“No,” I said. “I’ve aged slowly. I was slightly older than Darius when you last saw me.”
“Is this a joke?” she half laughed.
“Look at him, Mum,” Darius said intently. “Really look at him.”
And she did. And this time I saw something in her expression and realized she’d known who I was the second she saw me — she just hadn’t admitted it to herself yet.
“Listen to your instincts, Annie,” I said. “You always had good instincts. If I’d had your nose for trouble, maybe I wouldn’t have gotten into this mess. Maybe I’d have had more sense than to steal a poisonous spider…”
Annie’s eyes widened. “No!” she gasped.
“Yes,” I said.
“You can’t be!”
“I am.”
“But … No!” she growled, firmly this time. “I don’t know who put you up to this, or what you think you’ll achieve by it, but if you don’t get out quick, I’ll–”
“I bet you never told anyone about Madam Octa,” I cut her off. She trembled at mention of the spider’s name. “I bet you kept that secret all these years. You must have guessed she had something to do with my ‘death’. Maybe you asked Steve about it, since he was the one she bit, but I bet you never told Mum or–”
“Darren?” she wheezed, confused tears springing to her eyes.
“Hi, sis,” I grinned. “Long time no see.”
She stared at me, appalled, and then did something I thought only happened in corny old movies — her eyes rolled up, her legs gave way, and she fainted!
Annie sat in her chair, a fresh mug of hot chocolate cupped between her hands. I sat opposite her in a chair I’d dragged over from the other side of the room. Darius stood by the TV, which he’d turned off shortly after Annie fainted. Annie hadn’t said much since recovering. Once she’d come to, she’d pressed back into her chair, gazed at me, torn between horror and hope, and simply gasped, “How?”
I’d spent the time since then filling her in. I spoke quietly and rapidly, starting with Mr Crepsley and Madam Octa, explaining the deal I’d struck to save Steve’s life, giving her a quick rundown of the years since then; my existence as a vampire, the vampaneze, the War of the Scars, tracking the Vampaneze Lord. I didn’t tell her Steve was the Lord or involved with the vampaneze — I wanted to see how she reacted to the rest of the story before hitting her with that one.
Her eyes didn’t betray her feelings. It was impossible to guess what she was thinking. When I got to the part of the story involving Darius, her gaze slid from me to her son, and she leant forward slightly as I described how he’d been tricked into aiding the vampaneze, again being careful not to refer to Steve by name. I finished with my return to the old cinema theatre, Shancus’s death, and the Vampaneze Lord’s revelation that Darius was my nephew.
“Once Darius knew the truth, he was horrified,” I said. “But I told him he mustn’t blame himself. Lots of older and wiser people than him have been fooled by the Lord of the Vampaneze.”
I stopped and awaited her reaction. It wasn’t long coming.
“You’re insane,” she said coldly. “If you are my brother – and I’m not a hundred per cent convinced – then whatever disease stunted your growth also affected your brain. Vampires? Vampaneze? My son in league with a killer?” She sneered. “You’re a madman.”
“But it’s true!” Darius exclaimed. “He can prove it! He’s stronger and faster than any human. He can–”
“Be quiet!” Annie roared with such venom that Darius shut up instantly. She glared at me furiously. “Get out of my house,” she snarled. “Stay away from my son. Don’t ever come back.”
“But–” I began.
“No!” she screamed. “You’re not my brother! Even if you are, you’re not! We buried Darren eighteen years ago. He’s dead and that’s the way I want him to stay. I don’t care if you’re him or not. I want you out of my life – ourlives – immediately.” She stood and pointed at the door. “Go!”
I didn’t move. I wanted to. If it hadn’t been for Darius, I would have slunk out like a kicked dog. But she had to know what her son had become. I couldn’t leave without convincing her of the danger he was in.
While Annie stood, pointing at the door, hand trembling wildly, face twisted with rage, Darius stepped away from the TV. “Mum,” he said quietly. “Don’t you want to know how I fell in with the vampaneze and why I helped them?”
“There are no vampaneze!” she yelled. “This maniac has filled your imagination with lies and–”
“Steve Leonard’s the Lord of the Vampaneze,” Darius said, and Annie stopped dead. “He came to me a few years ago,” Darius went on, edging slowly towards her. “At first we just went for walks together, he took me to the cinema and for meals, stuff like that. He told me not to say anything to you. He said you wouldn’t like it, that you’d make him go away.”
He stopped in front of her, reached up, took hold of her pointing hand and gently bent her arm down. She was staring at him wordlessly. “He’s my dad,” Darius said sadly. “I trusted him because I thought he loved me. That’s why I believed him when he told me about vampires. He said he was telling me for my protection, that he was worried about me — and you. He wanted to protect us. That’s where it began. Then I got more involved. He taught me how to use a knife, how to shoot, how to kill.”
Annie sank back into her chair, unable to respond.
“It was Steve,” Darius said. “Steve who got me into trouble, who killed the snake-boy, who made Darren come back to see you. Darren didn’t want to – he knew he’d hurt you – but Steve left him with no choice. It’s true, Mum, everything he said. You’ve got to believe us, because it was Steve, and I think he might come back – come after you – and if we aren’t ready … if you don’t believe…”
He ground to a halt, running out of words. But he’d said enough. When Annie looked at me again, there was fear and doubt in her eyes, but no scorn. “Steve?” she moaned. I nodded unhappily and her face hardened. “What did I tell you about him?” she screamed at Darius, grabbing the boy and shaking him angrily. “I told you never to go near him! That if you ever saw him, you had to run and tell me! I said he was dangerous!”
“I didn’t believe you!” Darius cried. “I thought you hated him just because he ran away, that you were lying! He was my dad!” He tore himself away from her and collapsed on the floor, weeping. “He was my dad,” he sobbed again. “I loved him.”
Annie stared at Darius crying. Then she stared at me. And then she also started to cry, and her sobs were even deeper and more painful than her son’s.
I didn’t cry. I was saving my tears. I knew the worst was yet to come.
CHAPTER THREE
Later. After the tears. Sitting around the living room. Annie had recovered from the worst of the shock. All three of us were drinking hot chocolate. I hadn’t called the others in yet — I wanted some personal time with Annie before I dumped the full fallout from the War of the Scars upon her.
Annie made me tell her more about my life. She wanted to hear about the countries I’d visited, the people I’d met, the adventures I’d had. I told her some of the highlights, leaving out the darker aspects. She listened, dazed, touching me every few minutes to make sure I was real. When she heard I was a Prince, she laughed with delight. “Does that make me a princess?” she smiled.
“Afraid not,” I chuckled.
In return, Annie told me what her life had been like. The hard months after I’d ‘died’. Slowly returning to normal. She was young, so she recovered, but Mum and Dad never really got over it. She raised the question of whether or not they should be told I was alive. Then, before I could speak, she said, “No. They’re happy now. It’s too late to change the past. Best not to drag it up again.”
I paid close attention when she spoke about Steve. “I was a teenager,” she said angrily, “mixed-up and unsure of myself. I had some friends but not many. And no serious boyfriend. Then Steve came back. He was only a few years older than me, but he looked and acted grown-up. And he was interested in me. He wanted to talk to me. He treated me like an equal.”
They spent a lot of time together. Steve put on a good act — kind, generous, loving. Annie thought he cared for her, that they had a future together. She fell in love with him, and gave her love to him. Then she found out she was expecting a baby.
“His face lit up when he heard,” she said, shivering from the memory. Darius was by her side, solemn, silent, listening intently. “He made me believe he was delighted, that we’d get married and have lots of children together. He told me not to tell anyone — he wanted to keep it secret until we were husband and wife. He went away again. He said it was to earn money, to pay for our wedding and the baby’s upkeep. He stayed away a long time. He returned late one night, while I was sleeping. Woke me up. Before I could say anything, he clamped a hand over my mouth and laughed. ‘Too late to stop it now!’ he mocked me. He said other things, horrible things. Then he left. I haven’t heard from him since.”
She had to tell Mum and Dad about the baby then. They were furious — not with her, but with Steve. Dad would have killed Steve if he’d found him. But nobody knew where Steve was. He’d vanished.
“Raising Darius was hard,” she smiled, ruffling his hair, “but I wouldn’t give up a day of it. Steve was wicked, but he gave me the most marvellous gift anyone could have ever given me.”
“Soppy old cow,” Darius grunted, fighting hard not to smile.
I was quiet a long time after that. I wondered if Steve had meant to use Darius against me even then. This was back before he met the vampaneze and learnt of his abominable destiny. But I bet he was already planning my downfall, one way or the other. Did he deliberately get Annie pregnant, so he could use his nephew or niece to hurt me? Knowing Steve as I did, I guessed those were his exact intentions.
Annie started telling me about her life with Darius, from how Mum and Dad helped rear him until they moved away, how the pair were managing now on their own. She worried about him not having a father, but her experience with Steve had made her wary of men, and she found it hard to trust anyone. I could have listened to Annie talk all night, telling tales about Mum, Dad and Darius. I was catching up on all those missed years. I felt like part of the family again. I didn’t want it to stop.
But we were in the middle of a crisis. I’d delayed the moment of truth, but now I had to tell her about it. The night was drawing on, and I was keen to conclude the business I’d come about. I let her finish the story she was telling – about Darius’s first week in school – then asked if I could introduce her to some of my friends.
Annie wasn’t sure what to make of Vancha, Alice and Evanna. Alice dressed normally, but Vancha in his animal hides, with his straps of throwing stars and green hair, and the hirsute, deliriously ugly Evanna draped in ropes … They would have stuck out like a couple of gargoyles anywhere!