“I just didn’t think you’d really make a deal for them to claim a whole city.”
“Relax,” Paige said. “How do you think the Nymar got their hooks so deep into Chicago?”
The Half Breeds in the train yard burned like a stack of old tires and smelled twice as bad. Cole set a new speed record crossing the city to get back to where Daniels was hiding. Along the way, police cars sped in small packs to respond to any number of calls that flooded the emergency lines. Even though Kansas City looked like a disaster area, the Skinners knew things were a hell of a lot better than they appeared to be.
Chapter 31
Chicago Four days later
Cole’s spear hit Paige’s upraised baton with a crack that filled the cellar beneath Raza Hill. Throughout the entire practice session, he couldn’t help staring down at the arm that was held against her side by a sling.
“Stop worrying about it,” she said.
“I can’t help it. Are you sure you’re feeling well enough to spar? Maybe you should rest some more.”
Paige twirled the baton in her left hand like a drummer showing off between solos and replied, “If you don’t start swinging that weapon like a man, you’re the one that’s gonna need some rest.”
“Come on, now.” Pausing just long enough to swat away a fairly strong swing, Cole lowered his spear to block the lower shot that followed. “You can’t even use your right arm.”
“It’s a lot better.” When he scowled at her, she added, “Well, better than it was.”
“Can you move it?”
“A little. Daniels took some samples and already knows what went wrong with the ink. The next batch should work just fine.”
“Next batch?” Cole said as he sent a few quick attacks her way.
Paige stepped into a sideways stance that allowed her to bat away the spear while keeping her right side out of its range. “Trial and error. You should read the journals of the guy who put the finishing touches on the varnish we use for our weapons. There’s one old picture of the first set of hands to get stuck by those thorns, and it ain’t pretty. Now, we don’t even think about it.”
“Maybe you don’t,” Cole grumbled. “So losing your arm just gets chalked up to the greater good?”
Sighing, she waited for him to swing at her again and shifted her stance to deflect the spear with her right forearm. Despite an impact that Cole could feel all the way up to his shoulders, she didn’t even flinch. “I didn’t lose my arm,” she said. “Yes, it’s messed up. No, I can’t move my hand. Yes, it hurts. Daniels is working on the problem, so I’d rather not dwell on it. Okay?”
He actually felt relieved to hear her say that. Since leaving Kansas City, Paige had been quietly allowing Daniels to slice her up for tissue samples while stubbornly refusing to acknowledge the pasty appendage that dangled from her shoulder like a rock. Now that she’d taken to wearing the sling so she could practice, the more familiar Paige was making a comeback. “What about you?” she asked. “How are you holding up?”
Looking around at the gray walls of their basement practice space, Cole forced a nervous smile. “I could do without being underground for the next year or two.”
“Sounds good to me,” she said as she headed for the stairs and motioned for him to follow.
“Every part of my body hurts in one way or another, but the serum cleared it up pretty well.”
Paige stopped at the bottom of the stairs, turned around and asked, “Nothing broken? No bruises that won’t go away? Dizziness?”
Cole shook his head.
“How are you sleeping?”
“With my eyes closed. Heh.” Since she didn’t respond to the lame joke, Cole added, “Pretty good.”
“Then you’re done with the serum until you get hurt again,” she announced. “Since you didn’t need to go to the hospital after everything you went through, it’s in your system and doing its thing.”
“Maybe it’d help your arm,” Cole offered.
She started climbing again. “Already tried and it burned like hell. I think it’s got something to do with the charmed metal of the Blood Blade mixing directly with the Nymar juice in the serum. That stuff isn’t just some magic Hammer Strike health pack, you know.”
It made him warm in all the good places to hear her throw around some geek talk while also climbing stairs in her tight sweatpants directly in front of him. “Health pack, huh? If I got you into some more Sniper Deathmatches, you’d be pretty damn irresistible.”
She glanced over her shoulder and cocked her hip in a way that made it obvious she knew she was being watched. “And if you stopped talking about video games so much, you might gain a few hot points yourself.”
Cole knew better than to chase after that line of conversation. While some parts of him were more than willing to see it through, the other ninety-five percent was just too damn tired. He climbed up the stairs and then heard something that made him rethink those statistics.
“Come with me, Cole,” Paige said as she headed to her bedroom. “I need you for something.”
Letting his spear drop from his hand, he maneuvered through the spotless kitchen and to the rooms in the back of the old restaurant. Paige’s had once been the manager’s office, but had plenty of space since the wall between the original office and adjoining storage area had been knocked down. As she walked past a few mismatched dressers and a full-sized bed on a cheap wooden frame, she peeled off her sweatpants and tossed them onto a pile of clothes that had been festering there since before they left for KC. She wore her tight runner’s shorts under the sweats, which hugged her backside quite nicely.
Following her to a small desk at the back corner of the room, Cole deduced that the computer set up there was probably good enough to play a few games, but not at the proper graphical resolution needed to get the full effect. When Paige sat down at the desk, he groaned, “Seriously? Do you really need to strip just to get help with your computer?”
“Who says I need help with a computer?” she asked.
“So…you want to…?”
“No. I need your e-mail password. MEG forwarded some stuff, but sent it to you.”
“So you’re just trying to torture me?”
She crinkled her nose and shrugged. “Maybe just a little.”
“It’s not funny.”
“Yes it is. You should see the look on your face.”
Cole let out a sigh and walked over to see what was on the monitor.
“Oh come on,” Paige said. “My sweats smell like I stole them from a wino. They’re gross and sticking to me.”
Since he was trying not to look at her, Paige leaned closer so he could see the puppy dog eyes she was flashing him. Unlike the ones that had gotten him bruised up in practice a while back, these were genuine. “Sorry. After seeing you in your carrot patch boxers, I thought we could relax a little more around each other.”
“Relax, yes. Torture, no.” He tapped in another password and went to the most recent arrivals to his in box. “Here it is. It’s from Branch 18. They say thanks for the thermal. What’s that mean?”
“That fancy camera they were using was on layaway, so I paid it off for them. After all they did for us, I figure they earned it.”
Cole scrolled down. “Here’s one from Branch 40. It’s a bunch of links to…ohhhh…yeah. Have you seen these?”
Staring at the e-mail, Paige glanced down a long line of links to other websites, most of which steered them back to HomeBrewTV.com. Although the site’s bread and butter were videos of teens slamming each other in the groin or trying to sing, there were also plenty of clips from real television shows posted under various categories. All of the links in Stu’s e-mail fell under the same category: Kansas City Riots.
“Isn’t this the same site with the series about what can fit into a blender and the webcam journal from that whiny little college girl?” Paige asked.
“Just watch.”
The first video Cole opened was of a blond wo
man standing about forty yards away from the police car that Liam had smashed. Judging by the washed-out quality of the sunlight, it looked as if the report had been filmed not long after dawn. “Local authorities are still cleaning up the mess from Wednesday’s riot,” she said. “Although believed to have started during the most recent attack by a pack of rottweilers suspected of being set loose from an illegal fighting ring, the incidents quickly elevated to alarming proportions. Nearly all of Kansas City’s police responded to calls ranging from wild animal sightings to random assaults.”
The scene cut to another location, and had been recorded at another time, because the dazed old woman in a housedress was cast in the warmer light of early evening. “I don’t know what the police say they was, but they weren’t any dawgs. I had plenty of dawgs and I ain’t never seen dawgs like these.”
“What did they look like?” the blond reporter asked from off-camera.
“They was big and scary and…big. Fast too!”
The scene cut to a newsroom, where an older woman with graying hair sat beside a guy who looked like he’d been sucked out of an ad for cologne. The blonde from the previous scene was on a smaller screen behind cologne guy, and she said, “Many other witnesses claim to have seen what they describe as wolves running through the downtown area. While several cameras posted throughout the city were able to catch glimpses of large animals, this station was able to catch the following footage.”
Her image was replaced on the screen by a two-second clip of three animals racing across the frame so quickly that they weren’t much more than shaggy blurs. When the clip was slowed down and looped, the animals became even blurrier. The blonde reappeared just long enough to say, “Back to you, Madelyn and Jeremy.”
“Weren’t there wolves sighted in Chicago a few months ago?” the older woman asked.
Cologne guy nodded just like the prompter told him to and said, “Chicago police did report being attacked by a large animal at the scene of a domestic disturbance in Schaumburg, but refused to elaborate.” The monitor behind him flickered to show people of all shapes and shades running down the streets in a panic while throwing heavy things at each other or into nearby windows. “As for the riots, Kansas City authorities have issued a statement saying they were sparked by an unfortunate chain of events that led to nearly disastrous results. Since Wednesday, no more wolves, rottweilers, or pit bulls have been sighted. But that doesn’t go for cats and dogs, which brings us to Dennis Martins and our weather report…”
The next link in the e-mail was to another news video. The channel identification was different from the first, and the reporter was a rugged man who stood in a train yard with several fire trucks behind him. “Responding to a call that was placed toward the end of tonight’s riots,” he said, “the fire department found a grisly sight here at the Pyat Train Yards.” The reporter turned to reveal a blackened pile in the distance that had a thick plume of black smoke rolling off it. The camera then panned to show a slender man in his late forties dressed in full firefighter gear. A label at the bottom of the screen identified him as Lieutenant Bradley Speck.
“Tell us, Lieutenant Speck, what happened here?”
“Near as we can tell, someone killed a bunch of the dogs or whatever that were running loose and burnt them here.”
“So these are the dogs that were attacking people?”
“I don’t know about that,” Lieutenant Speck replied, “but they were a bunch of animals with some big teeth. They were burnt up pretty bad, so it’s hard to tell what breed they were.”
“There have been witnesses saying these were wolves or possibly something else. What can you say about that?”
“I just put out the fires. After a night like this, we’re lucky there weren’t more to put out. That’s all I’ve got to say.”
A third link was to a report from one of the national news stations. It was a short piece about the riots, which focused mostly on how many were killed and injured. Cole was about to skip right over it when he spotted a familiar face. He rewound the video and played it from there.
“I’m standing here with Kansas City local Alvin Monroe,” stated a stern but vaguely attractive woman wearing a sharp blue suit. Next to her was the skinny Nymar who’d approached Cole in North Terrace Park.
Alvin gazed into the camera as if staring into an alien probe, and then smiled just wide enough to show the chipped tips of his lower fangs. When he waved to his viewing public, his tattered sleeve fell down to show the thick black markings along his wrist.
“Mr. Monroe is being honored by local residents for saving a group of professors who were nearly attacked outside of the medical university.”
“Tha’s right,” Alvin slurred.
“Tell us what happened, Mr. Monroe.”
“Buncha big dogs came runnin’ along. Looked like they were gon’ hurt those teachers and so I jumped on ’em.”
“You jumped on them?”
“Yes’m,” Alvin said with a nod. “I jumped an’ scared ’em away. I bit one of ’em too. They din’ taste too good.”
The reporter chuckled nervously and asked, “Were they the same rottweilers or pit bulls connected to tonight’s events?”
“Are rottweilers big ’n’ mean?”
“Generally, yes.”
“They got big teef?”
“Yes.”
“Then these were them,” Alvin declared. “Dat’s dat.”
The report shifted back to the studios, where the regular anchor said, “There’s been plenty of speculation about what sort of dogs these were. Preliminary testing on several sets of remains have led examiners to conclude they were canines affected by a disease that may have also led to their feral behavior.” After that, he briefly acknowledged the efforts of a pair of “martial arts enthusiasts” who came to the aid of police during the riots by fending off several of the wild dogs. He then apologized for the correspondent’s comments regarding rottweilers and assured dog owners that the network had no intention of offending them.
“There’s a lot more like that,” Cole said, “but that’s pretty much the gist of it. Check this out, though.”
The next link went to a website that looked as if it had been put together by someone with some tech know-how and a rig in their basement, as opposed to a media conglomerate. After one click of Cole’s finger against the mouse, Paige’s screen was covered with still pictures of Half Breeds running through different sections of Kansas City and the surrounding areas.
“Haven’t we seen enough of these?” she asked.
“These are pics taken by people on their phones or cameras who sent them in to MEG’s site. These,” he said while using the cursor to circle the pictures in the left column of the screen, “are the originals, and these,” he said while circling the right column, “are the ones I touched up.”
The left column was labeled, GOOD TRY. The right was labeled, BUT NOT GOOD ENOUGH.
“Let’s just try an experiment,” Cole said as he clicked to an online search and typed in the words, Kansas City riot monsters.
Within .28 seconds, several pages of results came up. Some were in the vein of, “Hundreds claim to see monsters in streets of KC” and “rottweilers or werewolves?” while others had labels such as, “Monster pictures proven to be fake” and “Werewolf hoax turns into riot.”
When Paige looked over at him, Cole was beaming and nodding as if he’d just cured a disease. “Nice job,” she said.
“Nice? Just nice?”
“KC has been quiet and the press won’t stop talking about sick dogs, but you did a very nice job with adding to the confusion.” She got up and patted him on the head. “Now if you’ll get out of my room, I need to pack.”
“Pack for what?”
“A trip to Kansas City. I want to check in on those Mongrels.”
Cole logged out of his e-mail account and walked toward her door. “You’re going to see Officer Stanze, aren’t you?”
“He was a big he
lp,” she said with a shrug. “And a pretty nice guy.”
“Staying in the good graces of the authorities for a change, huh?”
Flicking her eyebrows up and putting on a dirty little smile, she said, “I guess you could call it that.”
“Wait. What?”
She had more than enough strength in her left hand to shove him out of her room and shut the door behind him. “You stood toe-to-toe with a Full Blood, so you can handle Chicago for a few days,” she shouted through the door. “Check on Stephanie tomorrow. I don’t like the…”
Although Paige continued to issue orders, Cole turned away from her room and walked back through the kitchen. After having been gone for a while, the door to his freezer took some coaxing before it swung open. Once he was inside his metallic, somewhat cool living space, he sat on the edge of his cot and sighed, “Just because I sleep in a freezer doesn’t mean I’m stuck here like some piece of meat.”
He picked up his phone from a stack of plastic crates that served as a table and pressed one of the speed dial buttons.
After two rings the connection was made and a voice said, “MEG Branch 40, what can I do for y—Cole! Sorry about that. Just looked at the caller ID. What’s up?”
“Hey, Stu. Is Abby around?”
“She’s listening to some EVPs.”
“Can I talk to her?”
“Sure. Hold on.”
A few minutes of static was finally interrupted by a click and a tired, vaguely interested, “Hello?”
“Hi, Abby. This is Cole Warnecki. Remember me?”
“Yes.”
“I was wondering if you were free some night. Maybe for dinner or something? I’d like to hear some of your ghost stories. Heh.”
“Like…a date?” Abby asked in a more interested voice.
“Sure. Yeah. That’s what I had in mind. How about it?”
“Welllll…”
Cole pulled in a breath, during which he reminded himself that he wasn’t some nervous kid wringing his hands. All right, so maybe he was a little nervous, but his hands were steady. “Look, I’m not a stalker or anything but you sound really nice and I’d like to treat you to a meal. We can swap weird work anecdotes. It’ll be fun.”
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