Read Deathstalker Online

Authors: Simon R. Green

Deathstalker (28 page)

“I thought that would provoke you into using your disrupter. Now it’s useless till the energy crystal has recharged. I won’t let them have you, Deathstalker. I want you for myself. Not for the price on your head. Money means little to me anymore. No, I want to break you, humble you, cripple
you. I shall enjoy that. And then I’ll let you drink a little of my blood, and you’ll belong to me, body and soul.”

Owen put away his gun and swept his sword back and forth before him. “You talk too much, Wampyr. Let’s do it.”

The Wampyr surged forward, arms outstretched, moving impossibly fast. Owen braced himself and stepped forward in a perfect lunge, sword extended, and Abbott impaled himself on the long blade. It entered just below the heart and punched out his back in a flurry of black, viscous blood. Abbott grunted once, and then stepped forward, forcing himself along the blade so that he could reach the Deathstalker. Owen pirouetted on one foot, brought the other up to slam against Abbott’s belly, and jerked his sword free again. He backed away, watching incredulously as the wound in the Wampyr’s chest healed itself in seconds.

Right
, thought Owen.
Fast, strong, regenerates. Wonder what else he isn’t telling me
. …

He cut at the Wampyr’s throat, and Abbott slapped the blade aside with his bare hand. Owen backed away again, and Abbott came after him. Hazel was suddenly there behind the Wampyr, aiming her disrupter. A dozen of the crowd piled onto her, ripping the gun from her hand and holding her down. She struggled fiercely, but their weight was too much for her. Owen scowled and subvocalized the trigger word
boost
. He’d been using it far too often just recently, and he hated to think what the long-term effects were going to be, but it wasn’t as if he had any choice in the matter. The world seemed to slow down as the boost took hold, supercharging his system and buying him time to think. The Wampyr was fast, but so was he, now. If he could just get past the Wampyr’s defenses, one good cut to the neck would decapitate him.
Regenerate from that, you bastard
.

He danced around the Wampyr, cutting and drawing back, spilling the black blood, only to see the cuts heal in a moment. The Wampyr moved with him, his hands reaching out to tear and hurt, the two men moving too quickly for the unaided eye to follow. Owen thrust and stamped, cutting where he could, going always for the throat, but never even getting close, while Abbott’s grasping hands came closer every time. Owen licked his dry lips and panted for breath. The boost gave him some regeneration, but he didn’t think it would be enough to repair what Abbott intended to do to him.

And then he moved too slowly, anticipated too late, and Abbott’s hand closed around his wrist like a vise. The Wampyr’s hand tightened, and all the feeling went out of Owen’s hand. The sword fell from his numb fingers, and Abbott laughed softly. Owen dropped his free hand to his boot, pulled out the dagger he kept there and rammed it between the Wampyr’s ribs. Black blood ran for a moment, and then stopped. The Wampyr smiled, and threw Owen twenty feet. The crowd scrambled to avoid him, and he hit the packed snow hard, driving the breath from his lungs. He rolled over slowly, biting back a groan. His hand was completely numb. Abbott was walking unhurriedly toward him, still smiling, the knife jutting unnoticed from his ribs.

Owen lurched up onto one knee and crouched there for a moment, breathing hard. And then his good hand brushed against something in the snow, and his heart missed a beat as he recognized what it was. Luck had finally smiled on him, and he was back in with a chance. Abbott loomed over him, grabbed Owen’s shirtfront with both hands and lifted him off the ground. His feet kicked helplessly, six inches above the snow.

“It’s over, little man,” said Abbott.

“Bet your ass,” said Owen. And he brought up the hand holding Hazel’s lost gun, thrust it into Abbott’s gaping mouth, and pressed the stud. The energy blast blew the Wampyr’s head apart like a rotten fruit, and black blood and brains flew across the air. Abbott’s hands slowly released Owen, letting him fall back onto the blood-spattered snow. He scrambled quickly away, tucked Hazel’s gun into his belt and scooped up his sword with his good hand, beating the other against his thigh to get the feeling back again. And then, finally, Abbott’s body fell and lay still.

The crowd of onlookers surged forward and fell on it like rats on a day-old corpse. They tore the Wampyr’s clothes apart, cut the flesh with their weapons and sucked at the black blood like leeches, their mouths working greedily against the pale flesh. Others fought over the blood spilling sluggishly from the severed neck. Owen staggered over to Hazel, who was back on her feet and shaking her head dazedly. She looked up sharply as he approached, then looked across at the feeding frenzy of the mob.

“I really think we should get out of here, Hazel,” said Owen. He flexed his hand, grimacing at the pins and needles,
and then gave Hazel her gun back. She nodded quickly and looked about her.

“I get the feeling it’s not going to be that easy, Deathstalker.”

Owen looked around him, and his blood ran cold. The crowd had left the Wampyr’s body and reformed itself around them. Most had black stains around their mouths, and all their eyes were fixed on Owen and Hazel. There was a growing tension in the air, and the faces of the crowd slowly filled with the same slow hatred. Their master, their god, was dead. There would be no more of the wonderful blood that had made them feel like gods, too, for a time. Owen looked quickly about him, but the odds were equally bad whichever way he looked. He stood back-to-back with Hazel, and they held their swords ready. And the mob came at them from all sides.

At first the sheer size of the crowd counted against it; they weren’t used to working together and kept getting in each other’s way. But the black blood burned within them, and they struggled for a chance to get at the man who had killed their god. Owen cut and thrust with skilled precision, killing coldly and dispassionately, with the minimum necessary movement and strength. The blood junkies died and fell, but there were always more to take their place. Hazel fought at his back, stabbing and cutting. Blades came at Owen and Hazel from all directions: swords and knives and machetes in never-ending numbers. Owen fought on, doggedly refusing to be beaten. The boost still flared within him, bright and powerful, but he wasn’t sure how much longer it would last. The candle that burns twice as brightly lasts half as long.

He gutted a skeletal man wrapped in evil-smelling furs, ducked a wild swing from the man next to him and cut viciously at another face that pressed too close. He’d already taken a dozen minor wounds he was too busy to feel, and blood soaked his clothes, some of it his. He grunted and stamped and swung his sword with all his amplified strength, and still the crowd surged around him, desperate to drag him down. Gleaming blades came at him from every side, and he could only evade and parry so many of them. It came to him suddenly and quite calmly that there was no way he and Hazel could survive this. There were just too many of the blood junkies. It only needed one of them to get
in a lucky blow, and the fight would be over. A hell of a way for a Deathstalker to die, pulled down by nameless dogs in a nameless back alley. He smiled slightly, even as he cut and thrust. He’d felt this way once before, on Virimonde, when his own men had surrounded him, desperate for his head, but then Hazel had come from nowhere to save him. This time she was in just as much trouble as he was. She couldn’t save him … but perhaps he could save her. He considered the thought dispassionately and found it good. He owed her his life, and the Deathstalkers always paid their debts. And at least this way his death would mean something.

He forced back the maddened faces in front of him with wide, sweeping strokes to buy him a little space, and drew his disrupter. Enough time had passed to recharge the crystal. Some of the crowd drew back just from the sight of the energy gun. Owen tilted his head back to yell at Hazel. He could feel her back bumping and jarring against his, showing that she was still alive and fighting, but he had no way of knowing what shape she was in.

“Hazel, I’ve got a plan!”

“Better be a good one, Deathstalker.”

“I’m going to blast a hole through the crowd with my disrupter. When you see the opening, run. I’ll keep them occupied.”

“Are you crazy? I’m not leaving you to die! I didn’t save your ass last time just to run out on you now.”

“Hazel, I can’t save both of us. If you don’t run, we’ll both die. Please, let me do this. Let me save you.”

There was a pause, and then her voice came back to him. “You’re a brave man, Deathstalker. Wish I’d known you longer. Do it.”

Owen summoned up the last of his boosted strength and threw himself at the crowd. Blood pounded in his head and boiled through his veins, and all his pain and tiredness disappeared like a fleeting thought. His sword swung and hacked like a part of him, driving back the vicious faces before him, his blade moving too fast for the eye to follow. The crowd fell back still further, confused for the moment by the deadly force in their midst, and Owen raised his disrupter and fired. The blood junkies threw themselves out of its way, but still the searing energy beam tore through those who didn’t move fast enough, and for a moment there was an opening in the crowd.

“Run!” yelled Owen as he pulled Hazel round so she could see the opening, and she lowered her head and ran. She burst through the crowd and on into the deserted street beyond. She pounded down the street, and only slowly realized no one was following her. She stopped and looked back, and all she could see were the backs of the crowd intent on one struggling figure in their midst. Hazel slowly lowered her sword and felt something burn in her eyes that might have been tears. He’d never liked her much, any more than she’d liked him, but he’d sacrificed himself to save her. For a moment she wanted to run back and fight beside him again, but that would just have thrown away the chance he’d given her. As she watched, the crowd pressed in from every side, hacking and cutting, and Owen fell beneath them to disappear under the crowd of bodies. A sob forced its way past her trembling mouth.

“Don’t mourn for him,” said a quiet, distorted voice behind her. “It’s not over yet.”

She spun round, sword at the ready, and found herself facing a tall, stocky man in a dark uniform she didn’t recognize. She had a brief glimpse of a subtly inhuman face with blazing golden eyes, and then the figure was past her and running toward the crowd with impossible speed. A few turned to face him, but he was among them in seconds, swinging his sword in long deadly arcs that picked men up and threw them aside like puppets with broken strings. Men and woman fell to every side of him, and the crowd scattered, unable to face the newcomer’s incredible strength and speed. From their midst a blood-stained figure rose up again, still savagely swinging his sword. His voice rose above the clamor, strong and strident.

“Shandrakor! Shandrakor!”

Hazel’s heart missed a beat as she realized who it was, and she had to blink back fresh tears. She should have known Owen Deathstalker wouldn’t die that easily. Together, he and the newcomer moved among the dispersing crowd like unstoppable nightmares, and bloodied figures fell to the stained snow and did not rise again. No one could stand against them, and after a few moments no one tried anymore. The surviving blood junkies turned and ran, and as quickly as that it was all over. Owen and the newcomer lowered their swords and watched them run, and then looked at each other appraisingly. Hazel ran back to join them, then
had to put a supporting arm round Owen as his knees buckled. He was trembling like a horse after a race, but he still managed a ghastly grin for her, despite his many wounds.

“You realize,” he said thickly, “that this is the second bloody time I’ve had to be rescued by somebody else? Just once I’d like to rescue myself, okay? Is that so much to ask?”

“Oh, shut up and get your breath back,” said Hazel. “If you were drowning, you’d complain the straw you were clutching at wasn’t a good enough quality. What was that you were shouting?”

“My Family’s battlecry,” said Owen. His voice seemed a little stronger. “I never used it before. Never thought I would. Surprising what goes through your mind when you realize you might not be about to die after all. Speaking of which, who’s your new friend?”

“Don’t ask me,” said Hazel. “I thought he was a friend of yours.”

They both turned to look at their unexpected savior, and he looked silently back. His face was subtly inhuman, just as Hazel had thought; there was something wrong in its planes and angles, as though strange and unfamiliar emotions had shaped it. But it was the eyes that held the attention, that brought goose-flesh to Owen and Hazel’s arms and raised the hairs on their necks. The eyes glowed a bright gold in the dim light of the street, as though lit from within by some strange inner fire. They marked him, like the brand of Cain. He was a Hadenman, one of the legendary augmented men of lost Haden. They were rare now, seen perhaps once in a hundred worlds, the few survivors of the terrible Hadenmen rebellion, when cyborgs created by men sought to wipe out humanity, root and branch. They failed, just, and now the last remnants were scattered far and wide across the Empire, feared and courted wherever they went as the ultimate warriors. They were supposed to be shot on sight, but usually no one was stupid enough to take them on with anything less than an army.

Few and far between now, lost and forsaken; the bitter end of a once brilliant dream.

“I am Tobias Moon,” said the Hadenman in a harsh rasping voice that had no place in a human throat. “I am a partially functioning augmented man. Most of my implanted energy crystals are exhausted, and I lack the means to recharge
them. I am therefore unable to utilize most of my implants, but I am still more than capable of seeing off a few blood junkies.”

“How did you know we needed help?” said Hazel.

“A message from Cyder,” said Moon. “She thought you could use some assistance, and that we might be able to help each other.”

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