Four tales of military horror from Jonathan Maberry, Weston Ochse, Joseph Nassise, and James A Moore. A supplemental volume to SNAFU, this book contains short stories and novellas from four of the best military horror writers in the field. From demons to horrors from the deep, the battles keep on coming. Fight or die…50,000 words to keep you on the edge of your seat.
James A. Moore , Jonathan Maberry , Joseph Nassise , Weston Ochse
Боевая фантастика18+SNAFU: Heroes
Edited by Geoff Brown and Amanda J Spedding
Cohesion Press
Bendigo (Australia), www.cohesionpress.com
The Hungry Dark
Joseph Nassise
CHAPTER ONE
The body lay unmoving in the middle of the street, partially covered by the inch or so of snow that had been falling since the sun set half an hour before. The lights of the SUV made it easy to see that the body was that of an adult male in dark clothing. The shadows looming over it, however, never mind the snow, made it difficult to make out any further details.
Knight Commander Cade Williams, the man in charge of that evening’s operation, slowly brought the vehicle to a halt a couple of car lengths away from the corpse. He stared through the windshield at the lightly falling snow on the body, then turned his attention to the two-storey buildings looming on either side of the street.
In the seat beside him, his executive officer, Master Sergeant Matthew Riley, was doing the same.
“What do you think?” Riley said, his usually deep and boisterous voice oddly hushed in the still confines of the car, almost as if he were afraid someone, or something, might overhear them.
Cade didn’t blame him; he’d started getting the creeps the minute they’d driven into town.
“Can’t just leave him there,” he said, his attention still on the buildings around them, watching for movement or some other tell-tale sign that they were occupied. “He might not be dead, just injured.”
The village streets were narrow enough as they were; never mind with a body in the middle of them. There was no way to get around the body unless they moved it.
“Look alive. We don’t know what’s out there waiting for us...” he said, as he opened the door and cautiously stepped out. The others followed suit.
All four were members of the Holy Order of the Poor Knights of Christ of the Temple of Solomon, also known as the Knights Templar. Contrary to popular belief, the Order had not been destroyed at the hands of the king of France when he’d burned Grand Master Jacques de Molay at the stake in 1314, but instead had gone underground, hidden away, its members biding their time and waiting for the right opportunity. Resurrected as a secret combat arm of the Vatican in the closing days of World War One, the Order’s primary purpose was to protect mankind from supernatural threats and enemies. There were thousands of members worldwide, organized into local commanderies and led by a Preceptor that reported to the Seneschal at the Order’s ancestral home in Rosslyn, Scotland. Despite its size, the Order operated in secret, preferring to carry out its mission from the shadows themselves; fighting the darkness with nothing more than their wits, their skill, and their faith to protect them.
Cade was head of the Echo Team, the most elite of the Templar combat units, and the three men with him – Sean Duncan, Nick Olsen, and Matthew Riley – made up the command squad of his unit. While Olsen and Riley were seasoned combat veterans, having worked with Williams for several years, Duncan was a relative newcomer to the group, having transferred to the team from the Preceptor’s security detail a few months before. So far, though, despite his occasional need to be a stickler over the rules, he’d proven his worth to the unit and Cade was glad to have him.
The men had been at the Order’s headquarters in Rosslyn, Scotland, training a new class of recruits, when they’d been summoned to action. Reports of strange creatures and unusual behavior had been occurring for about a week near the remote village of Durbandorf, in the northern Black Forest region of Germany. The local parish priest had finally had enough and made a formal report to his bishop, noting that he, himself, had seen things he couldn’t fully explain. Such reports were monitored as a matter of course by the Order and the decision had been made to send a team to check things out.
Normally Cade would have assigned one of the local squads to handle it, but after two weeks he’d had his fill of training exercises. He was itching to get back into the field and this provided the perfect excuse for him and his team to do so. Forty-five minutes after the order had been handed down, the foursome was on a plane bound for Baden-Baden, Germany. They’d picked up a rental SUV at the airport and then driven north, into the heart of the Black Forest.