Department 19: Battle Lines (72 page)

BOOK: Department 19: Battle Lines
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“Lieutenant Kinley.”

She turned towards the source of the voice and felt a smile rise on her face. Cal Holmwood was standing on the wide landing area, Paul Turner at his side. He smiled back at her as she slid to the ground before him and snapped a sharp salute.

“Hello, sir,” she said. “How are you?”

“As well as can be expected,” said Holmwood. “How was the flight?”

“Short,” she replied. “Longer than if I’d done it myself, though.”

“I’m sure,” said Holmwood. “Are these our new recruits?”

He nodded in the direction of the
Mina II
. Larissa turned to see the six Americans making their way down the ramp, staring around at the vast grounds of the Loop with wide eyes.

“Yes, sir,” she replied. “Do you want to meet them?”

“I think I probably ought to.”

Larissa nodded. “NS9 Operators,” she shouted. “Over here on the double.”

The men and women made their way across to where she was standing, incredulous expressions on their faces.

“Interim Director Cal Holmwood,” she said. “May I introduce Captain James Van Thal, Operators Patrick Johnson, Mark Schneider and Carrie Burgess, trainees Tom Gregg and Laura O’Malley.”

“Holy shit,” said Burgess, then blushed a deep red. “Sorry, sir.”

“Don’t worry about it,” said Holmwood, smiling broadly at the new recruits. “It’s good to meet you. I’m grateful to you all for being here.”

“It’s an honour, sir,” said Van Thal.

“It’s nice to have you back, Major,” said Holmwood. “Things have changed quite a bit since you were last here.”

“I’m looking forward to getting started, sir.”

“Glad to hear it,” said Holmwood. “Major Turner, please will you show these men and women to their quarters and see that they have everything they need?”

“Yes, sir,” said Turner, stepping forward. “Follow me, please.”

The Security Officer turned and strode towards the open hangar; after a second or two, the NS9 Operators followed him. Holmwood watched them go, then turned back to Larissa.

“They’re good people,” she said.

“I’m sure they are,” said Holmwood. “I wouldn’t have sent you if I didn’t trust your judgement. Or if I didn’t think it would be good for you. How was it?”

“It was wonderful, sir,” she said. “But it’s over. I’m home.”

Holmwood nodded. “Go and get yourself settled back in. I want a full debrief tomorrow morning. And I think there are a few people who are looking forward to seeing you.”

“I hope so,” said Larissa, grinning.

“Go on then,” said Holmwood. “Dismissed.”

She cast a final glance in the direction of the
Mina II
. The two Operators were standing at the bottom of the ramp, flanking the prisoner; he stood stiffly, his hooded head up, his back straight, his feet shoulder-width apart. She considered asking the Interim Director about him, getting it over with there and then, but decided against it.

It’s not the time
, she thought.
And I can’t wait any longer to see my friends.

Larissa set off towards the hangar. Without thinking, she floated into the air, then remembered where she was and let her feet sink back to the ground. Flying, which had been so glorious in Nevada, so wonderfully liberating, was a cause for suspicion and distrust among a significant number of her colleagues, and she felt her heart sink, just a little.

Her boots clicked across the concrete floor of the hangar as she headed for the double doors that would take her inside the Loop. She pulled her console from her belt and was about to type a message to Jamie, asking him where he was, when she heard three sets of footsteps come to a halt behind her and glanced back over her shoulder.

The prisoner and his escort had stopped in front of Cal Holmwood; as she watched, he waved a hand and the two Operators walked into the hangar, leaving the Interim Director alone with the hooded man. As Larissa turned away, she saw Holmwood take one of the prisoner’s arms and lead him forward. She reached the double doors and was about to push them open when she heard three words that stopped the breath in her chest. Cal Holmwood whispered them at a volume that no normal person would have been able to hear, but to Larissa’s supernatural ears they were as clear as a bell.

“Welcome back, Julian.”

Larissa gasped. She pushed through the doors, not wanting to give any sign she had heard anything, and walked down the corridor beyond them. Her head was spinning; she told herself to calm down, to not jump to conclusions.

There are plenty of people called Julian
.
It doesn’t mean anything. He’s dead, for God’s sake.

The possibility was so incredible that she couldn’t allow herself to properly consider it; it was too big, too monumentally, earth-shakingly huge. It was a thought that had occurred to her momentarily in Nevada, but she had dismissed it then, as she was trying to do now.

Coincidence. It has to be a coincidence.

She stepped into a waiting lift and pressed the button marked B. The doors slid closed in front of her and Larissa leant against the metal wall of the car, her head pounding.

There was no way she could tell Jamie what she had heard, not without ironclad proof that the idea now churning in her stomach was true. If she let him get his hopes up and turned out to be wrong, it would destroy him, and them. But if there was even a chance that he had been lied to, that his father was still alive, how could she not? If the prisoner disappeared into some dark corner of Blacklight, and she failed to tell him while there might be a chance to do something about it, how would she be able to live with herself?

She was deep in thought as the lift doors slid open, revealing the long central corridor of Level B; she turned left and walked along the grey semicircular path that led to her quarters, to the room that she had not seen for more than a month. Her mind was so full of dead men and secrets that she was completely unaware of the dark shape behind her until she unlocked the door and felt a tap on her shoulder.

Her eyes widened, then instantly bloomed dark red; she whirled round, fangs bursting from her gums, and stopped dead. Standing in front of her, a huge smile on his face, was Jamie Carpenter.

Larissa opened her mouth, but didn’t get the chance to utter a single word. Jamie reached round her waist, lifted her into the air, and strode into the room, kicking the door shut behind them.

TWO DAYS LATER
61
POST-MORTEM

“This meeting is called to order,” said Cal Holmwood. “All members of the Zero Hour Task Force present, Lieutenants Kinley, Randall and Browning, Colonel Frankenstein and Captain Van Thal present in addition.”

Jamie looked round the Ops Room. The central table was full, men and women in black uniforms occupying every seat round its edge. The Interim Director sat at one end with Paul Turner on one side of him, Jack Williams on the other. He looked tired, as always, but his face wore a determined expression, and his voice was low and steady.

“The last week has been remarkable, even by the standards of this Department,” said Holmwood. “This meeting has been called to update you on recent events. Minutes will be forwarded to your consoles afterwards, together with Security Division regulations regarding what you are authorised to tell your teams. Until you have them, please discuss nothing you hear in this room with anyone not present now. Is that clear to you all?”

There was a chorus of agreement and a ripple of nodded heads.

“Good,” said Holmwood. “Before we begin, I’d like you all to join me in welcoming the new additions to this Task Force. Lieutenants Kinley, Browning and Randall you all know, similarly Colonel Frankenstein, who has returned to the active roster. I’d like to introduce Captain James Van Thal of NS9, who has joined us for the foreseeable future. He and I have worked alongside each other several times, and I can tell you we’re lucky to have him.”

Kate and Matt blushed slightly, Frankenstein gave no visible indication that he had heard his name mentioned, and Van Thal nodded and smiled.

“To business then,” said Holmwood. “I’m sure most of you already know, but I can confirm that Albert Harker, who escaped from Broadmoor during the mass breakout, was destroyed two nights ago in the printing presses of
The Globe
newspaper near Reading. He was destroyed by Lieutenant Browning, who was accompanied to the scene by Lieutenant Randall and Colonel Frankenstein. Interrogation of Harker’s associates has confirmed that his stated intention was to alert the general public to the existence of vampires and this Department, although they have come to believe that gaining revenge against us was his true objective He was at least partly successful in terms of the public.”

“How successful?” asked Angela Darcy. “What’s the exposure?”

“Approximately one hundred thousand physical copies of the edition of
The Globe
that Harker and Kevin McKenna altered were despatched from the facility. We intercepted several lorries before they reached their destinations, and were able to remove a significant portion from retail outlets. But there are at least twenty thousand copies unaccounted for, which we have to presume were bought and read.

“In addition,
The Globe
’s website ran Kevin McKenna’s story uninterrupted for more than an hour. It has been taken down, along with the blog that McKenna wrote, presumably on Albert Harker’s orders, but pasted versions and caches of both appear on a daily basis. There is simply no way to make them disappear entirely, or make any accurate estimates about how many people may have read them in their various incarnations. The official response ran in
The Globe
yesterday, a retraction and editorial accusing Kevin McKenna of sabotage, of playing a practical joke on the country before killing himself. Early indications are that this story is holding, at least so far, although it has been roundly rejected in conspiracy theory circles. The Ministry of Defence have received more than three thousand phone calls and fifteen thousand emails enquiring about our existence, which have all been answered with firm denials. Beyond continuing to monitor the situation, there is little more we can do at this time.”

“Jesus,” said Jack Williams. “It’s out there now, even if no one believes it yet. Harker got what he wanted.”

“Lieutenant Browning shoved a stake into his heart until he burst,” rumbled Frankenstein. “I doubt he wanted that.”

I’m not so sure
, thought Matt.

“The Security Division has concluded that there is no immediate danger of exposure,” said Paul Turner, giving Frankenstein a sharp glance. “Although it goes without saying that it is now a significantly more likely prospect than it was a week ago. Harker may not have thrown the doors open as he intended, but he has opened them a crack. The likelihood of this Department, and the supernatural, remaining unknown to the public indefinitely is now almost nil.”

Jamie listened to his colleagues, his eyes widening. He knew what had happened in the printing press, had heard the tale in great detail from both Kate and Matt, but until now nobody outside the Security Division had known the extent of the damage Albert Harker had caused.

“This could have all been avoided,” he said, his voice low, “if we had known where Albert Harker was, if his family had treated him better. None of this needed to happen.”

“Thank you, Lieutenant Carpenter,” said Turner. “When the Science Division invents a time machine, I promise you it will be the first thing we go back and fix.”

Jamie stared at the Security Officer, who returned his gaze, his expression as flat and empty as always.

“Moving on,” said Holmwood, shooting them both a warning look. “We have an update on Albert Harker’s fellow Broadmoor escapees. The Science Division has now been able to confirm the theory put forward by Lieutenant Browning, due in no small part to the cooperation of the SPC. The theory explains the unusual power of the turned escapees, and how such a widespread global action was able to be perpetrated at the same time.”

Jamie glanced over at Matt, who had blushed a deep red, and saw Kate and Larissa do the same.

You didn’t tell us this, whatever it is,
he thought.
What happened to no secrets?

“What has been concluded is that the Broadmoor patients were not turned via the traditional method that we are all familiar with. They were not bitten.”

“So what the hell was done to them?” asked Larissa. She was looking at the Interim Director with a frown on her face.

“They were injected, Lieutenant Kinley. With the plasma that coats the fangs of every vampire. In this case, that came directly from Dracula himself.”

There were gasps around the table. Jamie’s eyes widened, and he looked at Frankenstein. The monster was as impassive as ever, but he thought he saw a flicker of surprise in the corners of his eyes.

“The SPC was able to map Dracula’s DNA from the remains that were formerly in their possession,” continued Holmwood. “A comparison with the altered DNA of two of the Broadmoor patients produced a partial match, with enough similarity to draw the conclusion I have just given you.”

“That doesn’t explain why they’re so strong,” said Angela Darcy. “I thought vampire power increased with the amount of time they’re turned?”

“That was the accepted wisdom,” said Holmwood. “And we believe it remains the case. But Lieutenant Browning’s theory suggests there is more to it than we had believed. There now appears to be a clear link between the age of the vampire and the power of their victims. This explains why the escapees are so dangerous.”

“Maybe it only applies to Dracula?” suggested Dominique Saint-Jacques. “Because he was the first?”

Holmwood shook his head. “There are other examples. Marie Carpenter, who was turned by Alexandru Rusmanov, is significantly stronger and faster than we would expect her to be, given when she was turned. And…” He paused, turning his attention towards Larissa.

She frowned, then blushed under the combined gaze of the Zero Hour Task Force. “Me?” she asked. “You mean me?”

Holmwood nodded. “General Allen has reported that you demonstrate abilities far ahead of the expected curve. He described you to me as one of the most powerful vampires he has ever seen. Is that the case?”

BOOK: Department 19: Battle Lines
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