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The Vampire Blog

Page 1

by Pete Johnson




  PETE JOHNSON

  CORGI BOOKS

  Contents

  Cover Page

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Otherbooks

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

  Version 1.0

  Epub ISBN 9781407076270

  www.randomhouse.co.uk

  THE VAMPIRE BLOG

  A CORGI YEARLING BOOK 978 0 440 86935 1

  Published in Great Britain by Corgi Yearling, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books A Random House Group Company

  This edition published 2010

  1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

  Copyright © Pete Johnson, 2010

  The right of Pete Johnson to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers.

  The Random House Group Limited supports the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), the leading international forest certification organization. All our titles that are printed on Greenpeace-approved FSC-certified paper carry the FSC logo. Our paper procurement policy can be found at www.rbooks.co.uk/environment.

  Set in 12.5/16pt Century Schoolbook by Falcon Oast Graphic Art Ltd.

  Corgi Yearling Books are published by Random House Children’s Books, 61–63 Uxbridge Road, London W5 5SA

  www.kidsatrandomhouse.co.uk

  www.rbooks.co.uk

  Addresses for companies within The Random House Group Limited can be found at: www.randomhouse.co.uk/offices.htm

  THE RANDOM HOUSE GROUP Limited Reg. No. 954009

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Bookmarque, Croydon, CR0 4TD

  To Bill – who knows a lot about vampires!

  Dad piped up, ‘The thing is, Marcus, you’re special.’

  ‘Oh, I’m the best.’ I grinned. ‘And I’m so glad you’ve realized it – at long last.’

  ‘But a few extra things are going to happen to you, which your friends won’t experience,’ he continued.

  ‘Like what?’ I asked cautiously.

  ‘Well, you will smell quite horrid,’ said Mum.

  I sniffed my armpits. ‘Are you saying I stink?’ I asked.

  ‘No, no,’ said Mum, ‘but you will for a little while, or rather your breath will. And there’s nothing you can do to take away the smell.’

  ‘And soon,’ said Dad, ‘a white fang will appear in your mouth.’

  I gaped at him. ‘Dad, what on earth are you talking about?’

  www.kidsatrandomhouse.co.uk

  www.petejohnsonauthor.com

  How many Pete Johnson books have you read?

  Funny stories

  THE BAD SPY’S GUIDE

  Shortlisted for the 2007 Blue Peter Book Award

  Book I Couldn’t Put Down category

  ‘This book grabs you from the first page (5 stars)’ Sunday Express

  HELP! I’M A CLASSROOM GAMBLER

  Winner of the 2007 Leicester Our Best Book Award

  ‘A real romp of a read that will leave readers ravenous for more’ Achuka

  HOW TO GET FAMOUS

  Winner of the Sheffield Community Libraries Prize

  HOW TO TRAIN YOUR PARENTS

  ‘Makes you laugh out loud’ Sunday Times

  RESCUING DAD

  ‘Most buoyant, funny and optimistic’ Carousel

  THE TV TIME TRAVELLERS

  ‘Another great humorous book from critically acclaimed Pete Johnson’

  Literacy Times

  TRUST ME, I’M A TROUBLEMAKER

  Winner of the 2006 Calderdale Children’s Book of the Year

  (Upper Primary)

  Thrillers

  AVENGER

  Winner of the 2006 Sheffield Children’s Book Award,

  Children’s Books, shorter novel

  Winner of the 2005 West Sussex Children’s Book Award

  ‘Brilliant’ Sunday Express

  THE CREEPER

  ‘Explores the subtle power of the imagination’ Books for Keeps

  THE FRIGHTENERS

  ‘Prepare to be thoroughly spooked’ Daily Mail

  THE GHOST DOG

  Winner of the 1997 Young Telegraph/Fully Booked Award

  ‘Incredibly enjoyable’ Books for Keeps

  TRAITOR

  ‘Fast-paced and energetic’ The Bookseller

  PHANTOM FEAR

  Includes:

  MY FRIEND’S A WEREWOLF and THE PHANTOM THIEF

  EYES OF THE ALIEN

  ‘Very readable with a skilful plot’ Observer

  CHAPTER ONE

  Sunday 30 September

  7.15 p.m.

  Three things you never want to hear your parents say:

  ‘Let’s talk about the facts of life.’

  ‘We’re going to start dancing now.’

  ‘Soon, a white fang will appear in your mouth.’

  My parents have just told me that last one. Then they went on to tell me … well, you just wait.

  Today is my thirteenth birthday. And for the first time in the history of the world, my parents bought me a present I actually wanted: an iPod Touch. It’s got to be my Christmas present as well. But I don’t care. It’s brilliant. And it’s no bigger than a mobile phone so it can go anywhere with me. Now I can play video games or go on the internet or blog whenever I want.

  And I imagined myself keeping such a sensational blog that just about everyone would be going mad to read it. Well, my blog’s going to be sensational all right, but no one can ever see it. What I’m about to tell you, blog, is for your eyes only – and must remain hidden behind a secret password for ever.

  Strange how your life changes when you’re least expecting it. I was just innocently munching my tea tonight when Mum and Dad suddenly stormed in. Mum switched off the telly and she and Dad sat down at the table with me.

  ‘We want to talk to you, Marcus,’ said Dad.

  This didn’t surprise me. Mum and Dad are always giving me long, boring lectures which really annoy me. That’s what I go to school for.

  ‘We thought,’ said Dad, ‘this would be a good moment to tell you’ – he looked at Mum, who nodded slightly – ‘about some of the wonderful changes that will soon be taking place in your body.’

  ‘Getting tons of acne and my voice going all wobbly, you mean,’ I said.
<
br />   ‘There are other changes too,’ said Mum softly.

  Oh no, here it comes, I thought, the facts of life talk. My toes were curling up with embarrassmentalready. ‘Not while I’m eating, Mum, please. You’ll put me right off,’ I said. ‘And we’ve done it in biology anyway, so I know all the gory details.’ Then I smiled, looked hopefully at the door and said, ‘Hey, Mum and Dad, it’s been great hanging out with you both and don’t be strangers now. Bye.’

  But neither of them budged. Instead, they glanced quickly at each other again. Then Dad piped up, ‘The thing is, Marcus, you’re special.’

  ‘Oh, I’m the best.’ I grinned. ‘And I’m so glad you’ve realized it – at long last.’

  ‘But a few extra things are going to happen to you which your friends won’t experience,’ he continued.

  ‘Like what?’ I asked cautiously.

  ‘Well, you will smell quite horrid,’ said Mum.

  I sniffed my armpits. ‘Are you saying I stink?’ I asked.

  ‘No, no,’ said Mum, ‘but you will for a little while, or rather your breath will. And there’s nothing you can do to take away the smell.’

  ‘And soon,’ said Dad, ‘a white fang will appear in your mouth.’

  I gaped at him. ‘Dad, what on earth are you talking about?’

  But he just rattled on. ‘Now, the fang will only be there for a day. And it’s nothing to worry about, quite natural for someone as special as you.’

  Dad looked as if he was about to say a lot more, but then Mum cried, ‘Well, I think that’s enough information for our first little talk.’ And she started to get up.

  ‘Er, hold on,’ I said. ‘Just why is a fang coming my way? You’ll be telling me next I’m turning into a vampire!’

  I rolled around laughing after I’d said that. Well, the atmosphere had got very tense without me quite knowing why. So when in doubt, laugh. Laughing is what life should be all about. That’s what I say anyway. Only I suddenly noticed that Mum and Dad weren’t even smiling. And then I spotted little beads of sweat on Dad’s forehead.

  ‘Hey, you two are really freaking me out tonight, you know,’ I cried. ‘You’ve put me right off my food as well, and usually nothing in the world can do that … now, just tell me, what’s going on?’

  Dad said slowly, ‘You’re not a vampire.’

  ‘No, well I never really thought I was,’ I said. ‘They don’t even exist, do they?’

  Dad didn’t answer this, but then said, very slowly and carefully as if he was translating what he was saying from another language, ‘Your mother and I are, we’re proud to say, half-vampires, well, nearly half – probably about forty per cent vampire. But we call ourselves half-vampires and we believe you are one too.’

  When you hear something as totally mindboggling as that, you don’t leap about and go mad (that comes later). No, you swallow very, very deeply and think: This is either a dream and pigs will fly through the window any second now. Or my parents have both TOTALLY FLIPPED. Yes, that’s what’s happened. The stress of modern life has really got to them.

  So, smiling in quite a kindly way at my loopy parents, I asked, ‘Now, how long have you thought you’re half-vampires? Let’s start with you, Dad. Just sit back, relax and tell me all about it.’

  ‘It’s a bit of a shock when you first hear, isn’t it?’ said Dad.

  ‘Yeah, it is really,’ I said, ‘especially when I don’t believe a single word of it.’

  ‘We shouldn’t have told you like this,’ said Mum. ‘The manual said to break it to you in stages.’

  ‘What manual?’ I asked.

  ‘Oh, just a little guide for people in this situation,’ said Mum. ‘And we so wanted to do it right.’

  ‘So how many half-vampires are there?’ I asked. ‘Or is it just you two crazies – and now lucky old me, of course?’

  ‘There are more of us than you might think,’ said Dad.

  He was saying everything so calmly, and he didn’t seem as if he was cracking up.

  ‘Look,’ I burst out, ‘correct me if I’m wrong, but don’t vampires have big teeth and very dodgy habits? Oh yeah, and aren’t they supposed to crumble into dust in the sun and live for five centuries? Hey, you’re not going to tell me you’re both two hundred and fifty years old now, are you?’

  Mum and Dad actually relaxed a bit then, and smiled as Mum said, ‘You mustn’t believe all the stories. They’re full of such wild exaggerations and we’re only half-vampires, of course. But you know that neither your father nor I like the sun.’

  And with a flash of shock I did remember how carefully Mum and Dad always wrapped up on sunny days. And we never went to hot places for our holidays either. In fact, Mum and Dad much preferred off-peak winter breaks. But I thought that was just because they were being a bit stingy with their money.

  ‘We do like the odd trickle of blood,’ went on Mum. ‘It’s remarkably refreshing actually. But only as a wonderful little treat now and again. And we do enjoy visiting graveyards at night; well, they’re just so full of atmosphere.’

  ‘But we’re no older than you think,’ continued Dad. ‘Half-vampires enjoy very long, active lives though. In fact, your great-grandmother lived long enough to see you when you were a little baby.’

  Then Mum produced this photo of a remarkably ugly baby (me) sitting on the lap of a tiny woman who looked like a very battered doll.

  ‘I’ve seen this picture before,’ I said.

  ‘But we never told you how old your great-grandmother was when this was taken,’ said Mum excitedly. ‘She was a hundred and twenty-four.’

  ‘And she only looks a hundred and twenty-three,’ I said. ‘Amazing. So she was a half-vampire as well?’

  ‘A very proud one too,’ said Dad. ‘She said our very long lives made us like time-lords. And she was active to the very end. Now, look at your grandparents … they might be retired, but neither your mother’s parents nor mine want to just sit at home. They’re all off travelling right now, aren’t they?’

  ‘But there is one important rule for us half-vampires,’ said Mum. ‘We must keep our identity secret. For if ordinary people knew about us …’

  ‘We’d make them very nervous,’ said Dad.

  ‘There are just so many wild tales about us, so it’s best they don’t know what we are.’

  ‘And I’m definitely a half-vampire?’ I said.

  ‘Almost certainly,’ said Mum, ‘but we’ll know for definite in the next day or two. That’s when these changes we mentioned should start.’

  ‘So if I have disgusting breath and grow a fang I’m one of you?’ I said.

  Dad nodded slowly. ‘But remember, there’s nothingtoworry about, only …’ He hesitated.

  ‘Yes?’ I prompted.

  Dad leaned forward. ‘The difficult part for you will be over the next few days, when the vampire side of your nature tries to come through.’

  ‘Just let that happen,’ said Mum. ‘Don’t block it in any way. That’s very important.’

  ‘Any more questions?’ asked Dad.

  ‘Yeah, can you and Mum turn into bats?’ Mum actually blushed and Dad coughed shyly. ‘We don’t like to show off … We’ll tell you about that another day.’

  ‘I can’t wait,’ I said, suddenly jumping up.

  ‘Where are you going?’ asked Mum.

  ‘Off to ring the hospital, as you’ve both gone completely nuts.’

  ‘Oh, Marcus,’ cried Mum.

  ‘I’m sorry, but there’s weird and then there’s this. I don’t believe a word of it. I’m going out now.’

  ‘No—’ began Mum.

  But Dad cut in. ‘That’s all right, let him stretch his legs for a few minutes.’

  And I just tore outside.

  8.25 p.m.

  I had to get out of there. I mean, here were my parents telling me all this universe-shattering stuff, but in such a calm, everyday way. That really freaked me out. I tell you, blog, something very creepy is going on in my hous
e.

  Unless – well, it could just be a huge practical joke, of course. But my parents aren’t into stuff like that. Or maybe it’s some kind of test? My parents love anything educational. But what’s educational about saying they’re half-vampires?

  No, I’ve got to just hope my parents have gone insane. And if they haven’t … WHAT IS GOING ON?

  Answers in blood on a gravestone.

  9.05 p.m.

  Went off on my skateboard for a bit, and then called on Joel, my best mate.

  His mum answered the door, glaring hard, as usual. ‘Oh, hello,’ I said cheerily, ‘is Joel there?’

  ‘He’s in disgrace,’ she snapped, ‘so you can see him for just five minutes. He’s in his bedroom – where he’ll stay for the rest of the night.’

  Upstairs, Joel told me about his latest crime.

  ‘Well, it was my little brother’s birthday today and it was so boring … until I organized the biggest jelly fight you’ve ever seen.’ He grinned. ‘But I haven’t forgotten it’s your birthday and I have for you … a world-class card.’

  I opened up the envelope. ‘Hey, you made it yourself.’

  ‘I spent several seconds on it too – and look at the bold way I wrote: HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MARCUS. There’s even a little picture of a cake.’

  ‘You spoil me.’

  ‘So did anything exciting occur on your birthday?’ asked Joel.

  Sitting here in Joel’s room, all that seemed far away now. I was right back in the normal world again. I showed him my iPod Touch, then I asked, ‘Joel, would you say my parents are weird?’

  ‘Oh yeah, but then all parents are.’

  ‘But are mine especially weird?’

  ‘Yeah, probably, but in a good way. I mean, your mum is nothing like mine. She’s so laid back for a start, and she just drifts about the house in a dream. Not hot on the old housework either, is she?’

  This was true. Our house was full of arty pictures and books, but it was sort of messy too. I knew Mum hated disturbing cobwebs. And she wasn’t the least bit scared of spiders either – in fact she treated them like little pets.

  I suddenly pictured Mum with her long, dark hair and all those jingly earrings she always wore. Yes, you could sort of imagine her slinking about in a horror film. But not Dad: a smallish man with a wispy beard and with an eager, helpful smile on his face and a trace of a Brummie accent. But he does have a study full of gory tales – shelves and shelves of them, in fact. Still, that doesn’t prove anything. After all, he runs a bookshop. So why shouldn’t he collect horror books?

 

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