Evolve Two: Vampire Stories of the Future Undead (32 page)

BOOK: Evolve Two: Vampire Stories of the Future Undead
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Frank’s razor rounds cut through the stocky guard, slicing up from under his ribs, through his chest, his throat, up into the man’s skull, out the top of his head in a jet of gray brain matter and blood. Two razor rounds sparked from the stone floor as the lanky one fired at him — Frank rolled, came up firing, aiming at the other guard’s gun, pressing the charge button so each projectile carried a pulse of electricity. The guard’s right arm splashed blood, and he staggered back, tendons cut, gun clattering to the floor.

The surviving guard was sitting up, shaking in a puddle of blood, groaning as the shock spasms left him. “Goddammit … fu-uck … whud I take this fucking job…”

“What’s the deal with this operation?” Frank demanded, pointing the gun at the man’s groin. “Why’re they keeping euthanasia patients alive?”

“I’m … just a mercenary, I don’t know nothing about what goes on back there. They won’t let us back in transition, they got their own people to patrol it. I hate this fucking job…” He stared at the bloody corpse sprawled on the floor. “You kill Larry?”

“Larry killed my wife. What’s your name?”

“Marv.
Ow.
Goddamn that hurts.”

“Okay, Marv Ow, you’re gonna get on that shuttle, and take any other personnel you can find with you. Evacuate all the employees. How many other mercs on this fucking bauble?”

“Just two others. We never had no trouble before.”

“You talk them into going with you. You understand me?”

“Yeah, fine, just give me a chance to
— Shit
that hurts … Larry has the medic gear…”

Frank reached down, pulled a bloodstopper off the dead guard’s belt. He sprayed his own light wounds with it, and then tossed it within reach of Marv’s working hand. “Use that.”

Marv sprayed the bloodstopper on his wound, shuddering with relief as the anesthetics took hold.

Frank spotted a concussion grenade on Marv’s belt. “Pretty heavy ordnance for a security guard. Hand that little egg to me, very carefully, Marv — give me all your ammunition and your pal’s too. Then get your people out of here. There’s going to be real death in this place. Nothing but real death.”

Stalking up to the balcony overlooking the great open space inside the Soulglobe, Frank remembered when he’d first seen Mella.

That trip up the Tigris, thirteen years ago.
See! The new Hanging Gardens of Babylon! See! A re-enactment of the Execution of Saddam Hussein! See! Ancient Treasures and Glorious Executions!

Frank had no interest in re-enactments of executions. He was ready to quit the trip, stupid idea doing a furlough there. Only, he had an interest in Babylon, the whole ancient Middle East. His mom had taken him to visit Cairo, Jerusalem, Istanbul. And he could count on peace in the Middle East — one of the most peaceful places on Earth, in the 22nd century. He wanted to be somewhere peaceful.

But here he was, in a deck chair on a tour boat listening to an android talk all breezily about re-enacting hangings. And there was Mella, handing out lunches to a group of school kids.

“Now that’s something you don’t see every day — face to face teachers,” said an old tourist in a fez, winking at him. “I remember a few — when I was a kid. None of them that looked that good.”

See! The girl you want to marry the moment you set eyes on her.
Mella. Beautiful and apparently unaware of it; innately kind, as if it were the most natural thing in the world. Made you believe something good could come from people…

And now she was shot to pieces. He had to know if it was his fault she’d died this way … and if not, whose fault it was.

Frank stood on the edge of the balcony watching the blue mists rising past it; the angling light. The Ballet of the Dead was done for now — only a few glass coffins drifted around the edges.

But far away, in the middle of the open space, someone was waiting for him. A big, dark figure was floating there, in the center of the Soulglobe.

Frank didn’t hesitate. He leapt from the balcony, pushing off hard, right for the man in the center. Everything about the stranger, his placement, the hunkered aggression in his stance, said this was an adversary.

The dark figure started toward him — it was like the guy moved through the near zero-G by his will alone. Frank couldn’t see a jet pack, couldn’t see him pushing off from anything. He went from motionless to flying toward Frank without anything propelling him.

They got closer to each other, Frank coming almost head first, like a diver, but flying horizontally across the space, propelled through the extremely low gravity by momentum. A hundred meters from his enemy; eighty, sixty, thirty. He saw that the guy had no weapons in his hands. But he was big, muscular, probably capable of killing without a weapon.

Closer. Wearing a black clingsuit, the man was pale, bald, with a big jutting jaw, craggy cheekbones, icy blue eyes, large hands opened to clutch. The stranger snarled as he flew toward Frank — were those
fangs
on his bared teeth? Not likely. Some kind of implants?

Frank had no desire to grapple with this hulking, toothy thug. He raised the razor gun, clicked the select screen up, used the ball of his thumb to tap the image of his target at the place he wanted to hit, modulating projectile configuration. He fired, the bullets flattening into the thickened razor shape he’d specified. Following the gun’s directions the projectiles strafed across the target’s chest — not much immediate effect. Maybe the guy had armor.

No — now his thick blood was splashing, spreading out from the dark figure’s chest, blood globules blossoming like grotesque red flowers in the low gravity. A solid hit.

But the big guy didn’t die. He just kept coming, grinning widely, displaying his fangs. Looming up. And the blood stopped coming out. The razor rounds hadn’t stopped him. Was this some kind of androclone?

Then they closed, the stranger instantly clamping his fingers around Frank’s neck. Squeezing. “I squeeze the blood out of your eye sockets,” the big man rumbled. “I drink from these fountains…”

The two of them floated in lethal embrace in the center of the Soulglobe. The big man opened his mouth wide over Frank’s eyes, fangs glistening. Choking, feeling blood forced painfully up into his head, Frank fired the gun almost point blank. The man only laughed. His fangs seemed to grow; his mouth gaped wider.

Frank’s fingers found the concussion grenade in his pocket and he jammed it deep into a gaping wound on the big man’s chest, shoving it in with all his strength, pressing the timer, jerking his hand free.

Frank’s adversary roared, clutched at the invaded wound, the motion sending the two of them spinning apart … Frank lost his gun to centrifugal force—

A dull
thud
and an explosion of red—

Frank was slammed hard in the gut by the force of the blast, splashed by an expanding cloud of rancid blood and fragmented flesh, driven backwards toward the asteroid’s shell. He spat blood and grabbed his knees, rolled up in a ball, twisting in an OA move, flipping to face the curved inner wall of the Soulglobe.

Something flew past him, trailing blood — a severed head. The fanged mouth still open, the eyes rolling, staring at him … then gone in the mists.

Frank was stunned, felt sick, disoriented by the explosion.
Part of the ballet of the dead myself, soon.

A balcony loomed. He straightened his body, then brought his knees up sharply, changed angles so he was coming down feet first… The circular entrance seemed to widen, like a mouth opening to swallow him, then he was through, skidding, spinning — thumping hard against the wall, sliding, coming to a stop face down.

He lay there a long moment, spitting blood, not sure if it was his. His whole front was soaked in the dark giant’s foul-smelling effusion.

Frank took a deep breath, his bruised chest aching, and got to his feet. He heard a clatter behind him and whirled. The razor gun, propelled by the explosion, skittering by itself along the floor, spinning as it went.

He ran to the gun, scooped it up, and turned to stagger toward the inner chambers of the Soulglobe.

Frank stopped about ten meters from her, and stared.

In a high-ceilinged stone room marbled with crystal, lit with soft blue light, the receptionist, Sestrine, was leaning over the body of old Mr. Jacobs, her hands pressed down on his shoulders. The old man was lying on his back on the stone slab. Intricate carvings, cryptic runes, etched the slab, and the wall beyond. Other bodies lay on shelves behind her, wrapped in plastic like flies in spider-silk bindings. Against the wall to the left were racks of pulsars, and remote control panels.

Frank watched as Sestrine bent over the old man. Her face dipped to his neck. He thought of a cat his mother had, its jaws on the neck of a dead bird.

A little blood trickled past her lips. The old man’s fingers twitched but he didn’t struggle. His eyes were glazed. Sestrine wore a cloth diner’s bib, like something from a restaurant, so she wouldn’t get blood on her gleaming white dress.

Frank remembered stories from old viddies. Horror stories. “So … you’re real,” he said. “Not just a story.”

Sestrine straightened up with a jerk, staring at him, blood streaming down her chin, eyes alight with red fire. She swallowed a mouthful of blood. “Ah. Mr. Zand.”

“You look kinda startled,” he said. “Guess you never thought I’d make it past the bruiser. How long do you keep people alive, here? People like Mr. Jacobs there.”

“Oh…” She removed the bib, used it to fastidiously wipe her face. She folded the bib, laid it neatly on Mr. Jacobs’ chest. “Not so very long as all that. Long enough. They die in time. There are always new ones.”

“Yeah. Like my wife.”

“Yes. I shared the first taste of her with Tet. The radiation made her blood a bit thin.” She took a step toward him.

He nestled the carbine against his shoulder, aimed squarely at her. “Uh uh. Stop right there. Answer my questions.”

She paused, but she didn’t seem frightened. More like — amused. She gave him the same sweet smile she’d given Mella. “You seem injured. I doubt you’ll get much farther. You’re lucky to have gotten past Karn. He was quite old and experienced and powerful. How did you manage it?”

“I’ll tell you, if you tell me some stuff first. I’m gonna take a wild guess — you guys have found a way to make the radiation shields drop in transport ships. Maybe in selected spots. Provide more people inclined to euthanasia—”

“An intelligent guess. Essentially — yes. We needed to prime the pump.” She started toward him. For some reason, he didn’t tell her to stop.

“Is it all true?” Frank asked. He was fascinated by her fiery eyes. It seemed to him that he saw real flames flicker there. “The stories?”

“Oh, we don’t turn into bats, and if you want to hear one of us laugh, just wave a crucifix at us.” He was aware that she was gliding slowly toward him, but he felt a little sleepy, almost inclined to open his arms and welcome her, as she said, “We’re not magical beings — we’re simply an old race, with certain, particular needs. Not quite the same species as yours. It’s true we don’t like sunlight — the light in here is filtered. But we do have our special gifts…”

Frank.
Was that Mella’s voice?

Suddenly he could feel Sestrine’s grip on his will. He realized the vampire was telling him things just to keep him from thinking too much. He felt the icy fingers of Sestrine’s mind — being aware of her mind gave him the chance to resist it.

Frank backed away from her, shook himself, and squeezed off two shots from the razor gun. The rounds struck her right in the heart.

Sestrine stopped, shivered — then shrugged complacently. “There is something true in the old stories: It’s very, very hard to kill us.”

She grinned, and crouched — and he knew she was going to leap at him. But his fingers were already at work on the target selector. “You asked how I killed your friend…”

Frank fired, strafing the rest of the clip out all at once, the razor rounds following the directions the gun gave him, its expert program aiming with inhuman precision — to sever Sestrine’s head cleanly from her body.

Her head simply tipped off the neck — spouting blood. The headless body seemed to hesitate, clutching the air. Then it toppled.

He walked over to the vampire’s head, picked it up by her hair, thinking about Medusa. Her mouth gnashed convulsively at him.

He watched as her head bled out. “How I killed your friend is, I blew his head right off his body. Seems like separating a parasite’s head from its body’s a pretty handy way to kill it.” He carried her head to a disposal chute, and tossed it in. “Works real sweet.”

It worked on Tet, too, when he burst in through the silver door, a moment later. “Sestrine!” the vampire howled, staring in shock at her body, as Frank inserted another clip into the gun.

Tet whipped about, hissing in cold fury as he stalked toward Frank — but the gun already had its setting. Frank fired, and the razor rounds severed Tet’s head from his body with almost surgical precision.

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