No Such Thing As Werewolves (51 page)

BOOK: No Such Thing As Werewolves
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“That’s the blood of the last grunt who gave me this kind of lip,” Blair growled, forcing authority he didn’t feel. He stepped up to the first soldier’s barrel, allowing the weapon to poke him in the chest. Energy moved within him, infusing his next words with
something
. He knew the name of exactly one officer here, and he hoped it was the right one. “Commander Jordan ordered me down to the central chamber to inspect the cabling. We’ve lost two monitors, and he doesn’t like the blind spot. You’re going to let me past, and you aren’t going to give me any more grief about it. Understood?”

“Yes, sir,” both men assented in unison, lowering their rifles as they snapped to attention. They stepped aside, clearing a path into the pyramid.

Blair blinked for a moment. Could it have been that easy? Guess he was due for a break. He hoped his luck would hold for the rest of the trip down.

He advanced past them, down the tunnel that, given how tight the corners were, he guessed may have been bored into the rock with a laser. His heart thundered as he strode away half expecting them to turn and shout at him to stop. They didn’t. He made it to the massive doors, which stood open to the night. The black cables snaked past them, and he briefly considered severing them. Not yet.

Blair entered the pyramid for the first time since his brief taste of death. This was a wholly different experience. When he gazed at the hieroglyphs covering the walls, he understood them as if he were reading English. If only he had the time for study. What knowledge must they contain?

“Did you just Jedi mind trick those guards?” Liz rumbled from the shadows, softly to avoid being detected by the cameras or the guards he’d just bluffed. “Wait till Trevor hears about this. He’s going to crack up.”

“We weren’t the droids they were looking for,” Blair said, forcing a smile.

Blair wished he shared her enthusiasm. Now that he was finally confronted with the reality of the situation, he was terrified. What sort of opposition would they face reaching the Mother? It couldn’t be as easy as what they’d encountered thus far. Would they be able to escape? Could he even wake the Mother at all? So many unknowns.

They continued down the corridor, eventually reaching the spot where he and Bridget had paused to study the glyphs that very first day. He stared up at the beautifully scripted wall, understanding it in a way he couldn’t possibly have then. It was so clear. The tide of undead washing across the world. The champions standing against them. Citizens coming willingly to their deaths because they knew there must be champions to save the rest of them.
 

Even this place was described, an Ark. Not
the
Ark.
An
Ark, one of many. This place held so many secrets, but he’d bought understanding at the cost of an even more precious commodity. Time. He just didn’t have it. Blair hurried forward, aware of Elmira’s form flitting from shadow to shadow. There was no sign of Liz.

He made his way deeper, eventually reaching the final slope that led into the central chamber. He remembered Steve’s shattered husk, the broken remains of a great man. He remembered long hours with Bridget, her presence inspiring the same lust it always had, despite her betrayal. Most of all, he remembered dying, just a few hundred steps from where he stood now. Would he die again today, this time more permanently?

“Listen,” Elmira hissed, flitting to the shadow next to one of the statues lining the corridor. “Do you hear that? Up above. The way we came.”

Blair listened. He heard a clatter of metal boots on stone. A lot of boots. Too many for him to make out their number. Those boots were still distant, but they were getting closer. That had to be an armed response. Soldiers would be here soon. He dropped to one knee, reaching for the cables. “They know we’re here. Liz, I’m going to cut the power. We’re out of time.”

“Do it. I’ll get down to the central chamber and scout their position. Blair, do that mindshare thing with Elmira and I,” Liz commanded, still shrouded in shadows. “Once we know what we’re dealing with, we’ll formulate a better plan.”

Chapter 73- Free

Bridget awoke with a gasp, scrambling backward as she wildly studied her surroundings. She’d been dreaming about a different world, one covered in ice and snow. The pieces melted through her fingers, leaving nothing but ephemeral images. She lay against the wall of her cell, nightgown soaked through with sweat.

A hurried set of footsteps and the rapid heartbeat they belonged to ran down the corridor outside. They stopped outside of her cell, which opened with a hiss and revealed Sheila’s wide brown eyes. She wore an ill-fitting soldier’s uniform, complete with a matte-black helmet.

“We have to get you out of here,” she panted, chest heaving. She darted a glance behind her and then turned back to Bridget. If you can break your restraints, now is the time. I spiked some coffee and gave it to the gate guards. We have maybe five or ten minutes before someone notices something.”

“Sheila, what you doing? They’ll kill you for helping me,” Bridget replied, rising to her feet as gracefully as the restraints would allow her to.

“Only if they can catch me,” she said, leaning on the doorframe as she caught her breath. “Jordan let slip that Blair is coming, and given the fact that every soldier is grabbing a gun, I’m guessing he’s arrived. I’m hoping you can get me up to the ridge above camp, then come back and help him do whatever he needs to do.”

“Of course, Sheila. Stand back,” Bridget said, closing her eyes. She summoned all the fury, all the helplessness she’d experienced these past weeks. It was finally time to fight back.

She opened the cage, allowing the beast free rein. It came surging forward, but instead of repressing her conscious mind, the beast’s mingled with hers. They were one blended being, united in their need to escape this place, to right the injustices that had been inflicted on them.

Bridget sucked in a deep breath and let out of howl that shook the walls. It grew deeper as she changed, muscles writhing as fur burst from her body. By the time the howl ended, the transformation was complete. She stood hunched in the cell, her back and shoulders pressed against the comically low roof.

The restraints had grown to accommodate her larger form, but no matter how strong they were, they had a breaking point. Bridget strained, pulling her wrists apart with as much strength as she could muster. Her arms burned with exertion for long seconds. Then the restraints gave way in a shower of broken metal. She repeated the process with her ankles, stepping into the hallway to join Bridget.

“Let’s go. Run for the ridge. I’ll be behind you, in the shadows. If anything tries to stop you, I will deal with it,” she snarled.
 

Chapter 74- Unexpected Allies

Trevor watched in horror as floodlights burst to life throughout the camp. Eight armored figures sprinted for the tunnel leading into the pyramid. They moved with military precision, in two columns of four. He remembered them from San Diego. How could he forget? He, Liz, and Blair had been forced to run then, and they’d only had to deal with four. Now there were twice as many and who knew what defenses inside the pyramid. They boiled out of the camp as though they were ants scrambling from a struck anthill, moving to encircle the pyramid’s western face, where the entrance lay. This whole op was going to hell very quickly.

He moved his scope to the closest building, the one just beyond Adolpho and Cyntia’s hiding spot. A figure burst out, but unlike the others, she darted
away
from the pyramid, toward the cliff. She kept shooting glances over her shoulder, scrambling across the rocky ground with the sort of desperation reserved for those who know their lives depend on running.

“No, no, no,” Trevor murmured, dropping the scope and surveying the area around the fugitive. His fears were confirmed. At least two-dozen soldiers had taken notice. Their training wouldn’t allow them to ignore someone fleeing during a combat op. They’d be compelled to investigate. If the person had simply walked away calmly, she might have had a chance.

The Mohn soldiers took up the hunt like a pack of hounds, fanning out as they moved in her direction. Trevor’s jaw dropped as a patch of darkness sprouted claws, rending the soldier at the rear of the group. Trevor glanced down at Cyntia’s hiding spot, but she was still there. Another female werewolf had joined the fight, but he had no idea who she was.

Adolpho broke from cover, pointing at the soldiers and barking something that the wind snatched away. A half-dozen shapes loped through the darkness, those dogs that had managed to find their way down to him. There were far fewer than he’d arrived with, maybe five or six. The soldiers reacted instantly, several dropping to firing positions behind rocks as they brought their weapons to bear.

The layered staccato of multiple rifles split the night as bullets pinged and whined below. Some found their targets, and three of the dogs dropped. One of the survivors, a burly Rottweiler, tackled one of the soldiers who’d fired. The pair went down in a tangle of limbs.

Other soldiers were stopping now, lining up shots as they adjusted to multiple opponents. The stranger materialized behind one of them, tearing out his throat before disappearing again. Trevor had a better look this time and could clearly see silver fur. Blair was the only silver werewolf that he knew of, but this was clearly a female.

The fugitive continued her mad dash, bounding over rocks as she made her way to the base of the ridge. That gave Trevor a moment of pause. There was no way the person could have climbed it unaided, not without the help of a werewolf or a jet pack. She must be working with the strange new werewolf.

He compartmentalized the situation, settling his cheek against the rifle as he peered through the scope again. Enemy of my enemy and all that. What mattered right now was downing those soldiers so his people could live. He found his first target, a tall man taking shelter behind a boulder. He ducked from cover and loosed a volley from his assault rifle. Trevor couldn’t see the man’s target, so he had no idea if the shots hit.

He cleared his mind, settling the crosshairs over the man’s throat. Then he stroked the trigger. A thunderous crack echoed across the valley as the man’s head evaporated into gory mist. Trevor glanced up from the scope, surveying the battle for more targets. There was an abundance of them. The last few dogs had already gone down.

Cyntia had apparently melted into the shadows with the newcomer, which left Adolpho and the fugitive. The fugitive had been smart enough to take cover between the large boulders at the base of the ridge, leaving Adolpho as the only viable target for almost twenty soldiers.

A withering hail of bullets lanced into him, knocking him back like a hurricane would a plastic bag. He rolled behind a boulder, probably buying himself time to heal. Then Cyntia appeared, disemboweling one soldier and then immediately slashing the throat of another. The silver seemed to take that as her cue, and she leapt from the darkness and into a trio of soldiers.

That still left over a dozen, with overlapping fields of fire. They lit Adolpho up, peppering the gray with a withering storm of bullets. He tried desperately to hide behind the rocks, but there was simply nowhere to go. Werewolf or not, his body was still flesh and blood, and Trevor watched in horror as Adolpho fell limply to the ground. The hail didn’t slacken, more and more bullets sending up gouts of blood and gore as they tore the body apart.
 

Trevor closed his eyes and took a deep breath. He couldn’t help Adolpho, but he could avenge him. He opened his eyes and found another target. Then another. Reload, aim, kill. He picked off four more before he ran out of targets. Cyntia and the silver crouched next to Adolpho’s corpse, talking.

The silver put a hand on Cyntia’s shoulder and then sprinted for the base of the ridge. She scooped up the fugitive like a toddler and began to bound up the steep hillside like a mountain goat on speed. Cyntia stayed with Adolpho for long moments before she followed.

Trevor rose to his feet and took a step back from the cliff. He rested a hand on his .45 and waited as calmly as he could. Not long after, the silver bounded over the lip of the ridge, landing heavily several feet away. She set the fugitive down. The woman had short brown hair and was wearing a Mohn uniform. Her face was pale and drawn, and she seemed to fight for breath, though he wasn’t sure if that was from exertion, fear, or altitude sickness. Maybe all of them.

“Who are you?” Trevor asked, pointedly ignoring the silver. He was totally
not
terrified of the nine-foot werewolf just a few feet away.

“My name is Sheila. I’m part of the team that’s been studying this place. We’re the ones who started this whole thing, who unleashed the werewolves,” she gasped, clutching at her chest. She looked like she might keel over at any moment, pausing to breathe in several more sharp lungfuls of cool night before she continued. “You don’t seem all that surprised by the sight of a werewolf. You’re here with Blair, aren’t you?”

“You know Blair?” Trevor asked, removing his hand from his weapon. “Yes, I’m with him. He just took a team into the pyramid.”

“Oh, thank God,” she gasped, leaning heavily against the granite. She turned to face the silver. “We may actually have a chance. You should get down there and help him.”

“Not until I’m sure you’re safe,” the silver rumbled, fixing Trevor with a baleful stare.

“If you threaten him, I will rip out your heart and eat it,” Cyntia rumbled, stepping from the shadows just a few feet from Trevor.
 

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