Soloman screamed in pain at the deep wounds and rolled violently, turning and spinning, the movements faster and faster in a red blaze of pain and blood until he savagely threw the beast away, rising instantly.
The mandrill hit the ground on its feet and threw itself back, covering the small distance with a roaring bloodthirsty intent, and Soloman frantically withdrew the Grizzly to fire wildly as— It hit him again and conscious thought was never a part of what happened afterward.
The violent jaws flashed past his neck and then Soloman saw the black tanto rising in his hand, rising and plunging with death-strength into the massively muscular chest and neck.
The beast screamed, struck deep, and returned the rage but Soloman anticipated the blow, raising his shoulder and arm to block a clawed hand. And then they were tumbling again, a battle of beasts fang to fang in red light, lightning-quick blows lashing through a mist of blood as they battled.
Blows were blinding, delivered and received in a tide of flashing blood as they fought face-to-face. Then Soloman realized dimly that he was losing the titanic battle and with desperation roaring in his head grabbed the beast by the neck.
He hurled it back with hate and then closed in on it, smashing it over the stones and as they rolled again Soloman's blade rose and fell in a red holocaust of vengeance that separated him from this world, from all he had ever known.
Soloman struck blindly, in a brute frenzy that released pure rage. There was no mercy, just vengeance as he stabbed and stabbed and stabbed in a shower of blood until the beast began to tire.
A clawed hand lashed out, slower this time, and Soloman ducked to evade the blow. Then, throwing himself forward, he struck hard, his fist frozen with all his strength on the hilt of the blade as he hit it solidly in the chest, breaking a rib. Soloman felt the blade slide deliciously over bone as he instantly tore it clear, drawing viciously to do even more damage. He spun to block a back-handed sweep as the brown shape whirled again into him.
Collision!
Together they hit the floor in a storm of tornadic blows, each delivering fiendish wounds as they rolled down the corridor with roars blending. Soloman saw only white fangs painted red with his blood as he struck with the tanto again and again to hit the neck over and over, striking to kill, knowing nothing else. He struck in a red rage, wounded and wounding until the beast beneath him fell suddenly . . . still. . .
Still ... and dead.
Bending his head to its chest, Soloman moaned. He knelt a long time, everything forgotten in the pain, the place, the battle. It had almost been too much for him and then he remembered . . . Cain . . .
Amy.
He lifted his head tiredly and didn't waste a glance down because it was over and he had more to do. He stood, exhausted.
"Maggie!" he shouted, swaying.
She came out of the darkness, Mother Superior Mary Francis holding Amy in her arms with the child tightly clutching the black habit. Then as the nun approached she bent down to grasp something that Soloman had lost in the battle with the mandrill. He was too dazed to wonder what it was as she silently placed it inside her cloak.
Maggie was before him, supporting him.
With a fierce glare Soloman held her close. "Get out of here," he whispered, breathless.
"Soloman, please come with—"
"No, Maggie! It ends for both of us! Cain dies tonight! It's over!"
"Sol—"
His grip on her neck brought a cry from her.
"It's over, Maggie!" he shouted. "Cain has to die! But none of us are going to survive if you don't get out of here right now! Find Marcelle! Get back to the car!"
Mary Francis rushed forward, grabbing Soloman's arm to pull his frantic grip from Maggie.
"Do what you must do!" she shouted into Soloman's face. "Do what you must do! But do not fear him! Do not let him use your love against you! That is his greatest weapon!"
Staring, Soloman saw her essence, a strength that was not of this world. He nodded. "Get Maggie and Amy the hell out of here, Sister. I'm about to bring this place down."
Expressionless, she moved to usher the two toward the stairwell as, behind them, Soloman bowed his head.
He was already tired and wounded as he lifted the shotgun. He felt deeply that there was no way to defeat what lay above, but there was no other path to take. His whole life had come to this and now he would finish it.
Leaning against the wall, he laid the daypack on a hook beside the staircase and made sure the ruse could be lit quickly. It would kill both of them, he knew, but that was good enough.
Live . ..
Die ...
Whatever.
***
Supporting Maggie and Amy, Mary Francis ushered them up the stairwell, stepping around the dead bodies sprawled in a red flood at the threshold. Together they hurried in frantic silence, knowing they weren't safe yet.
They were halfway up when Amy reached out in tears, grasping the old nun's neck, staring hard. And even in the confusion and panic Mary Francis seemed to feel the impact of the gaze.
Amy whispered, "Mary . . ."
Mary Francis paused, turning at the words.
Then Amy slowly lifted the rosary beads, clutched them tight in a trembling fist. Her eyes were pleading, needy, and the nun paused to lean Maggie against a wall, instantly reaching up to wrap a strong old hand over Amy's.
And the crucifix.
Her voice was like cool water.
"Yes, child," she whispered. "He will."
***
Ben sat up in the seat.
Archette, eminently confident of his security defenses, had exited the manor. And Ben started the engine, waiting until the driver pulled into the sand-swept roadway of Long Island. And Ben was behind it, calculating, remembering every intersection that would come up during the next five miles, selecting a spot.
He took his time.
Then as they pulled into a deserted four-way stop outside Sea Cliff— a remarkably deserted coastal road—he saw his opportunity and moved. He gunned the LTD hard and pulled up beside the limo. The CIA-trained driver reacted automatically, driving the fender of the larger vehicle hard into Ben's right front, attempting to ram him off the road.
But Ben had expected it and took the impact, cutting the wheels hard to the right. Then they accelerated sharply and Ben waited until they reached a mean left turn, moving away from the sea.
As they took the turn Ben slammed on his brakes, letting the limo cut in front of him. And as the larger black vehicle reached the apex of the corner, he accelerated again and slammed into its rear bumper, forcing them both off the road and into the sand. The two cars careened crazily into a stand of trees.
Ben exited first, running to the driver's door and using four rounds to blast out the reinforced window before the man could respond. Then, using his brute strength and forty years of experience, he hauled the hapless driver onto the sand, disarmed him and pointed the gun in his face. His voice was a sinister threat that cut through the slashing tide.
"Get out of here," he whispered.
The driver ran, raising both hands in surrender.
It took him five seconds to vanish in the early dusk and Ben knew he didn't have much time. He got into the limo, ignoring the smashed glass. He gunned the engine and in seconds cleared it from the LTD. Then he was on the road, moving fast toward the cape.
He ignored Archette, knowing the CIA man was planning a desperate move at the first opportunity. He also knew Archette could shoot him over the seat but he was watching his every move, so screw him. If he used a gun, Ben would just use his, simple as that. They could die together.
In a short time Ben found an isolated beach area. He drove in and stopped. Then he jerked open the limousine's rear door, hauling and hurling Archette face-first onto the rocks.
There was no sand at all; the beach was a rainbow of sea gravel.
Bloodied by the impact, Archette rose enraged. His mouth was open in shock and emotion for
the first time vividly twisted the haggard face. Ben felt a wave of satisfaction to know that, for probably the first time, Archette knew what it was like to be in the trenches instead of simply sitting back and criticizing those who did the fighting.
The CIA man's eloquent manner had utterly fled.
"You . . . you're a fool," he rasped, pointing a finger. "Do you think they won't know that you're responsible for this?"
The .45 hung hot, and Ben shook his head.
"Bastard," he whispered, feeling ridiculous, but not knowing what else to say. "You damned Communist bastard … You betrayed them.
Pushed them into the street... for whatever Cain is. For that evil damned family down the road."
Archette seemed to collect himself. "Ben," he began, with a rising control, pleading, almost apologizing. "You need to consider the consequences of this action. It is not too late to, uh, to resolve this this misunderstanding."
Ben said nothing.
His face revealed it all.
Sobering, Archette straightened as he gazed into Ben's eyes. Fear began to quicken in the CIA man's face as he measured his situation. He began backing away. "I shall forget this," he said, frowning, "and you can continue your career."
Waves collided against the shore.
"Make peace with God," Ben growled coldly. "I should've let Soloman do this a long time ago."
Archette continued backing away.
"B-B-Ben," he said, raising hands to plead reason. "Just what do you know? Please! I'm telling you the truth! I am on assignment! If you do this, you will only endanger the sanctity of—"
"Right," Ben growled as he fired.
The first round went through Archette's chest and sent a fleshy cloud of blood into salty air. The second caught him high in the right lung. The third blew off a white segment of skull and scattered showering chunks of bone and brain on distant rocks.
Swaying slightly, Archette stood, eyes gone glassy.
Then fell forward to the ground.
Ben raised his face to search the beach for witnesses. He found none, though it didn't matter. They would know who did it and he would deal with it. He slowly holstered the pistol and stared down, no words rising within him, as he'd expected.
The man was dead.
Yeah. He nodded, turning away.
It was enough.
***
Soloman mounted the stairway at the rear of the dungeon, climbing step by step until he came boldly into a wide torch-lit cathedral, beholding Cain seated motionless on a lordly stone throne.
Soloman glanced around and saw a portal to his left, a vast granite stairway leading up. Without expression he turned back to the throne as Cain smiled, released a faint laugh.
"Come to me, Soloman," he said. "I did not want to face you in battle again; it was becoming tedious. But now, I suppose, I must kill you. And then begin again."
Soloman walked forward, slowly reloading the shotgun. He held Cain's demonic eyes, staring without fear at the giant seated so calmly on his throne in the cold, cavernous darkness.
"I'm going to kill you," Soloman said without emotion.
"A bold threat for one who has lost so much," Cain replied casually, unmoving and unintimidated. "Tell me, Soloman, do you know why you fight so fiercely?"
Soloman said nothing. With one hand he racked the shotgun.
"No, of course you don't." Cain smiled. "But I will tell you. You fight because you failed. Yes, because you failed your child, leaving her when she needed you the most. Because you failed your wife, surrendering to the temptations I presented – like all the rest."
Soloman's face was dead, his eyes ready. His mind was so shut down that he almost didn't hear the words but they struck him deep, hitting with a regret that wounded, making him mourn how much life he'd wasted when he had a child and wife who had loved him so much.
"Yes, because you failed them both," Cain rasped. "You had the chance to make their lives and you cast it aside ... for this world."
Soloman saw it all in a moment and knew that he had been loved, and that he had loved in return. It was true, he had not loved as he intended to love, but he had loved as truly as he had known how.
Cain laughed.
"No more words." Soloman frowned. "It's time."
The giant laughed again. "Your courage is futile, Soloman. For whether I die or not means nothing to me. I will return ... I always return. And when I do, I will hunt you down to take my vengeance."
"Then get ready to take it."
Soloman raised the shotgun and fired.
The blast scattered wide with the distance to hit Cain and the throne and the wall behind him with a disintegrating impact. Then there was a pause as Cain slowly shook his head and stood, obviously perturbed. He flicked his hands, scattering blood.
"Again and again we dance this dance, Soloman," he rasped. "But now I tire of it. You have become a distraction." He gathered something within himself, lowering his head as he assumed a threatening stance. "When will you understand that you are nothing? When will you understand that I will always take what you love as my own?"
Warily, Soloman edged toward the stairway, the shotgun centered on Cain's massive body. And as he reached the gate, glimpsing the long staircase behind him, he angled his body, secretly removing a grenade from his waist. He locked his thumb in the ring, waiting.
Cain's aspect darkened.
"All games must end, Soloman." He started across the floor, slowly at first but gathering speed quickly. "And this game has gone too long!"
He charged, hurling a massive table to the side.
Soloman turned and leaped up the steps as Cain crossed the floor in a roaring red rush but this time Soloman was almost as fast, taking the stone steps four at a time. Desperation decided his judgment because he knew Cain would be closing in quickly, and he pulled the pin as he reached the second floor, dropping the grenade behind him. He made another ten feet before it exploded, bathing the upper stones in mushrooming fire that erupted with an inhuman howl.
Stunned by the concussion, Soloman rose and whirled back to fire for effect. He sprayed flames and saw Cain's monstrous form sprawled wildly on the floor beneath the stairway, hands lifted to his head, his body wreathed in smoke. Clearly, he had almost been on top of the detonation and Soloman quickly loaded more rounds, taking a single second to secretly remove another grenade and lock a thumb through the ring.
"You're going to die tonight, Cain," he said. "As God is my witness, you're going to die."
Stillness, and the echoing roar.
With a growl Cain rose.
"Human," he rasped. "You are only . . . human."
"You took away everything I ever loved," Soloman said. "I've come to take it back."
Cain laughed, blood flowing from his mouth. "My only mistake was that you ever had it to begin with." Then, rising with effort, he began to ascend the steps, his face smoldering over extended fangs.
Defiantly Soloman pulled the ring and tossed, staring stolidly as it toppled down the stairs. As Cain realized what was coming his eyes widened in surprise. Soloman waited until the last split-second before he moved, hurling himself aside. The blast was more brutal than he'd anticipated, erupting up the staircase to pursue him. He hit the floor rolling, bringing the shotgun high. Then he leaped back to see Cain stumbling wildly through the flames and he fired point-blank, the round hitting center-mass.
As Cain staggered back Soloman fired again and again and again, sending down seven rounds. Then he leaped, hurling himself down the flight to kick the giant violently in the chest.
It was a murderous blow and would have killed a normal man, crushing his heart or shattering his spine, but Soloman knew it wouldn't kill Cain. Yet as they tumbled down the stairs in a chaotic mass of flailing arms and legs Soloman realized the blow had, indeed, stunned the giant. And when they reached the base Soloman dove away as Cain struck at him again, shattering stone, his face distorted in horrific wrath. Whirling back, Soloman emergency
-loaded a single round and fired.
The shotgun's impact slammed Cain against the wall, fangs unhinged as an ungodly roar thundered into stone and Soloman slammed in another round to fire yet again, pinning the giant down. Then he quick-drew the Grizzly, discharging the semi-auto almost point-blank into Cain's body.
At the first blast he knew it penetrated something vital because Cain's bloody fangs distended in a wounded roar, the armor-piercing bullet cutting through and through. Soloman counted the rounds as he continued and then the slide locked.
He had to move.
The giant's wrath blazed black in his face as Soloman staggered away, entering a tunnel that led to somewhere dark and unknown with Cain pursuing close behind.
***
Maggie, supported by Mary Francis, staggered into the inner ward to see Marcelle falling from a stairway, the prison tower. The priest was blackened by blood, his hand hard against his chest.
"Marcelle!"
Mary Francis, shouting an oath, laid Maggie against a wall and spun to embrace Marcelle, settling him also against the stones where he collapsed, grimacing in agony. He tried to speak, failed, and wearily bowed his head, breathing heavily.
"Where," he whispered finally, "is Soloman?"
The Mother Superior answered, "He has gone to kill Cain."
Marcelle nodded without surprise, struggling to rise. Then he seemed to see something, and a slow groan of despair came from him. Maggie, instinctively clutching Amy more tightly in her arms, raised her head to follow the gaze and saw the horrifying sight.
Two warlocks approached, swords in hand.
Mary Francis stood, confronting them.
"Go," she said to Maggie. "Go quickly."
"Mary, you can't—"
"Go, child!" she snapped, hesitating a moment before she added in a gender voice, "I have lived long enough."
Marcelle coughed as the Mother Superior glanced at him. "Do you wish to follow Soloman or Maggie?" She revealed no expression. "Do what you must do."
"I will follow Soloman," Marcelle whispered and rose tiredly, stumbling toward the darkened portal that led to the dungeon. Blood coated the stones as he slowly staggered away.
"Marcelle!" Maggie shouted, and removed the syringe containing the original Marburg virus from her jacket.
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