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    Mission_Improper

    Page 38
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      gave an impressive impression of Kincaid. "You

      coming?"

      "Of course," he replied, pressing something

      that made the chestpiece open on the steel suit.

      Charlie looked strangely vulnerable as he stepped

      down out of it.

      A vampire couldn't gut a Cyclops, but it might

      do so to him.

      "Kincaid's going to enter the asylum from the

      north with Malloryn and Gemma," he said,

      touching his earpiece again. "Ava's coordinating

      the Nighthawks and will have them slip into place

      surrounding the asylum so that nothing escapes. It's

      up to us to get Byrnes out."

      In one piece. Ingrid swallowed. "Let's go

      then."

      The two Nighthawks that Garrett had brought

      scrambled over the planks, running low with their

      weapons raised. Flanders, the one in the lead,

      pressed his spine to a crumbling brick wall and

      cocked his head to listen before flicking two

      fingers. The other Nighthawk, Nicholson, vanished

      into the shadows in response.

      "It's clear," Garrett said, and urged her and

      Charlie forward into the darkness.

      She quite enjoyed working with people who

      knew what they were doing.

      "Anyone think that this seems a little easy?"

      Charlie whispered, swallowing hard as they

      hurried through the abandoned tunnels.

      "What do you mean?" Ingrid asked.

      "Not a single guard, or a vampire sighting,"

      he pointed out.

      Which was troubling.

      Nicholson returned from ahead, appearing out

      of nowhere. "We've reached the bottom level of

      cells," he murmured. "It's quiet."

      "Too quiet," Garrett added grimly, then

      gestured them on ahead. "Expect anything. This is

      starting to feel like a trap."

      "How would she know we were coming?"

      Charlie whispered.

      "Maybe she saw us?" Ingrid replied.

      "Flanders, take point. Nicholson, cover the rear.

      Everyone, weapons out." She tipped her head

      toward Garrett, gesturing him to slip in behind

      Flanders. "I've got your back."

      "Thanks," he murmured, unholstering his

      enhanced pistol.

      They all carried firebolt bullets, which could

      take off a vampire's head if necessary.

      The phosphorus glow from the glimmer light

      in the headset around Flanders's head provided just

      enough light to see by as they wound down, through

      half-used tunnels filled with rot and mud and the

      filth of this part of London. All of them were

      preternatural: they could see with the faintest of

      lights, and light made them a target in these tunnels.

      The vampire tracks they were following led

      to a half-rotted door set into stone. Up, then. The

      scent through here was stronger, and bones lay

      scattered around. Ingrid's eyes watered, as her

      sense of smell was the strongest, and she took a

      moment to wipe them as the men fanned through the

      room and down the two tunnels spearing out from

      it.

      "There are people in here," Charlie

      whispered, slinking back along the corridor from a

      small excursion. "I can hear them."

      People? Ingrid went to the first cell and

      peered in. A pair of children scrambled away from

      her, curling into their mother's arms. An old man

      lifted a piece of chair and waved it threateningly.

      "Stay away from us," he rasped.

      Jesus. The stench hit her again: unwashed

      bodies, blood and old death, mixed with a strong

      presence of eau de vampire.

      "Sir," Garrett called under his breath. "Sir,

      I'm with the Nighthawks. I'm not here to hurt you."

      Relief dawned on the man's face and the

      woman started sobbing. The man grabbed the bars,

      desperation plain on his face. "Please! Please let

      us out!"

      "Who are you?" Garrett asked, looking around

      for a key. "What happened?"

      "I don't know," the man gasped, gripping the

      iron bars on the cell doors as if afraid that they

      would leave him here. "Something rolled into the

      room of my house and started hissing gas. The next

      thing I knew, I woke up here with Verna and the

      children." The man swallowed. "There's vampires

      here. You can hear the screams at night, when they

      come and drag some of us away. They don't come

      back." He started sobbing. "They took my son three

      days ago, and they didn't bring him back."

      Garrett came back out of the shadows. "No

      keys."

      Ingrid slid her hand inside one of the pouches

      on her belt and withdrew her lock pick set. As

      much as she was frightened for Byrnes, she

      couldn't leave these people here in the dark.

      She knew all too well what it felt like to be

      locked in a cage.

      "A woman after my own heart," Charlie said

      as she set to work.

      "Stop flirting, and keep an eye out." The lock

      was old, but it gave an appreciable click. Ingrid

      listened intently, but it seemed there were no

      guards on duty who'd heard the small noise.

      The door was another matter. It groaned on its

      hinges, and she cursed under her breath as the old

      man yanked on it.

      "Quiet," she hissed, holding the door firm.

      "You'll have to slip through the gap. And don't

      make any noise."

      "Hullo?" someone called from further up the

      passage. "Hullo, is anybody there?"

      She exchanged a look with Garrett. More

      prisoners. "Keep them quiet."

      Garrett nodded and slipped into the darkness

      with the two Nighthawks following him.

      The cell door opened and Ingrid helped the

      old man out. His wrist was shockingly thin, and the

      children were crying silently as their mother

      carried them out. Ingrid took the small water flask

      from her hip, wishing she had more as she shared it

      between them.

      "Where did you live?" Ingrid asked, stroking

      the dirty hair out of one child's face.

      "Begby Square," the man replied. "This is my

      neighbor, Anne, and her children."

      "My husband?" Anne pleaded, grabbing hold

      of Ingrid's hand. "Please, my husband! They took

      him three weeks ago. Are there other cells? Other

      people?" She looked frantically back down the

      hallway where Garrett and the Nighthawks were

      freeing other hostages.

      Three weeks ago. Ingrid swallowed, for the

      only answer she suspected she had was not one the

      woman would want to hear. "It's a warren down

      here. We'll make sure they all get out," Ingrid said

      soothingly, "but we need to get you and your

      children to safety first. I'm sure if your husband is

      down here, we'll find him.”

      The old man exchanged a look with her as he

      tried to help Anne to her feet. "I'll make sure she

      gets out," he said, and Ingrid saw in his eyes the

      same thoughts that lurked within her. Anne's

      husband wasn't going to be found. Not alive,


      anyway.

      This then, was what had happened to all the

      people who went missing. Someone had taken

      them, both in order to cause chaos and for far more

      practical reasons. After all, what could you feed to

      vampires?

      It made her furious, and all of the hairs along

      her arms rose as the berserkergang fired within

      her. People weren't objects, and they weren't food.

      They didn't deserve to be locked in cages. Like she

      had been.

      Zero had done everything possible to make

      this personal. Ingrid ached to smash her face in.

      "Easy," Charlie muttered. "Save your anger

      for the one who deserves it."

      "Oh, I will," she snarled, standing and glaring

      up the passage. "I'm going to make that bitch rue

      the day she ever set eyes on Begby Square."

      "But first, we need to get the prisoners out,"

      Charlie said.

      Garrett came out of the darkness, a little girl

      wrapped in his arms and a trail of sobbing people

      hobbling behind him. His expression looked as

      haunted as her heart, and she realized that the little

      girl in his arms was only a year or so older than

      his twin daughters. "I'll get them out," he promised.

      "I've sent Nicholson back for more Nighthawks.

      You two go on ahead and rendezvous with Kincaid

      and Malloryn. We can't risk this bitch taking her

      anger out on Byrnes."

      "It will be my pleasure," Ingrid growled, as

      she let the fury spill within her. She'd never let the

      berserker part of her nature have free rein before,

      but now wasn't the time to play nice.

      THIRTY-TWO

      "FANCY A LITTLE music?"

      Zero moved to the cylinder phonograph in the

      corner and set it to playing. A faint waltz echoed

      through the brass horn. Instantly the two vampires’

      eyelids began to lower as firelight flickered over

      the gaunt bones of their spines. Two hounds at rest

      by the hearth.

      Somewhat sickening.

      "Did you know," Zero murmured, watching

      them with a faint smile, "that they can be trained? It

      interests me. That one can be taught to react to

      something in association with... the same kind of

      stimulus. For example, they hear this music and

      they know that I am pleased with them, and that it

      is time to sleep."

      Byrnes

      wriggled

      against

      his

      chains.

      "Fascinating." The daft woman was scratching one

      of the vampire's heads as though it were a hound.

      And he could swear that one of them was making

      some sort of purring sound deep in its throat.

      "Do you wish to know how I discovered

      this?" Zero asked.

      Why not? Anything that made vampires

      sleepy was possibly a good thing to know. "How?"

      "I was once interred in an asylum by my

      husband." Her smile remained just as bright. "And

      I use the term 'interred' deliberately. He meant for

      me to die there. One of the things I learned is that

      sounds bring certain associations to mind. Even

      now the mere scrape of a key turning in a lock

      makes me feel ill."

      He didn't want to sympathize with her, but it

      was all too easy to imagine what had happened to

      her. "How did you escape the asylum?"

      "Oh, I didn't escape. I seduced one of the

      other inmates’ visitors—a baron—and became

      infected with the craving virus. After I tore out my

      handler's throat, the governor of the asylum took

      note. It's not the sort of thing one wants to have

      whispered about their facility, you see. Blue blood

      lords taking advantage of the patients. Tut, tut.

      What would the papers say?" She swirled in a

      slow circle as the phonograph played a couple of

      piquant notes, holding on to her skirts as if it were

      a waltz. "The next day a pair of red-liveried

      servants arrived to take me away. At first I thought

      it was Nigel—my baron—but I soon learned he'd

      forgotten me. Fickle man. No, these servants

      belonged to the Duke of Lannister. And they took

      me to Falkirk Asylum, which was masquerading as

      another treatment facility."

      Falkirk, which had been owned by the Dukes

      of Lannister, Caine, and Casavian. He sensed

      where this was going.

      "That was where I was reborn." Zero swirled

      to a halt near the table and opened a small case. He

      craned his neck to see what was inside it, but the

      curve of her body hid it. Zero held something up

      and flicked her nail against it. "I went into Falkirk

      as Annabelle, victim of a half dozen men and their

      whims, and I exited it as Zero, who can be judge,

      jury, and executioner."

      "I won't argue that you've been poorly done

      by, but the people from Begby Square did no

      wrong by you. The guests at the Venetian Gardens

      had nothing to do with your incarceration. So why

      hurt them?"

      Zero laughed. "Oh, Byrnes, I thought you were

      an investigator. That party belonged to the Earl of

      Carrington. Do you know who was on the guest

      list?"

      "Nigel? Your baron?"

      Her smile softened. "I almost began to doubt

      you, but you are just as clever as I had hoped. Poor

      Nigel's still alive, by the way, but I bet he wishes

      he wasn't. Did you know that blue bloods can

      survive almost anything? And they might be able to

      heal, but they can't actually regrow limbs or

      organs... or eyes."

      "And what about Begby Square?"

      "My husband lived there. Unfortunately,

      Thomas didn't last long enough to see my justice."

      Her face flattened as she strode toward him,

      holding something low against her skirts. "But his

      cow-faced mother did. And his two sisters. And

      all of their families, and the neighbors who

      sneered at me. Who is sneering now?"

      A chill ran down his spine. What the hell was

      in her hand? "Possibly no one. You don't have to

      do this. I'm no threat to you—"

      "Relax," she said, holding up a syringe. "I

      don't mean you harm. You're going to be one of my

      allies, Byrnes. This will hurt a little—the first time

      is always the worst—" She suddenly giggled.

      "That's what men always say, isn't it? But once it's

      done, you'll be on the first step toward your new

      transformation. I do hope you'll be strong enough to

      survive it."

      A bubble of fluid wept from the top of the

      syringe. Byrnes’s gaze tracked it warily. "I think I'd

      like to know a little bit more about this... ah,

      transformation before we go ahead with it. Is it

      reversible?"

      "Oh, no." Zero tore his sleeve clear up the

      middle, revealing the muscle in his upper arm.

      "Once it begins you must continue it, or else you'll

      end up like my failures."

      Byrnes's gaze shot toward the vampires

      reclining on the floor. "How many treatment
    s?"

      Hell, where was Ingrid? She should be here by

      now, and if she didn't come quickly, it was going to

      be too late. His gaze narrowed on the syringe

      needle.

      "Seven treatments, provided all goes well.

      They shall proceed a week apart. Any closer

      together and your brain might trickle out of your

      ears." Zero rubbed a spot on his upper biceps,

      crooning a little under her breath. "You need to

      stay nice and relaxed, otherwise you'll hurt

      yourself. Don't worry. We've refined the formula

      since Dr. Cremorne used it upon us. The failure

      rate has gone down significantly. Only three in ten

      die now."

      "Us?" He seized on the word, trying to crawl

      through the chair as she inched closer. "Who's us?

      Am I joining some sort of... elite brotherhood,

      hmm?"

      Zero paused, glancing up from beneath her

      silvery lashes. "They're of no concern to you or I,"

      she finally said. "You're mine. I'm tired of being

      told what to do and kept on a leash. I want my own

      fun, my own allies."

      "Who's holding the leash?"

      "You wouldn't be trying to get information out

      of me, would you?" Zero went very still.

      He'd taken a slight misstep there. Byrnes

      summoned every ounce of arrogance that he could

      muster. "Of course I am. If there's someone running

      this entire coup, then I want to know who. I'm

      about to become what you are. Do you think I want

      to walk into a trap where there's a leash around my

      throat too, without at least knowing who it bloody

      well is? What if I take this leap and end up as

      slave for some despot? That's not me, princess."

      "That's not me either." She seemed delighted.

      "I hate playing by the rules."

      "You and me both." He made himself smile.

      Bloody hell. "Do you know what I like? I like

      puzzling out the answer to mysteries. And this is

      the greatest mystery of all. I won. I found you, so

      that we could be together. Don't I at least get my

      prize?"

      Zero nibbled on her lip. "You could help me

      remove the leash," she whispered, as though

      thinking about it.

      "Who do we have to kill?"

      A slither of darkness slid through her pale

      blue eyes. "My brothers. We were born in a trial

      by fire, and since then we've only been able to rely

      on each other. Ghost is the problem. Without him,

      the others would leave us alone to do as we

      wished."

      "Who's Ghost?"

      "The first," she whispered. "The first one who

      survived the transformation. He thinks that gives

      him the right to lead us."

     


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