This 19th-century vampire hunting kit prompted a bidding war when it went under the hammer at Hansons this summer.
The oddball item was expected to sell for a modest £2,000 ($2.4k) but went on to fetch an impressive £16,900 ($20k) instead.
The wooden box was sold containing everything one might need to survive a vampire attack, including two matching pistols, a brass powder flask, Holy Water, a copy of the Bible, a wooden mallet, a stake, a brass candelabra, rosary beads, and crucifixes. It also contained historical papers from London's Metropolitan Police.
The chilling kit once belonged to the British aristocrat Lord Hailey (1872-1969), who was a former administrator of British India.
Vampire hunting kits were reportedly all the rage at the turn of the 19th century, thanks largely to Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula. The kits were typically purchased as a novelty by travellers who were headed to Eastern Europe, where vampires were most commonly believed to reside.