Colin staggered back, his feet becoming rubber. Then the floor simply ceased to be there. He dropped, straight down, landing on his a.r.s.e at the bottom of the root cellar.
Everything went fuzzy, and then black.
Colin awoke in darkness.
He felt around, noticed his leg bent at a funny angle.
The touch made him cry out.
Broken. Badly, from the size of the swelling.
Colin peeled his eyes wide, tried to see. There was no light at all. The trap door, leading to the kitchen, was closed. Not that it mattered; he couldn"t have climbed up the ladder anyway.
He sat up, tears erupting onto his cheeks. There was a creaking sound above him, and then a sudden burst of light.
"I see you"re still alive, eh?"
Colin squinted through the glare, made out the bowler hat.
"No worries, mate. We won"t let you starve to death down there. We"re not barbarians. Willie will be down shortly to finish you off. Promise it"ll be quick. Right, Willie?"
Willie"s laugh was an evil thing.
"See you in a bit."
The trap door closed.
Fear rippled through Colin, but it was overwhelmed by something greater.
Anger.
Colin had ever been the victim. From his boyhood days, being beaten by his alcoholic father, up to his nagging ex-wife, suing him into the recesses of poverty.
Well, if his miserable life was going to end here, in a foul-smelling dirt cellar, then so be it.
But he wasn"t going without a fight.
Colin pulled himself along the cold ground, dragging his wounded leg. He wanted the boning knife, the one he"d left curled in Van Helsing"s hand.
When Jake came down to finish him off, the fat b.a.s.t.a.r.d was going to get a nice surprise.
Colin"s hand touched moisture, blood or some other type of grue, so he knew he was close. He reached into the inky blackness, finding Van Helsing"s body, trailing down over his shoulder . . .
"What in the h.e.l.l?"
Colin brought his other hand over, groped around.
It made no sense.
Van Helsing"s head, which had been practically severed from his shoulders, had reattached itself. The neck was completely intact. No gaping wound, no deep cut.
"Can"t be him."
Perhaps another body had been dumped down there, possibly b.u.t.ts. Colin touched the face.
No beard.
Grazing the mouth with his fingers, Colin winced and stuck a digit past the clammy lips.
It was cold and slimy inside the mouth. Revolting. But Colin probed around for almost an entire minute, searching for teeth that weren"t there.
This was Van Helsing. And he had completely healed.
Which was impossible. Unless- "Jesus Christ." Colin recoiled, scooting away from the body.
He was trapped in the dark with a vampire.
When would Van Helsing awake? d.a.m.n good thing the bloke was chained down. Who knows what horrors he could commit if he were free?
Colin repeated that thought, and grinned.
Perhaps if he helped the poor sod escape, Van Helsing would be so grateful he"d take care of the goons upstairs.
The idea vanished when Colin remembered Van Helsing"s words. All the poor sod wanted was to die. He didn"t want to kill anyone.
"b.l.o.o.d.y h.e.l.l. If I were a vampire, I"d do things-"
Colin halted mid-sentence. His works were in a sardine can, inside his breast pocket. He reached for them, took out the hypo.
It just might work.
Crawling back to Van Helsing, Colin probed until he found the bony neck. He pushed the needle in, then eased back the plunger, drawing out blood.
Vampire blood.
Tying off his own arm and finding his vein in the dark wasn"t a problem; he"d done it many times before.
Teeth clenched, eyes shut, he gave himself the shot.
But there was no rush.
Only pain.
The pain seared up his arm, as if someone was yanking out his veins with pliers.
Colin cried out. When the tainted blood reached his heart, the muscle stopped cold, killing him instantly.
Colin opened his eyes.
He was still in the cellar, but he could see perfectly fine. He wondered where the light could be coming from, but a quick look around found no source.
Colin stood, realizing with a start that the pain in his leg had vanished.
So, in fact, had all of his other pain. He lifted his shirt, expecting to see bruised ribs, but there wasn"t a mark on them.
Even the withdrawal symptoms had vanished.
The hypodermic was still in his hand. Colin stared at it, remembering.
"It worked. It b.l.o.o.d.y well worked."
Van Helsing still lay sprawled out on the floor, face down.
Colin looked at him, and he began to drool. Hunger surged through him, an urge so completely overwhelming it dwarfed his addiction to heroin.
Without resisting the impulse, he fell to the ground and bit into the old man"s neck. His new teeth tore through the skin easily, but when his tongue touched blood, Colin jerked away.
Rancid. Like spoiled milk.
A sound, from above. Colin listened, amused at how acute his hearing had become.
"All right, then. Jake, you go downstairs and mercy-kill the junkie, and then we"ll be off."
Mercy kill, indeed.
Colin forced himself to be patient, standing stock-still, as the trap door opened and a figure descended.
"Well well well, look who"s up and about. Be brave, I"ll try to make it painless."
Jake moved forward. Colin almost grinned. Big, sweating, dirty Jake smelled delicious.
"You got some fight left in you, eh?"
Colin lunged.
His speed was unnatural; he was on Jake in an instant. Even more astounding was his strength. Using almost no effort at all, he pulled the larger man to the ground and pinned down his arms.
"What the h.e.l.l?"
"I"ll try to make it painless," Colin said.
But from the sound of Jake"s screams, it wasn"t painless at all.
This blood wasn"t rancid. This blood was ecstasy.
Every cell in Colin"s body shuddered with pleasure; an overwhelming rush that dwarfed the feeling of heroin, a full-body o.r.g.a.s.m so intense he couldn"t control the moan escaping his throat.
He sucked until Jake stopped moving. Until his stomach distended, the warm liquid sloshing around inside him like a full term embryo.
But he remained hungry.
He raced up the ladder, practically floating on his newfound power. b.u.t.ts stood at the table, piling dishes into a wooden crate.
"Colin?"
b.u.t.ts proved delicious, too. In a slightly different way. Not as sweet, sort of a Bordeaux to Jake"s Cabernet. Colin"s tongue was a wild thing. He lapped up the blood like a mad dog at a water dish, ravenous.
"What the h.e.l.l are you doing?"
Colin let b.u.t.ts drop, whirling to face Willie.
"Good G.o.d!"
Willie reached into his vest, removed a small derringer. He fired twice, both shots tearing into Colin"s chest.
There was pain.
But more than pain, there was hunger.
Willie turned to run, but Colin caught him easily.
"I wonder what you"ll taste like," he whispered in the screaming man"s ear.
Honey mead. The best of the three.
Colin suckled, gulping down the nectar as it pulsed from Willie"s carotid. He gorged himself until one more swallow would have caused him to burst.
Then, in an orgiastic stupor, he stumbled from the house and into the glorious night.
No longer dark and silent and scary, the air now hummed with a bright glow, and animal sounds from miles away were clear and lovely.
Bats, chasing insects. A wolf, baying the moon. A tree toad, calling out to its mate.
Such sweet, wonderful music.
The feeling overwhelmed Colin, and he shuddered and wept. This is what he"d been searching for his entire life. This was euphoria. This was power. This was a fresh start.
"I see you have been busy."
Colin spun around.
Van Helsing stood at the entrance to the house. His right hand still gripped Colin"s bone knife. His left hand was gone, severed above the wrist where the chain had bound him. The stump dripped gore, jagged white bone poking out.
Colin studied Van Helsing"s face. Still sunken, still anguished. But there was something new in the eyes. A spark.
"Happy, old man? You finally have your freedom."
"Freedom is not what I seek. I desire only the redemption that comes with death."