Part 17 (1/2)
”He sounds like a ghost, not a vampire,” Tucker suggested.
Caxton shrugged. ”From what I heard he sounded like a severe depressive. Apparently the only thing he ever complained about was being tired, but the building manager suggested he missed more than a few days of work, especially in the winter. Judging by the mail he got he read a lot of men's magazines -Playboy, FHM, Maxim-but never went on a date or anything more social than a movie.”
Arkeley nodded as if was all starting to make sense. ”A virtual non-ent.i.ty that no one really missed when he was gone. Tell me how he died.” ”Industrial accident. He touched a live wire or something and died of cardiac arrest before the ambulance could even arrive. That's what the building manager told me.” She studied the printout in her hand. ”He worked at an electrical substation outside of Kennett Square.” She checked the printout again. ”Let me make another call.”
Arkeley stood stock still while she called the substation's offices. Tucker started a game of computer solitaire-then had to close it out when she hung up her phone after less than a minute. ”You're going to love this,” she said.
Arkeley's eyebrows inched up toward his hairline.
”He wasn't working at a substation. He was helping to dismantle it. The substation was a hundred years old and they were closing it down. Most of the buildings onsite are still standing but they've been permasealed. Which means
all the windows are going to be covered with plywood and the doors padlocked.” ”A vampire could tear a padlock off with his bare hands,” Arkeley said. His face started to crease in a very wide smile.
”You said they liked ruins. Should we get on the road? We don't have too much daylight left but we could at least scope the place out, and maybe get an order of exhumation for Reyes' grave.
The smile on Arkeley's face stopped short. ”We?” he asked
Caxton was about to reply when her phone rang again. She expected it was the building manager with a detail he'd just remembered but it wasn't-the call was coming from State Police headquarters, from the Commissioner's office. ”Trooper Laura Caxton,” she answered, placing the phone to her ear. When the Commissioner's a.s.sistant had finished relaying his message she hung up once more. ”We've been instructed to come to Harrisburg immediately.”
”We?” Arkeley asked again.
”We, you and me. The Commissioner wants us, and he says it's urgent.”
The Commissioner stood in his doorway when they arrived-never a good sign. It meant he was looking forward to having them at his mercy. They filed into his office and sat down across from his desk. The air in the room felt hot and becalmed and Caxton wished she could undo the top b.u.t.ton of her uniform s.h.i.+rt, loosen her tie, but she knew it wouldn't be allowed. There was a dress code to maintain. Arkeley just sat down in his awkward fas.h.i.+on, his fused vertebrae making it impossible for him to sit comfortably. He did his best at appearing as if this were just a routine meeting, perhaps a chance to prepare a new strategy. While Caxton stewed in uncomfortable silence the Commissioner busied himself at the front of the desk for a while, saying nothing, working with paper and tape.
When he was done five letter-sized color laser prints hung down from the edge of the desk. Portraits of state troopers, probably taken the day they graduated from the academy. They wore their hats with the chinstraps actually under their chins (by the next day, Caxton knew, they would learn to wear the strap across the backs of their heads) and looked out of the paper and over her shoulder as if toward some bright tomorrow.
”Would you like to know their names?” the Commissioner asked when they'd had time to look at the portraits. ”There's Eric Strauss. And Shane Herkimer. And Philip Toynbee. And-”
”I resent your implication,” Arkeley said. As evenly and dispa.s.sionately as he said anything. His left hand gripped the desk and he leaned forward to stare right into the Commissioner's eyes.
”I haven't even begun to imply,” the Commissioner fired back. He leaned forward in his chair and grasped either branch of a pair of antlers that had been turned into a pen and pencil set. ”These five men died two nights ago. They were Troop H and they responded to a call for backup. Their deaths are inexcusable-five men lost to bring down one bad guy? These were well-trained troopers. They would have known how to handle themselves in a hazardous situation. That is, if they knew what to expect. They were not given sufficient information and they died because no one told them they were facing off against a vampire.”
Caxton was confused. She knew it wasn't her place to speak out-the two men expected her to remain silent throughout this interview-but she couldn't help it. ”We didn't know either, when we called for them,” Caxton tried, but Arkeley held up one hand to quiet her. He looked at the other man as if he was ready to hear what came next.
The Commissioner made a low sound in his throat. ”And let us not forget the two troopers and the local policeman who died watching the hunting camp. They died because they were sitting on a porch.”
Caxton shook her head. She wouldn't speak, not after Arkeley warned her off, but she had to make some gesture of her incomprehension. ”I sent my two best trackers down to that camp,” the Commissioner said, looking at her as if he wanted to see her reaction. ”They were Bureau of Investigations hotshots, top marks at the academy, life-long hunters, mountain boys-these two have bow-hunted for bear and come out on top. They set up shop in a hand-made blind a hundred yards from the camp and they waited to see if anybody was coming back to the scene of the crime. At least, that was the plan until your man Arkeley here called them and told them they were perfectly safe and they could sit on the porch, out in the open, where anyone could see them. Now they're dead.”
She glanced across at Arkeley. He only nodded. He must have made the phone call while she was sitting with Vesta Polder. But why? What had made him think the porch was a safe place for the troopers? He must have at least suspected that the half-deads were coming back.
”I have their pictures here, too,” the Commissioner said, shuffling some papers on his desk. ”Want to see?”
Arkeley stirred in his chair and cleared his throat before speaking. ”I'm not entirely sure what you're getting at, but I do know what you're missing. The thing you don't understand, Colonel, is that we are not fighting gang-bangers, or terrorists, or drug dealers. We are fighting vampires.”
The Commissioner sputtered, ”I think I know-”
Arkeley cut him off. ”In the dark ages a vampire could live for decades unopposed, feeding nightly on people whose only defense was to bar their windows and lock their doors and always, always, be home before sundown. When it became necessary to slay a vampire there was only one way it could be done. There were no guns and certainly no jackhammers at the time. The vampire slayers would gather up every able-bodied male in the community. The mob of them would go against the vampire with torches and spears and sticks if they had to. Very many of them would die in the first onslaught but eventually enough of them would pile on top to hold the vampire down.” He paused and raised one finger in the air. ”Let me be clear about this, they quite literally climbed on top of the vampire to keep him from running away, pressing their own bodies against his, exposing themselves to his toothy maw by necessity. Those who made it this far would usually die as the vampire struggled to get free. Often enough the vampire would get free and the process would start over. Eventually our forefathers would prevail, but only through sheer dint of numbers. The men-and the boys-in those mobs did not s.h.i.+rk from their duty. They understood their terrible, grievous losses were the only way to protect their villages and their families.”