“Show yourself!” I screamed.
“Certainly,” the response came from directly behind me.
I turned, whipping Abomination around. There was nothing there.
“Why must we fight, Owen? Why do you rage against your destiny?”
“Face me,” I hissed. “Let’s finish this like men!” A finger tapped me on the shoulder. I spun and blasted a round of buckshot through a stained glass window. A curtain moved and I shot it too. “Damn it!” There was movement overhead, a massive shadow slinking across the ceiling.
I raised my gun as it dropped. The light caused the shape to shrink. Jerking the trigger, I managed to pump several rounds upward before impact. It slammed me into the carpet. I kept firing. The shape rose. My flashlight beam cut a path through the shadow, leaving nothing but a man in a robe. I shot Hood repeatedly in the chest, silver buckshot tearing right through him. I kept on shooting even as my flashlight exploded.
He disappeared into the darkness.
Now all I had was the pale green glow coming from my armor. I dropped Abomination into its sling. “You killed me, Hood. I’m going to return the favor!” I reached for the pouch on my back and pulled out a pair of road flares. They ignited with a hiss of flame and sparks. “I’m gonna burn this motherfucker down!” I laughed maniacally as I tossed the flares to the far end of the room and reached back for more. Once I had thrown a flare into each corner I drew another magazine from my chest rig and reloaded my shotgun. One of the curtains was on fire and the carpet had caught at the far end. Now that was more like it. Flames licked up the wall, casting flickering light across the chapel. I glanced back and forth, searching for my target.
“Monster Hunters are always hell on the furniture,” he whispered in my ear. I turned, too slow, and he blocked my shotgun. Hood’s sneering face was inches from my own. He head-butted me. Stars exploded in my vision. Then he hit me, once, twice, fists colliding with my face, robes snapping around his arms, and finished it off by kicking me brutally hard in the stomach. I collided with a pew, flipped over it, and landed on my back.
Gasping for air, I started to crawl. I was so weak. Water began to fall from the ceiling. Fire sprinklers. I coughed uncontrollably. My body was tearing itself apart.
“You have any idea what this’ll do to my insurance?” He leapt onto the top of the pew I had gone over, and crouched there, watching, enjoying my plight. The light from the flares was dying, extinguished by the sprinklers. As the light dimmed, Hood seemed to blur and grow. I flipped Abomination to full auto and emptied an entire magazine through his body. He leapt from the pew, splinters flying in every direction, and vanished back into the shadows. I rolled onto my stomach and clawed my way across the carpet beneath the other pews. It wasn’t like I could hide. I glowed in the dark.
“I defeated Earl Harbinger and Agent Franks simultaneously. What exactly do you think you’re going to accomplish? Part of me exists in a dimension beyond your understanding. You couldn’t stop me in broad daylight on your best day, let alone half-dead and in the dark.”
I found an open space between rows and rolled into it, whacking my head in the process. I reached for the satchel with Milo’s super flash-bang. I could barely feel my hands and they blundered about clumsily like they were asleep.
“You still haven’t wrapped your brain around what’s really going on! Come on, Owen, don’t disappoint me like this.”
It hurt to move, but I raised my head and looked. I could make out Hood, in human form, leaning against the far wall, arms folded. “Okay, then why don’t you educate me, asshole. What’s your master plan, besides feed me to your stupid god?”
“That’s the spirit.” He chuckled. “As you learned last year, it’s a real chore for an Old One to enter our world. They exist in a reality different from our own. The rules of our existence are fatal to them. The few trapped here are dead yet dreaming. Their spawn can only exist inside a body created in this world or as disembodied spirits. The Elder Things are far too great to lower themselves in that way. For them to exist in this plane they must first bend our reality to match their own.”
“Yeah, I know, and they need somebody like me to do that for them.” I had to keep blinking. I didn’t know if it was because of the sprinklers, or if my eyes had started bleeding. No time to worry about it. I had to focus. When I set this thing off, I would only have a few seconds to take him out.
“Very good. You’re a very special man. Preordained before your birth to wield the key to the planes, the Avatar of Chaos himself, blessed with powers beyond that of any mortal man.”
“Blah, blah, blah,” I gasped. “Get to the point. I ain’t got all day.”
“That’s your gift, your curse. Lord Machado was the last, but he was too weak. But then you were too strong. You have no idea how jealous I am of you.” He pushed away from the wall and walked casually down the aisle toward me. “If only I had been born with your blessings . . . If only you knew . . . But I do go on, and your time is so very short. To achieve my life’s work, I needed something to appease the Dread Overlord. Sacrificing you will suffice, and I needed the means to control his gift, which in a way, your side has also provided me.” He snapped his fingers. “Torres, my son, would you bring in our guest, please?”
There was the sound of doors opening. I jerked around toward the front of the chapel. It had opened into a viewing area. Fifteen feet away, half a dozen robed acolytes stood beside an ornate coffin.
“Anthony . . .” I hissed, raising my shotgun, my feverish mind forgetting that it was empty. The former Fed dipped his head at me. There was a hint of madness in his eyes. They opened the casket’s lid, revealing the occupant. Falling water beat a cadence onto the silk.
Julie?
My laboring heart skipped a beat.
No. It wasn’t her. The figure was perfectly still, hands folded peacefully across her chest, just below where someone had driven a wooden stake through her heart.
Susan . . .
“Susan Shackleford stole the artifact. She took it from DeSoya Caverns after you so carelessly discarded it. She kept it, like a common thief, stupidly thinking that she could learn to use it for herself. It was mine. I earned it. I was the one who should have inherited the key after Machado failed. Who was this stupid vampire to think that she could take my honor? She’d made herself unbelievably strong by feeding on unholy monsters of every kind, stealing their precious lives, their energy. The ghastly hag. I offered her an alliance, but that wasn’t good enough. No! Susan dared think that she could take over the Condition, the church that I built with my own hands, the flock that I’d tended! She thought she deserved my glory!” Hood’s voice was bitter. “That’s why she came to you with a piece of the key. She knew she was no match for me, but my dear old friend, Ray, believed that you, one of the Chosen, might actually have a chance. He’s as big a fool as he’s ever been, thinking he could keep it from me.”
“The artifact?” I gasped. It was too powerful. I couldn’t begin to imagine what it could be used for in the hands of a loony like Hood. “You have it?”
“After Susan dared to interfere in Mexico and then again in Cazador, I tracked her down and took back what was rightfully mine. She escaped Earl only to run into me. I’m not done with her yet, either. I’ve never been able to use such a powerful vampire in my experiments before . . . She’s always been beautiful, but I could improve her.”
He was closer now. He reached into his robes and pulled out the small piece of stone. About the size of a pack of cards, it looked innocuous enough, but I knew that it held the end of the world inside. “With you, with this, my dream will be complete.”
It wouldn’t do him any good. The big gate could only be opened once every five hundred years. He couldn’t let the Dread Overlord in. “You’re too—” I had to stop as a fire rippled up from my abdomen, burning through my throat, and bloody vomit spilled involuntarily past my lips. I retched and cringed while Hood waited patiently for me to finish. “
Late . . .” I finally gasped.
He was only a few feet away. “Of course. This isn’t about letting them in. I’m trading you for something special. I’ve proved my worthiness to awake the Arbmunep, and the artifact will allow me to utilize it to its full potential.”
Myers had said that name. “What now, you sick freak?”
Hood grinned. It was terrifying. “Eternal night. Beautiful eternal night. The world will wilt and decay until they surrender to their rightful king.”
“You’re insane.”
He didn’t like having his sanity questioned. “I’m the Lord of Shadows!” he shouted.
I was growing weaker by the second. I didn’t know if I could do this. Cold water rained down on my face. The giant flash-bang was in my lap. It was now or never.
Gathering up what strength I had left, I pulled the cord and tossed it. The Frisbee-sized chunk of lethal chemicals sailed down the aisle toward Hood. Sparks shot from the top as it landed on the sopping carpet at his feet. He frowned at the device. “Delaying the inevitable with a mere distraction,” he said as he raised his cloak to shield his face. “Pathetic.”
I forced myself upward as it ignited. Scalding light burned across the room. The cultists covered their eyes and cried out as the light bombarded them. The chemicals burned with an unholy screech. Blind, desperate, I drove myself forward. I had to reach my target.
Maybe it was the water soaking the explosive into mush, but this one didn’t last nearly as long. Hood, unfazed, lowered his cloak, grinning. “You didn’t even reach me.” He stopped when he realized where I had gone. “Oh, bloody hell.”
“Ha!” I responded, still blind, but I had found what I was looking for. The wooden stake embedded in Susan’s chest brushed my numb fingers. I forced my hands to curl around the shaft and I tugged. It grated against her ribs.
Stakes through the heart don’t permanently kill vampires. They just shut them down, their supernatural regenerative abilities unable to heal as long as the foreign object is there. When the stake comes out, the vampire heals. I wasn’t strong enough to do this on my own. I needed help. She was evil incarnate, but the enemy of my enemy was my friend.
“Stop him!” Hood bellowed at his blinded minions.
The stake wrenched free with a sickening pop. Someone crashed into my back, taking us both to the ground. I rolled over, weakly trying to defend myself. A cultist was on top of me, trying to hold me down. I got one arm free and slammed the stake upward. The man made a terrible gurgling noise as the sharpened wood pierced his throat.
Susan rose from the coffin with shocking speed, perfectly straight, the hole in her chest still closing. The vampire was eerily still for a long moment, arms demurely folded, false rain cascading around her. Her dress was torn and filthy from the flight through the forest. Her black hair hung like a veil over her pale face.
One of the cultists moved.
Her eyes opened, a sick shade of red. One delicate hand swept down, cleaving like an ax through an acolyte’s face and out the back of his skull. The other cultists retreated. Susan growled at them, raised her hand, and licked the blood from her fingers. It took a second for Susan to get oriented, taking in me on the ground, the huddled nut jobs, and her nemesis.
The Master vampire growled at the necromancer. “Marty . . .”
“Susan,” the shadow man responded.
“We have a score to settle, you and me,” she said, showing off her fangs.
“Indeed we do. You thought you could best me, take over the empire that I built. That was your last mistake.”
“And your first was having me turned into a vampire to begin with, you limey bastard.” Susan stepped out of the coffin and floated to the floor.
I shoved the dying cultist off me. “Get him, Susan! Kick his ass!” I shouted. I tried to sit up, but was too weak, and sank back to the floor.
For a second, I thought we might just have a chance. She was powerful, mean as hell, but then Susan shook her head. “Sorry, hon. I tried that once, didn’t work out. That’s why I hired you, remember? Thanks for saving me though. Much appreciated.” Then she was just gone.
“No! No! Damn it! Damn it!” I screamed in frustration. The tattered dress hit the floor, empty, as a white mist rolled across the ground and out the broken window. Stupid! So much for that idea. Never trust the undead. “You better run, you bitch!” It figured that the last thing I’d accomplished in my life was to save the life of a vampire. Way to go, idiot. I collapsed into a pathetic coughing fit.
Unbelievable pain shuddered through my body. The undead curse was shredding my cells. As a reminder of things to come, the cultist with the wooden stake jammed in his neck sat up, corpse already animated. Struggling to rise, I made it only a few feet before falling on my face. I was just too weak. A boot splashed right in front of my nose.
“Somebody shut off the sprinklers already,” Hood ordered. Strong hands landed on my back and rolled me over. I tried to reach for my pistol. That same boot collided with the side of my head. “Determined bloke, isn’t he? Disable the tracking device.”
“I’ve been jamming the signal since he came out of the portal.” Somebody took my shotgun. Someone else began pulling on the side of my armor. I was too feeble to do anything about it. “What now?” Torres asked.
“Watch him. I’ll prepare the sending. Young Mr. Pitt has a very important appointment to keep.”
Consciousness returned in tiny bits. First came the terrible aching in my bones. My body felt like an old garment that had been eaten thin by moths. Next I became aware of the taste of blood, my own blood. I gagged. My head rolled to the side so it could spill out. My eyes opened. Everything was blurry.
“Well, look who’s awake.” Torres was sitting across from me. One of his eyes was bruised and swollen shut. That’s what you looked like when Agent Franks knocked you out. “How are you feeling?”
I couldn’t respond. My face hurt too much.
“Figured as much. Well, you look like shit.” He was leaning back in his chair, enjoying himself. He had Abomination resting on the chair next to him. “In fact, let me show you.” There was a small mirror on the table between us. He picked it up and held it so I could see my reflection.
My skin was utterly pale. There were red blotches on my skin from blood vessels breaking just under the surface. The whites of my eyes had taken on a sick yellow tone and they were circled by blackened sockets. The fresh wound on my cheek from the werewolf was festering and leaking pus.
I closed my eyes. I had killed zombies that looked healthier than that. Not too much longer now.
Torres put the mirror down. “You were always ugly. Hell, I wondered how somebody like you wound up with a hot piece like that Shackleford chick. But now? Damn, you’re ugly. About to get uglier too. But don’t worry, the High Priest says that you’ll hang on long enough to make it to the other side.”
I tried to tune out the pain but it was all-consuming. I had no idea that it hurt this much to turn into a zombie. All I could feel was agony. One part of my body would just hurt, until another part started to hurt worse, and that would briefly take my attention, until the next bit topped it. The traitor continued to drone on. He was really enjoying himself. There were three other men in the room with us. They would occasionally laugh at something Torres said. I fixated on him. I failed to take out Hood because of my stupidity. Trusting Susan . . . What the hell had I been thinking? Not only was Hood still alive, which meant Earl was doomed, I had also managed to let loose another devil into the world. Maybe I could partially atone for that and somehow take this piece of trash with me.
I forced myself to pay attention to my surroundings. It was a comfortable but plain apartment, probably attached to the back of the mortuary. There was one closed door and a curtained window off to the side. I was in a heavy wooden chair. They had put down a tarp to protect the carpet. My wrists had been tightly bound to the chair arms with orange twine. The cord was frayed, but strong, and had already c
ut deeply into my flesh. Looking at my hands made me sick. Blood was seeping around my fingernails.
“I will say this for you, Pitt. You’re a man after my own heart, somebody who can appreciate the finer things in life. Good-looking women, good-looking guns.” He lifted one of my .45s. “Just so you know, I’m keeping your gear. Don’t worry. I’ll give them a good home.” The others laughed. “And look what else I’ve got.” He stuck out his chest. He had pulled the Velcro MHI patch off my armor and pinned it to his robe. The happy face with horns didn’t mean much to him, but he knew it did to me. “I figure I played Monster Hunter long enough to earn this bad boy. Pretty sweet, huh?”
“Screw . . .” I was too tired to finish the sentence.
“Poor Pitt. You’ll be on the other side, suffering for an eternity. And we’ll be here, living like kings, running the new order.”
“The dark new dawn,” said one of the cultists.
“Amen, brother,” Torres replied. “And we owe it all to Owen Pitt.” He pushed the .45 into my forehead with a sneer. “Don’t we, you zombie fuck?” He pulled the gun away and snickered. “Don’t want to get a bunch of scabs on my new gun. I want to keep this baby nice. I’ll probably use it to put a bullet into some of your friends. We’re not done with MHI, oh no. When the sun doesn’t rise tomorrow, the payback begins. We clean house, and nothing will be able to stop us.”
“You’ll . . . die . . . too . . .” It took a moment for me to register that the horrible scratchy noise was actually my voice. I sounded worse than an orc.
“Unbelievers are already dead, they just don’t know it yet. The faithful will live forever.” Torres slouched in his chair, carelessly gesturing with my gun. “We’re not as crazy as you think. The master’s one smart dude. Look at me. He’s been grooming me for years, knowing that he’d need men in the MCB eventually. I worked hard, got into federal law enforcement. He arranged a monster encounter for me to survive, bam, and next thing you know, I’m one of America’s finest . . . Don’t worry. We’re not shutting the sun off. Just blocking it until everyone’s ready to fall in line. But it’s going to get real cold and people are going to get real hungry before they have the sense to do that.”