Assassin's code jl-4

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Assassin's code jl-4 Page 44

by Jonathan Maberry


  “There’s more. You need to find Joe Ledger right now.”

  “That’s what I’m trying to-”

  “No, listen. No matter what it takes, no matter who gets in your way- find him. Church is certain Grigor is there.”

  “ What?”

  “The device is unarmed. Vox helped the Upierczi obtain and position the bombs, but he withheld the activation codes until they gave him the full spectrum of a gene therapy to cure his cancer. Upier 531. Daughter, they’ve made Hugo Vox one of them. Now Vox is fulfilling his end of the deal.

  Grigor is there to activate the Aghajari bomb. He has a device for it, a code scrambler. He has to be stopped.”

  “I’ll cut his-”

  “Listen,” said Lilith sharply. “The code scrambler has all of the codes on it. All of them, do you understand?”

  “Yes.”

  “Daughter,” said Lilith, “we figured out where the other devices are. You have to get that code scrambler. If those other devices are activated… God.”

  “Where are they?”

  Lilith told her.

  Violin had to clap a hand to her mouth.

  Before another second passed she was moving. Leaping down to the catwalk, running nimbly along it, heading down toward the basement. Looking for Joe Ledger.

  Looking for Grigor.

  Racing to save the world.

  Chapter One Hundred Seventeen

  Aghajari Oil Refinery

  Iran

  June 16, 6:21 a.m.

  I bellowed my pain as I tried to wrench my flesh from the teeth of that shattered crate, but I wasn’t going anywhere. Grigor bent low, his body language becoming like some animalistic and predatory thing, vulpine, unnatural. His mouth was a wide, red slash in his pale face. He flashed out a hand and knotted my hair in his fist. Blood ran down my face, blinding my right eye, snaking hot lines inside my clothes. My arms were pinned by the jagged wood and I couldn’t reach my back-up knife clipped inside my pocket. He could have killed me right there and then. I knew it, he knew it. My life was nothing to him, an inconvenience at worst or an amusement at best. But he paused before going for the kill.

  “Your world is going to die,” he snarled.

  It was the kind of grandiose threat that might have sounded corny in pretty much any other circumstance. Not now. Vampires with nukes. Yeah, they get to mouth off any way they want.

  The best reply I could manage was a wheezy, “Yeah… well fuck you.”

  Not original, but effective. The effect was, however, that he pulled me halfway out of the nest of splinters and then slammed me back in, deeper.

  “When the bombs go off,” whispered Grigor, “your own stupidity and paranoia will drive the nations together into a war that will devastate the earth. When the skies darken with ash, your kind will cower. When the fallout spreads, they will sicken and die. In the coldness of nuclear winter, the Upierczi will rise up and claim dominance.”

  “Not a chance,” I said, but that was defiant bullshit.

  His plan was a pretty good one. The war would probably start as soon as the bomb in Pakistan detonated. That government was conflicted and paranoid, and ever since SEAL Team Six popped a cap in Bin Laden on Pakistani soil, political tensions have been high and hostile. They would never believe that the bomb was triggered by vampires. I mean… who would believe that? Sure, I was a true believer right now, but I wasn’t going to be there to testify to the existence of monsters. No, the bomb there, the bombs in Iran and Saudi Arabia, the bomb in Louisiana, these were going to be seen as acts of war, and war would be the result. By the time anyone ever figured out what the hell was going on, the whole world would have become a hell.

  And the Upierczi could live in a radioactive world. They were perfectly adapted-and genetically modified-to live in the world they were making.

  The fact that this was all becoming crystal clear to me right now was a pain in the ass. Would have been nice to have put this all together back at the Arklight camp, and then sipped a beer while Church called in a multinational airstrike on Grigor.

  As Church said, “If wishes were horses.”

  “I thought you believed in God,” I said, fumbling for something to use as a lever. “How does this serve Him?”

  “Read the Old Testament,” he said. “Our God is the God of vengeance and warfare. We are the new chosen people. We were chosen by Father Nicodemus and blessed by him in God’s name. Your kind should worship us.”

  I had no answer to that. I’m not a theologian. So I again fell back on my old favorite. “Fuck you.”

  Another pull and slam. Hard enough to rattle the whole stack of crates. A whole new array of burning points of pain blossomed where my body was pressed into the splinters. He leaned in close-not close enough for me to bite his nose, though-and snarled at me to worship him, emphasizing it with another shake. I was getting chewed up pretty bad by the splinters and blood was pouring down my body. I could feel it running out of my hair and down my cheeks.

  “The Red Order thought they were working to maintain the faith,” said Grigor, his tone full of mockery, “but they polluted their own mission. When the bombs go off, every human who survives will be on his knees. Not the first bombs-no, that will merely start the war-but the three we have placed on the altars of faith.”

  “What… are you talking about? Where are those other bombs?”

  Grigor leered at me and the other vampires laughed. This was the heart of their plan, and the delight they took in it crackled through the air like electricity.

  “We will strike the very heart of the faiths whose stupidity and superstitions have made monsters of my people, and whose pointless holy wars have done nothing but drive people away from faith. When I have drunk your life, Captain Ledger, I will send the activation codes that will detonate high-yield nuclear devices that we have placed in tunnels beneath Jerusalem and Mecca and the Vatican.” He leaned close. “Do you think that will bring the faithful to their knees?”

  Chapter One Hundred Eighteen

  Aghajari Oil Refinery

  Iran

  June 16, 6:23 a.m.

  John Smith lay prone on a catwalk and tracked a dark-clad female figure with his scope. He had crosshairs on her the entire time. His finger lay along the outside curve of the trigger guard.

  Without moving he said, “Company’s coming.”

  In his earbud, Top said, “One of theirs or one of ours?”

  Before he could answer, a second figure leaped out of a place of concealment and landed right in the woman’s path. The second figure moved unnaturally fast and he whipped out a long, curved dagger.

  One of them.

  John Smith slipped his finger into the guard, but before he could wrap it around the trigger, the woman ducked under the swing of the knife and there was a flash of silver in each of her hands. The Red Knight seemed to disintegrate into a cloud of bloody mist. Part of him landed on the catwalk, the rest fell into the steam below.

  “One of ours,” said John Smith. “I hope.”

  Chapter One Hundred Nineteen

  Aghajari Oil Refinery

  Iran

  June 16, 6:25 a.m.

  I thought I had heard the worst, most shocking things I could hear. I was wrong.

  Jerusalem.

  Mecca.

  The Vatican.

  God almighty.

  The King of Thorns sniffed the blood on my face and then suddenly darted his head forward, his tongue slithering out like a snake’s to lick fresh trickles from my cheek. It was a horrible thing, invasive, intrusive on a level I’d never personally experienced before, and deeply disgusting. He took a second, longer lick and I tried to squirm away from his hot tongue running over my jaw and cheek and all the way up to the corner of my eyebrow.

  He pulled back for a moment, and his smile was truly horrifying.

  I think I screamed.

  His face wrinkled in disgust and he spat out the blood, but then he smiled. “Eating garlic is an old t
rick. You have to do it for years before your blood is poison to us.”

  He laughed, stretching that mouth wider still. I recoiled and thrashed and kept screaming. Then Grigor bent closer still and pressed his cold lips to my ear.

  “Hugo Vox gave me a very special list, my friend. Would you like to guess what is on it?”

  My heart froze in my chest.

  “There are Upierczi in America. Even now, even as you die here, my brothers are heading toward Baltimore. Shall I tell you who will die?”

  He whispered the names of my father, my brother, my sister-in-law, my nephew.

  “If your brother’s wife is still fertile, we may let her live. Our birthing cells are waiting. But she will see her husband and child torn to pieces and consumed. ”

  I howled in fury and tried to tear myself free of splinters. All I accomplished was to drive the jagged points deeper into my own flesh.

  Grigor was not done with me. His lips moved against the flesh of my ear. “I can spare her. She will still die, but she can die quickly… and whole. You can save her. I offer you a chance to assure an easy death for those you love.”

  “Go to hell.”

  He slapped me so hard that I felt a tooth crack. But the impact shifted me in the nest of splinters. I felt one shoulder suddenly slide free, greased by my own blood. The rest of me though, was still trapped.

  “I’m offering you a chance to save your family. Are you too stupid or heartless to listen?”

  “O-okay,” I wheezed. “Tell me…”

  “Pray to me,” he said. “Fall to your knees and pray to the King of Thorns. Pray to the Upierczi. Be the first of your kind to worship us and you will earn my mercy. That’s all you have to do.”

  Around me the Upierczi had fallen into an expectant silence.

  I closed my eyes and thought of my sister-in-law. Jenny. Beautiful, sweet-natured. A schoolteacher and mother. I thought of my brother, Sean. A detective, a loving husband, and father. And Sam, his son. Cute, smart as a whip, and an expert on all things baseball. He wanted to play third base for the Orioles when he grew up.

  If he grew up.

  My tears mingled with the blood on my face.

  “Okay,” I gasped. “Okay…”

  He moved slightly back, easing the pressure that held me within the shattered crate.

  “You will be remembered as the first of your kind to-”

  “ Fuck you,” I snarled as I tore my loosened other shoulder free of the splinters and clamped my right hand around his balls.

  Full-fist grab, hard as I could, backed by all the terror and desperation that howled in my mind.

  Grigor’s eyes flared wide and he tried to simultaneously back away and twist his body free, but I clamped down and held on with everything I had. I came out of the crate with a spray of bloody splinters, and hit him across the face with my left. Once, twice, twisting his nuts as each punch landed. His scream was so high and loud that stalactites trembled loose from the roof and fell around us.

  So I spit right into his screaming mouth. There might not be enough of garlic in my bloodstream, but there had to be a lot of it in my saliva.

  Even in the midst of his pain, he stared at me in blank surprise for just a moment.

  Then he hit me.

  A third straight punch to the center of my chest. My hands and feet went instantly numb. I lost my grip and I lost my ability to stand as the punch sent me crashing back into the crate. I hit the corner of the big one and spun off and down, landing on my face near my fallen flashlight. For a single burning moment I could not feel my heartbeat, and I was positive that the shocking force of the blow had stalled it in my chest.

  I gasped like a dying fish and could not move.

  The Upierczi had begun to laugh like spectators at the Roman circus, amused at my defense but delighted by Grigor’s apparent victory.

  Then their laughter died.

  My body seemed to be catching fire. My chest was a solid knot of agony. I collapsed down as the darkness closed around me like a fist.

  Behind me I heard Grigor gagging and keening as he staggered away from me, but he wasn’t clutching at his groin. I could just barely see him through the gathering haze. He was clawing at his own throat. His pale face was turning red, and I could see his chest labor as he fought to suck in a breath. All he managed was a high-pitched wheeze as the allergic reaction shut down his upper airway.

  It was the garlic in my spit. Maybe even what was in my bloodstream. He’d tasted my blood after all. I’d eaten a whole lot more of it than Ghost had.

  At least I hurt him, I thought as I lay dying. At least I did that much.

  Then there was a huge sound as Grigor suddenly dragged in that lungful of air. His chest and abdomen expanded with it and he blew it out. He took another breath. And another. His color was still bad, but my trick hadn’t been enough.

  He looked at me and began to laugh. It was hoarse and phlegmy, but it was a laugh of triumph.

  Well, fuck me, I thought. The trick hadn’t worked after all.

  Then something came out of the dark and moved at me and across me and over me. A monstrous white creature that howled like a demon from the pit as it leaped into the air and struck the King of Thorns like a thunderbolt.

  The vampire’s laughter turned into a terrified shriek.

  Ghost.

  Chapter One Hundred Twenty

  Aghajari Oil Refinery

  Iran

  June 16, 6:29 a.m.

  Maybe it was that Ghost could sense me teetering on the edge of the abyss.

  Maybe it was the sound of vulnerability in the knight’s shrieks of pain.

  Maybe Ghost just plain had enough.

  Whatever the reason, my dog had clawed his way back from helpless terror. His eyes blazed with bottomless animal hate, and his teeth flashed as he bore the King of Thorns backward into the darkness.

  I think that’s when my heart started beating again.

  The Upierczi howled in mingled shock and horror as their master went down with a white dog tearing at him. They hesitated at the edges of inaction, stepping forward but not attacking. My pistol lay on the floor and I wormed my way toward it. My chest was on fire and I knew that something inside was broken, but I stretched bloody fingers toward the gun.

  Grigor tried to fend Ghost off, slapping and punching at him, but there was no art or skill in his defenses. He was absolutely terrified of Ghost. Of the fetch dog who had suddenly become the thing he and his kind truly feared.

  Ghost tore at Grigor’s flailing hands, slashing with his fangs, biting. I saw a couple of fingers arc through the air trailing streamers of blood. Grigor screamed for the Upierczi to help him and suddenly they were moving, rushing forward, converging on Ghost.

  I clawed the pistol butt into my hand, racked the slide, rolled over, aimed.

  Sudden thunder filled the chamber. The whole line of Upierczi closest to me went down but I hadn’t fired a shot.

  The Upierczi spun and looked up.

  And more of them died as bullets tore through faces and chests.

  I heard a voice, leathery and deep-chested, bellowing one word over and over again.

  “Echo! Echo! Echo!”

  And the slaughter began.

  Chapter One Hundred Twenty-One

  The Iran-Kuwait Border

  June 16, 6:30 a.m.

  Charles LaRoque sat hunched in one corner of the limousine as it raced toward the border checkpoint between Iran and Kuwait. Forty miles and they would be out of the accursed country.

  Across from him, Father Nicodemus appeared to be dozing.

  LaRoque’s phone rang and he snatched it up, looked at the screen display, and punched the button.

  “Where are you?” asked Vox.

  “Nearly to the border. We’ll be out of the country in less than an hour.”

  “Good. Things are going to hell here. Get out and lay low, and I’ll call you when the dust settles.”

  “What about the bomb
s?”

  Vox laughed. “You’ll know if they go boom.”

  “Goddamn it, Hugo.”

  “Look, Kuwait’s safe ground. Grigor isn’t targeting that. But once you get to the airport go somewhere really safe. Outside of the prevailing weather patterns. Fallout drifts, you dig?”

  LaRoque glanced at Nicodemus, who was smiling in his sleep.

  “How could so many things go wrong all at once?” asked LaRoque. “I thought you said it was all under control.”

  “Yeah, well,” said Vox. “Shit happens.”

  Vox was laughing as he disconnected, and LaRoque frowned. His father had trusted Vox, but his grandfather had not. Now LaRoque wondered which one truly knew the man.

  “Father-?” he asked.

  Nicodemus opened one eye. “What is it, my son?”

  “That was Vox.”

  “Yes,” said the priest, as if he had heard the conversation. Perhaps he had. He was sneaky like that.

  “Were we wrong to trust him?”

  “‘We’?” The priest smiled. “I wouldn’t say that we were wrong to trust him.”

  LaRoque stared at him in puzzlement, confused by the inflection.

  “I’ve always trusted Hugo. Ever since he was a boy.”

  “What? But I… I thought… you said you didn’t know him before this.”

  “Oh,” said Nicodemus. “Yes, that was a lie.”

  “What?”

  “I do that,” said the priest. “Lie, I mean.”

  “What are you talking about?”

  The priest gestured to LaRoque’s pocket. “Look at your mirror. Tell me what you see.”

  Deeply confused, LaRoque removed the compact from his jacket and opened it. The top mirror showed his own troubled face, mouth turned down in a frown, brows knitted. Then he angled it to show the bottom image.

  It was the priest’s face. It was not the first time LaRoque had seen the priest in his mirror, but there was something different about it. The face was much younger, less seamed and spotted. A healthy face that was nonetheless un healthy. Diseased in a different way. The face was grinning-the merry, devious grin of a trickster.

 

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