in thin rivulets, red and yellow, all down his quivering
thighs.
His wife, the last of the six wives he'd had in life, cried out to Janos
that he spare Bodrogk this torture. And weeping, she too collapsed in her
chains. At last her husband struggled to his feet, the orbits of his eyes red
with agony and hatred where he gazed at Janos. 'I know that she is dead,' he
said, 'even as I am dead, and that you are a ghoul and a necromancer. But it
seems that even in death there is shame, torment and pain. Therefore, to spare
her any more of that, ask what you will of me. If I know the answer I will
tell it to you. If I can perform the deed, it shall be done.'
'Good!' Janos grunted. 'I have six of your men in their burial urns, where
they lie as salts, ashes, dust. Now I shall spill them out of their lekythoi
and have them up. They will be my guard, and you their Captain.'
'More flesh to torture?' Bodrogk's growl was a rumble.
'What?' Janos put on a pained expression. 'But you should be grateful!
These were your warrior comrades in an age when you battled side by side. Aye,
and perhaps you shall again. For when my enemy comes against me, I can't be
sure that he'll come alone. Why, I even have your armour, with which you
decked yourself all those years agone, and which was buried with you. So you
see, you shall be the warrior again. And again I say to you, you should be
grateful. Now I call these others up, and I call upon you, Bodrogk, to control
them. Your wife stays here. Only let one treacherous Thracian hand rise
against me ... and she suffers.'
'Janos,' Bodrogk continued to gaze at him, 'I will do all you ask of me.
But for all that I was a warrior in life, I was a fair man, too. It is that
fairness which prompts me to advise you now: keep well the upper hand. Oh, I
know you are a vampire and strong, but I also know my own strength, which is
great. If you did not have Sofia there, in chains, then for all your acid I
would break you into many pieces. She alone stays my hand.'
Janos laughed like a great baying hound. 'That time shall never come,' he
said. 'But I too shall be fair: when this is done, and done to my liking, then
I shall put you both down, and mingle your dust, and scatter it to the winds
forever.'
"Then that must suffice,' said the other.
'So be it!' said Janos . . .
As the sun painted a crack of gold on the eastern horizon, Harry Keogh
slept on. But in the Aegean Sea off Rhodes Darcy Clarke and his team were
aboard a slightly larger, faster boat than last time, and already passing
Tilos to port where they forged west for Sirna. Watching the sea slip by like
blue silk sliced by the scissors prow, Darcy again went over the plans they'd
made last night and looked for loopholes in their logic.
He remembered how David Chung had sat at a table in their hotel rooms,
while the rest ringed him about and watched his performance. Chung's parents
had been cocaine addicts; the drug had rotted their minds and bodies, killing
both of them while he was still little more than a child. So that ever since
joining the Branch he'd aimed his talent in that one specific direction: the
destruction of everyone who trafficked in human misery. They had given the
locator other tasks from time to time, but everyone in E-Branch knew that this
was his forte.
Last night he'd employed a little of the very substance he loathed,
crouching over the smallest amount of snow white cocaine. Upon the table a
large map of the Dodecanese, and upon the map the merest trickle of poisonous
dust, lying on a flimsy brown cigarette paper to give it definition.
Chung had called for silence, and for several minutes had sat there
breathing deeply, occasionally wetting a finger to take up the white grains
and touch them to his tongue. Then -
- With a single sharp puff of air from his mouth he'd blown the cigarette
paper and its poison away, and in the next moment stabbed the map with his
forefinger. 'There!' he'd said. 'And an awful lot of it!'
Manolis Papastamos and Jazz Simmons had applauded, but Zek, Darcy and Ben
Trask had not seemed much surprised. They were impressed, of course,
but ESP had been their business for many years. It wasn't so strange to them.
Then Manolis had looked more closely at the map, the place where Chung was
pointing, and nodded. 'Lazarides's island,' he said. 'So now we know where the
Lazarus is hiding. And aboard her, all the shit that the Vrykoulakas
stole from the old Samothraki.'
After that, planning had been basic to minimal. Their aim: simply to get to
the island in the hour after dawn, when the white ship's vampire crew should
be less inclined to activity, and to destroy the Lazarus, vampires and
all, right there where she was anchored.
David Chung was out of it now; his part had been played and the remainder
of his time in the sun was his own; he wouldn't see the rest of the team until
the job was finished. And now indeed they were on their way to finish it.
Manolis brought Darcy's mind back to the present: 'Another half-hour and
we're there. Do you want to go over it again?'
Darcy shook his head. 'No, you all know your jobs. As for me: this time I'm
just a passenger - at least until we get onto the island and into Janos's
place.' He looked at his team.
Zek was unzipping herself from her lightweight one-piece suit. Underneath
she wore a yellow bathing costume consisting of very little and leaving
nothing at all to the imagination. She scarcely looked her age but was sleek,
tanned and stunning. With her blue eyes, her blonde hair flashing gold, and a
smile like a white blaze, there wouldn't be a man alive or undead who could
keep his eyes off her!
Her husband looked at her and grinned. 'What's so amusing?' she asked him,
tossing her head.
'I was thinking,' Jazz answered, 'that we'd like to sink these blokes along
with their ship. The idea isn't that they should go diving in the water after
you!'
'This is something I learned from the Lady Karen on Starside,' she told
him. 'If I can distract them, then the rest of you will be able to do your
jobs more safely and easily. Karen was an expert at distraction.'
'Oh, they'll be distracted, all right!' Manolis assured her.
Ben Trask had meanwhile opened up a small compartmented suitcase and taken
out four of six gleaming metal discs some two inches thick by seven across.
The back of each disc was black, magnetic, and the obverse fitted with a
safety switch and timer. Manolis looked at the limpet mines where Trask began
fitting them to a pair of diving belts in place of the usual lead weights, and
shook his head. 'I still don't know how you got them out of England,' he said.
Trask shrugged. 'In a diplomatic bag. We may be silent partners, but we're
still part of British Intelligence after all.'
There's a rock up ahead,' Zek shouted from where she now sat on a rubber
mat on the narrow deck on top of the cabin and in front of the windshield. She
pointed. 'Manolis, is that it?'
He nodded. 'That's it. Darcy, can you take the wheel?'
Darcy took control of the boat and throttled back a little. Manolis and
Jazz stripped down to swimsuits, and went into the tiny cabin out of sight. In
there, they tested aqualungs and checked their swimfins. Ben Trask took off
his jacket and put on sunglasses and a straw hat. In his Hawaiian shirt he was
just some rich tourist fool out for a day's pleasure-boating. Darcy might
easily be his brother.
The island had swum up larger and Zek was seen to be right: it was little
more than a big rock. There were a few shrubs, patches of thyme and coarse
grass, and lots of rocks . . . and situated centrally, above coastal cliffs, a
weathered yellow stack going up sheer for maybe one hundred and eighty feet.
Zek looked at it and put her hand to her brow. 'That's a pigmy of an
aerie,' she said, 'but it gives me the shudders just the same. And there are
men - no, vampires - on it. Two of them at least.'
The boat rounded the point of a promontory and Darcy saw what lay ahead.
But even if he hadn't seen it, his talent had already forewarned him. 'Stay
down,' he called out to Manolis and Jazz in the cabin. 'Draw those curtains.
You two aren't here. There are just the three of us.'
They did as he told them.
Zek stretched herself out luxuriously on the cabin's roof and put on
sunglasses; Trask lay back and hooked one leg idly over the boat's rail; Darcy
headed the boat directly across the mouth of a small bay. And there, anchored
in the bay ... the white ship, the Lazarus.
Trask knocked the cap off a bottle of beer and tilted his head back, merely
wetting his lips but studying what he could see of the island intently. That
was part of his job, while Darcy and Zek, in their various ways, studied the Lazarus.
The island consisted of a tiny beach inside a pair of bare spurs of rock
extending oceanward, and an almost barren slope of rock climbing to the
central stack. From this side, the top of the stack was seen to be a ruined
fortification or pharos of some sort, with the remains of badly eroded steps
still showing where they zig-zagged up to it. But half-way up the stack, a
false, flat, extensive plateau seemed carved, as if in ages past the upper
section had split down the centre and half had toppled over. With massive
walls built around the plateau's perimeter from one side of the needle rock to
the other, the place had obviously been a Crusader stronghold. The old walls
had long since fallen away in places, but it was seen that new walls were now
under construction, and scaffolding was plainly visible clinging to both the
stump and the surviving upper section of the stack.
Darcy meanwhile considered the Lazarus. The white ship stood off
from the beach in deep water central in the small bay. Her anchor-chain went
down shimmering into the blue of the sea. On the deck under the black,
scalloped awning, a man sat in one of several chairs. But as the motorboat
came powering into view he stood up and took binoculars from around his neck.
He wore a wide-brimmed floppy hat and sunglasses, and he kept fairly well to
the shade as he put the binoculars to his eyes and trained them on the
motorboat.
Zek propped herself up on one elbow and waved excitedly, but the watcher on
the deck ignored her - at first.
Darcy throttled back and turned the boat in a wide circle about the white
ship, and joined Zek in her waving. 'Ahoy, there!' he put on an upper-class
English accent. 'Ahoy aboard the Lazarus!'
The man went to the door of the lounge and leaned half-inside, then came
back out. He now aimed his binoculars at Zek where she continued to wave; this
was scarcely necessary for the circling boat was no more than forty or fifty
feet away. She felt his gaze on her and shivered, despite the blazing heat of
the sun. A second man, who might have been the twin of the first, joined him
and they silently observed the circling boat - but mainly they observed Zek.
Darcy throttled back more yet, and a third man came out of the white ship's
lounge. Ben Trask stood up and held up his bottle to them. 'Care for a drink?'
he shouted, imitating Darcy's faked accent. 'Maybe we can come aboard?'
Like fuck! thought Darcy.
Zek scanned the ship, not only above but also below decks. She counted six
all told. Three sleeping. All of them vampires. Then . . .
. . . One of the sleepers stirred, woke up. His mind was alert; it was more
completely vampire than the others; before Zek could cover her telepathic
spying, he had 'seen' her!
She stopped waving and told Darcy: 'Let's go. One of them read me. He
didn't see anything much, only that I'm more than I appear to be. But if they
run off now we'll lose them.'
'We'll see you later,' Ben Trask called out as Darcy turned the boat away
and sped for the tip of the far promontory.
Passing from the view of the watchers on the Lazarus, he throttled
right down and allowed the boat to cruise close up to a flat-topped,
weed-grown rock barely sticking up out of the sea. Jazz and Manolis came out
of the cabin, put on their masks and adjusted their demand valves, and as
Darcy cut the engine they stepped from the boat to the rock and so into the
sea.
'Jazz,' Zek called down, 'be careful!'
He might have heard her and he might not; his head went down and a stream
of bubbles came up; the swimmers submerged to fifteen feet and headed back
towards the Lazarus.
'More distraction,' said Darcy, grimly, as he throttled up and turned back
out to sea.
'Darcy,' Zek called to him, 'keep just a little more distant this time.
They'll be wary, I'm sure.'
As Darcy headed straight out to sea and the Lazarus came back into
view, so Ben Trask got down on his knees and took a sterling sub-machine gun
out of its bag under the seat. He extended the butt and slapped a curved
magazine of 9 mm rounds into the housing, then lay the gun between his feet
and covered it with the bag.
Half a mile out, Darcy turned to port and came speeding back towards the
white ship. There was activity aboard now, where the three on the deck hurried
round the rail, pausing every few paces to look over into the water. Jazz and
Manolis would be there any time now. Darcy piled on the speed and Zek
commenced waving as before. The men on the deck came together at one point at
the rail and again Zek felt binoculars trained on her almost naked body. But
this time the interest was other than sexual.
Then, as Darcy leaned the boat over on her side and recommenced his
circling, they heard the rattle of the Lazarus's anchor-chain as it was
drawn up, and the throbbing cough of her engines starting into life. And now a
fourth man came ducking out of the lounge onto the deck . . . cradling a
stubby, squat-bodied machine-gun in his arms!
'Jesus!' Ben Trask yelled. And it might have been that his shout of
warning was a signal to let the battle commence.
The man with the machine-gun opened up, standing there on the deck of the Lazarus
with his legs braced, hosing the smaller craft with lead. Zek had
scrambled down off the cabin roof; as she ducked into the tiny cabin the
windshield flew into shards and Darcy felt the whip of hot lead flying
all around. Then Trask stood up and returned fire, and the gunner on the Lazarus
was thrown back as if he'd been hit by a pile-driver. He bounced off a
stanchion on the deck, came toppling over the rail and splashed down into the
water. And another crewman ran to retrieve his gun.
Darcy was round the white ship now and putting distance between them as he
forged for the open sea; but as Zek came back out of the cabin, she grabbed
the wheel and yanked it hard over, shouting: 'Look! Oh, look!'
Darcy let her have the wheel and looked. The man with the gun on the deck
of the Lazarus was firing down into the water, shooting at something
which drew slowly away from the white ship's flank. It could only be Jazz or
Manolis, or both of them.
'You handle her!' Darcy yelled, and he moved to where Trask was still
firing and drew out a second bag from under the seating. But as he loaded up
the second SMG there came more of the angry wasp-buzzing of sprayed bullets,
and Trask cried out and staggered back, only just managing to prevent himself
going over the side. The upper muscle of Trask's left arm had a neat hole
punched clean through, which turned scarlet and spilled over with blood in the
next moment. Then Darcy was up on his feet, returning fire.
But the Lazarus was moving; she reversed out of the bay and began to
turn slowly on her own axis, and the water boiled furiously where her
propellers churned. They couldn't stop her now and so let her go, and Zek went
to Trask to see if there was anything she could do. He grimaced but told her:
'I'll be OK. Just wrap it up, that's all.'
Heads broke the surface of the water as Zek tore Trask's shirt from his
back to make a bandage and sling. Darcy throttled right back and drew
alongside Jazz where he slipped out of his lung's harness and trod water, then
helped him clamber aboard, and Manolis came knifing in in an expert flurry of
flippers. In another moment he, too, had been dragged up into the boat - at
which point the motor gave a gurgling cough and stopped dead.
'Flooded!' Darcy cried.
But Ben Trask was pointing out to sea and yelling, 'Jesus, Je-sus!'
The Lazarus had turned round and was coming back. The throb of her
engines was louder, faster as she bore down on the smaller vessel, and her
intention was obvious. Manolis, working furiously to get the motor restarted,
glanced at the waterproof watch on his wrist. 'She should have gone up by
now!' he yelled. 'The limpets, they should have -'
And when the Lazarus was something less than fifty yards away, then
the mines did go off. Not in one unified explosion, but in four.
The first two exploded near the stern of the white ship, with only a second
or so between them, which had the effect of first throwing the stern one way
and then the other, and also of lifting it up out of the water. Slewing and
wallowing as the engines seized up, the Lazarus was still advancing
under something of her former impetus; but then the third and fourth limpets
went off where they'd been placed towards the stem, and that changed the whole
picture. With the stern already low in the water from massive flooding, now
the prow was pushed up on the crest of white-foaming waters, and as her nose
slapped back to the tossing ocean so the engines exploded. The back of the
boat was at once split open in gouting fire and ruin, and hot, buckled metal
was hurled aloft in a fireball of igniting fuel.
As the glare of the fireball diminished and a huge smoke ring climbed
skyward on the last hot gasp of the ship, so she gave up the ghost, settled
down in the water and sank. Scraps of burning awning fluttered back to the
tossing ocean and the drifting smoke cleared; the sea belched hugely and
offered up clouds of steam; the gurgling and boiling of the waters continued
for a few seconds longer, before falling silent . . .
'Gone!' said Darcy, when he could draw breath.
'Right,' Jazz Simmons nodded. 'But let's make sure she's all gone.
And her crew with her.'
Manolis got the motor going and they chugged over to where the Lazarus had
gone down. An oil slick lay on the water, where bubbles surfaced and made
spreading rainbow colours. Then, even as they watched, a head and shoulders
came bobbing up, lolled over backwards, and the lower part of the blackened
body slowly rotated into view. He lay there in the water as if crucified, with
his arms spreadeagled and great yellow blisters bursting on his neck,
shoulders and thighs. But as they continued to stare aghast, so his eyes
opened and glared at them, and he coughed up phlegm, blood and salt water.
Manolis didn't think twice but shut off the motor, picked up a speargun and
put a harpoon straight into the gagging vampire's chest. The creature jerked
once or twice, then lay still in the water. But still they couldn't be sure.
Zek looked away as they reeled him in to the side of the boat, tied lead
weights to his ankles and let him sink slowly out of sight.
'Deep water,' Manolis commented, without emotion.
'Even a vampire is only flesh and blood. If he can't breathe he can't live.
Anyway, the floor of the sea is rocky here: there will be many big groupers
down there. Even if life were possible, he can't heal himself faster than they
can eat him!'
Ben Trask was white and shaky but well in control of himself. His shoulder
was all strapped up now. 'What about the one I knocked overboard?' he said.
Manolis took the boat to the middle of the bay where the Lazarus had
been moored, and Darcy gave a shout and pointed at something that splashed
feebly in the water. Even shot, the vampire had made it half-way to land. They
closed with him, speared him and dragged him back out to sea, where they dealt
with him as with the first one.
'And that's the end of them,' Ben Trask grunted.
'Not quite,' Zek reminded him, pointing at the looming stack of white and
yellow stone inland. There are two more of them up there.' She put her hand to
her brow and closed her eyes, and frowned. 'Also . . . there may be something
else. But I'm not sure what.'
Manolis beached the boat and took up his speargun. He was happy with that
and with his Beretta. Darcy had his SMG, which he considered enough to handle,
and Zek took a second speargun. Jazz was satisfied with Harry Keogh's
crossbow, with which he'd familiarized himself during the voyage. They might
have taken the other SMG, too, but Ben Trask was now out of it and they must
leave the gun with him - just in case. His task: stay behind and look after
the boat.
They waded ashore and started up the rocks. The trail was easy to follow
where the thin soil had been compacted between boulders, and where steps had
been cut in the steeper places. Half-way to the stack they paused to take a
breather and look back. Ben was watching them through binoculars, and also
watching the stack. So far there had been no sign of life in the place, but as
they approached its base Jazz spied movement up in the ancient embrasures.
He immediately dragged Zek into cover and motioned Darcy and Manolis down
among jumbled rocks. 'If those creatures up there had rifles,' he explained,
'they could pick us off like flies.'
'But they haven't, or they would have already,' Manolis pointed out. 'They
could have got us as we beached the boat, or even as we engaged the Lazarus.'
'But they have been watching us,' said Zek. 'I could feel them.'
'And they are waiting for us up there,' Jazz squinted at the rearing,
dazzling white walls.
'We're skating on very thin ice,' Darcy told the others. 'I can feel my
talent telling me that this far is far enough.'
A shout echoed up to them from the beach. Looking back, they saw Ben Trask
struggling up the incline after them. 'Hold it!' he yelled. 'Wait!'
He approached to within thirty or forty yards, then fell back against a
boulder in the shade and rested a while. And when he had recovered: 'I've been
looking at the fortifications through my glasses,' he yelled. 'There's
something very wrong. The climb looks easy enough - up those ancient stone
steps there - but it's not. It's a lie, a trap!'
Jazz went back and met Ben half-way, and took the binoculars from him. 'How
do you mean, a trap?'
'It's like when I listen to a police interview with a suspect perp,' Ben
answered. 'I can tell right off if he's lying even if I don't know what the
lie is. So don't ask me what's wrong up there, just take my word for it that
it is!'
'OK,' said Jazz. 'Go on back down to the boat. From here on in we step
wary.'
When Ben had started back, Jazz looked through the binoculars at the
zig-zagging, precipitous stone stairway from the base of the stack to the
ancient walls. Close to the top, a jumble of boulders and shards of stone
bulged from the gaping mouth of a cave, held back from the steps and the
vertiginous edge by a barrier of heavy-duty wire mesh strung between deeply
bedded iron staves. Cables, almost invisible, hung down from the ramparts and
disappeared into the gloom of the cave. Jazz looked at these cables for long
moments. Demolition wire? It could be.
He rejoined the others where they waited. 'I think we're walking right into
one,' he said. 'Or we will be if we start up those steps.' He explained his
meaning.
Darcy took the binoculars from him, stuck his head out from under cover and
double-checked the face of the looming rock. 'You could be right . . . must
be right! If Ben says it's all wrong, it's all wrong.'
'No way we can cut those cables,' Jazz said. "Those things up there
have the advantage. They could spot a mouse trying to make it up those steps.'
'Listen,' said Manolis, who had also been studying the route up the rock.
'Why don't we play them at their own game? Let them think we're falling for
it, and make them waste their ambush.'
'How?' said Darcy.
'We start on up,' said Manolis, 'but we are stringing it out a little, and
one of us is staying well ahead of the rest. The path turns a corner just
underneath the cave with the boulders. And just before the corner, there is
this big hole - er, this concavity? - in the face of the cliff. So, one of us
has already turned the corner, and the others look all set to follow him. The
creatures up in the fort are in a quandary: do they press the button and
get the one man for sure, or do they wait for the others to come round the
corner? At this point the one in front, he goes faster, past the point of
maximum danger, and the others pretend they are coming on! But they
only just show themselves and don't actually start on up that leg of the
climb. The vampires can't wait; they have missed one of us and so must try for
the other three; they press the button. Boom!'
Jazz took it up: 'The three at the rear have now showed themselves around
the corner, but unbeknown to the guys on top they're expecting what happens
next. As the charge blows those rocks out of the cave higher up, so the three
skip back round the corner and into the scoop in the face of the cliff.'
'Is how I see it,' said Manolis, nodding, 'yes.'
'Or,' said Darcy, his face suddenly pale, 'we leave it till tonight, and -'
'Is your guardian angel speaking?' Manolis looked disgusted. 'I have seen
that look on your face before!'
Darcy knew he was right and cursed under his breath. 'So, who do you
suggest bells the cat?' he said.
'Eh?'
'Who goes first and risks getting blown the hell off the cliff?'
Manolis shrugged. 'But. . . who else? You, of course!'
Jazz looked at Darcy and said: "This talent of yours, it really
works?'
'I'm a deflector, yes,' Darcy nodded, and sighed.
'So what's the problem?'
The problem is my talent doesn't work in fits and starts,' Darcy answered.
'It's working all the time. It makes a coward of me. Even knowing I'm
protected, I'll still use a taper to light a firework! You are saying: off you
go, Darcy, get on up those steps.-But it is saying, run like hell, son
- run like bloody hell!'
'So what you have to ask yourself,' said Jazz, 'is who's the boss, it or
you?'
Darcy offered a grim nod for answer, slapped a full magazine into the
housing of his SMG and stepped out into view of who or whatever was watching
from above. He made for the base of the stone steps and started up. The others
looked at each other for a moment, then Manolis started after him. Jazz let
him get out of earshot and said: 'Zek, you stay here.'
'What?' she looked at him. 'After Starside you're telling me that I should
let you do something like this on your own?'
'I'm not on my own. And what good will you be anyway with only a speargun?
We need you down here, Zek. If one of those things gets past us, you're going
to have to stop him.'
"That's just an excuse,' she said. 'You said it yourself: what good am
I with only a speargun?'
'Zek, I -'
'All right!' she said. And: 'They're waiting for you.'
He kissed her and started after the other two. She let him get onto the
steps and start upwards, then scrambled after. They could fight later . . .
Just before the crucial corner, where the narrow stone steps angled left
and climbed unevenly up the section of cliff face directly beneath the
threatening cave with its potential barrage of boulders, Darcy paused to let
the others catch up a little. His breathing was ragged and his legs felt like
jelly: not because of the stiff climb but because he was fighting his talent
every inch of the way.
He looked back and, as Manolis and Jazz came into view, waved. And then he
turned the corner and pushed on. But he remembered how, as he'd passed the
sheltering hollow where the rest of the team would take cover, he'd been very
tempted. Except he had known that once he stepped in there, it would take at
least a stick of dynamite to get him out again!
He craned his neck and glanced straight up, and winced. He could see the
wire-netting holding back the bulging tangle of rocks not ten feet overhead.
It was time to make his break for it. He put on speed and climbed out of the
immediate danger area, then glanced back and saw Jazz and Manolis coming round
the corner. At which precise moment a pebble slipped underfoot and sent him
sprawling.
Feeling his feet shoot out over the rim, Darcy grabbed at projecting rocks
and in the same moment knew that it was going to happen. 'Shit!' he
yelled, clinging to the cliff face and the steps, as a deafening explosion
sounded close by and its shock wave threatened to hurl him into space. Then-
- Fragments of rock were flying everywhere; it was like the entire stack
was coming down; deaf and suffocating in choking dust and debris, Darcy could
only cling and wait for the ringing to go out of his ears. A minute went by or
maybe two, and the rumbling died away. Darcy looked back . . . and Jazz and
Manolis were clambering dangerously up towards him across steps choked with
rubble.
But up ahead someone - two someones - were clambering dangerously down!
As Darcy began pushing himself to his feet, he saw them: flame-eyed,
snarling, coming to meet the stack's invaders head on. One of them carried a
pistol, the other had a nine-foot octopus pole with a barbed trident head. The
tines must be all of eight inches long.
Darcy's SMG was trapped under rubble and stony debris. He yanked on the
sling but it wouldn't come. The vampire with the pistol had paused and was
taking aim. Something thrummed overhead and the creature aiming at
Darcy dropped its pistol and staggered against the cliff face, its hands
flying to the hardwood bolt skewering its chest. It gagged, gave a weird,
hissing cry, fell to its knees and toppled into thin air.
The other one came on, cursing and stabbing at Darcy with its terrible
weapon. He somehow managed to turn the wicked trident head aside as Manolis
arrived behind him. Then the Greek policeman yelled, 'Get down!' and Darcy
threw himself flat again. He heard the crack! -crack! - crack! of
Manolis's Beretta, and the hissing of the vampire turn to shrieks of rage and
agony. Shot three times at close range, the thing staggered there on the
steps. Darcy yanked the octopus pole out of its hands, slammed the butt end
into its chest. And over it went, mewling and yelping as it pinwheeled all the
way down to the base of the stack.
Jazz Simmons came up to the other two. 'Up or down?' he panted.
'Down,' said Darcy at once. 'And don't worry, it isn't my talent playing
up. It's just that I know how hard those things are to kill!' He looked beyond
his two friends. 'Where's Zek?'
'Down below,' said Jazz.
'All the more reason to get back down,' said Darcy. 'After we've burned
those two, then we'll see what else is up here.'
But Zek wasn't down below, she was just that moment coming round the
corner. And when she saw that they were all in one piece . . . her sigh of
relief said more than any number of spoken words.
They brought petrol from the boat and burned the two badly broken vampires,
then rested a while before going up into the old fortifications. Up there
Janos had been preparing a spacious, spartan retreat; not quite an aerie of
the Wamphyri as Zek remembered such, but a place almost equally sinister and
foreboding.
Letting her telepathic talent guide her through piles of tumbled masonry
and openings in half-constructed walls, and past deep embrasure windows
opening on fantastic views of the ocean's curved horizon, she led the others
to a trapdoor concealed under tarpaulins and timbers. They opened it up and
saw ages-hollowed stone steps leading down into a Crusader dungeon. Rigging
torches, the men followed the stairwell down into the reeking heart of the
stack, and Zek followed the men. Down there they foupd the low-walled rims of
a pair of covered wells which plunged even deeper into darkness, but that was
when Zek gasped and lay back against nitrous walls, shivering.
'What is it?' Jazz's voice echoed in the leaping torchlight.
'In the wells,' she gasped, one hand held tremblingly to her throat. 'There
were places like this in the aeries on Starside. Places where the Wamphyri
kept their . . . beasts!'
The wells were covered with lids fashioned from planking; Manolis put his
ear to one of the covers and listened, but could hear nothing. 'Something in
the wells?' he said, frowning.
Zek nodded. "They're silent now, afraid, waiting. Their thoughts are
dull, vacuous. They could be siphoneers, or gas-beasts, or anything. And they
don't know who we are. But they fear we might be Janos! These are ... things
of Janos, grown out of him.'
Darcy gave a shudder and said: 'Like the creature Yulian Bodescu kept in
his cellar. But ... it has to be safe to look, at least. Because if it wasn't
I'd know.'
Manolis and Jazz lifted the cover from one of the wells and stood it on its
edge by the low wall. They looked down into Stygian darkness but could see
nothing. Jazz looked at the others, shrugged, held out his torch over the
mouth of the well and let it fall.
And it was like all hell had been let loose!
Such a howling and roaring, a mewling and spitting and frenzied clamour.
For a moment - only a moment - the flaring torch as it fell lit up the
monstrosity at the bottom of the dry well. They saw eyes, a great many, gaping
jaws and teeth, a huge lashing of rubbery limbs. Something terrible beyond
words crashed about down there, leaped and gibbered. In the next moment the
torch went out, which was as well for they'd seen enough. And as the hideous
tumult continued, Jazz and Manolis replaced the cover over the awful shaft.
On their way back up the steps, Manolis said: 'We shall need all the fuel
we can spare.'
'And plenty of this building timber,' Jazz added.
'And after that those other limpet mines,' said Darcy, 'so we can be sure
we've blocked those wells up forever. It's time things were put back to rights
here.'
As they reached the open air, Zek clutched Jazz's arm and said, 'But if
this is a measure of what Janos can do here, even in the limited time he's
had, just think what he might have done up in those Transylvanian mountains.'
Darcy looked at his friends and his face was still gaunt and ashen. His
throat was dry as he voiced his own thoughts: 'God, I wouldn't be in Harry
Keogh's shoes for . . . for anything!'
Harry woke up to the sure knowledge that something had happened, something
far away and terrible. Inhuman screams rang in his ears, and a roaring fire
blazed before his eyes. But then, starting upright in his bed, he realized
that the screams were only the morning cries of cockerels, and that the fire
was the blaze of the sun striking through his east-facing windows.
Now that he was awake there were other sounds and sensations: breakfast
sounds from downstairs, and food smells rising from the kitchen.
He got up, washed, shaved and quickly dressed. But as he was about to go
downstairs he heard a strangely familiar jingling, a creaking, and the easy
clatter of hooves from out in the road. He went to look down, and was
surprised to feel the heat of the sun on his arms where he leaned out of the
window. He frowned. The hot yellow sunlight irritated him, made him itchy.
Down there in the road, horse-drawn caravans rolled single file, four or
five of them all in a line. Gypsies, Travellers, they were heading for the
distant mountains; and Harry felt a sudden kinship, for that was his
destination, too. Would they cross the border, he wondered? Would they even be
allowed to? Strange if they were, for Ceausescu didn't have a lot of time for
Gypsies.
Harry watched them pass by, and saw that the last in line was decked in
wreaths and oddly-shaped funeral garlands woven from vines and garlic flowers.
The caravan's tiny windows were tightly curtained; women walked beside it, all
in black, heads bowed, silently grieving. The caravan was a hearse, and its
occupant only recently dead.
Harry felt sympathy, reached out with his deadspeak. 'Are you OK?'
The unknown other's thoughts were calm, uncluttered, but still he started a
little at Harry's intrusion. And: Don't you think that's rude of you? he
said. Breaking in on me like that?
Harry was at once apologetic. 'I'm sorry,' he answered, 'but I was
concerned for you. It's obviously recent and . . . not all of the dead are so
stoical about it.'
About death? Ah, but I've been expecting it for a long time. You must be
the Necroscope?
'You've heard about me? In that case you'll know I didn't mean to be rude.
But I hadn't realized that my name had reached the travelling folk. I've
always thought of you as a race apart. I mean, you have your ways, which don't
always fit in too well with . . .no, that's not what I meant, either! Perhaps
you're right and I am rude.'
The other chuckled. I know what you mean well enough. But the dead are
the dead, Harry, and now that they've learned how to talk to each other, they
talk! Mainly they reminisce, with no real contact with the living - except for
you, of course. Which makes you yourself a talking point. Oh, yes, I've heard
about you.
'You're a learned man,' said Harry, 'and very wise, I can tell. So you
won't find death so hard. How you were in life, that's how you'll be in death.
All the things you wondered about when you were living, but which you could
never quite resolve, you'll work them all out now that you're dead.'
You're trying to make me feel better about it, and I appreciate that, the
other answered, but there's really no need. I was getting old and my bones
were weary; I was ready for it, I suppose. By now I'll be on my way to my
place under the mountains, where my Traveller forebears will welcome me. They,
too, were Gypsy kings in their time, as am I... or as I was. I look forward to
hearing the history of our race at first hand. I suppose I have you to thank
for that, for without you they'd all be lying there like ancient, desiccated
seeds in a desert, full of potential, shape and colour but unable to give them
form. To the dead, you have been rain in the desert.
Harry leaned far out of his window to watch the caravan hearse out of sight
around a bend in the dusty road. 'It was nice meeting you,' he said. 'And if
I'd known you were a king, be sure my approach would have been more
respectful.'
Harry - the other's deadspeak thoughts drifted back to the Necroscope,
and he sensed that they were a little troubled now, - you seem to me to be
a very rare person: good, compassionate and wise in your own right, for all
that you are young. And you say that you have recognized an older wisdom in
me. Very well, so now I would ask you to accept some sensible advice from a
wise old Traveller king. Go anywhere else but where you are going. Do anything
else but that which you have set out to do!
Harry was puzzled, and not a little worried. Gypsies have strange talents,
and the dead - even the recently dead - are not without theirs. How then a
dead Gypsy king? 'Are you telling my fortune? It's a long time since I crossed
a Traveller's palm with silver.'
The other vseized upon that: With silver, aye! My palms shall never know
its feel again — but be sure my eyes are weighted with it! No, cross yourself
with silver, Harry, cross yourself!
Now Harry wasn't merely puzzled but suspicious, too. What did this dead old
man know? What could he possibly know, and what was he trying to say? Harry's
thoughts weren't shielded; the Gypsy king picked them up and answered:
I have said too much already. Some would consider me a traitor. Well,
let them think it. For you are right: I'm old and I'm dead, and so can afford
one last indulgence. But you have been kind, and death has put me beyond
forfeiture.
'Your warning is an ominous thing,' said Harry. But there was no answer.
Only a small cloud of dust, settling, showed where the caravans had passed
from sight.
'My route is set!' Harry called after. 'That is the way I must go!'
A sigh drifted back. Only a sigh.
'Thanks anyway,' Harry answered sigh for sigh, and felt his shoulders sag a
little. 'And goodbye.'
And he sensed the slow, sad shake of the other's head ...
At 11:00 a.m. Harry booked out of the Hotel Sarkad in Mezobereny and waited
by the side of the road for his taxi. He carried only his holdall, which in
fact held very little: his sleeping-bag, a small-scale map of the district in
a side-pocket, and a packet of sandwiches made up for him by the hotel
proprietor's daughter.
The sun was very hot and seemed intensified by the old boneshaker's dusty
windows; it burned Harry's wrists where it fell on them, causing a sensation
which he could only liken to prickly heat. At his first opportunity, in a
village named Bekes, he called a brief halt to purchase a straw summer hat
with a wide brim.
From Mezobereny to his drop-off point close to the Romanian border was
about twenty kilometres. Before letting his driver go he checked with him that
in fact his map was accurate, and that the border crossing point lay only two
or three kilometres ahead at a place called Gyula.
'Gyula, yes,' said the taxi driver, pointing vaguely down the road. And
again: 'Gyula. You will see them both, from the hill - the border, and Gyula.'
Harry watched him turn his cab around and drive off, then hoisted his holdall
to one shoulder and set off on foot. He could have taken the taxi closer to
the border, but hadn't wanted to be seen arriving in that fashion. A man on
foot is less noticeable on a country road.
And 'country' was what it was. Forests, green fields, crops, hedgerows,
grazing animals: it seemed good land. But up ahead, across the border: there
lay Transylvania's central massif. Not so darkly foreboding as the
Meridional!, perhaps, but mountains awesome and threatening enough in their
own right. Where the road crossed the crest of low, undulating hills, Harry
could see the grey-blue peaks and domes maybe twenty-five miles away. They
clung to the horizon, a sprawl of hazy crags obscured by distance and
low-lying cloud. His destination.
And from that same vantage point he could also see the border post, its
red- and white-striped barrier reaching out across the road from a timber,
almost Austrian-styled chalet. Borders hadn't much bothered Harry, not when he
had the use of the Mцbius Continuum, but now they bothered him considerably.
He knew that there was no way he was going to get past this one, not on the
road, at least. But his uncomplicated plan had taken that into account. Now
that he knew exactly where he was on the map (and the precise lie of the
border), he would simply continue to act the tourist, spending the day quietly
in some small village or hamlet. There he'd study his map until he knew the
area intimately, and choose himself a safe route across into Romania. He knew
the Securitatea were keen to keep Romanians in, but couldn't see that there'd
be much to-do made about keeping foreigners out! After all, who but a madman
would want to break in? Harry Keogh, that was who.
At the bottom of the hill was a T-junction where a third-class road (or
half-metalled track, at least) cut north through dense woodland. And less than
a mile through the woods . . . that must be Gyula. Harry could see hazy blue
smoke rising from the chimneys in the near-distance, and the gleaming, bulbous
domes of what were possibly churches. It looked a quiet enough place and
should suit his purpose ideally.
But as he reached the bottom of the slope and turned left into the woods,
he heard again that half-familiar jingle and saw in the shade of the trees
those same Gypsy caravans which had passed under his window earlier in the
day. They had not been here long and the Travellers were still setting up
camp. One of the men, wearing black boots, leather trousers and a russet
shirt, with a black-spotted bandana on his brow to trap and control his long,
shiny black locks, was perched on a leaning fence chewing a blade of grass.
Smiling and nodding as Harry drew level, he said:
'Ho, stranger! You walk alone. Why not sit a while and take a drink, to cut
the dust from your throat?' He held up a long, slim bottle of slivovitz. 'The slivas
were sharp the year they brewed this one!'
Harry began to shake his head, then thought: why not? He could just
as easily study his map sat under a tree as anywhere else. And draw less
attention to himself, at that. 'That's very kind of you,' he answered,
following up immediately with: 'Why, you speak my language!'
The other grinned. 'Many languages. A little of most of them. We're
Travellers, what would you expect?'
Harry walked into the camp with him. 'How did you know I was English?'
'Because you weren't Hungarian! And because the Germans don't much come
here anymore. Also, if you were French there would be two or three of you, in
shorts, on bicycles. Anyway, I didn't know. And if you hadn't answered me,
why, I still wouldn't, not for sure! But . . . you look English.'
Harry looked at the caravans with their ornate, curiously carved sigils,
their painted and varnished woodwork. The various symbols were so stylized
they seemed to flow into and become one with the fancy scrolls of the general
decoration, almost as if they'd been deliberately concealed in the design. And
looking closer - but yet maintaining an attitude of casual observation - he
saw that he was right and they had been so concealed.
His interest in this regard centred on the funeral vehicle, which stood a
little apart from the rest. Two women in mourning black sat side by side on
its steps, their heads on their bosoms, arms hanging slackly by their sides.
'A dead king,' said Harry . . . and out of the corner of his eye watched his
new friend give a start. Things began to piece themselves together in his
mind, like bits of a puzzle forming up into a picture.
'How did you know?'
Harry shrugged. 'Under all the flowers and garlic, that's a good rich
caravan and fit for a Traveller king. It carries his coffin, right?'
Two of them,' said the other, regarding Harry in a new, perhaps slightly
more cautious light.
'Oh?'
'The other one is for his wife. She's the thin one on the steps there. Her
heart is broken. She doesn't think she'll survive him very long.'
They sat down on the humped roots of a vast tree, where Harry got out his
sandwiches. He wasn't hungry but wanted to offer them to his Gypsy 'friend',
in return for the good plum brandy. And: 'Where will you bury them?' he
eventually asked.
The other nodded eastward casually enough, but Harry felt his dark eyes on
him. 'Oh, under the mountains.'
'I saw a border post up there. Will they let you through?'
The Gypsy smiled in a wrinkling of tanned skin, and a gold tooth flashed in
the sun striking through the trees. 'This has been our route since long before
there were border posts, or even signposts! Do you think they would want to
stop a funeral? What, and risk calling down the curse of the Gypsies on
themselves?'
Harry smiled and nodded. 'The old Gypsy curse ploy works well for you, eh?'
But the other wasn't smiling at all. 'It works!' he said, quite simply.
Harry looked around, accepted the bottle again and took a good long pull at
it. He was aware that others of the Gypsy menfolk were watching him, but
covertly, while ostensibly they made camp. He sensed the tension in them, and
found himself in two minds. It seemed to Harry that he'd discovered a way
across the border. Indeed, he believed the Gypsies would gladly take him
across; more than gladly, and whether he wanted to go with them or not!
The odd thing was that he didn't feel any animosity towards this man, these
people, who he now felt reasonably sure were here partly out of coincidence
but more specifically to entrap him. He didn't feel afraid of them at all; in
fact he felt less afraid generally than at almost any time he could remember
in his entire life! His problem was simply this: should he casually, even
passively accept their entrapment, or should he try to walk out of the camp?
Should he make allusion to the situation, make his suspicions known, or simply
continue to play the innocent? In short, would it be better to 'go quietly',
or should he make a fuss and get roughed up for his trouble?
Of one thing he was certain: Janos wanted him alive, man to man, face to
face - which meant that the last thing the Szgany would do would be to hurt
him. Perhaps now that Harry was on the hook, it were better if he simply lay
still and let the monster reel him in. Part of the way, anyway.
. . . When he yawns his great jaws at you, go in through them, for he's
softer on the inside . . .
Did I think that? Harry used his deadspeak, or was it you again,
Faethor?
Perhaps it was both of us, a gurgling voice answered from deep within.
Harry nodded, if only to himself. So it was you. Very well, we'll play
it your way.
Good! Believe me, you - we? - have the game well in hand.
'Do you think I might rest here a while?' Harry asked the traveller where
they sat under the trees. 'It's peaceful here and I might just sit and look at
my map, and plan the rest of my trip.' He took a last mouthful of slivovitz.
'Why not?' said the other. 'You can be sure no harm will come to you . . .
here.'
Harry stretched out, lay his head on his holdall, looked at his map.
Halmagiu was maybe, oh, sixty miles away? The sun was just beyond its zenith,
the hour a little after noon. If the Travellers set off again at 2:00 p.m.
(and if they kept up a steady six miles to the hour) they might just make it
to Halmagiu by midnight. And Harry with them. He couldn't even hazard a guess
as to how they would go about it, but felt fairly sure they'd find a way to
get him through the checkpoint. Just as sure as he'd seen that sigil of a
red-eyed bat launching itself from the rim of its urn, painted into the
woodwork of the king's funeral caravan.
He closed his eyes and, looking inwards, directed his deadspeak thoughts at
Faethor. I think I frightened Janos off- when I threatened to enter his
mind, I mean.
It was bold of you, the other answered at once. A clever bluff. But
you were in error, and fortunate indeed that it worked.
I was only following your instructions! Harry protested.
Then obviously I had not made myself plain, said Faethor. I meant
simply that your mind is your castle, and that if he tried to invade it
you must look to understanding his reasons, must look into his mind and
try to fathom its workings. I did not mean, literally, that you should step
inside! It would in any case be impossible. You're no telepath, Harry.
Oh, I knew that well enough, Harry admitted, but Janos himself
wasn't so sure. He's seen some strange things in my mind, after all. Not least
your presence there. And if you were advising me, then obviously he would need
to step wary. The last thing he would want - the last thing anyone would
want, including myself- is you in his mind. Still, I suppose you're right and
it was bluff. But I felt. . . strong! I felt I was playing a strong hand.
You are strong, Faethor answered. But remember, you had the
additional strength of the girl and Layard. You were using their amplified
talents.
I know, said Harry, but it felt even stronger than that. It could of
course have been your influence, but I don't think so. I felt that it was all
mine. And I believe that if I had been a true telepath, then I would have gone
in. If only to try and do to Janos what he did to Trevor Jordan.
He sensed Faethor's approval. Bravo! But don't run before you can walk,
my son . . . And before Harry could answer: Will you go with the
Szgany, the filthy Zirra?
In through his jaws? Harry answered. Yes, I think so. If I can't get
into his mind, then I'll get into his 'body', as it were, and maybe blunt a
few of his teeth a little along the way. But answer me this:
If I have frightened him off from any sort of mental seduction or invasion,
what will he do next? What would you do, if you were him?
What remains to him? Faethor answered. In the skilful use of powers
- those very powers he desires to steal from you - he believes you are his
match. So he must first conquer you physically. What I would do if I were him?
Murder you, and then by use of necromancy rip your Knowledge right out of your
screaming guts!
Your. . . 'art'? Harry answered. Thibor's? Dragosani's? But Janos
doesn't have it.
He has this other thing, this ancient, alien magic. He can reduce you to
ashes, call you up from your chemical essence, torture you until you are a
ruin, incapable of defending yourself - and then enter your mind. And so take
what he wants.
Hearing that, Harry no longer felt so strong. Also, the slivovitz had been
more potent than he thought and he'd taken quite a lot of it. Suddenly he knew
the sensation of giddiness, an unaccustomed alcoholic buoyancy, and at the
same time felt the weight of a blanket tossed across his legs and lower body.
It was cool under the trees and someone was seeing to his welfare, for now at
least. He opened his eyes a crack and saw his Gypsy 'friend' standing there,
looking down at him. The man nodded and smiled, and walked away.
Treacherously clever, these dogs, Faethor commented.
Ah! Harry answered. But they've been well instructed . . .
Though Harry felt he should have no real requirement for sleep, still he
let himself drowse. For two or three days now there had been this weariness on
him, as if he were convalescing after some minor virus infection or other,
maybe a bug he'd picked up in the Greek islands. But a strange ailment at
best, which made him feel strong on the one hand and wearied him on the other!
Perhaps it was a change in the water, the air, all the mental activity he'd
been engaging in, including his deadspeak, so recently returned to him. It
could be any of these things. Or ... perhaps it was something else.
Even as he let himself drift, and as he began to dream a strange dream - of
a world of swamps and mountains, and aeries carved of stone and bone and
cartilage - so Mцbius came visiting:
Harry? Are you all right, my boy?
Certainly, he answered. I was merely resting. Whatever strength I
can muster . . . it could be I shall need it. The battle draws nigh, old
friend.
Mцbius was puzzled. You use strange terms of expression. And you don't
quite, well, feel the same.
As Harry's dream of Starside faded, so Mцbius's dead-speak made more of an
impression. What? he said. Did you say something? Terms of
expression? I don't feel the same?
That's better! said Mцbius, with a sigh of relief. Why, for a
moment there I thought I was talking to some entirely different person!
Between dream and waking, Harry narrowed his eyes. Perhaps you were, he
said.
He sought Faethor in his mind and wrapped him in a blanket of solitude.
And: There, he said. And to Mцbius: I can hold him there while we
talk.
Some strange tenant?
Aye, and greatly unloved and unwanted. But for now I've covered his
rat-hole. I much prefer my privacy. So what is it you've come to tell me,
August?
That we're almost there! the other answered at once. The code is
breaking down, Harry, revealing itself. We'll soon have the answer. I came to
bring you hope. And to ask you to hold off from your contest just a little
while longer, so that we -
- Too late for that, Harry broke in. It's now or never. Tonight I go
up against him.
Again the other was puzzled. Why, you seem almost eager for it!
He took what was mine, challenged me, offended me greatly, Harry
answered. He would burn me to ashes, raise me up, torture me for my secrets
- even invade the Mцbius Continuum! And that is not his territory.
Indeed it is not! It belongs to no one. It simply is . . . Mцbius's
deadspeak voice was dreamy again, which caused Harry to concentrate and
consolidate within his own personality.
'It simply is'? he repeated to Mцbius, mystified. But of course it
is! What do you mean, it is?
It thinks . . . everything, Mцbius answered. Therefore it is
... everything! But something had been triggered in him. He was fading,
drifting, returning to a dimension of pure Number.
And Harry made no attempt to retain him but simply let him go ...
16
Man to Man, Face to Face
'Harry!' Someone gave his shoulder an urgent shake. 'Harry, wake up!'
The Necroscope came instantly awake, almost like stepping through a Mцbius
door from one existence to another, from dream to waking. He saw the Gypsy he
had spoken to and shared food with, whose blanket lay across his legs. And his
first thought was: How does he know my name? Following which he
relaxed. Of course he would know his name. Janos had told it to him. He would
have told all of his thralls and human servants and other minion creatures the
name of his greatest enemy.
'What is it?' Harry sat up.
'You've slept an hour,' the other answered. 'We'll soon be moving on. I'm
taking my blanket. Also, there is something you should see.'
'Oh?'
The Gypsy nodded. His eyes were keen now, dark and sharp. 'Do you have a
friend who searches for you?'
'What? A friend, here?' Was it possible Darcy Clarke or one of the others
had followed him here from Rhodes? Harry shook his head. 'I don't think so.'
'An enemy, then, who follows on behind? In a car?'
Harry stood up. 'You've seen such a one? Show me.'
'Follow me,' said the other. 'But keep low.'
He moved at a lope through the trees to a hedgerow. Harry followed him and
was aware of the other Gypsies scattered here and there throughout the
encampment. Each of them to a man was silent but tense in the dappled green
shade of the trees. Their belongings were all packed away. They were ready to
move.
'There,' said Harry's guide. He stood aside to let the Necroscope peer
through the bushes.
On the other side of the road a man sat at the wheel of an old beetle
Volkswagen, looking at the entrance to the encampment. Harry didn't know him,
but ... he knew him. Now that his attention had been focussed on him,
he remembered. He'd been on the plane, this man. And . . . in Mezobereny?
Possibly. That cigarette holder was a dead giveaway. Likewise his generally
snaky, effeminate style. And now Harry remembered, too, that earlier brush
with the Securitatea in Romania. Had this man been their contact in Rhodes? An
agent, perhaps, for the USSR's E-Branch?
He glanced at the Gypsy beside him and said, 'An enemy - possibly.' But
then he saw the knife ready in the other's hand, and raised an eyebrow. 'Oh?'
The other smiled, without humour. The Szgany don't much care for silent
watchers.'
But Harry wondered: had the knife been for him, if he'd tried to make a run
for it? A threat, to bring him to heel? 'What now?' he said.
'Watch,' said the other.
A Gypsy girl in a bright dress and a shawl crossed the road to the car, and
Nikolai Zharov sat up straighter at the wheel. She showed him a basket filled
with trinkets, knick-knacks, and spoke to him. But he shook his head. Then he
showed her some paper money and in turn spoke to her, questioningly. She took
the money, nodded eagerly, pointed through the forest. Zharov frowned,
questioned her again. She became more insistent, stamped her foot, pointed
again in the direction of Gyula, along the forest road.
Finally Zharov scowled, nodded, started up his car. He drove off in a cloud
of dust. Harry turned to the Gypsy and said: 'He was an enemy, then. And the
girl has sent him off on a wild goose chase?'
'Yes. Now we'll be on our way.'
'We?' Harry continued to stare at him.
The man sheathed his knife. 'We Travellers,' he answered. 'Who else? If you
had been awake you could have eaten with us. But - ' he shrugged,' - we saved
you a little soup.'
Another man approached with a bowl and wooden spoon, which he offered to
Harry.
Harry looked at it.
Don't! said a deadspeak voice in his head, that of the dead Gypsy king.
Poison? Harry answered. Your people are trying to kill me?
No, they desire you to be still for an hour or two. Only drink this, and
you will be still!
And sick?
No. Perhaps a mild soreness in the head - which a drink of clean water will
drive away. But if you drink the soup . . . then all is lost. Across the
border you'll go, and up into the ageless hills and craggy mountains - which,
as you know, belong to the Old Ferenczy!
But Harry only smiled and grunted his satisfaction. So be it, he
said, and drank the soup . . .
Nikolai Zharov drove as far as Gyula and midway into the town, then finally
paid attention to a small niggling voice in the back of his mind: the one that
was telling him, more insistently with each passing moment, that he was a
fool! Finally he turned his car around and drove furiously back the way he'd
come. If Keogh had gone to Gyula he could check it later. But meanwhile, if
the Gypsy girl had been lying . . .
The Traveller camp was empty - as though the Gypsies had never been there.
Zharov cursed, turned left onto the main road and gunned his engine. And up
ahead he saw the first of the caravans passing leisurely through the border
checkpoint.
He arrived in a skidding of tyres, jumped from the car and ran headlong
into the one-room, chalet-style building. The border policeman behind his
elevated desk picked up his peaked, flat-topped hat and rammed it on his head.
He glared at Zharov and the Russian glared back. Beyond the dusty, fly-specked
windows, the last caravan was just passing under the raised pole.
'What?' the Russian yelled. 'Are you some kind of madman? What are you,
Hungarian or Romanian?'
The other was young, big-bellied, red-faced. A Transylvanian village
peasant, he had joined the Securitatea because it had seemed easier than
farming. Not much money in it, but at least he could do a bit of bullying now
and then. He quite liked bullying, but he wasn't keen on being bullied.
'Who are you?' he scowled, his piggy eyes startled.
'Clown!' Zharov raged. 'Those Gypsies - do they simply come and go? Isn't
this supposed to be a checkpoint? Does President Ceausescu know that these
riff-raff pass across his borders without so much as a by your leave? Get off
your fat backside; follow me; a spy is hiding in those caravans!'
The border policeman's expression had changed. For all he knew (and despite
the other's harsh foreign accent), Zharov might well be some high-ranking
Securitatea official; certainly he acted like one. But what was all this about
spies? Flushing an even brighter red, he hurried out from behind his desk, did
up a loose button on his sweat-stained blue uniform shirt, nervously fingered
the two-day-old stubble on his chin. Zharov led him out of the shack, got back
into his car and hurled the passenger-side door open. 'In!' he snapped.
Cramming himself into the small seat, the confused man blusteringly
protested: 'But the Travellers aren't a problem. No one ever troubles them.
Why, they've been coming this way for years! They are taking one of their own
to bury him. And it can't be right to interfere with a funeral.'
'Lunatic!' Zharov put his foot down hard, skidded dangerously close to the
rearmost caravan and began to overtake the column. 'Did you even look to see
if they might be up to something? No, of course not! I tell you they have a
British spy with them called Harry Keogh. He's a wanted man in both the USSR
and Romania. Well, and now he's in your country and therefore under your
jurisdiction. This could well be a feather in your cap - but only if you
follow my instructions to the letter.'
'Yes, I see that,' the other mumbled, though in fact he saw very little.
'Do you have a weapon?'
'What? Up here? What would I shoot, squirrels?'
Zharov growled and stamped on his brakes, skidding the car sideways in
front of the first horse-drawn caravan. The column at once slowed and began to
concertina, and as the dust settled Zharov and the blustering border policeman
got out of the car.
The KGB man pointed at the covered caravans, where scowling Gypsies were
even now climbing down onto the road. 'Search them,' he ordered.
'But what's to search?' said the other, still mystified. 'They're caravans.
A seat at the front, a door at the back, one room in between. A glance will
suffice.'
'Any space which would conceal a man, that's what you search!' Zharov
snapped.
'But . . . what does he look like?' the other threw up his hands.
'Fool!' Zharov shouted. 'Ask what he doesn't look like! He doesn't
look like a fucking Gypsy!'
The mood of the Travellers was ugly and getting worse as the Russian and
his Securitatea aide moved down the line of caravans, yanking open their doors
and looking inside. As they approached the last in line, the funeral vehicle,
so a group of the Szgany put themselves in their way.
Zharov snatched out his automatic and waved it at them. 'Out of the way. If
you interfere I won't hesitate to use this. This is a matter of security, and
grave consequences may ensue. Now open this door.'
The Gypsy who had spoken to Harry Keogh stepped forward. 'This was our
king. We go to bury him. You may not go into this caravan.'
Zharov stuck the gun up under his jaw. 'Open up now,' he snarled, 'or
they'll be burying two of you!'
The door was opened; Zharov saw two coffins lying side by side on low
trestles where they had been secured to the floor; he climbed the steps and
went in. The border policeman and Gypsy spokesman went with him. He pointed to
the left-hand coffin, said: 'That one . . . open it.'
'You are cursed!' said the Gypsy. 'For all your days, which won't be many,
you are cursed.'
The coffins were of flimsy construction, little more than thin boards,
built by the Travellers themselves. Zharov gave his gun to the mortified
border policeman, who fully expected the next curse to be directed at him, and
took out his bone-handled knife. At the press of a switch eight inches of
steel rod with a needle point slid into view. Without pause Zharov raised his
arm and drove the tool down and through the timber lid, so that it disappeared
to the hilt into the space which would be occupied by the face of whoever lay
within.
Inside the coffin, muffled, someone gasped: 'Huh - huh - huh!' And
there came a bumping and a scrabbling at the lid.
The Gypsy's dark eyes bugged; he crossed himself, stepped back on wobbly
legs; likewise the border policeman. But Zharov hadn't noticed. Nor had he
noticed the high smell, which wasn't merely garlic. Grinning savagely, he
yanked his weapon free and jammed its point under the edge of the lid,
wrenching here and there until it was loose. Then he put the bone handle
between his teeth, took the lid in both hands and yanked it half-open.
And from within, someone pushed it the rest of the way . . . but it wasn't
Harry Keogh!
Then-
- Even as the Russian's eyes stood out in his pallid face, so Vasile Zirra
coughed and grunted in his coffin, and reached up a leathery arm to grasp
Zharov and lever himself upright!
'God!' the KGB man choked then. 'G - G – God!' His knife fell from
his slack jaws into the coffin. The old dead Gypsy king took it up at once and
drove it into Zharov's bulging left eye - all the way in, until it scraped the
inside of his skull at the back. That was enough, more than enough.
Zharov blew froth from his jaws and stepped woodenly back until he met the
side of the caravan, then toppled over sideways. Falling, he made a rattling
sound in his throat, and, striking the floor, twitched a little. And then he
was still.
But nothing else was still.
At the front of the column a Gypsy drove Zharov's car into the ditch at the
side of the road. The Securitatea lout was reeling back in the direction of
his border post, shouting: 'It had nothing to do with me - nothing -nothing!'
The Szgany spokesman stepped over Zharov's body, looked fearfully at his old
king lying stiff and dead again in his coffin, crossed himself a second time
and manhandled the cover back into place. Then someone shouted, 'Giddup!' and
the column was off again at the trot.
Half a mile down the road, where the roadside ditch was deep and grown with
brambles and nettles, Nikolai Zharov's corpse was disposed of. It bounced from
caravan to road to ditch, and flopped from view into the greenery . . .
Even as Harry had drained the soup in the bowl to its last drop, drug and
all, so he'd brought Wellesley's talent into play and closed his mind off from
outside interference. The Gypsy potion had been quick-acting; he hadn't even
remembered being bundled into the funeral caravan and 'lain to rest' in the
second coffin.
But his mental isolation had disadvantages, too. For one, the dead could no
longer communicate with him. He had of course taken this into account,
weighing it against what Vasile Zirra had told him about the short-term effect
of the Gypsy drug. And he'd been sure he could spare an hour or two at least.
What the old king hadn't told him was that only a spoonful or two of drugged
soup would suffice. In draining the bowl dry, the Necroscope had dosed himself
far too liberally.
Now, slowly coming awake - half-way between the subconscious and conscious
worlds - he collapsed Wellesley's mind-shield and allowed himself to drift
amidst murmuring deadspeak background static. Vasile Zirra, lying only inches
away from him, was the first to recognize Harry's resurgence.
Harry Keogh? the dead old man's voice was tinged with sadness and not a
little frustration. You are a brash young man. The spider sits waiting to
entrap you, and you have to throw yourself into his web! Because you were kind
to me - and because the dead love you - I jeopardized my own position to warn
you off, and you ignored me. So now you pay the penalty.
At the mention of penalties, Harry began to come faster awake. Even though
he hadn't yet opened his eyes, still he could feel the jolting of the caravan
and so knew that he was en route. But how far into his journey?
You drank all of the soup, Vasile reminded him. Halmagiu is . . .
very close! I know this land well; I sense it; the hour approaches midnight,
and the mountains loom even now.
Harry panicked a little then and woke up with something of a shock - and
panicked even more when he discovered himself inside a box which by its shape
could only be a coffin! Vasile Zirra calmed him at once:
That must be how they brought you across the border. No, it isn't your
grave but merely your refuge - for now. Then he told Harry about Zharov.
Harry answered aloud, whispering in the confines of the fragile box: 'You
protected me?'
You have the power, Harry, the other shrugged. So it was partly
that, for you, and it was . . . partly for him.
'For him?' But Harry knew well enough who he meant. 'For Janos Ferenczy?'
When you allowed yourself to be drugged, you placed yourself in his power,
in the hands of his people. The Zirras are his people, my son.
Harry's answer was bitter, delivered in a tone he rarely if ever used with
the dead: 'Then the Zirras are cowards! In the beginning, long before your
time - indeed more than seven long centuries ago - Janos fooled the Zirras. He
beguiled them, fascinated them, won them over by use of hypnosis and other
powers come down to him from his evil father. He made them love him,
but only so that he could use them. Before Janos, the true Wamphyri were
always loyal to their Gypsy retainers, and in their turn earned the respect of
the Szgany forever. There was a bond between them. But what has Janos given
you? Nothing but terror and death. And even dead, still you are afraid of
him.'
Especially dead! came the answer. Don't you know what he could do to
me? He is the phoenix, risen from hell's flames. Aye, and he could raise me
up, too, if he wished it, even from my salts! These old bones, this old flesh,
has suffered enough. Many brave sons of the Zirras have gone up into those
mountains to appease the Great Boyar; even my own son, Dumitru, gone from us
these long years. Cowards? What could we do, who are merely men, against the
might of the Wamphyri?
Harry snorted. 'He isn't Wamphyri! Oh, he desires to be, but there's that
of the true vampire essence which escapes him still. What could you do against
him? If you had had the heart, you and a band of your men could have gone up
to his castle in the mountains, sought him out in his place and ended it there
and then. You could have done it ten, twenty, even hundreds of years ago! Even
as I must do it now.'
Not Wamphyri? the other was astonished. But . . . he is!
'Wrong! He has his own form of necromancy, true -and certainly it's as
cruel a thing as anything the Wamphyri ever used - but it is not the true art.
He is a shape-changer, within limits. But can he form himself into an aerofoil
and fly? No, he uses an aeroplane. He is a deceiver, a powerful, dangerous,
clever vampire - but he is not Wamphyri.'
He is what he is, said Vasile, but more thoughtfully now. And
whatever he is, he was too strong for me and mine.
Harry snorted again. 'Then leave me be. I'll need to find help elsewhere.'
Smarting from Harry's scorn, the old Gypsy king said: Anyway, what do
you know of the Wamphyri? What does anyone know of them?
But Harry ignored him, shut him out, and sent forward his deadspeak
thoughts into Halmagiu, to the graveyard there. And from there, even up to the
ruined old castle in the heights . . .
Black Romanian bats in their dozens flitted overhead, occasionally coming
into the gleam of swaying, jolting lamplight where they escorted the jingling
column of caravans through the rising, misted Transylvanian countryside. And
the same bats flew over the crumbling walls and ruins of Castle Ferenczy.
Janos was there, a dark silhouette on a bluff overlooking the valley. Like
a great bat himself, he sniffed the night and observed with some satisfaction
the mist lying like milk in the valleys. The mist was his, as were the bats,
as were the Szgany Zirra. And in his way, Janos had communicated with all
three. 'My people have him,' he said, as if to remind himself. It was a phrase
he'd repeated often enough through the afternoon and into the night. He turned
to his vampire thralls, Sandra and Ken Layard, and said it yet again: 'They
have the Necroscope and will bring him to me. He is asleep, drugged, which is
doubtless why you can't know his whereabouts or read his mind. For your powers
are puny things with severe limitations.'
But even as Janos spoke so his locator gave a sudden start. 'Ah!' Layard
gasped. And: There . . . there he is!'
Janos grasped his arm, said: 'Where is he?'
Layard's eyes were closed; he was concentrating; his head turned slowly
through an angle directed out over the valley to one which encompassed the
mountain's flank, and finally the mist-concealed village. 'Close,' he said.
'Down there. Close to Halmagiu.'
Janos's eyes lit like lamps with their wicks suddenly turned high. He
looked at Sandra. 'Well?'
She locked on to Layard's extrasensory current, followed his scan. And:
'Yes,' she said, slowly nodding. 'He is there.'
'And his thoughts?' Janos was eager. 'What is the Necroscope thinking? Is
it as I suspected? Is he afraid? Ah, he is talented, this one, but what use
esoteric talents against muscle which is utterly ruthless? He speaks to the
dead, yes, but my Szgany are very much alive!' And to himself he thought: Aye,
he speaks to the dead. Even to my father, who from time to time lodges in his
mind! Which means that just as I know the Necroscope, likewise the dog knows
me! I cannot relax. This will not be over . . . until it is over. Perhaps I
should have them kill him now, and resurrect him at my leisure. But where
would be the glory, the satisfaction, in that? That is not the way, not if I
would be Wamphyri! I must be the one to kill him, and then have him up
to acknowledge me as his master!
Sandra clung to Layard's arm and locked on to Harry's deadspeak signals . .
. and in the next moment snatched herself back from the locator so as to
collide with Janos himself. He grabbed her, steadied her. 'Well?'
'He ... he speaks with the dead!'
'Which dead? Where?' His wolf's jaws gaped expectantly.
'In the cemetery in Halmagiu,' she gasped. 'And in your castle!'
'Halmagiu?' The ridges in his convoluted bat's snout quivered. 'The
villagers have feared me for centuries, even when I was dust in a jar. No
satisfaction for him there. And the dead in my castle? They are mainly
Zirras.' He laughed hideously, and perhaps a little nervously. 'They gave
their lives up to me; they will not hearken to him in death; he wastes his
time!'
Sandra, for all her vampire strength, was still shaken. 'He ... he talked
to a great many, and they were not Gypsies. They were warriors in their day,
almost to a man. I sensed the merest murmur of their dead minds, but each and
every one, they burned with their hatred for you!'
'What?' For a moment Janos stood frozen - and in the next bayed a laugh
which was more a howl. 'My Thracians? My Greeks, Persians, Scythians? They are
dust, the veriest salts of men! Only the guards which I raised up from
them have form. Oh, I grant you, the Necroscope may call up corpses to walk
again - but even he cannot build flesh and bone from a handful of dust. And
even if he could, why, I would simply put them down again! I have him; he is
desperate and seeks to enlist impossible allies; let him talk to them.'
He laughed again, briefly, and turning towards the dark, irregular pile of
his ruined castle, narrowed his scarlet eyes. 'Come,' he grunted then. 'There
are certain preparations to be made.'
A handful of Szgany menfolk bundled Harry through the woods and past the
outcropping knoll with its cairn of soulstones beneath the cliff. His hands
were bound behind him and he stumbled frequently; his head ached miserably, as
from some massive hangover; but as the group passed close to the base of the
knoll, so he sensed the wispy wraiths of once-men all around.
Harry let his deadspeak touch them, and knew at once that they were only
the echoes of the Zirras he had spoken to in the Place of Many Bones deep in
the ruins of the Castle Ferenczy. The knoll's base was lapped by a clinging
ground mist, but its domed crest stood clear where the cairn of carved stones
pointed at the rising moon. Men had carved those stones, their own headstones,
before climbing to the heights and sacrificing themselves to a monster.
'Men?' Harry whispered to himself. 'Sheep, they were. Like sheep to the
slaughter!'
His deadspeak was heard, as he had intended it should be, and from the
castle in the heights was answered:
Not all of us, Harry Keogh. I for one would have fought him, but he was in
my brain and squeezed it like a plum. You may believe me when I say I did not
go to the Ferenczy willingly. We were not such cowards as you think. Now tell
me, did you ever see a compass point south? Just so easily might a Zirra,
chosen by his master, turn away.
'Who are you?' Harry inquired.
Dumitru, son of Vasile.
'Well, at least you argue more persuasively than your father!' said Harry.
One of the Gypsies prodded him where they bundled him unceremoniously up
the first leg of the climb. 'What are you mumbling about? Are you saying your
prayers? Too late for that, if the Ferenczy has called you.'
Harry, said Dumitru Zirra, if I could help you I would, in however
small a measure. But I may not. Here in the Place of Many Bones, I was gnawed
upon by one of the Grey Ones who serve the Boyar Janos. He had my legs off at
the knees! I could crawl if you called me up, but I could never fight. What,
me, a half-man of bone and leather and bits of gristle? But only say it and
III do what I can.
So, I've found a man at last, Harry answered, this time silently, in
the unique manner of the Necroscope. But lie still, Dumitru Zirra, for I
need more than old bones to go against Janos.
The way was harder now and the Gypsies sliced through the thongs binding
Harry's wrists. Instead they put two nooses round his neck, one held by a man
who stayed well ahead of him, and the other by a man to his rear. 'Only fall
now, Englishman, and you hang yourself,' their spokesman told him. 'Or at very
least stretch your neck a bit as we haul you up!' But Harry didn't intend to
fall.
He called out to Mцbius with his deadspeak: August? How's it coming?
We're almost there, Harry! came the excited answer from a Leipzig
graveyard. It could be an hour, two, three at the outside.
Try thirty minutes, said Harry. I may not have much more than that
left.
Other voices crowded Harry's Necroscope mind. From the graveyard in
Halmagiu:
Harry Keogh ... we are shunned. Who named you a friend of the dead
was a great liar!
Taken off guard, he answered aloud. 'I asked for your help. You refused me.
It's not my fault the world's teeming dead hold you in contempt!'
The Szgany where they laboured up the mountainside in the streaming
moonlight looked at each other. 'Is he mad? Always he talks to himself!'
Harry opened all the channels of his mind - removed all barriers within and
without - and at once Faethor was raging at him: Idiot! I am the only one
who can help you, and yet you keep me hooded like some vicious bird in a cage.
Why do you do this, Harry?
Because I don't trust you, he answered silently. Your motives, your
methods, you your black-hearted self! I don't trust a single thing you say or
do, Faethor. You're not only a father of vampires but a father of liars, too.
Still, you do have a choice.
A choice? What choice?
Get out of my mind and go back to your place in Ploiesti.
Not until this thing is seen through -to- the - end! And how can I be sure
you'll stick to that? You can't, Necroscope!
Then sit in the dark, said Harry, closing him off again. And now the
climb was half-way done . . .
In Rhodes it was 1:30 a.m.
Darcy Clarke and his team sat around a table in one of their hotel rooms.
They had spent time recovering from their work, had eaten out as a group, had
discussed their experiences and how they'd been affected and probably would be
affected for a long time to come. But in the back of their minds each and
every one of them had known that their own part in the fight was minimal, and
that without Harry Keogh's success everything else was cosmetic and the
partial elation they felt now only the lull before the real storm.
As they'd returned from their late meal, so Zek had come up with an idea.
She was a telepath and David Chung a locator. Together, they might be able to
reach Harry and see what were his circumstances.
Darcy had at once protested: 'But that's just what Harry didn't want! Look,
if Janos got his mental hooks into you -'
'I've a feeling he'll be too much involved with Harry to be thinking about
anything else,' Zek had cut in. 'Anyway, I want to do it. In the Lady Karen's
stack - her aerie on Starside -1 had the job of reading the minds of a great
many Wamphyri. Not one of them so much as suspected I was there, or if they
did nothing came of it. That's the way I'll play it now.'
Still Darcy wasn't sure. 'I was only thinking about poor Trevor,' he said,
'and about Sandra . . .'
'Trevor Jordan wasn't expecting trouble,' Zek had answered, 'and Sandra was
inexperienced and her talent variable. I'm not putting her down, just stating
a fact.'
'But -'
'No!' and again she had cut him off. 'If David is willing, I want to
do it. Harry means a lot to Jazz and me.'
At which Darcy had appealed to Jazz Simmons.
Jazz had shaken his head. 'If she says she'll do it, then she'll do it,' he
said. 'Hey, don't take my word for it! I'm only married to her!'
And with reservations, finally Darcy had submitted. For the fact was that
he as much as anyone else was interested to know Harry's circumstances.
Now the three who weren't participants, Darcy, Jazz and Ben Trask, sat
around the table and concentrated on what Zek and David were doing: the latter
with his eyes closed, breathing deeply, his hands resting lightly on the stock
and body of Harry's crossbow where it sat on the table, and Zek similarly
disposed, her hand on one of his.
They had been this way for a minute or two, waiting for Chung to locate the
Necroscope through the medium of one of his own possessions. But as seconds
ticked by in silence and the two participants grew even more still, so the
watchers began to relax a little - even to fidget - and their thoughts to
drift. And just at the moment that Jazz Simmons chose to scratch his nose,
that was when contact was made.
It was brief:
David Chung uttered a long drawn-out sigh - and Zek snapped bolt upright in
her chair. Her eyes remained closed for several long seconds while all the
colour drained from her face. Then . . . they shot open and she snatched
herself away from Chung, straightened to her feet and backed unsteadily away
from the table.
Jazz went to her at once. 'Zek?' his voice was anxious. 'Are you OK?'
For a moment she stared right through him, then at him, and accepted his
arms. He felt her trembling, but at last she answered: 'Yes, I'm all right.
But Harry -'
'You found him?' Darcy too had risen to his feet.
'Oh, yes,' David Chung nodded. 'We found him. What did you read, Zek?'
She looked at him, looked at all of them, and freed herself from Jazz's
arms. And said nothing.
Darcy said, 'Is he OK?' And he held his breath waiting for her answer.
Eventually she said, 'He's all right, yes, and he got there safely - to his
destination, I mean. Also, I saw enough to know that it will all come to a
head soon. But . . . something isn't right.'
Darcy's heart thudded in his chest. 'Not right? You mean he's already in
trouble?'
She looked at him, and her look was so strange it was as if she gazed on
alien things, in a world of ice beyond the times and places we know. 'In
trouble? Oh, he's that, all right, but not necessarily the trouble you're
thinking of.'
'Can you explain?'
She straightened up and gave herself a shake, and hugged her elbows. 'No, I
can't,' she said, shaking her head. 'Not yet. And anyway, I could be
mistaken.'
'But mistaken about what?' Darcy's frustration was mounting. 'Harry is
going up against Janos Ferenczy personally, man to ... to thingl If
he's in trouble before they even meet, his disadvantage could well be
insurmountable!'
Again she gave him that strange look, and shook her head, and quietly said,
'No, not insurmountable. In fact on a one to one basis, I think you'll find
that . . . that there's not a great deal to choose between them.'
Following which, and for quite a long time, she would say no more.
With the misted valley far below and in the streaming moonlight of the
heights, Harry knew the climb would soon be over and he'd be face to face with
hell. He had hoped to call up all the local dead into an army on his side,
arid march with them on Janos's place. But even the dead were afraid. Now
there was very little time left, and probably less hope. So the fact that he
actually found himself anticipating what was to come was a very hard
thing to explain. It could be of course that he'd simply 'cracked' under the
strain, but he didn't think so. He'd never been the type.
His mind was still open and Mцbius picked up his thoughts:
A breakdown? You? No, never! And especially not now, when we're so close. I
need to be into your mind, Harry.
'Enter, of your own free will,' he answered, almost automatically.
The other was very quickly in and out, and he was excited as never before. It
all fits! It all fits! he said. And the next time I come, I'm sure I'll
be able to unlock those doors.
'But not right now?'
I'm afraid not.
'Then there may not be time for a next time.'
Don't give in, Harry!
'I haven't. I'm just facing facts.'
I swear we'll have the answer in minutes! And meanwhile you could try
helping yourself.
'Help myself? How?'
Give yourself a problem in numbers. Set yourself a mathematical task.
Prepare to re-establish your numeracy.
'I wouldn't even know what a mathematical problem looked like.'
Then I'll set one for you. The great mathematician was silent for a
moment, then said: Now listen. Stage one: I am nothing. Stage two: I am
born and in the first second of my existence expand uniformly to a
circumference of approximately 1,170,000 miles. Stage three: after my second
second of uniform expansion my circumference is twice as great! Question: what
am I?
'You're crazy,' said Harry, 'that's what you are! A minute ago I would have
sworn it was me, but now I know that I'm perfectly sane. Compared to you,
anyway.'
Harry?
Harry laughed out loud, causing the Gypsies who struggled up the final rise
with him to jump. 'A madman,' they muttered, 'yes. The Ferenczy has driven him
mad!'
The Necroscope used his deadspeak again: August, here's me who can't
count his toes without getting nine, and you ask me to solve the riddles of
the universe?
Pretty close, Harry, Mцbius answered, pretty close. Just keep at it
and I'll be back as soon as possible. His deadspeak faded and he was gone.
Jesus! said Harry to himself, shaking his head in disgust. Jesus!
But Mцbius's question had stuck in his head. He couldn't give it his
attention right now, but he knew it was in there, lodged firmly in his mind.
And now the party had reached the top of the cliffs; and somewhere here on
this wind-blasted, sparsely-clad plateau, here lay the ruins of the Castle
Ferenczy. That was where Janos waited; but right here and now, here at the top
of the long climb . . . here something else waited. Seven somethings in all,
or eight if one included the Grey One slinking in the moon-cast shadows.
Harry's 'escort' to the lair of the undead vampire.
The two leading Zirras saw them first, then Harry, finally the three
Gypsies who panted where they laboured close behind. All drew back, startled
and gasping, except the Necroscope himself. For Harry knew that he stood in
the presence of dead men, which was common ground for him. What he and the
others with him saw was this:
Seven great Thracians, dead for more than two thousand years, raised up
again from their burial urns to do Janos's bidding. They had the aspect of
life at least, but there was a great deal of death in them, too. They wore
helmets and some pieces of armour of their own period, but wherever their grey
flesh showed naked it was scarred, disfigured. Their helmets were fearsome
things, designed to terrify any beholder: they were domed, of gleaming bronze,
with oval eye-holes dark in the flicker of their torches, and curved,
downward-sweeping flanges to cover the jaws of the wearers.
All seven were big men, but their leader stood a good four inches taller
than the rest. He stepped forward, massive, but the eyes behind the holes in
his mask were red - with sorrow.
Bodrogk looked at Harry Keogh and the five who cowered behind him. 'Free
him,' he said. His tongue was ancient but his meaning - the way his bronze
sword touched Harry's ropes - couldn't be mistaken.
The Szgany spokesman stepped cautiously to Harry's side and loosened the
nooses a little around his neck. And to Bodrogk the Gypsy said: 'You are ...
the Ferenczy's creatures?'
Bodrogk didn't understand. He looked this way and that, frowning, wondering
what the man's question had been. Harry read his deadspeak confusion and
answered: 'He wants to know if Janos sent you.' He spoke the words aloud,
letting his deadspeak do the translating. And now Bodrogk's gaze centred on
Harry alone.
The massive Thracian paced forward and the Gypsies fell back. Bodrogk
caught the ropes around Harry's neck and snapped them like threads. He grunted
an introduction, then said: 'And so you are the Necroscope, beloved of all the
world's dead.'
'Not all of them,' Harry shook his head, 'for there are cowards among the
dead even as there are among the living. If I can't know them - because they
are afraid to know me - then I can't befriend them. And anyway, Bodrogk, I've
no great desire to be loved by thralls.'
Bodrogk's men had come forward, moving closer to the Gypsies on the bluff,
herding them there. Now their huge leader took off his helmet and tossed it
clanking aside. His neck was a bull's, his face full-bearded, fierce. But it
was grey, that face, and, like the rest of his flesh, gaunt with an unspoken
horror. His haggard, harried aspect told far better than any words the way in
which Janos had dealt with him and his.
'I heard you talking to the dead,' said Bodrogk. 'You must know that all of
Janos's thralls are not cowards.'
'I know that the Thracians in the vaults of his castle are dust, and so
can't help me. They told me they would but can't, because only Janos himself
may call them up, for he alone has the words. On the other hand . . . you and
your six are not dust.'
'Are you calling us cowards?' Bodrogk's calloused hand fell upon Harry's
shoulder close to his neck, and in his other hand a great bronze sword was
lifted up a little.
'I only know that where some suffer Janos to live,' Harry answered. 'I came
to kill him and remove his taint forever.'
'And are you a warrior, Harry?'
Harry lifted his head, gritted his teeth. He had never feared the dead, and
would not now. 'Yes.'
Bodrogk smiled a strange, sad smile - which faded at once as he glanced
beyond Harry. 'And these others with you? They captured you and brought you
here, eh? A lamb to the sacrifice.'
'They belong to the Ferenczy,' Harry nodded.
The other looked at him and his eyes went into Harry's soul. 'A warrior
without a sword, eh? Here, take mine,' He placed it in Harry's hands - then
scowled at the Szgany and nodded to his men. The six Thracian lieutenants fell
on the Gypsies with their swords, swept them from the bluff and over the edge
of the cliff like chaff. It was so swift and sudden, they didn't even have
time to scream. Their bodies went bumping, bouncing and clattering into the
deep dark gorge.
'A friend at last,' Harry nodded. 'I thought I might find a few, at least.'
'It was you or them,' Bodrogk answered. 'To murder a worthy man, or
slaughter a handful of dogs. Thralldom to the Ferenczy, or freedom - for as
long as it may last. Not much of a choice. I made the only decision a man
could make. But if I had paused a moment to think . . . then it might have
gone the other way. For my wife's sake.' He explained his meaning.
'You've taken an enormous chance,' Harry told him, giving back his sword.
'The dead called out to me,' Bodrogk answered. 'In their thousands they
cried out, all of them begging your life. Aye, and one especially, whose
tongue lashed like none other! Why, she might have been my own mother! But
instead she was yours.'
Harry sighed, and thought: thank God for you, Ma!
'Your mother, yes,' said the other. 'She half-swayed me, and Sofia did the
rest.'
'Your wife?'
'The same,' Bodrogk nodded, leading the way back towards the ruined castle
in the heights. 'She said to me: "Where is your honour now, you who once
was mighty? Rather the applause and cold comforts of the teeming dead, and
thralldom to Janos forever, than another urn filled with screaming ashes in
the monster's vaults!"'
Harry said, 'We have much in common then, your lady and I.' And, on
impulse: ^Bodrogk, I already have my cause but she must be yours. Only fight
with Sofia in mind, and you cannot lose,' And deep inside, unseen, unheard, he
prayed it was true. Except: 'I have no plan,' he admitted.
Bodrogk laughed, however grimly, and answered, 'A warrior without a sword,
nor yet a plan of campaign!' But he grasped the Necroscope's shoulder and
added: 'I have been dead a long time, Harry Keogh, but in my life I was a king
of warriors, a general of armies. I was the Great Strategist of my race, and
all the centuries flown between could not rob me of my cunning.'
Harry looked at the Thracian, striding gaunt, grim, dead and resurrected
beside him. 'But will cunning suffice, when the vampire need only mutter a
handful of words to return you to dust? I think you'd better tell me how this
magic of his works, and then something of your plan.'
'The words of devolution may only be spoken by a Master, a Mage,' said
Bodrogk. 'Janos is one such. He must direct his words, aim them like an
arrow to their target. And to hit the target he must first see it. Wherefore
... we go up against him as individuals! You, me, my six, each man of us a
unit in his own right. We approach and enter the castle from all sides. He
cannot smite us all at once. And with mere words, even Words of Power, he
can't smite you at all! Some of us shall fall, aye. What of it? We've fallen
before; we desire to fall, and to remain fallen! But while Janos deals
with some of us, the others - especially you, Harry - may live long enough to
deal with him.'
Harry nodded. 'It's as good a plan as any,' he said. 'But surely he isn't
alone?'
'He has his vampire thralls,' Bodrogk answered. 'Five of them. Three who
were Szgany, and two but recently joined him. One of these is a woman with
Powers -'
'Sandra,' Harry breathed her name, felt sick in the knowledge of how it
must be for her, and how it was yet to be.
'And the other a man likewise talented,' Bodrogk continued. 'Janos broke
him to force his obedience. As for the woman: he did to her what he does to
women, the dog!'
Then we have them to deal with, too.'
'Indeed - and now!'
'Now?'
They are waiting for us, there beneath the trees, beyond which lie those
tumbled, cursed ruins. I am now supposed to give you into their hands, when
they in turn will take you to their master.'
Harry looked, saw twisted, wind-blasted pines leaning towards the cliffs of
the ultimate ridge. And in the shadows formed of their canopy, he also saw the
yellow flames of vampire eyes, feral in the night. He reverted to true
deadspeak, using only his mind to ask: Do you know how to deal with them?
Do you? Question matched question.
The stake, the sword, the fire, Harry answered, grimly.
Swords we have, said Bodrogk. Fire too, in the torches which my men
carry. And stakes? Aye . . . we cut a few while we waited for you at the
cliff. For, you see, there were vampires in my day, too. So let's be at it.
Janos's undead thralls came ghosting out of the trees. Their long arms
reached for Harry; they smiled their ghastly smiles; not a one of them dreamed
that Bodrogk had renegued. But even as they ringed the Necroscope about, so
the Thracians fell on them and cut them down!
It was butchery, and it was quick. All three vampires were beheaded, thrown
to the ground and staked through their hearts. But only three? As Bodrogk's
men took up the bodies of their victims and draped them across low branches,
and set fire to the tinder-dry, resin-laden trees, Harry saw a crooked figure
standing a little apart. And in the next moment Ken Layard stepped into view.
'Harry!' he sighed. 'Harry! Thank God!'
Moonlight turned his sallow flesh golden as he opened his arms wide, closed
his eyes and turned his face up to the night sky. The Thracians looked at
Harry; there was nothing he could do; he nodded and turned away -
- And saw a tall, dark figure standing at the edge of the ruins, only a
dozen paces away.
Janos!
Bodrogk's men had done with Layard now. They too saw the vampire there in
the dark of the ruins, his scarlet eyes furiously ablaze. The Thracians began
to melt quickly back into shadows, but not quickly enough for two of them who
stood close together.
Janos pointed at them, and his awful baying voice swelled out like a
curse on the night air:
'OGTHROD AI'F - GEB'L EE'H - YOG-SOTHOTH!
There was more, but the effects of the rune of dissolution were already
apparent. The two Thracians who were Janos's target had already cried out,
fallen against each other, collapsed to insubstantial wraiths which, as he
finished his devocation, drifted to the earth as dust!
Harry glanced all about; Bodrogk and his remaining four were nowhere to be
seen; another terror approached.
The wolf - the Grey One which had also been part of his escort, but who had
kept himself well back behind the party of Thracians - was now creeping up on
him, shepherding him towards the castle's master. The Necroscope stooped, took
up one of the bronze swords of the dematerialized Thracians, felt its great
weight. Smaller than Bodrogk's sword, still it was no rapier. Harry knew he
couldn't hope to wield this thing, but it was better than nothing.
He looked for Janos, saw the monster's fleeting shadow moving back into the
darkness of the ruins. A ploy, a feint: Harry's cue to pursue him. Well, and
wasn't that what he was here for?
As he followed after Janos, so the Grey One rushed up behind him and
snapped at his heels. Harry stiffened his leg into a bar of flesh and bone and
lashed out, and felt teeth crunch as his foot concertinaed the beast's
slavering muzzle. He snarled at the creature and took up his sword two-handed
. . . and astonishingly the wolf shrank back, whining!
Before Harry could wonder at the meaning of this, Bodrogk and one of his
remaining four stepped from cover and together fell on the animal. The sounds
of their attack were brief and reminded Harry of nothing so much as a
butcher's shop as they first crippled the beast, then cut short its yelping
and howling by taking its head.
Harry's eyes were more accustomed to the dark now; in fact his clarity of
vision in the night was entirely remarkable and a wonder to him. But that was
something else he had no time to consider. Instead he looked into the heart of
the tumbled pile and saw Janos standing behind a toppled wall. The monster's
gaze was fixed on a point beyond Harry - the Thracians, of course. But as he
pointed his great talon of a hand, so the Necroscope shouted: 'Look out!'
'OGTHROD AI'F . . .' Janos commenced his crackling rune of devolution, and
before he'd finished another Thracian had cried out, sighed, and crumbled into
smoking, drifting dust. One of the two had been saved at least, and Harry
found himself hoping it was Bodrogk.
But now the Necroscope went after Janos with a vengeance. Athletic,
sure-footed even in the dark, he saw the vampire commence a descent apparently
into the earth itself behind a mound of rubble. In the last moment before he
disappeared he turned his freakish head and looked back, and Harry saw the
crimson lamps of his eyes. There was a challenge written there which the
Necroscope couldn't resist.
He found the stone trapdoor raised above hollowed steps leading down, and
almost without thought began his own descent - until a voice from behind
stopped him. Looking back, he saw Bodrogk and his remaining warriors
converging on him. 'Harry,' the great Thracian rumbled. 'You'll be first down.
Go swiftly! Preserve my Sofia!'
He nodded, clambered down the spiralling stairwell - a wall of stone on one
side and a chasm opening on the other - down to the first landing. But setting
foot on the solid stone floor . . .
Janos was waiting!
The vampire came from nowhere, knocked the sword out of Harry's hands,
hurled the Necroscope against the wall with such force that all the wind was
hammered out of him. Before he could draw breath Janos towered over him,
closed one huge hand over his face and slammed his head against the wall.
Physically there was no match: Harry went out like a light.
Harry . . . Haaarry! his mother cried out to him, a hundred mothers
like her, an even larger number of friends and acquaintances, and all the dead
in their graves across the world. Their voices soughed in the deadspeak
aether, filled it, penetrated the threshold of Harry's subconscious mind and
wrapped him in their warmth. Warmth, yes, for the minds of the dead are
different from the common clay of their once-flesh.
Ma? he answered through his pain and the struggle to rise up, back into
the conscious world. Ma . . . I'm hurt!
I know, son, she said, her voice brimming over. I feel it . . . we
all of us do. Lie still, Harry, and feel how we feel for you. Behind
her, the wash of background deadspeak was building up to a crescendo, a wall
of mental moaning.
Lying still won't help, Ma, he said. Nor all the gnashing of teeth I
hear going on there. I'm going to have to shut you all out. I need to wake up.
And when I've done that I'll need help just to live.
But the dead can help, Harry! she told him. There's one
trying to contact you even now who has part of the answer.
Mцbius? She had to be talking about Mцbius.
No, not him, Harry sensed the shake of her head. Another, someone
who is much closer to you. Except there's not much left of him, Harry. You
won't hear him against all of this. Wait, and I'll see if I can quiet them.
She retreated, spoke to others, passed on a message that spread outwards
like ripples in a calm pond where a stone has been tossed, until it
encompassed the world. The mental babble quickly faded away and an
extraordinary silence followed. Out of which -- Harry?
Whoever it was, his deadspeak was so weak that at first the Necroscope
thought he must be imagining it. But:
Are you looking for me? he answered, eventually. Who are you?
I am nothing, the other sighed. Not even a whimper, not even a
ghost. Or at very best a ghost even among ghosts. Why, even the dead have
difficulty hearing my voice, Harry! My name was George Vulpe, and five years
ago my friends and I discovered the Castle Ferenczy.
Harry nodded. He killed you, right?
He did more, worse, than that! the other moaned, his deadspeak thin as
the slither of dry, dead leaves. He took my life, my body, and left me
without. . . anything! Not even a place to rest.
Harry felt that this was very important. Can you explain?
I've spoken to a great many Zirras in the Place of Many Bones, George
Vulpe told him. When the Ferenczy lay in his urn, they were the ones who
came to feed and refuel him with their blood. But I was different. On my hands
there were only three fingers!
Now Harry gasped. You were the one!
He has my body, the other said again. And I can't rest. Ever.
What was he? Harry wanted to know. I mean, how did he usurp
you, drive you from your body?
The other explained. My blood drew him up from his urn. I was a son of
his sons, from the Zirra clan. But I didn't know that. Only my blood knew.
He came from his urn? Harry pressed. As essential salts?
My blood transformed him.
Harry needed help to understand. He uncovered Faethor.
Damn you, Harry Keogh! the incorporeal vampire at once raged.
Be quiet! Harry told him. Explain what this man is saying to me.
Faethor heard Vulpe's story, said: Why, isn't it obvious?
Janos had taken precautions. When I reduced his brain and vampire both to
ashes, his ever faithful Zirras hid him away in a secret place until he could
perform this . . . this metempsychosis. But it wasn't merely a transfer of
minds: Janos's leech was revived from its ashes. The creature itself entered
this one's body! And now -
But Harry at once closed him down again. And: George, he said, thanks
for your help. I don't see what good it will do me, but thanks anyway.
The only answer was a sigh, rapidly fading to nothing . . .
Harry strove to rise up from unconsciousness, to revive himself, to wake
up. And was on the verge of succeeding, then Mцbius came.
Harry! Mцbius cried. We have it! We believe we have it! He
entered the Necroscope's mind, and in another moment: Yes, yes - this must
be right! But . . . are you ready?
I've never been so ready, Harry answered.
That's not what I meant, said Mцbius. I mean, are you prepared
mentally?
Prepared mentally? August, what is this?
The Mцbius Continuum, Harry. I can open those doors, but not if you're not
ready for it. There's a different universe in there, doors opening on places
undreamed. Harry, I wouldn't want you to get sucked into your own mind!
Sucked into - ? Harry shook his head. I don't follow.
Look . . . did you solve my problem?
Problem? Suddenly Harry felt rage and frustration boiling up in him. Your
fucking problem? What time do you think I've had for solving fucking problems?
Did you even think about it?
No . . . Yes!. . . yes, I thought about it.
And?
Nothing.
Harry, I'm going to open one of those doors . . . now!
The Necroscope felt nothing. Did it work?
It worked, yes, Mцbius breathed. And if you have the equations, you
should be able to do the rest yourself.
But I don't feel any different.
Did you ever? Before, I mean?
No, but-
I'll open another door. There!
But this time Harry did feel it. A sharp white lance of agony, setting off
fireworks in his head. It was something like the pain Harry Jnr had arranged
for him if ever he should be tempted to use his deadspeak, but since he was
already unconscious its effect was greatly reduced. And it served an entirely
different purpose.
Instead of blacking him out, it jabbed him awake -
- He came awake, into a waking nightmare!
Cold liquid burned his face, got into his throat and stung him, caused him
to cough. It was - alcohol? Certainly it was volatile. It smoked, shimmering
into vapour all around. And Harry was lying in it. He struggled to his hands
and knees, tried not to breathe the fumes, which were rising up into some sort
of flue directly overhead ... A blackened flue . . . Fire-blackened!
Harry kneeled in a basin or depression cut from solid rock, kneeled there
in this pool of volatile liquid. Impressions came very quickly. He must be in
the very bowels of the castle, down in the bedrock itself ... a huge cave . .
. and against the opposite wall where rough-hewn steps led up to the higher
levels . . . there stood Janos watching him! He held a burning brand aloft,
his scarlet eyes reflecting its fire.
Their eyes met, locked, and Janos's lips drew back from his monstrous teeth
in a hideous grin. 'And so you are awake, Necroscope,' he said. 'Good, for I
desired that you should feel the fire which will make you mine forever!' He
looked at the torch in his hand, then at the floor. Harry looked, too. At a
shallow trough or channel where it had been cut in the rock. It ran from
Janos's feet, across the floor, to the lip of the basin.
Jesus! Harry lurched for the rim of the shallow pool, and his hands
shot out from under him. He wallowed in the liquid, put one hand on the rim
and drew himself up, heard Janos's mad laughter and saw him slowly lowering
the brand to the floor!
My problem, Harry! Mцbius was hysterical in his horror.
Harry fought back terror to picture the thing, instinctively translating
Mцbius's circumferences into diameters:
And his intuitive mathematical talent, returned to him at last, did the
rest.
What am I? Mцbius howled, as the fire of Janos's torch descended to
the liquid fuse.
'Light!' Harry cried aloud. 'What else can you be? Only light expands at twice
the speed of light - from nothing to a diameter of 744,000 miles in two
seconds!'
Fire whooshed, came racing across the floor of the cave in a blue-glaring
blaze.
Which light? Mцbius was frantic.
'You were nothing until you came into existence,' Harry yelled. 'Therefore
. . . you are the Primal Light!'
Yes!!! Mцbius danced in Harry's mind. And my source was the Mцbius
Continuum! Welcome back, Harry!
Computer screens opened in Harry's mind even as the bowl became an inferno.
Searing heat roared up in a tongue of blue fire that belched into the chimney
overhead. Liquid fire singed the hair from his head and face and set his
clothes blazing. It lasted perhaps one tenth of a second - until Harry
conjured a Mцbius door and toppled through it!
He knew where to go, conjured a second door and fell out of the Mцbius
Continuum into a deep drift of snow at the roof of the world. He was scorched,
yes, but alive. Alive as never before. Elation filled him, and more than
elation. His laughter - hysterical as Mцbius's own -quickly died down, went
out of him, became a growl that rumbled menacingly in his throat...
Janos had seen him disappear, and in that moment had known that Harry Keogh
was invincible. The Necroscope had gone . . . where? And he'd be back . . .
when? And what awesome Powers would he bring with him? Janos dared not wait to
find out.
He bounded up the stairs through the lower limits of the castle's labyrinth
bowels, eventually emerging in the area of massively vaulted rooms which
housed his urns and jars and lekythoi. And discovered Harry there ahead of
him! Harry, Bodrogk and the remaining Thracians.
Janos fell back to crouch against a wall, hissing, then straightened up to
come forward again. 'You are dust!' he snarled at Bodrogk, and pointed his
finger.
The huge Thracian chief and two of his captains ducked through an arched
door into another room, but the third was caught in the blast of Janos's
devocation:
'OGTHROD AI'F, GEB'L - EE'H,
YOG-SOTHOTH, 'NGAH'NG AI'Y,
ZHRO!'
The devolved man threw up his arms and sighed his last . . . and fell in a
cloud of grey-green chemicals.
Janos roared his mad laughter, leaped to take up the fallen warrior's
sword. He advanced on Harry, sword raised high - and the Necroscope knew
exactly what to do. For Harry was a mage, a master in his own right; and in
his mind right now, crying out from all of their prisoning urns, a thousand
deadspeak voices instructed him in the Words of Power!
He pointed at the jars scattered all about, and turning in a circle uttered
the rune of invocation:
'Y'AI 'NG'NGAH, YOG-SOTHOTH,
H'EE - L'GEB, F'AI THRODOG,
UAAAH!'
The vaulted room filled with stench and purple smoke in a moment, obscuring
Harry, Janos and all. And out of the rush and reek came the cries of the
tortured. There had been no time for the mixing of chemicals; these
resurrected Thracians, Persians, Scythians and Greeks would all be imperfect.
But their lust for vengeance would be entirely in keeping.
Janos knew it, too. He careened through their stumbling, groaning ranks as
they shattered their jars and grew up like mushrooms out of nothing; but as
fast as he could target a group and put them down again, so the Necroscope
called them up! There was no way the vampire could win. He couldn't bellow his
words fast enough, and the ranks of resurrected warriors were rapidly closing
on him.
Blasting a path of dust before him, he fled to the steps winding up to
ruined regions above and passed from sight. The hideously incomplete army
would follow after, but Harry cautioned them:
'Stay here. Your part is played. But this time when you go down, you know
that you may rest in peace.' And they blessed him as he returned them all to
their materia. All except the warrior king Bodrogk.
And taking Bodrogk with him, he stepped through a Mцbius door . . . and
out again into the ruins of Castle Ferenczy.
They waited, and in a little while Janos came, grunting, whining and
panting into the night. He saw them, choked on his terror, gagged and reeled
as he stumbled away from them out of the ruins. He was spent; he had no
breath; he tottered to the cliff behind the castle and climbed it along a path
. . . and half-way up found Harry and Bodrogk waiting for him. The huge
Thracian carried a battleaxe.
There was nowhere left to run. Janos looked outwards to the night and his
crimson eyes gazed on empty space. In all his life there'd been only one
Wamphyri art he never mastered or counterfeited, and now he must. He held up
his arms and willed the change, and his clothing tore as his body wrenched
itself into a great blanket, an aerofoil of flesh. And like a bat in the
night, he launched himself from the cliffside path.
He succeeded! - he flew! - with the tatters of his ripped clothing
fluttering about him like strange wings. He flew . . . until Bodrogk's hurled
battleaxe buried itself in his spine.
Harry and Bodrogk returned to the ruins and found the monster writhing
there where he'd crashed down in the rubble. He choked and coughed up blood,
but already he'd worked the axe loose and his vampire flesh was healing him.
The Necroscope kneeled beside him and looked him in the eye. Man to ... man?
Face to terrifying, terrified face.
'Bastard Necroscope!' Janos's eyes bled where they bulged.
'You have a man's body,' Harry answered, without emotion, 'but your mind
and the vampire within you were raised from ashes in an urn.' He pointed a
steady hand and finger. 'Ashes to ashes, Janos, and dust to dust! OGTHROD
AI'F, GEB'L - EE'H.'
The vampire gave a shriek, wriggled frantically, choked, gagged and
regained his man-shape.
And the Necroscope continued: 'YOG-SOTHOTH, 'NGAH'NGAI'Y.'
'No!' Janos howled. 'N-n-noooooooo!'
As Harry uttered the final word, 'Zhror, so Janos's entire body
convulsed in instant, unbearable agony. He writhed frantically, vibrated, then
grew still. Finally his head flopped back and his awful mouth flew open, and
the lights went out in his eyes. Then -
- His massive chest slowly deflated as he sighed his last, long sigh. No
air escaped him but a cloud of red dust, drifting on the air. The rest of his
body, even his head, must be full of the stuff. And as the dust of that
devolved vampire leech settled, it reminded the Necroscope of nothing so much
as the spores of those weird mushrooms at Faethor's place on the outskirts of
Ploiesti.
Which in turn served to remind him of something else as yet unfinished . . .
* * *
Bodrogk's lady Sofia came up out of the ruins, and Sandra came with her.
She came ghosting in the way of vampire thralls, her yellow eyes alive in
the night, but Harry knew that she was less than Sandra now. Or more. Briefly,
he remembered his precognitive glimpse back at the start of this whole thing:
of an alien creature that came to him in the night and lusted after him, but
only for his blood. Sandra was now an alien creature, who would lust after men
for their blood.
She flew into his arms and sobbed into his neck, and holding her tightly -
as much to steady himself as to steady her - he looked over her sallow
shoulder to where Bodrogk gathered up his wife. And he heard Sofia say:
'She saved me! The vampire girl found me where Janos had hidden me and set
me free!'
And Harry wondered: her last free-will act, before the monstrous fever in
her blood claims her for its own?
Sandra's beautiful, near-naked body was cold as clay where it pressed
against the Necroscope, and Harry knew there was no way he could ever warm it.
A telepath, she 'heard' the thought as surely as if it had been spoken, and
drew back a little. But not far enough.
His thin sharp stake, a splinter of old oak, drove up under her breast and
into her heart; she took one last breath, one staggering step away from him,
and fell.
Bodrogk, seeing Harry's anguish, did the rest . . .
Epilogue
All night Harry sat alone in the ruins, sat there with his thoughts, with
Faethor trapped within him and the teeming dead held at bay without. He let no
one in to witness his sorrow.
He had thought he would be cold, but strangely was not. He had thought the
darkness and the shadows would bother him, but the night had felt like an old
friend.
With the dawn spreading in the east, he sought out Bodrogk and his lady.
They had found a sheltered place to light a fire, and now reclined in each
other's arms, watching the sun rise. Their faces greeted him with something of
sadness, but also with a great resolve.
'It doesn't have to be,' he said. The choice is yours.'
'Our world is two thousand years in the past,' Bodrogk answered. 'Since
then . . . we've prayed for peace a thousand times. You have the power,
Necroscope.'
Harry nodded, uttered his esoteric farewell and watched their dust mingle
as a breeze came up to blow them away . . .
And now he was ready.
He returned to the ruins and set Faethor free.
What? that father of vampires raged. And am I your last resort,
Harry Keogh? Do you enlist my aid now, when all else has failed you?
'Nothing has failed,' Harry told him. And then, even by his standards, he
did a strange thing. He deliberately lied to a dead man. 'Janos is crippled,
dying,' he said.
Faethor's fury knew no bounds. Without me? You brought him down without
me? He doesn't know I had a hand in it? I want to feel the dog's pain! He
crashed out of Harry's mind and discovered Janos - dead!
Astonished, Faethor knew the truth, but of course Harry had known it before
him. He triggered Wellesley's talent to shut Faethor out. 'I told you I'd be
rid of you,' he said.
Fool! Faethor raged. /'/I be back in, never fear. Only relax your
guard by the smallest fraction, and we'll be one again, Necroscope.
'We had a bargain,' Harry was reasonable. 'I've played my part. Go back to
your place in Ploiesti, Faethor.'
Back to the cold earth, after I've known your warmth? Never! Don't you know
what has happened? Janos made no great error when he read the future. He knew
that a master vampire - the greatest of them all - would go down from this
place when all was done. I am that vampire, Harry, in your body!
'Men shouldn't read the future,' said Harry, 'for it's a devious thing. And
now I have to be on my way.'
Where you go, I go!
Harry shrugged and opened a Mцbius door. 'Remember Dragosani?' he said.
And he stepped through the door.
Faethor shuddered but went in with him. Dragosani was a fool, he
blustered. You don't shake me off so lightly.
"There's still time,' Harry told him. 'I can still take you to
Ploiesti.'
To hell with Ploiesti!
Harry opened a past-time door and launched himself through it, and Faethor
clung to him like the grim death he was. You won't shake me loose,
Necroscope!
They gazed on the past of all Mankind, their myriad neon life-threads
dwindling away to a bright blue origin. And now Faethor moaned: Where are
you taking me?
'To see what has been,' Harry told him. 'See, see there? That red thread
among the blue? Indeed, a scarlet thread . . . yours, Faethor. And do you see
where it stops? That's where Ladislau Giresci took your head the night your
house was bombed. That's where your life-thread stopped, and you'd have been
wise to stop with it.'
Take . . . take me out of here! Faethor gasped and gurgled, and clung
like an incorporeal leech.
Harry returned to the Mцbius Continuum and chose a future-time door, where
now the billions of blue life-threads wove out and away forever, speeding into
a dazzling, ever-expanding future. He drifted out among them, and was quickly
drawn along the timestream. And: 'This thread you see unwinding out of me,' he
said. 'It's my future.'
And mine, said Faethor doggedly, steadier now.
'But see, it's tinged with red,' Harry ignored him. 'Do you see that,
Faethor?'
I see it, fool. The red is me, proof that I'm part of you always.
'Wrong,' said Harry. 'I can go back because my thread is unbroken. Because
I have a past, I can reel myself in. But your past was finished back in
Ploiesti. You have no thread, no lifeline, Faethor.'
What? the other's nightmare voice was a croak. Then -
- The master of the Mцbius Continuum brought himself to an abrupt halt,
but the spirit of Faethor Ferenczy shot on into the future. Harry! he
cried out in his terror. Don't do this!
'But it's done,' the Necroscope called after him. 'You have no flesh, no
past, nothing, Faethor. Except the longest, loneliest, emptiest future any
creature ever suffered. Goodbye!'
H-H-Harry! . . . Haaarry! . . . Haaaarrry! . . . HAAAAAAAAAA-
But Harry closed the door and shut him off. Always. Except that before the
door slammed shut he looked again at the blue thread unwinding out of himself.
And saw that it was still tinged red.
Men should never try to read the future. For it's a devious thing ...
REVISION HISTORY
v2.0 wg
-conversion to standard HTML format
-added chapter links
-fixed variety of scan errors