Read Roaring Blood (Demon-Hearted Book 2) Online
Authors: Ambrose Ibsen
I shook my head. “Hell, no. We're going in from the top. We'll meet them halfway.”
“The top?” asked Germaine.
“Better hold on tight.” I began to sprint. There were a few cops hanging around the edge of the RenCen, sitting in their cruisers. I did my best to stay out of their way but didn't really care if any of them saw me. I was racing down the empty street like a gazelle, one of the seven skyscrapers in my sights.
“Jesus, kid,” gasped Germaine. “You're not going t-to jump, are you?”
Hell yeah, I was.
I'd run some tests during my downtime, done a bit of practice, and I have to tell you that my demonic vertical jump had become pretty incredible. I could leap higher than any mortal in the record books. But with a running start? Twenty or even thirty feet wasn't impossible. I'd considered trying out for the NBA; dunking over the heads of those seven-foot dudes would have been child's play to me, but Kubo had smacked me for even suggesting it.
I took off like a rocket, sailing through the air, leaving the cop cars and Veiled Order foot soldiers behind, and gripped the exterior of the building.
And then I climbed.
I'm not sure what it is that allows me to climb walls so easily. My skin doesn't change; I haven't got little hooks in my hand or anything that allow me a better grip. Scaling buildings or mountains was a simple thing now that I had Gadreel; as if held in place by magnets I had zero trouble climbing up obstacles, no matter the composition of the surface. I raced up the side of the building, going up about ten or fifteen feet, before I happened upon a window I could smash.
It was time to make my entrance. It wasn't so subtle as what Kubo and the rest had been planning, but it was
fast
. I hesitated briefly before kicking in the window and rolling into the room. There was no telling what I might find inside; for all I knew there were dozens of zombies jam-packed into this room, and they'd lash out at me the moment I entered.
That was a chance I'd have to take.
I buried my heels in the windowpane and sent a shower of fine glass into the room.
My feet met solid ground and the spider precariously clinging to my shoulder trembled like he was going to pass out.
“We're in,” I said, taking a moment to catch my breath and glance around the room.
It was dark in there.
And it wasn't exactly what I'd expected to find in a building overrun by zombies.
THIRTY-EIGHT
Germaine and I were in an office space. There was a desk in the corner with a somewhat antiquated PC on top of it. A potted fern sat near the window from whence I'd just scrambled in, the terra cotta pot now half-filled with shards of glass. Two comfortable-looking swivel chairs sat in the other corner, near the door.
But you know what was missing?
Zombies.
The room was completely untampered with. Where I'd expected to find a bunch of rotting bastards fouling up the place, I found only a comfortable-looking workspace where I could sit down and create some Excel spreadsheets. Color me disappointed.
“Where are they?” asked Germaine.
“Beats the hell out of me.” I tongued my molars and approached the door to the office, cracking it and looking out to the hall. The hallway was completely empty. The air in it felt undisturbed, smelled vaguely of air freshener. Not a sour or rotting note to be found. This simply wasn't adding up. “None out here, either?” I muttered.
One-by-one, I checked out the other offices along the hall.
The only upsetting thing I found was in a Mr. Crescenzo's office. Hanging on the wall was some
hideous
modernist piece drawn up in blues, yellows and browns. A real eyesore. The kind of thing that someone who wants to appear sophisticated and artsy might hang up in their office. Well, I'm here to tell you that a bunch of brightly-colored, ugly-ass geometric shapes shouldn't pass for art-- no matter how nice the frame. Whoever this Mr. Crescenzo was, he had awful taste. I plucked the picture off of the wall and snapped the whole thing over my knee. Maybe upon returning to work he'd find the sense to hang up something truly tasteful in its place. A Picasso, a Goya--
“Where the hell are all of the zombies?” asked Germaine. He sounded almost offended at the lack of foes in the tower. “They sleepin', or what? The whole world's mobilizing against them outside and there ain't a single one to be found.”
I chuckled. “Yeah, maybe they packed up and left. Found some better things to do.”
Something occurred to me as we started for the stairwell. Zombies were capable of operating in the daylight. It'd been explained to me that they were weaker in sunlight, and so tended to operate mainly after dark. Though the zombies had moved into this complex and had plans for it, they were probably in no state for a full-on fight.
“Zombies are weaker by day, yeah?” I asked Germaine, climbing up to the next level. “Why doesn't Kubo just storm the building and kill them all with ease? Seems obvious.”
Germaine kept an eye on my rear as I started down the hall. “These secret societies are all the same. Bloated. Inefficient. They're all about bureaucracy, kid. I agree with ya, but the fact of the matter is that these guys don't
really
care about getting in here and saving the hostages. They just want to do things
their
way. Know what I mean? They'll save the world, but they'll do it in their own arbitrary fashion.”
This floor, too, was empty of zombies.
“What the hell, man? There ain't a single zombie in this whole building, is there?” I spit on the ground, doubling back towards the stairwell. “Most of the activity seemed to be coming from the hotel building. Maybe we should just focus on getting over there, huh?”
Germaine agreed. “Let's do it up, kid.”
I'd never been in the RenCen before, so finding my way to the center building was going to be tough. I guessed that the seven skyscrapers were all linked, and that they shared walkways by which the hotel could be accessed, but I had no idea where they were. I burned more than half an hour trying to find a way to the hotel building, and the entire time I encountered no one, living
or
dead.
Wandering through this empty building was creeping me out a whole lot more than the zombies would have.
I made it down to the ground floor and found what appeared to be a hallway linking the building I was in to the hotel. “Jackpot,” I said, pushing open the door and starting into the passage. The hallway was lined in windows, and a well-manicured courtyard replete with flowers and shapely trees surrounded us on both sides.
“Nice place,” said Germaine, staring out the window as we passed. “Might get a room here sometime if I'm ever back in town.”
The hallway was perhaps forty or fifty feet long. I walked slowly, not sure what I'd find once I passed through the other door. Arriving at the metal double doors whose signage welcomed would-be guests to the hotel, I placed my hand carefully upon the handle and pushed it open.
On the other side of the door was a lobby.
A lobby dressed in a light wreathe of smoke and the stench of rotting flesh.
THIRTY-NINE
My hackles went up the minute I walked in, and for good reason. The place smelled like a slaughterhouse. It's a tough thing to describe; the smell of blood, of meat left to fester in the heat, permeated every inch of the lobby and struck me with all the force of a punch to the nose.
But there was no one to be seen in the lobby.
“Where the
hell
is that smell coming from?” I asked. “And the smoke?”
Germaine buried his face against me to try and shut out the smell. “I haven't the slightest. Let's, uh... let's turn back, eh?”
So, there
were
zombies in this complex after all. Without having entered the other five buildings, I had a pretty strong hunch that the rotting invaders were relegated to this skyscraper alone. I stood for a while, listening, but heard nothing. The cries or sobs of tortured hostages never rang out, nor did the characteristic death rattles I knew the zombies to make when they sensed a threat.
There was silence.
“I've got a real bad feeling about this, kid. Didn't the Chief say that this was zombie central? I can smell the bastards but I can't see them. And I don't like that. Something's going on here.” Germaine jumped off of me and scaled the handsome counter where ordinarily a clerk would have been stationed. “Feel like we've walked into a trap, to be honest.”
I kept on walking, passing through the lobby and into one of the hallways that I presumed would lead me to the hotel rooms on the first floor. I stopped short, though, pausing at the threshold to said hallway because I saw someone.
I'd been expecting a rotting corpse, something eminently punchable. What I found instead, though, was a little girl. She walked very slowly down the hall, on tip-toes, and held something black in her hand. Approaching her slowly, I motioned to Germaine and brought a finger to my lips. The girl was walking down the hall, wearing a ruffled, knee-length dress with a flower print on it. Her red hair was naturally wavy, but looked awfully out of sorts. Maybe the girl was lost, looking for her parents? I closed the distance between us, trying to get a look at what was in her hand and hoping that I might catch her attention without scaring her.
That black thing she was holding looked an awful lot like a timer. As I snuck up behind her I saw the three red zeroes on the side of the thing.
And then I put two and two together.
I've seen enough action movies in my day to know what that was.
An explosive.
“H-hey,” I said, keeping my voice low. “Little girl? Could you... could you come over here?” I chanced, quickening my pace. “I'd like to talk to you for just a second.”
The girl didn't turn around. She just kept on walking. She never walked faster or slower, but maintained the same leisurely pace. As if she were being led, compelled. And then, when I was within a few feet of her, I noticed just how pale her skin was. Reaching out to touch her shoulder, I found her cold as ice.
The little girl turned to face me, eyes completely glazed over and trails of dried blood at the seams of her mouth. A zombie.
Germaine and I jumped back, anticipating an attack, but to our surprise the zombie girl paid us little mind and kept going down the hall. She turned a corner, leaving our stunned asses behind.
“Follow her,” said Germaine. “Follow her. I don't know where she's going, but if we follow her deeper in, then I think we're going to figure out what's going on in this place.”
I took my time in walking down the rest of the hall, and the stench of death waxed to nigh unbearable levels as I turned the corner. The lights along the next stretch were flickering and the doors to numerous rooms were hanging open. Soft footfalls were the only sounds that broke the silence.
Aside from the little girl, I glimpsed three other figures shambling down the hall. They were disheveled, but they didn't look like they'd just crawled out of the grave. Like the child, they all held black devices that I took to be explosives. “What the hell is going on?” I asked the spider, pointing to the figures ahead of us. “Why aren't they attacking us? Where are they going with those?”
I started jogging down the hall, calling after the undead, but got no reply. They didn't even turn around, were living in a completely different world, by the looks of it. I followed them down the hallway and into a large atrium where there was a sprawling fitness center. The atrium was dotted with large columns, and it was to these supports that the undead were flocking.
I watched as the little girl tapped a button on the black device in her palm and then wrapped her arms around the nearest column. The other zombies did the same. Walking through the atrium, I saw no fewer than ten or fifteen zombies gathered around the columns with explosives in hand. They were clinging to the things, apparently planning to trigger explosions and bring the whole house down.
I gulped. “Germaine,” I began, canvassing our surroundings and studying the undead in our midst, “I think these people were guests at the hotel. And Agamemnon is controlling them. They're spreading throughout the entire hotel with these explosives. The necromancer isn't using this place as headquarters after all...”
“He's going to destroy it. And he's going to make
them
do it.” Germaine pointed to the zombies. “Any way we can steal the explosives?”
“There must be tons of them...” I walked over to the little girl. She was still as a statue, her little arms wrapped tightly around the concrete pillar. The device in her palm was counting down from thirty minutes. “This thing is going off in thirty minutes...” I didn't even have to think about it. Though we might be able to get rid of some of the explosives, there was simply no way we could hope to find every last one within the space of a half hour. It just wasn't going to happen.
“What are we going to do?” Germaine sounded panicked, the hairs on his body bristling. “The Veiled Order is going to be busting in here from the underground. If they do, they're going to get crushed when the building comes down. And every first responder in the city is just outside. They'll all get smashed, too.”
I hated that necromancer, but I had to hand it to him. If you want to start a war and cripple your enemy before it even starts, then killing the first responders and anyone foolish enough to stumble in early is the best way to do it. This takeover of the RenCen was a distraction. A good one. The eyes of the world were on this building and the city's emergency forces were focused on infiltrating it. Once it went
boom
, well, they'd all go with it. Agamemnon was about to seal the deal.
I rushed out of the atrium, finding still more zombies with bombs in their hands. They lingered in the corners of every room, clung to whatever supports they could find. They'd been placed strategically, in spots where the explosions might be particularly devastating. This skyscraper was coming down, and it was coming down in a ball of fire. It was too late for the guests in this hotel; without even exploring the numerous floors of the building I felt confident of that. Agamemnon had slain them all and then raised them to do his bidding. But there was still time to save everyone else. I had to let the Veiled Order know what was really going on in here. They needed to evacuate, change their plans before it was too late and everyone ended up dying in the blast. I'd deal with the consequences later. Kubo would probably eviscerate me for busting out of HQ, but that wasn't important just then.