‘And you say he’d been taken by a vampire, this man?’ Still groping in the dark, Kyle was horrified. ‘Recently? But where? How?’
That’s the worst of it, Alec, said Keogh. He was taken here — here in England! As for how he was taken – let me tell you . . .
Chapter Four
Yulian had been a late baby, late by almost a month, though in the circumstances his mother considered herself fortunate that he hadn’t been born early. Or very early and dead! Now, on the spacious back seat of her cousin Anne’s Mercedes, on their way to Yulian’s christening at a tiny church in Harrow, Georgina Bodescu steadied the infant in his portable cot and thought back on those circumstances: on that time almost a year before when she and her husband had holidayed in Slatina, only eighty kilometres from the wild and ominously rearing bastions of the Carpatii Meridionali, the Transylvanian Alps.
A year is a long time and she could do it now – look back – without any longer feeling that she too must die, without submitting to slow, hot tears and an agony of self-reproach bordering on guilt. That’s how she had felt for long, long months: guilty. Guilty that she lived when Ilya was dead, and that but for her weakness he, too, might still be alive. Guilty that she had fainted at the sight of his blood, when she should have run like the wind to fetch help. And poor Ilya lying there, made unconscious by his pain, his life’s blood leaking out of him into the dark earth, while she lay crumpled in a swoon like . . . like some typically English shrinking violet.
Oh, yes, she could look back now – indeed she had to – for they had been Ilya’s last days, which she had been part of. She had loved him very, very much and did not want to lose grasp of her memory of him. If only in looking back she could conjure all the good things without
invoking the nightmare, then she would be happy. But of course she couldn’t . . .
Ilya Bodescu, a Romanian, had been teaching Slavonic languages in London when Georgina first met him. A linguist, he moved between Bucharest, where he taught French and English, and the European Institute in Regent Street where she had studied Bulgarian (her grandfather on her mother’s side, a dealer in wines, had come from Sofia). Ilya had only occasionally been her tutor – when standing in for a huge-breasted, moustachioed, matron from Pleven – at which times his dry wit and dark, sparkling eyes had transformed what were otherwise laborious hours of learning into all too short periods of pure pleasure. Love at first sight? Not in the light of twelve years’ hindsight – but a rapid enough process by any estimation. They had married inside a year, Ilya’s usual term with the Institute. When the year was up, she’d gone back to Bucharest with him. That had been in November of ’47.
Things had not been entirely easy. Georgina Drew’s parents were fairly well-to-do; her father in the diplomatic service had had several prestigious postings abroad, and her mother too was from a moneyed background. An ex-deb turned auxiliary nurse during the First World War, she had met John Drew in a field hospital in France where she nursed his bad leg wound. This kept him out of the rest of the fighting until she could return home with him. They married in the summer of 1917. When Georgina had introduced Ilya to her parents, his reception had been more than a little stiff. For years her father, severely British, had been ‘living down’ the fact ‘that his wife was of Bulgarian stock, and now here was his daughter bringing home a damned gypsy! It hadn’t been that open, but Georgina had known what her father had thought of it all right. Her mother hadn’t been quite so bad, but was too fond of remembering how ‘Papa never much trusted the “Wallachs” across the border’, a distrust which she put forward as one of the reasons he’d emigrated to England in the first place. In short, Ilya had not been made to feel at home.