passed. In fact, he was nearly eighteen, in his last year at school, before he’d even noticed the plaque beside the door. He’d never read the book, and probably never would. He’d fallen asleep during Coppola’s
— How can you do that?
— What?
— Sleep during a film like that.
— I always fall asleep when the film’s shite.
— We’re supposed to be out on a date.
— That’s a different point, he said.-For that, I apologise. How did it end, anyway?
— Oh, fuck off, she said, affectionately-that was possible in Dublin.
So the whole thing, the whole Dracula business, meant absolutely nothing to him.
Nevertheless, he wanted to drink blood.
Badly.
The
He wasn’t sure when it had started. He was, though-he knew when he’d become aware.
— How d’you want your steak?
— Raw.
His wife had laughed. But he’d been telling her the truth. He wanted the slab of meat she was holding over the pan, raw and
Then he woke.
But he was awake already, still standing in the kitchen, looking at the steak, and looking forward to it.
— Rare, so, he said.
She smiled at him.
— You’re such a messer, she said.
He hid behind that, the fact that he acted the eejit, that it was
And it was; it was fine. Life was normal. For a while. For quite a while. Weeks-he thought. He opened the fridge one day. There were two fillet steaks on a plate, waiting. It must have been weeks later because she-her name was Vera-she wouldn’t have bought steak all that frequently. And it wasn’t the case that Vera did all the shopping, or even most of it; she just went past the butcher’s more often than he did. She bought the food; he bought the wine. She bought the soap and toilet paper-and he bought the wine.
He grabbed one of the steaks and took it over to the sink. He looked behind him, to make sure he was alone, and then devoured it as he leaned over the sink. But he didn’t
— Where’s the dinner? Vera wanted to know, later.
— What?
— I bought fillet steaks for us. There.
She stood in front of the fridge’s open door.
— They were off, he said.
— They were not.
— They were, he said.-They were minging. I threw them out.
— They were perfect, she said.-Are they in here?
She was at the bin.
— The wheelie, he said.
He hadn’t expected this; he hadn’t thought ahead.
— I’m bringing them back, she said, as she moved to the back door.-The fucker.
She was talking about the butcher.
— Don’t, he said.
He didn’t stand up, he didn’t charge to block her. He stayed sitting at the table. He could feel his heart-his own meat-hopping, thumping.
— He’s always been grand, he said.-If we complain, it’ll-I don’t know-change the relationship. The customer- client thing.
He enjoyed listening to himself. He was winning.
— We can have the mince, he said.
— It was for the kids, she said.-Burgers.
— I like burgers, he said.-You like burgers.
The back door was open. It was a hot day, after a week of hot days. He knew: she didn’t want to open the wheelie and shove her face into a gang of flies.
They had small burgers. The kids didn’t complain.
That was that.
Out of his system. He remembered-he saw himself-attacking the meat, hanging over the sink. He closed his eyes, snapped them shut-the idea, the thought, of being caught like that. By a child, by his wife. The end of his life.
He’d killed it-the urge. But it came back, days later. And he killed it again. The fridge again-lamb chops this time. He sent his hand in over the chops, and grabbed a packet of chicken breasts, one of those polystyrene trays, wrapped in cling-lm. He put a finger through the film, pulled it away. He slid the breasts onto a plate-and drank the pink, the near-white blood. He downed it, off the tray. And vomited.
Cured. Sickened-revolted. Never again. He stayed home from work the next day. Vera felt his forehead.
— Maybe it’s the swine flu.
— Chicken pox, he said.
— You must have had the chicken pox when you were a boy, she said.-Did you?
— I think so, he said.
She looked worried.
— It can make adult males sterile, she said.
— I had a vasectomy, he told her.-Three years ago.
— I forgot, she said.
— I didn’t.
But he was cured; he’d sorted himself out. The thought, the memory-the taste of the chicken blood, the polystyrene tray-it had him retching all day. He wouldn’t let it go. He tortured himself until he knew he was fixed.
It was iron he was after. He decided that after he’d done a bit of Googling when he went back to work. It made sense; it was fresh air across his face. Something about the taste, even the look, of the cow’s deep red blood-it was metal, rusty. That was what he’d craved, the iron, the metal. He’d been looking pale; he’d been falling asleep in front of the telly, like an old man. Anaemia. Iron was all he needed. So he bought himself a carton of grapefruit juice-he knew the kids would never touch it-and he went into a chemist on his way home from work, for