Edward Lee - Vampire Lodge

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When Kevin and his family visit his Aunt Carolyn, unusual things begin to happen. His aunt is just creepy. When he learns more about his aunt and her gloomy mansion in the woods, Kevin is finally left with no choice but to admit the truth: Vampires do exist, and his Aunt isn’t the only bloodsucker in the house! Join Kevin and creepy Aunt as the secret in the basement is finally revealed.

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He lay there in bed, staring at the ceiling. But then he noticed something. I guess Aunt Carolyn was right after all. The lightning and thunder has stopped. Sure enough, it had, and it seemed like the rain was letting up too.

And this sudden absence of the storm’s steady sounds left the bedroom suddenly, and eerily, silent—

clink! he heard.

Then—

crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch…

Kevin leaned up in bed. What were those sounds? The clink had sounded somehow like metal, and the steady crunching noise sounded just like—

People walking, he realized.

And something else: The sounds seemed to be coming from the french doors which led to the balcony, which could only mean:

The sounds are coming from… outside, he thought.

But who on earth would be walking around outside this late at night?

He listened some more. Maybe it was just my imagination, he considered when the sounds disappeared. But just when he was about to forget about them—

clink!

crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch…

—he heard them again!

Quietly, he climbed out of bed and approached the two closed french doors. Then he quickly opened them and slipped out onto the wet balcony. The rain was only trickling now, and the wind had vanished. He glanced down at the grassy area between the forest and the back of the lodge, and was astounded at the heavy silence. And, once more, that creepy feeling returned to his belly, the idea that he was now standing on the same balcony that Count Volkov had once stood upon.

Count Volkov… the vampire…

clink!

There it was again! And then, again—

crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch…

Kevin leaned out over the balcony’s heavy wooden railing, and then looked down.

And he… saw something, didn’t he?

Yes, indeed he did. There, at the edge of the woods behind the lodge, he noticed two faintly glowing lights…

Lanterns! he recognized. Lantern lights!

And once his eyes had adjusted, he recognized something else too.

Two figures!

He was sure of it. So late at night, and in the trickling rain, two men were walking along the edge of the woods behind the lodge, their lanterns pitching slowly back and forth as their feet— crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch— crunched on over fallen leaves and branches, and every so often— clink! —that same metallic sound could be heard. Each man seemed to be carrying something long and thin, which Kevin, in the dim lantern light, was then able to identify.

Shovels, he thought, peering down. They’re carrying shovels. And every few steps, the big blades of their shovels clinked together as they walked on towards the forest.

And Kevin was able to recognize something else too, as the trickle of rain continued to fall. In their bobbing lantern lights, he could make out their faces beyond a doubt—

It’s Bill Bitner! he recognized. And Wally!

And just one second later, both figures turned into one of the paths which led into the woods, and disappeared.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

The next morning, Kevin awoke to see Jimmy, already fully dressed, looking out the french doors. “Wake up, Kevin,” he said. “The rain stopped. We can go out to the bluff and fly our kites.”

Kevin groaned groggily. He hadn’t slept well at all, which was no wonder. It had been well past three a.m. before he’d fallen asleep, and all through the night he kept waking up from nightmares of Count Volkov: the long thin face, pale as milk, emerging from the dark. The bald head, the black hole-punch eyes, and the sharp-pointed fangs showing through The Count’s twisted vampire grin…

Kevin would wake up each time in a shivering sweat, leaning up wide-eyed in bed, his heart pattering.

“Come on,” Jimmy exclaimed. “Up and at ’em. Let’s get out there and get our kites flying while we still can. It could start raining again any time.”

Kevin nodded sleepily. “I’ll be ready in a few minutes,” he said.

“Great, I’ll meet you downstairs.”

Kevin dragged himself out of bed, then showered and dressed. He was so tired he didn’t even feel like flying kites today, but then he realized if he didn’t, he’d have to sit around the lodge all day, and that was one thing he definitely didn’t want to do. The lodge terrified him now, and why shouldn’t it? With all the things he’d found out last night? And finding out that my aunt is a vampire? he added in thought. Hanging around the lodge was the last thing he wanted to do.

Dressed and ready, he grabbed his bat kite and trudged downstairs. The lodge was dead quiet. Jimmy was waiting for him in the foyer with his own kite. “Let’s go.”

“Jimmy, Kevin,” Becky’s voice called out from the dining room. “Where are you guys going?”

“To the bluffs,” Kevin said, rubbing sleep out of his eyes.

“To fly our kites,” Jimmy added.

Becky smirked from her place at the table, over a bowl of cereal. “You and your stupid kites. Aren’t you even going to eat breakfast?”

“Naw,” Jimmy answered. “We want to get going now, before it starts to rain again.”

“Oh, and let me tell you two nitwits something,” Becky chided. “I asked Wally about what you guys said yesterday.”

“What’s that?” Jimmy asked.

“About how you two doughheads said you saw him mysteriously digging around in the woods.” Becky frowned at them. “All he was doing was digging for a broken water pipe. Real mysterious, guys.”

Water pipe, my eye, Kevin thought. And I guess Bill Bitner and your lover boy Wally were digging for broken water pipes last night, too. At three a.m.! But Kevin didn’t voice this thought, and he remained convinced that not telling anyone about the things he’d discovered so far was the best idea. But before he and Jimmy left, he stopped and said, “Hey, Becky?”

“Hay is for horses!” Becky complained back.

“Which is what you look like,” Kevin couldn’t resist, and groaned. But then he asked his sister the question he was sure he already knew the answer to. “Where’s Aunt Carolyn?”

“How would I know?” Becky griped. “I’m not her keeper.”

“Well, have you seen her at all this morning?”

“No. I haven’t seen her anywhere. Oysterbrains!”

“Neither have I,” Jimmy volunteered. “But who cares? Let’s get going.”

Kevin followed Jimmy out the front door, but before he could close it behind him, Becky harassed him a final time from the breakfast table. “Oh, and have fun flying your stupid kite… Kevvie.

Kevin groaned to himself, then closed the front door. Sisters sure are a pain, he thought. I should’ve dumped that bowl of cereal right on her smart head.

Outside, they immediately buttoned up their jackets. The air was brisk—they could see their breath condense in front of their faces—and there was a steady wind, ideal for kite flying. Fallen autumn leaves blew around their feet as they headed for the path that would lead them to the bluffs. Jimmy looked worriedly up at the sky. “Yeah, it looks like it might start raining again. We may never get a chance to fly these kites.”

Kevin, trudging along, nodded noncommittally. Right now, kite flying was the furthest thing from his mind. All he could think about instead was The Count, the lodge and all the weird business he’d uncovered, and, of course, Aunt Carolyn.

“Don’t you think that’s kind of odd?” Jimmy asked.

“What?”

“Well, you know. Your Aunt Carolyn. Your sister said she hadn’t seen her all morning, and we didn’t see much of her yesterday either, except after it got dark.”

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