There were five doors ahead of him, everyone of them ajar a few inches, as if to say: There are no secrets here, not from a boy who wants the truth. Come look! Come see! If you dare.
He dared, but not in the way the House had planned. After spending a few moments examining the doors, he ignored all of them, and instead went back down a flight, chose a strong chair from one of the bedrooms, brought it back upstairs, climbed onto it and pushed open the trapdoor that let onto the attic.
It was hard work hauling himself up, but he knew, when he’d finished and lay panting on the attic floor, that his pursuit of Hood was almost at an end. The Vampire King was near. Who else but a master of illusions would live in a place so bereft of them? The attic was all the House was not: filthy, murky and cobwebbed.
“Where are you?” he said. It was no use thinking he could surprise the enemy. Hood had watched his ascent from the first stair. “Come out,” he yelled, “I want to see what a thief looks like.”
There was no reply at first, but then—from somewhere at the other end of the attic—Harvey heard a low, guttural growl. Not whiting for his eyes to become fully accustomed to the gloom he started toward the utterance, the boards creaking beneath his feet as he went.
Twice he stopped to look up, because a noise somewhere in the darkness overhead caught his attention. Was it a trapped bird, panicking as it flew blindly back and forth? Or roaches, perhaps, massed on the beams above him?
He told himself to put such imaginings out of his head and concentrate on finding Hood. There were enough real reasons to be fearful here without inventing more. Unlike the area around the trapdoor, this end of the attic served as some kind of storeroom, and his enemy was surely lurking in the maze of rotting pictures and mildewed furniture. In fact, wasn’t that a fluttering motion he saw now out of the corner of his eye?
“Hood?” he said, squinting to try and make better sense of the shape in the shadows. “What are you doing hiding up here?”
He took another step forward, and as he did so he realized his error. This wasn’t the mysterious Mr. Hood. He knew this shape, mangled though it was: the half-rotted wings; the tiny black eyes; the teeth, the endless teeth.
It was Carna!
The creature half rose from its squalid nest, snapping at Harvey as it did so. He made a stumbling retreat, and might have been seized after three steps had Carna not been so hobbled by its wounds and slowed by the chaos of its surroundings.
It struck out at the piles of detritus to the left and right of it, scattering chairs and overturning boxes; then hauled itself in pained pursuit of its prey. Harvey kept his eyes fixed upon the beast as he backed away, his mind buzzing with questions. Where was Hood? That was the main mystery. Mrs. Griffin had been certain he was up here somewhere, but Harvey had now wandered the attic from end to end, and its only occupant was the creature driving him back toward the exit.
He chanced several glances into the shadows as he retreated in case he’d missed some figure hiding there. It was not a human form his eyes alighted upon, however; it was a globe the size of a tennis ball, glowing as though filled with starlight. It appeared like a bubble from the boards and rose toward the roof. Momentarily forgetting his jeopardy, Harvey watched it as it ascended, joined by another, then a third and a fourth.
Astonished by the sight, he took too little care where he was walking. He stumbled, fell, and ended up sprawled on the hard boards, staring up at the roof through a red haze of pain.
And there above him was Hood, in all his glory.
His face was spread over the entire roof, his features horribly distorted. His eyes were dark pits gouged into the timbers; his nose was flared and flattened grotesquely, like the nose of an enormous bat; his mouth was a lipless slit that was surely ten feet wide, from which issued a voice that was like the creaking of doors and the howling of chimneys and the rattling of windows.
“Child!” he said. “You have brought pain into my paradise. Shame on you!”
“What pain?” Harvey shouted back. He was shuddering to his marrow, but he knew this was no time to show his fear. He would deal in illusion, the way the enemy did; pretending courage even if he didn’t feel it. “I came to get what was mine, that’s all,” he said.
Hood sucked one of the gleaming spheres into his mouth. Its light went out instantly.
“Marr is dead,” he said. “Jive is dead. Gone to muck and dust because
of you!”
“They were never alive,” Harvey said.
“Did you not hear their sobs and pleas?” Hood demanded, the knots in his brow tightening. “Did you not pity them?”
“No,” Harvey said.
“Then I will not pity you,” came the rasping reply. “I will watch my poor Carna devour you from sole to scalp, and take pleasure in it.”
Harvey glanced in Carna’s direction. The beast had stopped advancing, but was poised to strike, its dripping jaws inches from Harvey’s feet. Now that the beast was still, he could clearly see how badly wounded it was, its body as ragged as a moldy rug, its huge head drooping as though every breath was a burden.
As Harvey stared at it he remembered something Mrs. Griffin had told him: “I would welcome Death now,” she’d said, “like a friend I’d driven from my door.”
Maybe it wasn’t a journey to the stars that was awaiting Carna; maybe it was simply a return to the nothingness from which Hood had conjured it. But the creature wanted that gift nevertheless. It was weary and wounded, kept alive not by any will of its own but because Hood demanded its service.
“Such a pity…” the voice in the roof murmured.
“What is?” Harvey said, looking back at Hood, who had two more of the globes at his lips. “To lose you this way,” he went on. “Can’t I persuade you to think again? After all, I’ve done you no harm.
Why not come back and live here peacefully?”
“You stole thirty years of time with my mom and dad from me!” Harvey said. “If I stay here you’ll steal a lot more.”
“I only took the days you didn’t want,” Hood protested. “The rainy days. The gray days. The days you wished away. Where’s the crime in that?”
“I didn’t know what I was losing,” Harvey protested.
“Ah,” said Hood softly, “but isn’t that always the way of it? Things slip from your fingers and when they ‘re gone you regret it. But gone is gone, Harvey Swick!”
“No!” Harvey said. “What you stole I can steal back.”
At this, a gleam ignited in the twin pits of Hood’s eyes.
“You burn bright, Harvey Swick!” he said. “I’ve never known a soul that burned as bright as yours.” He frowned as if studying the boy below. “Now I understand,” he said.
“Understand what?”
“Why it is you came back.”
Harvey began to say: I came for what you took, but Hood was correcting him before he’d uttered two words.
“You came because you knew you’d find a home here,” Hood said. “We’re both thieves, Harvey Swick. I take time. You take lives. But in the end we’re the same: both Thieves of Always.”
Repulsive as it was to think of himself in any way similar to this monster, there was some comer of Harvey that feared this was true. The thought silenced him.
“Perhaps we needn’t be enemies,” Hood said. “Perhaps I should take you under my wing. My west wing.” He laughed mirthlessly at his own joke: “I can nurture you. Help you better understand the Dark Paths.”
“So I’ll end up feeding on children, like you?” Harvey said. “No hanks”
“I think you’d like it, Harvey Swick,” Hood said. “You’ve got a streak of the vampire in you already.”
There was no denying this. The very word vampire reminded him of his Halloween flight; of soaring against a harvest moon with his eyes burning red and his teeth sharp as razors.
“I see you remember,” Hood said, catching the flicker of pleasure on Harvey’s face.
Harvey instantly put a scowl in
its place. “I don’t want to stay here,” he said. “I just want to get what’s mine and leave.”
Hood sighed. “So sad,” he said. “So very sad. But if you will have what’s yours, have death. Carnal” The beast raised its pitiful head.
“Devour the boy!”
Before the wretched beast could shift itself Harvey scrambled to his feet. In the race to the trapdoor he knew he had little chance of outrunning Carna; but was there perhaps another way of laying the beast low? If he was a Thief of Always, as Hood had said, perhaps it was time to prove it. Not with dust, nor with stolen conjurings, but with the power in his own bones.
Carna took a threatening step toward him, but instead of retreating Harvey extended his hand in the creature’s direction, as if to pat its decaying head. It hesitated, its expression mellowing into doubt.
“Devour him…” the Vampire King growled.
The beast lowered its head, in expectation of punishment from above. But it was Harvey who laid his hand upon it; a gentle touch that sent a shudder through its body. It raised its snout to press itself against Harvey’s palm, and as it did so, let out a long, low moan.
There was neither pain in the sound nor complaint. In fact it was almost a moan of gratitude, that for once it not be met with blows or with howls of horror. It turned its eyes up to Harvey’s face, and a shudder of pleasure passed through its body. It seemed to know that the motion would prove fatal, because the instant after, it retreated from its comforter and as it did so its shudders multiplied, and its body suddenly flew into a thousand pieces.
Its teeth, which had seemed so fearsome moments before, rolled away into the darkness; its massive skull shattered; its spine collapsed. In a matter of seconds it was no more than a heap of bone shards, so dry and so aged even the most desperate dog would have passed them by.
Harvey glanced up at the face in the roof. Hood’s expression was one of utter perplexity. His mouth was agape, his eyes staring from their pits.
Harvey didn’t wait for him to break his silence. He simply turned his back on Carna’s remains and hurried toward the trapdoor, half expecting the creature in the roof to slam it shut. There was no response from Hood, however, until Harvey was lowering himself down onto the chair on the landing. Only then, as Harvey took one last look up at the attic, did Hood speak.
“Oh my little thief…” he murmured. “What shall me do with you now?”
XXI. Tricks and Temptations
You’ve done well,” said the smiling face awaiting him at the top of the stairs.
“I wondered where you’d gone to,” Harvey said to Rictus.
“Always ready to serve,” came the unctuous reply.
“Really?” said Harvey, stepping down off the chair and approaching the creature.
“Of course,” said Rictus. “Always.”
Now that he was closer to the man, Harvey saw the cracks in his veneer. He was plastering on a smile, and smothering his words in butter and honey, but it was the sour smell of fear that oozed from his sickly skin.
“You’re afraid of me, aren’t you?” Harvey said.
“No, no,” Rictus insisted, “I’m respectful, that’s all. Mr. Hood thinks you’re a bright boy. He’s instructed me to offer whatever you want to make you stay.” He spread his arms. “The sky’s the limit.”
“You know what I want.”
“Anything but the years, thief. You can’t have those. You won’t even need them if you stay and become Mr. Hood’s apprentice. You’ll live forever, just like him.” He dabbed at the sweat beads on his upper lip with a yellowed handkerchief. “Think about it,” he said. “You might be able to kill the likes of Carna…or me…but you’ll never hurt Hood. He’s too old; too wise; too dead.”
“If I stayed…” Harvey said.
Rictus’s grin spread. “Yes?” he purred.
“Would the children in the lake go free?”
“Why bother about them?”
“Because one of them was my friend,” Harvey reminded him.
“You’re thinking of little Lulu, aren’t you?” Rictus said. “Well, let me tell you, she’s very happy down there. They all are.”
“No they’re not!” Harvey raged. “The lake’s foul and you know it.” He took a step toward Rictus, who retreated as if in fear of his life, which perhaps he was. “How would you like it?” Harvey said, stabbing his finger in Rictus’s direction. “Living in the cold and the dark?”
“You’re right,” said Rictus, raising his hands in surrender. “Whatever you say.”
“I say set them free now!” Harvey replied. “And if you won’t, then I will!”
He pushed Rictus aside and started down the stairs two at a time. He didn’t have a clue what he was going to do when he got down to the lake, fish were fish, after all, even if they’d once been children; if he tried to take them out of the lake they’d surely drown in the air—but he was determined to somehow save them from Hood.
Rictus came after him down the flight, chattering like a clockwork salesman.
“What do you want?” he said. “Just imagine it and it’s yours! How about your own motorcycle?” As he spoke something gleamed on the landing below, and the sleekest motorcycle human eyes had ever seen rolled into view. “It’s yours, m’boy!” Rictus said.
“No thanks,” Harvey said.
“I don’t blame you!” Rictus said, kicking the motorcycle over as he sailed past it. “How about books? Do you like books?”
Before Harvey could reply the wall in front of him lifted like a great brick curtain, revealing shelf upon shelf of leather-bound volumes.
“The masterpieces of the world!” Rictus said. “From Aristotle to Zola! No?”
“No!” said Harvey, hurrying on.
“There’s got to be something you want,” Rictus said.
They were heading toward the final flight of stairs now, and Rictus knew he didn’t have very long before his prey was out in the open air.
“You like dogs?” Rictus said, as a litter of yapping pups scampered up the stairs. “Pick one! Hell, have ‘em all!”
Harvey was tempted, but he stepped over them and on.
“Something more exotic, maybe?” Rictus said, as a flock of brilliantly feathered parrots descended from the ceiling. Harvey waved them away.
“Too noisy, huh?” said Rictus. “You want something quiet and powerful. Tigers! That’s what you want! Tigers!”
No sooner said than they padded into view in the hallway below; two white tigers, with eyes like polished gold.
“Nowhere to keep ‘em!” Harvey said.
“That’s practical!” Rictus conceded. “I like a practical kid.”
As the tigers bounded off, the telephone on the table beside the kitchen door began to ring. Rictus was down the flight in two springs, and at the table in another two.
“Listen to this!” he said. “It’s the President. He wants to give you a medal!”
“No he doesn’t,” Harvey said, tiring of this rigamarole now. He was at the bottom of the stairs and crossing to the front door.
“You’re right,” said Rictus, ear to the phone again. “He wants to give you an oil field, in Alaska!” Harvey kept walking. “No, no, I got that wrong! He wants to give you Alaska!”
“Too cold.”
“He says: How about Florida?”
“Too hot.”
“Boy! You’re a difficult guy to please, Harvey Swick!”
Harvey ignored him, and turned the handle of the front door. Rictus slammed down the phone and raced toward him.
“Wait up!” he hollered, “wait up! I’m not done yet.”
“You’ve got nothing I want,” Harvey said, hauling open the front door. “They’re all fakes.”
“What if they are?” said Rictus, suddenly hushed. “So’s the sun out there. You can still enjoy it. And let me tell you, it takes a lot of magic to conjure up all these shams and hoaxes. Mr. Hood’s really sweating to find you something you like.”
&
nbsp; Ignoring him, Harvey stepped out onto the porch. Mrs. Griffin was standing on the lawn, with Stew-Cat in her arms, squinting up at the House. She smiled when she saw Harvey emerge.
“I heard such noises,” she said. “What’s been going on in there?”
“I’ll tell you later,” said Harvey. “Where’s Wendell?”
“He wandered off,” she said.
Harvey cupped his hands around his mouth, and yelled: “Wendell! Wendell!”
His voice came back to him from the face of the House. But there was no reply from Wendell.
“It’s a warm afternoon,” said Rictus, idling on the porch. “Maybe he went…swimming.”
“Oh no,” Harvey murmured. “No. Not Wendell. Please, not Wendell…”
Rictus shrugged. “He was a goofy little kid, anyhow,” he said. “He’ll probably look better as a fish!”
“No!” Harvey yelled up at the House. “This isn’t fair! You can’t do this! You can’t!”
Tears started to cloud his eyes. He wiped them away with his fists. They were both useless, fists and tears. He couldn’t soften Hood’s heart with weeping, and he couldn’t bring down the House with blows. He had no weapon against the enemy but his wits, and his wits were about at an end.
XXII. Appetite
Oh, to be a vampire again, Harvey thought. To have claws and fangs and a hunger for blood upon him, like the hunger he’d had that distant Halloween; the hunger he’d turned from in disgust. He wouldn’t turn from it now. Oh no. He’d let it swell the beast in him, so he could fly in Hood’s face with his hatred razor-sharp.
But he wasn’t a beast, he was a boy. It was the Vampire King who had the power, not him.
And then, as he stared up at the House, he remembered something that Rictus had told him at the door: “It takes a lot of magic to conjure up these shams and hoaxes,” he’d said. “Mr. Hood’s really sweating to find you something you like”
Maybe I don’t need fangs to suck him dry, Harvey thought; maybe all I need is wishes.
“I want to talk to Hood,” he told Rictus.