Dead Man's Bluff
Mark Morrison

	Greetings,
	
	Word has reached me that you are skilled in 
	investigations of, shall we say, an unusual nature. 
	I am in need of a detective with an open mind, and 
	the recognition that not all the things which walk 
	in our world are easily explained by the more 
	rational amongst us. A detective such as yourself.
	
	I invite you to visit me at my home on the Highbury 
	Road, number 117, this Thursday evening. I do look 
	forward to making your acquaintance.
	
	I am indeed,
		
		Yours sincerely,
		     
		     Alexander Czeminski

	The above letter arrives for one of the investigators on the 
Thursday of the appointment.
	If they check the address they can confirm that Czeminski is 
listed as the owner. Apart from that, for official purposes, the man 
simply does not exist. He is not on the tax department's books, no 
birth certificate exists for him, no passport or immigration papers, 
no police record, no phonebook listing. Nothing.
	If they go there during the day, number 117 is a dark stone 
house set away from the road. An unleashed doberman in the yard 
discourages them from entering the property.
	If they go there at night, Czeminski answers the door. He is 
quite handsome. He does not shake hands. The house is dark and dusty 
and there is an odd smell about it. He leads them into a well-stocked 
library, pours them a drink, motions them to be seated, and begins. 
"My good people, I am pleased to have this opportunity to meet you. My 
name is Alexander Czeminski, and I am a vampire." He is.

Possibilities
1       Czeminski is a collector of esoteric books and paraphernalia. 
He asks them to bear him in mind if they ever have anything of that 
nature. He will pay handsomely. He bears them no malice.

2       He has heard of them and guesses that eventually they might 
track him down, for being what he is. He has asked them here to strike 
up a more civilized arrangement: they leave each other alone. If he 
can't, then he will attempt to kill them; maybe tonight, maybe in the 
weeks that follow.

3       He wants to make a deal. He lives on the dark side of normal 
existence and is aware of the dark things that dwell there; be they 
monstrous creatures, or crumbling undead, or gibbering ghouls, or 
ancient godlings. He is privy to information, the rumours and gossip 
that travels along the telegraph wires of the dead, unheard by mortal 
ears. He offers to fence information in return for their protection 
against vampire hunters, clergymen, and other investigators. If the 
bargain is struck Czeminski will appear in future adventures, giving 
odd tips, translating old documents, and scaring the hell out of them 
with sudden appearances.

COPYRIGHT (C) 1990 Mark Morrison