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The Obscurati

Page 5

by Wynn Wagner


  “I want the three of you to be Obscurati,” the queen said (only she used the real name of the group).

  “Hamlet,” Pierre said, “you are a very effective fighter. I have seen you grow over the years, and I’m not sure I ever want to fight against you.”

  Hamlet blushed. Yes, vampires blush. It isn’t pretty.

  “Mårten,” Pierre continued, “your fighting has improved greatly, but you are still the most insane warrior I have ever seen. You are completely out of control in a fight, and that makes you scary and dangerous. That’s one reason you are here. But the main reason is that when you fire a sniper rifle, you don’t ever miss. You can drop a rogue vampire from hundreds of meters away, and the bad guy won’t even know what hit him. You can track vampires as well as the best trackers in the world.”

  “But….” I started to say.

  “I know, you want to mix it up,” Pierre said. “You like fighting, and I’m sure you will see some of that, but that isn’t the main reason you are here. You are a deadly sniper and a first-rate tracker.”

  Oberon shifted his weight. He was being left out of this, and that made me uncomfortable.

  “Oberon,” the queen said. “You study munitions.”

  “Yes, ma’am.”

  “Is it a hobby, or did you study engineering?”

  “Both… but mainly a hobby now.”

  “Never a straight answer from you.”

  “He’s not ‘straight’, ma’am,” I said.

  “Thank you, Mårten,” she said. “I’m five thousand years old, but I’m not blind.”

  “I studied engineering in college,” Oberon said, “but that was just after the First World War.”

  “Okay, I’d like you to take your engineering and get it up to date. We lost several members of the Obscurati in a fight in India a few months ago, and it was because our warriors were outgunned. I don’t want to lose Hamlet, Mårten, or anybody else just because some jackass vampire has better science. We can no longer send a dozen warriors into a situation, because technology has made it possible for one bad vampire to wipe out the entire team.”

  “I understand,” Oberon said solemnly. I could tell he was relaxing. The queen had got him here for a real job, not just because he and I were a couple.

  “I am going to be sending you some engineering equipment, machinery that you can use to make prototypes of whatever you are working on. I will also be sending you an engineer, temporarily. He has a PhD in engineering, so he can get you started on projects. You don’t have to limit yourself to what he suggests. He is just there to get you pointed in the right direction and to make sure you know what all is available these days. Be writing down questions for him.”

  “He is human,” Pierre said, “so you will quickly find that he doesn’t think like a vampire.”

  The queen added, “I need you to be more advanced than the best rogue vampire. I need you to be more devious than the most underhanded bad guy.”

  “What about Menz?” I asked. “Won’t he know what’s going on?”

  “Menz is smart,” the queen said. “I’ve known him for a thousand years. Yes, he will probably know what is going on, but I’m sure he will never say anything because he knows the rules. If he asks, tell him you are doing some things for me. If Menz objects to you using the basement, we will find another location for the workshop. I know him well enough to say that I think… I mean… let’s just say that he won’t say anything. You ask a good question, but Menz will not have issues. If anyone else asks, tell them it is a hobby.”

  “Remember how we took out the vampires that kidnapped Paco?” Pierre asked.

  We all nodded.

  “That was the Obscurati in action. When something bad happens, you get no advance notice. Either the queen or I will notify you where to go. Someone will always meet you at the site. It is always one person, so if you see nobody or if you see more than one person, leave at once. There might be trouble. The one person who meets you is your guide. Listen to that vampire, because it could be the difference between life and death for you and the others.”

  Pierre paused to let everything sink in.

  “I will come to Bavaria every few months just to check in,” he continued. “Mårten, work on your technique. You are mainly going to be our tracker and our sniper, but let Hamlet make sure you’re the best fighter possible.”

  “Okay,” I said. Hamlet gave me a sly grin.

  “Oberon,” Pierre said, “you are not a fighter.”

  “He has other talents,” Hamlet said.

  “Halt die Klappe. Schweinerei,” Oberon said before remembering the queen was in the room. He forgets English when he gets angry. I’ve seen him get so flustered that he speaks German to me and English to everybody else.

  “Entschuldigen Sie mich,” he whispered.

  She just smiled and winked.

  “He does have other talents,” Pierre said with a grin. “The Obscurati needs more members like Oberon. The guys who died in India might still be alive if we had had Oberon working on fighting tools. Oberon, can you do this?”

  “I’d love to,” he said with that absolute self-confidence that I’ve grown to love. Oberon never merely tried to do anything. He just set his mind to it and made it happen.

  “So keep an open mind and run your engineering lab or machine shop to come up with new ways to make Hamlet and Mårten even more lethal than they already are.”

  AND that was it. We didn’t chat with the queen about the affairs of the European vampires. We didn’t find out how large the Obscurati is. We were clueless as to how many vampires existed in Europe.

  That day, we became Obscurati. We became part of the vampire “special ops” representing the queen of Europe. We became the vampires that other vampires never want to see. We were part of a worldwide group of the scariest vamps anywhere. I didn’t feel scary, and I was convinced that if you tried to tell anybody that Hamlet was scary, they’d die from laughter. Friggin’ nelly vampires.

  There’s no uniform or badge. There’s no ID card or secret handshake. Diddly-squat.

  We didn’t even get our names on a cake or anything. Wait, vampires don’t eat cake. Never mind.

  The truth is that there is nothing to stop some master vampire from popping up to claim he is Obscurati.

  Wait, no real Obscurati would ever make such a claim. And if another vampire did and we found out about it, it would be the last claim the vampire ever made.

  Hamlet, Oberon, and I became members of the vampire Delta Force in Europe. We became vampire Yamam, and, in theory, nobody could know. When called, we’d just make somebody dead and not even get a newspaper story or “attaboy.”

  Chapter 6

  OBERON was born in Dresden in the eastern part of Germany in 1915. He is fifteen years younger than I am. I turned him when he was the same age I was when I was turned. I was born fifteen years sooner, but we are really the same body-age: twenty. It’s a weird vampire thing that is hard to explain.

  His birth name was actually Viktor. His hometown of Dresden was full of great museums and music. It was the cultural heart of the German state of Saxony. Viktor grew up surrounded by the very best of European culture.

  He was smart—nerdy, maybe—in school. He told me that some of the other boys taunted him because he was so pretty. Viktor was beautiful, but never ruggedly handsome.

  He had an older brother, a younger brother, and a younger sister. His older brother was a little embarrassed to be related to Viktor, but he was much older and was already on his own when Viktor was an infant. By the time Viktor was ten or eleven, the older brother stopped coming to the house when Viktor was there. His own brother rejected Viktor because he wasn’t rugged enough.

  At school, it was Viktor who had to stand up for his little brother and sister. He was closer to their ages, so they all went to the same school. Even though he wasn’t rugged and manly, Viktor taught himself how to protect those he loved.

  Over the years, he trained
himself to be quiet. It was his idea of self-preservation, but it worked to make him more mysterious. The bullies could tease him over his looks but not because he was effeminate. They would have had to tease him because he was so quiet. He only spoke when spoken to and almost never looked anyone in the eyes. It was like Viktor was in a separate universe. He created a shell, and the little boy would hide inside.

  Maybe he had to be like that.

  His father beat his mother and all the kids. It was savage, and it happened consistently. Viktor says he had a broken arm or leg several times a year, and they were all caused by the beatings. The sister had bruises, and his little brother almost always had a cigar burn or two. The father must have been a real piece of work, and he thought he would keep getting away with it forever. Daddy made a big mistake: you never should underestimate Viktor/Oberon. He stays quiet, and he looks meek. He never got angry, but he knew how to protect his little brother and sister. The world had forced him to understand cruelty and protection.

  What kind of man beats a thirteen-year-old kid and a ten-year-old girl? What kind of father puts cigar burns on a six-year-old boy’s arms? A really sick-ass man, that’s what.

  One summer night when he was thirteen, his father caught Viktor having sex with a fourteen-year-old boy. Victor had hit puberty when he was twelve or thirteen. That is an early age for puberty, I think, but that’s what he said. The boys weren’t making any noise, but his father just walked into the bedroom to find Viktor’s dick inside the other boy’s ass. The father started beating Viktor and the other kid and then stormed out of the room screaming. Viktor and the kid got dressed and ran downstairs to the kitchen.

  The father was going wild, attacking everyone. Just as he was about to clobber the other kid with a rolling pin, Viktor picked up a knife and plunged it into his father’s chest. The man went down with a surprised look, like he couldn’t believe that Viktor would actually stab him. His mother was screaming. His fuck-buddy was standing against the far wall, afraid to say or do anything. Viktor noticed that his sister had come into the kitchen and was hiding under the dining table. His little brother was probably still asleep.

  So they had a body to deal with. His mother was hysterical and wasn’t going to be any help. Job one was to get her calm. Viktor talked to his mother for half an hour until the woman could stop shaking long enough to pay attention to what needed to be done. Viktor told his mother that everything would be okay and that she would be better off without her husband. He told her how much he beat all the children, and she seemed shocked. She had either been living in denial or really hadn’t known how much of a monster the husband was. Somewhere along the way, her motherly instincts kicked in. It was like the motherhood engine roared to life, and she knew that it would be better for her family. She seemed to know that Viktor had acted the only way he could. He had protected his mother and brother and sister.

  Viktor’s boyfriend helped with the body. Viktor cut his father into pieces, while his mother and boyfriend stuffed each piece into bags. His mother was crying; the other boy was crying or in shock. I think Viktor was just paying attention to what needed to be done. Stoic. If he had any residual anger, he was keeping it inside. Viktor had a job to do: dispose of dear old Daddy.

  When he told me this story, he was quiet and calm and matter-of-fact. He was full of steely resolve. It wasn’t that he avoided emotions or kept things bottled up, but inside he was one of the strongest and quietest people I’ve ever known. He had to be, for self-preservation.

  While his mother stayed to clean the kitchen, the two boys put all the bags into a cart and headed for the woods that began behind the house. The other boy was shaking, and neither of them said anything. Viktor knew that animals would come and scavenge the body parts. They emptied a bag every dozen meters. When the cart was empty, the boys tossed it and the empty bags into a river and sat for hours.

  His friend cried, but Viktor just stared at the creek to watch the cart float away. No comfort. No anger. It was what it was.

  The boyfriend promised never to tell anyone what had happened, but Viktor knew he couldn’t risk it. Viktor didn’t want to live his whole life looking over his shoulder, wondering if the boy or his own mother had talked. He told the boyfriend to report what had happened to the police, but not to tell them about cutting up the body. He was just supposed to say that Viktor had hauled the body off somewhere. He asked the boy to give him about an hour head start. They hugged and parted. The other boy was shaking, out of fear or shock.

  Victor killed his father at age thirteen. Society wasn’t able to protect his family, so he had to do it. Can a kid ever get over that kind of trauma? If the police found out, he would be locked up or executed. If they didn’t, he would still have to live with the memory of that night. That kind of memory would never grow dim with time. That kind of wound would never become a scab or scar.

  He went back to the house and told his mother that he was leaving. He changed clothes and left the bloody ones where the police would find them. Viktor left Dresden forever. He would never see his mother or brother or sister again. Instead of suffering with broken arms and legs, he was going to have to live the rest of his life with a broken heart. He would have to know that the thirteen-year-old kid inside had become a killer, justified or not.

  At that moment, Viktor simply ceased to exist. He hitched a ride on a freight train and decided his new identity would be Oberon, just because he liked the sound of the name. It was a good German name, and I don’t think he knew it was also one of the lead characters in Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream. All he had was a new name, one change of clothes, a picture of his mother, and a mind full of the most awful memories any child can be asked to carry. He knew that he was a murderer and that he could never see the family he loved.

  Somewhere in Bavaria, he jumped off the train. Menz found him walking through the woods on his estate and took Oberon in. Menz never demanded an explanation. I think he refused sex when Oberon offered it. Menz just made sure he was well-fed and offered him a job. Oberon joined the human staff at Menz’s Bavarian estate as a groundskeeper. When he was older, Oberon became a blood donor. Menz offered him free schooling, like he did all the blood donors. Menz had papers drawn up to match Oberon’s identity, but I think I’m the only one who knows his real name and the reason Viktor had to disappear. The papers were forgeries, but they would pass the closest official scrutiny. Menz had his methods.

  There’s no statute of limitations for murder, but he could go public today. He could go on TV and tell the world. Nobody would believe that it happened in 1928 or that he is now a hundred years old. The story might get him locked up for being crazy, but not for killing Daddy.

  Oberon studied engineering in college, and he was an okay student. When the First World War broke out, Menz let Oberon stay at the estate. The teenager went into hiding because he didn’t want to fight. Oberon hates to fight, and he almost never gets angry. He is one of the most even-tempered humans or vampires I’ve known, and he is so quiet and smooth.

  I always wonder if his demeanor is genetic or because he still keeps himself boxed up after being beaten so relentlessly as a child. He never wanted to talk about it. It took me fifty years to get him to open up as much as he did. I never pushed too hard. Of course I wanted to know, but I respected it as a sensitive topic. There were facts about his childhood that I just didn’t need to know. There are still holes in what I know about his childhood, and I accept that. I didn’t need to open all those old wounds. If he ever wants to talk, he knows I will be a good listener.

  I wondered if there was some sexual abuse from his father or brother, but he never wanted to talk about it. I didn’t push the issue. When he is ready to tell me, I will be there to listen.

  After he told me the story, he reached for my hand and squeezed it. He stared at the ground while holding my hand. What was going on inside that head? It can’t be healthy to internalize so much pain, but he never showed so much as a second of
anger toward his father or his life on the run.

  During World War II, I know that Oberon always watched for news about Dresden. He saw his older brother’s name on a list of those killed near Stalingrad, and his only reaction was a single nod of his head: no love between those two. Oberon wasn’t pleased that his brother had been killed, but he accepted the news with more calmness than I could imagine. One nod of the head, and the chapter on his older brother was closed. The brother who rejected him as a kid was dead.

  He feared the Allies would bomb Dresden or that the Russians would overrun the city, and he was always pleased when there was no news. Dresden was spared. There were some military targets, but it was mainly a cultural center. All the buildings were historic, and they stood without any destruction. It had become a city of refugees and prisoners of war. The population had grown to over a million by 1945. The war was almost over. Dresden would be saved.

  Then came February 13, 1945: British and American airplanes dropped 650,000 incendiary bombs into the middle of that ancient city over the course of three days. It created the largest firestorm ever seen. The fire caused winds as powerful as a Texas tornado. It fed on itself, and Dresden was consumed. German newspapers said 250,000 people were killed. It was a holocaust all to itself. Officials later said the death toll was much lower, but it was tough on Oberon. Winston Churchill even said the bombing was “unwise,” but that wasn’t a consolation for those who knew people in the city.

  It was one of the few times that I saw him cry. His family. His friends. They were all gone.

  I KNOW that the Nazis were awful people and had to be stopped. The insanity started without anyone noticing. Germany was brutalized after the Great War. Our borders were redrawn, and we were forced to pay huge sums of money. We had no money, of course, but France demanded what we had.

  In 1936, the country almost tossed Hitler out of office because the humans were starving. The chancellor had paid a huge sum of money to the farmers so they could buy seeds. The military wanted the funds, but Hitler told them to do without. Guns or seeds? You would think this was an easy decision, but it was very controversial at the time.

 

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