“Oh well,” said Tallow, as the elevator opened up on the ground floor of Aer Keep. “It’s getting late. Time I went home, I guess.”
THE HUNTER pushed the door just a little farther open, and stepped into the dark room.
An inhuman voice shrieked
The hunter staggered back into the hallway, wiping his face. His vision was blasted and hazy, but he could make out vivid orange paint on his fingertips. The metal screaming wouldn’t stop. The hunter ran for the fire door, fearing neighbors would be brought to the corridor by the noise. The hall creaked and tilted in his vision, becoming a dark tunnel, and he could see the sounds, suddenly, as pistoning metal tentacles, fucking their way through the wall and the floor after him.
The hunter hurled himself through the fire door and down the stairs. He had to stop at the next landing and throw up. The vomit spread through the floor and the walls, turning the stairwell into a wet red digestive tract. He kept running down the stairs, almost slipping twice on his own vomit where it coated the soles of his shoes.
The hunter burst into the hallway, still half blind, trying not to scream, feeling bruises bloom and stiffen his flesh where the thing had attacked him. Through the glass of the front door he saw a tall flapping creature, some black-winged half-human thing moving its long awful limbs and shouting words he couldn’t decipher.
On the run, the hunter put two bullets through the glass and into the thing’s chest, smashed through the door by main force and momentum, and didn’t even break stride over the body on the ground as he sprinted off into the night.
PACKED INTO Tallow’s car, he and the CSUs were five minutes away from Tallow’s apartment when he said, “Kill the lights.”
Bat took out his own phone and thumbed something into it.
“This is what you did with my Twine unit.” Scarly sulked. “That cost me a hundred bucks.”
“What?” said Tallow.
“The thing I wired into your lighting circuit. That lets me turn your lights off over the Internet.”
“That cost a hundred bucks?”
“Yes. And I had to wait for it.”
“Damn,” said Tallow. “I hope he doesn’t shoot it.”
“You’re not funny. I am also not thrilled about my paintball gear being cannibalized for this idiot stunt.”
“Hey. Your office is filled with dangerous junk. Paintballs, dyes, detonator caps, God knows what else. You planned to use it all one day, right?”
“Well,” said Scarly. “Actually, some of it’s stuff that Talia won’t let me keep at home.”
Tallow blew stale air out of his lungs, wound down the window, and tried to get a chestful of something sweeter. “Our guy does two things. He kills people and he hides in plain sight. I want him marked. If he can’t hide, he loses power. If we can take that from him, we finally,
“And lucky,” said Bat.
“That too,” said Tallow. “But both Turkel and Westover are pretty sure I’m going to get hit tonight. I wonder where Machen is.”
“Jerking off inside his money bin,” said Scarly.
Tallow found a parking space on the street that had the front of his apartment building in sight. The lights in Tallow’s apartment were off. He pulled into the spot and turned the engine off. “Okay. I’ll take the rear exit. Scarly will take the side escape. Bat can take the front.”
“Why do I get the front?” Bat whined.
“Honestly? Because this is our guy, and our guy doesn’t strike me as the sort of guy who usually takes the front door. He’s a hunter. I’m expecting him to come in and out of the back exit, with the fire escape as a secondary measure.”
“So now you’re saying I can’t handle CTS?”
“Make your mind up, Bat. Either you’re upset because he might come out the front, or you’re upset because I think Scarly is probably a better shot than you are.”
“I can be pissed about both. I am very clever and a good multitasker.”
“Get out of the car and check your gun, Bat.”
“I already checked it.”
“Check it again.”
Tallow got angry at himself, at the nerves in his own voice. Bat didn’t meet his eyes.
They got out of the car. Tallow locked it up and lifted and reseated his Glock, and they walked toward his apartment building.
“Wow,” said Scarly. “You live in a shitbox.”
“Take the side,” said Tallow, just as his apartment window shattered and a gunshot smacked the air with a flat report.