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Authors: G.R. Yeates

Tags: #eyes, #vampires, #horror, #vampire, #dead, #world war one, #first world war, #Vetala

The Eyes of the Dead (14 page)

BOOK: The Eyes of the Dead
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He split it open.

Chapter Thirty-Three

And there it was, suspended in a corrupt, disintegrating womb. Deathless and wormy. Obsidian eyes, poison moons, blazing with nocturnal brilliance from its mildewed and crabby underside. Tangled vegetative fronds came weaving out from the chitinous matter of its layered hide. Reaching to the high vaulted ceiling of the cavern, weaving in with the hoary roots of Black Wood. Drinking the sustenance of blood and suffering from its noxious soil.

Wilson stood before the Vetala.

The spaces within him, the old wounds, were brimming over with the bad blood of thought, feeling and memory. He shuddered, nauseated by terrible remembrance. Some things are best left forgotten. Wilson knew now what the dead fear, what follows on, the fate that comes after extinction. When something becomes nothing. When everything of you and about you is gone from this world. When no-one remembers your name.

And my name is all I have left, he thought.

He could feel the infernal scratching worsening, raking the inside of his skull with its blinding fury. Darkened claws raged away. Scratching inhuman languages into hard bone. Every letter, a jagged point. Each word, a series of gouges.

…What’re you doing here, boy? This is no place for you…

A ripple passed through the cancerous hateful form.

Wilson looked up at it, “What is this place?”

…This is the Grey, where we dwell. You know that much…

“What am I doing here then? I’m not the same as you.”

…You are. You’re becoming one of us. Once we’re inside you, there’s no getting us out. Heh, you might say we’re like having rats in the brain…

More ripples coursed through the beast.

It was laughing at him.

“I’m not like you.”

Wilson brandished his bayonet. His stomach knotted. He held out the blade, then he inverted it, resting its point against his heart. He could feel the life-giving organ shuddering underneath. His time was almost up. He heard the voice of Brookes.

…Do the right thing…

He could feel the scratching under the skin of his arm. Wilson ground his teeth, glaring at his hand, paralysed. His fingers loosened. The bayonet began to slide free. The laughter of the Vetala shook a shower of limestone stalactites down from the vaults above. Better do it now and do it quick. He looked into the shimmering spider-eyes of the horror hanging before him.

“I might be a lie, I remember nothing about who I am, and you might well be the truth of me, but you know what? Sometimes, a lie can be noble.”

He drove the bayonet blade home. A mountainous shudder ran through the Vetala. A howl ripped out of it, a raw, hopeless, bleeding sound.

Everything stopped.

There was a moment of perfect stillness.

A wintry flush ran through Wilson. He clenched his teeth against it. Feeling his fingers and toes burn with prickling chills. Everything became blotchy. A ferocious scratching tore through his insides, burrowing into his heart, his lungs and kidneys. He let it pass through him. He knew this was it, the threshold between life and death. There was no going back. This was the point of no return. The rats inside his skull scurried over one another, scratching away at his brain, shredding his senses, trying to claw their way out, escape. But the black river came thundering through him, washing the rats, and the scratching, away forever. Wilson’s head fuzzed and went light. A strange aching pressure flared and then receded inside his skull. The Vetala trembled, shook, its carapace becoming translucent. A hissing wave of excretory fumes washed over Wilson. The Vetala was rotting, receding, crumpling in on itself. The shell of its hide crumbling, coming apart at the seams. Raining soundlessly to the ground. Fluids went gushing out in thick maggot-ridden rivers. Its eyes shattered like mirrors. Its tendrils writhed desperately over the dead bodies below, seeking to draw some sustenance from them. Wilson saw something small and black squirm its way out of the titanic carcass. The next second, it was gone. Then, with a cataclysmic groan and a reverberating crash, the Vetala fell from its cradle. Its grip on the roots of Black Wood dissolving completely.

All became quiet and still.

******

Smithy and Brookes were waiting for him, sitting on the steps of the crypt, sharing a fag, puffing out smoke through the holes in their bones. Smithy smiled a crooked smile, despite his broken jaw.

…Well done, Whiner. Couldn’t have done better m’self, and that’s saying summat…

Brookes nodded at Wilson. He was smiling, satisfied, stroking the open wound in his throat with a restless fingertip.

…Thanks, Reg. You did the right thing…

Epilogue

Wilson opened his eyes. He could see pale sky through the branches of Black Wood. He was sprawled on his back, wounded, his lifeblood pumping into the ground. His breathing was shallow. Every breath was a battle won. Wilson felt the bullet in his back grinding against bone. The still, white-eyed corpses of Smithy and Brookes were sprawled over him. Their eyes, glassy and empty. Shells whined and roared overhead. Men screamed and yelled. Everything sounded so distant, so far away. The rat from the crater was squatting on his belly. It was looking down at him, its eyes calmly regarding him. Something hurt in his side. Wilson drew it out from his pocket. Small, silver and tarnished. A crucifix. The stigmata scar it had made showing, white on his palm.

Wilson’s eyesight flickered and dimmed. The rat was swelling, spreading, dissolving into formlessness and shadow. He sighed, closed his eyes.

Overhead, he heard the black birds cry.

…We are such things as dreams are made on…

William Shakespeare

About the Author

G.R. Yeates was born in Rochford, Essex and went on to study English Literature at the Colchester Institute. He has lived in China where he taught English as a foreign language and he now lives in North London where he writes every day and sleeps very little. He considers his literary influences to include George Orwell, H.P. Lovecraft, Ramsey Campbell, Franz Kafka and Thomas Ligotti.

The Eyes of the Dead
is his debut novel.

For news and details of future releases:

http://www.gryeates.co.uk

http://www.twitter.com/_gryeates_

http://www.facebook.com/pages/GRYeates-Horror-Author/10150248772620001

BOOK: The Eyes of the Dead
6.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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