Vampire War Trilogy. Darren Shan
harm me during the short time it will take to deal with this threat,” Mr Crepsley replied. “And I will protect my eyes with cloth, as you did during your purge.”
Making beds amid the moss and leaves on the ground, we wrapped ourselves in our cloaks and settled down. “Of course, they might just be curious,” Harkat muttered. “They could simply want to see … what a real-life vampire looks like.”
“They move too keenly for that,” Mr Crepsley disagreed. “They are here on business.”
“I just remembered,” I hissed. “The guy in the shop was buying guns!”
“Most vampire hunters come properly armed,” Mr Crepsley grunted. “Gone are the nights when the fools toted only a hammer and wooden stake.”
There was no more talk after that. We lay still, eyes closed (except for Harkat, who covered his lidless eyes with his cloak), breathing evenly, feigning sleep.
Seconds passed slowly, taking an age to become minutes, and an eternity to become hours. It had been six years since my last taste of vicious combat. My limbs felt unnaturally cold, and stiff, icy snakes of fear coiled and uncoiled inside the walls of my stomach. I kept flexing my fingers beneath the folds of my cloak, never far from my sword, ready to draw.
Shortly after midday – when the sun would be most harmful to a vampire – the humans moved in for the kill. There were three of them, spread out in a semicircle. At first I could only hear the rustling of leaves as they approached, and the occasional snap of a twig. But as they closed upon us, I became aware of their heavy breathing, the creak of their tense bones, the pacy, panicked pounding of their hearts.
They came to a standstill ten or twelve metres away, tucked behind trees, preparing themselves to attack. There was a long, nervous pause – then the sound of a gun being slowly cocked.
“Now!” Mr Crepsley roared, springing to his feet, launching himself at the human nearest him.
While Mr Crepsley closed in on his assailant at incredible speed, Harkat and me targeted the others. The one I’d set my sights on cursed loudly, stepped out from behind his tree, brought his rifle up and got a snap shot off A bullet whizzed past, missing me by several centimetres. Before he could fire again, I was upon him.
I wrenched the rifle from the human’s hands and tossed it away. A gun went off behind me, but there was no time to check on my friends. The man in front of me had already drawn a long hunting knife, so I quickly slid my sword out.
The man’s eyes widened when he saw the sword – he’d painted the area around his eyes with red circles of what looked like blood – then narrowed. “You’re just a kid,” he snarled, slashing at me with his knife.
“No,” I disagreed, stepping out of range of his knife, jabbing at him with my sword. “I’m much more.”
As the human slashed at me again, I brought my sword up and out in a smooth arcing slice, through the flesh, muscles and bones of his right hand, severing three of his fingers, disarming him in an instant.
The human cried out in agony and fell away from me. I took advantage of the moment to see how Mr Crepsley and Harkat were faring. Mr Crepsley had already despatched his human, and was striding towards Harkat, who was wrestling with his opponent. Harkat appeared to have the advantage of his foe, but Mr Crepsley was moving into place to back him up should the battle take a turn for the worse.
Satisfied that all was going in our favour, I switched my attention back to the man on the ground, psyching myself up for the unpleasant task of making an end of him. To my surprise, I found him grinning horribly at me.
“You should have taken my other hand too!” he growled.
My eyes fixed on the man’s left hand and my breath caught in my throat – he was clutching a hand grenade close to his chest!
“Don’t move!” he shouted as I lurched towards him. He half-pressed down on the detonator with his thumb. “If this goes off, it takes you with me!”
“Easy,” I sighed, backing off slightly, gazing fearfully at the primed grenade.
“I’ll take it easy in hell,” he chuckled sadistically. He’d shaved his head bald and there was a dark ‘V’ tattooed into either side of his skull, just above his ears. “Now, tell your foul vampire partner and that grey-skinned monster to let my companion go, or I’ll – ”
There was a sharp whistling sound from the trees to my left. Something struck the grenade and sent it flying from the human’s hand. He yelled and grabbed for another grenade (he had a string of them strapped around his chest). There was a second whistling sound and a glinting, multi-pointed object buried itself in the middle of the man’s head.
The man-slumped backwards with a grunt, shook crazily, then lay still. I stared at him, bewildered, automatically bending closer for a clearer look. The object in his head was a gold throwing star. Neither Mr Crepsley nor Harkat carried such a weapon – so who’d thrown it?
In answer to my unvoiced question, someone jumped from a nearby tree and strode towards me. “Only ever turn your back on a corpse!” the stranger snapped as I whirled towards him. “Didn’t Vanez Blane teach you that?”
“I … forgot,” I wheezed, too taken aback to say anything else. The vampire – he had to be one of us – was a burly man of medium height, with reddish skin and dyed green hair, dressed in purple animal hides which had been stitched together crudely. He had huge eyes – almost as large as Harkat’s – and a surprisingly small mouth. Unlike Mr Crepsley, his eyes were uncovered, though he was squinting painfully in the sunlight. He wore no shoes and carried no weapons other than dozens of throwing stars strapped to several belts looped around his torso.
“I’ll have my shuriken back, thank you,” the vampire said to the dead human, prying the throwing star loose, wiping it clean of blood, and reattaching it to one of the belts. He turned the man’s head left and right, taking in the shaved skull, tattoos and red circles around the eyes. “A vampet!” he snorted. “I’ve clashed with them before. Miserable curs.” He spat on the dead man, then used his bare foot to roll him over, so he was lying face down.
When the vampire turned to address me, I knew who he was – I’d heard him described many times – and greeted him with the respect he deserved. “Vancha March,” I said, bowing my head. “It’s an honour to meet you, Sire.”
“Likewise,” he replied blithely.
Vancha March was the Vampire Prince I’d never met, the wildest and most traditional of all the Princes.
“Vancha!” Mr Crepsley boomed, tearing the cloth away from around his eyes, crossing the space between us and clasping the Prince’s shoulders. “What are you doing here, Sire? I thought you were further north.”
“I was,” Vancha sniffed, freeing his hands and wiping the knuckles of his left hand across his nose, then flicking something green and slimy away. “But there was nothing happening, so I cut south. I’m heading for Lady Evanna’s.”
“We are too,” I said.
“I figured as much. I’ve been trailing you for the last couple of nights.”
“You should have introduced yourself sooner, Sire,” Mr Crepsley said.
“This is the first time I’ve seen the new Prince,” Vancha replied. “I wanted to observe him from afar for a while.” He studied me sternly. “On the basis of this fight, I have to say I’m not overly impressed!”
“I erred, Sire,” I said stiffly. “I was worried about my friends and I made the mistake of pausing when I should have pushed ahead. I accept full responsibility, and I apologize most humbly.”
“At least he knows how to make a good apology,” Vancha laughed, clapping me on the back.
Vancha March was covered in grime and dirt and smelt like a wolf. It was his standard appearance. Vancha was a true being