by Tim O'Rourke
Potter looked away from Murphy and stared into the fire.
“This pack of wolves are trying to live good lives,” Murphy continued, “They are trying to lift the curse that has been placed upon them.”
“So what’s the deal?” Isidor said as he loaded two bolts into his crossbow.
“Sorry?” Murphy almost seemed to growl at him.
“You said that you struck up a deal with one of these wolves, so what was it?” he asked, throwing his loaded crossbow over his shoulder. I guessed he believed he might need it.
Murphy paused for a moment and looked at Luke and Potter. It was if he had some bad news to tell them. “I struck a deal with Jack Seth…”
“Oh, you’ve got to be kidding me!” Potter yelled and stood up.
“Jack Seth!” Luke breathed in wonder…or was it in fear? I couldn’t tell.
“Didn’t we lock that arsehole up for twelve counts of murder?” Potter shouted over the fire at Murphy.
“That’s right, we did!” Luke said, now standing.
“The evidence was very circumstantial, if I remember rightly,” Murphy said, now he too was standing.
“Circumstantial!” Potter almost seemed to screech. “He was still eating one of the victims when we came crashing through the fucking door!”
“So how come he’s out roaming the English countryside?” Luke asked Murphy. “Didn’t the elders pass down twelve life sentences? One life sentence for each victim?”
“He says he was set up,” Murphy said.
“Set up! God give me strength!” Potter roared. Then, pointing at me, he added, “There was so much evidence that even Dana Scully over there wouldn’t have wasted her time investigating the case, it was so cut-and-dried!”
Then coming around the fire, Luke came close to Murphy and looking him straight in the eyes, he said, “Don’t tell me the deal was his early release in return for him tracking down Kayla?”
Murphy didn’t say anything, he just looked away and that was answer enough.
“Oh, Christ! This just keeps getting better and better!” Potter shouted, kicking the ground with his boot. “The guy is a freaking maniac!”
“He says he was innocent – that he was set up!” Murphy insisted.
“Yeah, and Santa Claus is gonna get me a date with Jennifer Lopez for Christmas!” Potter shouted as he lit himself a cigarette.
Standing, I looked at Murphy and then at the others and said, “You know, maybe we should listen to the sarge, he hasn’t led us wrong before.”
Blowing smoke from the corner of his mouth, Potter looked at me and said, “Do us all a favour, sweet-cheeks, and keep your nose outta this – you have no idea who we’re dealing with.”
“Maybe we should give this Jack Seth a chance if the sarge -”
But before I’d a chance to finish, Potter had lept over the fire and was standing before me. “Jack Seth is an animal – nothing but vermin,” he said. “This isn’t some kinda fairytale – the guy dates a woman with bristles under her tongue for crying-out-loud!”
“All the female Lycanthrope have hair under their tongues!” Murphy shouted. “That’s just the way they are!”
“Look,” Potter said turning on him, “I can just about forgive a girl for not shaving her armpits – but a hairy tongue! That just takes the piss!”
“Stop it!” I shouted. “Standing here arguing about hairy tongues isn’t going to solve anything. We’re meant to be searching for Kayla.”
“Yeah, and look where that got us,” Potter snapped at me. “According to you and Indiana Jones over there, that thing wasn’t even Kayla.” Then turning on Murphy, Potter spat, “It looks like your mate Jack Seth lied to you!”
Fixing on Potter with his steely-blue eyes, Murphy said, “There’s only one way of finding out.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Luke asked, stepping close to me.
“We go and ask him,” Murphy said with a grim look on his face. “And I promise you, if he did lead us into a trap back there at the monastery, those twelve life sentences will seem more like a vacation by the time I’ve finished with him!”
“You know he can’t be trusted, don’t you?” Potter said, the anger now gone from his voice as he tried to reason with Murphy.
Ignoring him, Murphy turned his back on us and disappeared into the shadows at the rear of the overhang. “Get some sleep, we get going at dusk.”
Chapter Twenty-One
Opening my eyes, I looked up. There was a face just inches from mine, as if they were peering over me. Trying to move, I realised that I was lying down. I felt weak – too weak to move. My throat was raw and my tongue felt swollen in my mouth.
The room was dimly lit with a single light bulb that hung from the centre of the stone ceiling.
Where am I? I wanted to say, but my swollen tongue couldn’t form the words inside my mouth.
I looked up at the face again, my eyelids feeling like weights hanging over my eyes. I hadn’t felt this rough since getting drunk and making a fool of myself at my passing-out parade at police training school. But I had been hung-over back then – this was different. I felt as if I’d been drugged. I could only see half of the face peering down at me – the top half. His eyes stared over a blue surgical mask and down at me.
“How are you feeling, Kiera?” he asked, his voice sounding muffled from behind his mask. “Are you okay?”
What was going on here? Had I been injured? With my heart beginning to weigh heavy in my chest, I looked into those eyes and shook my head and it felt like a dead weight. I tried to speak again, but couldn’t, so I slowly shook my head from left to right to let them know that I was far from alright.
Whoever it was that hid behind the mask must have seen the utter fear in my eyes, because they squeezed my shoulder and said, “You’ll be okay, Kiera, you’ve just come back from surgery.”
Surgery! I screamed inside. What kind of surgery?
The surgeon, if that’s what he was, squeezed my shoulder again and a bolt of pain twisted its way up the length of my back, like a red-hot poker being dragged across my flesh. Despite my dry and swollen tongue, I screamed in pain, arching my back off the bed.
“Calm yourself, Kiera,” the surgeon tried to soothe. “I’ll give you something to ease the pain.”
He turned away and moved to a small silver trolley that was beside the bed. And as he did, I could see a shape hiding in the far corner of the room. Whoever it was, he was masked in shadows. I stared through the gloom at him and he must have sensed – known – that I could see through the darkness – because he turned away from me so that I couldn’t see his face. Apart from my bed and the bare light bulb hanging from the ceiling, the room was barren. The walls were featureless and made from grey stone.
Where am I? I wanted to scream out again but I couldn’t.
Turning, the surgeon stepped away from the trolley and came towards me. In his hand, he held a needle.
Instantly my mind began to scream, NO! NO! NO! What was he going to inject me with? I didn’t want to be unconscious again. However bad the pain in my back was, I wanted to stay awake, I wanted to know – see – what they were doing to me. Slowly, he came towards me and I noticed his forearms for the first time, they were muscular and covered in hair – bristling black hair. Holding the needle above my face, I could see that the syringe was full of a pale blue liquid – it looked like detergent.
Shaking my head from side to side, I tried to inch my way back up the bed and away from him. But as I did, pain exploded inside me like a bomb going off in my spine. The force of it making my back feel like it had been ripped apart, my ribs and spine dismantled. I locked-up with pain and the surgeon seized my arm.
“Hush now, Kiera,” he said again, bringing the needle close. I tried to pull back, get away but the pain was too intense and raw. Even though every one of my survival instincts was screaming for me to get away from the surgeon, and whoever it was that lurked in the corner, I just couldn’t
move.
With my eyes bulging in their sockets, the surgeon raised my left arm, and inspected it closely.
“How am I meant to find a vein in these conditions?” he asked, and I wondered if he were talking to the shadow in the corner.
“Just get on with it,” the shape in the corner barked. The voice was deep and emotionless.
“I need more light,” the surgeon said, his eyes screwing-up as he inspected the crook of my elbow.
“Just do it!” the shadow barked.
Then, looking into my eyes, his almost seemed to smile as the surgeon said, “You’ll be okay, Kiera, I promise.”
I felt a scratchy feeling in my forearm and a warm feeling seemed to flood through my body. As my eyes began to feel heavy, I realised that I recognised the eyes which peered back at me over the top of that surgical mask…I had seen them in a picture…a photo…above the fire…at…
Chapter Twenty-Two
…I sat bolt upright and grabbed the crook of my elbow. I scratched at it with my fingernails, as if trying to claw away whatever it was the surgeon had injected me with. I didn’t want to be unconscious again, I had to get out of the room, away from the surgeon and the man in the shadows. Scrambling to my feet, I got up, almost tripping over Luke who lay curled next to me. Even seeing him wasn’t enough to convince me that I was awake and the surgeon had just been someone in my nightmare.
“Kiera,” someone whispered from the other side of the overhang.
Spinning around, my mind showing me a series of shattered images reflecting needles, surgical masks, shadows and…
“Kiera,” the voice came again.
“Keep away from me!” I groaned. “I don’t want to go under again!”
“It’s me, Isidor,” the voice said, and looking through the darkness, I could see that he was propped against the wall of the overhang. His knees were drawn up to his chest and he was reading a book. Even though my eyes could see that it was him, my nightmare still hung about my head like fog and my brain told me it was the surgeon trying to trick me into going to him.
“Leave me alone!” I hissed.
“Kiera?” he said getting up and coming close. “Are you okay?”
“Please,” I said, shying away from him, not wanting another injection.
Then his hand was gently touching my shoulder and he was pulling me towards him. “Kiera, you’ve had a nightmare, that’s all.”
I looked into his eyes and they twinkled back at me, blue and clear. The tips of the black flames he had tattooed up his neck were now lost amongst a spattering of stubble that covered the lower half of his face and neck. “It’s me, Kiera,” he smiled.
Slowly, the last fragments of my nightmare melted away, as I realised that I was no longer in that barren room with the surgeon and whoever it had been lurking in the corner.
“There was a surgeon…” I whispered as he guided me back to the spot where he had been sitting. Looking back over my shoulder, I could see a shaft of pink sunlight cutting through the gap where we had earlier entred the overhang. The sun was setting outside and I knew that it wouldn’t be long before the others were awake.
“Sit here,” Isidor whispered as he slouched back against the wall. He held the book open across his knees and gave me a sideways glance. “Wanna talk about it?” he asked.
I didn’t, so I changed the subject, “What are you reading?”
“ ‘Ryder’ by Greta Maloney,” he said, closing the book and placing it back into his rucksack.
“Any good?” I asked, wanting to find another subject to talk about other than my nightmare.
“It’s creepy,” he smiled at me.
“I thought you would’ve had enough of creepy,” I half-smiled at him, “Especially after everything we’ve been through recently.”
“You can’t ever have enough ‘creepy’,” he smiled back.
“I guess,” I said, looking away from him. Silence fell between us and I knew that if I were ever going to ask him about being a half-breed this was my chance. So turning to face him, I said, “You said Kayla was your sister. How can that be?”
Staring ahead, Isidor laced his fingers together over his drawn-up knees and said, “I’m almost two years older than Kayla, but she doesn’t know that I exist. I didn’t know anything about her either until recently,” he started to explain. “My mother and father are Lady and Lord Hunt just like Kayla’s. As far as I’ve been told, my mother had a terrible time carrying me as an unborn child. She was sick constantly and spent most of her time in bed at Hallowed Manor. Doc Ravenwood cared for her, but he suspected that something wasn’t quite right. He expressed his fears to my father, telling him that my mother’s life could be in danger because she was carrying a half-breed. My father was thrown into a panic as he had never revealed his secret to my mother about being a Vampyrus. So one day, when my mother was screaming in pain, they gave her a sedative to calm her, and Doc Ravenwood used that x-ray-thingy to take a peek at me inside of her.”
“A bit like an ultrasound?” I cut-in.
“I guess,” he said, still not looking at me. “Anyway, what they saw terrified my father, for even as a fetus I had my wings. Nothing like this had ever been seen before. Most half-breeds didn’t start their change until adolescence and as we know, that change killed them. But there I was, inside my mother’s womb, already looking like a Vampyrus. Apparently, my father went into a blind panic and for days he was thrown into a fit of despair. What was he to do? He couldn’t tell my mother – what would he have told her? That for years he had been masquerading above ground as a human when really he was nothing more than a vampire bat? No, he loved my mother deeply and feared that she would have left him
“So, Doc Ravenwood and my father made a decision which would change all of our lives forever. When my mother went into labor they kept her heavily sedated, and when I was born, my father snuck me away down into The Hollows, where he gave me to his sister to raise as her own,” he said, his voice dropping to a whisper.
“But what about Lady Hunt…your mum?” I gasped. “What did they tell her?”
Turning to look at me, his eyes shot with what looked like tears, he said, “They told her that I had died soon after birth. They kept my mother sedated for days, passing in and out of delirium, so she was not to know any better. Days later, when she did finally wake, they told her their lies, saying that they had buried me in that graveyard beneath the weeping willows at Hallowed Manor.
“This threw my mother into a deep, dark depression and as far as I know, my father bitterly regretted telling her those lies. But he couldn’t go back – he knew what he had done was unforgivable. But in her despair, my mother begged him for another child and within a year or two Kayla, my sister was born,” he said, cuffing away the tears that stood in the corner of his eyes.
“Lord Hunt took a dangerous risk,” I breathed, haunted by what Isidor had just told me. “Kayla could’ve been born just like you.”
“My father fretted the whole time while my mother carried Kayla,” he explained. “Every week, Doc Ravenwood would check on my mother with that x-ray machine and to his and my father’s relief, Kayla showed no outward signs of being a half-breed. And that’s that,” Isidor said trying to sound quite matter-of-fact about the whole thing, but I could tell that he was hurting. “You know the rest. Kayla grew up believing that she was just like any other little girl, and our mother believed it, too. Until she got to sixteen, that is,” he said.
“But what about you?” I said, my heart aching for him.
“What about me?”
“What was it like for you as a kid?” I asked him. “It must have been tough.”
“No, not really,” he shrugged, but I didn’t believe him. “I grew up believing that my aunt was my mother. I had no reason to think any different. I grew up in The Hollows along with all the other Vampyrus. But…” he trailed off.
“But what?” I pushed.
“I knew that I was different from the other Vam
pyrus,” he said. “Sure, I looked like them, but my wings were different from theirs, mine grew beneath my arms and wouldn’t fold away, which made it very difficult for me when my friends wanted to investigate above ground. Like most Vampyrus, they wanted to know what it was like up here, so as young teenagers, we would sneak away above ground and check out the humans. My friends could blend really well, but it was harder for me. Some even got permission from their parents to attend school and college above ground, join the football team, date girls, but not me.
“When I asked my mother…aunt…why I looked different, she would change the subject and tell me that in her eyes I was perfect. But it wasn’t only my wings; it was my sense of smell. I mean it was almost suffocating at times. But I soon realised that I could use it to track things – you know like animals and stuff and my friends just for fun. So, I built the crossbow and while my friends practiced football and dated human girls, I would practice my hunting and my aim. But this only set me apart from them even more, and in a way, I guess I secretly liked that – I mean I wanted to be different. So I got the tattoos and piercing and stuff to really set me apart.
“Anyway, one day I’m standing on the touchline, watching my Vampyrus mates playing football with their human buddies, and this geeky-looking guy strolls up alongside me. He’s wearing these cheap plastic glasses and his face is all covered in spots,” Isidor said.
“Sparky?” I cut in.
“Yeah, your mate Sparky,” Isidor grimaced. “He says to me, ‘It’s a shame, really’
‘What is?’ I ask him.
‘That you don’t fit in with the humans as well as your Vampyrus buddies.’
“I was shocked, Kiera, by what he said, and I just stared at him wide-eyed and opened-mouthed. I mean, I couldn’t figure out how he knew about us.
‘I don’t know what you’re talking about,’ I said to him.
‘You’re more like a human than you realise,’ he smiled.