Ultimate Weapon (McClouds & Friends #6)(145)
Novak was curled on the ground, shaking. Blood spread quickly beneath his wasted body. His hand was pressed to his midriff. Gut shot.
Good, she thought viciously. Die in agony, scum.
Georg aimed the gun at the man whose jaw had been shot off.
“So you are the one,” he said. “Traitor and spy. I had to let all of my men be killed in order to identify you, Ferenc. This grieves me.”
The man gurgled, eyes bugging over his shattered lower face.
“I told the sniper to aim for your mouth,” Georg told him. “I thought it appropriate. Don’t you?”
Blood sprayed as the man shook his head. He clutched at Georg’s leg. Georg kicked him away. “The real punishment would be to leave you alive with that face,” Georg said. “But alas, it is not practical.”
He pulled the trigger. Bam. The contents of the man’s skull exploded from the back in a pink, splattering fan, over the carpet, wall.
Black-clad men bulked up with Kevlar, masked with helmets and bristling with equipment and weaponry were sliding into the room like shadows. One through the door and two through the space where the windows had been. Broken glass glittered everywhere.
Georg bent over to Novak’s shriveled form. He slid the barrel of the gun into the old man’s gaping mouth and jerked his face up with it.
“You’re not the only one who had an inside man,” he said. “I had one, too. Someone to take out your security at just the right moment. You got soft, old man. Complacent. Now you die, and I’ll take back my toy. And everything else you have, as well. It’s mine now. All mine.”
Novak struggled to speak. Georg jabbed the gun sharply, knocking the old man to the ground again. Then Georg turned and looked at Tam. That persistent white froth of bubbly spit dangled from his grimacing lips. His eyes dragged over her, lit up with unholy lust.
He licked his wet, foamy lips and started toward her.
Chapter
28
The first sentry’s eyes barely had time to widen before Val grabbed the side of his head, whipped it down, and smashed the man’s temple into his jerked up knee. The sentry thudded to the floor. A swift, brutal kick to the nose to make sure he was out, and Val darted on.
He felt a detached sense of unreality to be slipping through the corridors of this hellish place again. The palace was drafty and cold, with a pervasive stench of damp and mold. He’d found the place crushingly depressing when forced to live and work there in his youth, like the dismal castle of an absentee vampire. He almost expected to run into himself as he passed silently by the mildewed library with its treasure trove of rotting antique books.
He stopped, listened. Heartbeat slowing, time slowing. Battle ready.
A sentry rounded the corner. Val jabbed a punch into his face, grabbed his neck. A headbutt, an elbow raked across the the throat, a knee jab to the groin, and the man was felled. In relative silence, but for the grunts and thuds.
He froze in an agony of indecision at the top of the staircase.
Crash, gunshots, glass shattering. The noise broke his paralysis. He sprinted down the stairs. The Saints Salon, then. Novak’s favorite room with its baroque splendor and its creepy frescoes. Typical.
Georg had arrived and made his move. It was about f*cking time. He experienced a flash of what almost amounted to warmth for the bloodsucking freak. Not that it would keep Val from killing the man at the first opportunity.
He began stepping over bodies, skirting puddles of blood. Novak’s staff, he assumed, taken by surprise by Georg’s attack force. Blood-spattered, water-damaged walls, and rolled in dark rivulets across the cracked antique tilework.
So he’d missed the first wave. Just as well. Not his fight.
The next corner he turned would put him outside the Saints Salon. With his sixth sense, he picked up the inaudible shush of fabric-clad thighs rubbing together, squeaks of rubber-soled boots against tile. The man turned the corner, whipping up his gun—
Thunk, Val’s knife sank into the man’s eye, before the shout had time to flash from the man’s brain down his nerve fibers to his throat.
He staggered, fell. Val sprinted forward and grabbed him under the armpits, dragging him out of sight of anyone around the corner.
Black-clad, heavy, slung with gear. The dead man was shorter and slighter, but the bulky vest might camouflage that for the brief moment that mattered. He whipped the helmet off the dead man—and gasped in a short, shocked breath. Staring at the corpse.
Cristo. He knew this man. Knew his name. A PSS agent, young, hired less than five years ago. Efficient, capable. Professional.
Val dragged his eyes from the accusing gaze of the pale, staring blue eye that remained. Unfortunate, but if he had not killed, he would have been killed, and Tamar had no time for moral ambiguity.
This man had made his choice. He had known the risks.
The fastenings of the Kevlar vest made a loud scritch as he wrenched them loose. He stilled, ready to shoot whoever might poke his head around the corner to investigate.
Seconds ticked by. Nothing. No one.
He donned the vest, ignoring the blood that stained it, put on the helmet, strapped on the chin guard. He angled his head for maximum shadow on his face and walked toward the other black-clad man stationed in front of the Saints Salon.
A gun crashed from inside. The man turned to look, distracted.
Val leaped, grabbed, wrenched. Crunch, the man’s vertebrae gave. The man flopped to the ground, neck snapped, shitting himself.
Shannon McKenna's Books
- Standing in the Shadows (McClouds & Friends #2)
- In For the Kill (McClouds & Friends #11)
- Fatal Strike (McClouds & Friends #10)
- Extreme Danger (McClouds & Friends #5)
- Edge of Midnight (McClouds & Friends #4)
- Blood and Fire (McClouds & Friends #8)
- Baddest Bad Boys
- Right Through Me (The Obsidian Files #1)