Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
he said, extending his hand.
Abe shook it. “Likewise, Mr. Seward, likewise.”
“You are doubtless aware of Mr. Seward’s reputation?” asked Henry.
“I am.”
“Then you must know that he is a favorite to be nominated this time around.”
“Of course.”
“Of course,” said Henry. “But tell me… did you know that Seward here has hunted and destroyed nearly as many vampires as you have?”
Abe had to bite his lip to keep his jaw from dropping. Bookish, privileged little Seward—a vampire hunter? Impossible.
“Revelations,” said Henry. “Revelations are what bring us together tonight.” Henry paced in front of the hearth.
“I have brought you here,” he said, “because my colleagues wished to see for themselves the purpose that I have seen in you. To see this Abraham Lincoln I have spoken of these many years. I have brought you here because they wanted proof that you were capable of what we ask; to judge you directly before going any further.”
And how shall I be judged? By the expediency with which I behead them?
A man’s voice rang out of the darkness: “I am sure we can find a more agreeable method than that, Mr. Lincoln.”
A few scattered laughs echoed through the room. Henry silenced them with a wave of his hand.
“It is already done,” he said. “From the moment you were carried into this room, they saw your past and your pain; peered into your soul—just as I have. Had you been deemed unworthy, you would not have been permitted to wake among us.”
“ ‘Us…’ ” said Abe. “I have long believed that vampires form no alliances.”
“Desperate times. Our enemies have allied themselves—so must we. They have recruited living men to their cause—so have we.”
Henry stopped pacing.
“There is a war coming, Abraham,” he said. “It is not a war of man, but it is man who shall spill his blood fighting it—for it concerns his very right to be free.
“A war… ,” he continued. “And you of all men must win it.”
There was nothing else now—no vampires in the mezzanines, no Seward or silver tea service… there was only Henry.
“There are those of my kind,” he said, “who choose to remain in the shadows. Who cling to that last piece of themselves that is human. We are content to feed and be forgotten. To go about our cursed existence in relative peace, killing only when our hunger becomes unbearable. But there are others of my kind… those who see themselves as lions among sheep. As kings—superior to man in every way. Why, then, should they be confined to darkness? Why should they fear man?
“It is a conflict that began long before there was an America. A conflict between two groups of vampires: those who seek to coexist with man, and those who would see all of mankind in chains—bred, raised, and corralled as cattle.”
Judge us not equally, Abraham…
“These fifty years,” said Henry, “we have done everything in our power to prevent this war. Each of the errands I have sent you on—each has been with the aim of destroying those who would see it hastened, and your efforts—those of Seward and others—have indeed slowed its progress. But we can no longer hope to prevent it. Indeed, not four weeks ago we saw the first battle fought here on the streets of New York.”
Strange sightings… impossible feats…
“Our enemies are shrewd,” said Henry. “They have made their cause the cause of the South. Allied themselves with living men who defend slavery as fervently as they. But these men have been deceived into quickening their own doom, for Negroes are only the first of the living to be enslaved. If we lose, Abraham, then it is only a matter of time before every living man, woman, and child in America is a slave.”
Abe felt as if he might be sick.
“That, old friend, is why we must not lose. That is why we have allied ourselves. We are vampires who believe in the rights of man,” said Henry. “We are the Union… and we have plans for you, old friend.”
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
PART III
PRESIDENT
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
TEN
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
A House Divided
“A house divided against itself cannot stand.” I believe this government cannot endure, permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved—I do not expect the house to fall—but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other.
—Abraham Lincoln, accepting the Republican
Party’s
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