Sang Sacré
The fictional Buffista City. With a variety of neighborhoods, climates, and an Evil Genius or two, Sang Sacre is where we'd all live if it were real. Jump in -- find a neighborhood, start a parade, become a superhero. It's what you make it.
History. Map.
The man in Interrogation A was definitely not a robot. He was tall for a human, or perhaps the way he sat up straighter than most humans made him look taller than most humans Charpe had met. He was well dressed, and looked remarkably unrumpled for a man who'd been found lying in a patch of dandelions. "So, Mr. Reeves is it? I'm Captain Charpe. The sergeant says you told him quite a story."
"If you say so, sir. I did not embellish it, if that is what you are wondering about." It wasn't so much a denial as a statement of fact. The man seemed very self-possessed.
"No. Mr. Reeves, I don't wonder if you embellished it. I do wonder what you were you doin' wanderin' about in Greenwood after dark? There's not a lot out there, and strange things have been known to happen."
"I was on my way to an appointment with a prospective employer. The address I was given is in the park."
"Let me guess. Castle Gudanov?"
"Indeed, sir. Might I inquire how you determined that?"
"It's the only private residence in the park." Not to mention the fact that Charpe had met a robot called Reeves at the Castle, a robot that spoke in the same manner and voice as this Mr. Reeves. "What was the job?"
"I was given to understand by the agency that Mr. Gudanov required a butler."
"But you say you never got there?"
"I don't know, sir." It was the first time in the interview that Reeves actually looked somewhat discomfitted. "As I told the sergeant, the last thing I remember was walking along Dunsany Road. There was a noise and a bright light from above, and then the next thing I knew, Mr. Phlint was looking down at me." He paused for a moment. "I shall need to call the agency to let them know I missed the appointment."
"I'll have Sergeant Chopper let them know. He'll need to check some details with them anyway. Now, is there anything else you can remember."
As Reeves thought, odd sounds started to come from the direction of the front desk. It sounded like someone was running a vacuum cleaner. Charpe vaguely remembered something about the city hiring a cleaning service, but he'd assumed that it would come during the night shift. Anyway, nothing Chopper couldn't handle. Reeves seemed to think of something, but just a quickly dismissed it.
"You had a thought, Mr. Reeves?"
"I almost hesitate to say, sir, but there was one thing."
"What?"
"The squirrels, sir." He hesitated. "It almost seemed as though they were watching me."
Chopper entered the room a bit faster than he might usually.
"Beggin' your pardon, sir, but the other Reeves is out front, and he's brandishin' a vacuum cleaner."
Reeves looked perplexed. "Other Reeves, sir?"
"Let's just say that it's likely you were missin' for a bit more than a day," Charpe replied as he headed for the door.
The figure standing in front of the front desk had accomplished in thirty seconds what the combined manpower of the Watch hadn't been able to do in over a week. It had completely cleared the waiting room of people. Just one glance at the quarter ton of mobile stainless steel that had come through the front door with a weapon that whined like a vacuum cleaner from Hell where its right arm ought to be had been enough to convince most folks that it was long past time to wash their socks, and that they'd better get right on it. Of course, had they not been in such a hurry to rinse out their hosiery and other soiled articles of clothing, they might have noticed that the robot's right arm was, in fact, a vacuum cleaner. They also might have noticed that the weapon the robot brandished in its left hand was merely the world's most dangerous looking scrubby sponge.
Charpe, Chopper, and Reeves watched from around the corner of the corridor, just barely out of sight. "What kind of weapon is that?" Chopper asked quietly.
The human Reeves answered. "It's a Robinson-Brooks Dust Demon 3000 vortex action wet-dry vacuum cleaner, sergeant. It's the state of the art in atmospheric displacement technology. A recent article in one of the consumer magazines rated it a 'Best buy.'"
"A vacuum cleaner? How dangerous is it?" asked Charpe.
"Dust bunnies have been known to quake in terror at the mere mention of its name, sir."
"I'm more concerned with somewhat larger creatures, Mr. Reeves."
"Of course, sir. I think it unlikely that it would cause any permanent damage, sir, although one might expect that direct contact with the inlet tube may produce what I believe is known in the vernacular as 'one whale of a hickey.'"
Corporal Harrass was still standing behind the desk, relieved for the moment that most of the mob of citizenry had disappeared. He looked the robot up and down with a sneer. "May I 'elp you?" he said loudly enough to be heard over the noise from the vacuum.
The robot reached over to his right arm with his left hand and flipped a switch next to a bright yellow light. The light went out, and the din began to fade away. "Excuse me," it said quietly, "but I'm here to see Captain Charpe."
Charpe stepped forward from the corridor. "Here I am. What do ya want, Reeves?"
"Ah, Captain Charpe. I hope you will excuse this imposition, but my employer has sent me to retrieve the phase converter. I must warn you that if you do not produce it forthwith, I have been instructed to use all means at my disposal to retrieve it."
"Ya have, have ya? And what happens if I refuse to give it to ya?"
"Then I am afraid, sir, that I shall have to give your headquarters a thorough scrubbing until you cough up the goods, as it were."
Charpe went back to Chopper and Reeves, and asked Chopper, "What do ya think, Pit?"
"Well, sir, Gudanov has been keepin' his activities confined to Greenwood, so he is meetin' his end of the bargain ya proposed."
Charpe thought a moment, then, "Yeah, you're right. Okay..."
Reeves coughed quietly, then spoke up. "If I might make a suggestion, sir."
"Yes, Mr. Reeves?"
"Well, sir, the building is a bit, er, dingy. Perhaps it might work to your advantage not to return the item right away."
Chopper added, "Aye, it could help, sir, the budget bein' what it is an' all."
Charpe nodded, then turned back towards the robot. "Sorry, Reeves, I can't turn it over just yet."
"Then I shall have to do my worst, sir. I'm afraid I did warn you."
"Ya did, and now we must suffer the consequences. Do ya have any preference as to where ya'd like to start?"
"I can start here if that is consistent with your wishes, sir, and then if you could provide someone to point me towards any other areas that I can sanitize, I'd be most appreciative." The robot reached for the switch on his right arm.
"That will be fine, Reeves." He turned to Chopper. "Get Knobsmasher up here."
"You missed a spot," said Constable Knobsmasher as he indicated the one remaining smudge in the cell. He was sitting on one end the bunk within the cell.
"Ah, thank you for pointing that out, Constable." The robot extended its left index finger, and a small quantity of cleaning solution squirted out of the tip onto the stain. It followed that with a vigorous swab with the world's most dangerous looking scrubby sponge, completely obliterating the offending globules of grease. The cell positively gleamed.
"You're very good at cleanin', you know," said Knobby. "A real professional, you might say."
"Thank you, Constable. I did warn Captain Charpe that I would be merciless in my assault upon the grime in this building if he did not accede to my employer's demands. Has he decided to hand over the phase converter yet?" The robot looked hopeful.
"No, not yet 'e asn't." He got up from the bunk. "Can't imagine why not. All this cleanliness is terrifyin' me."
"If I may say so, Constable, your Captain must have nerves of steel to run this sort of risk." The robot did a quick tidy of the cot, the end of its right arm rotating until an evil looking upholstery brush locked in place at the tip. The vacuum spooled up to full power, and quickly removed a considerable accumulation of dirt and dust from the spot where Knobby had been sitting. The robot followed this up by straightening and tucking the covers until one could bounce a half-dollar off them.
"The Captain is a tough one, there's no mistake. 'E's got a policy 'bout negotiatin' with terrorists, see. If you ask me, you're goin' to have to do some serious scrubbin' to get 'im to change 'is mind."
The robot turned back to Knobsmasher. "Well, there's nothing for it, then. I shall just have to continue on this rampage."
"I'll take you to the next cell then, shall I?"
"Thank you, Constable. That would be very helpful."
Meanwhile, Charpe and Reeves (the human one) were in the squad room, watching the robot on a security monitor as it terrorized the Yard's wide assortment of dust critters. Across the room, Chopper was using the phone at his desk.
"Sir, I couldn't help but notice that the robot's voice sounds remarkably similar to my own, and that neither you nor the sergeant seem surprised by that. I can't help but think that there is something that you haven't told me yet regarding the robot," said Reeves.
Charpe looked up from the monitor at Reeves. "Mr. Reeves, Sergeant Chopper and I met that robot at Castle Gudanov three weeks ago. It told us it was Gudanov's butler."
"Three weeks ago? That seems hardly likely, sir. I was still employed then. How would Mr. Gudanov have obtained a copy of my voice and mannerisms? It's all seems very mysterious."
Charpe nodded. "I think the problem is that we've been assumin' that your appointment at the castle was last night. Just out of curiosity, Mr. Reeves, what date do ya think today is?"
Reeves answered. Charpe slowly shook his head, then turned around the desk calendar at the station so Reeves could see it. "Just as I thought. You've actually been missin' for..."
"Twenty-four days, sir," said Chopper, returning from his desk. "At least, that's when the agency said Mr. Reeves' interview was scheduled. They also said that Mr. Reeves had been employed by Gudanov since then."
"What?" Reeves looked dumfounded for just a moment, but regained his composure quickly. "I see, sergeant."
"'Fraid so, Mr. Reeves," Chopper continued, "I just called your agency to check a few things, an' they said that Gudanov's assistant, Hans, had called to confirm your engagement as butler for one month, an' that your wages an' the referral fee had been paid in full."
"I see," said Reeves again.
"Also, Mr. Henberry would like ya to call him when ya have a moment. Ya can use my phone if ya like." Chopper pointed towards his desk.
"I see," but Reeves slowly shook his head in the manner of one whom, in fact, does not see, then stood up. "If you will excuse me, sirs." He walked over to Chopper's desk and began to dial.
Chopper looked at Charpe. "Whadda ya think, sir?"
"I think it looks like Gudanov used our Mr. Reeves as a model of some sort for his Reeves, Pit. And given that he paid him, Reeves may have agreed to it."
"Well if he agreed, sir, why the bright lights? Why leave him settin' in a dandelion patch with no memory?"
Charpe shrugged. "Mad scientists seem to be a lot like wizards. They love to put on a show." The sound of shouting began to filter in from the front desk. Charpe could easily make out Harrass's voice. "Sounds like things are getting back to normal out front."
"Aye, sir. Didn't take long, did it? Maybe we should just bolt the front door."
Reeves hung up the phone, and came back over to the two orcs. "Well then. Captain Charpe, if there's nothing more."
"Already have another job lined up for ya then?" Charpe asked.
"No, sir. It's quite the opposite, in fact. It appears that having one of its valets found dazed in a dandelion patch is not consistent with the image the agency wishes to project to prospective clients. They will no longer represent me."
"They gave ya the sack?" said an incredulous Chopper. "Sure an' I'm sorry, Reeves. If I'd known..."
"As you say, sergeant, and please don't chastise yourself." He paused, distracted as the shouting out front got louder for a moment, then continued. "Perhaps it's for the best. The truth is that of late I've not been totally content in my work."
"Really?" said Charpe.
"I'm afraid so, sir. I've come to find that life in service is not quite what it once was. Chances of finding a stable position have become very long indeed. That point was driven home rather forcefully when my last employer decided to chuck everything to become a physician, further reasoning that as he now would have assistants, he would have no further need for a valet."
"He became a doctor, then, just like that?"
"No, sir. He merely thinks he's a physician. He's currently confined to the Mattedown Clinic for the Bewildered in Dalrymple Gardens. I hear he's frightfully abusive to both patients and caregivers alike. It's a very sad state of affairs."
"I'm sure it is," said Charpe. "So, what are your plans?"
"I... I'm not sure, sir."
A crash, followed by the sound of breaking glass, came from the direction of the front desk, and Chopper hurriedly headed out of the room to investigate.
"Ever considered joinin' the Watch, Mr. Reeves?"
"Sir?" Perplexed would be a good description of the look on Reeves' face.
"It's a simple question. We could use someone like you."
"I fear I must point out, sir, that I have no experience in police work."
"The watch has plenty of people with experience in police work, Mr. Reeves. What the Watch needs right now is someone to handle the front desk, someone who is organized and knows how to deal with the people who walk in through the front door or who call in by phone, someone who can sort the wheat from the chaff, and then assign the proper constable for the job. In short, Greenwood Yard needs a butler. What do ya say?"
"The offer is tempting, sir, but do you think the city would look kindly on your hiring a butler?"
"Well, your title would be Desk Sergeant, but the job is pretty much as I described it. We really could use a man with your talents."
"Then, sir, I accept. When would you like me to commence my duties?"
"How about right now? Welcome to the Watch, Sergeant Reeves." He shook Reeves' hand. "Let's get you a badge."
"Very good, sir."
"Bloody Hel..." The words trailed off as Charpe entered the Yard's lobby. He'd gotten so used to muttering it as he walked through the front doors lately that it was becoming automatic, but today there was no reason. No one was complaining; no one was yelling; no one was even milling about. The lobby was empty except for Sergeant Reeves, who was calmly sitting behind the desk speaking on the telephone.
"Yes, Mrs. Desotelle, that sounds most sinister indeed. I shall dispatch a constable at once... You are quite welcome, ma'am... Good day, Mrs. Desotelle." Reeves greeted Charpe as he hung up the phone. "Good morning, sir."
"Good mornin', sergeant. Mrs. Desotelle bein' plagued by poodles again?"
"Indeed, sir." He checked the duty roster. "Constable Elphcrusher is nearest the Old Quarter. I'll have him stop in to see her directly."
"Tell him to see if he can find any of the Well Behaved to bring along with him. They're good at gettin' situations like this sorted out." Charpe looked over the desk log as Reeves was contacting Elphcrusher. "Quiet mornin', I see. Some might say too quiet. We didn't have another robot burst in and scare everybody off again, did we?"
"No, sir. Speaking of robots, sir, Constable Knobsmasher mentioned that he was running out of things for my doppleganger to clean here in the building, so I suggested to him that perhaps the statuary in Weiler Square could do with a good polish. They are over there now."
"Ah, so that's who they were. I thought they were awfully big to be pigeons. Good idea." He paused and looked around the empty room again. "Now then, Sergeant Reeves, tell me somethin'. Last night when I left, this area was mobbed with people who wished to report crimes and suspicious activity. This mornin' there's no one here. How did you manage to satisfy the public so thoroughly in such a short period of time?"
"I have to confess, sir, that I may have inadvertently driven some of the public away."
"How? Those folks weren't even afraid of Harrass."
"Well, sir, the thought occurred that since it might take some considerable time to handle all those assembled, then perhaps some refreshments would be in order. To that end I took the liberty of having Constable Dobler prepare a small selection of canapés to serve to those waiting."
"Canapés?" Charpe asked.
"Yes, sir, small savory hors d'oeuvres," Reeves explained, indicating the serving tray off to one side of the desk. "At first those present seemed most gratified by the gesture, but then a curious thing happened. People began to leave rather hurriedly, as though they had all suddenly remembered a prior dental appointment."
"That is odd," agreed Charpe, as he looked over the tray, then selected an item and popped it into his mouth. "These are really quite good." He picked up another.
"I believe my mistake was in not taking into account Constable Dobler's preference for, er, non-traditional ingredients in his collations. I fear the human palate is not quite so sophisticated as that of an orc."
"That's a shame," said Charpe, wiping a crumb from his mouth. "These ratatouille miniatures are first rate. Dobler uses real rat, you know, not that fake stuff those posh human restaurants try to pass off as rat."
"Indeed, sir, aubergine is no doubt a poor substitute. At any rate, soon the only persons remaining were those who had business to discuss with the Watch that just couldn't wait. With the crowd disappated, we were able to handle those cases in short order."
"Well then, carry on, sergeant." Charpe grinned. "Well done."
"Very good, sir."
There's a pile of dead men in my living room. OK, a few dead women, too, but for some reason, the majority of the vampire population of Sang Sacre is male.
I stand over the corpse sprawled over the Persian rug. "Are you telling me that turkey narcolepsy affects the undead?"
Bob blinks up at me. There's mashed potato in the corner of his mouth. "Pi-ii-ie . . ."
"I thought it was 'Blo-o-o-od.'"
The other vampires groan in disapproval, but I'm hardly worried. None of them has moved a muscle since the last of the stuffing disappeared. Even Joey, who I banned from the table for sticking olives on the tips of his fangs and grinning at everyone. It was funny the first ten times he did it.
I nudge Bob with my foot. Gently. "I'm going shopping. If you don't hear from me in three hours, come rescue me. I'll be in the Bazaar."
He blinked again and looked as concerned as a creature who has OD's on candied yams can look.
"I'll be fine. Achmed's coming with me. If you're mobile in an hour, there's pie in the kitchen."
A greedy moan worthy of any Hammer film goes up.
"Leave the dishes in the sink. No real dead bodies on the carpet. See you later."
"I just don't get it," Constable Knobsmasher said to Catsmeat Dobler. "Why does your kind call today 'Black Friday'? It's not even a bit cloudy out, much less dark an' stormy. It's what you call an oxymoronic 'oliday, it is."
Dobler was along to observe as Knobsmasher walked a beat through the Old Quarter, Part of Dobler's training in Watch procedures. "If you're a businessman, Knobby, this is, like, the best day of the year. Perfectly sane consumers lose all reason and practically fork the cash over like it was Monopoly money. Black Friday used to be my best day. Folks are in a hurry and can't spare the time for a sit-down lunch, but you offer 'em a nice grilled sausage on a stick at a reasonable price, they'll line up." Dobler sighed. "Damn, those were good times."
"Yeah, but what's that got to do with it bein' Black an' all? There's not a cloud ina sky, no dark lords smitin' folk with flamin' swords and such, nobody runnin' 'round 'ollerin' in a panic."
"You've obviously never gotten caught between two old ladies both trying to buy the last fondue pot from a kiosk in the Medina."
"Can't say as I 'ave..." Knobsmasher was interrupted by a beep from the radio attached to his tunic. "Yeah, sarge," he answered, then cupped his hand over his earpiece to listen. After a moment he said, "We're at Roubidoux an' Deschanel in the Quarter." He listened again, then, "Right you are, sarge. We'll 'ead over an' check it out." He looked over at Catsmeat. "Sarge says a neighbor reported seeing a large number of dead bodies in an apartment in the Folly. We're to check it out."
"Just the two of us?" asked Dobler a bit nervously. "The sarge did say 'bodies', right? You know, as in multiple. Shouldn't we wait for some backup?"
"Nah, no need. Be good trainin' for you. An' you'll get to know a bit more about the neighbor'ood this way."
"How, by taking down the names of the streets along the way while some deranged axe murderer sneaks up behind and adds me to the pile of dead bodies?"
"No need to get all sarcastic like," said Knobsmasher. "I know who lives in that apartment, I does, an' I know she's got some, shall we say, unusual friends. We won't be findin' no dead bodies up there. Well, all right, theys will be dead, but there's dead, and then there is dead. You see?"
"No," said Dobler, "Not a clue." A couple of moments later he asked, "But what if they're the other kind of dead?"
"Well then, Catsy, me ol' chum, we'll 'ave us an old fashioned Black Friday, now won't we."
The door to the apartment was open a crack when the constables arrived at the apartment in question. Through the opening Dobler could see several bodies sprawled about unmoving, all looking deathly pale. "Knobby, they look awfully dead," he whispered, getting a bit pale himself.
"They are," said Knobsmasher, "but as I said..." He opened the door full, strode over to one of the bodies, and poked it with his nightstick. "C'mon there, Bob, wake up."
The body groaned and rolled over, opening it's eye a crack as it looked up at Knobsmasher. "Knobby? What the hell time is it?"
"Noon. Neighbor reported a pile o' dead bodies. Mass turkey coma, then?"
"Yeoop," came the woozy reply.
"Everyone else okay, nobody needin' a couple pints o' AB neg?"
"Well, if you're offering to go..."
"No. Just checkin' your reflexes, I was." He turned to Dobler. "Told you, I did. Nothin' to see here. Just a bunch o' vampires doped up on turkey dinners."
"Vampires?"
"Yeah, whadya expect, zombies? Now let's us go reassure Mrs. McGregor down the 'all."