Authorâs Note
Please donât read this story unless you have already seen the film âVan Helsingâ as it gives away the ending!
Recently I watched this film and it has become one of my favourite films of all time. I nearly cried when the Wolfman delivered his final, punishing blow to Anna; why must the film be so unfair? Most films have happy endings. Most films should have happy endings. And then it struck meâwhat if Anna had lived? She and Van Helsing would certainly have married, maybe started a family. It is even possible the Holy Order would have allowed her to accompany Van Helsing on his missions; she is certainly skilled enough to keep up.
And then it hit me. I could make them live happily ever after! So I returned home after my third viewing of the film, fired up the PC and started feverishly writing.
*****
Gabriel Van Helsing stood in front of the beautiful, intricately inlaid altar of St. Peterâs Church in Vatican City, and let his mind drift as the organ music and singing washed over him. His big, tanned hands nervously clenched the small box held between them.
Both his job and his curse were to vanquish evil; he was the Left Hand of God. He had served Him faithfully for centuries, though he remembered little of itâfighting the Romans in 73 AD was one memory his friend Friar Carl had prised from him. And now it was 1889. Had he truly been alive for close to a thousand years? His memories during the daytime were patchy at best, and yet during the night they came alive and plagued him with horrific nightmares that always just escaped realisation upon awakening.
The golden light from thousands of candles reflected off more statues, carvings and paintings than one man could possibly dream of seeing in a lifetime. It also reflected off Van Helsingâs finely chiselled face, illuminating his nervous smile. This day he would create new memories, starting with the woman he now turned to see walking up the aisle behind him.
Anna Valerious, a woman now raised high in the sight of God. She was beautiful, passionate and loyal; but in the time they had known one another she had also shown him how brave she could be. How determined.
Over the course of his existence he had known many womenâthough only a few in the Biblical sense. He had rarely grown attached enough to a woman to lay with her, knowing that he would be ageless and that they would whither and die. And once they knew the truth of what he did, what he was, they would be frightened of him. That thought more than any other kept him apart from most women.
But Anna, beautiful Anna, was different. Six months ago he had left Rome under orders of the secret Knights of the Holy Order, taking as his weapons assistant Friar Carl. He had travelled across the Adriatic Sea through winter storms, and driven their horses hard across the Carpathian Mountains. Their goal was Romania; their task, to seek out and aid the last two members of the House Valerious. Van Helsing had been informed of their centuries old battle against a great, powerful vampireâthe mighty Count Dracula.
The quest had almost caused him to loose his sanity; he found himself transformed into the hideous, fearsome Wolfman after suffering a bite from Annaâs brother, a werewolf himself. But he had used those wolf abilities to destroy Dracula in one final, cataclysmic battle.
And he had nearly lost his darling Anna in the process. She had been charged with finding the antidote that stopped the progression of his lupine disease, and she promised to administer it to him after the battle, if she were able.
Now Anna was walking towards him down the marble aisle, and his mouth dropped open at her intrinsic beauty. Her slender, slight frame was shrouded in a gorgeous white wedding gown, with her face veiled, and a long white train flowing out behind her. She advanced towards him slowly, and all he could do was stare at her as his memories played through his mind once more.
This was a memory he would never forget, the moment when he had so very nearly killed the woman he was about to marry.
He remembered that time in monochrome, for he had been in wolf form and that was all they ever saw. But he remembered how vivid the smells had beenâthe odious smell of Draculaâs decomposing body as he had sunk his fangs into the beast had been almost overpowering, but he had been so consumed with rage during their titanic fight that he could no nothing else. There was the smell of blood, both his own and the Countâs; Van Helsing had not walked away lightly from that fight.
But most of all he remembered the smell of Anna, delicate, seemingly fragile, but hard as granite. Heâd smelt her before he whirled around and saw her, standing small and defiant in front of him. He had acted on impulse, launching himself across the ruins of Draculaâs make-shift laboratory in one bound, landing on her body. Heâd felt the tiny, almost inconsequential prick as she shoved the needle in to his thick, hairy hide, felt the antidote working through his veins.
But then, he turned to look down at his precious Anna, lying so still on the chaise lounge before him. Slow realisation crystallised in his brain when he heard Friar Carl utter the words, âSheâs dead.â
Heâd picked her up and held her close to him, howling out his pain and desolation as his wolf form deserted him and he shrank back to human size. The wolfâs howl became a human cry of loss, of sorrow, and he wept as he touched his lips to her face.
But Anna Valerious had not been deadâshe was indeed made of sterner stuff, and the blood of nine generations of House Valerious ran through her. As he had held her so close to him, feeling the contours of her body and mourning her loss, heâd felt a tiny, wayward pulse in her neck.
âCarl!â he called, disbelief and hope running hotly through his tired, confused body. âCarl! I donât think sheâs dead! IâI can feel a pulse!â
Friar Carl had run forward and immediately touched his fingers to Annaâs neck, counting under his breath. A look of relief played across his sweaty, frightened face.