by Val Tobin
The Hunted
Copyright 2019 Val Tobin
Published by Val Tobin
ISBN: 978-1-988609-10-2
License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your enjoyment only, then please return to your retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Chapter Forty-Seven
About Val Tobin
Other books by Val Tobin
Connect with Val Tobin
Acknowledgements
Thank you to Andrea Holmes; Val Cseh; Michelle Legere; John Erwin; Alis B. Kennedy; Wendy Quirion; Diane King, owner of The Hedge Witch in Sharon, Ontario; Melanie Smith; and Alice Swadner for beta reading, professional advice, and suggestions.
Editing by Kelly Hartigan (XterraWeb) editing.xterraweb.com. Thank you, Kelly.
Thanks to Patti Roberts of Paradox (paradoxbooktrailerproductions.blogspot.com.au/) for the amazing cover.
DEDICATIONS
To my readers who keep asking for the next story. To Bob, Jenn, Mark, Chanelle, Savannah, and Jack, always.
Chapter One
The creature, a grendel, turned its pug-nosed face to the sky and sniffed the warm September air. Rachel remained motionless and alert, the beast’s large, grey head framed in her rifle sight. One twitch and she’d blow its face off, but she could wait—for a moment or two anyway.
Where the hell is Hound Dog? No sooner had the thought breezed in and out of her mind than her earpiece blipped and Dog’s voice rasped in her ear.
“Got two of ’em fifteen degrees from the alpha position. Firing in three … two …”
Rachel’s rifle blasted, and the grendel’s head burst like a rotting cantaloupe. The body dropped to the forest floor.
“Got ’im,” she said into her mic. She’d heard the double blast nearby and waited for Hound Dog to report his kills.
“Two down, Frostbite. That’s the nest.”
Rachel no longer cringed at the Frostbite nickname; rather, she embraced it. If they wanted to paint her as a cold bitch, she’d be more than happy to freeze the chuckleheads out. At least they left her alone now, and she’d never have to contend with the frat boy antics other freshly minted protectors put up with.
Her teammates had learned on their first week together two years ago not to mess with Rachel Needham. She smiled, recalling Hound Dog’s screams when he woke to find his pelvic region covered in fire ants. That little etiquette lesson came as retribution for sneaking into her room during the night on her first day as a full-fledged protector and dumping spiders in her bed. Initiation, the guys had called it, implying all newbies must endure it. Well, she had initiation rituals of her own. She promised them she wouldn’t haze them if they left her alone. So far, they all behaved like good boys. At least, ever since the fire ants …
The snap of twigs and rustle of underbrush from the direction of the trees where Rachel’s dead grendel lay brought her out of her musings. Silence no longer a necessity, her other two teammates clomped over to the body.
Code Master, tall and skinny and looking exactly like the nerd he was, squatted next to the corpse. He removed his glasses and wiped sweat and black curls from his forehead. “Yup, it’s dead.”
“You haven’t even touched it,” Foot-Long said.
“Don’t have to. No head, no life.” Code Master smirked and puckered his lips. “Or ya wanna give him mouth-to-mouth?”
“Like I give your mama every night?”
Rachel, having had enough of their juvenile banter, stepped from her makeshift blind in the shrubbery. “Can the chatter, boys. Let’s get this fucker back to HQ.”
The curses rolled off her tongue smoothly now, and Rachel no longer winced, even inwardly, every time she swore. She hated it, but it made her one of the guys—all in the name of career advancement and breaking through a glass ceiling that, in all honesty, wasn’t as thick in the protector game as it was in the regular military or had been on the police force.
The force hadn’t been too bad, and had life remained as it had been before the grendels appeared on the scene twelve years ago, she’d have continued through the ranks. Before she’d turned thirteen years old and the grendels ate her mother, she’d aspired to be a detective. After her mother’s death, revenge drove her. From the moment the protectors were created, she hunted and killed monsters, and she was among the best.
She consoled herself over her lost career with the reminder that detectives couldn’t kill their homicidal prey. Protectors won awards and recognition for doing so. Rachel snagged newcomer of the year her first year in, something her teammates might or might not have resented. She suspected Code Master and Foot-Long—for the subs he ate, not for the length of his dong, so she’d been told—didn’t mind. Hound Dog, on the other hand, had probably added it to his list of grudges against her.
Fine with me. If he ever needed another lesson in manners, she’d provide one.
Rachel scanned the surrounding area, peering into the trees and brush.
“Where’s Dog?”
She sometimes wished her rivalry with Hound Dog were friendlier. A coworker who helped and supported her efforts while giving her a decent rival to beat would have benefited them both. To their detriment, he undermined her at every turn. However, while Hound Dog behaved like an ass after hours, he was an excellent protector. It wasn’t like him to take so long to appear in their designated after-kill meeting place.
“With his kills.” Code Master’s reply came too smoothly and automatically.
“You saw him or you’re guessing?”
His grey-blue eyes, always piercing, met hers, but only for a moment. He flushed and looked away. “Sorry, boss, I’m assuming.”
“Want I should search for him?” Foot-Long dropped a plastic bag next to the grendel’s body.
“Nice try, grunt, but you’re not getting out of corpse detail. You two bag the body. I’ll find Dog.” Rachel checked her phone to locate Hound Dog on the
tracking app and melted into the trees, heading south-west.
When she spotted him propped against a tree smoking a joint, her first instinct was to tear a strip off his hide. When she registered his shaking hands and sheet-white face, she hoisted her rifle to ready and crept up beside him.
She spoke in a whisper. “What’s the word, Dog?”
“A body, boss.”
“Yeah. Two bodies. Why aren’t they bagged?”
“No.” He shook his head. “In the nest.”
The grendels’ nest. Grendels nested in groups of three or four, not always as families. Scientists specializing in grendel research, such as her younger brother, Jeff, reported that the creatures formed seemingly random groups. They nested together for safety and security, the way hunter-gatherers and cave dwellers had once done, Rachel supposed, but she’d never heard of grendels dragging a body back to their nests.
It must be bad if Hound Dog, a veteran hunter, became apoplectic at the sight of it.
She tilted her head, indicating the joint. “You’re on duty, Protector.”
“Sorry.” He took a final drag and ground it out in the dirt. “It—” He breathed deep, gulping air as if he couldn’t get enough.
“Okay. You puke?” It would matter, so she had to ask.
He shook his head. “Came close.”
Relieved he had it together enough to keep his lunch down, she said, “Want me to bag it?”
Hound Dog shook his head again. “My job. Gimme a minute.” His voice broke as he said, “A girl, boss. Just a girl.”
“Christ, Dog. This will rain hot coals from hell on us.” She crouched next to him and touched his shoulder. “Point me to the nest. I need to secure the scene and take evidence before we bag her. Finish here and then join me.”
“Why?” The colour had returned to his cheeks, and his voice sounded stronger. Good. In a moment, he’d be back to his cocky self.
“You’re assuming the creatures killed her. They probably did, but never assume.”
“You just want to play cop.” Irritation laced his voice.
“I’ll always be a cop. That’s why I’m team leader and you’re not.” She couldn’t help needling him. Hound Dog’s obvious resentment always brought out the nasty in her. He’d wanted the team leader job, but he didn’t have the policing experience she did. It ticked one more box on his grudge list.
He waved toward what she assumed was the nest, and after reminding him he had two grendel bodies to bag, she slipped through the trees.
The girl was petite but older than Rachel had expected. The corpse lay beside the nest rather than in it—precision wasn’t one of Dog’s skills—and oddly, she appeared unmolested.
Since when do these creatures leave food unsampled?
Never, to Rachel’s knowledge, yet here lay a body without a mark on it sitting at grendel-nest ground zero.
Drag marks indicated it had been in the nest, but they’d yanked it out and dumped it nearby. Why? This bugged her more than if she’d found the girl mangled inside the nest. The girl should be in pieces and should never have been in the nest at all. The throat and thighs, usually one of the first areas on the body these things chowed down on, remained intact.
“What happened?” she murmured. “What the hell happened?”
Uneasy, she studied the area first. The only footprints in evidence, aside from the grendels’, were hers and Hound Dog’s. All seemed quiet, but as her ears attuned to her surroundings, she picked up bird chatter in the trees. Behind her, plastic crackled, leaves rustled, and twigs snapped as Hound Dog bagged the two bodies.
Most groups nested well away from each other, so she didn’t expect to encounter other monsters, but she never let her guard down anyway. The grendels wouldn’t have read the manuals—they could do whatever the hell they wanted. She didn’t trust them to remain consistent.
Rachel accessed the camera function on her cell phone and took pictures of the body, the nest, and the surrounding area. When she had enough photos of the scene, she pulled on a pair of latex gloves and squatted next to the body.
Rigor mortis had set in but hadn’t completed, which meant the girl had been dead less than thirty-six hours. Rachel saw no obvious marks—no bullet wounds, stab marks, blood, or marks on the throat. After checking the eyes for petechial hemorrhages, she ruled out asphyxiation. The skin held a greenish tinge, a normal occurrence after death.
She rose. They’d have to comb the area for any evidence to show this was a body dump, cart the body back to the base, and then pass it along to the police. All protectors were trained in forensics to spare those not trained to hunt grendels from the risks of poking around in grendel territory.
After gathering evidence and taking photos, they’d need to get this body and that of the grendels out of the forest, but they had a Humvee for that, parked about a kilometre back. No roads, not even crappy dirt roads, led to their current location. The team had hiked in from where they’d left the vehicle.
She got to work.
Chapter Two
The girl’s body was on its way to the health sciences offices in Peterborough, Ontario, where the nearest pathologist worked. Back at the base, on the outskirts of Lakefield, Ontario, Rachel and the rest of her team hit the showers and then gathered in the cafeteria for dinner.
The large room was deserted, everyone else on the base having already had their meal. Rachel ordered the chicken pot pie special with salad and a bottle of water and took her tray to the table where Hound Dog already sat.
“Looks like you recovered from your find,” she remarked as she set her tray on the table and snagged a chair across from him.
When he shrugged rather than responded with a scathing retort, she changed her mind. “Still shook?”
“No.”
“It’s all right to be upset by what you found.”
“I’m fine.” He poked at his meat with his fork, spearing it and sliding it around in the gravy pooling around his mashed potatoes. As he continued to poke at it and not eat, Rachel studied him.
He appeared healthy enough. His colour was good, and his large brown eyes shone bright and clear. His eyes gave him the nickname, not any womanizing ways as she’d assumed when they were first introduced. He had eyes like a basset hound and a nose as adept as any dog’s at sniffing out grendels. A large, burly man, Hound Dog had played football in high school and worked out as if training to compete for the Mr. Universe title.
Code Master joined them with his tray of chicken nuggets, fries, a bowl of chocolate pudding, a large cola, and three chocolate bars. No wonder he had raging acne.
Rachel scowled.
“What’s with the face?” Code Master asked.
She grinned and waved a hand at his food. “You eat like a hormonal teenager.”
“Gives me energy.”
She shook her head in disgust. “You have no vegetables.”
“Sure I do. Fries are made from potatoes. Potatoes are vegetables. Besides, you’re not my mother.”
“Someone apparently has to be.” Now, why should she care enough to argue about his diet? The dead girl’s face flashed through Rachel’s head. “Sorry, Coder, I guess I’m still punchy from finding that chick.”
“What did the cops say?” Foot-Long joined them, setting his tray down across from Code Master. At least he had a salad to go with his—surprise, surprise—submarine sandwich. Loaded with cold cuts and drenched in mayo, the sandwich shed hot peppers from all sides. His drink of choice was a large iced tea.
“Not much. The detective was as surprised as me that she was intact. The coroner’s report will explain what happened to her, but I doubt they’ll share the information with us when they get it. We’re just the clean-up crew.”
“But you’ll find out, boss.” Hound Dog levelled his gaze at her. “You always find out.” Behind the even tone hovered a hint of accusation and, perhaps, annoyance.
“I take an interest. They like that.”
“Well,
maybe I want to take an interest in this one.”
“Why?” Genuinely surprised, she waited for his reply.
“Because it’s weird,” Code Master said.
Foot-Long also threw his hat in the ring. “I want to know too.”
“I can talk to the captain. Ask her to update us,” Rachel said.
“Will they tell her?” Hound Dog asked.
“She could ask them to. They might want to interview us, ask us what happened out there. What we found—not that we found anything besides the body.” She ate a few mouthfuls of food. At times, the four of them together made a comfortable group.
“And you’re so special Cap will fill you in? Or is it because you’re both women?”
Until Hound Dog spoiled the mood—and Hound Dog always spoiled the mood.
“Damn it, Jack, why must you do that?”
He licked his lips and grinned lasciviously. “I love it when you say my name. Say my last name, too, babe. I’ll propose.”
She gave him a bland look. “Let’s stay on topic. We leave tomorrow. When we return to the base in two weeks, they’ll have news—probably. You want me to get Cappy to share the info? She’ll tell me because I’m asking. Any of us can ask.”
“Yeah, but not all of us would get answers.” Hound Dog’s voice betrayed a touch of wounded ego.
“Maybe because you go around acting like you’re king of the compound.” Rachel had had enough of the conversation. She speared a bite of Hound Dog’s roast beef with her fork and popped it in her mouth. “Good meat.”
“I hear that a lot.”
God, she’d walked right into that one. Without missing a beat, she said, “Too bad it’s cold.”
She rose and picked up her tray. “When we get back from break, I’ll hunt up the captain and ask her what happened with the girl. Whatever she knows, we’ll know. I promise.”
Rachel left her team and went to her dorm room. With luck, no calls would come in during the night and she’d be home for her two weeks off by noon tomorrow.
***
Since the night remained quiet, Rachel got home to her townhouse in Peterborough by ten o’clock in the morning. When she arrived, she found the street as silent as her night had been. On this Monday morning, most of the residents were at work or school.