“Yeah, I know,” Erin said, spinning the wheel back to the left, “your lawyer will probably call this coercion or scaring the witness or some kind of shit like that.” She white-knuckled the wheel, and the car felt like it was perpetually an inch from sending them both over the edge. “I’ll take complaints later.”
“Who are these guys?” Lucia said, almost hiccupping as she spoke. Like she was gonna heave.
“I have no fucking idea,” Erin said, the frustration bleeding out as she floored it down a straightaway. Rain washed over the windshield. “But I’m damned sure gonna find out.”
* * *
Arch watched Hendricks do the windup as he came at Gideon. The cowboy wasn’t moving nearly as slowly as he had been when Arch had last seen him; it was like he wasn’t hurt at all. Arch would have wondered if he’d been faking it, but he’d seen the bruises. And if he wasn’t mistaken, Hendricks now had both eyes open and looking absolutely normal.
He didn’t have time to wonder, though. Hendricks failed to lead with his sword and took a body blow from a backhand Gideon threw out just casually. The cowboy went flying. He landed a few feet away, almost skidding over the edge but catching himself just in time.
Arch felt a frown take hold on his face. He had his gun drawn but knew how little effect it had on these things—and that was just the lessers. He tried to remember how much impact Hollywood, the last greater he’d faced, had shown from bullets. He had lost an arm to a big rifle.
“One of you is gonna scream for me,” Gideon said in a high voice. Arch thought he had a northern accent, but didn’t know enough about northern accents to place him. “Which one of you wants to volunteer?”
Arch raised his gun, a Glock 22, filled with sixteen .40 caliber bullets, drew a bead on Gideon’s torso, and started to fire.
* * *
Lerner took what he hoped like hell was the last curve. He blew past a guardhouse like the one he’d seen at the bottom of the dam doing about sixty, shooting up the hill with the pedal mashed to the floor. The road was straight from here anyway.
“The party’s started without us,” Duncan said, and Lerner knew he was reading. The engine was revving like it would blow any minute.
“I hope our friends,” Lerner slung the word friends like it was toxic, “last until we get there. I’d hate to see the guest of honor rip through them and get done with what he needs to do before we get a chance to intervene.”
“Don’t forget the party favors,” Duncan said. Lerner hadn’t forgotten. Their batons didn’t do shit against greaters.
That was what the bag in the trunk was for.
* * *
Hendricks took the impact on his shoulder and rolled out of it as best he could. Gideon hit harder than most demons, and he wasn’t even really trying, Hendricks didn’t think. The wet splashing noise he’d made as he landed coupled with the sudden rush of water down the neck of his shirt was a rude fucking awakening.
Arch stood off with Gideon gun raised while the demon said something about screaming. Hendricks could have heard him over the rain but he wasn’t paying any attention. He was too busy going for his own gun.
Arch started firing and Hendricks tried to match him. He had a 1911, made by Colt. He’d heard the story in the Marines about how it was actually designed by legendary gunmaker John Browning for the U.S. Army in the wake of the Spanish-American war. It had some hard-hitting rounds, big .45s. Bigger than what Arch carried, anyway.
But not as many bullets. He blew through all seven rounds in the magazine plus the one in the chamber about the time Arch was hitting his stride. Hendricks had a spare mag and changed it out quickly, fumbling a little from where he still lay in the water.
When he had the slide safely locked back into position and ready to fire again, he looked up. Gideon was just standing there, a look of discomfort on his face, like he had gas and nothing more troubling than that. It turned into a smile as Hendricks was getting to his feet and holstering his gun. He tightened the grip on his sword.
“Okay, boys,” Gideon said, grin showing some crooked teeth, “now that you’ve fired at me, let me return the favor.”
And he opened his mouth and blew fucking fire at Hendricks in an eight-foot jet of flame.
* * *
Erin was on the sedan in the home stretch, saw it crest the ridge at the edge of the dam road and disappear from sight. She could see a couple cars parked up there—one of them was Arch’s Explorer, she noted with surprise. “What the fuck?” she whispered.
“Another cop up here?” Lucia said, like she was looking for affirmation.
They were seconds behind the sedan in cresting the top of the hill. The road dipped down at a low angle after that, leveling out where it met the dam. The sedan had stopped in the middle of the road just in front of them and the two guys were already out, already running onto the dam where something—she squinted—what the fuck—?
There was Arch, she realized in a flash, with his back to the two guys getting out of the sedan. Just a few feet in front of him was another guy, a pudgy one, but it took a second to realize he was even a guy because he had a jet of fire coming out of his mouth that stretched out toward the steep edge of the Tallakeet Dam. At the end of it, jumping sideways toward Arch and rolling, kicking up water as he did so, was a man in a black coat and a cowboy hat.
“What the …” Lucia whispered in quiet awe as Erin hit the brakes, stopping the cruiser behind the sedan they’d been chasing like it was life itself only a moment before. “What IS that?”
“Holy fuck,” Erin said in raw shock, a cold, clammy feeling crawling over her skin as she watched the fat man breathe fire again in a long, blazing line at Hendricks, who was scrambling to avoid it. “It’s a fucking demon.”
* * *
Gideon was boiling over, the hot desire unspent and burning out of his mouth in the form of flames. He could spray it in a jet, he’d figured out with that engineer, and had seared the man to ashes from the waist up.
The rain was pounding as he unleashed it aiming for the cowboy, his motel neighbor. Served the demon hunter right; he was clearly looking for a fight.
Now he had one.
Gideon had never been a very physical person. Most Sygraaths weren’t. They lived in isolation, didn’t deal with people. Now Gideon had no idea why. It was so good to touch, so good to kill while you were up close. He’d always known being closer made it more intense, but this was taking it to new heights.
He chased the cowboy along with his breath of fire. He could hear the rain hissing and turning to steam as it hit the flames.
The cop kept shooting at him, but he shrugged it off. Like pinpricks, they were. The noise was the worst part.
Then a gun roared from somewhere behind the cop, up on the hill, and he felt a hell of a lot more than a pinprick.
* * *
Erin heard the shot crack down from somewhere behind her, watched the fire-breathing demon stagger from the hit. The jet of flame that had been following after Hendricks stopped immediately as the tubby bastard reeled, arms pinwheeling from the impact.
Erin stared at the scene taking place through her front window, then blinked to make sure it was really happening. It was.
She threw open the door and shouted, “Stay in the car!” to Lucia, who was watching wide-eyed through the windshield herself. Erin pulled the keys as she got out and stormed around to the trunk to pop it open.
Ka-ching.
The department had lived a little larger in the days before the recession. That was in the heyday before the budget cuts came, eliminating overtime along with some necessary equipment and training. That was before Erin’s time, but because she spent her days in the office with the sheriff, she got to hear about it. Ad nauseum.
The good news was, some of those one-time expenditures from the heydays were still good five or ten years later.
Like the AR-15 rifle that the sheriff carried in his trunk.
Erin snugged the stock against he
r shoulder and clicked the red dot scope on. It produced a little circular targeting reticle in the middle of a square display. It looked straight through into the magnifying scope just beyond on the top rail of the rifle, giving her a nice 4x zoom on what she was looking at. It didn’t have the power of whatever that person was shooting from up in the woods, but it’d spray some hurt, she figured.
And it’d be better than sitting in the car waiting to see if Arch and Hendricks survived their encounter with some fire-breathing creature from hell.
She didn’t want to think about how Hendricks had been right—and not crazy—about this one thing. She didn’t have time for it right now. She felt the stock against her shoulder, cranked back on the charging handle and palmed the forward assist for good measure. Then she thumbed the selector switch to three-shot burst and ran down the hill toward a fight she damned sure didn’t understand—but instinctively knew which side she was on.
* * *
Lerner was hanging back until the rifle shot echoed and Gideon staggered. Even a greater could get knocked down by enough force, and whatever that person was wielding looked like it had the oomph to do the job. Lerner had been shot before, by handguns, mostly, and he didn’t like the sensation. He wasn’t a greater, though, because those fuckers could shrug off a pistol shot like it was nothing.
He saw Duncan across the hood. Duncan spoke first. “You get to the trunk, I’ll—”
“Okay,” Lerner said, and Duncan was already in motion, drawing his baton as he charged at Gideon, who was falling back a couple steps from the impact of that shot.
Lerner fumbled with the keys and slapped the right one into the trunk. He would have wished for an auto open, but his hands were shaking so bad he probably would have crushed the key fob anyway.
* * *
Arch still had a couple rounds left when the roar of a big rifle up on the hill was followed by Gideon nearly falling over. He looked back, instinctively, since the bullet had probably only gone about two feet over his head on the way to the demon. He couldn’t see anyone up in the woods, but that was the point of a rifle, right?
His eyes fell down and he saw a couple things in quick order—the first was Erin Harris with an AR-15 and a mean look in her eyes. She was just stepping onto the dam when he saw her, and he wouldn’t have wanted to be in her way.
The second thing was a blur as Duncan shot past him, that peculiar-colored suit flapping in the breeze as the demon launched himself at Gideon. A baton popped in his hand as he went past, snapping to a three-foot extension like a miniature sword, and he brought it down on Gideon’s skull like he was an old-time lawman clubbing a protestor.
* * *
Erin watched as one of the suits she’d been chasing closing on the demon. He produced one of those spring-loaded batons and hit the thing in the head with it, causing the demon to stumble again and shake his head. He didn’t look pleased.
She came up on the sedan she’d been chasing as the other guy, the driver that she’d gawked at as she watched him smash her sideview mirror, opened the trunk and snatched a big black gym bag out of it. She started to tell him to stop, but he moved faster than anyone she’d ever seen, leaving the trunk open and her in the dust as he ran off across the dam toward the melee.
Erin cut across to the side of the sedan’s hood and got behind it. She’d seen that flame and didn’t really want to be on the receiving end of it the way Hendricks nearly had been. She parked herself there, pulled up her gun, looked through the scope, and waited.
* * *
Hendricks was getting up as Duncan came into the fray. He pushed off the flooded surface of the dam and brought his sword up as Duncan rained a hell of a blow on Gideon’s head. If it had been a normal skull, the crack he heard would have been bone splitting open.
As it was, all Gideon did was shake it off, take a step back, and blow a bellow of flame that sent Duncan into the air, on fire, and past Hendricks over the edge of the dam. Hendricks felt the wave of heat overcome him, and he flinched away.
It caused Hendricks to whip his head around to watch, involuntarily. Duncan shot past him like he’d been hit by a car, a ball of nearly unrecognizable flame as he plummeted four hundred feet down the sheer surface of the dam.
* * *
Lerner saw Duncan go over, was close enough to feel the heat. There was a hiss as the falling rain turned to steam and obscured his view.
Lerner felt some additional heat, though, a burning rage down deep. He started to drop to his knees in the mist of steam, grabbed hold of the zipper on the black gym bag in his hand, and he started to tug on it.
A jet of flame shot at him, lighting its way through the mist. Lerner rolled to dodge. The fire came at him so fast that he lost his grip on the bag as he evaded, throwing himself hard left. It only took a moment for him to realize he’d gone left when he should have gone right, and he fell off the dam just the way Duncan had gone. He snagged hold with one hand and dangled there by his fingertips while the flames roared over his head.
* * *
Arch saw Lerner go over the edge just a few seconds after Duncan. His first thought was that if the OOCs (or whatever) had sent their A-team, this whole thing was going to end badly for everyone but Gideon.
He didn’t dwell on that thought too long, though, instead popping the switchblade he’d been carrying in his pocket for the last couple weeks and charging at Gideon. The demon was focused on spraying the edge of the dam with flame, which was forcing Hendricks to dodge again; the fire was separating him from the cowboy.
Arch ignored the rain pelting him in the face and each splash of the water soaking his pants legs as he ran at Gideon in a tackle. Any second the demon could turn back, and Arch had to do some damage first.
How had they killed the last one? The heart, that was it. A blazing light in the chest of Ygrusibas—that cow-thing. He’d stabbed it himself, watched the thing burst into flames.
Arch bent lower for a tackle. He was going to hit Gideon right in the gut, blade first. Then he’d cut up, see if there was a light in him like there had been in Ygrusibas.
Then Gideon turned right at Arch, and Arch saw the light. But it wasn’t any sort of inner light, the beating heart of the demon.
It was Gideon’s breath of fire, hitting him squarely in the face.
* * *
Hendricks saw Arch disappear into the flames as Gideon swept around to counter the cop charging at him. Hendricks had been stuck in place, separated from Arch by the flames as Gideon chased him with the fire. He’d seen what it had done to Duncan, and getting hit by it was not on his priority list.
But when it hit Arch, Hendricks felt the cold, clutching fear wrap itself around his stomach and pull down like he’d had a weight tied to his gut. His knees felt like they wanted to buckle, and he could feel his jaw drop.
The fire blazed, pouring out of Gideon’s mouth, billowing like an orange cloud that was tall as a man and just as wide. Arch was swallowed up by it entirely.
Hendricks could feel the anger course through him, and he raised his sword. He charged as he heard another thunder crack of a bullet whipping down from the hills at the same time a burst of gunfire came from behind Lerner and Duncan’s sedan at his right.
* * *
Erin watched Arch disappear in the mammoth burst of flame, swallowed up by the demon’s breath, and it took her a second to catch her own. She’d known Arch for years. Since long before they’d worked together.
Everyone knew Arch. He was the local hero, the guy every other guy wanted to be in high school, and the one every girl wanted to date.
Plus, he could have been a real dick, but he never was. He’d stayed humble, and though he wasn’t a social butterfly, he never talked down to anyone like he was better than them, never got pushy about his faith, even back then, and was always decent to everybody. Even those jealous, racist fucks who said shitty things to him for being a black man dating a pretty white girl.
Erin pulled the red dot scope
up and centered it on the demon’s face. She could barely see it, through the hiss of steam. She could feel the heat, even from here, and she pulled the trigger and let a burst fly just as the big gun up in the hills opened up again.
* * *
Hendricks saw one of Gideon’s arms go spiraling through the air and he thought, damn, whoever was at the business end of that fifty cal rifle was a pretty fucking good shot. Not Marine Force Recon good, but pretty fucking good.
Not that it mattered, because Arch was almost certainly still burnt to death.
Hendricks let that thought fuel him as he came at Gideon. The fucker had killed the one guy who he’d confided in. Five years he’d been doing this. Five years he’d submerged himself in it, in over his head every goddamned day.
Sure, he’d talked to other demon hunters, but rarely. Arch was the first person he’d connected with, other than Erin, since he’d started down this road.
Hendricks let his feet splash across the flooded surface of the dam as Gideon staggered backward, the flames in front of him dissipating into steam as another three-shot burst of rifle fire pelted him in the chest. He raised his sword and slammed into the demon, burying his blade into Gideon’s belly and following with all his weight a moment later.
His momentum hit the demon while he was already off-balance. Hendricks saw the sword slide into the demon’s fat gut as his pudgy face registered surprise. As his shoulder hit Gideon, he felt himself leave the ground and they both fell back, over the edge of the dam, and Hendricks felt a splash as they hit the flooded reservoir below and began to sink.
Depths: Southern Watch #2 Page 26