Read Monster Hunter Nemesis Online

Authors: Larry Correia

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Contemporary, #Urban

Monster Hunter Nemesis (39 page)

* * *

Heather climbed up the ladder as fast as she could. Stricken was right behind her, and surprisingly enough, he was managing to keep up. After that was Renfroe, and even if she wouldn’t have been able to place him by the panting and gasping, the odd glow would have given him away. Behind that weird guy was the rest of the surviving STFU staff members, stretched across three floors’ worth of ladder clear back to where they started. Not that Heather could tell any of them apart because the scents drifting up the shaft were a confused mix of fear hormones.

They were right to be scared, because the Nemesis soldier had just broken the door down and was coming in after them. Heather could tell by the sound and the smell, but Renfroe could see it somehow as well. “They’re in!”

Supersoldier on top, more below, they were trapped in a vise.

“Mr. Stricken, Agent Franks is at the main gate with a bunch of MCB,” Renfroe reported.

Stricken didn’t respond. It was like he was focused on climbing, and that was it. That was odd. Normally he wouldn’t shut up, though she’d never seen him in actual danger before.

“Can you let Franks in?” Heather shouted.

“Sure, I can activate the hydraulics, but Franks will kill us,” Renfroe answered.

“He can get in line. The more Nemesis fighting Franks the fewer fighting us.”

“Okay, I’m on it. Out of my way, chumps. Autolocks released. Hydraulic cylinders engaged. Okay, Franks has an open door. I hope you’re right.”

Somehow whatever put Renfroe on the PUFF table made it so he could mess with electronics . . . That meant maybe she wouldn’t need Stricken to get the exit open after all. She was suddenly tempted to stomp on his fingers and watch him tumble down the shaft, but with her luck he’d domino the rest of them, she’d lose the other guy who could open the door, and she really didn’t have anything against the secretarial staff. Now, the armed guards, on the other hand, had been there when she’d been getting tortured, so screw those guys.

There was a loud bang at the bottom of the shaft. Nemesis had found the secret passage. They didn’t waste any time. There was a surprised shout as the last person in line got yanked off the ladder. The noise turned into screaming and violent thrashing.

“I’m coming for you, humans!” shouted the Nemesis soldier at the bottom.

He reached the next one in line. “My leg! He’s got my leg! He’s got—”
CRUNCH.

One of the guards began shooting downward. Bullets ricocheted back up the shaft. One of the secretaries yelped when she got hit, lost her grip on the ladder, and fell. From the noise—panicked wailing and crashing—she took somebody else with her. The Nemesis soldier began to laugh, like that was the funniest damn thing he’d ever seen.

Heather reached the top. There was a metal hatch. “How do I open this thing? Stricken?” But the spymaster didn’t respond. “Stricken!”

“It locks on this side. Just turn the wheel I think,” Renfroe answered. “There’s a Nemesis soldier right on the other side waiting for you. The coded door is past her.” Somebody else died below them. “Hurry!”

Grasping the rusty wheel, she forced it to turn. The smell of blood and torn open bodies filled the shaft. Heather’s heart rate was increasing. The change was beginning. “I better get my damned exemption coin out of this! I’ll take the soldier, just get that door unlocked!” Heather shoved the hatch open.

The thing waiting on the other side grabbed her by the hair, yanked her out of the shaft, then threw Heather so hard that she hit the bunker’s ceiling, which hurt, but the really painful part was when she got kicked in the chest on the way back down.

Ribs broken, Heather bounced across the dusty floor until she struck the far wall.
Damn.
And she’d thought that Franks hit hard. That had knocked all the wind out of her. Luckily, her bones were used to breaking and immediately re-forming. Heather rolled over. The Nemesis soldier was a tall, Nordic-looking woman, and she had returned her attention to the shaft. As tempting as it was to let her murder Stricken, Heather really wanted to get out of here. Once her sternum wasn’t smashing her lungs flat, she gasped in a lungful of air and shouted, “Hey! I’m not done with you!”

The Nemesis woman looked over. “You’re alive?” She was wearing a slightly bemused expression as she left the shaft and walked over, casually dropping the handful of red hair she’d ripped out of Heather’s scalp on the way. “Then you’re not human either. What has Stricken sent to challenge me?”

Heather pulled herself up the wall until she was standing, and tried to get her bearings. The entire concrete room was only twenty feet across. The hatch was in the center, and from the screaming noises coming out of it, Stricken’s people were getting chewed up. There was a big bank-vault door on the far side of the room with a keypad on it. There was a boot print on her tank top. The Nemesis soldier was closing on her fast. Heather held up one hand. Her claws weren’t growing like they normally would. “Hang on . . .”

“Why should I?”

The transformation wasn’t happening as fast as it should. Enough of that toxin was still in her system that it was really screwing her up.
Damn it, Stricken!
That was really bad news, and an even worse time to find out. “You want a real challenge?” Heather growled. “Give me thirty seconds to get ready.”

“That sounds fair.” The woman grinned until her mouth grew so wide that it nearly split her face in half. She extended her arms wide, proudly demonstrating that each of her fingers had somehow turned into a tentacle ending in a needle-sharp spike. “I’ll give you time if you grant me the same courtesy,” she said, only now her words were hard to understand, what with those things that looked like crab legs splitting through her cheeks.

I hate my job.

Heather flung herself at the monster.

CHAPTER 18

Pennsylvania Colony, 1775

Consciousness returned quickly. A surgery had been performed. The work was crude and extremely painful, but his lungs were drawing in air and his heart was beating.

“Well, then, I see that our undying Hessian is awake.” A fat old man was sitting on a stool next to his bed. He adjusted his glasses as he studied Franks’ wounds. “That is a rather remarkable feat considering you had a wound to your abdomen sufficient to see daylight through. General Washington said you spoke English. Is this so?”

“Yes,” Franks croaked. Human languages were easy to master compared to the old tongue. “Where am I?”

“Most of you is present here in my laboratory in Philadelphia, however I regret to inform you that much of the rest of you is spread across a field in Virginia. Traditionally, when a man’s body is forcibly removed from the waist down by a cannonball, they have the decency to perish in a timely manner. To do otherwise tends to frighten the women and the livestock.”

“I’m not meant to die yet.”

“You made that rather clear. When you refused to expire, General Washington wanted your remains thrown upon a pyre. I believe the actual description he applied to you was
an unholy abomination in the sight of the Lord
. However, due to my small measure of reputation in the sciences, he thought I could ascertain what manner of beast the Hessians had unleashed upon us first, because heaven forbid we face any more soldiers so fearsome. So you were placed in a wagon and brought here as quickly as possible. You have proven to be a curious distraction. I am supposed to be preparing for an important diplomatic journey, but I’ve been engrossed in studying you instead. Would I be correct in assuming that you are the legendary creation of the alchemist Konrad Dippel?”

“Yes.”

The elderly fat man gave him an appreciative nod. “Then I can safely assure the good general that you are one of a kind.”

“My mission is to keep it that way.”

“I see . . . So the stories about you wandering the countryside destroying various nefarious supernatural beings are true. You are both a terror in battle and a scourge against any unearthly creature that crosses your path. Your fearsome reputation precedes you, sir.”

“I’m supposed to fight for you now.”

“General Washington’s letter mentioned you speaking briefly on this matter. May I inquire as to your motivations for joining our cause?”

“No.” If they’d thought about burning him before, nothing would stop them if they realized the truth. “But repair me, and I will serve you.”

The fat man thought about that for a long time. “I will not deny that I am intrigued by this idea; however, our noble endeavor to secure our liberties does not ask for servants, but rather free men, motivated by their own ideals, and governed by agreed-upon laws and contracts.”

“Then we make a contract.”

“We are men who will not be ruled by the arbitrary decrees of a king. Are you such a man?”

“No. I am Franks.”

“A pleasure to make your acquaintance, Mister Franks. I am Benjamin Franklin. Let us discuss
this hypothetical contract of yours . . .”

* * *

There was a mechanical hum. The gigantic blast doors began grinding open.

“Out of the way.”

The breaching crew didn’t even have time to shut their torches off before Franks had shoved past them. He caught a brief glimpse of the interior. It was a very large room resembling a factory, surrounded on all sides by catwalks and windows, but then Franks had to duck back when the surprised demons inside started shooting at him.

Franks turned around. Fifty men were eagerly waiting for their chance to fight some demons. “Two on the catwalk to the right. One on the left.” Somebody had let them in, but from the reactions, it didn’t appear to have been Nemesis. They needed to secure the entrance before Stricken closed the door.

“Bangs and disco. Now!” Cueto shouted. MCB agents rushed forward and began tossing distractionary devices through the gap. Some blew up with a bright flash and a lot of noise, but the really obnoxious ones were clear rubber balls filled with incredibly bright, flashing LEDs. Since it was such a big room, they wouldn’t be that effective, but it was mostly to draw the defenders’ eyes from what was coming next. “Toss the eyes.”

The next two MCB agents in line each had an object that looked like a black softball. They chucked them through the opening, each in a different direction. The sensors hit the ground rolling. “Eyes in!”

The door was still opening, but it wasn’t fast. It was wide enough now for a man to go through, but this was the very definition of fatal funnel. Even Franks wouldn’t make it through there without being chewed to pieces. They needed to secure their beachhead. Luckily, the MCB had a lot of tricks up their sleeves.

The sensor balls were weighted so that they’d stop bottom down. Their tiny tracks didn’t make them very fast, but they didn’t need to be fast since their thermal, IR, and seismic scanners could see quite a long ways.
“I’ve tagged three defenders,”
Archer said over the radio. He was in the comfort of the command truck, but for the next few seconds, he was the one having all the fun.
“I’m going hunting.”

“Robots up,” Cueto ordered.

The little tracked vehicles weren’t that impressive, but they were heavily armored, and each one had an M240 machine gun mounted on it. The machines could work autonomously, but their decision-making wasn’t perfect, so Franks preferred flesh brains running things over electronic ones. Their controllers were back at the truck, watching monitors and driving the robots with controllers actually taken from popular video game systems. The first one rumbled through the narrow gap, through the smoke and flashing lights, until its controller spotted one of Archer’s marked targets and opened fire.

“Okay, men. This is it. We need proof it was Stricken who hit us. I want that pasty shit bird in cuffs,” Cueto ordered. “The rules of engagement are simple. Nemesis soldiers get put down. STFU personnel either cooperate or get shot. We are not fucking around in there.”

Once the second robot was inside and making a lot of noise as well, Franks ducked through the door. He rushed through the smoke and took cover behind a pylon. The defenders had retreated ahead of the robots’ fire so Franks didn’t have a shot. Franks kept watch as the robots rolled further in. As the gap widened, more MCB and Swiss Guard rushed in behind him.

“They’ve fallen back,”
Archer said over the radio.
“I’ve got at least five of them near you, but they’re retreating through the factory.”

“Five?” Agent Cueto crouched next to Franks. Even under Myers he had been the Strike Team’s operational leader, but he had never been the kind of commander content with staying in the rear and giving orders. “You thinking what I’m thinking?”

Franks nodded. This place was way too big for that few people. “Archer. What size is the facility?”

“Ground penetrating radar is still doing its sweep. There are at least two floors below you. It covers a lot of ground. I haven’t even gotten to the back of it yet.”

“We’ve got us a bug hunt,” Cueto said. “All the STFU people are going to be hiding and we’re going to have to dig them out like ticks. That’s always fun.”

“Worse. More exits.” Franks wasn’t happy. His force and his time were limited. He had agents above, including some on sniper overwatch, but if this place was that large, then Stricken and Kurst could have potential escape routes he couldn’t even see. Unless they were stupid enough to stick their heads out right in front of his snipers, the odds of them escaping had just increased exponentially.

Franks hadn’t noticed Gutterres approach. The Secret Guard was extremely good at moving quietly. “Leave a squad on this door.” Franks nodded toward the ladders to the right. “Have the Swiss clear the right.” Gutterres started giving orders. Then Franks looked to Cueto. “Send a squad of MCB to clear left.”

“You heard the man, Bravo Team, move out!” Cueto shouted. “The rest of us take that factory. If that’s where he’s built Nemesis, that’s our proof.”

“I’m on point,” Franks stated. Nobody argued.

They moved out. The bunker was enormous. There was an open space down the center large enough to accommodate trucks. As inviting as that was, they stuck to whatever cover was available. Despite being underground, so many lights were suspended from the tall ceiling that it was actually extremely bright. Most of the surfaces were stainless steel or painted white so that it seemed rather sterile.

“Have your flashlights ready,” Cueto ordered on the radio, “in case they blow the lights when they counterattack.”

“That’s what I would do,” Franks said. He could only assume Nemesis could see in the dark as well as he could. Better probably, since only one of Franks’ eyeballs was properly treated, and the other one had come from one of MHI’s cadavers and that donor had been nearsighted.

The overhead lights clicked off, plunging the huge room into darkness. The MCB and the Swiss Guard turned on their weapon-mounted lights and hunkered down, waiting for an attack. “Told you so,” Cueto said. Franks waited to the count of twenty and then signaled the nervous men to keep moving.

Their two robots rumbled along ahead of them. Their belt-feds were smoking from the heat, but they still had plenty of ammo left.
“I’ve got nothing in sight,”
Archer reported.
“They’ve retreated. The sensor balls can’t open doors, so I’m cutting through an air vent and trying to follow them.”

Lights were still blinking on the various machines and computer monitors were still on, so they hadn’t lost power. “Somebody find a light switch,” Cueto ordered.

The agents moved quickly, leapfrogging from cover to cover. Only hardened combat vets ended up on the Strike Team. They were ready, and all of them knew that just because the MCB’s fancy sensors hadn’t picked up any danger didn’t mean it wasn’t there.

Franks didn’t recognize most of the machinery around them. It all seemed to be complicated diagnostic medical equipment. Franks’ medical knowledge was limited to putting himself back together, and when he had to do that himself it was usually the old-fashioned way, with needle and thread, though the invention of superglue had been extremely helpful.

Franks came around the corner and came face to face with a demon.

His flashlight beam reflected off the glass between them. It wasn’t awake yet. The body wasn’t fully formed, but he could sense the evil spirit already clinging to the congealing mass of protein. To one of the Fallen it might as well have put up a sign saying that this property was claimed and there was no trespassing, but to the humans it would just look like a fleshy, humanoid blob. It was floating in a greenish liquid, inside a large glass container, held upright by dozens of wires and tubes stuck through its body.

“That’s disgusting . . .” Gutterres said. “It’s unnatural.”

Franks walked around the glass tube. The tissues were soft and pink. Layers of muscle were slowly building on top of the skeleton. There was no skin yet.

“I know you need evidence, but my gut is telling me to burn these things,” Gutterres said.

Franks knew that wasn’t his gut talking, that was Gutterres’ human decency offended by this spectacle. Some humans were more sensitive to the presence of evil than others.

While the sweep teams reported in, Franks signaled for the men to spread out and search the factory. One of the men stopped in front of a monitor. “That thing’s got a heartbeat. According to this, there’s a bunch more too.”

“Is there a birth date?” Franks asked.

“Yes, sir. Most are really recent, but the oldest one is from a few months ago.”

Cueto and Franks shared a glance. There was their evidence that Stricken had been working without authorization.

Franks looked over the agent’s shoulder. This workstation was monitoring heartbeats for
prototypes fourteen through twenty-six.
Each screen had a heartbeat, except for the last, which showed
no signal.
Franks glanced down the aisle. There were six glass tubes on this side. There was something growing in each one. Some were nothing but hardened skeletons with a pink glaze of new flesh growing over them, while others appeared to be fully formed human beings, sleeping peacefully in their pseudoamniotic fluid. Franks stepped out into the lane running down the center of the factory. There were six more tubes on the other side . . .

And a blank spot on the end.

Tubes and wires were lying there, hastily disconnected, and there was a puddle on the floor. “One of the tanks is missing.”
That can’t be good.
He walked forward and played his light across the area. Big tires had rolled through the fluid and tracked it deeper into the facility. “It was loaded on a truck.”

“What’s Stricken up to?” Cueto asked.

“This is Archer. I’ve found something. There’s a room full of dead bodies. They’re fresh. I’m trying to get an angle here, but it looks like they got dumped in a big pile. I’ve got at least twenty so far, male and female. Some are dressed in scrubs or civilian attire, but I’ve got a bunch in coveralls that look like security guards.”

Franks frowned. It was starting to sound like Stricken wasn’t in control here after all.

“Hello, Franks.”
The voice came over the intercom.
“Welcome to my childhood home.”

“Kurst . . .” Franks muttered.

His men immediately took cover between the machines and tanks, flashlights stabbing out in every direction. More lights bounced along the catwalks and windows above.

“Aren’t they beautiful, Franks? They were made in your image.”

Franks put his hand to his transmitter and whispered, “Archer, locate that transmission.”

“On it, Franks. Uh oh . . . They’re on the way back toward you guys! Shoot. I’ve lost signal.”

Kurst had a maniacal laugh.
“I stepped on your little toy. Humans are so remarkably clever. Maybe that’s why they were the ones who followed The Plan. They had the imagination necessary to believe the World Maker, while the rest of us lacked the faith. The time has come to right this injustice. The albino made us in your image, but I will improve the design. This time, I shall be the Creator. I will fix the mistakes made before.”

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