Three Nights of the Vampire- The Complete Trilogy

Home > Horror > Three Nights of the Vampire- The Complete Trilogy > Page 33
Three Nights of the Vampire- The Complete Trilogy Page 33

by Amy Cross


  “I'm pretty sure that there's no mention of any of this in the history books,” I pointed out.

  He shrugged.

  “How can huge things like this really get swept under the carpet?” I asked. “Vampires. Time travel. I'm sure there are plenty of other things I don't understand, as well. Werewolves?”

  “Oh, they're real,” Hugo replied.

  “Zombies?”

  “There have been a few outbreaks.”

  I thought for a moment.

  “Unicorns?” I asked finally.

  “Complicated.”

  “Ghosts?”

  “Ever-present.”

  “And how do I get home?”

  “There'll be time to figure that out,” he replied, “but right now I need to go and find Judith. She's somewhere in the dungeons here, and Zieghoff's men might still put up something of a fight. The ones who haven't already fled once they learned of his insanity, at least. Everything's under control, but I have to get Judith away from this wretched place. Wait here, and I'll be right back.”

  He moved to step around me, but suddenly I grabbed his shoulder as I saw something moving nearby.

  “It's okay,” Hugo said, “I'm just -”

  “You said Zieghoff made a mistake, right?” I replied, as a sense of fear began to fill my chest. “You said he shouldn't have drunk all the serum?”

  “Exactly. It's kind of pathetic, really, but -”

  “I think maybe you might want to rethink that,” I said, forcing him to turn and look toward the other end of the room. “I think maybe we have a problem.”

  He turned, and we both stood and watched in horror as Klaus Zieghoff's shuddering, rippling figure rose from the ground and got back on its feet. His head was bowed, but after a moment he looked straight at us, and his eyes burned bright as he opened his mouth and revealed a set of large, razor-sharp fangs. Flames were rippling across his body, as if he was about to burn at any moment. Finally a low, angry growl emerged from his mouth.

  “Okay, Hugo,” I said cautiously, resisting the urge to scream, “do you still think you've got this situation under control?”

  Chapter Fifty-Five

  Chloe

  “I feel it in my veins,” Zieghoff gasped as he held out his left hand and examined his darkened, charred skin. “Such power. Such energy. Such strength.”

  “Zieghoff,” Hugo said cautiously, stepping toward him, “I want you to listen very carefully to me.”

  “Listen to you?” Zieghoff replied, still looking at his own hand with a sense of wonder. “I can barely even hear you. You're completely insignificant, all of you.”

  “Zieghoff -”

  “What am I?” Zieghoff asked.

  Hugo hesitated.

  “You don't even know, do you?” Zieghoff sneered, standing up straight as ripples of fire continued to dance across his body. His face was burned now, but he seemed to be in no pain at all. “I see it in your eyes. You always thought that you knew everything, but now you're scared. You thought it was impossible to absorb all the serum in one body, but you were wrong. I dared to go beyond the limits of your knowledge, and now look at me. I'm the most powerful vampire that ever lived.”

  “I'm not quite sure that's what's happening here,” Hugo said. “Let me examine you, Zieghoff. Let me try to understand what all that serum did to you.”

  “Examine me?” Zieghoff replied. “You're not even worthy of being in the same room as me, let alone touching me.”

  “I'm a scientist,” Hugo said firmly, “and I -”

  “No!” Zieghoff roared, raising his right hand, and in that instant Hugo was sent flying across the room until he slammed against the far wall and then fell to the floor.

  I ran over to help him, but he was already trying to get back up.

  “Find Judith!” he gasped.

  “But -”

  “Find Judith!” he said firmly, pushing me away. “I can deal with Zieghoff, Chloe, but I need to know that Judith's safe first. Go into the dungeons and find her, and get her out of there, and then get her as far away from this place as you can.”

  “What are you going to do about Zieghoff?” I asked.

  He looked past me, and I turned to see that Zieghoff was shuffling slowly toward us.

  “I'll find a solution,” Hugo said after a moment, and then he pushed me again. “But I need to think clearly, and for that I need to know that Judith is safe. I'm trusting you, Chloe. Judith's the most important thing in the world to me, and I'm trusting you to save her. Now run!”

  I hesitated, and then I heard a growling sound nearby. I turned and saw Zieghoff glaring directly at me, and I instantly felt a rush of instinctive, primal fear rising through my chest. I took a step back, but the fear was getting stronger and stronger, and finally I realized that Hugo was right. Turning, I stumbled out of the room, and then I tried to work out how I was going to find Judith.

  “I'm going to help you!” I heard Hugo shouting. “Whatever power you've got now, Zieghoff, you need to know how to control it or it could destroy you. There's no more -”

  Suddenly he screamed. I turned to look back, but all I saw was flickering orange light cast against one of the walls, and I felt a wave of heat rushing through the air. I wanted to go back in there, to help Hugo, but I could hear him shouting at Zieghoff now and I realized that I had to do what he'd asked me to do. I had to trust him, and I had to find Judith.

  Chapter Fifty-Six

  Chloe

  Stopping in the gloomy corridor, I realized I could hear someone whistling up ahead. I'd been searching the dungeons for a while now, without any luck, but at least it seemed that Zieghoff had sent most of his guards away. Now, finally, I had a sense that maybe I'd found where Judith was being held.

  A moment later, the entire corridor shuddered, and a thin layer of dust fell from cracks in the ceiling. There had been several similar tremors over the previous few minutes, and I'd heard a few loud thudding sounds as well. Whatever was going on between Hugo and Zieghoff, they seemed to be doing for more than just talking. Still, Hugo had told me that he'd got things covered, and I figured I just had to trust that he knew what he was doing.

  And I had to find a way to get Judith to safety.

  Making my way toward the doorway at the corridor's far end, I stopped for a moment and listened as the whistling sound continued. I had no weapon, and no real ideas, but I figured I'd just have to figure something out on the fly. And then, as if to remind me that time was of the essence, the whole building shook harder than ever. All around me, the walls seemed to be on the verge of collapse.

  I hurried forward, into the next room, and I immediately saw Judith on the floor behind some bars. Then, hearing a noise nearby, I turned to see a soldier staring at me.

  “You again?” I gasped.

  It was the same soldier I'd encountered before, back in Paris, and sure enough his left foot was heavily bandaged, and his nose was still taped up as well. He stared at me for a moment, as if he genuinely couldn't believe that he was seeing me, and then he turned and tried to hurry to his gun. Thankfully, his injured foot slowed him down, and I managed to grab him and pull him back.

  “You shot me!” he gasped in broken English. “This time I'm going to -”

  Before he could finish, I swung a fist at him and punched him on the side of the face, sending him thudding down to the ground. I grabbed the gun, but then I saw that the guy was already unconscious.

  “I guess there's a first time for everything,” I muttered, as I slowly clenched and unclenched my fist. The punch had hurt, but at least nothing seemed to be broken.

  Crouching down, I took a set of keys from the soldier's belt and hurried over to the jail cell's metal door.

  “What are you doing here?” Judith asked.

  “Hugo sent me to get you out,” I replied, just as the building shook again. I started trying each of the keys, hoping against hope that eventually I'd be able to get the door open. “It's complicated, but l
et's just say that his plan has taken a bit of a detour.”

  “I told him not to work with Zieghoff!” she exclaimed. “You have to believe me. I begged him, but he wouldn't listen!”

  “He's a stubborn guy, that's for sure.”

  I tried another key, but I was still having no luck.

  “What's happening up there?” Judith asked, as the building shuddered again. “It sounds like the end of the world.”

  “I think that might not be far off,” I muttered, as I tried the final key. “Hugo says he's got everything under control. We just have to get out of here.”

  I turned the key, but I still wasn't having any luck.

  “It has to be one of these!” I said as I started again, trying each key for a second time.

  “How could he work with that monster?” Judith replied. “I'd rather die than have Hugo help the Germans.”

  “Hopefully it won't be -”

  Suddenly I froze, and I looked between the bars and saw Judith's horrified face. In that instant, I thought back again to what Hugo had said in the future.

  “For everything you destroyed, Chloe,” his voice had snarled, echoing now in my memory, “you must now pay a heavy price. For Judith, for all the pain. For how she died. Did you really think I'd let you get away with it?”

  “What is it?” Judith asked. “Why are you looking at me like that?”

  “It's nothing.” I got back to checking the keys, but I quickly found that – once again – none of them fitted the lock.

  “I don't think this place is going to last much longer,” Judith said. “Chloe, you have to save yourself. Get out of here before the ceiling comes down.”

  “I'm not leaving you!” I said firmly, but it was clear that the keys weren't going to help. Hurrying back over to the unconscious soldier, I checked to see if he had any others, and then I started searching the room. “They must be here somewhere!” I shouted, as a loud rumbling sound filled the entire building. “What kind of person doesn't keep the key close to the locked door?”

  “You have to run!” Judith shouted. “Chloe, I don't want anyone else to get hurt because of me!”

  Realizing that the key definitely wasn't nearby, I suddenly remembered having seen another office upstairs, in one of the rooms near the main entrance. The keys had to be there.

  “I'll be right back,” I told her. “I think I know where to get the keys, but they're upstairs. I'll be back in two minutes, I promise!”

  “Just go!” she sobbed. “Get away while you still can!”

  “I'll be back!” With that, I turned and ran back out into the corridor, although at that moment the building began to shake violently and I was thrown against one of the walls.

  Hurrying toward the stairs, I realized I could hear screams in the distance. It certainly didn't sound like Hugo had Zieghoff under control, but he'd told me that I had to trust him. I made my way up into the main hallway, and then I hurried to the office. The door had been left open when the soldiers had left, and I figured that the remaining guards would have fled once the building began to shake. I started checking all the drawers in the desks, desperately hoping that the right set of keys would have been left behind.

  Finally, in a bottom drawer, I found a set of keys. I carried on searching for a moment, but there seemed to be no other sets, so I ran back out and headed toward the stairs that led back to the dungeon.

  “No!” a voice snarled suddenly, and I was swept off my feet and sent flying across the room.

  At the last moment, I managed to grab the side of the door as I was pulled back into the large chamber, and then I turned and saw that flames were filling the room. Hugo was on the ground, not moving at all, and Klaus Zieghoff was watching me from the heart of the inferno. Energy was dancing in the air all around him, and flickers of what looked like lightning were moving all over his body as he laughed

  “I was just about to kill the irritating Mr. Hugo Bane,” Zieghoff said, as flames burst from his eyes, “but I might as well deal with you at the same time. After tonight, I'll be far too busy conquering the world.”

  Chapter Fifty-Seven

  Chloe

  “Stop!” I yelled, as I felt an invisible force pulling me toward the flames. “You don't have to do this!”

  I was still clinging to the door, but my grip was slowly slipping and I knew that I couldn't hold on for much longer. Already, the heat from the inferno was starting to burn the back of my neck.

  “They'll all bow down before me now,” Zieghoff said, his voice filled with a sense of wonder. “I won't even need to see the future, not yet. I'll force the world to bend to my will. I'll end the war in Europe first, I'll finish that all tomorrow morning. Then in the afternoon I'll deal with the Soviets and the Americans, and then I think I'll sort out most of Asia in the evening. That'll leave me time to crush China the day after, and maybe South America as well. I should have the entire world under my control within seven days, which seems somehow fitting. And then, on the seventh day, I shall rest.”

  Suddenly my fingers slipped from the door, and I was dragged through the air. I managed to grab the side of a column, but the heat was becoming unbearable and my grip was once again starting to come loose.

  “The only question is how to kill you,” Zieghoff continued. “As the one who initiated this chain of events, I suppose you deserve a somewhat fitting death. I considered keeping you around, but you're no longer essential to my plans and I'd prefer to eventually master time travel on my own terms, so I think I shall burn you. Yes, that seems like a relatively quick way for you to die. Not entirely painless, but then you deserve a little discomfort. After all, you really haven't been as helpful as you might have been. In fact -”

  I waited, still clinging to the column, but after a moment I looked over my shoulder and saw that Zieghoff was clutching his side as if he was in immense pain.

  “It's all so new,” he grimaced, clearly struggling. “It's all... I'm not used to the power, I feel as if it's... almost too much sometimes and...”

  He hesitated, and then the invisible force stopped pulling me as Zieghoff dropped to his knees.

  “No!” he snarled. “I can contain it! I'm strong enough!”

  I scrambled back around the column, trying to get away from the worst of the heat, and a moment later Zieghoff let out an agonized scream. The heat seemed different somehow, and after a few seconds I realized where I'd experienced it before. It was the same kind of heat that I'd felt in the mansion, right before I traveled back in time. That time, the inferno was caused by Matthias dying, which meant...

  I peered back around the column, just in time to see the flames starting to completely engulf Zieghoff. He cried out, shouting something that got lost in the heat, and then I saw his body starting to break apart.

  Rushing across the chamber, I grabbed Hugo's arms and started dragging him toward the door. I struggled a little, but finally I managed to get him out into the hallway, and then I pulled him all the way through the main door and along the path that led to the open grass. Finally, figuring that I was far enough away, I laid him down. As I did so, the blue ring fell from one of his pockets and landed on the grass.

  Picking the ring up, I realized that this must have been the other key to my journey. Somehow, this ring had sent me back in time, and I figured that maybe it could send me the other way as well. After all, why else would Hugo have had it with him?

  I hesitated, and then I pocketed the ring before hurrying back into Chateau Malafort.

  The heat was incredible now, and the chamber seemed to be filled with fire. I stopped and looked at the immense white light, and the whole building shuddered around me as I realized that this was my chance. The inferno was starting to dim a little now, as if the flames would soon die, so I stepped forward as I felt the pull of home. I didn't understand fully, but in that moment I felt absolutely certain that all I had to do was step into the light with the ring in my hands, and I'd end up home. I could even feel my own t
ime period calling to me somehow, as if trying to help me.

  There were tears in my eyes.

  Home.

  I took a step forward, and then another. Reaching out, I held up my hand and I saw traces of fire dancing around my fingertips, trying to pull me closer.

  Suddenly the building shook again, and this time the ground beneath my feet began to give way. A loud creaking sound filled the air, and I looked up just as chunks of stone began to fall. The inferno was fading faster now, and I realized that I only had at most a few more minutes left before my chance would vanish. I stepped forward and reached for the ring in my pocket, but then at the very last moment I felt the ground shake again. I put my hand in my pocket again, but – before I could take the ring out – my fingertips brushed against the keys I'd taken from the office.

  Judith.

  I had to save Judith.

  “For Judith, for all the pain. For how she died. Did you really think I'd let you get away with it?”

  That's what Hugo had said to me. Had he been talking about this moment, or about another? All I knew was that I couldn't leave yet, not without making sure that she was safe first.

  I raced to the stairs, and then I made my way down into the dungeon as quickly as I could manage. The building was constantly shaking now, as if it might entirely collapse at any moment, but finally I reached the room where Judith was being held. The unconscious soldier was gone, having most likely woken up and fled, so I headed to the metal bars and began frantically trying the new set of keys.

  “You shouldn't have come back!” Judith shouted. “The whole place is about to fall down!”

  I tried one key, then another, until there was only one more left. I slipped it into the lock and gave it a twist, and finally there was a faint clicking sound and I was able to pull the door open.

  “Run!” I yelled, grabbing Judith's arm and dragging her out of the room.

  We hurried along the corridor and up the stairs, and then out onto the lawn. Judith immediately dropped to her knees and tried to get Hugo to wake up, while I turned and stepped back toward the building. I could still see the light burning, albeit not so brightly now, but I realized there was still a chance.

 

‹ Prev