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Monster Hunter Legion

Page 43

by Larry Correia


  I shook my head in the negative. The news was still the same. The MCB had finally picked one of its conflicting stories and run with it. Las Vegas had been the site of an awful terrorist attack, first with weaponized Ebola, then with chemical weapons that may have caused crazy hallucinations, and finally with high explosives that had caused considerable damage down the Strip. “Last I’d heard they were still attempting to bring those horrible miscreants to justice.”

  “Good. I hear they’re real jerks.”

  Like Julie had told me in the hospital, MHI had gotten hurt. Of our thirty-three members that had attended the first and final ICMHP, six had died, two were missing, and ten had been injured, with three of those being severe enough that they would probably end up retiring. We’d had another two Hunters that didn’t get a scratch on them that had quit as a result of being exposed to their worst fears in the nightmare realm. None of the other companies had come out unscathed either. Everybody had lost someone. Earl had to say his goodbyes to Heather again. She still had one year of service left before she gained her PUFF exemption. It had been a bittersweet and too-short reunion for those two.

  At least we had managed to protect the vast majority of the innocents who had been trapped inside the Last Dragon with us. As expected, they had all been threatened and silenced by the MCB. Some would make the transition to accepting the real world, others would end up in Appleton, a handful of them would end up like us.

  ICMHP had left everyone with scars.

  On the bright side, we had made some valuable new allies. The agreement that Earl had put together to share information and resources on the first day of the conference had managed to stick. We now had a strategic partnership with most of the other companies. Nate Shackleford and a small MHI crew had sealed the deal by risking their lives to hold the final wave of demons until every single other Hunter could fall back past them. That had gotten us a lot of respect. The kid had gained a reputation as a hero, maybe even enough of one to overcome the shame his father had brought on the family name years before.

  It felt good to have allies. Sure, we’d compete against each other when it came to regular business, but when the time came that this new enemy showed his face, those differences would be set aside, and the world’s Hunters would collect their pound of flesh.

  I’d been surprised that so many of our new friends had stopped by to see me in the hospital. News travels fast among Hunters, and within a few hours of me catching a tranquilizer dart in the neck, pretty much everyone knew roughly what had gone down in order to defeat the Nachtmar. Just when I felt the worst, I had an army of strangers thanking me for saving their lives. As Earl Harbinger would say, they were all right. Sadly, White Eagle had gone home already, so I didn’t ever get to ask that loud guy if he was related to Mordechai or not. Grimm Berlin had taken the PUFF money they’d received from Stricken and divided it out evenly to be given to the families of the Hunters that had died at the Last Dragon. Klaus Lindemann was a class act.

  The only other bit of happy news that had come out of our Las Vegas trip was that our bomb expert, Cooper, had gotten hitched. One of the party girls that had crashed Grimm Berlin’s celebration had wound up following him around learning how to build improvised explosives during the siege. I guess that had led to love at first blast. Once they’d gotten back to Earth, having decided that life was short, they had immediately gotten married at a twenty-four-hour wedding chapel by an Elvis impersonator. Tanya had approved.

  As for that particular odd couple, I never found out what it was that Edward the orc had given me to give to Tanya in case he died. He had taken it back and hadn’t said another word about it. I wasn’t going to push the guy that had single-handedly sword-fought a dragon about it, either.

  “Crap,” Mosh said, drawing me back to the present. “I can’t do this.”

  “What’re you worried about? I’m the one that has to kill him.”

  “We’ll see about that. Once he tells us who sent him back, I’ll—”

  “What?” I asked, genuinely curious.

  “I don’t know. Something. But they’re not taking Dad if I can help it.”

  That’s the spirit. I reached over and rubbed his bald head. “For luck.”

  Mosh swallowed hard and followed me up the steps. I screwed up my courage and rang the doorbell. We were about to face the hardest man in the world. A minute later there was much rattling as many sets of locks were undone.

  The door opened and Dad was standing there. It was hard to read his expression, but he knew right away why I’d come. “I’ve been expecting you. I knew you’d do the right thing.” If he was a little surprised to see me, he was really surprised to see Mosh. “David? What’re you doing here?”

  “Being responsible, I guess.”

  Dad hadn’t expected him at all and I think it might have shook him a little. “Come in, come in. Your mother’s not home,” He led us inside. “But I’m guessing this surprise visit shouldn’t involve her anyway.”

  “How is she?”

  “She’s had years to get used to it. You’re the ones that have had to learn all this on such short notice. And for that, I’m sorry.” We all sat at the kitchen table. “Judging by the shape you two are in, Las Vegas. Was that your work?”

  “Afraid so,” I answered.

  Dad looked at Mosh. “You too?”

  Mosh nodded quickly. “A little.”

  “He saved a lot of lives,” I said. “We wouldn’t have made it without him.”

  “I’m proud of you, son.” Auhangamea Pitt said to my brother for probably the first and only time in his life. “I’m proud of you for that, and I’m proud of you for having the guts to come here today.” Mosh had to look away, blinking rapidly.

  My father turned back to study me for a long time. “Something’s changed since I saw you last, Owen.”

  “We lost people,” I said simply.

  “Naw . . . That’s not it. You’ve lost people before.” He shook his head. “But this time was different. Either you sent them or something you did made it happen. I can see it in your eyes.”

  My voice cracked. “How can you know?”

  “Because, son, I see that exact same thing I see on your face right now every single time I look in the mirror. It’s a heavy burden, and it don’t ever go away. You do what you have to do. Leadership is a hell of a thing.”

  I rubbed my face. “I can’t—”

  “They won’t be the last,” he promised. “That’s war, and yours is just beginning.”

  “I know it is,” I answered. “But we’ve got a lot bigger army than I thought. There’s legions of us.”

  The men of the Pitt family sat at that table for a while, mulling that over. Dad waited patiently to begin. He’d already waited most of his life for this moment.

  It was time to fulfill his destiny.

  It was time for me to start mine.

  “Dad, it’s time we talk . . .”

  Table of Contents

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  EPILOGUE

 

 

 
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