20
I used Leischneudel’s cell phone to call
Max and explain our suspicions.
“I have a theory, too,” said the mage. “I observed
the phenomenon twice yesterday that soon after we entered
the theater, Nelli experienced what appeared to be an allergic
reaction and soon after we exited, she reverted to a state of
robust good health. You and I assumed that something in the theater
was troubling her senses.”
“Uh-huh.”
I made an exasperated gesture at Leischneudel, who
was listening intently to my conversation, urging him to drink
faster. Daemon could arrive at any moment, and we were still in
his dressing room—since I thought we might be noticed if we left
the room with half a bottle of blood in our possession. Besides, I
didn’t want to bump into Tarr or Fiona, if I could avoid it.
Max continued, “I now postulate that, since Nelli
is a mystical being, what irritated her senses yesterday
was—”
“A vampire?” I guessed. “Or, rather, vampires.”
Thack and Leischneudel had both been here, after all.
“Yes. I think it possible,” Max said, “that we
were getting an affirmative reaction from Nelli. We just
didn’t recognize it.”
“Because we were looking for something identical to
her reactions to mystical threats on previous occasions,” I
said.
“Precisely. A living vampire—as you now know from
your friendships with two of them—is not inherently threatening or
evil. That’s a matter of character and circumstances. Ergo, Nelli
does not respond to vampirism as a threat. But I now suspect she
does respond to it as an irritant to her delicate
senses.”
I exercised tact and did not mention that Max’s
delicately sensitive mystical familiar regularly gulped down
discarded garbage during her habitual perambulations.
“The question is, Max, if I’m right and there is an
unknown vampire wandering around here, can Nelli’s senses pinpoint
him?”
“We can only ascertain that by making the
attempt.”
“Can you bring her to the theater right away? Since
the vampire hunter is coming to New York—”
“What?” Leischneudel blurted.
“I’ll tell you in a minute,” I whispered. Then I
continued saying to Max, “We might be able to help narrow his
search and end this nightmare faster if Nelli can identify the
rogue vampire.”
“Nelli and I shall come to the Hamburg forthwith,”
Max said. “However, under the terms of the treaty, if any
representative of the council asks me to leave or wants Nelli to
stand down—”
“Yes, I understand,” I said. “I’ll make sure
someone knows at the stage door to let you in.”
As I ended the call, Leischneudel said, “A
vampire hunter is coming here?”
“Yes. I didn’t want to spoil your dinner, so I was
saving the news for afterward. Drink up, by the way.”
He pursed his bloody lips and cradled the mostly
empty bottle against his chest, rocking back and forth a little. “I
think I’ve lost my appetite. A Lithuanian vampire
hunter?”
“You should keep a low profile while he’s
here.”
“Oh, you think?” he snapped.
I realized he was very upset.
“There’s no need to panic,” I lied, recalling what
Max had said about the ruthlessness of Lithuanian vampire hunters.
“We can get through this.”
There was a sharp, heavy knock at the door. We both
flinched, looked at it, and froze. A moment later, someone flung
open the door.
Leischneudel hastily wiped his mouth with his hand.
I glanced at him and saw with dismay that all that did was smear
the blood around, making it even more noticeable.
A total stranger stood in the doorway. He was an
older man, gray-haired and heavyset. He had a ruddy complexion and
a pug nose, and he wore sensible clothing: a plaid flannel shirt,
an anorak, khaki trousers, and sturdy shoes.
What I mostly noticed, though, was the crossbow in
his hand.
He said, “I’m looking for Daemon Rav . . .” His
blue eyes fixed on Leischneudel, who was frantically smearing blood
across his mouth. “Vampire!”
The stranger raised his crossbow and took
aim.
“No!” I leaped to my feet.
“Wait!” Leischneudel howled, diving
sideways.
The vampire hunter shifted his crossbow to track
Leischneudel’s evasive move. He stepped further in the room to
corner his quarry—and slipped on the champagne I had spilled by the
door. His eyes bulged as he cried out and sailed up into the air,
where he seemed to hover for a moment like a cartoon character,
then he crashed heavily to the floor, banging his head against the
doorjamb as he fell.
I knelt down next to him and felt for a
pulse.
Leischneudel peeked out from behind the chair he
was hiding behind. “What did you do, Esther?”
I said, “He’s still alive.”
“Also trigger-happy!”
“Quite.” I took away the crossbow. “Do you think we
should tie him up?”
“Yes.” Apparently too shaken to stand
upright, Leischneudel crawled over to the stranger. “Let’s do that
right now.”
I closed the door, since I shrewdly suspected that
some of our colleagues might question our intentions if they saw us
tying up an unconscious stranger.
Leischneudel, who was still in his street clothes,
removed his belt and bound the stranger’s hands behind his back.
Then he rooted around the room searching for something equally
strong to use on the legs.
“I’m a little disappointed,” I said.
“What, that he didn’t kill me?”
“Calm down. I just mean this is the Dirty
D’Artagnanator, sent all the way from Vilnius to slay our rogue
vampire? He’s not quite what I expected.”
Leischneudel, who had found an electrical extension
cord, started binding the man’s ankles with it. “What were
you expecting?”
“Well, not a chubby old guy who immediately knocked
himself out so we could tie him up.” Then I realized what else I
hadn’t expected. “Wait a minute.”
I knelt beside the unconscious man and started
fishing around in his pockets.
“What are you looking for?” Leischneudel asked as
he finished his task.
“His ID. This man sounded American when he spoke.
The vampire hunter who’s coming to New York doesn’t even speak
English . . . Ah-hah! Here it is.” I found his wallet, opened it,
and pulled out the driver’s license.
“Who is he?” Leischneudel asked.
I frowned, puzzled. “He’s Peter Simkus of Oshkosh,
Wisconsin.” After a moment, it hit me. “Oh, crap. I need
your phone again.”
Leischneudel handed it over.
I called Thack’s cell. He didn’t pick up, so I left
a message on his voice mail. “Your Uncle Peter just tried to kill
Leischneudel. We’ve knocked him out and tied him up in Daemon’s
dressing room. I think you should come to the theater and talk to
him. Right away.”
“Thack sent his uncle to kill me?”
Leischneudel said shrilly. “I thought Thack liked me!”
“No, Uncle Peter was supposed to be the interpreter
for the vampire hunter,” I said. “Thack mentioned that his uncle
had done a little vampire hunting; but since he’s managed to be
captured by us, I’d say he’s pretty rusty. I’m guessing he
got a little too excited about being back in action and overstepped
his mark.”
“Overstepped?” Leischneudel repeated.
“Esther, he pointed a crossbow at my head!”
“We have the crossbow now,” I said reassuringly,
waving it at him. “And he’s tied up.”
“Who let a stranger with a weapon into the
building?” Leischneudel demanded.
“That’s a good question.” I knew the cops were
overwhelmed, but I found it hard to believe they’d been distracted
enough to let someone waltz past them with a crossbow. “And if
Uncle Peter is here, then where is—”
Leischneudel and I clutched each other in panic as
the door flew open without warning. Daemon stalked into the
room.
He slipped on the spilled champagne and cursed as
he righted himself. He tripped on Uncle Peter and gave the
unconscious man an irritable kick before he stepped over him.
I quickly closed the door while Daemon flung
himself into a chair.
“My God, I thought yesterday was the worst
day of my life!” he said in an aggrieved tone, still looking
hungover and wrung out from last night’s bender. “I now look back
on yesterday as an innocent time of unspoiled pleasures and
youthful dalliance. Do you know why?”
“Why?” Leischneudel asked, perhaps too accustomed
to playing Aubrey to Daemon’s Ruthven.
“Because now I am living through today,”
Daemon declared. “Do you have any fucking idea what has happened to
me today?”
I said, “You’re not even curious, are you, about
why we have an unconscious hostage and a crossbow in your dressing
room?”
“Nocturne is threatening to fire me!” Daemon
shouted. “I am the face and voice of Nocturne, and
they’re talking about dumping me!”
“Oh! Because of the whole . . .” Leischneudel made
a vague gesture. “The tabloids are just awful today.”
“You know what else? My movie deal is
this close to being canceled!” Daemon held his thumb and
forefinger a millimeter apart.
“You have a movie deal?” Leischneudel asked in
surprise.
“Princeling of Darkness,” Daemon
replied.
“Feature film?” I asked.
“Cable TV,” Daemon said darkly. “It’s about a
vampire who proves he’s innocent of murder by hunting down the
fiend who actually exsanguinated his lover.
“Wow, and they might not want you for that
anymore?” I said. “Go figure.”
“And when I came to work just now, I was
spat on, insulted, and pelted with garbage outside the theater by
people who were my devoted fans before the tabloids tried to turn
me into a demented killer!”
“Did you sneak in through the fire exit, like
Victor suggested?” I asked,
Daemon looked blank. “When did Victor suggest
that?”
“I think he left it on your voice mail.”
“Oh, I’ve had my phone turned off for hours. You
would not believe the calls I’m getting! How do these people
get my number, anyhow?” Daemon rubbed his forehead. “Where
is Victor? Has he deserted me, too?”
“No, I think he’s probably waiting for you by the
fire exit. Victor said . . .” My eyes met Leischneudel’s.
“Victor.”
Leischneudel looked at me inquisitively.
“Who has the most access to this dressing room
besides Daemon? Who can come and go without being noticed?” I
gestured to the fridge, from which bottles of blood had been
quietly disappearing. “Who can take things out of this room
without being stopped or questioned?”
Leischneudel’s eyes widened and he gasped.
“Victor!”
“What about Victor?” Daemon asked
irritably.
“Where was he when Adele Olson was killed?”
“Who?” Daemon was absently fishing around in his
pockets for something.
I whacked him upside the head. “The murder victim,
you jackass!”
“Ow! Jesus, calm down, would you?” he said.
“I’m the one having my life destroyed by this, not
you.”
“Where was Victor when the murder was
committed?”
“How should I know? I’m more interested in
where he is now. I need something for my stomach. And my
head. And I need to use his phone. I don’t want to turn mine
on.”
“You really think Victor is . . .” Leischneudel
wiggled his brows meaningfully at me.
Looking at him with a puzzled frown, Daemon said,
“Gay? Probably. But I don’t ask about his personal life.”
“Tarr says he doesn’t have a personal life,” I
mused.
How twisted might that make a person? Or a
vampire?
“Tarr. Is he here?” Daemon stood up,
swayed briefly, then pulled himself together. “I want a word with
him. No! I want five minutes alone in a room with him, no rules, no
referee.”
As he headed for the door, I said, “Don’t
trip—”
Daemon tripped.
“—on Uncle Peter.”
Looking down at Thack’s uncle, Daemon said, “All
right. Fine. I’ll bite. Why is there an unconscious man tied
up on the floor of my dressing room?”
“No one really knows,” Leischneudel said.
“Here’s something else we don’t know.” I joined
them in gazing down at Uncle Peter, who looked peaceful and was
snoring a little now. “Where is the vampire hunter who was supposed
to be with him? Did his airplane not take off from Vilnius? Did the
guy never get here? Where . . . Oh, my God.”
“What?” Leischneudel said. “What?”
“He’s here,” I said with certainty. “The vampire
hunter is in the building.”
“No!” Leischneudel dived behind a chair again,
taking cover.
“That’s how they got in here with weapons,”
I said. “They climbed up to the roof after dark, then rappelled
down via old air shaft.” I looked down at Uncle Peter with more
respect now. Sure, he was rusty, but he still had the right stuff.
“Two ropes hanging down. Edvardas Froese is here,
too.”
“For God’s sake,” Daemon said. “They couldn’t just
buy tickets from a scalper, like everyone else?”
“They’re not here to see the show,” I snapped.
“They’re vampire hunters. Uncle Peter probably came in here to
interview you. While Edvardas is doing recon or something. Who
knows? The only stories I’ve heard about vampire hunting are from
eighteenth-century Serbia, and they were slaying the undead.
Edvardas has a whole different sort of quarry to hunt down.”
From behind his chair, Leischneudel wailed.
“Just keep a low profile,” I said to him. “I’m
going to go see if I can find Edvardas. A total stranger carrying a
crossbow and speaking only Lithuanian probably stands out, even
around here. I’ll see if I can get through to him with
pantomime gestures or something. Don’t untie Uncle Peter until I
get back. We want to make sure he knows not to kill you before we
let him loose.”
Leischneudel grunted an affirmative.
“And I,” said Daemon through gritted teeth, “am
going to find Tarr and kill him with my bare hands!”
He flung open the door to march through it.
We came face-to-face with a tall, slim, powerfully
built man with a neatly trimmed beard who had his pale blond hair
tied back in a ponytail. He wore a long suede coat, old boots, and
leather pants, and he carried a crossbow.
Now this is more like it.
“Edvardas Froese,” I said with certainty.
He glanced at me and lifted one brow. He looked at
Daemon, and his eyes narrowed in recognition. Perhaps he’d had a
case file to study on his transatlantic journey.
Then he saw Uncle Peter lying on the floor behind
me, unconscious and securely bound. In a split second, he raised
his crossbow and pointed it at Daemon.
“Vampyras!” Edvardas cried in a deep
baritone voice.
I didn’t need to speak Lithuanian to understand
that.
“Whoa.” Daemon raised his hands. “What the hell are
you doing, man?”
“He doesn’t speak English,” I said.
Daemon looked at me. “You know this
guy?”
“Not exactly.”
Edvardas spoke coldly to Daemon. I didn’t
understand the words, but the intent certainly came across as,
“I’ll see you in hell!”
“Wait! No!” With no idea what else to do, I raised
Uncle Peter’s crossbow, which I was still holding, and pointed it
at Edvardas.
Keeping his eyes on Daemon, he said something
dismissive to me.
“I’ll shoot!” I warned.
Daemon sighed. “Look, I don’t know what language
this guy is speaking. But I’m pretty sure he’s telling you that
thing isn’t loaded.”
“What?” I looked down at my weapon. “How can you
tell?”
Edvardas snickered.
“Oh, shit,” I said. “Uncle Peter’s even
rustier than we thought.”
“The old man was pointing an empty weapon at me?”
Leischneudel blurted from his hiding place inside the dressing
room.
On our left, Bill was running down the hall toward
us. “What the hell is going on here?” he shouted. “Esther! Daemon!
Who is that?”
Somewhere to our right, Mad Rachel starting
screaming, “They’re coming in! They’re coming in!”
The combination of stimuli was enough to distract
even a seasoned vampire hunter. Edvardas looked around, perhaps
thinking he was being ambushed from multiple directions. I realized
we had to disarm him to prevent a potential fatality before his
interpreter woke up and could be convinced to tell him not to kill
us. So I flung myself at him while he was off his guard, and the
two of us went flying into the far wall together.
I heard a short, soft, menacing sound that I didn’t
recognize, immediately followed by Daemon shouting, “Jesus! That
nearly hit me!”
I realized the crossbow had misfired when Edvardas
stumbled into the wall with me. He flung me aside with one muscular
arm as easily as if I were a paper napkin. I reeled backward and
fell down as he launched himself at Daemon, who was shrieking, “I’m
an actor! I’m an actor!”
Leischneudel appeared in the doorway, his lips
quivering, his eyes glassy with fear. But he was a hero, deep down.
When he saw what was happening, he joined Bill in jumping on top of
the vampire hunter and pummeling him.
Edvardas was darned impressive, I had to admit. He
fought three men at once (well, two, anyhow—Daemon was mostly
cowering and shrieking over and over that he was an actor), and he
seemed to be winning.
Down the hallway, I could hear Mad Rachel
screaming, “Here they come! What do we do?”
I noticed a crossbow lying on the floor near me
while Edvardas fought his adversaries. He had his hands around
Daemon’s neck now, and he looked like he was trying to rip his head
off, exactly as Jurgis Radvila had done with an undead vampire in a
Serbian cemetery long ago. Acting on instinct, I picked up the
crossbow, rose to my feet, and walloped Edvardas over the head with
it as hard as I could.
He cried out, swayed unsteadily on his feet for a
minute, then collapsed.
Daemon was choking and gagging, red-faced, with
tears streaming from his eyes.
“Oh, my God,” Leischneudel said, panting
with panic and exertion. “What do we do now?”
Bill was breathing hard, too. “I came back here to
tell you the lobby has been breached. The crowds are pouring into
the house. They’ve gone insane!”
I was also panting. “Crazy crowds rioting inside
the theater? Two homicidal vampire hunters backstage, one of whom
doesn’t understand English?” I looked at my companions. “I say we
run for it!”
“Good plan,” said Leischneudel.
“I like it!” Bill seemed bizarrely cheerful.
Daemon was waving his arms feebly, indicating he
needed help to stand up. Bill and Leischneudel hauled him off the
floor. He was swaying dizzily in their arms as we all turned in the
direction of the stage door to make our escape.
“Run for your lives!” Mad Rachel
screamed.
I stared dumbfounded as Tarr and Rachel—who was in
full costume and makeup—ran straight toward us from that direction,
shouting their heads off. Then I heard the rising din of voices
behind them, angry shouts, the roar of the crowd.
“They’re coming through the stage door!” Tarr
shouted. “The cops can’t hold them off! Why do we even pay
taxes in this city?”
Pelting down the hall behind them, I saw six men:
my vampire posse and Leischneudel’s Caped Crusaders.
When Flame saw me, he shouted, “The perimeter has
been breached! Our position has been flanked! Man overboard!”
Silent shouted at him, “Oh, shut up!” Then
to me: “Esther, run! We’ll hold them off until you’re gone!”
Then he laughed exultantly and turned to confront
the sea of costumed, wing-wearing, befanged, gothpainted,
Jane-look-alike, and mad-scientist vamparazzi piling through the
stage door and flooding the hallway.
I saw Treat and Casper knock down Dr. Hal (whose
picket sign today said: IMMORTAL LIFE IN PRISON!) while he
was shouting, “No prisoners!” Then they high-fived each
other.
The two Caped Crusaders leaped into the oncoming
sea of people, swirling their capes with gusto and shouting, “Bam!
Pow! Zam!” as they shoved and hit people.
A gaggle of Janes, unable to get past the
bottleneck my posse was creating in the hall, were screeching,
“Daemon! Daemon! Please.” Some of them were weeping with
lust-maddened hysteria.
“Fire exit!” Daemon choked out, his nose running
and his eyes still streaming. “Didn’t you say something about the
fire exit?”
“Hah! Yes!” Bill laughed maniacally as he and
Leischneudel grabbed Daemon and started half-carrying, halfdragging
him. “Fire exit! Stay together, everyone!”
As he passed Edvardas’ prone body, Tarr asked me,
“What is that?”
“A Lithuanian vampire hunter.”
“Yeah, that’s what I thought.”
Mad Rachel started bawling her eyes out, making her
makeup run as she wailed, “I want Eric! I want my mamma!”
“Come on,” I said, dragging her by the arm.
“Didn’t you hear Bill? Stay together!”
We all ran toward the darkened wings, through them,
and then across the stage. The curtain was down, and the
working-lights for the crew offered enough illumination to ensure
we didn’t trip over the furniture in our mad dash to escape. The
house of the Hamburg, directly on the other side of the curtain,
sounded like the Roman Coliseum in some epic gladiator film. As the
others kept running (except for Daemon, who was staggering while
being dragged), I paused to peek through the curtain, wondering if
there was any possibility of escaping unseen via the fire exit in
the house.
“Good God!” I blurted.
There were dozens of people rampaging through the
theater, with still more pouring through the doors at the
back.
“Come on, come on!” Tarr grabbed my arm and dragged
me away from the curtain, hauling me the rest of the way across the
stage with him. “That is not your audience anymore,
kiddo!”
“Don’t call me that,” I snarled at him and jerked
my arm out of his grasp. “This is all your fault!”
“Hey, Daemon wanted to be noticed,” Tarr said with
a nasty sneer. “Well, now he’s been noticed.”
“Run! Turn back! RUNNNNNNN!”
Emerging from the darkened wings at this end of the
stage, Victor collided with Bill, Leischneudel, and Daemon. The
four men all fell down, tumbling across the stage like billiard
balls.
Rachel ignored them all and kept running forward,
disappearing beyond the wings.
Victor was babbling as he hauled himself off the
stage, and then scooped Daemon up. “I was waiting for you. By the
door. Like I said I would! There was a knock. I thought it was
you!”
“You opened the fire door?” I guessed.
Rachel screamed in terror and came running back
this way.
Tarr said, “Yep, he opened the fire door.”
“And they came pouring in,” Victor wailed.
“Dozens of them! What do we do?”
“No, no, no!” Daemon shouted. “How can this be
happening to me?”
“Oh, for God’s sake,” I said.
Bill pointed at the curtain. Beyond it, the decibel
level of the seething horde was still rising. “There’s a fire exit
that way, if we can get to it.”
I shook my head. “Not a chance. I looked.”
Bill was practically jumping up and down with
excitement as he said, “Stage door, no. Fire exit, no. House,
no.”
“Are you saying we’re trapped?” Leischneudel asked
in horror.
“We all going to die!” Rachel howled while
runny mascara streaked down her face.
“I know another way out!” I said suddenly. “If we
can get to it.” There might be time, if we move fast enough. “This
way!”
I ran toward the rear of the backstage area, near
where Bill had found the rappelling ropes earlier. I went past the
spot where Lopez and I had sat talking two nights ago, and down the
hallway where he had then led me, into the alcove where the
basement door was.
“No, this is a dead end,” Leischneudel
protested.
“It’s not! Who has a flashlight?” I asked.
Bill pulled one out of his work belt. “I do.”
Victor, who was hauling Daemon now, said, “I have a
small one on my key chain.”
“Me, too.” Tarr added to me, as if I might care, “I
like gadgets.”
I opened the basement door.
“No!” Rachel howled. “We’ll be trapped like
rats!”
“There’s an underground tunnel,” I said. “Abandoned
old water mains. We can escape this way. Hurry! Before anyone
realizes where we’ve gone.”
I lifted up my Regency skirts and started
descending the stairs, the adrenaline of terror making me unusually
swift and agile. I heard my colleagues stampeding behind me, and
then the heavy basement door, already high above my head now,
thudded shut behind us.
“Get out your flashlights,” I said. “Bill, shut off
the overhead light.” When the vamparazzi got as far as that
dead-end alcove, there was less chance they’d look for us down here
if the basement was dark.
By then, I hoped, we’d be long gone, anyhow. Lopez
had said there were other exits from the tunnel. It shouldn’t be
too hard to find one.
As soon as the lights went out, Rachel wailed,
“This place is scary! I want Eric!”
“Shut up,” Tarr and I said in unison.
In the faint illumination provided by one large and
two very small flashlights, I led them all across the basement,
behind the rusted-out machinery and forgotten junk, and down the
slick old steps to the heavy door in the wall.
Bill was laughing with delight. “What is
this place? Esther, this is amazing!”
“You ain’t seen nothing yet. Come on.”
We entered the tunnel that ran under the street and
connected the Hamburg to the old underground access chamber below
Eighth Avenue. I was halfway to it when Victor, at the end of our
queue, called out to me, “Uh, Esther? Problem.”
Daemon’s voice was raspy as he said, “Leischneudel,
come on. What’s the hold-up?”
“Uh, I’ll wait here,” Leischneudel said. “No one
will look this far away for me. And the cops will have things under
control in a while.”
I said to Bill, “You take the lead. The access
chamber is right ahead of you. When you get there, open the old
iron door under the spiral stairs. It’s very stiff, but it opens.
That’s the tunnel. From there you can get to an exit. A manhole or
something like that.”
“What about you?”
“I’ll be right behind you with Leischneudel.”
“Esther!”
“You guys go ahead. I know where I’m going.” I
added, “And whatever’s wrong with Leischneudel, I can bring him
around. Go.”
As they proceeded toward the access chamber, I
started making my way back through this tunnel, passing my
colleagues. When I reached Tarr, I realized I’d need a flashlight,
and I took his without apology as I said, “Give me that. You can
follow Bill.”
As I passed Victor and Daemon, I remembered with a
sudden chill that I suspected Victor of being the rogue
vampire.
He said something to me, but I didn’t hear what it
was. The tunnel was reverberating with the echo of Mad Rachel’s
wails.
When I reached the door to the basement, where
Leischneudel stood wringing his hands, trembling and sweating, it
was pretty easy to guess what was troubling him.
“Claustrophobia?”
He nodded. “I don’t have too many problems in
ordinary daily life, but an underground tunnel? I can’t. Esther, I
can’t.”
I tried to convince him that we could do this as if
it were a trust exercise in acting class, where he’d close his eyes
and just let me lead him. But his nerves were shot to hell, and he
was too frantic and panicky to be talked into this.
As we stood arguing, the lights suddenly came
blazing on throughout the cellar, making us blink and squint. We
heard the basement door slam in the distance, and then we heard two
men’s voices. After a moment, we realized whose voice it was
and why we couldn’t understand what he was saying.
“The vampire hunters!” Leischneudel whispered in
terror.
“My God, those guys are tough,” I said with
reluctant admiration.
Leischneudel grabbed my arm, pulled me inside the
dark tunnel with him, and quietly closed the heavy door behind
us.
“Come on, come on,” he whispered. “Let’s
go.”
“I thought you were claustrophobic?”
“I am. It turns out I’m just more phobic
about vampire hunters.”
We proceeded through the dark, uneven tunnel with
fast, fear-fueled steps. When we emerged into the access chamber,
our colleagues had already pried opened the door and entered the
tunnel. We were alone in the chamber. Leischneudel paused and
looked around at the nineteenth-century construction and the
crumbling spiral staircase that led to nowhere.
“Wow, this is amazing!” he said. “If I weren’t
terrified out of my mind, I think I’d enjoy this.”
We heard shouts behind us in Lithuanian.
“Holy shit! Get in the tunnel,” I said.
“Now.”
We ran through the iron door, sloshing into the
thin layer of water there and slipping a little on the tunnel’s old
curved floor.
“Should we close it behind us?” Leischneudel
reached for the rusty door and tugged. It screeched a little.
Something whizzed past us with deadly speed. A
crossbow bolt!
“Uncle Peter!” I cried. “Edvardas! Stop this
now!”
The next crossbow bolt came so close to me it
brushed my arm. Startled, I nearly dropped Tarr’s key-chain light.
Then I turned it off, realizing what a good target it made me. I
hastily stuffed the thing inside my corset so I wouldn’t lose it.
As my eyes adjusted to the complete, opaque blackness underground,
I saw the dancing lights of the Lithuanians’ flashlights flicker
through the open doorway and bounce around the brick wall.
“Let’s go,” I whispered. “We’ll have to lose them
in the tunnels.”
“Right.”
I turned and ran. So did he.
Terrified, confused, and functioning in pitch
darkness in a strange place, it was a few seconds before we each
realized we weren’t running in the same direction.
“Esther!”
“Leischneudel!” I took a step in his direction,
then stopped abruptly when I heard two crossbow bolts fly through
the door directly between us and clatter violently against the
curved brick wall.
I instinctively backed up a step—then shrieked when
something snakelike touched me, hanging down from the
ceiling.
“Esther!” Leischneudel shouted.
“I’m all right!” I realized in that instant what it
was. Tree roots. Hanging down through the ceiling. I
remembered Lopez showing this to me. “Leischneudel, there are
stalactites hanging down near you. Be careful. Now run!
You’ll come to an exit! You will. Go!”
“Esther, no, I won’t leave you—”
“I’m not a vampire, and they know it. They won’t
kill me.” I hoped I was right about that. “I’m going to try to
reason with them. Go!”
“No, Esther—”
“Go!” Some brick dust fell on my head and
into my eyes. I couldn’t see anyhow, but the stinging was painful
and distracting, and it made my eyes water. As some bits of mortar
fell on my head, I remembered Lopez telling me that intruding tree
roots could cause structural instability in these old underground
tunnels.
I heard Leischneudel’s footsteps sloshing through
the water as he fled into the dark. The tree root brushed me again,
making me jump and gasp in frightened revulsion a second time. I
backed well away from it, not wanting it to touch me again.
I heard the Lithuanian voices getting closer.
“Uncle Peter, can you hear me?” I called.
“Who is that?” the old man called.
I heard something all around me that sounded like
sliding pebbles. I backed up a step further, my heart pounding with
instinctive fear.
“I’m a friend of Thack’s! Do not shoot
me.”
“Friend of who?”
I heard rumbling like thunder, followed by
cracking.
“Your nephew! Thackeray Shackleton!”
“Oh—that ridiculous name! What was the boy
thinking?”
“Do not come into the tunnel.” My chest was
pounding with anxiety. “I think it’s in danger of caving in!”
I moved forward, feeling my way along the wall.
Something big fell in front of me, plummeting from the ceiling and
hitting the water with a heavy thud and a splash. Pebbles hit me in
the head.
“Young woman! Come out of there!” The voice
was frightened, not threatening.
“I’m try—”
Somewhere behind me, from the far, dark reaches of
this long-abandoned tunnel, a woman screamed in bloodcurdling
terror.
The echo reverberated through the darkness and
seemed to trigger the cave-in in earnest. The whole ceiling
collapsed above me, and I threw myself backward just in time to
avoid being buried by it. The long, echoing, thundering crash was
deafening as the tunnel shook and I scrambled around in stygian
darkness, screaming in blind, panic-stricken fear. I was coughing,
holding my hand over my nose and mouth as I crawled through the
water on my hands and knees, struggling to move in this ridiculous
Regency costume while trying to escape from plummeting rocks and
debris.
When the bricks finally stopped falling and I
stopped screaming in hysterical terror, I was alone, in the dark,
with the exit to the Hamburg sealed off by an immense pile of
ruined masonry.
Behind me, trapped somewhere else in this tunnel
with me, she screamed again.