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CHAPTER 8

SIT-DOWN



Both the guards and Lafontaine — tall, overweight, balding, seemingly in his thirties despite records that placed him in his twenties — were wearing mirrored sunglasses in spite of the darkness. Reginald’s vampire eyes could usually see through mirroring, but he couldn’t see through Lafontaine’s glasses at all. They weren’t normal sunglasses. They had to be another human innovation, intended to keep things on the level and to keep the two vampires from meeting his eyes. 

There was a simple card table (plastic, not wood) in the middle of the room. On each side of the table was one folding metal chair. Timken sat in one and Lafontaine, with a glance at Reginald, sat in the other. Reginald stood beside the card table, feeling like a waiter. 

“You were supposed to come alone,” said Lafontaine. 

“You’ll be glad he’s here,” said Timken. “Reginald is the best mind we have.” 

Lafontaine glanced at him again. “That’s exactly why I’m not glad he’s here.” 

“This was the only way it made sense.” Timken shrugged good-naturedly. “I’m just a figurehead. He’s our best negotiator. Not that I want him to bamboozle you, you understand. Just that we owe it to everyone to have the best minds on this.” 

Lafontaine took a third look at Reginald, but this time he looked him over very slowly, starting at his feet and working his way upward. He spent a lot of time on Reginald’s face, trying to read him. The only other place he lingered nearly as long was Reginald’s huge gut. 

Finally he turned his head, with its sparse hair, toward Timken. “Did you just say ‘bamboozle’?” 

“You know what I mean. I just mean we’re not trying to trick you.” 

“I know what it means. It just doesn’t sound like something a vampire would say.” He glanced yet again toward Reginald. “Are you two really vampires?” 

“I could drink your blood if you’d like,” said Reginald. 

Lafontaine stared directly at him, his mirrored lenses locked on Reginald’s eyes. Reginald had extended his fangs, but he was wielding them in the least threatening way possible. He was standing beside the table with his two white teeth resting over his lower lip and wearing a nonplussed expression on his face. Given the look, he’d only have been threatening to a buffet.

The tension broke, and Lafontaine laughed. Reginald retracted his fangs. 

“Should it bother me, that there are two of you and only one of me?” said the human. 

“No,” said Reginald. “Seeing as you still have us by the balls.” 

Timken shot him a look. It was never good practice, in a negotiation, to admit to being at a loss, but Reginald could read the human like a book despite their lack of eye contact. Lafontaine had come into this negotiation equally arrogant and desperate — a combination that came off to Reginald like Napoleon as a suicide bomber. Neither Lafontaine nor humanity as a whole had anything to lose beyond what they’d already lost. They couldn’t intimidate Lafontaine and they couldn’t bulldoze through him, so the only way to lower his guard was to concede, roll over, and expose their bellies. It would be the last thing the leader of a human insurgence would expect from vampires. 

Lafontaine nodded, smiling slightly. “That we do.”

“What do you want?” said Timken. This time, Reginald was the one who shot a look. They hadn’t exchanged enough pleasantries. Timken was a seasoned politician and knew better than to barge on so bullheadedly. But Reginald could feel his mood, and what he felt was interesting: the vampire president was nervous. 

“Freedom.” 

“You’re free,” said Timken. “I’m told you escaped years ago.” 

“I did. But I want freedom for all humans.” 

Timken shook his head. “We need blood. That’s not negotiable, seeing as we can’t survive without it.” 

“And we have our fingers on your key factories,” said Lafontaine. “You play ball and we’ll maybe work something out. But if you won’t, we’ll burn them.” 

“We can rebuild. And the humans inside them now will never make it out alive.” 

Lafontaine shifted in his chair. “Mister President, let me ask you a question,” he said. “Would you want to keep living if your life consisted of waiting to be bled?” 

Timken shook his head — not to say that he wouldn’t want a life of bleeding, but in exasperation. “No deal,” he said. “Lay down your arms, and maybe we’ll let some of you live.” 

Reginald looked again at Timken. Now he was being aggressive — a strange breed of aggression that Reginald could feel being born out of fear. He wondered again at Timken’s behavior. The president shouldn’t be nervous. He’d once staged a violent coup on the American Vampire Council. He’d gotten into bed with the murderous head of the Annihilist Faction and been at least half responsible for the ending of seven billion lives. He’d led the USVC for forty years, through the worst turmoil the world had ever seen. So why was he nervous now? 

The script Reginald had laid out was straightforward. Lafontaine would ask for the liberation of all of the blood farms, and Timken would counteroffer by giving him two of them. It would be enough to pacify the humans into at least a partial stand-down, and they could handle the loose ends later. Reginald had arranged to have the soldiers at the ready, in two concentric rings. The soldiers would protect their exit if the negotiations went as planned, or be prepared for an extraction if something went wrong. But Timken wasn’t giving in. He wasn’t apologizing on behalf of his people for the humans’ treatment. He wasn’t giving the human resistance leader the nuggets that he was supposed to, that he could take back to his followers as trophies of victory. Reginald tried to probe him, but he couldn’t get any thoughts at all from Timken despite beginning to push. He could only get moods, meaning that Timken was deliberately keeping Reginald out.

Lafontaine leaned back and crossed his arms over his chest. It was almost a casual shift in posture, but Reginald saw it for what it was: movement into defense, into closing off discussion. Reginald had pegged Lafontaine as highly intelligent and probably arrogant — the former attribute probably magnified by forty years of unknown human advancement. A personality like that wouldn’t stand for much jostling. 

“You know, Mr. President,” said Lafontaine, using Timken’s title sarcastically, “you haven’t come in here like a man who wants his farms or his sun blocker back — or, for that matter, like a man who doesn’t want a pathogen released into his cities.” 

Reginald was about to react — to step in if possible — when the sounds of gunshots came from outside. Reginald recognized them as the weapons held by the vampire soldiers; his finely tuned ears could easily tell the report of lead rounds from those of anti-vampire rounds.

Lafontaine’s head perked up. Apparently he could tell them apart, too. 

Reginald snapped his head toward Timken. “What did you do?” he hissed. 

The answer came in the form of two black shapes that exploded through the building’s windows. A moment later, a pair of CPS Special Forces soldiers (not the men from the SWAT truck; these soldiers hadn’t been on Reginald’s roster) had grabbed Lafontaine by the arms. Reginald could feel the two vampires’ bloodlust. If they’d had their helmets off, he’d see their exposed fangs. 

The soldiers threw Lafontaine onto the card table, slamming him hard enough to buckle the table’s legs. Then Timken was above him, and Reginald saw his Hyde face emerge — the face he kept hidden from the public behind his careful Dr. Jekyll. 

With his back flat on the table and his arms held fast by the two soldiers, Lafontaine laughed. 

Timken’s face, very close to the human’s, was red and furious. His fangs were out, glistening with saliva. His features twisted, turning his usual handsome face horrible. With a growl, he reached down and ripped Lafontaine’s glasses from his face — and found himself staring into two empty eye sockets. 

“In the land of the blind, the man beyond influence is king,” Lafontaine laughed as Timken gaped into the two unglamourable holes.

Timken punched him hard in the face. 

Reginald was shocked. In the photo he’d seen of Lafontaine, he’d had eyes. The photo had only been a few years ago. Had he taken out of his own eyes? And without those eyes, how had he navigated the room? Why, when they’d been speaking earlier, had he ticked his head between them as if meeting their eyes?

“How did you coordinate it? How are you doing this?” Timken bellowed, spraying Lafontaine with spit. Timken’s bearing was terrible. An angry vampire could sometimes transcend humanity, becoming more than just a thing with fangs. What was facing Lafontaine now was more monster than man. And still the black man laughed. 

Lafontaine arched as best he could with the soldiers still holding his forearms. Then he trained his empty sockets on Timken and said, “You think I’m blind? Look into a mirror with your beautiful vampire eyes some time. All that vision… yet throughout all these years, you didn’t see shit.” 

“If you don’t start talking, I’m going to rip you apart piece by piece,” Timken growled. 

Lafontaine didn’t answer. Instead, he looked up at the two soldiers holding him, his empty eyes boring into their black visors. The soldiers were squirming, their grip on him suddenly uncertain.

He said, “Hot in here, isn’t it?” 

One of the soldiers — and then, quickly afterward, the other — yelled and yanked their hands away from Lafontaine’s skin. The human sat up on his elbows, smiling. The soldiers looked at their palms as if they’d never seen them before. Both of the vampire soldiers were white — but their palms, after touching Walter Lafontaine, had turned jet black. 

Lafontaine’s dead eyes turned to Reginald and Timken. 

“Thank you for validating my opinion of you,” he said. “I expected shit… and I got shit.” Then he turned toward the soldiers, whose gape-mouthed expressions were apparent even through their visors. “And you two,” he added. “You have an hour. Better make the most of it.”  

He surged up from the table, snarling and swiping his hands toward Timken’s face. Timken flinched back, dodging contact with the man’s poisoned skin. Then Lafontaine came for Reginald with his palms out. Reginald kicked at him, caught Lafontaine in the shin. The big man staggered back and struck the table, then lunged again. Reginald dodged. He was faster than the human, but not by much. And despite Lafontaine’s husky build, he seemed to have adrenaline on his side. 

Lafontaine crouched. Reginald readied himself to dodge again, but instead he fell back as a great tumult of exploding glass and metal siding heralded the arrival of the vampire troops. The warehouse became a blur. As Reginald stumbled back out of the room’s middle, he caught sight of the two soldiers, now writhing on the ground and screaming in agony, most of their bare arms already turning black. The newly arrived soldiers scampered away from the two infected men, climbing into the rafters, walking along the ceilings. 

The humans soldiers streamed in behind the vampires. There were dozens upon dozens of them, and all were dressed in armor like the AVT used to wear, but shinier and more mobile — and, Reginald thought, with no visible weak spots. The humans didn’t hesitate as the vampires had; they opened fire, striking empty air as the vampires dodged. The humans’ gunfire continued, striking nothing. The vampires were too fast. But then, after a minute’s worth of misses, a few bullets began to score hits. Reginald watched it happen, seeing something that stopped his undead heart: the bullets weren’t flying straight. They were acting like lightning-fast heat-seeking missiles, curving in the air. With each volley of shots, the bullets came nearer and nearer their targets. 

Timken had taken shelter beside Reginald. And now, seeming alien, Reginald found that he could feel the president’s fear after all.

“Those weapons,” Reginald told him. “They’re learning.” 

The bullets arced more and more accurately with each burst. And as he watched it happen, Reginald noticed a second thing: the troops were holding their weapons, but the rifles were also attached to the soldiers’ waists by what looked like hinged robotic arms. He could hear motors in the arms whirr as the soldiers moved and fired. The bullets were learning to seek their cool targets, and the weapons’ sights were learning the vampires’ movement patterns. They were outmatched. Desperately. It was only a matter of time before they would all be dying on the ground, infected with the black plague.

More bursts of fire, now carefully controlled. The humans had settled into a diamond-shaped pattern around Lafontaine, who was casually wiping his arms and neck with a handkerchief as vampires began to burst into sparks around him. They dropped like insects knocked out of the air, striking the building’s floor, clutching themselves and screaming. The formation of humans moved into an orderly, unrushed procession across the floor, with Lafontaine in the middle. 

The second wave of vampire soldiers arrived, heavily armored as a failsafe measure and intended for deployment only in the case of something catastrophic. The humans’ bullets plinked off the new vampires’ armor. They marched forward, feeling cocksure, their weapons raised. The lead-shooters, stocked with armor-piercing rounds, coughed fire, and humans began to fall. The tables slowly swung; several humans struck the floor. Others dove for cover, scrambling breathlessly away.

One of the humans threw a round device into the middle of the warehouse. Reginald knew it wasn’t a normal grenade and turned away, but the throw had gone to the other side of the room. It detonated in an explosion of brilliant light, and when Reginald took his arm from his eyes, it came away sunburnt. He watched it heal, now pushing Timken backward. He had no love for the president, but right now it was us versus them, and “us” meant vampires. 

More vampire troops arrived, all heavily armored. The humans seemed to have exhausted their reserves; anyone who would ever join this firefight was already here. Fewer vampires fell. More humans threw ultraviolet grenades, but they didn’t have enough to make a dent. They’d struck hard and fast, and they’d taken the vampires by surprise, but the humans reached their limit as the battle wore on. There simply weren’t enough of them. Thanks to the redundant ring of troops, it looked like the vampires might triumph after all, but Reginald couldn’t help but wonder about the eighteen places where the humans still had them held tight… and what would happen afterward, when the human leader lay dead. 

Lafontaine, watching the firefight around him, looked unconcerned. He looked directly at Reginald and gave him a little wave just as an enormous bus-style recreational vehicle crashed through the building’s far wall, its windows and tires armored. The thing barreled directly at Reginald and Timken, forcing them to dive aside. Then men dove out of the bus, streaming from its doors and top hatch, and as something happened at Reginald’s back, he turned to see two of the newly arrived humans wrapping the president’s neck with silver and begin dragging him away. 

The human formation collapsed back into the RV in such an orderly way, it had to have been rehearsed. Less than ten seconds later, most of the humans were inside — save Lafontaine, the two men holding him, and three remaining gunmen fanned out as cover. Then Lafontaine walked up to Timken, who was weakened by the silver, and slapped him on the back. 

“Come on in!” he yelled.

Lafontaine laughed, then climbed the RV’s steps. The two humans dragged Timken up behind him, the remaining gunmen followed, and then the big bus’s door closed.

The vampire troops, undeterred, stormed the door. They scratched. They ripped aluminum from the frame. One of them reached inside, past the RV’s outer shell, and was blown explosively backward. He shook his head, confused, and stormed forward. Others reached in, were similarly repelled, then fell to the dusty floor. They recovered, regrouped, and charged again, only to be repelled and knocked onto their backs. And the humans inside the bus, watching the trampoline-like display, began to laugh. 

“Goddammit, you assholes!” Reginald bellowed at the soldiers. “That’s a mobile home! You can’t go in unless he invites you!”

Then Lafontaine, holding one end of Timken’s silver leash, waved through the window as the RV backed out and drove away.