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Blood and Bullets

Page 25

by James R. Tuck


  Faster than I could put my foot down he threw his body back, shaking me off and flinging me backward through the air. My stomach lurched as I sailed above the gravel. One second was all I had to see golden fur erupt from dark skin and his face pull into the shape of a snarling beast. Lion sprang to my mind. Then I was crashing into a row of trashcans, spilling garbage everywhere, thinking about nothing but pain.

  Something hard rammed into my back just above my kidneys with a grinding crush. Air whooshed from my lungs as my diaphragm spasmed and jerked. I was blind, vision dark from lack of oxygen. The pile of garbage I was in didn’t help as it spilled over me. Something wet and sticky smeared across my arm. Dust and debris flew in my face. Scrambling, I got my feet under me. Heaving lungfuls of air I shook my head to clear my sight.

  A pile of old cinderblocks lay on the ground, scattered from where I had slammed into them. As my eyes cleared I saw the man who had thrown me was now a full-fledged man-beast. Half-man, half-lion, he stood like a special effect in a big-budget movie. Sand-colored fur covered him, and he had grown in size, more muscular than before, bigger than me. Thick black talons flexed in and out at the end of his fingertips. His body shook. Dreads colored like dirty honey bounced around his leonine face. They had grown out into a thick mat of a mane.

  Back turned to me, he had the dog’s chain again. His arm lifted, making the dog dangle. Pawing at the air, it struggled to breathe through the choking collar. Blood dripped from its fur, spattering the ground at his feet in a crazy pattern of swirls. High pitched yelps of pain were choked by the collar and still cut over the low growl that was thrumming from the Were-lion.

  Violence coiled inside me like a spring, tension tight, waiting to be unleashed. Anger coursed through my body. My old friend Rage washed away the pain in my back with a tide of adrenaline. My eyes squinted, my vision narrowed to a laser-fine focus; only the Were-lion was in my sight. The skin on my fingers scraped as they closed on two of the cinderblocks next to me. They weighed nothing in my anger.

  One in each hand I charged, closing the space between us in the blink of an eye. Fury tore from my throat in a scream as I slammed the two cinderblocks together against his skull.

  They shattered into shards of concrete and dust from the impact, falling apart in my hands.

  The dog fell from the lion man’s grasp, yelping as it hit the ground and immediately curling into a ball of blood-slicked fur. The lycanthrope dropped to his knees, bonelessly slumping to the side. I was on top of him in a second, fists pounding against the side of his face. Anger drove my fist again and again, trying to batter my way through bone. He was still conscious. He stayed half-man and half-beast, even though his face was slack and his eyes were closed. If he had passed out he would have shifted back into a human. I kept beating on him, not giving him a chance to recover. Not even one fucking second. One second would be too much. Give him even one second of respite and he would recover and I would lose the slim advantage I had.

  There was a flash of motion to my left and I turned. Something struck me in the side and then I was tumbling across the ground with a wolf trying to eat my face.

  Two-inch-long fangs curved yellow, snapping viciously at me. Fetid canine breath left the skin on my cheeks moist, and hot spittle flew as I fought to keep that mouth away from me. Everywhere my hands fell on the wolf to hold it back found muscle vibrating with power. Coarse fur rubbed along my arms, feeling like cotton candy made of steel. I was on my back with the wolf on top of me. My mind registered its size because we were pressed against each other. The wolf was damn near as big as I am.

  My hands scrabbled, trying to find a weak spot to exploit. Finally, I dug to the wolf’s trachea under a thick ruff of fur. Squeezing with all the strength I had, I tried to jam my fingers under it, trying to crush it. My arm was burning with effort when I felt it give and pop under my fingers with the wet, hollow sound of dislocating a joint.

  With a yelp that strangled out in a gurgle, the wolf pushed off, leaping away. It swung its head from side to side, coarse fur ruffling around its neck. It shook from snout to tail, gagging on its own blood. Black nails had dug long red furrows across my thighs and chest. The denim of my jeans gapped open atop the slashes. Thin, hot streaks cut across where the skin was broken, blood soaking out to the edges of the cut jeans.

  It hurt like a bitch.

  I didn’t try to get up. In a fight you are at your most vulnerable when trying to stand up. Instead my hand closed on the gun under my left arm and pulled it out. The grip filled my hand with a comfort. My heartbeat slowed and my nerves stopped jangling. I always feel better with my gun in hand. A Colt .45 1911 holds seven rounds of silver-jacketed death. Eight if you carry one in the chamber.

  I always carry one in the chamber.

  The safety was thumbed off the second I pulled it free of the holster. I had it pointed at the group of men who now stood surrounding me. They had been closing around me in a half circle. They stopped mid-step when the gun flashed out. It’s hard to feel anything but helpless when you are flat on your back, but having a big-ass gun helps.

  “Everybody stay right where you are.” I swung the gun back and forth from one to the other in a smooth arc, red laser sight bouncing from chest to chest. “Next person to take even one step toward me eats a bullet.”

  The five men were all different, but dressed like the Were-lion was. Black military BDU pants, boots, and black shirts. Each had small touches of individuality, but they still looked like they were wearing a paramilitary uniform.

  And they were all lycanthropes. I could feel their power pressing against my skin in a mishmash of sensation. Flashes of fur short and thick, fur coarse and greasy, rubbery skin wet and rough, thick pyramids of horn, and the oil-slick feel of snakeskin. The impressions slithered and crawled over me until they took hold of my mind. Pressure built in my skull as I drew in my power to sense the supernatural, closing it like a fist. I tamped the impressions down in my mind. Pulling my power close inside made the sensations fade. It’s a bitch to concentrate when all of that is going on, and I was a little occupied.

  The lycanthropes around me were all different sizes and shapes; the only thing similar about them was the clothes they wore. The one on the left crouched, ready to spring. Yellow eyes gleamed in the sunlight and they had the same feline cast as the Were-lion’s. He wasn’t nearly as large as the lion. Smaller, sleeker, but similar in build and feel.

  Next to him stood a long, thin man with black eyes set in a wide face. His dusky skin was hairless and slick. Even holding his position he swayed gently back and forth. A bloodless, forked tongue flickered over thin lips. I knew from the feel of him I was looking at some kind of snake. I would bet money he was venomous.

  His neighbor was short and stocky, standing on short, bowed legs. His skull had shifted, elongating his face into a reptilian snout. Matching black eyes blinked slowly at me and hard, pebbled skin formed across his brows and cheeks.

  A small, greasy man with a wide chest was helping the Were-lion to his feet. Small, sharp teeth flashed in a wide grin, too many teeth for just a human, and dark brown hair shot coarsely from his head.

  The fifth one was a giant of a man. He would have towered over me, and I am not short. Hell, normally I am the biggest man in any given situation, but this one stood an easy seven feet tall. His head was shaved like mine and gleamed in the springtime sunshine. Everywhere his skin showed it was fish-belly pale. Thick and rubbery, it covered massive limbs. Arms like slabs of beef hung loose by his side. Webbing stretched between his knuckles, skin solid to the first full joint of each finger.

  The greasy Were hopped from one foot to the other, tugging on the Were-lion’s arm. His voice was a raspy bark. “Leonidas, he is down on the ground, showing his belly.” A finger shot my direction. The arm and hand it was on were covered in a thick layer of wiry brown hair. “We can take him.”

  The Were-lion shook him off with a growl and stepped in, closing the circle around me. Blo
od matted in dreadlocked hair, and his face was twisted with anger. The wound from the cinderblocks was closed up already. Damn lycanthropes. They heal like magick.

  “He is right, human. Put the gun away, you are outmatched.” A taloned finger flicked a dread from across his eyes. “Put it away. Take your beating like a human and we will let you live.”

  I didn’t move from the dirt and gravel. Sharp rocks dug into my back and shoulders. Liquid heat was building in the muscles of my arms from holding my gun up while lying on my back, but they weren’t trembling.

  Yet.

  “I don’t know. I see seven assholes and I have eight silver bullets. I’d say I was matched pretty damn good.”

  The tension in the group cranked up to eleven. They all began to cast eyes at Leonidas, the Were-lion. I had gotten their attention by saying the magic words. Silver and bullets.

  Silver is good against most supernatural threats. It slows monsters down. To lycanthropes, silver is poison. They can heal most damage done to them, except for silver. Not only does a silver bullet cause the same trauma to them that a regular bullet does to a regular human, but it sets up a violent, allergic chain reaction too. If they don’t get the bullet out of them it can lead to anaphylactic shock and death. With regular bullets you have to completely destroy the brain or the heart to kill a Were. Toss silver on the bullet and you have a fast acting poison to lycanthropes.

  It changes the game.

  “Bullshit.” This was from the giant. It sounded like the word was stuck in his gullet. He choked it out, wet and messy. “Nobody uses silver bullets. They’re too expensive.”

  My eyebrow cocked up. “You can be the first one to find out.”

  I could feel the tremble starting in my shoulders. The gun didn’t shake yet, but it was getting heavy. Really damn heavy. I was going to have to do something to change the dynamic we were in. A standoff was not in my favor. My arm would quickly fatigue until my aim would be worthless, even at this close range. If I moved and took my gun off them, they would jump on that moment of weakness and distraction like quicksilver. I had no idea how to change the situation so I continued to buy time.

  “The name is Deacon Chalk. Surely you didn’t roll your furry asses into town and not check out the local players.”

  Leonidas waved his hand dismissively. “You are not our prey. We don’t care who you are.”

  “Turn around, leave the dog with me, and clear the hell out of my town.” The tremble that had been twittering in my shoulders now ran down my arm, spasming my tricep muscle. Fire poured into every fiber of my arm. The muzzle of the gun moved side to side. Tightening my grip steadied it. But only a little.

  “Be warned, asshole.” My own voice was a snarling growl now. “I will shoot before I lose control of my gun. Make your choice right now. Walk and live. Stay and die.”

  There was a moment where time froze, clear and sharp and fragile. None of us moved. None of us breathed. We just stayed, locked in a bubble of potential violence and bloodshed. Tension crackled the air, ozone hot.

  Then, the pressure changed.

  All of them leaned slightly forward. Drawing into themselves, getting ready to leap in tandem, murder in their eyes. My finger tightened on the trigger, arm tensing to absorb the shock of recoil that would happen the split-second the hammer fell.

  Death held his breath, waiting for blood to be spilled. I would not be able to take them all out before they tore into me. But some of them were dead meat, they just didn’t know it.

  A midnight black hot rod roared into the lot, grinding gravel under its wheels as the brakes locked down.

  Its monster grille loomed like a killer whale over a family of seals. Dust flew forward, swirling over the hood and front tires. The engine snarled with pure American horsepower. The 1966 Comet Cyclone is the epitome of what a hot rod is supposed to be. It stood with attitude. Badass black with a chain link steering wheel and a growling engine that put the lion to shame.

  She is a beauty and she is all mine.

  The heavy door swung open. A small brunette with bubblegum streaks stepped out, a shotgun racked in her hands, its distinctive sound click-clacking loud over the engine’s growl. She brought the barrel down, sweeping it back and forth over the lycanthropes that were regrouping. They had been driven back by the car’s entrance.

  “Which one of these assholes do you want me to shoot first?” Tiff’s eyes flashed, black and pink hair swirling out. The cavalry had arrived.

  God bless her.

  I scrambled to my feet, using the distraction of the car to my advantage. The lycanthropes looked from me to Tiff. The bowlegged one made a swift, shuffling move toward her. She pointed the shotgun at the middle of his chest.

  “Take one more step!” The words pushed from behind clenched teeth.

  My .45 was still pointing at the Weres. Moving and adrenaline had washed away the burn in my muscles. “I’d listen to the lady. That gun has double-aught silver-shot in it. She can’t miss your ass from there.”

  Those black eyes turned toward me. Slowly he took a step back. I shook my gun, waving them back. “Keep moving. All of you move your asses back.”

  Leonidas motioned with his hands, now covered in golden fur and ending in inch long black talons. Everyone took a few steps back. Moving over to the dog I crouched down. Reaching out my left hand I gently touched blood-slicked fur. A whine escaped its lips. It was still alive. It looked like hell warmed over, but it was still alive.

  Softly I examined it, no, sorry, her, softly I examined her. She was small, maybe sixty pounds but when healthy she looked like she would fill out to a nice ninety to one hundred. She was long-limbed and her fur, where it wasn’t covered in gore, was thick and soft. The color was a deep russet that made the blood hard to spot where it was drying. The thick collar had rubbed and worn away the fur around her neck, leaving the skin under it raw and chafed. I pushed my power out to her, letting it run down my arm and roll over her. The feedback I got was the feel of skin and the smell of a city park in the moonlight.

  Just as I thought, another shapeshifter.

  As gently as I could, I slid my arm under her, trying to find a purchase on her limp form that would allow me to pick her up. It was harder than you would think. It would have been cake if I’d had two hands to use, but I still had my gun out in my right hand and pointed at the bad guys.

  Finally I got her into the crook of my arm. Her head lolled limply against my skin, leaving smears of blood, brown and crimson. Lifting her confirmed she didn’t weigh anything. Carefully, I backed over to the Comet’s passenger door. There was a click as Tiff hit the button to unlock it, causing the heavy steel door to yawn wide and swallow us.

  The toe of my boot slid behind the front seat and hooked the lever which folded the back down. It was awkward to lean in and lay her on the backseat. I piled the chain up into loose bundles on the floorboards. Standing up I raised the .45 to cover the Weres again.

  I pushed the front seat back upright. Standing with one foot in the car and one foot on the ground I drew the .44 snubnose revolver from the holster at my lower back. Now I had both hands full of gun pointed at the bad guys. Nodding to Tiff made her slip in behind the wheel and close her door. I felt the car bump a bit as she put it in gear, foot on the brake.

  Seven angry lycanthropes glared at me in the springtime sun. Leonidas pointed a clawed hand at me. “This isn’t over. I will have what is mine.”

  I gave him my best smile, the pit bull grin. “The only thing yours around here is a silver bullet.” I waved the guns from one to the other of them for effect. “Get out of my town. If I see you again I will shoot you in the face.”

  I dropped into the seat and Tiff put the pedal to the metal. The Comet’s door slammed shut as she lurched forward, scattering Weres like bowling pins and covering them with dust.

  I had been right. An asshole had come along and ruined my perfectly good day.

  I hate being right.

  KENSINGTON
BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2012 by James R. Tuck

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat & TM Off.

  ISBN: 978-0-7582-7762-6

 

 

 


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