"No, but I guessed he would. If he hadn't, I'd have worked out some other way to manoeuvre you together. I didn't need to, but I liked the idea. Him being here at the same time as us was providence. I'm just slightly miffed that Alan wasn't here too - that would have made for a complete reunion."
"What about my cup ticket? How did you find out about that?"
"I phoned Tommy that morning," Steve said. "He was astonished - first he bumps into his old pal Darren, then he hears from his old buddy Steve. What a coincidence! I faked astonishment too. I asked all about you. Learnt that you were coming to the match. He invited me as well, but I said I couldn't make it."
"Very clever," I complimented him icily.
"Not especially," Steve said with false modesty. "I simply used his innocence to ensnare you. Manipulating the innocent is child's play. I'm surprised you didn't see through it. You need to work on your paranoia, Darren. Suspect everyone, even those beyond suspicion - that's my motto."
Vancha edged up close to me. "If you keep him talking, maybe I can slip out back and attack him from the rear," he whispered.
I nodded my head a fraction and Vancha slid away slowly. "Tommy told me he'd been in contact with you in the past," I said loudly, hoping to mask the sound of Vancha's footsteps. "He said there was something about you that he had to tell me the next time we met, after the match."
"I can guess what that was," Steve purred.
"Care to share it with me?"
"Not yet," he said. Then, sharply, "If you take one more step towards that door, Mr March, the snake-boy dies." Vancha stopped and shot Steve a look of disgust.
"Leave my son alone!" Evra screamed. He'd been holding himself in check, but Steve's threat proved too much. "If you harm him, I'll kill you! I'll put you through so much agony, you'll pray for death!"
"My!" Steve cooed. "Such vindictiveness! You seem to have the knack of driving all your friends to violence, Darren. Or do you deliberately surround yourself with violent people?"
"Stuff it!" I grunted. Then, tiring of his verbal games, I said, "Are you going to fight or not?"
"Ialready answered that question," Steve said. "We'll fight soon, have no fear, but this is neither the time nor place. There's a rear tunnel - newly carved - which we'll leave by shortly. By the time you pick your way through the stakes, we'll be far out of reach."
"Then what are you waiting for?" I snarled. "Get the hell out!"
"Not yet," Steve said, and hisvoice was hard now. "There's the sacrifice to make first. In the old days, a sacrifice was always made before a large battle, to appease the gods. Now, it's true that the vampaneze don't have any official gods, but to be on the safe side?"
"No!" Evra screamed - it was as clear to him as to the rest of us what Steve meant to do.
"Don't!" I shouted.
"Gannen!" Vancha roared. "You can't allow this!"
"I have no say in it, brother," Gannen Harst responded from behind his log. He hadn't shown his face yet. I had the feeling he was ashamed to show it.
"Ready, R.V.?" Steve asked.
"I'm not sure about this, man," R.V. replied uneasily.
"Don't disobey me!" Steve growled. "I made you and I can break you. Now, you bearded, armless freak - are you ready?"
A short pause. Then R.V. answered softly, "Yes."
Vancha cursed and raced forward to force his way through the pit of stakes. Harkat lumbered after him. Alice and Debbie fired on the log protecting Steve, but their bullets couldn't pierce it. I stood, clutching my knife, thinking desperately.
Then a voice behind me called out shakily, "Dad?" Everybody paused. I looked back. Darius was trembling. "Dad?" he called again. "You're not really going to kill him, are you?"
"Be quiet!" Steve snapped. "You don't understand what's happening."
"But? he's just a kid? like me. You can't?"
"Shut up!" Steve roared. "I'll explain later! Just?"
"No," I interrupted, sliding up behind Darius. "There won't be any 'later'. If you kill Shancus, I'll kill Darius." For the second time that night I felt a dark spirit grow within me, and pressed the blade of my knife to the young boy's throat. Behind me, Evanna made a small cooing noise. I ignored her.
"You're bluffing," Steve jeered. "You couldn't kill a child."
"He could," Debbie answered for me. She stepped away. "Darren was going to kill him earlier. Harkat stopped him. He said we'd need the boy to trade for Shancus. Otherwise Darren would have killed him. Darius - is that the truth?"
"Yes," Darius moaned. He was weeping. Part of it was fear, but an equal part was horror. His father had raised him on lies and false heroics. Only now was he beginning to realize what sort of monster he'd aligned himself with.
I heard Steve mutter something. He peered out from around his log, studying us from the heights of the stage. I made no threatening moves. I didn't need to. My determination was clear.
"Very well," Steve snorted. "Throw away your weapons and we'll swap the two boys."
"You think we'll entrust ourselves to your untender mercies?" Vancha huffed. "Release Shancus and we'll turn your son over."
"Not until you shed your weapons," Steve insisted.
"And allow you to mow us down?" Vancha challenged him.
There was a short pause. Then Steve threw an arrow-gun away, far across the stage. "Gannen," he said, "am I carrying any other weapons?"
"A sword and two knives," Gannen Harst replied immediately.
"I don't mean those," Steve growled. "Do I have any long-range weapons?"
"No," Gannen said.
"What about you and R.V.?"
"We have none either."
"I know you don't believe a word I say," Steve shouted to Vancha, "but you trust your own brother, don't you? He's a pure vampaneze - he'd kill himself before he'd utter a lie."
"Aye," Vancha muttered unhappily.
"Then throw away your weapons," Steve said. "We won't attack if you don't."