Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Collection 6-10

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Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Collection 6-10 Page 255

by Laurell Hamilton


  I put the barrel against his forehead. “Whatever else happens, Ulysses, you die next.”

  A man’s voice came out of the darkness. He was speaking over a sound system, that much I could tell. “If you pull the trigger, we will kill your other bodyguard. Rifles with silver shot, Ms. Blake, and I assure you that my people are dead shots. Now, put your guns down, and we’ll talk.”

  I kept my gun and told Ulysses, “Get away from me, now!” He crawled away, still crying.

  I picked out the shadowy form on my side of the catwalk. Bobby Lee was aimed to the other side, which left one man in the middle without a gun on him. But from this distance, with them above us, we had to make each shot count, which meant that we had to kill what we could, then hope we could do something with the last one. “Who the hell are you?” I asked.

  “Drop your guns, Ms. Blake, and I’ll tell you.”

  “We keep our guns, girl,” Bobby Lee said. “He’s going to kill us either way.”

  I agreed.

  “We don’t want you dead, Ms. Blake, but we don’t give a shit about your friends. We can just keep picking them off until you change your mind.”

  I moved to stand in front of everyone, so that the middle shot was harder. From the above angle, I couldn’t block them completely, but it was the best I could do. “Everybody get down.” Only Bobby Lee hesitated. “They don’t want me dead, and I need your gun.” He glanced at me, then dropped to one knee, using me to shield himself from the middle gunman. He’d grasped my plan. Everyone else was hugging the floor. There was no cover, and the door was close but not close enough, what with three rifles on us.

  “What are you doing, Ms. Blake?” the voice asked.

  “Just testing a theory,” I said.

  “Don’t be stupid, Ms. Blake.”

  “Bobby Lee,” I said.

  “Yes, ma’am.”

  “How good are you?”

  “Give the word, we’ll find out.”

  I felt my body go very, very still, so that the world narrowed down to the end of my gun and that shape crouched on the catwalk. It was about ten yards. I’d hit targets farther away than that. But that was target shooting. I’d never tried to drop a man with a handgun from this distance. I let out the last of my breath so that I was just stillness, just the gun, just the point of the gun, just the aim of the gun, and with the last, barest touch of my voice, I whispered, “Word.”

  Our guns went off almost simultaneously. I didn’t shoot just once, I fired as fast as I could pull the trigger. My figure jerked, the target came out of his crouch, then fell slowly off the catwalk. I turned my gun before the body hit the ground and found the man in the middle standing up. I saw the shadow of his rifle. I heard the voice shouting over the explosion of gunshots, “Don’t hit her, don’t you dare.”

  The rifle plowed up floor inches from me—two shots—trying to get me to move and give him a shot at Bobby Lee, but I stood my ground and fired back. Bobby was firing with me, and the shadow form jerked, staggered, then slumped forward, his rifle falling to land on the floor with the other two bodies of the now-dead riflemen.

  The voice said, “Boys, do not disappoint me.”

  The werehyenas rushed us. Bobby Lee and I started shooting. We divided the six werehyenas up between us, smooth, no cross fires, no taking the other’s hit—my side of the room, his side of the room. I took two, I think he took one, and we both clicked empty. I drew the Firestar left-handed, which made it about two seconds slower than it needed to be, but it was probably faster than popping the clip on the Browning and reloading. If I survived, I’d have to time which one was faster.

  It was Ulysses who was almost upon me like a dark shape of doom. A gun exploded at my back, and Ulysses fell backwards onto the floor. I whirled to find Nathaniel with a gun. His eyes were wide, his lips parted, a look of astonishment on his face. He’d picked up Cris’s dropped weapon. Movement turned me back to the fight. Metal flashed as Bobby Lee waded into the last two werehyenas. The fight was too intense. I couldn’t get a clear shot.

  The far doors opened, and men poured out. I rushed the fight around Bobby Lee and fired almost point blank into someone’s back. The man shuddered and dropped, putting me face-to-face with Bobby Lee. It had startled him, and I had to fire across his body into the last of the fightees. I pointed the Firestar at the werehyenas pouring towards us. I emptied the gun into them, as we all started backing for the door. I wasn’t as good left-handed. I don’t think I killed anyone, but I wounded someone with every shot, and it slowed them, made them hesitate.

  Gil, Caleb, and Nathaniel were already at the doors. Daylight spilled in, and I was dazzled for a second, because my sunglasses were still tucked across the front of my shirt. I dropped the Firestar, popped the empty clip from the Browning and had the second clip pounded home before we made the sidewalk. I still couldn’t hear the noise of the clips hitting home, but I saw Bobby Lee making the same movement with his gun that I’d made with mine. I knew he was locked and loaded.

  I yelled, “Nathaniel! Jeep, get it running!” I knew he knew where the extra set of keys were. I remembered Narcissus saying that there were over five hundred werehyenas. We had to get out of there before they decided to pick up more guns or just overwhelm us with numbers. Shooting them would slow them down, but whoever that voice had been, he had them terrified. I could kill them, but I couldn’t terrorize them. Whether they poured out of that door in a wave would depend on whether they feared death or terror more.

  I glanced back to find Nathaniel in the Jeep, with Caleb and Gil in the back. The engine roared to life. Bobby Lee and I started for the Jeep, and the werehyenas rolled out into the sunlight, too many to count, almost too many to aim at. I fired into the mass of bodies, and I yelled, “Run!”

  Bobby Lee and I were running for the Jeep, which meant our aim wasn’t what it should have been, but the men were packed so tight that we kept hitting them anyway. They’d fall, then there’d be screams, sounds, a chittering laughter that raised the hair at the back of my neck, and the wounded rose as hyenamen, muscled, pale-furred, spotted, with a muzzle full of fangs and claws like black knives. We weren’t whittling them down, we were giving them better weapons to use against us.

  Nathaniel yelled, “Get in!”

  I glanced back to find the doors open front and middle. I slid into the rear seat, Bobby Lee slid in front. The doors were shut, locked, and Nathaniel was pulling away from the curb when they poured over us. They swarmed the car, covering the windows. Nathaniel hit the gas and the Jeep roared forward. An arm smashed through the window beside me. The sound of breaking glass was everywhere. They were trying to hold on and get inside. I fired through my window into the man beyond, and he fell away. Bobby Lee was firing into the hyenaman that was trying to crawl through the windshield.

  But there were at least three others smashing at the glass, trying to crawl through. I fired the Browning into the one on the opposite window from mine. It took four shots before he fell away. The Browning had to be close to empty, but I’d lost count. The last two werehyenas were halfway through the windows; one of them spilled into the back of the Jeep. He launched himself at me, and I fired two more bullets almost point blank into him. The gun clicked empty. The man fell, apparently dead at my knees, because I was kneeling in the back of the Jeep, which meant that I’d crawled over the seat to meet his charge. I didn’t remember doing it.

  The last one was in half-man form. He was having trouble tearing his way through the window. I think he’d caught something painful on the glass. I drew the blade that I wore down my back. My right knee was down, leg flat to the floorboard, my left, raised on the ball of my foot. It was a swordsman’s stance for when you couldn’t stand—balanced. I struck in a blur of speed, feeling the strength in my body like nothing I’d ever felt before. He looked up at the last second just before the blade bit into the side of his face and split his head open. Blood splattered on my arms, across my face. The body slumped forward, most of
its lower parts still dangling out the window. The upper part of his head from just above the jaw was gone, spilling out onto the carpet, soaking into the leg of my jeans. I had a heartbeat to think, holy shit, then I heard the sounds on the roof.

  Bobby Lee said, “Persistent bastards.”

  I didn’t answer, just knelt by the wheel well opposite the bodies. Edward, assassin to the undead, and the only person I knew of with a higher kill count for monsters than me, had talked me into letting a friend of his remodel my Jeep. The wheel well held a secret compartment. Inside there was an extra Browning Hi-Power, two extra clips, and a mini-Uzi with a mushroom clip. The clip barely fit inside the compartment, but it nearly tripled the round capacity, so it was worth the tight fit.

  Claws ripped through the roof of the Jeep and started peeling it back, like opening a tin can. I threw myself onto my back and fired up into the roof. Animal howls, one body fell past the windows, but the other one stayed on the roof, the half-animal arm shoved through the metal. I went to my knees, firing just in back of the arm. The hyenaman rolled off the back of the Jeep and bounced in the road. The arm stayed in the hole in the roof, caught on the metal.

  When the ringing in my ears toned down enough for me to hear something besides the pounding of my own blood, I could hear Caleb saying, “Fuck, fuck, fuck,” over and over. Gil was huddled beside him on the floorboard, screaming, a high piteous sound, his hands over his ears, eyes closed. I leaned on the seat, but didn’t try to climb back over. My back was covered in blood and worse things from rolling around on the floor.

  I yelled, “Gil, Gil!”

  He just kept screaming. I tapped the top of his head with the gun barrel. That made him open his eyes. I pointed the gun at the ceiling while he stared at me. “Stop screaming.”

  He nodded, hands lowering slowly. He kept nodding over and over again. Caleb had stopped cursing under his breath. He was breathing so hard I thought he might hyperventilate, but I had other things to worry about.

  “What kind of clip ya got on that Uzi?” Bobby Lee asked.

  “It’s called a mushroom clip. It about triples the ammo capacity.”

  He shook his head. “Damn, girl, where have you been living that you need that kind of firepower?”

  “Welcome to my life,” I said. I looked down at Gil. “Next time I tell you to stay home, stay home.”

  “Yes, ma’am,” he whispered.

  “Slow it down, boy,” Bobby Lee said, “we don’t want to get picked up by the cops with bodies in the car.”

  “The damage may be a tip-off,” I said.

  The arm dangling from the ceiling had changed back to human shape. It flopped bonelessly as Nathaniel turned a corner. I looked away from it and found the now-human with his head bisected. His brains had leaked out in pieces. I was suddenly hot, dizzy. I couldn’t remember what I’d done with the big blade. I must have dropped it, but I didn’t remember doing it. I wedged myself into a corner, the Uzi raised to the ceiling, my body held on three sides by metal and the seat back. It was as close to being held as I could manage. I closed my eyes, so I couldn’t see what I’d done. But the smell was still there: fresh blood, butchered meat, and that outhouse smell that let you know someone’s bowels had let loose. I started to choke, and the Jeep pulled off the road. That made me look up, gave me something else to concentrate on.

  Nathaniel was pulling onto a gravel road in the middle of nowhere. There were trees, a floodplain, green grass, and beyond that, the shine of the river. It was a peaceful spot. He drove until we weren’t easily visible from the road, then stopped.

  “What’s going on?” I asked.

  Bobby Lee answered, “I think if we drive around in traffic with legs sticking out, someone will notify the police.”

  I nodded. It was a good point. “I should have thought of it,” I said.

  “No, you’ve done your work for the day. Let me do the thinking ’til your head clears.”

  “My head’s clear,” I said.

  He climbed out of the car and spoke through one of the broken windows as he moved towards the legs. “I know pangs of conscience when I see them, girl.”

  “Stop calling me ‘girl’.”

  He grinned at me. “Yes, ma’am.” He grabbed the legs and shoved the body through the glass. It landed with a thick sound on top of the first body. A sound came out of the body on the bottom. It might have just been air escaping—it happened sometimes—but then again . . .

  I was on my knees, Uzi pointed at the bodies. Bobby Lee said, “Don’t hit the gas tank, ma’am, we don’t want to blow ourselves up.” He had his gun back out.

  I shifted my angle so that I’d shoot through the dark head that lay at the bottom of the pile. Did two bodies constitute a pile? Did it matter? Something brushed my hair and I jerked the gun up, only to find that I’d brushed the fingers on the arm hanging from the ceiling. It was coming loose, sliding lower on its own. Great.

  I pressed the barrel of the Uzi against the top of the head. “If you’re alive, don’t move, if you’re dead, don’t worry about it.”

  Bobby Lee opened the back of the Jeep, his gun angled down for a shot at the “body.”

  “If I fire into the top of his head, the bullets may cut your legs out from under you.”

  He moved off to one side, gun steady. “My deepest apologies, ma’am, I know better than that.”

  I pressed the gun barrel more securely into the top of the head and began to reach slowly towards the neck that was just visible under the very dead top body.

  “I’m alive.” The voice made me jump and nearly made me squeeze the trigger.

  “Shit,” I said.

  “Why don’t you finish it?” the man asked. His voice was pain-filled, but not thick. I’d missed heart and lungs. Careless of me.

  “Because that wasn’t Narcissus’s voice over the speaker system, and Ulysses said they had your lovers. That we didn’t know what they’d do to your lovers if you guys failed them. Who is the guy over the speaker? Who is ‘they’? Where the fuck is Narcissus? Why would the werehyenas let anyone take them over like this?”

  “You’re not going to kill me?” He made it a question.

  “You answer our questions, and I give you my word that we won’t kill you.”

  “May I move?”

  “If you can.”

  He moved slowly, painfully onto his side. His hair was curly, dark, cut very short, skin pale. He turned until he could see my eyes, and the effort left him shaking, his lips blue, which made me think maybe we didn’t have much time to ask our questions, that maybe we’d already killed him, just not fast enough.

  His eyes were a strange shade of gold. “I’m Bacchus,” he said in that pain-filled voice.

  “Nice to meet you. I’m Anita, that’s Bobby Lee, now start talking.”

  “Ask me anything.”

  I started asking. Bacchus started answering. He didn’t die. By the time we crossed the bridge into Missouri, his lips were pink and healthy and the dazed look had left his eyes. I was really going to have to start packing better ammo.

  61

  BACCHUS ACTUALLY DIDN’T know all that much. Narcissus had introduced his new gentleman fair, Chimera, and they’d seemed to be having a wonderful time together. If not true love, then the rough trade they both wanted. Then Narcissus had gone into one of the rooms and not come back out. For twenty-four hours the werehyenas had thought it was just sex, but after that, they stopped believing Chimera’s assurances that Narcissus was alright. Ajax had managed to get inside, and that’s when it went bad.

  “Ajax told us Narcissus was being tortured, really tortured.”

  “Why didn’t you rescue him?” I asked.

  “Chimera came with his own bodyguards. They took . . .” Bacchus had to stop and fight to take a deep breath, as if something inside him was hurting. “You don’t know what they’ve done to our people. You don’t know what they’ve threatened to do to them if we fail them.”

  “Tel
l us, then we’ll know,” I said.

  “Have you met Ajax?” he asked.

  I nodded.

  “They cut his arms and legs off and burned the ends of the wounds so he couldn’t heal the damage. Chimera said they’d put him in a metal box and just get him out on special occasions.” Bacchus choked, and I wasn’t sure if it was from injuries or horror.

  Bobby Lee said, “He’s upset enough that I can’t tell if he’s lying or not, but I think he’s telling the truth.” His voice was a little hoarse, as if he were seeing the images in his head that I was trying very hard not to imagine. I’d gotten better lately at simply refusing to let my imagination run away with me. Maybe it had something to do with being a sociopath; if so, let’s hear it for dementia. I sat there in the Jeep, my mind carefully blank, no visuals. Bobby Lee looked ill.

  “How many bodyguards does this Chimera have?” I asked.

  “About twenty-five, before you started killing them.”

  “I thought there were like five hundred of you guys. How could twenty-five men keep you down?”

  Bacchus looked at me with stricken eyes. “If someone had your Ulfric, Richard, and was cutting pieces off of him, crippling him, wouldn’t you do anything to save him?”

  I stayed quiet and thought about that one. I gave the only truthful answer that I could. “I don’t know. It would depend on what ‘anything’ covered. I see your point, but why didn’t you just rush them?”

  Bacchus propped himself up against the side of the Jeep. Nathaniel took a corner a little fast, and Bacchus tried to grab something so he wouldn’t slide. I gave him my hand, caught him, and he looked both grateful and uncertain. He kept hold of my hand and gave really good eye contact. “We didn’t have an alpha. Ajax and Ulysses were the next in command, and once they started cutting up Ajax, Ulysses told us to do what they said.” He squeezed my hand, not too tight. “The rest of us aren’t leaders, Anita. Our alphas were all telling us to cooperate with Chimera. We’re followers, that’s it, that’s all. We need an alpha with a plan.”

 

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