Infernal Cries: An Echo Team Urban Fantasy Novel
Page 17
The moment the Necromancer’s blood touched the mummified skin of the Hand power flashed across the room in a wave that was almost, but not quite, visible to the eye. Cade felt it as though and it slammed him against the pillar with awesome force. Two of the Necromancer’s acolytes were thrown to the ground and Cade thought he heard the unmistakable sound of a neck snapping under the impact. Cade watched in horror as the flesh of the Hand filled out, the skin pushing away from the bones, the blackened, shriveled husk swelling and turning a healthy pink color.
Silence fell.
The laughter began moments later, starting slowly but building in volume and tone until it was echoing around the massive room.
The laughter was coming from the Necromancer and when he thrust his hands into the air in a victory stance, Cade could see that the Hand had grafted to the sorcerer’s wrist completely, as if he had lived with it since the day he was born. Power literally dripped from its fingers in blackish-green threads of arcane might.
“Behold! The Hand of Glory reborn!” Logan shouted.
There was more than a touch of madness in his voice.
The Blackhawks set down with military precision and discharged their passengers before climbing back up into the night sky above where they would remain until the extraction order was given. The minute Riley’s feet hit the concrete he forgot about the choppers, confident that the pilots knew their jobs and needing, right now, to concentrate on his own.
The windows of the warehouse ahead of them were lit from within by a strange greenish-black hue and Riley knew that they had found their target.
That was where they would find the Necromancer.
And hopefully, Cade.
He charged forward, knowing without needing to look that his men were forming up around him in a classic SWAT formation with overlapping fields of fire that would support and enhance their effectiveness as a strike unit. Five yards to his right another squad was doing the same and Riley had a moment to admire the precision of the team’s operation before figures lurched toward them from the shadows surrounding the building.
It took only seconds for the lead men in each squad to recognize the newcomers for what they were – reanimated corpses fresh from the grave, or, in this case, the sea – and they passed the signal to the rest. Gunfire arced out with brutal efficiency, cutting a swatch through the enemy ranks.
Just as Cade discovered earlier, however, these creatures were only minimally affected by the bullets that ripped through their rotting forms. A few fell to lucky headshots, but the rest simply regained their feet or continued on undeterred by the gunfire.
In seconds they would be among the knights.
“Swords!” Riley called out over the team’s communications equipment and his men ceased their fire, drew their holy blades, and met the oncoming charge straight on.
Swords flashed, bodies collided, but the precision and unity of the Templars was no match for the restless dead. Riley and his men chopped through the enemy ranks in moments, leaving the field littered with corpses and the path to the warehouse clear.
Riley raised his sword and signaled for the squads to form up on him as they converged on the entry point, a tall warehouse door that filled half of the structure’s rear wall and that was used to bring the oversized shipping containers into storage. Two men ran forward, placed demolition charges, and ran back. Riley crouched down and turned his back.
The shout came next. “Fire in the hole!”
The Necromancer snatched up the Staff of Anubis and power flashed again, surrounding him in a sickly black corona of arcane energy that seemed to shift and dance with a mind of its own.
Without another word to Cade, Simon Logan pointed the Staff of Anubis at Gabrielle and shouted out a long string of words in ancient Sumerian.
Power flashed out from the end of the staff and struck the feather around Gabrielle’s neck, enveloping her in an inky ball of energy so thick that she was momentarily lost from sight as the ground beneath Cade’s feet seemed to shake in response.
Riley raced in through the breach in the warehouse door, his eyes going wide at the sight of the Necromancer wielding the Staff of Anubis in what looked to be an attack against Cade’s wife, Gabrielle, while Cade struggled against the bonds that had him tied to a support pillar nearby. Between the two groups were several of Logan’s personal entourage, who appeared to be involved in some kind of ritual summoning that looked suspiciously familiar to Riley.
He centered the muzzle of his gun on the Necromancer’s back and fired three swift shots.
All three struck home with deadly force, throwing the Necromancer forward and sending the Staff of Anubis tumbling free from his hand. The arcane power that was flashing about the room snapped off with the suddenness of someone flipping a switch.
Now released from the onslaught of all that energy, Gabrielle’s body sagged against its bonds in the metal frame on the other side of the room. Her head lolled back and forth on her chest for a moment before going still.
Riley rushed over to Cade’s side. Riley could sense the battle winding down around him, the Necromancer’s acolytes surrendering now that their leader was out of the fray, but Riley’s attention was focused now on his friend. He cut through Cade’s bonds with his knife. The former Knight Commander tumbled forward and only Riley’s quick hands kept Cade from collapsing to the floor. Riley was helping him try to sit up on his own when a voice cut across the chatter and commotion filling the room.
“Cade? Cade, where am I?”
Gabrielle!
Cade couldn’t believe what he was hearing and his grip tightened like a vice on Riley’s arm as he muttered, “Up. Help me up.”
He didn’t think he’d spoken loudly enough, but Riley must have heard him because his friend was suddenly helping him to his feet so he could see.
Cade looked across the warehouse floor, across the death and destruction, across the blood and the bodies of the dead, and looked into his wife’s eyes for the first time in seven years.
“What happened?” she asked. “Why am I in this thing?”
It really was her, he realized.
She was here. Alive.
Whole!
Summoning his strength, Cade replied, “I love you. I’m here. I’ll explain everything.”
Then to Riley, “Leave me. Get her down.”
Cade looked up to reassure her once more and that’s when it happened.
Gabrielle’s body convulsed.
One minute she was looking at him with a sense of deep bewilderment and then her body snapped as if she’d been hit with a bolt of lightning.
For one, long moment she was still with them, afraid and uncertain of what was going on, and then she blinked and convulsed again.
When she opened her eyes a moment later, someone, no, something, had taken up residence.
It stared across the room at Cade and then it smiled.
That smile promised a hundred horrible things, each worse than the last.
But that was nothing compared to when she spoke.
“Hello, Cade,” said the Adversary from behind her eyes.
As her husband shouted in horror, “Gabrielle” flexed her arms and legs, snapping the iron frame that was holding her prisoner as if it were made of twigs. She landed in a crouch and as she rose to her feet, great, grey and black molted wings sprouted from her back and spread out behind her with the snap of clothes on the line.
The muzzles of Templar weapons swiveled in her direction and shots began to snap out, peppering the air around her, but she flexed those great wings and launched herself upward, smashing through the roof and disappearing into the night sky high above.
A single black feather drifted down to the floor of the warehouse in the wake of her passing.
The story continues in Judgement Night
Knight Captain Matthew Riley paced back and forth in the narrow confines of the anteroom outside Preceptor Johannson’s office as he waited to be called inside. He�
��d just come in from the field and his grey jumpsuit was still stained with the blood of the duergar they’d been hunting not an hour before, but he’d be damned if he stopped to change just to save the sensibilities of the man who he was waiting to see. He’d been summoned to appear “forthwith” and so here he was, bloodstains and all.
Riley didn’t like Johannson - thought the man was a pretentious pain-in-the-ass with a God complex – but he was forced to tolerate him thanks to recent changes in the chain of command that put the Echo Team, never mind the rest of the Templar special operations squads, under the control of the local Preceptors. Previously they’d reported to the Seneschal, the Order’s second in command, but that had all changed in the wake of the recent prison break. Even worse, Echo was based in the same commandery as Johannson, which meant Riley got to see far more of the Preceptor than he card to. If he could have transferred the team somewhere else, anywhere else, he would have done so. Even Australia, under the control of that old pain-in-the-ass Dennison, would have been better than here.
The last two weeks had been sheer hell and not just politically. There had been a seemingly endless stream of disasters, one after another, from the escape of the Necromancer to the reappearance of the Adversary in the resurrected body of Gabrielle Williams, the once-dead wife of Echo’s former commander – and Riley’s closest personal friend – Cade Williams. Echo and the rest of the fast response combat teams had been hunting for the Adversary, and Cade, ever since that night in the warehouse when the fallen angel had broken the barriers between this world and the next and returned, no doubt intent on wreaking as much havoc as was physically possible.
It was Riley’s job to prevent that and, so far, he wasn’t having much luck.
Of course, getting dragged out of the field for bullshit meetings like this one wasn’t helping.
No sooner had he finished the thought that the door to the Preceptor’s office opened behind him. Riley spun around to find Hennessy, the Preceptor’s aide, standing there.
Riley ignored the scathing look the aide gave his attire as he stepped into the office, but made sure to trod on the other man’s foot as he went by. Hennessey was known to be rather fastidious when it came to personal hygiene and it would drive him nuts thinking about all the disgusting things that Riley’s boots could have come in contact with while in the field.
It was petty, Riley knew that, but it made him smile nonetheless.
His smile was short-lived however as he remembered why he’d been summoned here.
The man he’s come to see sat behind his desk, ostensibly reviewing a thick sheaf of paperwork but Riley thought he was just pretending to keep busy. Johannson was the perfect bureaucrat, far happier to be ordering people about behind the scenes than serving on the front lines. Like all Templars he’d spent some time in the ranks, but his penchant for Machiavellian maneuvering in order to build allies with one hand in each other’s pockets allowed him to climb into an executive position relatively quickly and it had been many years since he’d held a weapon. For men like Riley, and Cade before him, that made him next to useless.
As was typical, the Preceptor didn’t bother looking up from the work he was doing but simply ordered his subordinate to report.
“Update me on the search for Williams.”
Riley stared at the Preceptor without saying anything for a moment. He didn’t know what the hell the Preceptor’s problem was with his friend and former commander, but rather than getting better since Cade had “retired”, it had only gotten worse. Johannson was obsessed.
They had a fallen angel running around on the loose somewhere and this fool can’t get his mind off Cade.
When he knew he’d get called for insubordination if he held back one second longer, he finally said, “I’ve been unable to locate the Knight Commander since the night he left the warehouse in Brooklyn.”
The Preceptor’s glanced up lazily, catching Riley in his stare. “You mean fled the warehouse, don’t you?”
“No, I mean left. He was in pursuit of the Adversary.”
Johannson’ sneered. “He wasn’t in pursuit of anything, Captain. Williams fled the scene to join his compatriots, leaving you and your men at the mercy of anything else that might have remained in that warehouse. He even ordered you not to fire on that infernal creature he’s collaborating with as he did so!”
Riley knew that Cade had ordered them not to fire at the time for fear of killing the host body that the Adversary was possessing, the body, and possibly the soul, of his long-dead wife Gabrielle, but there was no way he was going to argue the theology and ethics of that one with a man like Johannson. Instead, all he said was, “I don’t see it that way. Sir.”
Johannson threw down the papers he been holding and stared at Riley with disgust. “You don’t see it that way? No, of course you wouldn’t. Your loyalty to a known criminal is distressing, Captain. If I wasn’t short staffed I’d remove you from command of the Echo Team.”
Go ahead and try, Riley thought. Johannson had almost caused a mutiny after leaving him and Cade out to dry in the midst of the Chiang Shih incursion and the men in the ranks wouldn’t take too kindly if it were to happen again, not while the Adversary was out there somewhere. The men didn’t regard Riley with the same mix of fear and awe that they gave to Cade but that didn’t mean he wasn’t a well-respected commander in his own right. The men would follow Riley, perhaps even more willingly than they would Cade, as they regarded Riley as one of their own.
The Preceptor shook his head, as if in disgust, but Riley didn’t rise to the bait. After a moment, Johannson said, “What news of the Adversary?”
Now, finally, he gets to what’s important.
But Riley didn’t have much better news on this topic either.
“We’ve had reports of several sightings but we’ve been unable to corroborate any of them. Our best bet is that our target has gone to ground, most likely to get used to the physical form it now controls.
“On the plus side, we’ve confirmed the death of Simon Logan and have recovered the Staff of Anubis.”
“So you’re not totally incompetent, is that what you’re telling me?” the Preceptor asked.
Riley wisely kept his mouth shut.
“Any word on who the woman was?”
Riley hesitated, but then decided the truth would serve him better than being evasive. The information was bound to come out at some point and it went a long way to explaining why Cade had acted the way he had.
“The woman was Gabrielle Williams, sir, the Knight Commander’s former wife.”
Johannson stared at him. “Williams’ wife was killed several years ago.”
Riley nodded. “That’s correct, sir.”
“Then how...?”
“We don’t know. Her body was there when we arrived and, given what happened, we didn’t have time to investigate further.”
Riley had no qualms about lying about Gabrielle, for he knew that if he told the truth Johannson would bring the Order’s inquisitors down on his head faster than he could blink. He’d helped Cade dig up Gabrielle’s grave, after all. He’d been there when his friend had levered the coffin open and found his wife’s still-warm body lying inside, without the slightest hint of corruption or decay, like a modern day Sleeping Beauty just waiting for her prince to come. Most other Templars would have assumed the body was being sustained by black arts and destroyed it immediately, but Riley hadn’t done anything of the sort. He’d ever helped Cade carry his wife’s body – Riley couldn’t bring himself to call it a corpse – to his vehicle and watched him drive off into the night. After all, it hadn’t been that long before that when Gabrielle herself had rescued Riley and the rest of the Echo Team when they’d been trapped in the Beyond by the angel Baraquel. He’d stared into her eyes and spoken directly to her; if there was even the slightest chance that her soul could be reunited with her body, Riley wasn’t going to be the one to stand in the way.
The Preceptor wasn’t so acc
ommodating.
“Why am I only now hearing about this?”
Riley shrugged. “I believe it was in my initial report.”
It wasn’t; he knew that. He’d intentionally left the woman’s identity out of it, but he also knew that Johannson wouldn’t remember one way or the other. If the Preceptor checked, and found out differently, then Riley would claim it was a simple oversight.
Johannson glared at him, as if the weight of his stare was going to cause Riley to suddenly break down and give up the truth.
Gonna take a lot more than what you’ve got to get me to break, Riley thought, as he gazed calmly back at the other man.
But then Preceptor surprised him.
“So help me understand this, Captain,” Johannson said. “That night, at the warehouse, you entered the building and found both Commander Williams and the Necromancer inside together, along with the seemingly intact body of William’s dead wife?”
“Well, yes, but...”
The Preceptor talked right over him. “And it never occurred to you that the reason this woman’s body was intact after being in the ground for the last five years was because the Necromancer had just used his sorcery to make it so?”
“What? No, it wasn’t...”
“And now both Williams and the Adversary, who, by the way is now using that suddenly intact body we were just talking about, have disappeared and YOU DON’T SEE A LINK BETWEEN THEM?!”
The Preceptor’s face was bright red by the time he had stopped shouting and for a moment Riley wondered if the man was going to have a heart attack. Before he could say anything, however, the Preceptor stabbed the intercom button on his desk and said, “Get me Operations” when his aide replied.
Uh oh, Riley thought.
The phone rang seconds later and Johannson snatched it up.
“Operations? This is Preceptor Johannson. I’m issuing shoot-on-sight orders for both the Adversary and former Knight Commander Cade Williams. Have a written copy prepared and sent to my office for immediate signature.”