CHAPTER 15
Claude was wearing the same oddly formal black suit he and the other Annihilists had worn when they’d crashed the TGV trains. Black-clad V-Crew soldiers stood in a semicircle around him, their silver-bladed gloves up and poised.
“Step back, Reginald,” said Claude.
Reginald did, and as he did, he saw that there were more soldiers on the other side of the shed. They’d entirely surrounded him in the time it had taken to lean toward the crypt door, and none had made a sound.
“You too, Nikki.”
Nikki looked like she might try to do something stupid. Reginald’s eyes asked her not to. The V-Crew had them contained, arranged in a loose circle that put each vampire about a double-arm’s length from the next. If the soldiers extended their arms and clasped hands, they could all play the world’s most disturbing game of Red Rover.
“Don’t try any of your little mind tricks, by the way,” said Claude, waving his hand around his head. “Everyone here has trained to keep you out, and judging by my dry run at VWC, it works just fine.”
“I wasn’t trying very hard back then,” said Reginald.
“Sure you were,” said Claude. “And as smart as you are, you still can’t lie worth shit.” Then he took two steps forward and leaned toward Reginald. The soldiers didn’t move, remaining in their loose formation.
“So,” he said. “You had a nice trip from Antarctica?”
Beside Reginald, Nikki’s hand darted to her mouth. Through the hangover of the blood bond they’d used to scan the graves, Reginald felt her realize something.
“You wanted us to escape,” she said.
Claude nodded. “We couldn’t get anything out of Malcolm. We’d been trying for decades, but he’s a fucking idiot and a terrible seer. He couldn’t tell us anything, and we used our most persuasive methods to ensure that he told us the truth. Then we had him turn several humans to see if the blood bond between them could clear anything up — if the new vampires could interpret what was inside Malcolm, their maker, in a way that he himself couldn’t. But nothing worked.” Claude tapped his chin with a finger. “I’d suspected as much, because I’ve never heard of a vampire who could sense much more than his maker’s moods, let alone one who could see a generation back. But hey, I’d never heard of a vampire who could glamour other vampires either… at least until I got back from the TGV and worked out what must have happened between us. So when you showed up at Vampire World Command? Well, it was just too golden of an opportunity. I just had to see what you could find out from Malcolm — if, that was, you thought you could run away undetected with whatever you learned.”
“You knew we’d come,” said Reginald, eyeing the V-Crew soldiers and poking them with his mind. They all had mental walls up. To Reginald’s bloodsense, the walls felt like reinforced concrete.
Claude shook his big head, his goatee looking particularly black in the moonlight. “Oh, not at all. But when you did show up? Well. We couldn’t have planned it any better. It was an incredibly lucky coincidence — almost as if you’d been sent to give me the last piece I needed to end this conflict.”
“The codex.”
Claude nodded. “The master plan. The blueprint for how to satisfy the angels’ mandate.”
“But what if the codex says that the humans survive?” said Reginald. “What if it says you lose?”
Claude chuckled, probably thinking about five billion dead humans. “Well, then it’d be like sneaking a peek at the other team’s gameplan.”
Claude walked forward, nudged Reginald aside, and approached the vault. He ran his fingers over the surface of the strange tumblers set in the marble. Nikki eyed him, looking toward Reginald. She seemed to be asking if she should try and strike, but the notion was beyond stupid. Reginald shook his head slowly.
“How does it open?” Claude asked, not turning.
“From the inside,” said Reginald. “By zooooombies!”
Claude turned, blurred forward, struck Reginald in the chest, and knocked him to the dirt. Nikki reacted instantly, but before she could so much as twitch, she was struck with something massive and flailing. For a strange moment, it was as if she were being attacked by an octopus. Then she fell too, landing beside Reginald under what, in the moonlight, looked like net made of bright white string. Except that where the string touched Nikki’s skin, it burned and fizzled and popped. She was gritting her fanged teeth, trying not to scream as the silver net drained her strength.
“Believe it or not, I like you, Reginald,” said Claude, standing over both of them. “The Faction believes that humans are inferior, and that all vampires are superior to them by leaps and bounds. But amongst vampires, we’re actually much more egalitarian than your old Council. The way the Faction sees it, you are vampire, so you are one of us. Maurice respected you. Even the Nation, while it hated you, respected your mind.” Then the smile on Claude’s lips was replaced with a scowl. “But the problem with you is, you think you’re too goddamn funny.”
Reginald didn’t like the way Claude had used the past tense to refer to Maurice, but he couldn’t think about that now. There was too much pain and too much to lose. The ground below him was hard; the kind of ground a guy his size might be able to crack like concrete. Beside him, Nikki continued to writhe.
“Again: how does it open? Is this a lock? What’s inside?”
“You’re a big, strong man,” said Reginald. “Why don’t you just smash it?” He resisted the urge, looking at Claude’s imposing frame, to add Like the Hulk.
Claude looked at the marble tomb. It could be an entrance to a series of underground chambers or it could be just a plain old burial vault on top of the ground. Nobody other than the keepers had ever seen the codex, and nowhere, as far as Reginald could tell, had the codex been described. It could be a scrap of ancient parchment. It could be a fragile porcelain cylinder that would crumble to pieces if treated harshly. Reginald almost wanted Claude to smash the crypt. Better for nobody to see it than for Claude to.
But Claude wasn’t dumb. He shook his head. “I might damage it,” he said. But it probably didn’t matter anyway, as the marble edifice was almost certainly backed by something stronger. The vault had been designed by vampires to keep something hidden from vampires. They’d made it look pretty, but it wouldn’t be susceptible to brute force. It was probably backed by iron and sandwiched with silver.
Claude reached down and picked Reginald up by the back of the neck, then dragged him across the dirt to the tomb.
“Tell me how to open it,” he said.
Reginald looked at the tumblers set into the surface of the marble. They almost looked like giant dice, each side the length of the longest bone in a finger. But they had more than six sides each, and they seemed to roll along multiple axes, moving more like a ball joint than rollers skewered to only spin up and down. There were glyphs carved into the surface of the marble, but the marble was soft and had worn with time. But that didn’t matter, because Reginald had already decided that the glyphs were a feint anyway. Vampires thought long-term, and something as crucial as code numbers wouldn’t be left to soften and blur over time. The true code probably came from aligning the shapes of the tumblers themselves. The differences between the different shapes of the tumblers were subtle but obvious to Reginald, and he could see something peeking out here and there at the edges of the marble. Beneath the stone was something harder — something that wouldn’t degrade with time.
“I don’t know how to open it,” said Reginald.
Claude smashed Reginald’s face into the tomb’s threshold, shattering his nose and jaw. For a moment he wondered how he was supposed to respond to Claude with his face broken, but then the thought was lost in pain… and then in obvious memory as his bones and skin knitted.
“Let’s try that again.”
“Yes,” said Reginald. “Because that was awesome.”
“Tell me how to open it,” said the big man.
“I seriously don’t know. You can break my face all day, and I still won’t know.”
“You’re the vampire mastermind,” said Claude. “It’s why we tracked you from Antarctica. You found something that has been lost and presumed gone for centuries. You’re really trying to tell me you can’t take this last step?”
Gripping the back of his neck, Claude held Reginald’s head up so that he could look into his eyes. Reginald tried Claude’s mind, but met the same solid wall he’d felt at the VWC. But it didn’t matter anyway, because there wasn’t just Claude to contend with. There were the V-Crew soldiers too, and Reginald counted a dozen of them. With Nikki incapacitated, the ensuing fight would be like thirteen hungry wolves versus half of a hot dog.
“Maybe you should have let me try the lock before your dramatic entrance,” said Reginald. He snapped his fingers. “Damn your need to be a drama queen!”
Claude smashed Reginald’s face again. With Claude holding the back of his neck, Reginald could only look down. He watched his blood pool below him, painting the tomb’s entranceway crimson.
“Tell me.”
“I don’t know.”
Smash.
“I can do this all night.”
Reginald winced, grimacing as his skull knit. He wished his pain switch had been courteous enough to turn off. It was so temperamental. It seemed to work as a warning sense, but never worked when being numb might actually be helpful.
“Let’s not,” said Reginald. “I think this is less fun for me than it is for you.”
“Just tell me. Tell me how to open it.”
“Try to pry it open with those big vampire fingers of yours.”
“I can’t. There’s silver in the cracks.”
Reginald knew that, of course. He’d seen it right away. The box was a conundrum. It was like giving Superman a safe made of kryptonite. It couldn’t be opened the right way without solving the lock, and it couldn’t be smashed — if it could be smashed — without taking what Reginald reasoned was an excellent chance of destroying what was inside.
Reginald shook his head as best he could manage. “Then I’m out of ideas.”
Claude sighed, then threw Reginald aside as if he were a sack of flour. Reginald struck the ground, rolled, then stretched until everything popped into place. He came to his feet. The troops didn’t even flinch, apparently not willing to consider him a threat. He was near their periphery, and less than a foot away was a gap between two men. But even if he’d been thin and if Nikki wasn’t being held, he wouldn’t have tried to squeak between the soldiers. They were too fast, too strong, too trained.
Reginald walked toward the big vampire. Despite the situation, a feeling of confidence was beginning to settle over him as he thought about Claude’s dilemma. Claude wasn’t getting what he wanted because Claude wasn’t supposed to find the codex. Reginald was supposed to find the codex, so one way or another he was going to come out holding it. Whether Claude then took it from him and killed him was still up in the air, but a partial win was a partial win.
“Why don’t we just leave things to chance?” said Reginald.
Claude turned.
Reginald continued: “I can’t read it. You can’t read it. So neither side learns how this all turns out. We just have to do what we’re going to do, and see what happens.”
Claude blurred toward him. Reginald couldn’t stop Claude’s charge, but his detailed sight and mind saw the blur pull something from behind his back as he approached. A partial second later, he was pinned down with his side to the ground and Claude above him, that same thing buried in his neck. Reginald struggled against whatever had impaled him, but the thing was hot, like a brand. His neck wound wouldn’t close around it. He rolled his eyes to the side and saw that Claude had his hand wrapped around a stake that was tipped with silver.
“I think,” said the big man, his veneer of calm and cool finally beginning to falter, “that you know exactly how to open that vault.”
“I don’t!”
“I also think that the audio pickups in your room at VWC heard you saying something about fate. But a big lump like you wouldn’t believe in something as flimsy as fate, would you? Fate is for fortune tellers. Fate is for mystics. But for the great vampire logician? No, I don’t think so. And that got me at first. It made me wonder if you were really the mind they say you are, if you were willing to spout off about bullshit. But then something occurred to me. Would you like to know what it was?”
“I’m on the edge of my seat here,” Reginald croaked. The silver stake was pinning his head flat, so he couldn’t look up. He rolled his eyes toward Claude, thinking that the joke was on him. The silver against Reginald’s blood made him weak and unable to fight. But that was his normal state, so ha-fucking-ha.
“I remembered that the whole idea behind the codex is based on fate — but that it was a kind of logical fate. Things were set up; other things had to happen. So if you were spouting off about fate when you thought you were alone…” He tapped Reginald on the forehead. “… then you weren’t using the word in the same way a fortune teller would. No, you would be talking about logical fate. And so I began to believe in you, Reginald. I believe that you were fated to find the codex. I believe that you have to know how to open that vault, because if you don’t open it, how can you get the codex? How can you save the world without holding it in your fat little hands and reading it to the end?”
Shit.
But he tried again: “I don’t know how to open it,” he said. “Honestly.”
Claude withdrew the stake. He moved over to Nikki, still pinned beneath the net. Being careful to avoid touching the silver himself, Claude placed the tip of the stake over Nikki’s heart.
“I’ll bet she knows how to open it,” he said.
A strange whistling noise began to fill the air. Claude looked around curiously. The V-Crew looked first at each other, then at Claude. They peeked at the other graves and monuments, seeing nothing coming. But the sound was getting louder, becoming like the roar of an engine. Like an airplane engine. Or like an airplane without an engine. Like something bludgeoning through the air, beating it aside like water from a ship’s wake.
Reginald looked up.
What looked like a meteor struck the ground in the middle of the circle of V-Crew soldiers, causing the land to split and buckle. Rocklike bits of hard clay spun into the air and then began raining down. The soldiers had flinched back. Now they were turning toward the boulder, or asteroid, or bomb, or whatever it was. But there was no bomb, and no asteroid. Kneeling on one knee and one arm, like a man preparing to spring, was Maurice.
Then he sprung.
He went for Claude first, meeting the bigger man before he could prepare, catching him in the chest and throwing them both against a massive vault with huge doors plated with greening copper. The doors collapsed inward, folding over the ball of vampires like a fist pressed into aluminum foil. The hinges snapped; the vault’s stone front wall sundered and fell.
The soldiers rushed toward the chaos.
Reginald wasn’t worth considering, apparently. He found himself alone and uncovered. He reached for a tree branch, snapped it off, and used it as a hook to drag the silver net off of Nikki. The thing was light; it came away easily. Once she was free, Nikki sped into the melee. Reginald called after her, feeling weak and useless. His mind was confused from the silver, as if pieces of the stake’s coating had flecked off into his body. His bloodsense came and went; he couldn’t concentrate enough to summon any of his abilities. He tried to focus, watched his vision slow, watched it crawl forward. He couldn’t stop it. Something was changing. The pain avoidance trick, the hyper-attention trick — all had deserted him, leaving him feeling like a puppet on a string. The moment was chaotic. The codex wouldn’t be able to define or quantify it. Reginald had the free will to use his abilities and couldn’t summon any of them. His foes had the free will to fight, and did. He was an instrument of predestiny. He was a slave to fate. He was an instrument of change, an agent of chaos. He’d started all of this. He would be the one to finish it.
It was all too much, too many strings to grasp. All he could do was to watch it happen.
He ducked behind a vault, peering around its edge to see what he could see. But then something massive appeared at his side.
“Reginald. You okay?”
It was Brian Nickerson.
“I can’t do anything,” said Reginald, his head swimming. “I’m useless.”
Brian was carrying a duffel bag. He slapped something into Reginald’s hand. It was one of the dual-barreled rifles used by the Anti-Vampire Taskforce.
“There,” said Brian. “Now you’re useful.”
Brian slung out one of the guns for himself. Further down the row of graves, an apocalyptic battle raged. Reginald watched as a tree was sheared and fell, crushing a mausoleum to rubble. Bits of gravestones hailed down on them. Even clumps of sod were flying. Reginald couldn’t see any specifics, but he’d already counted four fiery explosions. At least one of Nikki or Maurice were still alive, and they’d taken out at least three of their opponents.
“Maurice can fly?”
“The oldest ones can fly in extreme situations,” said Brian. “The vampire agent responds like adrenaline. It’s like when old ladies find the strength to lift cars to save babies. But thank God you got staked. It’s how we found you.”
“What do you mean?”
Brian ducked around the vault they were hiding behind. Sighting precisely, he fired a burst of shots and one of the V-Crew exploded in fire. Brian had hit him in the back. Shooting a man in the back was very Brian. Brian was helpful when it didn’t put him in danger, such as the time he’d cleared their way out of the American Council building by running for his life, holding another vampire in front of him as a shield.
“He’s your maker. He can feel when you’re in mortal danger.”
Reginald looked at the melee, thinking of Nikki. He hadn’t felt her peril when he’d first been on trial in front of the vampire council. But of course, she’d never really been in danger. And, come to think of it, she hadn’t been his progeny yet, either.
Brian blurred away, leaving Reginald alone. The big man moved like rocket, annihilating graves and vaults in a straight line as he went. One of the V-Crew flew at him, having hidden behind one of the vaults. The vampire struck Brian, but he didn’t remotely impact the huge vampire’s momentum. Brian reached back with his free hand, grabbed the vampire by the ankle, and swung him in an easy circle, slamming his head into the heavy base of a stone obelisk. The vampire’s head exploded on impact like a pumpkin under a sledgehammer, his fancy helmet flying across the yard like shrapnel. His body erupted in fire and Brian, unheeding, ducked behind a square marker that was too small to conceal his bulk. Behind him, the bloody obelisk wobbled slightly.
“Brian, get in here!” came a female voice.
Reginald ran toward the voice when Brian did.
He came to an open area and found Claude hanging from a tree by his neck. He was clawing at the rope holding him, which may have been a repurposed tree root. Maurice was sprinting toward his dangling brother, a sheared off piece of branch in his hands, aiming for the heart. But before he could cross the distance, three V-Crew troops tackled Maurice, pinning him down. The pin lasted a quarter of a second. Maurice exploded upward, sending all three vampires flying like shards from a grenade. Reginald saw Maurice meet his eye, give him a devilish grin that was all Maurice. Then he snapped the branch in half on his knee and ran forward with one makeshift stake in each hand. Soldiers were already coming at him. He speared at both of them; he took one in the chest and the other in the face. The vampire he’d struck in the chest shredded the stake on impact. They wore some sort of armor; Brian had either gotten lucky with his shot or the rounds were armor-piercing. Maurice dropped the stake, grabbed the vampire by the thigh and neck, then ran his hands toward each other to shuck the armor from the soldier like the shell from a crab. He ran forward with his stripped bounty, impaling the soldier on the tree-bound half of the branch he’d broken off earlier. There was a flash of sparks, and the tree began to catch flame. The orange firelight made the radial shadows of a thousand gravestones jump and flicker.
Claude had freed himself from the vine and was on the ground, preparing to lunge. He saw Reginald, then seemed to remember the reason he’d come to the cemetery in the first place. He sprinted forward. Reginald tried to raise his gun but was too slow. But before he reached Reginald, Claude was sideswiped by something smaller than the soldiers and wearing black. Nikki.
Claude snarled. He grabbed the sides of Nikki’s head and twisted, hard. But Nikki spun herself with the twist, protecting her neck, and came out of the spin to deliver a fist to the side of Claude’s head hard enough to cause his left eye to explode. His head looked dented like a tin can. His good eye found Nikki but she ran, knowing when to retreat and regroup.
Claude’s healing eyes had lost Reginald, who’d ducked below a row of stones. He began to scan for someone to fight, probably Maurice. Reginald felt his throat try to swallow and fail. Claude was as old as Maurice but was much larger. Reginald hoped the spike of vampire adrenaline Maurice had gotten was good for more than flying, because man-to-man on otherwise fair grounds, Claude outmatched his brother easily.
Reginald ducked back as Claude sprinted off, caught Nikki’s eye across the opening, and fired his weapon at one of the V-Guards who’d just made an appearance. He didn’t trust himself with the wooden bullets; the second barrel fed by the second trigger seemed to be more forgiving. And it was. When two of the remaining solders (he thought there were six left; there had been some indistinct explosions that even his perfect accounting couldn’t make sense of) paused from their blurred running to approach Brian from behind, Reginald squeezed off a burst of shots. Most missed. At least one hit each soldier. They collapsed to the ground, screaming terrible screams of pain.
Brian looked back, saw Reginald, and gave him a nod of thanks. He ducked back and squeezed off some shots of his own in the other direction, still not engaging hand to hand. After a moment, Reginald could see what Brian was firing at. There were four V-Crew soldiers remaining, and they were moving in a group. Brian’s shots went wide; the soldiers ducked behind markers; Brian retreated.
Nikki blurred to Reginald’s side. He let out a held breath, relieved that she was still alive. The V-Crew soldiers were faster and stronger than she was, but she was wily and clever — something that wasn’t usually given fair credit in a fight.
Across the cemetery, monuments detonated with impact. Reginald couldn’t see the details of the melee — in which Maurice and Brian were battling their five opponents — and watching from a distance was nerve-wracking. He selfishly held Nikki’s wrist, using his strong fingers to grip tight so that she wouldn’t leave him. He told himself that the others would be okay. Brian could best the soldiers if they came at him one by one (or if they stood in front of his gun, if he still had it), and the soldiers were certainly no match for Maurice.
The thought broke as quickly as Reginald had it, because a second later a mausoleum fifty feet away exploded into stone shards. Then, emerging from the rubble, Claude began proving that he was a match for Maurice. The big man in the suit tackled his waifish brother, sending him into the fluted column of a massive crypt, toppling the front edge of its overhang. Rocks fell. The vampires ran, lapping the building, unclear who was chasing who. Maurice directed a punch at Claude and missed. He struck stone, which exploded to dust. The mausoleum reached its failure point; the wall Maurice had struck buckled and collapsed with a sound like thunder. The soldiers circled the others, unsure where and when to engage.
Reginald tried to shoot at the V-Crew, but then his gun went empty; apparently Brian had appropriated them half-full. Both chambers clicked dry. One of the soldiers heard the click and looked at him, then began to walk forward. The approaching vampire hadn’t seen Nikki, who’d wrenched free. Nikki circled him, approached from behind, stripped off his armor in one deft motion, and rammed her fist through the back of his ribcage. Ever since their escape from Council, she’d never taken off her carved wooden ring, and now, as it struck the vampire’s heart, he detonated in a ball of flame. Then Nikki ran forward and tackled Reginald, driving him to the dirt, as Maurice and Claude flew above them in a warring ball of fists and fangs.
Maurice and Claude struck the ground, separated, circled. On Reginald and Nikki’s other side, Brian reached the bottom of his own gun’s clips. One of the remaining soldiers came at him, claws out, and tried to behead him. Brian feinted back just in time and the attacking vampire missed, opening four deep gashes across his face instead. Brian yelled in pain, dove at his attacker, gripped him at the chest, and pitched him away. The vampire projectile sailed at least fifty yards on Brian’s heave, and Brian healed almost completely during the flight. Then he proved that he’d learned something about the AVT guns that Reginald hadn’t. When the soldier came roaring back, he pressed a button on the stock and a silver bayonet flicked out. Brian didn’t even have to thrust. He only had to line up correctly, and when the soldier leapt at him, the attacker met the bayonet’s tip with enough force to penetrate first his armor, then his heart.
The battle moved behind them.
Maurice and Claude were in the center of a clearing between graves, standing atop some sort of flat-to-the-ground memorial. They were pacing around each other like characters in a western, apparently having decided that they were too equally matched, that sheer physical force was meaningless. The two remaining V-Crew soldiers were at the periphery, hands and legs in ready stance, seemingly eager to rush to Claude’s aid but unsure where to enter the fray. But the scene didn’t last long enough for them to find out; the brothers had entered the area where Maurice had dropped his two stakes earlier, and Maurice went for one. Claude feinted toward the other. Maurice committed to his grab as the soldiers ran forward.
What happened next was so perfectly coordinated as to seem rehearsed. And maybe it had been, during all those long years of Annihilist Faction training camp.
Claude lunged in one direction. Maurice went for his weapon, placed his hand atop it. The soldiers both came forward at once. Maurice got the stake in-hand as he was struck by the soldiers, who knocked it from his grip and tried to pin him against the wall of a mausoleum. Maurice was too old and too strong for them to actually do it, but the moment’s distraction allowed Claude to turn from the stake on the ground, which was his decoy, and instead pull a smaller stake from the back of his belt.
Reginald saw it happen and began to run. But he was too late — too late by miles. Claude’s fist was a blur, and as Reginald yelled out, the big man struck Maurice in the chest. There was a white-hot explosion of flame and ash as Reginald watched his maker’s face react with unabashed surprise. Then there was the smell of burning and brimstone, and Maurice Toussant — who had been around for Julius Caesar and Jesus — was gone.
A bloodcurdling scream rent the night as Maurice’s dying fire made scare shadows dance around the three vampires in the clearing. At first Reginald thought it was his scream, but then Claude looked up, and in a fraction of a second his expression of victory turned to an expression of terror. He dropped behind the two soldiers and began stepping backward. Something came from behind and knocked Reginald down. It was Brian, marching toward the soldiers at human speed. They turned to watch him. Reginald could imagine duty filling their hearts — duty to protect their retreating leader. Claude continued to back away, then turned and ran. The soldiers flashed their claws and came at Brian’s throat, but there was no contest. Brian roared as he caught them both by the backs of the head, and then slammed them together. Their heads exploded like melons between his massive palms. Then there was fire, and dust, and nothing else.
When it was over, Brian turned slowly to face Reginald. Reginald didn’t understand any of what had just happened. Why had Claude run? How had it been so simple for Brian to outmatch the two trained soldiers? Was it really over, that fast? Any why, with Reginald’s best friend and maker gone to the breeze, did he not feel sorrow, but felt hollow instead?
“Now you need to open it,” said Brian.
But it didn’t make sense. Reginald walked forward. Brian knelt, his palm brushing the pile of ash that had so recently been Maurice. His clothes had been mostly incinerated in the flash, but there was something else still there — something Brian was picking up in the way you’d pick up a delicate China plate. It was a long sword, black with soot, its point tipped in wood.
“The vault, Reginald,” said Brian. “You need to open the vault.”
“Is he really gone?”
It was the stupidest question anyone had ever asked. Brian held up the sword. Reginald thought Brian might give it to him in the way marines will give a widow a flag, but instead he reverently slipped it under his own belt, where, on Brian’s massive frame, the thing looked more like a dagger.
Brian nodded. “Yes. He’s gone. So you’ve got to open it, Reginald. You’ve got to make this all worthwhile.” He extended a finger, pointing back in the direction where the fighting had begun.
They marched back to the utility shed that wasn’t a utility shed, with the strange vampire grave inside. Beside it, the stone angel with fangs stood guard. Looking at the angel gave Reginald a strange sense of unreality. He thought of his maker. Was it possible that good vampires went to Heaven?
He looked at Brian and Nikki, who were standing behind him. Brian nodded. Nikki knelt beside him. Then, with wet eyes, she put her arms around him. The hug lasted for a long moment, but Reginald could barely feel it. He was barely there.
He looked at the strange marble tumblers in the door of the vault, seeing their shape, seeing the shape they were supposed to create together. He could imagine the marble as it had once been, when the glyphs carved into its surface had been new and sharp. He could imagine the material beneath the marble, guaranteed to hold its shape.
He aligned the tumblers. He nudged the door open.
Inside the vault was a small space containing nothing at all.