Read Tracey H. Kitts - Lilith Mercury 1 - Red Online
Authors: Tracey H. Kitts
RED
Tracey H. Kitts
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RED
By
Tracey H. Kitts
RED
Tracey H. Kitts
2
© copyright August, 2007, Tracey H. Kitts
Cover art by Alex DeShanks, © copyright August 2007
New Concepts Publishing
Lake Park, GA 31636
www.newconceptspublishing.com
This is a work of fiction. All characters, events, and places are of the author’s imagination and not to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons or events is merely coincidence.
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Dedication:
To my mom who always knew I had talent, and to my dad who always knew it came from him.
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Lycanthropy is often referred to as a mental condition in which an individual believes himself to be a werewolf, but it’s much more than that. According to Greek mythology, a king named Lycaon was visited by Zeus, King of the gods, in disguise.
Thinking his visitor to be nothing but a beggar, the king served Zeus human flesh. As punishment for serving human flesh to a god, Lycaon was cursed for his animalistic ways. If you believe that sort of thing, that’s what happened.
In reality, Lycaon was visited by a werewolf whom he owed a great deal of money. Knowing what he was Lycaon served his guest the flesh in an effort to appease him. He was contaminated with lycanthropy as punishment for not paying his debt.
Apparently, werewolves don’t like to be stiffed.
This is how the disease got its name. What has this story got to do with me? I’m getting there.
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Tracey H. Kitts
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I was looking forward to the end of another hot, miserable summer night as I drove home that evening. Hopefully the local police would be able to cover up the night’s work without too much difficulty. God forbid they should be inconvenienced. I was called out at eleven thirty at night to hunt down a rouge werewolf, but hey, why should anyone else lose sleep?
Hearing the gravel of the driveway crunching underneath my tires was a relief. It was my signal that I was almost home. Oh, what I would have given to just crawl into bed and sleep for a couple of days. If I didn’t hate to stain my sheets with blood, I might have done just that.
I drove around to the back of the house, got out of the car, began unfastening my many weapons and depositing them in the trunk. I had just removed my long silver blade and closed the lid when I realized I had also locked up my keys. Before I could make an attempt at breaking into my own house, a noise caught my attention. It sounded like something was crunching through the underbrush in the nearby woods.
Since I was locked out anyway, I decided to investigate. I should have used more caution. But, I had stopped being afraid of the dark a long time ago. There was nothing in the dark worse than me, not that night.
I looked up, admiring the beautiful night sky. The next thing I knew, I was face down in the grass with something heavy on my back. I should have seen it coming.
Perhaps I was more tired than I had thought. The werewolf growled, pressing me further into the ground. I could taste dirt between my teeth, feel its claws digging into my shoulders, and its hot breath on the back of my neck.
I dug my knees further into the grass, pushing back with my hips. By the time I rolled over and jumped to my feet, the werewolf had run back into the woods. I tore off after it, listening to the sound of its frantic footfalls ahead of me. Ducking limbs, jumping roots, and dashing around branches, I stopped at last and listened to the night around me. It was quiet. When I say quiet, I don’t mean the normal sounds of a hot summer night. There were no birds, no crickets chirping, nothing.
I closed my eyes and sensed the woods around me, reaching out for any trace of human emotion—a thought, a feeling, a heartbeat. I felt something moving back toward the house. I started back more slowly, more quietly than before. I was in the woods hunting a werewolf with all my weapons locked in the trunk. It was not my night. I could only imagine what my father would say. Here was Lilith Mercury, a.k.a.
Quicksilver, a.k.a. The Silver Bullet, out hunting werewolves without so much as a silver nail file.
As I approached the house, I found the werewolf looking through the glass walls of my sunroom at the open back door to the kitchen. All he had to do was break the latch on the sunroom door and he would be inside. Nope. I did not want to have to kill a RED
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werewolf in my clean house that night. Without further thought to stealth, I sprang on him. My arm wrapped tightly around his massive throat. He flung his head back hard, knocking me into the flower bed where I hit my head on a large shepherd’s hook. The shepherd’s hook! Why didn’t I think of it before? The hook was plated with silver!
I jumped up and snatched on the hook. Whack. I was back on the ground again, enjoying the flavor of an azalea branch. Spitting out the flower, I stood up and pulled on the hook again. This time I managed to get it out of the ground. I was immediately knocked off my feet again, but I held on to the hook. It was positioned at the perfect angle when, a split second later, the beast leapt upon me, impaling himself on the silver.
He howled with fury and began pulling the hook through his body, pulling himself closer to me. I put my boot against his chest and shoved him backward, removing the hook from his body with a sickening slicing noise. He staggered back against the house. I slammed the hook across the side of his head, knocking him to his knees before I stabbed the hook through the back of his neck, and watched as his body slumped to the ground.
After washing the bloody smears off the vinyl siding, I decided to break in the back door and call it a night. This time, I locked the kitchen door.
* * * *
I heard footsteps coming from the staircase leading into the research lab beneath the house. Alfred came rushing up, looking completely disheveled.
“Good night, Alfred,” I said, continuing toward the stairs.
“What’s going on?”
“I handled it,” I answered simply.
He stomped barefoot across the foyer into the kitchen. “Holy shit,” he said, as he stomped back toward me. “You can’t just leave that monster in the back yard,” he insisted.
Being something other than human myself, I took offense at the word monster. It must have shown in my expression as his next words were not spoken so harshly.
“What were you thinking?” he asked.
“That you could handle something, for once.”
“Fine.” And with that, he turned back toward the lab and I ascended the stairs.
Dr. Alfred Moody isn’t exactly what you’d call normal either, but he’s human. I knew him through his work with my father before he became my partner. He’s about six foot five with dark hair and skin the color of an exotic caramel. He’s in decent shape, but not overly muscular. However, I didn’t doubt he could handle disposing of a werewolf carcass. He’s a brilliant scientist, twenty six years my senior. I believed he had spent every one of those years with his nose in a book.
“Wait,” he called.
“What?” I asked, walking back toward where Alfred stood at the foot of the stairs.
“What about the report? You know the commander will be expecting a report on the incident tonight.”
I looked at him blankly for a moment. I had honestly forgotten about giving a report. “Alfred, there are advantages to him being my father. I’ll make the report in the morning.”
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“I’ll make the report,” he said with a sigh. “Come on; give me the gist of it.”
I walked back down the stairs and into the sitting room to the left. Alfred clicked on a lamp and I winced.
“What? I can’t write in the dark,” he said, taking a note pad out of his lab coat.
He had a point. I normally didn’t turn on the lamp. Why bother with the light, when you can see in the dark?
I gave Alfred the rundown. Just as he rose to leave, I happened to glance out the window. Storm clouds had appeared over what was once a clear sky. The faint rumble of thunder in the distance told me I would sleep well, if I could ever get to bed. I’ve always loved a good storm, and living in Florida, I got plenty of them.
Gazing out underneath the gathering storm clouds, I caught sight of Marco Barak watching my house through the first sprinkles of rain. I’d left something out of the rundown I’d given Alfred. I’d recognized the werewolf I had killed earlier. He was a friend of Marco’s. There was a true monster, though at first glance one might be mistaken. Marco was attractive in that rough Harley Davidson, Marlboro man sort of way. Sexy and rugged, with a natural tan and dusty brown hair. I’d spoken to him only once before. He was being trained as a Hunter years ago, when he’d been contaminated.
That had been at least eight years ago, making him around thirty four now.
He hadn’t changed. Even through the rain growing steadily harder, I could see his tall frame clearly, looking exactly as I remembered him. Marco is around six feet tall, though he has always appeared larger to me. But, everyone seems tall when you’re five foot four.
I was on the way to my father’s office when we’d bumped into each other all those years ago. It was the first time I’d worn my now customary black leather cat-suit.
“Why black?” he’d asked.
“Stealth.”
Marco smiled at me. As I recalled, he had a nice smile, even white teeth, and full lips. Like I said, the man was good looking.
“Why bother? That red hair of yours glows in the dark.” He ruffled my hair and walked away. I didn’t know him well, but I’d thought he was a nice guy. Everyone had, including my father, who beats himself up to this day for not killing him when he had the chance. No one expected him to go crazy once he turned, let alone form a resistance group.
My father is the commander of The Hunters, a group originally formed on planet Terra to eliminate the threat of werewolves. They are the most elite group of professional assassins the world has ever known … and yet, the world doesn’t know them. Very few people know of the existence of The Hunters. A few of the local police had to be informed, for obvious reasons.
Werewolves have turned up for centuries in legends and myths from different cultures around the world. Every country has its own version of the werewolf, what they look like, and the powers they have. It is not a coincidence that before people on other continents were aware of each other, they had all developed their version of the same legend.
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Lycanthropy was created during the only world war the planet Terra has ever known. It’s a man made disease, born of nightmares. It was engineered as a biological weapon by Lionel Ferdinand, a scientist with radical ideas of what should be done with individuals who disagreed with his own political views. The idea was that people contaminated with the disease would transform and annihilate everyone else. Not everyone is capable of contracting lycanthropy, however. Just as some people have immunity to certain diseases they have been immunized against, others have a natural resistance. It was from these people that a vaccine was developed. Many hoped it would be ‘the cure’ for what was at the time known as the animal virus. Unfortunately, such was not the case. The virus ran rampant. The only person rumored to have developed a successful vaccine was Ferdinand himself, who had at this point had already been killed, slaughtered by a monster of his own making. Only pieces of his research were ever found. The complete formula, it would appear, was in his head. And most unfortunately, that had been lopped off by a werewolf.
Something had to be done. It was at this point that The Hunters were formed under the supervision of the acting President of the United Continental Terran Federation, Josiah Roark. Roark, formally vice President, had been forced into action by the contamination of the President himself. Not exactly the way he wanted to take office, I’m sure. It had been the first mission of The Hunters to assassinate their own President.