Everything in Creation is governed and bound by Laws;
Heaven and Hell are no exception.
In times when Demons refuse to comply,
When the actions of the rogues jeopardise the balance,
Hell sends their ancient and most dangerous spawn;
The Contractor…
Interim III - Hunters
“Fear… Nevermore, my son...
“Desmond, the day you read this letter, we would have been long gone
from this world, banished from the Third Kingdom for all eternity. We all have
choices in life and ours was to keep you safe; safe from evil, safe from
cruelty…
“I have no doubt in my mind that your foster family have loved and
cared for you immaculately all these years in my absence and for that I am
truly grateful. I have requested that your guardians give you this letter when
you become a man so that you can understand what happened to your family; to
us.
“By our wishes, your guardians have kept the details of your lineage from
you but now it is time that you know who you are, who we are and what happened
to us. For you, my son, come from a long line of proud warriors and fierce
demon hunters; you, my son, are a Van Hellsing…”
The heavy English rain buffeted
against the worn, wooden sidings of an old, two-storey house hidden along the
cliffs of Dover slightly off Waterloo Crescent. Its dilapidated appearance
masked a modern interior in which its inhabitants were sitting quietly in a
dimly lit lounge room, saying nothing to one another.
The only sounds heard through the room
was the buzzing of the fluorescent light bulb overhead and the ticking of an
antique, ‘Dresden’ grandfather clock sitting in the corner, swaying its
pendulum in soothing monotony.
No words were said until a
middle-aged woman cleaning the equally-aged Winchester rifle in her hands broke
the silence. ‘You’re sure it’s tonight Kennedy?’
A thin, bespectacled young-man
stood up and walked across the room towards the desk, upon which sat an aged,
handwritten chart.
‘It’s definitely tonight,’ he said
surely, running his finger across the chart, ‘the Southward Equinox is definitely
tonight, mother.’
‘Well that’s it then,’ said a
younger, twenty-something year old woman sitting on the far end of the worn
couch, ‘they’ll be here soon.’ Her hands shook nervously as she poured
lubricant on an old rag, cleaning out the barrel of the pistol on the coffee
table. ‘Where the Hell is dad?’
The older woman, Kennedy’s mother,
stood up from her stool opposite the younger girl and walked over to the
windows. ‘Patience Sylvana,’ she said, focusing her eyes through the heavy rain
outside their homestead, ‘Abelard will be home soon.’
She drew the out-of-style curtains
closed. ‘Sylvana, why don’t you take your sister upstairs and re-salt the
rooms.’
Sylvana and her identical twin
stood up from their seats and proceeded to run upstairs. ‘Oh and Leonie, don’t
forget the corners of the windows.’ Leonie turned and nodded at her mother
before disappearing upstairs.
‘You need to relax Adelia,’ said
the older gentleman, leaning against the grandfather clock with a glass of
Scotch clutched firmly in his wrinkled hand, ‘your husband is perfectly capable
of keeping himself out of trouble.’
The mother, Adelia, leered at the
glass in her brother’s hand and then back up and his pinked face. ‘How can I
relax when my bloody brother is drinking at a time like this? Will you please
put that down and do something else for a change Garland?’
Garland threw his arms up into the
air in defeat and finished his drink, letting out a mighty belch and placing
the glass onto the coffee table. ‘And what would you want me to do, Dellie?’
Adelia let out a long, pained sigh
before ordering her brother to reload the weapon magazines that sat on the
table in the kitchen. Her ears perked up as she heard footsteps ascending from
the basement in the room next to her.
‘That’s all of it,’ said an older
woman carrying a box full of munitions, ‘this’ll go a whole lot faster if that
bloody husband of mine would get off his arse and help me!’
Adelia grabbed the heavy box from
her sister-in-law and carried it to the kitchen. ‘I think you’ll be happy to
see Garland actually doing work for once, Estelle,’ she said, ‘I had him fill
the mags.’
Estelle walked into the kitchen
and clasped her hands on her mouth in shock. ‘See, now this is a grim omen of
what’s to come.’ She stated sardonically, sitting down next to her slightly
inebriated husband and helping him sort out the ammunition boxes. ‘Dellie could
you please check on my idiot sons, make sure they haven’t blown themselves up,
love?’
Adelia nodded and headed up the
creaky staircase towards the bedrooms. No sooner had her foot landed onto the
carpeted hallway, she smelled the distinct smell of burning gunpowder
permeating from the main bathroom.
‘I told you that was too much
glycerine!’
Adelia kicked open the bathroom
door to find her two nephews, Jacob and Archer staring back at her with
perplexed looks on their powder-blackened faces.
‘I-it’s not what it looks like,
Aunt Dellie,’ the older one, Jacob, protested, ‘Archie just put a bit too much
glycerine in the mix!’
‘And I told you,’ defended Archer,
‘composite explosives need a glycerine rate of at least five millilitres! We’re
trying to kill here, not shave our legs!’
‘I’m an adult, Archie! You gotta
listen to what I say!’
‘You’re barely eighteen!’
‘Well, I’m still older!’
‘Only by six years!’
Adelia placed a worn finger onto
her temple, stifling a small stress headache that was growing from their
bickering before asserting herself.
‘Boys,’ she said calmly, ‘I want
you both to clean yourselves up and check the fuses but don’t leave the house do you understand?’
The boys stared at each other.
‘Aunt Dellie, you need to relax.’ Jacob replied, waving his hand dismissively
through the air.
‘Yeah, Jacob and I had already
rechecked the fuses, charges and
primers. We’re all set to go.’
‘You’re worried about Uncle Abe
aren’t you?’ Jacob asked earnestly.
‘No… I…’
Archer placed one of his blackened
hands onto Adelia’s, staining her aging skin. ‘Uncle Abe will be fine, he’s
stronger than all of us Aunty.’
Adelia nodded and left the boys to
their explosives, inspecting the rest of the house and ignoring the piercing
sound of their bickering echoing through the halls. She made her way to the
master bedroom, her own room, where her twin daughters were busy placing lines
of rock salt along the walls and under the windows.
‘That’s the last of it mum,’ said
Leonie as Adelia walked into the room, ‘every nook and cranny fully salted.’
‘Is dad home yet?’ Sylvana asked.
‘It’s getting late.’
Adelia shook her head worryingly.
‘Chin up mum,’ Leonie smiled, ‘I’m
sure he’s not that far away.’
‘That’s if those monsters haven’t
gotten him first.’ Sylvana retorted dryly.
‘Syl! You shouldn’t say things about
daddy like that!’ Leonie defended.
‘Well where the Hell is he, Leah?
Tonight of all nights!’
‘Can’t you see mum is upset?’
Both girls stopped and stared at
their mother, her face wrought with worry. None said anything, spending the
time taking in their father’s absence.
Suddenly, the loud, calculative
voice of Kennedy flooded through the house. ‘Something’s
tripped the border sensor!’
Adelia snapped out of her daze and
ran down the stairs to her oldest son. ‘What is it Kenny? Is it Abelard?’
Kennedy had his eyes glued to an
ancient radar, watching vigilantly, a blip on the screen as it came closer and
closer to the house. ‘I can’t be sure mum, it could be.’
Adelia’s worries melted as she
heard the sound of a motorbike pull into the gravel driveway. She flung open
the front door and found the handsome, bearded face of her husband, Abelard,
smiling back at her. His face drenched from the rain as he ran forward and
placed a soft kiss on Adelia’s lips.
‘I’m so sorry I’m late darling.’
He apologised.
Adelia shook her head. ‘How did it
go?’
Abelard took off his wet, leather
jacket and threw it onto the stairway. ‘He’s with the caretakers now, he’ll be
fine.’
‘But is it okay, leaving him with
the maid’s family like that? It feels like such an imposition.’
‘We have no other choice love,
everyone we know is in this house tonight.’ Abelard placed a gentle kiss on
Adelia’s forehead. ‘Relax Dellie, I’ll go get him as soon as this is over.’
‘It might be over sooner than you
think dad,’ Kennedy interrupted from the lounge room, ‘I think they’re here.’
Abelard ran over towards the radar
and stared at the green, beeping screen covered in a handful of green dots.
‘Eleven… twelve… there’s fourteen
of them. They’re all coming from the south.’
‘I think they’re wind demons dad,’
Kennedy interjected, ‘they must be scouting the area.’
‘If they look hard enough they’ll
be able to spot the traps for the earth demons to dismantle.’
Adelia walked into the room and
leaned over her son and her husband. ‘Get Garland and Leonie to the windows,
they can shoot them down before they reach the homestead.’
Abelard’s powerful voice rung
loudly through the house. ‘Garland… Leonie… Fourteen targets, airborne, coming
from the south! You know what to do!’
A loud screeching sound was heard
from the kitchen as Garland quickly left his chair and ran past them, holding
onto an old bolt-action rifle in one hand and a bottle of Scotch in the other as
he ran upstairs.
Abelard turned quickly to Adelia.
‘Has he been…?’ He mimicked shaking an invisible glass in his hand.’
‘My brother is a better shot drunk
than sober Abe,’ Adelia smiled, ‘you’re about to see a hit rate that’ll put his
awards to shame.’
‘Whoa! Dad?’ Kennedy asked
concernedly. ‘What the Hell are these?’
Abelard’s eyes fixed onto the
green screen as a clump of dots were seen swaying smoothly towards their
position.
‘They’re water demons, coming
towards the cliffs.’ Abelard ran to the staircase and called out to Jacob and
Archer. ‘Boys, ready those charges! We’ve got swimmers coming in fast!’
Abelard heard nothing from them
but knew they were scrambling for the triggers as he heard their footsteps
patting off the wooden floorboards.
‘They’re really after us tonight
huh, dad?’
‘We’re just that popular, son,’
Abelard remarked, ‘let me know the moment you see any land-based demons. I’ll
be checking the arms.’
Estelle sat with her hands deep
into the munitions pile as Abelard walked into the kitchen.
‘So it’s started then?’ She asked him,
casually ignoring the gunfire that was ringing periodically upstairs. ‘They’re
here?’
Abelard nodded casually. ‘About
time too, all this waiting would probably drive your boys barmy.’
‘I can only imagine how badly
they’re itching to pull those triggers.’ Estelle snorted as she continued
filling the ammunition pile. Both of them stared out towards the landing as
they heard Kennedy’s voice ring loudly through the house.
‘Now boys!’
A loud explosion followed as the
Van Hellsings felt a tremor quake beneath them.
‘Never mind.’ Estelle remarked
offhandedly as Abelard ran out of the kitchen.
‘Kenny, what’s happening? Any
demons on foot?’
‘Nothing darling,’ Adelia replied,
‘the boys have managed to take out the water demons and Gar and Leonie are
almost done with the -’
‘Strike that guys,’ Kennedy cut
in, ‘we have a large wave of demons coming from the roads.’
‘Everyone, grab a weapon and get
to a window. We’ve got company!’
All members of the Van Hellsing
scurried around the house and securing a position before the night air was
marred with the sound of thunderous gunfire echoing from all directions.
Abelard ran to the front of the
house behind a wall of sandbags on the porch and scanned the night for any
signs of movement. His sharp eye caught the outline of black wings and he
immediately opened fire, smiling to himself as he saw the demon fall to the
ground. He cocked his bolt-action rifle and scanned the area again for his next
target.
‘Dad, they’re at the first pit!’
Abelard called back over his
shoulder in a loud, booming voice. ‘Jacob! Archer! First pit!’
A giant wall of fire erupted about
200 metres in front of him as the makeshift ‘moat of dynamite’ that the boys
had dug earlier exploded violently. Abelard continued firing into the night,
watching demon after demon fall before his rifle under the light of the fire
wall.
‘Gar! Leah! Make sure you don’t
let a single wind demon through!’ He shouted behind him.
Upstairs in the master bedroom,
firing through a broken window, was Leonie Van Hellsing. She took a deep breath
and remembered what her father had taught her: ‘squeeze the trigger Leah, don’t pull or jerk it.’ She found her
target, the beating of baleful wings and grasping talons silhouetted against
the night sky. Just as her father had taught, she squeezed the trigger slowly,
feeling her sniper rifle buck against her shoulder heavily and hearing the
deafening screech of a felled wind demon.
‘Good shot, Leah,’ her uncle
Garland commended, firing multiple bursts into the air, ‘watch your two!’
Leonie pivoted to the right and
aligned her sights with another wind demon, blasting the Hellion from the sky.
Through the echoes of gunfire and
explosives, Leonie and Garland heard the gruff voice of Abelard commanding from
below.
‘Don’t let a single one of those flying bastards through!’
Garland scoffed. ‘I would sooner give up my
medal from Bisley, Abe!’
‘Dad, they’re at the second pit!’
Kennedy shouted from the radar console.
Archer and Jacob Van Hellsing stared out of
the bathroom window and confirmed what Cousin Kenny was shouting at them.
‘Hurry up with that fuse!’ Archer
barked at his older brother.
Jacob was frantically twisting a
copper wire around a handmade trigger. ‘The bloody thing chose the most
convenient time to short on us!’ He grumbled angrily.
‘It happens, just hurry!’
‘I’m hurrying… and… got it!’
Jacob Van Hellsing stared out of
the window at the approaching horde and smiled. ‘See you in Hell.’ He remarked
as his hand slammed on the trigger.
Archer and Jacob dove into the
bathtub for cover but heard no explosion. Only the sounds of gunfire and the
soft, muffled explosions of landmines.
‘What happened?’ Jacob asked,
emerging from the porcelain bathtub.
Archer leapt to his feet and
checked the trigger. ‘The wire must be cut somewhere!’ He shouted in shock.
‘Damn it! There’s too many coming!
We need that wall!’
Archer ran to the hallway and
shouted down the staircase. ‘Uncle Abe! The trigger’s buggered! Someone’s gonna
have to detonate it manually!’
Upon hearing those words, Abelard
Van Hellsing, the famed Demon Hunter of Kent, cursed under his breath and
scanned the battlefield of his homestead. The demons were falling into the pit
and crawling up the other side towards them. He could throw a grenade into the
pit to set off the explosives, but he would need to get closer and with the
demons already approaching the house, he would need plenty of cover.
‘Cover me, I’ll set off the pit!’
He shouted to his family.
He bravely vaulted over the wall
of sandbags on his front porch and sprinted ahead towards the pit.
‘Cover yourself!’ Abelard heard
behind him. He stopped midfield and wheeled around to see his brother, Garland,
leaping from the window, holding his favourite bottle of Scotch in his hand
with a rag stuffed through the mouth.
‘Garland, no!’
‘Fall back Abe!’ Garland shouted,
rushing past him and towards the onslaught of demons. ‘I’ve got this one!’
Abelard cursed again and raised
his rifle towards the demons, covering his brother as he mindlessly charged
towards the armies of Hell itself.
Brave and foolish Garland whipped
out a Zippo lighter from his pocket and lit the rag, lobbing it with all his
might towards the pit. ‘Chew on this you pricks!’
Abelard watched in horror as he
calculated the trajectory of the flaming cocktail. It would never make it into
the pit. His eyes fell onto the grenade that lay at his feet and,
instinctively, he scooped it up and sprinted towards his brother.
‘NOW LEONIE!’ Garland shouted
holding his hands religiously towards the sky.
Through the mess of loud gunfire
and explosions, Abelard could hear the distinct ‘clink’ of a sniper round
piercing glass and watched in amazement as the makeshift Molotov cocktail
exploded, alighting the night sky with its red and warming glow and showering
burning splashes of Scotch into the pits.
Abelard felt a deep sense of
patriarchal pride for his daughter as the last pit, the moat of explosives that
surrounded the farmstead, exploded loudly, unleashing a torrential wall of
flames and incinerating the demons that lay therein. He smiled at his
daughter’s triumph but quickly remembered the situation as he heard the growls
of earth demons bearing down upon Garland.
Raising his rifle to his shoulder
once again, Abelard started firing at the fetid yellow demons as Garland turned
his heels and ran back towards him. Abelard felt the pressure of the situation
coursing through his adrenaline-filled veins as he felled demons one by one
that were eagerly reaching at his brother’s heels.
‘Blast it!’ He heard Garland
shout.
Abelard raised his eyes from his
iron sights to see his brother lying on the ground, a yellow, decaying talon
gripping and clawing at his ankle from beneath the earth. He raised his rifle
but could not get a clean shot and he knew that Leonie upstairs would not have
one either.
Abelard ran forward from his
firing spot, he could see the earth demon emerging from the dirt, its yellowed
fangs and salivating maws hungered for Garland’s flesh but before it could lay
one of its mangy fangs upon its victim, Abelard had already arrived, giving it
a swift kick into its chin.
The demon let out a shriek of
pain, letting go of Garland and clutching at its jaw. Abelard pulled his
brother to his feet.
‘Damn blighter twisted my ankle!’
Garland shouted, leaning on Abelard for support.
‘Don’t worry about it Gar,’
Abelard replied, doing well to mask the panic he felt, ‘let’s just get you back
home and you can sit on the chaise.’
‘Yeah, make sure it’s pointing out
the window.’
Abelard struggled against the
weight of his heavyset brother as he hobbled back towards the house. He tried
not to look back as he heard the sounds of talons, clawing upon the ground
rapidly but could not ignore the harrowing cries of a demon leaping upon them.
Abelard dropped his brother and pulled a revolver pistol from the holster at
his side, firing madly at his pursuer.
The cunning earth demon burrowed
underground to avoid Abelard’s gunfire and upon hearing the sixth shot fire,
re-emerged from the earth and resumed its pursuit.
Abelard reached into his pocket
and pulled out a handful of salt-filled bullets, reloading them into the
pistol’s chamber as quickly as he could. The demon, now only a few metres away,
leapt towards him again, its sharpened talons poised for striking as it
pounced. Abelard raised his fists in defiance, ready to fight the frenzied
Hellion but ducked as he heard Leonie’s rifle explode, sending the demon
disappearing into a mist of ash and dust.
Upon hearing the many growls of
land-based demons, Abelard quickly wiped the demon’s dusty entrails from his
face and picked up his brother, dragging him again back towards the house. He
breathed a sigh of relief as he felt his feet hit the sturdy, wooden porch.
‘Outta the way oldies!’ Shouted Sylvana,
running forward towards the onslaught.
Abelard turned to call her back
but shielded his eyes as Sylvana pulled the trigger of a crudely made
flamethrower, incinerating the demons ahead of her in a blazing inferno of red
and orange. Sylvana’s eyes glinted madly in the firelight, reducing the demons
before her into clouds of ash before the screaming of her twin sister alerted
her senses.
Leonie fired madly at the purple
wind demon, gnashing and clawing against the barrel of her rifle, trying to
pull her out of the broken window.
Leonie was careless. She neglected
to prioritise the wind demons over covering her father and uncle and had let
one reach the homestead.
The wind demon, upon seeing
Leonie’s arm leave the threshold of the protective salt barrier that she had
carefully laid, pounced, grabbing her and pulling her onto the roof.
It pinned one of its rotting
talons against her throat, holding her against the tiles and blew a large gust
of wind through the room, blowing away the salt lines and the only protection
the family had against the scourge of demons.
Seeing its triumph, the demon
turned its attention back at Leonie, struggling against its grip and losing
consciousness. She could feel its hot breath against her face and the smell of unholy
death made her eyes water. She heard a loud thunder of gunfire and felt herself
being dragged back in through the window, her carrier careful not to cut her on
the broken glass and splinters of wood.
As Leonie’s vision sharpened, she
could see the clear outline of her mother firing another round at the wind
demon with her shotgun.
‘Mum,’ Leonie choked, ‘the salt
barrier.’
Adelia’s eyes look towards the
corners of the walls, seeing white grains of salt blow across the room like a
thin layer of sand. She picked up Leonie and hoisted her arm around her
shoulder.
‘Come on, we’re getting your
cousins and regrouping.’ Adelia commanded, picking up her daughter’s rifle and
heading out of the master bedroom. ‘Boys, we need to displace!’ She heard no
reply from her nephews and began to worry. ‘Archer? Jacob?’
Ensuring that her daughter was
fine to walk alone, Adelia sent Leonie downstairs and carefully walked towards
the bathroom. She clasped her hands over her mouth to stop herself from
screaming. Lying on the floor with a large gash on his forehead was young
Archer, his head lolling from side to side as he dropped in and out of
consciousness. Adelia’s horror was directed more towards Jacob, suspended in
mid-air with a purplish, decaying talon around his throat.
She quickly raised her daughter’s
rifle towards her shoulders and fired at the wind demon as its sharpened claw
lunged at Jacob’s chest. He let out a pained moan as he felt the demon’s claw
pierce his upper torso, its fetid nails spearing through his flesh and into his
shoulder.
Jacob fell back to the ground,
clutching the open and ashy wound as he watched the dusty remains of the demon
crumble to the floor.
Downstairs, Abelard, Sylvana and
Garland Van Hellsing were frantically running to all corners of the house,
firing at the demons that were approaching the farmstead. Kennedy, having
abandoned his radar to tend to his little sister, Leonie, was eagerly eyeing
the green screen, ordering his family at packs of approaching Hellions.
‘Mag!’ Garland shouted to his wife
from his chaise near the window.
Estelle ran into the room, holding
a box that was half filled with an assortment of rifle magazines and loose
rounds.
‘This is it,’ she stated in a
panic, ‘it’s all we’ve got left!’
Abelard peered into the box and
felt a line of worrying sweat cascade down his dirty cheek. ‘Grab a rifle and
choose a window, Estelle.’ He ordered calmly.
Adelia stumbled down the
staircase, carrying her unconscious young nephew in her arms and mumbling
soothing words to Jacob as he clutched onto his bleeding shoulder.
She lay Archer down next to Leonie
and ordered a defiant Jacob to sit and rest.
‘Kenny, I need you to treat
Jacob’s wound. He’s got corpse dust in it, I think it might get infected.’ She
told her son.
Kennedy nodded. He quickly ran to
the nearby desk, scrambling for equipment before sitting down next to his
cousin.
‘Here, bite on this.’ He said
sternly to Jacob, holding out a wooden pencil.
Jacob did what he was told and
winced in pain as Kennedy started pouring medical alcohol onto the wound. ‘That
bloody stings, Kenny!’ He said through the pencil.
‘Yeah, well it’s about to get
worse.’ Kennedy replied. He reached over to Leonie’s rifle that lay on the
ground next to his mother and extracted a round from the magazine, carefully opening
the bullet and pouring its rock-salt and gunpowder mix onto Jacob’s bleeding
shoulder.
Jacob let out a loud, unholy growl
as he bit down hard onto the pencil in his mouth, feeling the searing pain of
salt burn his open wound and did not have time to react as Kennedy lit a match
and held it next to the gunpowder mix, burning the gash and cauterising it.
Adelia ignored Jacob’s whining as
she ran a damp cloth along Archer’s forehead, cleaning the large cut upon his
brow.
‘Archie,’ she asked him, trying to
shake him softly, ‘Archie, it’s Aunt Dellie… Can you hear me?’
Archer, still barely unconscious, let
out a soft, reassuring moan and Adelia breathed a sigh of relief, but her joys
were short-lived as she heard the blunt clicks of rifle hammers firing empty
rounds.
‘I’m out.’
‘Me too.’
‘What else is left?’
Abelard ran away from the windows
and towards his family, towards his wife.
‘Is this it Abe?’ Adelia asked him
softly.
Abelard did not answer, he only
held her tight as he heard scores of demons crash through the house at multiple
points. He stood up and raised his fists valiantly as the teeming demons
surrounded the living room, surrounding the Van Hellsing Family. The rest of
the family stood behind him, watching Abelard Van Hellsing, their clan leader,
the famous Demon Hunter of Kent, standing in defiance against Hell itself,
ready to fight to his dying breath.
‘You want my blood?!’ He shouted
at the surrounding, salivating demons. ‘I’m right here!’
Abelard lunged at the closest
demon with his fists primed, stopping abruptly as he heard the sounds of
sarcastic clapping behind him. He wheeled around to see the demons parting,
making way for a man wearing an impossibly pitch-black suit, with cruel black
eyes and a cocky smirk on his confident face.
‘Bravo, Van Hellsing,’ the man
spoke snidely, ‘it was worth travelling all this way to witness this.’ He
stopped in the middle of the room and stared at the Van Hellsings, huddled
together beside him. ‘You really are a curious family aren’t you?’
Abelard lowered his fists and
stared at the curious stranger. He was unsure of who he was but felt a dark
evil permeating from the man’s very pores and assumed it could only be one
person.
‘Lucifer.’ Abelard hissed.
‘The very same.’ The Throne of
Pride bowed, sniggering at Abelard. ‘It looks like you’re in quite a
predicament here.’
‘I don’t see one.’ Abelard defied.
‘Look around you mortal; your
family are at the grips of death.’ He laughed mirthlessly. ‘All because of your
colossal human ego.’
‘Send away your vermin and let’s
see what my ego has to say about yours.’
Lucifer raised a finger and waved
it from side to side patronisingly. ‘Now, now, is that any way of treating a
guest to your home?’
‘Enough with the chit-chat, I say
we skin them alive.’
All heads turned towards the
kitchen wherein another man donning a pitch-black suit and an angered
expression on his face walked boldly through the room, standing behind Abelard.
‘You must be Satan,’ Abelard
remarked, ‘the tantrum-thrower.’
‘Yeah? How about you and I go out
back and we’ll see whose tough shit?’
‘Easy brother, let’s keep a cool
head.’
‘They’ll all have no heads after I’m done with them!’
Abelard, stood defensively at the
two Princes of Hell. ‘What do you want?’
Lucifer smirked his trademark
smirk. ‘To make you an offer; before I have my hounds tear you apart, I’m
offering you a chance to settle some mortal affairs, if you know what I mean.’
‘You want my soul.’
‘Precisely.’
Abelard weighed his choices. He
could bargain his soul for his family’s safety, but would the Black Princes
honour his wishes? He had to try.
‘Fine,’ he answered, ‘I’ll trade
you my soul and in return, you leave my family alone, forever.’
Satan let out a loud, sarcastic
guffaw. ‘You reckon your soul is worth that of a clan of demon hunters? And I
thought Lucy was the proud one.’
Lucifer glared at Satan and then
redirected his attention at Abelard. ‘He has a point Abe; your life is not
worth that of your entire family.’
Abelard stroked his beard in
thought. What could he do as a last act of defiance against Hell? And then he
had an idea.
‘The Seal,’ he stated, ‘my soul
for the Seal.’
‘Okay, setting aside that your
soul isn’t worth such a powerful relic, who will you bequeath that Seal to?
After you get that ring, we’re just gonna kill whoever owns it and take it back
anyway.’ Satan mocked. ‘Just give us your soul and we’ll kill your family
quickly and painlessly.’
‘Abelard.’ Garland called from the
floor next to Leonie. ‘A word.’
The Black Princes gave the family
curious looks as they heard the hushed mumblings of agreements and protests and
ideas and plots from all members.
Finally, Abelard stood up and
declared loudly.
‘We will give you all of our souls
in exchange for the Seal of Solomon.’ The entirety of the Van Hellsing family
honourably nodded with their clan leader.
Lucifer and Satan exchanged
glances before themselves nodding in agreement.
‘However,’ Abelard interrupted,
‘so long as he has not cast the first stone, you are not to harm the owner of
the Seal. Are we understood?’
Lucifer smirked again. ‘Deal.’ He
clapped his hand, creating a small fireball through which he dragged a large
parchment from amongst its fiery manes.
Satan stared at the armies of
Hellions that crowded the room. ‘As soon as the last signature hits the
contract, I want you to drag them all as tortuously as possible back through
the Nine Circles.’ He ordered cruelly.
“And so you see, my son, the life of a demon hunter is cruel and cursed
and it is a life that I do not wish upon you. Should the day come, should they
tempt you as much as possible, stay your hand, keep a cool head and do no
retaliate. For the moment you fell a demon, you will forever branded by the
Leagues of Hell as a demon hunter. All who know you will be in danger, you will
always be on the run, on the edge.
“We all knew that we were not to walk away from that fateful night
alive and the rest of your kin gave their souls so that you may grow up in a
normal world…
“We all love you very much, son, and no matter the consequences, never
forget that you are Desmond Linden Van Hellsing, the last of the Van Hellsing
name.
Love, your father, Abelard Van Hellsing.”
The aged letter fell to the
floor near the foot of a young man. He had just been handed the letter by his
servant earlier that day; his eighteenth birthday. He always knew that there
was something odd about his upbringing, about what his foster family had told
him; discrepancies in their story.
He closed his eyes and it was as
though he was standing under a waterfall of his own memories. Images came
flooding back to him, washing over him like a hot bath.
He remembered when he was an
infant, hearing screams, seeing a stranger walk into his room and placing
something onto his hand… something… a ring?
His hand unconsciously ran towards
his neck, rubbing the silver chain that his foster family had given him since
childhood and his finger hit an inconspicuously ordinary ring, dangling against
his chest.
He lifted the bulky ring to his
eyes. It seemed plain except for the eight-pointed star riddled with tiny
symbols and illegible, time-worn writing.
‘Master Desmond,’ came the husky
voice of his aging manservant, ‘is everything alright?’ He had been watching
his master read the contents of the letter after handing it to him earlier.
‘You look… worried, sir.’
‘I’m fine Higgsby,’ he replied
sternly, ‘and don’t call me Desmond anymore.’ He stated, staring at the letter
that lay at his feet.
‘What should I address you as,
sir?’
‘Call me… Deslin,’ he answered,
clutching the ring that his father, his family, had left him, ‘Deslin Conrad…’
And so ends the Third Interim…
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