in Seward’s asylum, fighting against my bindings. The wolves at my feet let go. One of them snarled, stirring up the
others. They moved around me, excited, nipping at the blanket as though in play, their efforts ironically helping my
struggles as they shredded the cloth. Fresh air suddenly slapped my face as the damned thing finally came loose.
Bright eyes catching the moonlight in green flashes, with lolling tongues and rows of white teeth, they scampered
about like puppies. Some darted close to snap at me, wagging their tails at the sport of it. I wrested my hands free,
but had no weapon to use. Some blurred memory told me I carried no knife or gun. I scrabbled in the inches-deep
snow and found a piece of fist-sized rock. Better than nothing.
Then a big black fellow, one that was obviously the pack leader, lifted his head to the wild gray sky and howled.
Ever an eerie sound, but to be so alone in the forest, to hear it so close and loud, to watch the very breath of it
streaming from the animal’s muzzle—had the hair on my neck not already been raised to its limit, it would have
gone that much higher. The other wolves instantly abandoned their game and crowded near him, tails tucked like
fawning supplicants seeking a favor. One after another joined him, blending and weaving their many voices into a
triumphant song only they could fully understand.
The leader broke off and focused his huge green eyes upon me as the others continued their hell’s chorus. It’s a
mistake to ascribe human attributes to an animal, but I couldn’t help myself. The thing looked not just interested in
what he saw, but curious, in the way that a human is curious.
He snarled and snapped at those nearest him. The pack stopped howling and obediently scattered. After a sharp,
low bark from him they formed themselves into a wide circle like trained circus dogs. I was at its exact center. Some
stood, others sat, but all watched me attentively. Though I’d had more contact with wolves than most men, I’d never
seen or heard anything like this before.
A few of them growled, no doubt scenting my fear.
Clutching the nearly useless rock with one hand, I frantically tore at the bindings around my ankles with the other.
It was desperate work, made slow by my reluctance to take my eyes from the pack. Despite the distraction of their
presence, I saw that for some reason I’d been wrapped like a bundle for the mail, first in the blanket, then by ropes to
hold it in place. Why? Who had tied me up so? I cursed whoever had done me such an ill turn, the burst of anger
giving me the strength to get free.
I got clear of the blanket and staggered upright, half-expecting the wolves to close in. But they remained in their
great circle, watching. There were no trees within it to climb to safety, and if I tried to break through the line at any
point they’d be on me, so I kept still and stared back. One of the wolves sneezed; another shook himself. They knew
they had me.
A gust of winter wind sent the dry ground snow flying. Flakes skittered and drifted over the discarded blanket. I
slowly picked it up and looped it around my left arm. The leader stepped forward, growling. I angled to face him, my
powerless fear turning to fury that I should be brought to such a base fate.
“Come on, you big bastard. I’ll take you first,” I whispered, growling right back. I would sell myself dearly to
them.
The wolf lowered his head and rocked back on his haunches, like a dog about to do a begging trick. A roiling
darkness that seemed to come from within the thing’s body blurred the details as bones and joints soundlessly
shifted, muzzle and fur retreated, skin swelled. It rose on its hind legs and kept rising until it was a match for me in
height. The crooked legs straightened, thickened, and became the legs of a man, a tall, lean man clothed all in black.
Only his bright green eyes remained the same, and when his red lips thinned into a smile I clearly saw the hungry
wolf lurking beneath the surface.
I knew his face. One can never forget such stern features. They were the stuff of nightmares, all the more so for
my knowing, of my being absolutely certain, that he was dead—for I’d killed him myself.
Yet there he stood before me, stubbornly oblivious to the fact.
I was as afraid as I’d ever been in my life and could have expressed it, loudly, but there didn’t seem much point.
In a few minutes I’d either be dead or worse than dead, and making a lot of noise about it wouldn’t help me one way
or another.
“I can respect a brave man, Mr. Morris,” said Vlad Dracula, pitching his deep voice to be heard above the wind.
In it was the harsh tone I’d heard when he’d taunted us from the stable yard of his Piccadilly house. Now he clasped
his hands behind him and continued to regard me with the same mixture of interest and curiosity that had manifested
itself in his wolf form.
The wind buffeted against his body with little effect other than to whip at his dark clothes and gray-streaked hair.
Black on white was the mark Harker had left on the pallid flesh of Dracula’s brow; he bore the scar with little sign of
healing, yet nearly a month had passed from the last time I’d seen that face. But since then, I’d . . . I’d . . .
Something very like the wind whirled sickeningly inside my skull. The creature before me, the circle of wolves,
the snow, the cold, all faded for an instant of nothingness before asserting themselves again. It was like the focus of a