He drank her blood.
They were, after all, in vampire country. Thick forest, thicker snow, a picture-book landscape of peaks and abandoned castles.
Finn was no vampire, of course, nor even a flea, but he had to eat to stay alive, and Carla’s scalp was pockmarked with tiny wounds where he had broken the skin to feed3, using a spike of metal he’d picked up in Shanghai as a sword. Carla’s once-luxuriant hair had been his sanctuary on the never-ending death march, a jungle thatch that had given him cover, warmth and sustenance.
For five months, mostly at night, Baptiste – their captor, and one of Kaparis’s worst Tyros – had dragged them across the ancient spine of the world: up through the Taklamakan Desert, through icebound mountain kingdoms, then across an endless frozen plain, until mountains rose once more, thick forests full of bears and wolves. The only clue to how far they’d come in the faces of the few peasants they saw; even at a distance and wrapped up against the cold, they had grown pale and round-eyed.
Baptiste, bearded and unholy, had no other function but to go on in dumb, endless flight, driven by an urge he could make no sense of. His brain had been so damaged as he escaped Shanghai with the girl that he could barely remember who or what he was. All he had left was a brute sense of purpose, a homing instinct, and a capacity for violence. He knew the girl was his prisoner, but little else. And he had no idea, nor could he conceive, that she carried a thirteen-year-old boy in her hair called Infinity Drake, who was just 9mm tall …
Finn finished his drop of blood and wiped his mouth. “It’s less sugary. You’re getting weaker.”
“Between you and the fleas, I’m surprised I haven’t run dry,” Carla complained, resisting the urge to scratch.
The thuggish form ahead of her grunted and yanked the cable that shackled them together and bound her wrists. She staggered on.
They were traversing the tree line below a steep ridge, Baptiste and Carla high-stepping through deep snow. Finn climbed through her hair to take him in.
How do you kill a giant?
How do you kill someone two hundred times your size? Finn had been trying to figure it out for three thousand miles. Even in this zombie state, Baptiste was still many times faster and stronger than them, many times the murderer.
Finn’s plan was always to attack, but Carla knew better – if they could just hold on long enough, they would eventually get close enough to civilisation to summon help.
Right from the start (when Carla had thought Finn was just a kid on an army base in England who hung out with her older sister), they had enjoyed seeing the world in entirely different ways – America versus Europe, art versus science, girl versus boy. Sometimes she thought it was only the pointless circular arguments that kept them alive, as she slogged on through the real world and Finn ran around her head, full of crazy ideas—
“Hit him with a rock!”
“Build a signal fire!”
“Steal his knife!”
It was a strategy that had lost ground since Yo-yo had gone missing – Finn’s faithful idiot of a dog, who’d trailed them every step of the way from Shanghai. If Carla attacked, Finn had assured her, Yo-yo would join in. Trouble was, since wolves had closed in a few nights before, Yo-yo had kept his distance.
Was he even still alive? The further they’d gone, the weaker they’d all become.
One thing was certain – the brutal trek might never end, but one of them surely would, unless something happened soon.
How do you kill a giant?
Finn, lulled by Baptiste’s pace through the snow, suddenly got a flash of inspiration.
“Hey! We could hypnotise him!”
“Why didn’t I think of that?” said Carla sarcastically.
“No, listen. We went to this show once,” said Finn, trying to remember the night in a theatre with Uncle Al and Grandma. “Next time we stop, stare at him, tell him he’s feeling sleepy, then – click your fingers!”
“Click. Right,” said Carla.
“Then loop the cable around his neck and pull like hel—”
“You know what I’m going to do if I ever get out of this?” Carla interrupted.
“What?” said Finn.
“Shave my head. I’m going for the totally bald look. That way no one will ever climb into my hair agai—”
“AAAAAAA!!!”
Baptiste stopped dead and his sudden cry echoed around the valley like a rifle shot.
“What is it?” said Finn.
Carla followed the thug’s gaze. There, peeping just over the top of the ridgeline ahead … was a cross of stone.
Saliva dripped from Baptiste’s open jaw and he fell to his knees, gasping, overcome. Whatever he was looking for, he’d found.
“UUUUH!!”
Carla couldn’t believe it. Finn couldn’t believe it. There he was, a metre away, his neck exposed. Helpless in shock. For the first time. Helpless …
How do you kill a giant?
“NOW CARLA!!!” Finn screamed, but her instinct beat him to it.
Adrenalin surged and with her best softball hitter’s cry, Carla jabbed her bound wrists forward to loop her shackle round Baptiste’s exposed throat, then she yanked back – hard – with every ounce of her weight and being.
Baptiste gasped, reeled and rose.
“YES!” screamed Finn, nearly pulling a clump of Carla’s hair out in excitement as she rode the back of the raging, exploding form, clinging on like a rodeo champ as they fell back – SPLASH! – like a great whale in the snow, turning and careering down the slope in a snowball fury, Carla hanging on for dear life, Finn confused, crushed, the mad frozen world tumbling and … THUMP!
They hit something, stopped dead. A boulder?
“GAHH!” – with his free hand, Baptiste forced the shackle from his throat to take desperate rasping breaths – “GAHH! GAHH! GAHH!”
Carla pulled harder, every cell of muscle stretched to breaking point, every sinew hard as nails. “GAHH! GAHH!” cried Baptiste, as they lay locked in the snow, moments stretching to eternity … He was dying … he was dying …
Until the wolves came.
OWWOWWWOOWWW!
Finn saw them first, charging down the slope, leaving powder trails like missiles.
“INCOMING! CARLA!”
OWWOWWWOOWWW!
Carla looked up and in that split second – “GHAUH!” – Baptiste flipped like a salmon, slipped the noose and grabbed the back of her scrawny neck, and before she knew it she was thrown onto her back in the snow – SLAM – and Baptiste was above her, drawing back his fist—
RRRRAAW! The first wolf hit him all claws and teeth.
Baptiste, furious, beat it away as if it was a fly, then roared caveman-like at the rest of the incoming pack.
“AARRRRRRRRRGHGHGH!”
Fear ran through the wolves and they scrambled to avoid him, sudden cowards. From the snow, Carla saw high above the mayhem an eagle break its glide, disturbed, and at the same time … she felt the earth explode.
BRBRBRRBRRBRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR …
Thunder rose from the mountain. She saw Baptiste’s momentary confusion, then – WHAM! – the mountain hit him as a wall of white, a wall of energy, of cascading snow.
“Avalanche!” Finn yelled in her hair. “Hang on!”
But nothing could be heard, nothing could be sensed in the all-encompassing chaos, the liquid totality of it …
BRBRBRRBRRBRRRRRRRRRRRBRBRRBRRBRRRRRRRRRRR …
The Tyro lookout sharpened the focus on the Zeiss T-star image-stabilising binoculars. Her pulse quickened.
She zeroed in on the white scree slope on the Kalamatov Ridge. The avalanche was obscuring her view, but she could see at least one figure in the snow. Immediately she hit the hard comms link back to the monastery.
“Trespass alarm! Seven kilometres south-east on Kalamatov!”
BRBRBRRBRRBRRRRRRRRRRRBRBRRBRRBRRRRRRRRRRR …
Carla felt only pain – the shackles biting into her wrists as her unseen captor twisted and turned, then a SNAP of sudden release as the avalanche ran itself out, fading from a roar to a sigh …
She came to a halt, daylight leaking through the snow crystals.
She must be near the surface. For a few moments she lay in the profound silence and whiteness. She was still alive, but …
“You still there?” Carla whispered. Her greatest fear was to lose him. He was annoying, but he was in every sense her blood brother.
Finn opened his eyes in the curled sanctuary of her hair.
“Are you kidding? This stuff is like a bulletproof duvet.”
She let out a “Ha!” in relief.
“Is he still there?” said Finn in turn, hardly daring to hope.
Carla tried to move and got a shock. She still felt the pain of the shackles, but her wrists moved freely through the powder … Nothing at all binding them. She opened her arms … Smooth, delicious nothing. She felt like a princess waking in a fairy tale.
“HA!” Finn yelled when she brought her hands to her face in disbelief. “GET AWAY!”
Powered by euphoria and panic, Carla began to swim up to the surface.
“Careful!” Finn called out as the sun hit her face and she took a deep lungful of free, freezing air.
“Careful …” Finn warned again.
“OK …” Carla whispered. Slowly she wriggled and worked her head above the surface.
Baptiste …
Three feet away.
Head and shoulders out of the snow, stock-still like an Easter Island statue. Except this statue was bleeding and wisps of cloudy breath leaked from its mouth …
Carla held her own.
“Slow, slow, slow …” Finn urged.
Staring intently at the statue, Carla began to inch her way out. First her shoulders, then her arms, her knees … until she was able to take a first high step, a second …
She turned to wade down the slope, heart thumping. Three steps, four, five … She’d not been this far from him in months. The invisible chains that bound her to her captor seemed to be breaking one by one, until—
His eyes snapped open.
“AAAAARRRRRGGGGHHHH!” screamed Carla.
“RUN!” Finn yelled.
Carla ran, kneeing through the deep powder, stumbling as Baptiste exploded from the bank – “WAAAAARRRRRGGGGHHHH!” – avalanching after her, reborn in rage.
Finn shot to the top of her hair and grabbed his favourite long curl, flying free at its end like a mad bungie jumper able to bounce around and see all ways at once.
“RUN RUN RUN!”
Baptiste had pulled a knife from his belt and was closing fast.
Finn had to do something. Finn had to kill the giant. How?
“Arrrggghhhhh!” – Carla cried out suddenly as she ran onto nothingness and dropped a dozen feet before a rocky outcrop, coming to land – WHUMP – in a snowdrift at its base.
Baptiste followed – WHUMP – thumping further down the slope.
Carla instinctively rose to run again, but as she did so she heard Finn warn – “DON’T MOVE!”
She had fallen at the mouth of a cave, smashing aside the snow that concealed it. Now its contents were exposed. She sensed stink and stored heat. She saw fur. A pair of black eyes zooming in. A mother roused from a hibernating huddle.
“BEAR!” yelled Finn unnecessarily. “BROWN BEAR!” Always the naturalist.
Its massive salivating jaws opened – “ROOOOOOOOOAAAAAAAA-RRRRRRRRRRR!”
Carla screamed. The huge female swung round to check its pile of young, then swung back.
Finn, from the flying curl, saw Baptiste rising up the slope with the knife.
“KICK THE BEAR!”
“What?!” said Carla.
“KICK IT AND RUN!” screamed Finn.
Carla kicked at the dirt and ice before her, sending a spray of filth and grit into the bear’s face, enraging her and flipping her from defence mode into attack.
“ROOOOOOOOOAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRR!”
“GO!” screamed Finn.
As claws and jaws flashed towards Carla, she rose like a rocket and threw herself as far down the slope as she could, straight past the rising Baptiste …
“ARRRRRGGGGGGHHHHHHHH!” Man met mammal.
Carla sensed the force of the blow and heard a gasp of air as the claws of the bear ripped Baptiste clean open. She felt hot blood spray against her, felt life end – and thanked God she couldn’t see it – as the bear’s jaws snapped home round Baptiste’s neck, breaking his spine like a dry stick.
Finn caught a glimpse of it. Saw the crimson arc whiplash across the snow and sky. A final obscenity. But not final for long …
“ROOOOOOOOOAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRR!”
“RUN!” This was one mad bear.
Carla fell and tumbled and ran and staggered down through the forest as the bear pounded after her.
Carla had seconds.
Moments.
She would be obliterated.
Finn braced himself for the incoming final hit and yelled, uselessly, finally, “NOOOOOOO!”
YAP!
Hope.
Yo-yo galloped through the undergrowth and gave it everything, put every ounce of jelly energy into his spring and sank his teeth into the bear’s hind leg.
ROOOOOAAAAAARARARARARARR!
Yo-yo let go and – using the momentum of the bear’s reeling body – flew like a stone from a slingshot down the steep slope.
ROOOOOAAAAAARARARARARARR!
The bear roared again as it barrelled after the pelting, yelping mongrel, splintering the forest and exploding the snow.
“Run …” Finn managed to say through his astonishment.