Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Science-Fiction,
Mystery & Detective,
Horror,
Science Fiction & Fantasy,
Twins,
Vampires,
Horror Tales,
Fiction / Horror,
Horror Fiction,
Horror - General
it Harry? And he suspected that they were all wondering the same thing. And just like him, they’d all be glad that it was only an image.
Paul Garvey, a full-blown telepath, stood directly opposite Trask on the other side of the circle. He caught Trask’s eye through the rotation of the projection and nodded almost imperceptibly. It was his acknowledgement of Trask’s thought, which Garvey had “heard”. Yes, they were all thinking pretty much the same thing.
Garvey was tall, well-built, and had been a good-looking thirty-five year old. But then, that time six months ago, he’d tackled a murderous swine called Johnny Found and lost most of the left side of his face. Since then some of the best plastic surgeons in England had worked on Garvey till he looked pretty good, but a real face is made of more than flesh. Garvey’s was mostly tissue now, and the nerves didn’t connect up too well. He could smile with the right side but not the left, and so avoided the travesty by not smiling at all.
It had happened when they were tracking Harry Keogh, who in turn had been tracking Found, a necromancer whose specialty was to molest women before and after they were dead. Garvey had made the mistake of finding Harry’s quarry first, that was all. But the Necroscope had squared it; later, in a graveyard, the police had discovered Pound’s body so badly chewed up that he was barely recognizable. And despite everything else that was happening at the time—the fact that Harry had been a prime target—Garvey still reckoned he owed him for that.
As for Ben Trask, he reckoned they all owed Harry Keogh something, the whole world. It would have been so easy for the Necroscope to release the plague of vampirism which he carried within himself upon all humanity and be emperor here, with an entire planet for his empire. But instead he’d let them hound him into exile in an alien world of vampires, where he would be just one more monster. Harry had let it happen, yes, before the Thing inside him could take full control.
But whenever Trask thought back on that, on the alien passions which had governed Harry—how he’d looked the last time Trask saw him, in the garden of his burning house not far from Edinburgh—then his own mixed emotions would sort themselves out in short order, and he would know it was for the best:
The lower half of Harry’s figure had been mist-shrowded, visible only as a vague outline in the opaque, milky swirl of his vampire mist … but the rest of him had been all too visible. He’d worn an entirely ordinary suit of dark, ill-fitting clothes which seemed two sizes too small for him, so that his upper torso sprouted from the trousers to form a blunt wedge. Framed by a jacket held together by one straining button, the bulk of Harry’s rib-cage had been massively muscular.
His white, open-necked shirt had burst open down the front, revealing the ripple of his muscle-sheathed ribs and the deep, powerful throb of his chest; the shirt’s collar had looked like a crumpled frill, insubstantial around the corded bulk of his leaden neck. His flesh was a sullen grey, dappled lurid orange and sick yellow by leaping fire and gleaming moonlight. And he towered all of a foot taller than Trask, quite literally dwarfing him. But his face—
—That had been the absolute embodiment of a waking nightmare. His halogen Hallowe’en eyes which had seemed to drip sulphur. And his … grin? A grin, was that what it had been? Maybe, in an alien vampire world called Starside on the other side of the Mobius Continuum. But here on Earth it had been the rabid slavering grimace of a great wolf; here it was teeth visibly elongating, curving up and out of gleaming gristle jaw-ridges to shear through gums which spurted splashes of hot ruby blood; here it was a writhing of scarlet lips, a flattening of convoluted snout, a yawning of mantrap jaws.
That face … that mouth … that crimson cavern of stalactite, stalagmite teeth,