Vampire Dancing (14 page)

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Authors: J. K. Gray

Tags: #Fantasy

BOOK: Vampire Dancing
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A lorry came speeding into view. It stopped outside a burning post office. A small group of men got out and hurried around to the back. Moments later, they reappeared, and began spilling sacks of sand onto the burning premises.

Daniel wished them success with that.

Instinct propelled him to continue in the current direction he was heading. Surely some recognizable landmark would catch his attention soon. He crossed the road and continued with haste down a dark, narrow street. His long woolen coat flapped behind him. He had to get back to Nellie as quickly as he could. She was his godsend in surroundings largely unfamiliar, and would be all alone, and certainly full of concern - more for his safety than for her own. She was like that, bless her.

Minutes passed, and one street led to another, and, contrary to his belief, it began to seem like he was becoming completely lost in this suffocating, tightly woven labyrinth. Perhaps instinct had failed him on this occasion.

It would be a first.

A fire engine turned the corner at the top of the road. Daniel stepped back and watched it until it sped out of sight. The jangling of its bells rung in his ears even after it was gone.

In the lull that followed, he thought he heard the sobbing of a young woman, or perhaps a child. He stopped, tuned out all other sound and narrowed his attention.

There it was again, coming from the husk of a building torn asunder by a previous bombing raid.

It was certainly a child, and female.

He crossed the road and ventured into the ruin's skeletal remains, moving gingerly so as not to frighten the youngster. Despite the care taken, charred sticks and various other debris crunched underfoot.

The weeping abruptly stopped.

Even though his eyesight was exceptional in the dark, Daniel found himself having to squint to discern the whereabouts of the girl. Eventually, he located her. She was huddled in a corner with a teddy bear in her arms.

Drawing closer to her, he said, “It's alright, I'm not going to hurt you.” Despite his sincerity, the words rang hollow in his ears, and an echo of guilt reverberated deep within him.

The child stared back at him. Her glistening eyes glowed in contrast to her blackened face.

Daniel stopped a few feet from the girl and squatted. “Where are your parents? Are you all alone here?”

The girl said nothing, and withdrew into the corner as far as she could. Daniel guessed she was no older than seven or eight, and couldn't help but notice how tightly she was hugging her teddy bear; like it was all she had left in the World.

“What's the bear's name?” he asked.

The girl's reply, when it finally arrived, had an edge of wariness to it: “It doesn't have a name. It isn't real.”

Her voice was as soft as tissue paper.

Tissue paper was so easily torn
.

“But it is real,” Daniel told her. “God gave everything in the universe life - you, me, the trees, the birds, all the animals and even teddy bears.”

The girl wiped her eyes with a sleeve of her dirty red sweater, then looked down at the soft toy in her arms.

“Let me see,” Daniel said. He pretended to think of a name when, in actual fact, he already had one. “Why don't we call him Mister Bear?”

The girl stared back at Daniel through large, bewildered eyes, then blinked twice in rapid succession. Daniel wondered what events must have taken place to separate her from her parents; to render her alone and helpless, and seeking refuge in this ravaged structure.

He had to get her out of here. This entire area was considerably less than safe.

“I don't know how to tell you this,” he said, “but I'm a bit frightened by all of this bombing, and I really could use a friend - someone to look after me. I'm new around here, you see, and I seem to have gotten myself lost. Do you think you could be my guide for the night and help lead me to safety?”

The girl's only response was to bury her face into the side of her teddy bear's neck.

Daniel felt his spirits plummet. He had apparently failed to gain the youngster's confidence. So what now? He couldn't possibly leave her here, but neither could he drag her, kicking and screaming, out into the open street - even if it was for her own good.

Just then, the girl raised her head. She smiled at Daniel. Her eyes gleamed in the darkness. “I've decided that me and Mister Bear should both be your friend and look after you.”

Daniel's heart soared. The girl couldn't possibly know how much her words meant to him; how much he needed her acceptance.

“Thank you so very much,” he said, his joy clearly apparent.

The child got to her feet.

“Here,” Daniel said. He removed his woolen scarf. “You must be cold without a jacket.” He wrapped it around the girl's neck a couple
of times. “I'd offer you my coat but I think it would swallow you whole and we'd never be able to find you again.”

The girl giggled.

Daniel took the child's hand and escorted her out of the building. They stepped into the street. Visibility was only marginally better outside. He subtly tugged her hand in the direction he thought they should go. He tried not to make it apparent he was leading her (after all, it was he who was supposed to be lost), and hoped he would spot a familiar landmark or location soon. Achieving this, the plan was still to reach to Nellie's place. Once there, they'd get the girl cleaned up and make sure she got a good night's sleep. Tomorrow, Nellie could set about finding her parents - assuming she still had parents (he'd wait till she was settled in before questioning her again as to their whereabouts).

“We need to know each others' names if we're going to be friends," Daniel said. "I know Mister Bear's name, but I don't know yours.”

“It's Amanda.”

“Manda?” Daniel quizzed. “That's a weird name.”

“I said
Amanda
.”

“I think I prefer Manda,” Daniel teased.

Amanda giggled and whacked Daniel with Mister Bear.

“My name's Daniel. But I also have a secret name.”

“A secret name?”

“Yes, but I only share it with my very best friends.”

“Oh.” The girl looked a little disappointed.

“Don't worry,” Daniel said. “Since you're helping me tonight, you and Mister Bear automatically become very best friends.”

Amanda gave a gasp of excitement. “Tell me it, please!”

Daniel pretended to check there was no one within earshot of what he was about to tell the girl.

“My secret name,” he said in a hushed voice, “is Levagnion.”

Amanda frowned. “I don't know if I can say that name. It's very odd.”

Chuckling, Daniel looked at his small companion. “My secret name comes with special powers.”

“Really?” Amanda said - and then she caught herself. “That sounds a bit silly.”

“I know, but it's true,” Daniel replied.

“What powers do you have?”

“Let me see,” he said. “I can see better in the dark than almost everyone else, and cuts and bruises – even broken bones - heal very quickly.”

“Can you see in daylight?” Amanda asked.

“Of course I can,” Daniel said. “Although very strong sunlight can often hurt my eyes and make my skin itch.” He decided not to tell the girl that, in actual fact, intense sunlight burns him and can be deadly.

“And are those pointy teeth also part of your powers?”

That one caught Daniel a little off guard. “Well, yes. I suppose they are.”

“Do they help you eat better?”

“As a matter of fact, they do.”

“Can you fly?”

“No.”

“Why is your voice strange?”

Daniel couldn't help but be amused by the girl's ongoing interrogation. “I was born in Eastern Europe, but I've picked up various accents from here and there.”

“What's that place like?”

“Eastern Europe? It's mostly beautiful - breathtaking in places, as a matter of fact - but it can be extremely cold in winter.”

“Even colder than England?”


Much
colder than England.”

Amanda wrinkled her nose. “I wouldn't like it there. I hate the cold.”

Daniel stopped at the end of the road. He really wasn't recognizing his surroundings at all. He looked to the lamp posts and buildings; anything that might have a street sign on it.

Amanda pointed left. “I think we should go this way.”

“What's this way?” Daniel asked.

“My house,” Amanda replied.

"Are you sure?"

She nodded.

Once again, Daniel fought the urge to ask Amanda about her parents, deciding it would be best to wait until they got to her house - if, indeed, she knew where her house was.

“Alright then, we go this way.” He scooped the girl off her feet and sat her on his shoulders. “You and Mister Bear can steer me better from up there.”

Daniel followed the girl's directions. He wasn't quite sure where her navigation was leading them, but she seemed to know where she was going. Occasionally, he would spot a rat scurrying from the shadows. These rodents, ever cautious but never afraid, seemed to be the true denizens of these dark and troubled streets.

“I like it up here,” Amanda said.

“And what about Mister Bear? Does he like it up there?”

Amanda looked down at the war torn teddy bear sandwiched between her chest and the back of Daniel's head. “I suppose so.”

“You suppose so?” Daniel said. “Don't you know?”

“Not really,” she explained. “It can't talk.”

Daniel found Amanda's sobering response so funny that he was overcome with uncontrollable laughter.

Uncontrollable, that is, until a third party showed up.

The figure stepped out from the shadowy doorway of a nearby pub and adopted a lop-sided stance.

Daniel stopped abruptly. He felt Amanda's grip intensify. She sensed it too: something wasn't right with this person.

"You alright up there?" he asked.

“I'm scared,” she replied.

“Don't worry. I won't let anything happen to you -
or
Mister Bear.”

The girl smiled, despite her unease.

Smoke from a nearby burning property curled around the dark figure's legs.

“Are you just going to stand there?” Daniel asked.

The person offered no response.

“Maybe we should go back,” Amanda said.

“Perhaps,” Daniel replied. But, before he could decide either way, the shape side-stepped back into the pub doorway and was lost to the blackness therein.

Daniel approached the doorway with caution.

“Is it gone?” Amanda asked.

Daniel found the girl's choice of labeling -
it
- rather interesting, and decided to allay her fear to some degree. “Probably just a drunk. He's gone now.”

Gone, except: in the place where the figure had stood, the air was heavy with an unpleasant caustic odor that drifted like an idle spirit with no better place to be.

“But where has he gone?” Amanda said.

Daniel looked up at the girl. “Back to drunk land.”

Amanda giggled. “Funny upside down face.”

“Pardon?” Daniel said.

“You have a funny upside down face,” she replied.

“I have, have I? Well, from where I'm looking, you have a funny upside-”

Daniel's mind violently exploded with white-hot pain. He staggered to one side and lost his footing at the edge of the curb.

Screaming, Amanda clutched Mister Bear close to her chest and braced herself.

Daniel landed by side of the road. The palms of his hands stung and various other parts of his body throbbed, but this was nothing compared to the burning sensation which enveloped his back. Despite this, his only concern was for for the girl.

He twisted onto his side and tried to locate her. “Amanda!”

The pub's windows and doors exploded loudly onto the street, showering the pavement with pieces of glass and wood. Tongues of fire lapped at the edges of torn and jagged frames.

Amanda shrieked in response to the blow-out, allowing Daniel to spot her. She was sitting in the middle of the road, several feet from him, nursing a scraped knee and still clinging to Mister Bear.

The dark figure from before stood in front of the pub. It spread both hands. Extraordinarily long fingernails uncurled against the fiery backdrop.

The explosion from within the pub hadn't been the result of an incendiary drop. This
thing
had caused it. Daniel had no idea how he knew this, but he did (he found that knowledge often came from everywhere
but
the five senses).

He got to his knees and fought to remove his coat. It would only encumber him. The muscles in his back spasmed and burned, causing him to wince. He tossed the garment aside and struggled to his feet.

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