Antivirus (The Horde Series Book 1) (21 page)

BOOK: Antivirus (The Horde Series Book 1)
13.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Chapter 29

 

Sherrard Residence, Helena, Montana:
It was dark when Drew Jackson limped up the front walk of the Sherrard residence. The puncture wound in his thigh was hurting worse than before and he wondered if he should have taken Alders’ advice and gone to the hospital to have it checked out. But things were moving quickly now, and he had a few shots he wanted to get in before disappearing.

Kat met him on the front porch, an anxious expression on her face. “I’m worried about Jen,” she said and then stifled a yawn.

Jackson knew immediately how to play things in the direction he wanted. “I’m worried about you, Kat. You’ve been burning the candle at both ends. Why don’t you go on home and get some sleep?”

“I can’t leave Jen right now, Drew,” she replied wearily. “I think she’s really sick.”

“You won’t do Jen any good if you’re too tired to stay on your feet,” he pressed. “Go on, go home. I’ll stay with her for a while. Come back in the morning after you’ve gotten some sleep. You’ll be in a lot better shape to help out and we can decide if maybe we should get her to a doctor.”

“You’ll spend the night here?” Kat asked doubtfully.

“In light of what’s going on with Jon, I think it’s probably a smart idea if someone stays here with her.” He hooked a thumb back toward her car. “Look, I’m good for a while. I’ll make sure she’s comfortable and just kick back in the living room and watch a movie or two. That will keep me up and busy, in case Jon decides to come back.”

“What will you do if he does?”

Drew had no problem showing her his gun, which Alders had given back to him before he left the office. Because of the murders of Bethany Edwards and his own dog, as well as the attempt on Jackson’s life, Alders seemed to think that Jon might be targeting those that he knew and possibly had a grudge against. The attack last night hadn’t been random and Alders figured that if Drew was armed, he might be able to stop Sherrard if he came back.

Jackson, himself, had no issues with that at all. He would have kept his weapon anyway, but Alders’ insistence that he carry it only added believability to his own story. If Jon did indeed come around, he planned on pumping the entire mag into Jon’s brain. Then he would cut the head off the beast and ride the hero train all the way to the bank. For Drew, it was all about options, and he played the game as well as anyone.

“If Jon comes back and is violent, I’ll do what I have to do to protect Jen,” he said, somewhat gallantly. “I promise you that I’ll try to talk to him, first,” he added after seeing the look of alarm on Kat’s face. “But chances are, Jon isn’t who he used to be and if he comes back, it will be for one reason only.”

“I just can’t believe what’s happening,” she sniffed, clearly upset.

“None of us can,” he agreed solemnly. “Now go home, Kat. I insist.” Not waiting for an answer, he limped past her and onto the porch. “Get your things and scoot.”

“All right,” she sighed and walked with him into the house. “Jen’s in the bedroom. She’s got a fever but seems to be sleeping right now.”

“Where’s their dog?” he asked. Jackson had never liked the big wolf and had insisted that Jon keep Dakota outside when he ever came to visit. Heck, depending on how things went tonight, he might look for an opportunity to kill the thing.

“Out back,” she replied. “I made sure he’s fed and watered. You won’t have to worry about him.”

“Good,” he replied. “Now go. I’ll hold down the fort.”

Kat did just that, gathering her things and departing. She held some minor reservations about leaving Drew alone in the house with her friend, but she was too tired to think too hard about it. Drew had never been anything but proper and decent. Besides, she’d be back in the morning, and hopefully Jen would have turned the corner by then. If not, they could both get her to the doctor.

From the living room window, Drew Jackson watched Kat get into her car and leave. As soon as the tail lights disappeared around the bend, he left the window and started moving about the house, casually looking around. He wasn’t searching for anything in particular; he was just killing time, making sure he was going to be well and truly alone with Jen before he visited her in her bedroom.

Fifteen minutes passed before Drew finally made his way down the hall to the back of the house. Jen’s bedroom door was closed and he hesitated only a moment before knocking softly. He was committed to his plan. When she did not answer, he opened the door carefully and looked inside. The bedroom was dark, but a light was on in the master bathroom, casting a very dim glow into the room. Drew could make out Jen’s figure on the bed, a sheet draped over her legs. Licking his lips hungrily, he stepped into the room and let his eyes adjust.

“Jen,” he whispered. “It’s Drew. I’m just here to check in on you.”

She did not answer, but he could hear her breathing. It was rapid and seemed to rattle in her chest. She definitely didn’t sound well at all. He stepped into the room and closed the door and then, just to be certain, he flipped the lock. He stood there for nearly a minute, his eyes taking in her form in the dim glow. If he was going to make good on his designs, tonight was the best opportunity he would have. He knew he wouldn’t get another.

Taking a deep breath, he slipped off his shoes and padded silently over to the bed. Jen was lying on her back, her forehead covered with a sheen of sweat that reflected the dim light from the bathroom. Her lower body was draped in the bed sheet and her torso was clad in a thin white shirt that was just damp enough to be enticing. He paused, looking down at her for some time, his eyes wandering over her form. She was actually quite beautiful. Jon was lucky. Too bad for him that he wasn’t around anymore.

As gently as he could, he eased himself down into a sitting position on the edge of the bed, being careful not to disturb her. She continued sleeping, her breathing shallow. Taking a deep breath himself, he finally reached out and ever so gently, so as not to wake her, ran his hand along the flat of her stomach and over the rise of one of her breasts, lingering there long enough that he knew he was taking a big chance. Finally, his hand had continued up to caress her shoulder and that’s when her eyes snapped open.

“Drew?” she mumbled, reaching up and pressing her bandaged hand to her forehead, wincing as she did so. If she was embarrassed by his presence at her bedside, she didn’t show it. She was simply too exhausted to care. “What are you doing here?”

“Hey, Jen,” he replied, doing well to mask the sudden shakiness in his voice. “Kat went home and asked me to check in on you.”

“Oh,” she said groggily.

“How are you feeling?” he asked, leaning slightly closer. Sick or not, her lips looked incredibly inviting. If he leaned forward to kiss her, he knew he wouldn’t stop.

“I just want to sleep, Drew,” she said, rolling away from him. “Please, just go. Tell Kat I’ll be fine.”

Anger flared up within Drew at the perception that she had rebuffed him. Before he knew what he was doing, he had reached out and grabbed her shoulder, roughly rolling her back toward him.

Jen came back around, her eyes going wide with shock. Before she could vocally object, he was on top of her, pressing his mouth eagerly to hers. She fought him and tried to scream, but he kept his lips pressed to hers, muffing her screams. He started to roughly grope her as he pressed her to the bed, his hands trying to slide up her shirt.

And then suddenly, Drew Jackson found himself flying across the room. Just like that, everything that he had set up, was shattered apart, and he knew it. He crashed into the door, splintering the frame and sending him sprawling into the hall on top of the broken door. Shaking his head to clear the fuzziness in his brain, he looked up in shock to see Jen crouched on the bed. Her very form was feral, almost animal-like, and her lips were pulled back in a snarl. She was literally growling at him, her eyes narrowed and almost glowing in the darkness.

“Jen?” he said, his voice now audibly quaking. He had to outweigh her by a good 80 pounds, and for her to throw him off like she had sent his mind spinning into confusion. What had just happened could not have physically happened. “Jen, wait!”

But she no longer heard him. She dropped off the bed into a predator’s crouch, facing him. Her raven hair was a wild mane and her eyes narrowed even more as she began to measure him up, as a lioness would stalk her prey.

Drew Jackson had never been so scared in his life. Something about the woman was way off, almost alien, and he did the only thing he could think of. Forgetting the fact that he had a gun, he turned and ran, slamming his way through the house and out the front door, his bare feet slapping on the concrete driveway. He threw himself into the front seat of his car and, moments later, was smoking his tires as he roared down the street.

Had he not turned to run so quickly, he might have saved himself a lot of trouble. Even as he was charging out of the house, Jen Sherrard was collapsing on the floor of her bedroom, pulling herself into a shivering and feverish ball as the strange power that had gripped her disappeared.

Instead, Drew was thanking his lucky stars that he had escaped with his life. He had never seen anyone act like she had and he couldn’t help but wonder what it meant. Was she experiencing the same malady that had taken hold of her husband? If so, that presented a whole new plate of possibilities and he began looking for ways to turn it to his advantage.

And then, several miles down the road, Jackson remembered something and his heart nearly stopped in his chest.

He had left his shoes in Jen’s bedroom.

He was well and truly screwed now and he knew it. Unless, of course, he went back and took care of it. Unless he silenced her before she could talk. It only took him a few minutes of arguing with himself before he knew what he had to do.

Jen Sherrard had to die.

 

Chapter 30

 

Sherrard Residence, Helena, Montana:
From the darkness, Perry Edwards watched his former boss, Drew Jackson, rush from the front door of the Sherrard house and speed away in his car, leaving the acrid smell of burnt rubber heavy in the air. He wasn’t sure what the stranger occurrence was – seeing Jackson running out the front door like a bat out of hell or he, himself, being there in the shadows, watching it happen. He did know that he still had a score to settle with his former boss, but that would have to wait. Eventually, Drew would come to him anyway. Perry had made certain of that.

He still wasn’t certain why he had come to the Sherrard house, unless it was to subconsciously close that chapter in his former life. Jon Sherrard had been his friend for a long time. Then came that awful night at the Christmas party. He knew it had taken Jen a long time to forgive Jon, and she’d almost divorced him because of it. He, on the other hand, had never really forgiven either of them. He had acted like it was no big deal, but he had never gotten over the betrayal from his best friend and, even more acutely, that of his wife. And killing Bethany as his first act, while in Jon Sherrard’s body, had been pure karma, as far as he was concerned. It saved him from taking her to Switzerland and pushing her off a mountain like he had originally intended.

Now, here he was at Jon’s house, wondering what Jen Sherrard was doing inside. He had Jon’s body. Maybe getting some action with Jen was what was driving him to be here. He was fully healed and completely in control…at least he thought he was. Pushing aside any lingering doubts, he stepped out of the bushes and walked toward the front door. He mounted the steps and paused, looking at the opened door. Drew had been in a hurry to leave and hadn’t closed it. He almost rang the doorbell before he realized who he was. Grinning in spite of himself, he stepped into the house and shut the door behind him.

“Jen?” he called out, looking around. Because of their past friendship, he had been in the Sherrards’ house a number of times, so he knew his way around. It was late, so the back bedroom was his likely destination and he caught himself wondering again what Drew had been doing here. Had his former boss been thinking the same thing and come to have a little fun with Jen? She wouldn’t even consider that, would she? Not with the issues that were going on with Jon. And interestingly enough, here he was. Jon Sherrard had come home. The irony was not lost on him.

Tightening his resolve, he walked down the hall toward the bedroom. The door was open and, in the light of the hall, he could see a form lying huddled on the floor, just inside the room. Forgetting, for a moment, what he was there for, he hurried forward and knelt down beside her. Jen Sherrard was shivering uncontrollably, sweat pouring off her body.

“Jen!” he said in alarm and then caught himself. He was worried. Why was he feeling anxiety? It was not like Jen was his wife. But she was, wasn’t she?

With sudden clarity, Perry straightened and stumbled backward as he realized what was happening. “No!” he growled, turning his mind inward.

Recognizing that his stealthy approach had been detected, Jon Sherrard’s consciousness launched an all-out mental attack on Perry.
This is my body!
Sherrard practically screamed in his mind.

“No!” Edwards snarled, vocalizing as he stumbled against the door frame and pressed his fists to his temples as if he could squeeze Jon out of his head. “I own you!”

You betrayed me!

“You betrayed me first!” Perry Edwards screamed his hatred and frustration, fighting against the silent voice in his head. “You and Bethany! You did it!”

Get…out of…my body!

“No! I own you! This body is mine now! It’s mine, Jon!”

He suddenly and inexplicably laced himself with a hard right across his jaw. Stars exploded behind his eyes and he fell back into the hall, oddly wondering at the fact that you could hit yourself hard enough to nearly knock yourself out.

“Jon?” Jen called out weakly as she raised her head from the floor. The ruckus had broken through her fog. Not only that, Dakota had begun a frantic barking from outside as he ran the length of the house, trying to get inside. The big wolf knew something was wrong and that Jen was in danger.

Perry Edwards shook his head, trying to clear the stars as he continued to fight Jon’s consciousness. The blow to the jaw had been directed by Jon, but Jon had suffered the effects, too, possibly more so than Perry. Edwards felt Jon’s control slip and he quickly turned his thoughts inward, looking to quell the uprising.

“Jon, what’s…happening?” Jen called out again, trying to pull herself up onto her hands and knees. “I feel so…strange. Help…me.”

Perry looked at her, ignoring her condition. He was much more interested in what he wanted to do to her. It would be poetic justice, to be certain, and that thought helped him drive Jon’s groggy consciousness back into the recesses of his brain. “It’s alright, baby,” he said, shaking his head and steadying himself. He was back in control.

“Jon, I’m so…tired,” she went on as he stumbled over to her and pulled her to her feet.

He swept his arms underneath her and picked her up, gently laying her on the bed. Outside, the deep barks of Dakota sounded louder and more urgent. Perry ignored them and adjusted Jen in bed, pulling the sheet back up to cover her bare legs. Then he thought better of it and pulled them back down, stripping them from the bed. Jen was in and out of consciousness, and if she was aware of Perry getting into bed with her, she showed no signs.

The hunger began to rise up within him and Perry felt the intelligence within quickly coming to life. He had intended on repaying Jon’s past sins by having sex with his wife, but the Horde had decided to use Jen in a different way. The feeding filaments began to come free of their sheaths all over his body and, as hard as he tried to will them back into dormancy, he had no effect. He was fully conscious of what was happening, but the Horde had taken full control of Jon’s body.

He watched in detached fascination as the filaments began probing her stomach and face, preparing to penetrate her body and begin absorbing her. They were pushing into her soft flesh when the sudden sound of breaking glass filled the room.

Dakota hit the floor and in one bound, was on top of the bed, snarling and snapping even as the glass from the shattered window spun through the air. The big wolf never hesitated, his jaws clamping on Perry’s arm as it crashed into him. Man and wolf went flying off the bed, a mixture of snarls and shouts filling the house.

Dakota meant to kill the intruder and Perry knew it. He also knew that he was much more than just a man now and anything the wolf did to him, he would be able to repair. The intellect that was the Horde quickly withdrew back into whatever dark hiding place it existed within, giving complete control of Jon’s body back to Perry to deal with the threat. Perry quickly fought back, knowing he was going to have to kill the wolf.

Their momentum had carried them out into the hall and Dakota quickly maneuvered himself so that he was between Perry and Jen. Perry dropped to a crouch himself, ignoring the torn flesh of his arm. The feeding tendrils whipped about him in readiness as he calculated his attack. He flipped one of the extensions forward and predictably, Dakota’s jaws snapped closed on it, severing the end of it. Oddly, Perry felt no pain and quickly and efficiently wrapped two more around the wolf’s thick neck, dragging him off his feet. Dakota snapped again, but Perry sent the rest of the alien appendages, catching the wolf around the legs. He succeeded in getting one around the canine’s jaws, tightening them shut.

Just like that, the fight was over. Perry straightened and looked down in contempt at the incapacitated wolf, bound tightly in the coils of his feeding tendrils. Several more waved menacingly in the air and Perry wasted no time in putting them to work. Dakota whimpered softly as the alien extensions pushed their way inside his body and began liquefying and absorbing his organs. As the wolf shivered before him, Perry watched dispassionately as the animal breathed its last. It was an odd feeling, seeing the big animal dead at his hands. He’d liked Dakota and, on his visits to Jon’s house, he and the wolf had played a lot of games of tug-of-war with a long piece of thick rope. But now the wolf was dead at his feet and he felt no remorse about what he had done; it had simply been a necessity of survival.

Unfortunately for him, he had forgotten about his original intended victim.

Jen Sherrard’s scream of rage was ungodly in its similarity to the snarl of the wolf, and Perry looked up just in time to see the woman launch herself from the bed. She hit him with enough force to send him flying down the hall, the feeding filaments ripping free from the wolf’s body and flailing through the air. In shock and somewhat dazed, he rolled back to his feet, the alien parts of him quickly withdrawing back into his stolen body. Looking down, he was puzzled to see four long slashes in his torso, angling from his left shoulder to his right hip. Blood poured from the wounds and, in several places along his gut, his insides were pushing against the shredded stomach wall, threatening to spill out onto the floor.

Looking up in shock, Perry saw the reason. Jen Sherrard crouched over the body of her beloved pet, glaring at him with open hatred. But she was not wholly Jen Sherrard anymore. Her eyes glowed green and her face had taken on a distinctly canine shape, elongating into a snout filled with the teeth of a wolf. Her hands were held out threateningly before her, her fingers lengthened into long, curved, razor-sharp claws. Blood dripped from the claws on her right hand. His blood.

Perry had only a moment to wonder at what he was seeing when a gunshot rang out behind him and the bullet blasted into his back and out through his chest, driving the breath from his lungs. A second shot plowed a very similar path through him. Suddenly, he was moving. He knew he was hurt badly and couldn’t handle much more damage before he would be in danger of not being able to heal. Without thinking, without even looking at his new attacker, he turned and shouldered his way through a door next to him. It opened into another room and desperate to escape, Perry dove through the window and into the night.

Behind him, Drew Jackson appeared in the doorway and squeezed off several more shots through the shattered window. Whether he hit his target or not, Drew didn’t care. He knew he had wounded Perry badly enough to send him underground for a while. Hopefully, by the time he healed, Drew would be long gone.

He turned his attention back to the scene before him. Dakota lay dead in the doorway to the room. That rather pleased him. Jen Sherrard—at least he thought it was Jen—was crouched over the body of the wolf, her green eyes locked on him. She seemed to be caught between the shape of a human and an animal, with her head and hands leaning more toward that of the wolf.

Drew Jackson didn’t bother wondering what was going on with her. He had seen enough weirdness over the past day to know that he was done asking questions. “Hello, Jen,” he said coldly, raising his gun.

He shot her through the heart.

 

BOOK: Antivirus (The Horde Series Book 1)
13.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Going All the Way by Dan Wakefield
The Boy from Left Field by Tom Henighan
The Unwanted Heiress by Amy Corwin
Coming Home for Christmas by Marie Ferrarella
The Hunters by Chris Kuzneski