Blood and Silver - 04

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Authors: James R. Tuck

BOOK: Blood and Silver - 04
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BLOODBATH
Two bodies lay in front of me. They were female, their clothes removed and replaced with a sheet of congealed blood and a blanket of flies. Their arms and legs were pulled apart, sprawling akimbo in death. Neither of them had peaceful expressions on their faces. No, they were both frozen in screams, eyes shut with rigor mortis, mouths drawn wide with the rictus of death. One was average height for a grown woman.
The other was much smaller.
A man without eyelids was propped up against the wall. Bloodstained rope twisted around his body, binding him in a kneeling position, holding him there. He was dead, his throat torn open. The wound yawned apart to reveal the ivory gleam of his spine. He had been forced to watch what had happened in this room before he was killed. Every horrible second, helpless to stop it. Helpless to do anything but watch.
I turned away, chest tight, hot fire burning in my guts.
Someone was going to die for this . . .
Books by James R. Tuck
BLOOD AND BULLETS
 
BLOOD AND SILVER
 
 
Novellas
 
THAT THING AT THE ZOO
 
SPIDER’S LULLABY
 
 
 
Published by Kensington Publishing Corporation
BLOOD AND SILVER
JAMES R. TUCK
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Dedicated to The Missus.
She is still the reason the world turns for me.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The list is long and filled with wonderful folks. I mean really, it is absurd how lucky I am to have the people in my life who deserve a spot on this list. In no particular order here goes.
God. ’Nuff said.
The Missus. Thank you, just thank you so much for all that you do, ever. This small thank you is a paltry attempt to cover even a drop of my gratitude for the blessing you are to me.
The Daughter, the Son, and the Nephew. Y’all kick ass and make me proud.
My editor John. I appreciate all your work on my books. Absolutely a pleasure to work with and thank you for seeing the worth in my words.
Craig, Vida, Lou, and everyone else over at Kensington. Lots of ass-kicking going on by you guys.
Gene Mollica the baddest ass cover artist in the world.
Amanda, Ben, Charlie, Gerry, Matt Shafer, Matt Quinn, Kati, Anthony, Patrick, Alex, Adrienne, and Conor, the best damn critique group on the planet.
Annabel Joseph and the ladies at MPERWA for help with that special scene between Deacon and Tiff.
Kevin and Melissa for holding down the Family Tradition Tattoo fort for me.
Derek and Carol at Dragoncon. Hells to the yeah for DC!
My fellow Word Whores. Ladies, I love being a part of the gang.
I have the wonderful blessing of making some great author friends, many of whom I was a fan of before we became friends. There are a ton but a few extra special ones include: Faith Hunter, J. F. Lewis, Linda Robertson, Jeanne C. Stein, Jenna Maclaine, Annabel Joseph, Adrienne Wilder, Alex Hughes, Jessica Page Morrell, Tom Piccirilli, Chuck Wendig, Carole Nelson Douglas, Jonathan Maberry, Larry Correia, Nancy Holder, Debbie Viguie, Jackson Pearce, Janice Hardy, Shiloh Walker, Matt R. Jones, Joshilyn Jackson, and Delilah S. Dawson.
Thank you to every bookseller who loves the series and makes sure it is ordered, stocked, and hand sold. I would buy you a Ferrari if I could!
And book bloggers. For real, I owe you guys. Just let me know if you need any bodies buried.
And you dear reader, the last but not the least. You
are
the reason I do what I do. Thank you.
1
Good days don’t last. Not for me they don’t. Not for the last five years. Since the deaths of my family, good days are like pet rattlesnakes. I may not know when they will bite, but I damn sure ought to know that they will. Suddenly and sharply. With great venom and without mercy.
But I was having a good day. Scratch that, I was having a
great
day. My friend Tiff had dragged me downtown to a little carnival that had set up in a parking lot. It took some persuasion on her part; after all, I am a big badass occult bounty hunter. We had ridden rides and filled our bellies with greasy carnival food, laughing in the sunshine and making fools of ourselves. We were surrounded by normal humans, families enjoying themselves. There were no monsters. No bloodshed.
So far the only thing that had threatened my life was a rickety Tilt-A-Whirl and some sketchy-looking hot dogs.
And I’d had a good time. Leaving the carnival, I was happy to simply walk down the street, the warm sun on my back, and a good-looking woman at my side.
I was at peace with God, nature, and my fellow man.
And I should have known some asshole was going to come along and screw it up.
“Are you working tonight?”
My eyes cut over to the small brunette walking beside me. Well, I say brunette, her hair was dyed black and had bubblegum pink cut through it in streaks. Tiff matched me stride for stride, even though at 5’2” she was more than a foot shorter than me. The quick pace flipped her short skirt back and forth, flashing a nice length of leg from hem to calf-high boots.
“Nothing’s on the books, but you know that doesn’t mean anything.” I stepped close to her as we walked. “Don’t you have to work the club tonight?”
“Nope, I got Kat to cover so that I’m free.” She moved close and her arm slid around my waist. Fingernails painted to match her hair lightly scratched through my T-shirt. A pleasant shiver chased up my spine. Her arm rested above the snub-nosed .44 revolver she knew was at the small of my back. I had a lightweight button-up shirt over it and the big .45 semiautomatic that hung under my arm.
“Maybe we could do Indian food tonight then.”
Her free hand rubbed her stomach. “I don’t know how you can think of food right now. I am completely stuffed.”
“I always think about food when I’m not working.” I was comfortable walking beside Tiff. Spring was in the air. Warm but not oppressive, like the South gets in the middle months of the year.
Things had been quiet for a bit, which is why there was time to do things like go to the carnival. Normally I am eyebrow deep in monsters. Work had been pretty tame since last year when I had gone up against Appollonia, an insane hell-bitch of a vampire who had gotten hold of the Spear of Destiny. Of course, that job had nearly killed me, but I was still standing at the end of it. I had survived and managed to kill off a good part of the vampire population in the Southeast. All in all, not a bad day at the office.
That was also the time I had first gotten to know Tiff. The break in action had given me a chance to get to know her better and we had grown pretty close.
We were not dating. I wasn’t ready for that. She understood. Hell, she had to. She knew about my family, about what had happened to them. How I had lost them five years ago at the hands of a Nephilim serial killer named Slaine. I hunted him down and found that monsters
are
real. I found that every nightmare you ever had, every story you ever heard that made you lie awake at night and sweat even though you were cold with fear, every damned thing in the dark that made your heart skip a beat . . . it’s all real. My thirst for revenge was so great I hunted Slaine anyway, monsters be damned. I chased him even after learning what a Nephilim is.
Nephilim are the offspring of Angels and humans. While tracking Slaine, I came across an Angel. Yes, an honest-to-God Angel of the Lord. Slaine’s people were raping her, trying to impregnate her and make more Nephilim, filming it to sell as Angel porn. I killed those sons of bitches and set her free.
After that, I found the bastard who killed my family. Being just human, I was outmatched. He killed me.
Dead.
When I died, the Angel showed up to return the rescue. She infused me with her blood, or whatever Angels have that passes for blood. It brought me back . . . Made me more than human.
I am faster, stronger, and tougher than normal. I heal fast, not like a superhero, but a lot faster than humans. Although it all still hurts like a bitch until I do. I can see almost perfectly in the dark, and I can sense supernatural crap. I killed that evil son of a bitch, and I have been killing every evil son of a bitch I can find ever since.
Oh yeah, I’m Deacon Chalk, Occult Bounty Hunter.
I hunt monsters for a living.
To this day, the deaths of my family sit like stones where my heart was. Sometimes the pain of their memory is crippling. It breaks my bones and grinds my soul. It crushes me. All I want to do is go be where they are. I can’t buy that ticket myself, that’s a mortal sin according to the Pope. Kill yourself and go straight to hell. Do not pass Go. Do not collect two hundred dollars. So I move on and I keep hunting, waiting for the day I run up on something monster enough to take me out, to send me on my way to be with them. To give me the peace that was ripped away from me with their deaths.
The loss of my family is why I strap up and hunt. I carry the pain and rage of their loss
every day.
It’s always there. Always waiting to crawl from the shadows. Always looking to explode and shatter into shards that cut and tear. I miss them every day.
Every.
Fucking.
Day.
And there hadn’t been anyone since my wife died.
Until Tiff.
She came along last year in the middle of that shit-storm with Appollonia and the crazy bitch’s plan to enslave humanity. Once that was settled, Tiff stayed and made a place in my messed-up life. Somehow, she found a way to make her intentions clear and yet not put any pressure on the situation at all. She knew about my family and what had happened to them. Not the full story, because I still can’t talk about it. It’s too painful, too sharp. Even without knowing, Tiff still understood. And that was enough for now.
So understand that I was happy when we walked toward the parking lot to leave. All was good and right in this shitty old world, better than it had been in years.
Until we turned the corner and came across a man beating a dog.
The man was large. Dark chocolate skin bulged, thick with muscle. Not quite as big as I am, but a big son of a bitch nonetheless. Fat dreads hung around his head like dirty snakes. They shook as his arm rose and fell and rose again. One hand snarled around a heavy chain connected to a wide leather collar around the dog’s neck. The rest of the chain flailed from his other hand, thudding against the dog’s sides and haunches.
The dog was curled into a ball, trying to be as small as possible, hiding from the chain as much as it could. Pitiful whimpers mewled with each blow. Blood-slicked shaggy fur picked up dirt and debris from the gravel lot they were in, sticking in layers of brown and gray grit. It was so covered in blood and dirt I couldn’t tell what kind of dog it was.
The man stopped beating the dog but was still holding the chain. I could hear his breathing from across the lot, bellowing in and out, short from exertion.
Tiff drew to a stop beside me as I went still. She took a small step away, giving me room to move. Her arm was still behind me and I could feel her hand on the grip of the .44 at my lower back. She had her own in her bag, a CZ-75 9mm, but mine was closer to her hand. She was following the training I had been giving her over the past few months.
Good girl.
The keys to my car were already in my hand since we were close to the parking lot. I handed them off to her. Tilting my head, I spoke from the side of my mouth without taking my eyes off the scene in front of me. “Get the car. Pull it back here and stay in it. Keep the motor running and be ready to go.”
I caught her nod from the corner of my eye as she took the keys and moved away. I looked around the lot before I moved. It was at the end of a building on the corner of two streets. The back of the building was a brick wall. Some artist had painted a mural of a girl with a butterfly on her outstretched palm. It was pretty well done. The street side of the lot had a chain-link fence clogged with kudzu that was trying to take over, using the fence as a trellis. Kudzu will grow anywhere. It’s like a disease here in the South. Give it a crack in the asphalt to plant itself and it will latch on, getting bigger as each day passes, growing and spreading in little increments like vegetable Ebola. A row of cars lined the fence, leaning on their wheels.
I looked back. No one was coming down the sidewalk. There were a lot of people at the carnival, but they were all far enough away that they looked tiny and indistinct. The coast was fairly clear as long as this stayed quiet.
I took a step, walking toward the man. I rolled my shoulders to loosen them, and flexed my hands open and closed to warm them up. Adrenaline coursed through my arteries, making my heart beat harder. Not faster, the rate stayed the same, but each beat thudded inside my ribcage like a bat to a bell. Each beat slammed an echo inside me and anger rose, pushing more blood through my veins.
People who abuse animals are cowards, especially ones who hurt dogs. Dogs are God’s way of showing He still loves us. They only exist to be devoted to us. So when some jackass has to abuse a dog to make himself feel better, it really, really pisses me off.
I am not someone you want pissed off at you.
My whistle cut across the lot, making the guy jerk his head up. Deep amber eyes flashed out under a thick brow. The scowl he gave wrinkled a wide nose and curled his lips into a snarl. His voice rumbled from a deep chest. “Go away, redneck. This is none of your concern.”
“When I go away, I will be taking that animal with me, asshole.” I stopped just a few feet from him, finger pointed toward his face. “Walk away now and save me the trouble of kicking the shit out of you before I do.”
The man dropped the chain on top of the dog with a run of clinks and a thud. The dog didn’t move or run away, just lay shaking as the chain slithered off its huddled form. Turning to face me fully, the man flexed his fingers against each other. The knuckles popped loudly. A shudder ran through him. His chest and shoulder muscles compressed under his black T-shirt, tensing for a fight. He raised his face up to look at me.
The bones underneath his skin
shifted.
It was subtle, but I saw it. The bones thickened and slipped just ever so slightly, squaring up his skull and widening his mandible. A warm power slid over my skin, rubbing like velvet against the grain. The hairs on my arms stood up. The spring breeze pushed from behind him. The moist smell of cat made my nose wrinkle.
Damn. A lycanthrope in broad daylight.
This changed everything.
My eyes cast around for a weapon to even the odds. Weres are fast as hell and stronger than a motherfucker. I had guns, I always have guns. I even had silver bullets in them, but we were in the middle of downtown on a spring day. There were people around, families just around the corner from where we stood. Hell, we were only three blocks from the local police precinct. Gunshots would bring lawmen a-runnin’. That wouldn’t be good. Cops don’t have silver bullets. Some of them know about the things I fight, but most are completely in the dark. I try to keep it that way.
The lot was flat and mostly empty, nothing but gravel under my boots. No weapons I could see. I squared my shoulders and started walking toward him again.

What
did you just say to me?” His voice was deeper, the edge of a growl rumbling out into the air.
“I said . . .” and with that I closed the space between us, looping my right hand from behind and driving it into the side of his head. My fist slammed into his temple where the skull is its thinnest. It drove his head to the side and pushed him down into a crouch. Fingers closing on a handful of dreads, I jerked his face into my knee, smashing his cheek. Pain made him roar. The volume of it shook me, vibrating through my bones. Velvet power exploded from him, rushing along my body, stinging my skin.
Faster than I could put my foot down, he threw his body back, shaking me off and flinging me backward through the air. My stomach lurched as I sailed above the gravel. One second was all I had to see golden fur erupt from dark skin and his face pull into the shape of a snarling beast.
Lion
sprang to my mind. Then I was crashing into a row of trash cans, spilling garbage everywhere, thinking about nothing but pain.
Something hard rammed into my back just above my kidneys with a grinding crush. Air whooshed from my lungs as my diaphragm spasmed and jerked. I was blind, vision dark from lack of oxygen. The pile of garbage I was in didn’t help as it spilled over me. Something wet and sticky smeared across my arm. Dust and debris flew in my face. Scrambling, I got my feet under me. Heaving lungfuls of air, I shook my head to clear my sight.

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