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    Mission_Improper

    Page 26
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    children clutching their mothers' hands, and one

      even trying to ride a bicycle in the park across the

      street, guided by a man who had to be his father.

      This section of town was a bloodbath waiting to

      happen.

      "All right," Ava concurred, closing the door

      and peering out of the window. "As long as you're

      certain you'll be fine alone?"

      "Right as rain," Ingrid replied, and stepped

      back onto the footpath. Fog clung to the alleyways

      and the hair on the back of her neck rose, as if

      something was watching her from within, but she

      forced herself to wave to Ava as the carriage let

      out a hiss of steam and then burbled into the traffic.

      It turned the corner and Ingrid let out the

      breath she'd been holding. Turning, she strode

      along the street, breathing deeply.

      What was a vampire doing in this area of

      town?

      Every person she passed only pushed her

      nerves right to the edge, as she couldn't resist

      glancing at their faces. A fat banker there, hurrying

      home to his wife and children perhaps.... What if

      he got home and found nothing but blood? Or

      nothing at all. After all, people were disappearing

      and they still didn't know why.

      At least this was a bloody lead.

      Thunder rumbled in the distance, and Ingrid

      looked up. Black clouds hovered on the horizon,

      but she still had some time before it rained.

      A young governess looked both ways at the

      edge of the pavement, her hands clasped around

      her two charges' hands. Ingrid couldn't stop herself

      from taking the woman by the arm.

      Startled eyes flew to hers.

      "Take them home," Ingrid said curtly, trying

      not to frighten the young governess too much. "I'm

      working with the Nighthawks, and I'd highly

      recommend that you keep your charges inside

      today."

      The young woman blanched, and Ingrid

      smelled panic. But the girl swept up the children

      and hurried them away. At least that might be two

      that she saved.

      Children... everywhere. Ingrid's gaze locked

      on the grassy park across the street, her ears

      ringing with their laughter and screeches of joy.

      Indecision warred in her breast. Should she send

      them home? Or follow the creature to try and stop

      whatever it was up to?

      Ingrid bit her lip, then started to run after the

      scent trail. There were simply too many people

      out, and if she paused here, then the vampire might

      start its killing spree before she got to it.

      She was the only one who might be able to

      stop it.

      Suddenly she realized where she was.

      Familiar streets that she'd only traveled herself a

      day or so ago. She began looking around, her steps

      slowing as the scent trail crossed itself. It had

      some sort of interest in this area. Where the hell

      was she? Why did she recognize—

      That was when she knew.

      "No," she whispered, "No, no, no." As she

      scrambled around the corner, she caught hold of the

      gaslight and stared up at the building across the

      street. Miss Appleby's Home for the Elderly.

      Not coincidence. Not merely a chase. It had

      come here for a purpose.

      Screams lit through the building. Ingrid was

      running before she'd thought about it. Byrnes had

      made her promise not to confront the vampire by

      herself, but this was no time to worry about

      breaking that promise.

      Not when his mother was in that building.

      Slamming through the front door, she saw the

      blood painted against the walls, one forlorn

      handprint splayed in wet vermillion before it slid

      in a splash toward the floor. A body lay there,

      throat torn out and eyes wide in horror.

      Lightning

      flickered

      in

      the

      distance,

      highlighting the darkened entrance. Ingrid leapt

      over the body, seeing others in the halls, through

      the kitchen door.... Above her, noise thumped, and

      someone cried out in agony.

      Upstairs. The bloody vampire was upstairs.

      Moving quickly up the stairs, she caught its

      scent—that sickly sweet rot. This one was not as

      far advanced as the Ulbricht vampire had been. It

      had only just begun to stink of rot, not dripping in it

      like the house party vampire. That didn't mean

      anything. She had nothing to compare it to, as the

      Ulbricht vampire was the first she'd ever

      encountered. Who knew whether it was at the full

      peak of its speed and abilities, or whether it was

      only beginning to find its strength? Vampires

      weren't precisely a studied phenomenon. They

      were rare, and the usual way to deal with them

      was to exterminate them.

      Following the muffled thuds and thumps,

      Ingrid took stealthy steps forward, one foot placed

      carefully in front of the other, both of her knives in

      hand and her heart thundering in her throat.

      Right into mayhem. The creature was sitting at

      the end of the hall, glutting itself on a body. Others

      lay scattered and torn to ragged pieces. Ingrid

      froze, realizing it hadn't seen her. Its face was

      buried in the ravaged throat of what had once been

      a servant here, judging by the apron. Mrs. Byrnes's

      door was cracked open just across the hallway,

      faded sobs coming from within. Alive then.

      Perhaps it had focused on the maidservant in its

      grip, forgetting the other potential victims in here.

      Sometimes they did that, she'd heard.

      She slid an inch toward Mrs. Byrnes's room.

      Another inch gained, her heart pounding like

      it was fit to erupt through the cage of her ribs. How

      the hell the creature couldn't hear it was beyond

      her. One more step....

      The vampire froze.

      Ingrid echoed it.

      Sniffing, the pallid face lifted like a dog's.

      Filmy glaze covered its eyeballs, turning them an

      eerie calcium blue. Right. It was blind. But it

      would smell her now, and its blindness would

      barely slow it down. She had to remember that.

      A fierce, fiery cold began to creep through her

      veins, along with the faint tremble that preceded a

      fit of berserk rage. In the rage, a verwulfen man or

      woman was almost impossible to cut down. They

      barely felt pain or fear, or knew the cost of

      consequences. Nothing but brutal mindlessness and

      strength.

      The unfortunate thing was that she was

      already quite afraid, and what she really needed to

      be was angry.

      "Easy," she whispered, stepping closer to the

      door. "Easy there, lad."

      Movement

      flexed

      in

      the

      vampire's

      hindquarters.

      Ingrid twisted, driving the knife up as it

      launched toward her. Claws raked the hard

      carapace of her body armor, cutting through it like


      it was gauze, and then white-hot agony blistered

      through her abdomen. Oh shit. Ingrid forced herself

      to complete the blow she'd planned, her knife

      driving into the creature's eye, even as its teeth

      clamped down upon her shoulder. She had it by the

      throat with her other hand, but there was something

      there. A collar? Electricity zapped through her and

      she jerked her hand back.

      A high-pitched roar of rage ripped from its

      throat. Ingrid punched it in the chest, earning a few

      precious inches. Rage burned in her blood, her

      entire body going ice-hot as she threw it away

      from her. Then she was through the door into Mrs.

      Byrnes's room, slamming it shut—

      A weight hammered at the door, almost

      flinging her across the room. Turning, she set her

      back into it, knowing that this was the only barrier

      that might, just might, keep her alive. Byrnes's

      mother was huddled in the corner, her bare feet

      drawn up beneath her white night-robe. She stared

      at Ingrid with a childish expression of fear on her

      face, rocking slightly before burying her face in her

      hands. No help there.

      Blood. Blood everywhere. On her shirt, on

      her hands, on her.... She saw the gaping mess of her

      abdomen, and instantly her body went cold. Shite.

      Her mind refused to deal with it, but the sight of

      the mess cost her the fury she'd been building. The

      berserkergang slid from her like a shroud, and

      Ingrid gasped as all of the pain came rushing back

      in.

      Not now. Another blow almost broke the door

      in two.

      "Help!" she screamed.

      Claws scraped at the wood, slicing thick

      gouges of timber off it, she imagined. Blood. Pain.

      Shocking pain. Ingrid's vision blurred. She couldn't

      breathe. Couldn't move—

      The door rocked one more time. Her legs

      were about to give out. Then whistles broke out,

      high-pitched and stabbing through her ears.

      Nighthawks. She'd never been so glad to hear

      Nighthawks’ whistles in her life. A fluting trill of

      notes sounded in response. Claws padded away

      from the door.

      "Good boy," someone murmured, and a

      metallic clip snapped shut.

      Ingrid slid to the floor, as footsteps vanished

      into the depths of the house. That awful clicking

      screech of claws on the floorboards echoed it.

      Her abdomen was a hot, flaming mess of pain.

      God, what had it done to her? Tingles of heated

      numbness burned in her midsection, a sure sign that

      the loupe virus was hard at work.

      But at least the bloody vampire was gone.

      STATIC CRACKLED in Byrnes's ear. Cursing

      under his breath, he stepped into the nearest alley

      and pressed a finger to the button on his

      communicator. He'd almost forgotten he was

      wearing it as he tried to track Ingrid, who'd asked

      for him, according to Ava. "Not now, Garrett."

      "I've got an emergency at Clerkenwell. You're

      the closest Nighthawk—"

      "Garrett, I'm busy." Ingrid wouldn’t have

      wanted him if she didn’t think she needed him, not

      after last night.

      "Byrnes, it's a slaughter in there." Garrett's

      voice was on edge, even through the tinny speaker.

      "Sounds like your case."

      Byrnes paused. "A slaughter?"

      "One of the nurses escaped and bolted for the

      nearest Nighthawks garrison. They sent in a

      relieving crew, but nobody's answering. Craigmore

      went to scope the place out, and he says there are

      bodies everywhere. He hasn't been inside yet. Can

      see something moving in there, but he's waiting for

      reinforcements—"

      "Where?" That cold feeling seeping through

      his veins unnerved him. No. Garrett had said

      Clerkenwell. That didn't mean anything. The

      borough was large. And there was no guarantee

      that this slaughter had anything to do with the

      vampire they were hunting.

      "Miss Appleby's Home for the Elderly. It's on

      —"

      "Grant Street," Byrnes said hollowly, his ears

      ringing as though all of the blood had drained from

      his extremities. His mother. "I'm on it. Get me

      reinforcements as soon as possible."

      "IS ANYONE ALIVE IN THERE?" Byrnes

      demanded, frantically searching each window as

      he stepped out of the shadows behind Craigmore, a

      Nighthawk he'd worked with in the past. Mother.

      No. Not this way. After the life she'd led, she didn't

      deserve to die this way.

      "I don't know, sir. I haven't seen anyone

      moving in the last five minutes. Earlier, yes, but..."

      "Did—?" A hint of scent wafted past his nose,

      cutting off his next line of questioning. A scent he

      knew, musky and all woman. Nostrils flaring,

      Byrnes strode toward the building, a new fear

      rising in his heart. The scent was stronger here,

      near the door.

      "Ingrid," he whispered, and everything in him

      went cold. What the bloody hell was she doing

      here? A new fear rose to choke his throat, because

      if Ingrid was here then she wouldn't hesitate to

      enter, not when she knew his mother meant so much

      to him.

      Argument or no argument, he felt the darkness

      rise, the predator inside him just as frantic as he

      was. Get to her. Protect her, it insisted, locking

      bloodthirsty claws around him. The color in his

      vision vanished and blood pounded through his

      temples.

      This case had already proven that neither of

      them was invulnerable when it came to vampires.

      Jesus.

      "Sir, what are we going to do?" Craigmore

      sounded like a frightened little child behind him.

      "Stay here," Byrnes replied, clamping down

      on the hot surge of emotion that threatened to choke

      him. "Guard the perimeter and wait for

      reinforcements. I'm going in."

      TWENTY

      BLOOD HERE. Blood there. The Home was a

      slaughterhouse.

      Jesus Christ. Byrnes's mouth pooled with

      saliva, his nostrils flaring as he stepped inside.

      The hunger surged, sickening him. The men and

      women here were familiar. Not prey. It was the

      blood, overwhelming his senses and igniting the

      predator inside him.

      He didn't force it down, however. He needed

      the predator. That was the only way he could

      imagine coming up against a vampire alone and

      surviving.

      Ingrid, he whispered to himself, trying to

      refocus it. Ingrid needs us.

      Above him, something clattered.

      Byrnes froze, his gaze rolling toward the

      ceiling. Nothing moved. Only his heart, threatening

      to pound its way out of his chest.

      More sound. A thud. Byrnes started for the

      stairs. Both pistols were in his hands. A faint,

      mocking flute sounded somewhere above, a sound

      that took him back to Ulbricht's immense gardens.

      "Ingrid!" he called, reachin
    g the top of the

      stairs. "Ingrid, where are you?"

      Sound echoed behind him, and he spun,

      pistols rising instantly, only to see a startled cat

      flee past him. Byrnes let out the breath he'd been

      holding and eased both fingers off the triggers.

      "Byrnes?" came a low, feminine cry.

      Oh, thank God. She was still alive, and in his

      mother's room.

      He strode toward it, body alert for the faintest

      shifts of breeze and shadows. The door looked like

      it had faced one of those hedge trimmers that were

      all the rage at the moment. Thick gouges marked its

      heavy surface and curls of timber lay abandoned

      on the floor beneath it.

      "Ingrid?" he called, sheathing one of the

      pistols at his belt. "Is my mother there?"

      "She's here."

      Byrnes paused. Ingrid was breathing hard and

      something about her tone sounded strained. A faint

      note of panic crept down his spine. "Are you all

      right?"

      "A scratch," she croaked. "I'll heal."

      Something about that didn't sit right with him.

      "Where's the vampire?"

      "Was here. A minute ago. Left with... the

      woman."

      "What woman?" he demanded.

      "The

      pipe-playing

      woman.

      Ulbricht's

      mistress, I think."

      Her again. Byrnes looked around, but the

      house had an abandoned air. "Craigmore," he said,

      putting a hand to his ear to activate the

      communication device. "It's clear, I believe. Bring

      in the medics if they've arrived."

      Holstering his second pistol, he tried to open

      the door, but there was something in front of it.

      Giving it a nudge revealed a long lean leg, clad in

      Ingrid's dark trousers. The second the door cracked

      open, the wash of blood stung his senses.

      "Jesus Christ." There was blood seeping

      down her trousers. Byrnes pushed harder against

      the door, his breath catching. How bad was the

      wound? That was a lot of blood. "Can you move?

      Let me in, damn it. That's not a bloody scratch!"

      Ingrid dragged her legs up to her body, then

      tried to move aside. And failed.

      Shit. She was hurt. Badly.

      Byrnes nudged the door open just enough to

      slip through. His mother rocked in the corner, but

      there was no blood on her, and though she looked

      terrified, she wasn't wounded. Ingrid was. It was a

      simple matter to prioritize. Simple to—

      That was when he saw the damage.

      Time seemed to freeze as his focus narrowed

      down to her. "Let me see. Ingrid, let me have a

      look."

      Ingrid's hands were pressed against her

     


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