Uprising

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Uprising Page 28

by Mariani, Scott G.


  ‘Stop it!’ Dec shouted at him from the couch. ‘What are you doing? You’re hurting her.’

  ‘She’s a vampire, Dec. Forget about her.’

  The kid turned to gaze at Kate with tears of longing in his eyes. ‘We love each other. We’re going to be together forever.’

  ‘She’s been living here with you, hasn’t she?’

  Dec nodded. He pointed at a cupboard. ‘She sleeps there during the day. I take care of her. That’s how it’s going to be. Nothing you can do about it, get it?’

  ‘This has to end,’ Joel said. ‘If she keeps feeding on you like this, you know what you’ll become. One of them.’

  Tears flooded down Dec’s cheeks. ‘I don’t fucking care any more. I love her, man.’

  Coiled in the corner, Kate was slowly recovering from the blast of the cross’s energy. She raised herself up weakly on her elbows. ‘He loves me, you fuck. Leave us alone.’

  Joel shook his head. ‘I’m sorry for what’s about to happen,’ he murmured. Shaking with anticipation, he moved his hand to open the box and take out the cross. Now he would see exactly what happened when a vampire was exposed to the full force of its power. Kate saw what he was doing and screamed.

  But then a thought came to him and he stopped.

  ‘How did she know where to find you, Dec? Did you tell her where you were?’

  Dec just looked at him. Joel grabbed him by the collar of his bloody T-shirt and hauled him off the couch and shook him violently. It was shocking to feel how little the kid weighed.

  ‘How did she find you?’ he repeated.

  ‘She just did,’ Dec muttered. ‘I don’t know how. I was here, and she turned up. Don’t hurt her, Joel. For fuck’s sake, don’t hurt her.’

  Joel let Dec slump down again, thinking hard. The idea that was forming in his mind seemed crazy – but in a reality that had already been turned upside-down, even a crazy idea made perfect sense.

  He was thinking about the potentially infinite relationship of vampire to victim. One created another, then on it went down the line, one new vampire after another being endlessly hatched out of the wreckage of its human host. Stone had created the Kate Hawthorne who lay before him now. She was his progeny, eternally bonded to him; and, left to her own devices, the fledgling vampire girl had been about to turn Dec into the next link in the chain. The same connection must exist between every single vampire and each of their victims.

  Stone had turned Kate at Crowmoor Hall – that much was clear – and yet he’d been able to find her home in Wallingford. Just as Kate had, in turn, managed to find Dec here.

  What was guiding them? Some kind of extra-sensory homing ability? Clairvoyance? The same nebulous psychic connection that seemed to enable human twins to sense one another’s emotions, even their whereabouts, over distances that defied rational explanation?

  Joel took a step towards her. ‘Where’s Gabriel Stone?’ he demanded.

  Kate glowered up at him. ‘Fuck you.’

  ‘Not the answer I was looking for,’ Joel said. He took another step. ‘You want me to open this case?’

  Kate flinched violently, slumped back down to the floor and let out a tortured moan.

  ‘Where is he, Kate? Tell me.’

  ‘He’s gone,’ she blurted out. ‘Far away from here.’

  Against the wall to Joel’s right was a home assembly bookcase bulging with well-thumbed issues of car books, motoring magazines, repair manuals, a few tatty sci-fi and thriller paperbacks. Stuffed in between a Subaru maintenance manual and Classic Supercars was a big hardback world atlas. It looked immaculate and out of place in Matt’s book collection, like an unwanted gift that was only on the shelf out of obligation. Still clutching the case, Joel grabbed the atlas on an impulse and cracked it open, flipped a few pages and laid it flat on the floor showing a double-page spread of the world map. He thrust the book across the carpet under Kate’s nose. ‘You show me where he went. And I promise I’ll free you.’

  ‘Show him, Kate,’ Dec groaned faintly from the couch.

  ‘Never!’ she spat out.

  ‘You think he cares for you?’ Joel shouted at her. ‘He’s gone. He was just playing with you. You’ve nothing to be loyal to.’

  Kate went quiet, defeated. She looked warily at Joel. Her fangs had receded and, apart from her wild hair and the blood on her chin and hands, she seemed just like any other normal girl again. Joel thought of Alex, and his throat tightened so badly he wanted to scream.

  ‘Can you do it?’ he asked her.

  ‘You’ll set me free?’

  ‘I promised.’

  Slowly, reluctantly, Kate sat up and closed her eyes. Her chin sank towards her chest. She began to sway gently backwards and forwards, as if falling into some kind of trance.

  Dead silence in the room. Joel could hear the beating of his own heart.

  Kate reached a hand out across the open map. Extended her bloodstained index finger. It hovered uncertainly over the pages, wavered back and forth, and for a moment Joel was certain his idea really had been crazy. But then something in the girl’s expression seemed to focus, and her finger landed right on the small shape that was England, leaving a red print on the paper.

  ‘He travels,’ she murmured. Joel could see rapid darting movement behind the pale skin of her closed eyelids. Then, slowly, like the upturned glass moving of its own accord across an Ouija board in a seance, her finger began to move across the map. It traced a jagged red line of blood from west to east. Joel watched in morbid fascination as the line skimmed the southern tip of the Netherlands, moved across into Germany, then the Czech Republic and on into Hungary. It moved a little more, then came to a trembling halt. Kate’s hand went limp and she slumped back down to the carpet, mumbling something indistinct.

  Joel snatched the atlas from her and stared at the spot where the line of drying blood ended. She’d traced a path southeast across most of Europe, all the way to the northern reaches of Romania. The line broke off somewhere in the middle of the Carpathian Mountains.

  ‘You said something just then. A word. What was it? Kate?’ Forgetting himself, he was about to reach across to shake the girl’s shoulder – then drew his hand away quickly and laid it on the lid of the case so he could yank it open if she went for him. He was too close to this vampire to get complacent.

  Her eyes fluttered open and she mumbled it again, more clearly this time.

  ‘Vâlcanul.’

  The accent she used to pronounce the word sent a tingle down Joel’s back. That wasn’t something she’d learned in school. It seemed to come from some other place, as if the word was being channelled through her. He knew he’d been right. Backing away from her, he shut the atlas and tossed it on a chair.

  ‘You promised you’d free her,’ Dec croaked from the couch.

  ‘And I meant what I said,’ Joel replied.

  He stared down at the girl on the floor, and she gazed up at him with pleading in her eyes. He was suddenly looking at a normal seventeen-year-old, a pretty girl with red hair and intelligent blue eyes and her whole life ahead of her.

  Except he wasn’t.

  He opened the lid of the case. Her wild cry filled the room as he reached inside and his fist closed on the cold cross. He drew it out with a shaking hand.

  ‘Nooo!’ Dec screamed, twisting up off the couch and making a desperate lunge at Joel. Joel sidestepped him, and the kid crashed to the floor with a wail.

  Before the cross was even out of the case, Kate’s shriek was dying on her lips. Joel felt a sudden surge of heat in his fist as the cross seemed to pulse with invisible, ferocious power. Faster than he could register, the invisible force of it hit her. Blew her apart. Obliterated every shred of her being. Like something out of a nightmare, she disintegrated before his eyes.

  Then it was over. Her final cry seemed to echo in the crashing silence. Joel looked grimly down at the mess on the floor that had once been a beautiful, happy young girl, and for the second time tha
t night he tasted the harsh sting of vomit rising up in his throat.

  Dec was struggling to his feet, ashen-faced and trembling. ‘You killed her.’

  ‘You can’t kill what’s already dead,’ Joel said quietly. ‘I did what I promised. I freed her.’

  Dec nodded slowly, swallowed hard and gingerly touched the wound on his neck. He looked at Joel. ‘I’m going to become one of them, aren’t I?’

  Joel glanced at the cross in his hand. He held it out. ‘Touch it,’ he said.

  Dec tentatively reached out and brushed its surface with his fingertips.

  ‘Take it,’ Joel said softly, and Dec grasped it in his palm.

  Nothing happened.

  ‘I think you’re going to be okay,’ Joel said.

  Dec stared at the cross in his hand, blinking in confusion. ‘She bit me. She drank from me.’

  ‘I don’t know exactly how this works, Dec. She’d only just been turned herself. Maybe her powers weren’t strong enough. Maybe if she’d come back to you a few more times, drank a bit more…’ He shrugged. ‘You’ve been lucky.’ Already Joel thought he could see a change coming over Dec’s face. Almost as though he’d been freed too, from some kind of hypnotic power that had held him like a fly in a web. Joel laid a hand on his shoulder. ‘I’m very sorry for your loss. You’ve been brave, Dec. I’m proud of you.’

  Dec rubbed the tears from his face with his sleeve. His face twisted in sudden disgust.

  ‘I’ve been weak,’ he sniffed. ‘I shouldn’t have tried to stop you. I should never have let her in here.’ He handed the cross back to Joel. ‘What is that thing?’

  ‘Just a little something I picked up on my travels,’ Joel said.

  ‘Where are you going now?’

  ‘To take you home to your family. They’re worried about you. After that, I’m going to finish this once and for all.’

  ‘Let me go with you. I want to be there too. I want to see the fucker who did this to my Kate go down.’

  Joel shook his head. ‘This is something I’ve been waiting eighteen years for. I need to do it alone.’

  Chapter Seventy

  It was a dull early afternoon and clouds were scudding low over the airport terminal as Alex stepped out into the damp Brussels air. She popped a Solazal. Three left in the tube.

  She’d been expecting to see Harry Rumble waiting for her in the lobby, but no sign. Then she spotted the gleaming black Mercedes SUV with mirrored windows across the tarmac. The back doors opened simultaneously and two figures she knew instantly were VIA agents stepped out across the car park to meet her. One was tall with thin white hair, the other dark and ruddy. Both were wearing long black coats over grey suits, like bad imitations of police detectives. They weren’t smiling.

  ‘Where’s Rumble?’ she asked them.

  They didn’t reply. She shrugged and followed them to the car. The driver had the engine running and didn’t glance back at them in his mirror as they got in. Alex sat sandwiched between the two sullen agents.

  ‘So I suppose this is meant to intimidate me,’ she said. ‘The whole silent act. What do I call you guys?’

  The two agents stared fixedly ahead and said nothing.

  ‘Have it your way. I’ll call you Chico and Harpo. How about that?’

  ‘He’s Agent Bates,’ the tall, white-haired one muttered out of the corner of his mouth. ‘I’m Agent Verspoor.’

  ‘It’s a pleasure to meet you boys,’ Alex said. She wasn’t expecting a reply, and spent the next few minutes staring out at the drab scenery as the Mercedes sped around the outskirts of Brussels. Belgium. Land of chocolate and chips, and not much else.

  The Hotel Grand Châteauneuf sat secluded in twenty acres of its own wooded grounds a few kilometres from Brussels. The high level of luxury and even higher security made it perfect for the big-shot conferences and summits that were regularly held there. Bilderbergers, global business cartels, now vampires. The Mercedes was halted at the barred gates and the driver showed his paperwork to the armed private security guard that stepped up to meet them. A nod and a wave, and they glided on through the gates and into the rolling grounds. The hotel appeared through the trees as they came closer, all steel and glass and concrete. To Alex’s eye it looked slab-like and postmodern, but she guessed the brutal architecture appealed to the powermonger types. The main building could have been a grounded space station, with a giant glass dome in its centre that caught the dull sunlight.

  Up ahead, a procession of other vehicles was filing up towards the car park as vampires arrived from all over the world. Their driver slotted into a parking space and Bates and Verspoor escorted Alex from the car. As they followed the crowd funnelling towards the entrance of the main building, she could see the limos of the top Ruling Council dignitaries parked in a cordoned area. More agents were milling about, some of them conspicuously armed and glancing about nervously. Whatever stocks remained of Nosferol were sure to have been diligently reserved for VIP protection, Alex thought.

  Her two goons shadowed her every step of the way as she walked into the hotel lobby and glanced around for Harry Rumble. She spotted him through the crowds, standing in conversation with Xavier Garrett. Rumble didn’t seem his usual self-possessed self as she approached him.

  ‘I like the way you sent this double act to pick me up,’ she said. ‘Am I under close arrest or what?’

  Garrett smirked. Rumble shifted nervously and looked down at his feet. ‘I wouldn’t put it that way exactly.’

  ‘Then exactly how would you put it, Harry?’

  ‘We can talk about it later,’ he said. ‘It’s just about time for us to go in.’ The crowd was beginning to break up and drift towards the stairs leading to the main conference room. As they walked, Alex noticed the grim look on Rumble’s face.

  ‘What’s the matter, Harry? It can’t just be because of Solomon, can it?’

  He shook his head. ‘There have been more incidents. While you were in Italy the field stations in Bombay, New York and Tokyo were hit. Nosferol grenade attack. No survivors. Late last night there was another attempt, Paris this time. If the grenade hadn’t failed to go off, every one of our agents there would have bought it, too.’

  ‘Stone,’ she said. ‘He’s tightening the screw.’

  ‘And we don’t know what we can damn well do about it. The bastard has us by the balls.’

  They entered the conference hall and Alex glanced up at the high glass-domed ceiling she’d seen from the car. The banked rows of plush red velvet seats could seat up to five hundred, and they were filling up quickly. A host of ushers with Federation insignia on their smart red uniforms were running back and forth, attending to the delegates, smiling and shaking hands, offering glasses of blood. The elegant classical music piping into the room from hidden speakers was all but drowned out by the buzz of conversation. Rumble was whisked off to join a contingent of VIA section chiefs seated in the front row among other Federation leaders, while Bates and Verspoor steered Alex up the sloping side aisle towards a seat in the row second from the back, looking down from on high at the broad stage below. She got the distinct feeling she was being sidelined. They pointedly sat behind her, spaced two places apart as though that seemed more intimidating.

  There was nothing she could do except sit back and watch the conference hall fill up. She could feel the sense of anticipation building in the room as the event ticked steadily closer, but the overall atmosphere was downbeat. Many faces were frowning. Some of the conversations taking place among the rows of seats and in the aisles were more like arguments. Whether the Federation leaders liked to admit it or not, Gabriel Stone’s uprising had everyone deeply rattled.

  The buzz halted abruptly with the first signs of movement down below and, one by one, to a thunderous applause, the dignitaries hosting the conference filed out from behind the curtain and made their way to the long, curved podium. Alex had never seen them in the flesh before but, like every other vampire in the place, she could put nam
es to the faces that appeared on the big screens flanking the stage. Hassan. Borowczyk. Korentayer. Goldmund. Mushkavanhu. Behind them followed the rotund figure of the FRC Number Two, Gaston Lerouge. The Supremos took their places, three to a side. The seventh, central, seat remained empty; and then the applause intensified and there were shouts as Olympia Angelopolis burst out from behind the curtain. She swept across the stage, dressed in a flowing white gown that shimmered under the lights, mirroring the silver of her hair. The imperious, unsmiling features of the Vampress filled the screens over the stage. She paused graciously to acknowledge her reception and raised a hand. The applause died away.

  Then the great Olympia Angelopolis spoke.

  Chapter Seventy-One

  ‘On behalf of my fellow Supremos of the Ruling Council, I thank you all for gathering here today. Let us begin with a minute’s silence to mourn the lamented passing of Supremo Teshigahara, Councillor Sen and the other victims of the recent atrocities committed against our great Federation.’

  There was a soft murmur of assent among the audience, and a reverential hush hung over the auditorium. Olympia and the other Supremos solemnly lowered their heads. Up on the big screens, Gaston Lerouge was seen to wipe away a tear, even though everyone in the room knew that vampires couldn’t cry. After exactly fifty-nine seconds, Olympia abruptly raised her head and ended the silence. ‘Thank you. Now, let us begin.’

  Why am I here, Alex thought as the talking began. She could have been out there trying to find Joel instead of wasting time listening to this. She slumped deeper in her seat, put her feet up on the backrest of the row in front of her and folded her arms. She could feel the eyes of Verspoor and Bates right behind her, boring into her.

  Right from the start, the main thrust of the meeting was exactly the party line she’d been expecting. Gaston Lerouge took the floor and spent most of the first hour stirring the audience’s shared outrage with an impassioned account of the recent acts of sabotage, murder and robbery committed against the Federation by the new rebellion, the instigators of which he described as terrorists and insurgents. Having whipped up the sentiments in the room to a pitch, Lerouge masterfully changed gear and talked at length about the Federation’s long history: the struggle to establish order in the early days, the first successes and failures, the heroic efforts of esteemed colleagues such as The Lady of Steel herself to bring peace and harmony to what had been an embattled, divided, grievously endangered race. Were the sacrifices of the Founders to have been in vain? No, the audience roared. Was this towering monument to democracy, this paragon of justice and good, to be brought down by a rabble? No!

 

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