Читаем SNAFU: Hunters полностью

No reason to keep you down too long, darling.

She fell back to her hands and knees. He took the time to slice the side of her neck, just enough to prick the artery. Blood gushed in erratic spurts across the decaying asphalt, and she collapsed to her face, shaking, as the wound slithered and squirmed.

Her whole body shuddered, and a mad, keening growl erupted from her throat.

“There it is.”

The whispers slithered through his mind, calling to their sister, entwining her, embracing her in an unending maelstrom of madness and carnage. She thrashed on the ground, a half-ton child in a temper-tantrum, denied her favorite toys.

He glanced up long enough to see Washington and Karle advancing toward the mall without taking fire, then looked back down at Scratchy’s transformation. First-generation bonks made for the best bonk-outs. Tee-hee.

Tentacles oozed from her shoulder, and a mouth gnashed with serrated teeth from the wound in her neck. He limped back with too much theater for the benefit of the Dragonflies and took shelter in the shadows by the wall, his smirk hidden in the shadows.

Scratchy erupted in a mountain of writhing flesh, suckered tentacles and ropy masses of muscle almost obscuring her humanoid form. Her scream couldn’t come from human lungs, an animalistic rage purer and more potent than the worst that men could devise.

And better than most, Conor Flynn knew what men could devise.

Karle and Washington turned and opened fire as the bonked-out mountain of flesh charged them. His voice admirably calm, Karle called for air support and then addressed Conor. “Flynn, you alive?”

He coughed for effect. “Barely. Be a minute.”

“Well, step on it. We’ve got company.”

“Aye, sir.” From the shadows, Flynn smiled, and watched.

Washington drew a pair of combat knives and took the charge head-on. He disappeared in an avalanche of psychotic, ravening meat. Blood fountained up from the hideous abomination, though from his squad-mate or the monster Conor couldn’t tell.

He tried his leg. An electric jolt shot up his spine, but it held his weight and didn’t get any worse. Satisfied, he limped right, around the side of the building. Karle bellowed in the distance, and staccato gunfire echoed across the parking lot. Conor found a manhole, popped it up with his foot, and cocked his head.

Far beneath him, a bloody mess stained the ground, just hotter than the walls and floor. In what little streetlight hit the bottom he could just make out the remains of an ICAP uniform, too small to be Rowley or Platt. Organs and steaming chunks of viscera spilled out of the helmet, a viscous glob of jellied entrails that crisscrossed al-Azwar’s unmoving chest in a pattern his mind had to and wouldn’t recognize. The eldritch symbol lanced through his head, seeking a foothold he would never allow it to find. He snuffed it out and opened eyes he hadn’t realized he’d closed.

Overhead, streaks of orange fire lit up the sky. The earth rocked a moment before the explosions hit Conor’s ears, and Karle’s bellow of triumph brought a small shake to his head.

What’s your hollering about, big man? He’d never understand the valor in a drone strike, the glory in killing by remote control. The warriors of antiquity wouldn’t recognize this dispassionate barbarity. The bone shard hidden in the hilt of his sword cooed its agreement. He laughed, and it took that moment of empathy to attack.

Daggers of black thought lanced into Conor’s mind, seeking dominance and control, freedom from the eternity of death and the enslavement of soul. It surged forward, triumphant, exultant in the ease in which it invaded his mind. Instead of fighting, Conor let it in, deeper and deeper in its orgiastic triumph, until it came at last to the center of his being. He laughed at the panicked retreat from what it found there, then cut it off and strangled it with his will.

You serve me. And you will serve.

Cowed, the sword mewled in his mind, but it would find no mercy, no sympathy in its new master. A tremor of despair vibrated through the blade, and turned to a single, pathetic, razor thought: Hungry.

Conor patted the blade, a reflexive gesture with no emotion behind it. He grabbed a rung and climbed down, careful not to mess his boots any further on the slippery, stinking remains of Hurya al-Azwar.

* * *

Ten minutes after he found al-Azwar’s shattered body, Matt stopped with a mental grunt. Pointy’s bloody tracks marked the floor in the ultraviolet spectrum like highlighter, disrupted only by spotty patches of urine – rat or mouse by the look of it – and the acrid smell of the place. Pointy’s tracks led into a small room made of dark brick, and then straight under the steel door on the far side, a bulkhead-type monstrosity with a gasketed rim and a rusty, wheeled, double-bar lock.

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