Chapter 1
“Bellaiche has agreed to meet with us,” Marcel Chavinier
told his two captains, setting down the letter he had received from the
leader of the vampires. “Tomorrow night at midnight, in the Père
Lachaise cemetery. One of us and one of them. More than that, and they
see it as a declaration of war.” He dropped his bombshell and waited.
He knew the two men in front of him on the other side of the desk. Had
known them since they were little more than children when first Alain,
then Thierry, had arrived at l’Association Nationale de Sorcellerie to
learn the wizarding craft.
“No way in hell,” Thierry Dumont exploded. Marcel
almost smiled. Thierry’s reaction was completely predictable. Now if
Alain Magnier’s was as predictable, they would be able to make some
plans. “We are not sending a lone wizard to meet with a vampire. What if
the vampire isn’t alone? What if he attacks? What if…?” The old
diplomat turned general listened to Thierry’s ravings and waited for the
other man to stop him.
“I’ll do it,” Alain interrupted his best friend and
fellow soldier. “It’s a gesture of good faith. They’re offering to make
one by sending just one vampire. We have to make one in return by
sending just one wizard. Besides Marcel and you, I’m probably the most
powerful of anyone we would trust to send. It will take more than one
vampire to overwhelm me. You know they’re our best hope, Thierry. Let
me do this. We’ll agree to a length of time, and if I’m not back by the
agreed upon time, you can bring in the cavalry and rescue me. It’s a
chance we have to take.”
There was one other reason for him to go rather than
Thierry, but given Thierry’s reaction any time it was mentioned, it was
a reason best left unspoken. Thierry still had a chance at happiness.
Alain had lost that chance two years ago. If one of them was going to
this meeting with the vampires, better that it was him, not his friend.
Alain knew the risk Marcel had taken even contacting
the leader of the vampires. To admit that they were not strong enough to
defeat Pascal Serrier, the powerful dark wizard who had started this
war, took a lot of courage. It also left them incredibly vulnerable if
Jean Bellaiche decided against them. Not only would this fight
determine the future complexion of their society, but it was also
upsetting the balance of the world. Not just the balance between natural
and supernatural, but the balance of elemental powers that stabilized
everything. Without wizards to keep that energy in check, everyone and
everything would succumb to chaos. Alain knew it. Marcel knew it.
Thierry knew it. Alain hoped, for their sake, that the vampires knew it
as well. They had not been able to get an edge in the war and casualties
were mounting swiftly on both sides. They needed reinforcements before
there was no one left to save.
Thierry muttered curses under his breath, the air
around him sparking with the power called up by his emotions.
“Calm down, Thierry,” Marcel ordered. He knew the
wards surrounding his office would hold if Thierry’s magic got away from
him, but the younger man needed to learn self-control. “I agree with
Alain, so unless you’re offering to go in his place, you need to help me
figure out how to keep him safe.”
“Bad idea,” Alain said before Thierry could reply.
“Your temper is too unpredictable. You’d fly off the handle at some
imagined slight and we’d be in the same situation or worse. Trust me to
handle this.”
“I trust you. It’s Bellaiche and his kind I don’t
trust,” Thierry retorted. “If you haven’t checked in within half an hour
after the meet, I’m coming after you, guns blazing.”
Alain agreed to Thierry’s condition. It made sense to
have a backup plan. The vampires had never shown any sign of getting
involved in this conflict between wizards, but that was no reason to
take unnecessary chances. After all, they were about to ask the vampires
to get involved. Serrier was racist, not stupid. If he had not already
had the idea of approaching some of the other magical races, he would
soon, assuming he could overcome his ingrained disdain for those he
considered inferior. They could not afford to assume he would not.
***********
Alain thought carefully about every aspect of his
preparations. He was willing to give the vampires a chance to prove
their good will, but he had seen too much since this war began to trust
naively. If he had to go to this meet alone, he was going to be as
prepared as magic and modernity could make him. He dressed simply in
dark wool pants and a black turtleneck sweater. If it had occurred to
him to look, he would have seen as well that the dark colors were the
perfect foil for his sandy blond hair and lightly tanned skin. He had
stopped caring about the impact of his appearance, though, two years
ago. Only practicalities remained. The long cloak he used for winter
would keep him warm in the cool October night and was easy to discard if
it came to a fight. His pants and sweater were loose enough that they
would not hinder his movements, but not so loose that they would provide
a hand-hold for a foe. His cell phone fit into a holder on his belt. It
would be no use in a fight, but if he did not call in, Thierry would
know there was a problem. He had long ago mastered the art of wandless
magic, one of only a few wizards who had expended the time and energy it
took, but he carried a wand anyway. Giving it up or putting it out in
the open might help convince the vampire that his intentions were
honorable. Outside l’ANS, few people knew wizards could do wandless
magic.
He was about ready to leave when someone knocked on
his door. Reaching out with his magic, he felt Thierry’s aura outside.
With a flick of his wrist, he released the wards on his door to let his
friend inside. “What are you doing here?” Alain asked as he swirled his
cloak around his shoulders.
“Going with you,” Thierry answered.
“You’ll get us both killed that way,” Alain retorted.
“Not to the meet,” Thierry elaborated. “Just in the
métro. I’ll find a bar still open nearby and that way, if there’s
trouble, I can be there fast.
Alain agreed and the two friends set out for Anvers,
the nearest subway stop, resetting the wards that protected Alain’s
apartment as they left. It was an easy ride down line number three to
the Père Lachaise stop. Alain and Thierry made it in plenty of time,
giving them the chance to find a bar for Thierry. “I’ll call in half an
hour,” Alain promised as he left Thierry sitting in the little café just
down the street from the entrance to the cemetery.
Arriving at the cemetery, Alain stretched his senses,
magical and physical, to check out the situation. His magic detected no
aura, no presence, but he knew better than to believe he was alone. For
all he knew, the vampires had a way of masking their presence from those
who were hunting them. The wind whistled around him, blocking any subtle
sounds he might have heard to indicate if the vampire had yet arrived,
and the shadows from the monuments and trees kept his eyes from piercing
the darkness. Deciding not to take any risks, Alain drew his wand to
open the gate. If the vampire had arrived, he did not want to give away
his knack for wandless magic. It was his ace in the hole if he needed to
get out of there in a hurry. The gate opened soundlessly, an added
benefit of the spell he used. He slipped inside and shut the gate
behind him, leaving it unlocked, one less barrier for Thierry if he had
to arrive in a hurry or for Alain himself if he had to leave quickly.
“Throw your wand down,” a disembodied voice said from
the darkness. Alain spun around, seeking the speaker. The voice was
velvety soft, with a distinct British accent for all that he had spoken
in French.
Alain did as the voice directed, dropping his wand and
taking a step back. “I’m unarmed now,” Alain said. “Step out where I
can see you.”
Movement in the shadows drew his eye, and he turned to
face the vampire. Alain knew that members of the various magical races
came in all shapes and sizes, so he had no preconceived notion of what
the vampire would look like, or even if he would meet a male or a
female, but he had not expected the vision before him. Dark curls
surrounded a face the color of honey, with dark eyes and hairless skin.
The vampire was about Alain’s height, and likewise dressed in black. The
vampire, however, wore no cloak or coat against the chill air, a stark
reminder to Alain of the nature of his counterpart. He knew that
vampires did not age physically once they were made, so the creature
could have been anywhere from the twenty years he appeared to be to
hundreds of years old. He had been captured on the cusp of manhood, old
enough to be an adult, yet young enough to appear innocent still. Alain
reminded himself that this was a vampire, and that, as such, he had not
been innocent since he was made.