Necroscope by Brian Lumley

Have you no understanding, Dragosani? came Thibor’s answer. Among the men who followed me when I was a warrior, many were so injured in battle that they were carried to their beds. Some would recover. But after months of lying still, often they were wasted and full of aches and torments. Picture me, then, after five hundred years! But. . . we shall see what we shall see. Even as we talk I grow more eager to be risen up – and so perhaps, after a little more refreshment – ?

Dragosani wryly nodded his understanding, drew out a ” small glinting sickle of honed brightness from its sheath in his pocket, and stooped towards the ewe.

Hold! said the vampire. As you surmise, Dragosani, this may well be the hour – for both of us. An hour of great moment! For both of us. For my own part, I think we should treat it with the respect it warrants.

The necromancer frowned, cocked his head on one side. ‘How do you mean?’

So far, my son, I think you would agree that I have not stood on ceremony. For all that I have had my food hurled at me, as if I were some rooting pig, I have not complained. But I would have you know, Dragosani, that I too have supped at table. Indeed, I’ve dined in the courts of princes! – aye, and will again, with you perhaps seated upon my right hand. May I not, therefore, expect treatment more nearly gracious? Or must I always remember you as a man who poured my food over me like slops into a pigsty?

‘A bit late for niceties, isn’t it, Thibor?’ Dragosani wondered what the vampire was up to. ‘What exactly do you want?’

Thibor was quick to note his apprehension. What? And do you still distrust me? Well, and I suppose you have your reasons. Survival was mine. But come, have we not agreed that when I’m up and about, then that I’ll drive out the seed of my own flesh from your body? And in that moment, will you not be entirely in my hands? It seems a foolish thing, Dragosani, that you would put your faith in me walking abroad but not in my grave! Surely if I were so inclined, I’d be capable of more harm to you up than down? Also, if it were my plan to harm you, who then would be my guide in this new world I’m about to enter? You shall instruct me, Dragosani, and I you.

‘You still haven’t said what you want.’

The vampire sighed. Dragosani, I am forced to admit a small personal flaw. I have in the past accused you of a certain vanity, yet now I tell you that I, too, am vain. Aye, and I would celebrate my rebirth in a manner more fitting. Therefore, bring unto me the ewe, my son, and lay it down before me. This one last time, let it be by way of a genuine tribute – even as a ritual sacrifice to one who is mighty – and not merely swill and roughage for the

fattening of swine. Let me eat as from a platter, Dragosani, and not out of a trough!

‘Old bastard!’ thought Dragosani, while continuing to keep his thoughts secret. So he was to be the vampire’s serf, was he? Just another poor gypsy dolt to be cuffed about and follow at heel like a whining dog? ‘Ah, but I’ve news for you my old, my too old friend!’ and Dragosani hugged his secret thoughts tightly to himself. ‘Enjoy this, Thibor Ferenczy, for it’s the very last time a man will fetch and carry for the likes of you!’ And out loud he said:

‘You want me to bring you the beast, as if it were an offering?’

Is it too much to ask?

The necromancer shrugged. Right now, nothing was too much to ask. He would be doing a little ‘asking’ himself, shortly. He put away his razor-edged knife and took up the sheep. He carried it to the centre of the circle, crouched down and placed it where last night’s offering had lain. Then again he took out his sickle blade. Until now the glade had been quiet, still as the tomb it was, but now Dragosani sensed a gathering. It was as if muscles were suddenly bunched, the silent creep of a cat’s paws as it closes on a mouse, the forming of saliva on a chameleon’s tongue before it strikes. Quickly, thrilling with horror of the unknown – even a monster such as Dragosani, filled with horror – he drew back the stunned beast’s head and made its throat taut. And -No need for that, my son, said Thibor Ferenczy. Dragosani would have leapt away, for in that selfsame moment he knew – but knew too late – that the Thing in the ground had had its fill of piglets and sheep! Not one eighth of an inch had he straightened from his crouch before that phallic tentacle burst from the ground beneath him, shearing through his clothing like a knife and up, into him. And how he would have leapt then, to be free of it, even if the tearing should kill him; he would have leapt – but he couldn’t. Growing barbs within him, the pseudopod stretched itself through all the lower conduits of his body and filled him, and drew him down like a fish yanked from water on a hook!

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