Read Renegade (Ministry of Paranormal Research & Defence) Online
Authors: Andrew Chapman
The corridor went straight as an arrow along the length of the house, bedrooms branching off of both sides. At the end was a turn to the left, towards the rear of the house, and a short corridor ending in a window. To the right of that window was a door, behind the door a staircase. And at the bottom of the staircase, the servants' quarters.
Nice to know under normal circumstances, lifesaving now. The sun was shining through the window and throwing the shadows of two armed figures on to the opposite wall.
They were probably vamps. Which means that all the creeping and sneaking I'd been doing had been a complete waste of time. These guys could probably hear my heart beating.
I stopped in front of the last door on the left, a sneaky plan forming in my mind. I reached out with my left hand and opened the door as silently as possible. Then I flung it back. By the time it banged off of the wall behind it my hand was back on the assault rifle.
Two figures burst around the corner, obviously thinking they were going to catch me unawares, distracted by a room-to-room search. Instead they met a hail of gunfire. The first went down. The second, a lanky vamp with a military-style buzz cut dodged back around the corner before I could drop him.
Time for a little trick known as amateur hour.
I continued firing on full auto, peppering the corner and wall opposite with every round left in the magazine. When the rifle clicked empty I hit the magazine release. Instead of reaching for a fresh mag I flung the rifle around my body by the strap, snatching my SIG on the way back. I had the pistol pointed before the empty mag had finished clattering against the floor. The vamp leaned around the corner, expecting a reloading target, and died without firing a shot.
Vamps have lifetimes to work on their intelligence but I'd had a few years to work on my Sneaky As Fuck. Good instructors, too.
I stepped over the corpse and cautiously checked around the corner. It was clear and my luck held all the way down the back staircase. The servants' quarters were similarly deserted. I moved through, scanning every room and corridor as I did. Eventually I reached the door to the outside world.
The stables were dank and clammy. The scent of rotting hay and ground-in horseshit made a fug in the air which bit the back of my throat. The stables had a second level, a hayloft by the look of it. The only way up seemed to be a crude approximation of a ladder, basically slats nailed across an indent in one wall. Still, getting up to the hayloft would provide me with a good view of the grounds, so I climbed up. The hayloft was empty apart from a couple of rotting bales and a spilled bag of horse feed. From the center of the loft I could see out of the two openings in the walls. One was the doorway for loading supplies, evidenced by the remains of a wall-mounted pulley still visible above the hole. The other just looked like it was supposed to let in light. Between the two I had a fair view of the surrounding grounds. I paused to reload both of my weapons as I watched and crouched, calmly examining my options. I wanted to have a better look around and, just as I was trying to figure out how to manage that without exposing myself at either the door or the window, a voice spoke. It seemed to be coming from the air a few feet in front of me. The voice didn't seem excited in the slightest. It was coming from someone stood close to the wall, out of sight from my position.
Then the sound of boots crunching on gravel came from below and a head moved into view at ground level. It was one of the attackers, moving away from the stable, rounding the side of the mansion at a brisk pace. I silently cursed myself. I had made noise getting up here—not a lot, I had been careful—but more noise than I should have given that one of the bad guys was standing outside. I was getting sloppy. I'd had no sleep for who knows how long and now I was making mistakes like some green FNG. I felt anger rising and fought to suppress the feeling. Getting pissed off wouldn't accomplish anything. What I needed was to get out of the grounds as quickly and quietly as possible and get to the rendezvous point. This whole situation was starting to get me tense.
The grounds of the manor had several ways in and out. The main gate would be the best guarded and, hence, the worst bet. I mentally ticked off various exits. West side, small gate, probably guarded and I would need to skirt the building. That would leave me exposed from far too many angles. East side, no gate, dirt road. Getting down that road would leave me more exposed than going west, and the road was visible from the main gate as well as from most of the house. South would work best. That way lay cover in the form of a loose screen of trees, then the larger stables, a tumbledown barn, and a low fence to climb. It seemed easy. A little too easy.
Something else occurred to me. The sound of sirens had utterly failed to rend the air with their wailing, despite the fire and gunshots. Either the police and fire brigade had not been called or they had been stood down. It didn't matter much because either way it was beneficial. The police would have had too many inconvenient questions leading to uncomfortable answers.
I scanned what I could see through the two openings, keeping back in the shadows, moving around as much as possible to see as much as I could. All of the activity seemed to be centered on the front of the house. I'd rather wait until dark but that seemed about as likely as a getting a ride out with Elvis. As far as I could see it was clear. The ridiculous camouflage jacket went behind a bale of hay. There wasn't much I could do about the trousers but hopefully, at a quick glance, I wouldn't stand out too much. I lowered myself from the edge of the loft and dropped into one of the stalls, landing on a bed of musty straw.
Slowly I made my way to the door and took a look outside. I had to move. I walked carefully across the manicured lawn. Movement attracts the eye, a running figure doubly so. I knew this but it didn't help much. My skin crawled as I walked, feeling naked and vulnerable, trying to project an image of nonchalance around me.
A set of stone steps led down to a garden full of flowers and artfully-trimmed hedges. A flagstone path led through a veritable forest of Greek-style statues, all of them either naked strapping young men doing athletic things or graceful women wearing togas that somehow failed to completely cover one or both of their perky stone breasts. I liked them because they did represent a little touch of cover. I maintained my casual, nothing-to-see-here walk all the way past the big carp pond at the end of the path and then under the cover of a row of trees.
I let out a relieved sigh. Scary stuff. All it would have taken was one alert, awake guard with a rifle and an itchy trigger finger and I would have been out of luck. I wasn't going to push my luck any further. I had no idea what we'd walked into at DeClerc's place but I wanted nothing to do with it. Time to get the hell out of town.
Picking through the trees was almost relaxing compared to the walk through the garden, but I still went slowly and carefully. I had no clear idea of how many of the invaders there were and, by now, they had to know that someone was out here still kicking. It would only be a matter of time before they headed this way.
It took me the best part of twenty minutes but eventually I made it through the trees and emerged by a fenced-in paddock. A long structure that ran along one side of the paddock, a large block of stables, currently uninhabited from what I could see. Someone who once owned the mansion had been a horse buff. This had probably been a riding school or a gymkhana club. Not any more, apparently. By the look of the tire tracks crisscrossing the paddock it was now used by someone who favored two wheels over four hooves and engines over equines.
That might be useful, actually, if the bikes were stored in the stables. And if their tanks were full. And if the keys were stored there, too. If—
if
—all those were true my imminent and much delayed departure might be arranged with a little more speed.
It took me another ten minutes to cautiously work my way around to the stables. There was nobody in sight. So far so good. And then it got better. The tack room at the end of the block of stables had been converted into a garage. Several off-road bikes, both the two- and three-wheeled varieties, were lined up, and the walls were hung with equipment. Helmets, protective jackets, knee pads, shin pads, hip pads. And there was a small wooden cabinet on the wall. The door to the cabinet was open and there inside, praise be to the gods of convenience, were row upon row of keys.
Somebody was really into dirt bikes. Somehow it was hard to picture vamps out dirt-hopping but there you go.
I picked out a helmet that looked like it would fit and took a quick glance outside. I softly cursed my luck. A pair of vampires were heading my way. These weren't looking bored or distracted. This pair was looking professional and alert. They were dressed like the other attackers, assault rifles held casually, heads and eyes moving. How these vamps were casually walking around in the sunshine I had no idea. It was cold and slightly overcast but these two should have been turning bright red out there. I had no time for a scientific investigation at this point. I moved back into the shadows and considered my options. If at all possible I wanted to get away without having to kill these two, if only because the gunfire would bring more inquisitive vamps. This probably wasn't the time to experiment but I pulled the KnightStar electrolaser and checked to make sure the safety was off. I kept my SIG in my right hand. If necessary I could just blast the pair if they came in here and the electrolaser failed to work as advertised. A large 6x6 vehicle—it looked like a civvy version of the Army's Supacat—provided enough cover and I crouched back in the shadows.
For several minutes I waited in the darkness, trying to breathe quietly and not move. Then the light coming in from the doorway flickered and I heard the soft tread of the two vamps coming into the stable. The two split up. One came towards me, towards the back of the stable, the other headed towards the smaller exit and stepped outside. As the one vamp approached I edged around the Supacat, keeping as low as I could. It seemed like an age, creeping through the darkness. The vamp had caught something—probably the scent of my sweat—and was moving cautiously himself. Eventually I crept up behind him. He was peering around behind a row of quad bikes. I centered the red dot of the stun-gun's laser sight on the vamp's back and squeezed the trigger. The results surprised me but shocked the hell out of the vamp—literally. There was a sharp crackle of electrical discharge and something like a couple of miniature lightning bolts slammed him in the back. The vamp convulsed. He didn't even manage to scream as every muscle in his body contracted at once. As soon as I released the trigger he collapsed to the floor like a bag of spuds. The gun hadn't been as noisy as a pistol but it hadn't been silent. I spun and shuffled behind the Supacat again as the second vamp came back in the door. I traced his footsteps as he threaded through the bikes towards me.
“
Mike!” he hissed.
Not too bright. Sure, 'Mike' could have had an accident and knocked himself out but then what would be the point in calling his name?
As the vamp caught sight of his fallen compatriot he let out a gasp and I sprung up, the electrolaser firing. Like the first vamp he convulsed and hit the floor. I glanced down at the two prone vamps. Mike was stirring, regaining control of his limbs, so I gave him another burst and sent him back to la-la land. I couldn't really leave the two of them here. As soon as they were able to they'd raise the alarm.
The second vamp grunted quietly as I used my boot to flip him over onto his back. I took a deep breath and knelt next to his head, my commando knife in my hand. He barely twitched as the sharp blade passed through his windpipe and scraped against bone. It took me only a few seconds of probing to find the gap between two vertebrae and slice through his spinal column. I dispatched Mike in the same manner.
Then I took a few seconds to take a look at the pair. Their skin was slick and slightly sticky to the touch. They were wearing sunscreen, the bastards, and this was way above the stuff which would normally be on sale to the public. In order to protect the vamp from the sun's effects for any length of time the SPF would have to be astronomical but this whatever they were wearing would be proof for a little while. This actually pissed me off. Vamps were supposed to be stuck in the seventeenth century, not using modern chemistry to overcome their failings. It just wasn't playing fair. If the vamps were no longer imprisoned by the sun what was the point in humanity being afraid of the dark?
I guess there was the slight irony in DeClerc being attacked by vamps using a development of the very product that he'd gotten rich selling but that was cold comfort.
I didn't waste any time feeling bad about killing two helpless vamps. It was me or them and it sure as shit wasn't going to be me.
I made my way back over to the bike I'd picked out. It was a modified Kawasaki with high exhausts, a big tank, and huge knobbly tires. A real scrambler. The tank was full, the keys were in the ignition and I was ready to go. I kicked up the stand and, after a cautious look around, wheeled the bike outside. I moved down the line of stables and out into the forest before climbing aboard the bike and jumping on the kick starter. The bike's engine clattered into life. I was prepared to sacrifice stealth for speed at this point so I gunned the engine and roared off down a handy dirt track.
The path might have been, under other circumstances, quite picturesque. The ground was dry and firm. The weak sunlight streamed through the trees, turning the surroundings into a pleasant, dappled view.