TWENTY-SEVEN
Trajan mechanically chewed the sandwich as he stared at the laptop's screen. 'I wouldn't have believed it - the River Thames is full of islands.'
'So how do we find the one that the guy wants to return to?' Elmo said, 'It's the nature of these creatures that they are removed from humanity when they undergo the transition from mortal to vampire.'
'So we're looking for an island that's not inhabited?' Trajan nodded as he studied the computer screen. 'That rules out the Isle of Sheppey and Canvey Island. There are thousands of people living there. What we have left are a lot of obscure islands.' He began to recite a litany of strange names. 'Isle of Grain, Eel Pie Island, Headpile Eyot, Pigeonhill Eyot, Firework Ait and Deadwater Ait. Whatever they are.'
Ben looked over Trajan's shoulder. 'Eyot and Ait are medieval names for island. You can disregard everything upstream of London. The guy was clear enough; the island's located down in the estuary.'
'Some of these islands are nature reserves. They're not much more than a couple of acres of marshland. It's going to be like looking for a needle' - he grunted with frustration - 'on the dark side of the moon.'
'You don't have long, gentlemen,' Elmo told them.
Ben caught the mood of frustration, too. 'Tell us something we don't know.'
'What you don't know,' Elmo continued in that calm voice, 'is that if you delay too long then you're going to have to make choices.'
'What kind of choices?'
'Soon April and her companion are going to wake. You're going to have to choose between keeping them prisoner here during the hours of darkness, when they are awake and dangerous. Or you can take them to the island in the hope that you can save them. Or…' He shrugged. 'Or you can kill them, then destroy their bodies.'
'I don't care anything about the guy,' Ben said. 'But there's no way we'll harm April.'
'Nevertheless, those are the options.'
'You really think the key to this is to find the island?' Trajan asked.
'So far, that's your only option if you wish to make April well again.'
Ben nodded at the computer. 'Okay, Trajan. Keep searching.'
Trajan pushed the keyboard away from him. 'No good. How can we identify a particular island from what the guy told you? I mean, how big is it? Are there any distinguishing features?'
'Elmo' - Ben turned to the old man - 'is there any way of waking the guy in the other room?'
'You would need to wait until the sun is much lower.'
Trajan slammed his hand down on the table. 'But we can't wait that long.'
'But he was conscious enough to walk and to speak to me.'
'He cares for the woman,' Elmo told them. 'It was a supreme effort of will on his part.'
'Look, if he woke up once, he can wake up again!' Ben raced through into the bedroom. April lay on the bed as still as death. The stranger sat on the floor with his back to the wall. His eyes were closed and his head hung forward until the chin rested on his chest.
Everything became a blur; Ben knew that all that mattered now was to wake the man. Earlier this inert piece of crap had talked about the magic of the island, wherever it was.
'Hey!' Ben crouched down. 'Wake up! Come on, you've got to talk to me.' Ben roughly shook the man. There wasn't so much as a glimmer of consciousness. 'Wake up.' Ben didn't relish touching the man's bare flesh; nevertheless, he roughly shoved his head back against the wall, then he slapped his face. He slapped hard and repeatedly while he shouted, 'Wake up! Talk to me! Come on! Wake up!' Ben's palm stung but he didn't raise so much as a grunt from the vampire. 'Snap out of it.' This time he bunched his fist to deliver a blow against the man's cheekbone.
'Okay, that's enough.' Trajan gripped his wrist, preventing the punch.
'I've got to rouse him, then we'll get some answers.'
'It's not working, Ben. He's unconscious.'
'Bring a candle. We'll use the flame.'
Elmo ghosted into the room. 'You might derive satisfaction from burning his flesh but I doubt if you'll wake him. He'll open his eyes when the sun goes down.'
'Then it might be too late.' Ben's anger intensified. 'You told us that they might kill us. And if that ritual of yours works then Edshu might simply yank the plug and walk away. What happens to these, then?'
'By rights they should have died either through blood loss during the original attack, or drowned when they were thrown into the river.' Elmo gave a painful shrug. 'If they
should
be dead, then when Edshu releases them, what then?'
Trajan asked, 'So, what can we do?'
'The man spoke about an island,' Elmo replied. 'That could be where you find the means to rescue April.' He held up a finger. 'And yet… remember Edshu is the trickster. He may be the architect of a deceit. He might wish to lure you to the island for his own malicious purpose. You understand?
Trajan took a deep breath. 'The island it is then. Well just have to weather everything Edshu throws at us. You with me, Ben?'
'You don't have to ask. But how do we find it?'
'You heard Mr Kigoma. In a couple of hours April and this fellow are going to wake up.' He gave a grim smile. 'Once they're awake they can show us the way, can't they?'
'How?' Ben asked as he followed Trajan into the lounge.
'I'm going to get hold of a boat and we'll take the pair of them downstream. With luck, they'll recognize the island.'
'Trajan, instead of acting as navigators they're going to rip us apart.'
'No, they won't.'
'You saw what happened to those men in the park. So how are you going to persuade April and the guy to behave like they're out for nothing more than an evening river cruise?'
'That,' Trajan told him, 'is something we haven't figured yet. But we will.'
'And how are you going to find a boat at such short notice?'
Trajan picked up the phone and began to press the keys. 'My family's company ships medical aid to the people who need it. A lot of what we do is funded by trust and favors rather than money. Say a little prayer for me, Ben, because I'm going to test that good-will to breaking point.' He took a deep breath and picked up the phone. 'Hello, Jeff. Do you still have that boat in Chelsea harbour?'
As Trajan spoke on the phone Elmo murmured to Ben, 'Edshu will test Trajan and yourself in the coming hours. This will be your time of crisis. This is when both of you and April will be in extreme peril. Listen to these words, Ben.' The man's dark eyes were hypnotic. 'You will face danger; you will be attacked from quarters you can't begin to imagine. But this is the crucial fact, the threat won't always come from outside. Sometimes the danger will come from here.' Elmo Kigoma pointed a finger at Ben's heart.
TWENTY-EIGHT
An unconscious human is a difficult object to move. Immensely difficult. It has to be moved in one piece. When you want it to be rigid it's flexible. When you need to move it round a tight corner it doesn't bend like you want it to. And all the time you have to be careful you don't drop the inert person. So you end up struggling to move something that seems as heavy as a slab of concrete, yet more fragile than an antique vase.
These thoughts repeated themselves in a seemingly endless cycle as Ben worked with Trajan and Elmo to shift the guy with the gaunt face and gold-tipped teeth down into the basement garage of the apartment block. The stranger had a slender build; his body appeared emaciated; you could encircle his upperarm with your fingers, yet he was an object that was near immovable. Not for the first time Ben said, frustrated, 'Damn it, he must have bones of solid granite.' Then he added mentally,
or is Edshu testing us again?
The most logical way of moving the man was for Trajan and Ben to take an arm each; hold it over their own shoulders and carry him horizontally, like they were helping a friend home after a whisky too many. Only to carry him like this meant that the vampire's head rolled from side-to-side. When the creature's face slapped against Ben's jaw he recoiled so much that he dropped him.
Trajan didn't complain at Ben's squeamishness. 'When I touch him,' he said, 'I see those images again… the same as when we held April's hand… feeding on blood…' He shook his head. 'We've got to figure out another way to do this.'
Trajan found a sleeping bag that he unzipped and laid out flat on the hallway floor. What came next wasn't easy. However, they managed to roll the guy on to the opened sleeping bag. Then Elmo and Ben took a corner each at either side of the man's head. Trajan took the two corners by the feet. Lifting it was torture. Ben's shoulder ached; shooting pains blasted through his elbows. But sweating and panting they made it to the landing. Constantly, there was the threat of a neighbour stepping out of their own front door to discover what appeared to be the aftermath of murder.
'There's a lift to the garage,' Trajan panted, 'at the end of the landing.'
The only one of the three who appeared to be handling the burden without complaint, or even undue exertion, was the eighty-six-year-old African. He gripped the fabric of the sleeping bag in both hands and sunk all he had into carrying the dead-to-the-world figure.
Sleeping like a baby. The thought nearly produced a bark of lunatic laughter in Ben. The guy hadn't even murmured during all the manhandling to get him on the sleeping bag, then some pretty savage buffeting against the door frame to haul him out of the apartment. As they hoisted their cargo by closed front doors Ben smelt cooking as people prepared their evening meals; he heard snatches of conversation from those homes, together with a burst of music or applause from televisions. Sweet heaven, he thought with a sudden passion, here we are doing this! They're inside getting ready for a pleasant evening. Ignorance really is bliss.
And that's how we survive, isn't it? he thought. It's not what we know that keeps us functioning: it's what we
don't.
How would the steak on your plate taste if you knew the journey from calf to supermarket? Would you sleep at all if you walked through a cemetery where the soil suddenly became as transparent as glass - that and coffin wood, too - so you found yourself looking down through a material that was clear as air to hundreds of corpses in various stages of rot beneath your feet?
How do you close your eyes at night when you've gazed into a face that's shaped from pure horror rather than flesh, and those gaping eye-sockets filled with a glistening slime stare up into yours? And the buried man is not just peeping from his grave at you out of curiosity. No! You know only too well that dead brain harbours malicious thoughts. 'That's alright, Oh Living One, take a really good look at me. Do you see my rib cage through the holes in my shirt? Do you see the maggot squirming in my heart? Have your eyes devoured the appearance of my face? A face that slides away from my head as corruption loosens its grip upon the bone? Can you imagine what it would be like to smell the inside of this casket? How cold would it feel against your fingers to shake me by the hand? Would you remain sane if you embraced me? Keep watching me, Oh Living One. Feast your eyes. BECAUSE WHAT I AM NOW YOU WILL BECOME!'
There's mocking laughter coming from the dead in their graves. The laughter is cruel but so knowing. All the men and women in the graveyard lived their lives believing that somehow death wouldn't find them. But it does, you know, doesn't it?
And those people in the apartments grilling steaks, easing corks from wine bottles, have persuaded themselves death will
never ever
happen to them. Wrong. Wrong! Wrong! Why not hammer on the doors and show them what we're carrying! 'See the man that looks like a corpse. This is a vampire! Don't believe me, huh? Just you sit beside it here and wait for the sun to go down…'
'Ben' - the sound of Kigoma's voice struck him like a blow - 'remember what I told you. Edshu has the power to attack in many different ways. Keep your guard up.'
Ben's heart hammered. For a moment there he'd almost lost his mind. It had been like falling asleep. His grip on reality had nearly slipped away with such an oily ease; it was like his thoughts had become lubricated. The image of that transparent cemetery with corpses floating there underground had been so brutally vivid. Ben took a deep breath.
Dear God, this is going to be harder than I thought.
As they waited for the lift that would take them to the subterranean garage a door opened and a middle-aged woman looked out. 'Hello, Trajan. Keeping busy?'
Smoothly, as if dematerializing, Elmo Kigoma slipped away along the hallway until he was out of sight of the woman. The woman stared at them in surprise; her drop earrings even flicked against her neck as she turned her head so quickly to look at the sleeping bag they'd dragged to the lift doors.
Ben glanced down expecting to see the man lying on the fabric; however, Trajan had the presence of mind to flick the material over the body. What was on view was a lumpy sausage shape covered by the sleeping bag.
Trajan smiled. 'Hello, Rita. We're just getting rid of the heating boiler. These things weigh a ton.'
Rita was confused but still smiled back. 'They do, don't they?'
Even though she was clearly suspicious she appeared reluctant to accuse Trajan outright of moving what resembled a corpse wrapped in the sleeping bag.
Trajan smiled again. 'We'd better get going. Have a nice evening, Rita.'
'Oh, thank you.' She bobbed her head and the drop earrings jiggled. 'Cheerio.' With that she stepped back inside and closed the door.