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Chapter 34 THE HUNTING PARTY

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The mobilisation of the Department 19 strike team was a sight unlike anything Jamie had ever seen.

The hangar on Level 0 was a hive of activity: Operators in black uniform and purple visors filled the wide floor, clustered into tight circles as officers, Frankenstein and Morris among them, briefed them on the mission ahead. The hum of voices and the click of weapons being checked was deafening in the silent night air, but Jamie barely heard it; his attention was trained on the large structures that loomed in the darkness on the other side of the runway.

The doors of two of the buildings were slowly rolling open, spilling bright white light across the tarmac, illuminating the white markings that led to the runway. Two enormous black shapes were slowly being revealed, and Jamie watched, fascinated.

Inside the hangars stood a pair of black helicopters, their fuselages hanging bloated and swollen beneath twin sets of rotors. They were so tall and wide that Jamie could not believe they were capable of flight; their cockpits sat tiny above their bellies, which were the size of a suburban house. Behind him, he could hear the voices of Frankenstein and Morris giving orders to their men, but he paid no attention. It had been made clear to him that he was not going to be allowed to be involved in the mission, that his role was purely that of an observer, and so he saw no reason to bother with the briefings and the mission priority checklists. Instead he stood alone, in the huge arc of the main hangar’s open door, and watched.

With two earth-rattling explosions of sound, the engines of the helicopters growled into life. Jamie felt the vibrations shudder through him, even though he was the length of a football field away from the towering vehicles. Lights blinked on in the cockpits, and Jamie could see the pilots, impossibly small, running through their pre-flight checks. Then there were two heavy screeches of rubber, and the helicopters began to move towards him, rolling slowly over the tarmac under the power of their diesel engines, towards the strike team that would soon occupy them.

As they crossed the runway and emerged into the bright light of the open main hangar, Jamie gasped. The scale of the vehicles was vast; they towered above him, at least two storeys tall, and as wide as a 747. They looked as though someone had taken the cockpit, wings, landing gear and rotor assemblies from a normal-sized helicopter and then glued them on to a huge steel box.

They can’t fly. Surely they can’t. They’re too big.

Then a new thought occurred to him.

What the hell goes in there? Sixty men won’t fill half of one of them.

Behind him in the main hangar, the Blacklight officers shouted at their men to form up. Jamie turned and watched the squads line up into four neat lines, evenly spaced, facing out towards the waiting helicopters. Light blasted out of the bellies of the helicopters, and his shadow raced away in front of him, reaching the feet of the motionless soldiers.

“Jamie!” shouted Frankenstein. “Get out of the way! Next to me!”

Covering his eyes with his forearm, Jamie squinted up at the huge transports. The near sides of both vehicles had lowered, meeting the tarmac as wide ramps. Inside, beyond the blinding white lights, he could see hulking shapes at the top of each ramp, then he was grabbed by the arm and pulled to the side as the squads of Blacklight Operators marched forwards and upwards, disappearing into the cavernous interiors.

Frankenstein loomed over him.

“Are you going to make this difficult?” he asked, leaning down so his eyes were level with the teenager’s. “Or are you going to stay out of the way and let us do our job? Tell me now, so I know.”

Jamie stared up him. Frankenstein was looking at him with no compassion, no pity; he was all business.

OK. Have it your way. If it brings my mum home, have it your way. “You don’t need to worry about me,” he answered. “I won’t get in the way.”

Frankenstein smiled at him.

“Thank you,” he replied.

They ran out to the nearest helicopter, crouching low beneath the screaming rotors. They climbed the ramp and headed to the right, where two of the Blacklight squads were sitting, in eight rows of heavy-duty flight seats. Frankenstein and Jamie sat down alongside them, and strapped themselves in. Jamie looked around the enormous interior of the helicopter, his eyes widening.

In front of him were two jet-black armoured vehicles, huge and heavy-looking, with two enormous wheels on each side, the kind of wheels that looked like they belonged on a monster truck. Guns bristled from a turret atop each vehicle, and a purple spotlight sat on a swivelling arm at the front. Beyond the two vehicles were four more lights, three times the size of the ones on the armoured cars, lashed safely to the floor and walls alongside racks of beam guns and UV grenades.

The rotors rose to a whining scream, and the seat beneath Jamie shook and rattled as the huge helicopter lumbered into the air. The exhaustion he had been battling all day returned with a vengeance, and he shut his eyes as the strike team headed north.

He was woken by the sound of Frankenstein’s voice ordering the Operators to carry out their final checks. The men, who looked to the half-asleep Jamie like rows of black robots in their identical uniforms and anonymous helmets, pulled their weapons from their belts, unloaded and reloaded them, and replaced them in their loops and holsters.

“Absolute silence until we reach the go point,” said Frankenstein, looking round at the men. “No one moves until the UV cannons are in place and all four squads are in position. Is that clear?”

“Yes, sir,” chorused the soldiers.

“I want this to run smooth and simple,” Frankenstein continued. “I don’t want any heroics. We go in, we eliminate the targets, we bring the package out. Understood?”

The package? Is he talking about my mother?

“Yes, sir.”

The helicopters landed a mile away from the target, sending cut grass spinning into the air, and startling a herd of grazing cows. The ramps lowered and the Blacklight team deployed, the four armoured cars rolling silently down into the field, their wheels propelled by engines that were surrounded by sound-dampening ceramic plates. The UV spotlights came next, attached to purpose-built housings at the rears of the vehicles. The squads of Operators followed them, their purple visors lowered, their T-Bones held loosely across their chests. The men climbed into the vehicles, and Frankenstein called for a readiness report over the closed-circuit radio system that linked them together. The four squads reported back ready, and Frankenstein ordered the driver of his vehicle to proceed. The armoured car moved smoothly across the field and out on to a narrow country road. Jamie sat next to Frankenstein, his visor raised, his weapons checked and re-checked, his leg bouncing nervously up and down as they neared their destination.

Light blazed from the windows of the estate’s main house, and the sounds of music and voices floated out on the night air.

The Blacklight team brought the vehicles to a halt in the trees at the bottom of the drive, where they would be invisible from both the road and the house, and the Operators disembarked. Frankenstein and Morris directed them into position, giving their orders via a series of complex hand signals that Jamie found utterly impenetrable. The first squad, Morris’s squad, took one of the UV spotlights, flanked the house and took up a position at the rear, covering the back door and the outbuildings that stood in a loose semi-circle around it. The second and third squads took a spotlight each and positioned themselves at the sides of the building. Frankenstein waited until he received silent confirmation that each of the teams were in position, then led his own team slowly forward towards the house. He turned to Jamie as his men started to move through the trees.

“Stay here,” he whispered.

Then he smiled.

Jamie stared, unsure how to respond, and then the monster was gone, just another shadow moving through the black columns of trees. Jamie stared after him for a few seconds, then climbed back into the armoured car.

Suddenly the estate was filled with purple as the UV spotlights burst into life, covering the doors and windows. Jamie heard the bang from a hundred yards away as one of the Operators kicked the front door of the house in, then a millisecond later saw it happen on one of the monitors on the vehicle’s control console. A moment later he heard the first shouts and screams as he watched the Blacklight squads pour into the house.

I want to see this for myself.

Jamie leapt down from the vehicle and streaked through the trees towards the house. The noise rose as he ran across the wide lawn in front of the building, and then he was through the front door, directly disobeying the only order Frankenstein had given him. The noise was coming from behind a huge carved wooden door at the rear of the lobby, and he hauled it open, his heart pounding, his mind racing with what he was going to say to his mother when he was reunited with her.

It was a large dining hall, set for a dinner that was never going to be served. A huge open fire roared in a fireplace at the back of the room, sending orange light reflecting off an ornate chandelier that hung above the long table. Standing in front of the fire were maybe twenty men and women in tuxedos and cocktail dresses. The Blacklight strike team surrounded them, their T-Bones set against their shoulders and pointing at the protesting crowd.

Jamie’s heart sank.

His mother wasn’t there.

Neither was Alexandru.

As he stared into the room, Frankenstein pulled the beam gun from his belt and raked purple UV light across the group. Several of the women shrieked, and most of the men bellowed angrily, but there were no screams of pain, and no smoke rose from the exposed skin. Frankenstein turned away from them, his face as dark as thunder, and Jamie saw him speak into his radio.

“I demand to know the meaning of this outrage!” shouted one of the men by the fire, a large, portly man in a tuxedo that was straining at the seams. His round face was bright red with indignation, a glistening black moustache quivering on his upper lip. “This is private property! I demand an explanation, this instant!”

A Blacklight Operator stepped forward and jabbed the tip of his T-Bone into the man’s chest, hard. Several of the women cried out; the man backed away in a hurry, shouting as he did so, until a striking woman in a figure-hugging black dress placed a hand on his shoulder, and he was quiet.

Frankenstein strode back through the Operators and addressed the small crowd.

“Where is Alexandru Rusmanov?” he growled.

“Never heard of him,” snapped a woman at the front of the group.

Frankenstein strode to a table set against one off the long walls of the hall. On it were glasses, plates and a silver tray containing glass vials of a dark red powder. He picked one of the vials up, and held it out towards the woman.

“I suppose you don’t know what this either?” he snarled. “Or do you always keep a supply of Bliss on hand for whenever you throw a party?”

“I’ve never seen that before in my life,” the woman replied, a maddening smile on her face. “I don’t know what it is, or why it’s here, and I challenge you to prove otherwise. Now, why don’t you get the hell out of my house?”

Frankenstein threw the vial to the floor. It smashed, and Bliss flew into the air in a small red cloud. He saw a number of the guests eye the spilt powder with naked desire, and felt himself teeter on the edge of control of his temper. He took a half step towards her, but the woman didn’t back down an inch. She stared up at the monster, her eyes narrow, her face calm. She was standing steadily, her hands on her narrow hips, wearing a dark red cocktail dress and a white shawl around her shoulders..

“Tell me where Alexandru is, and we’ll go,” replied Frankenstein, his voice low and dangerous.

They faced each other for a long moment, until a voice called from the back of the group.

“You’ll never find him, you filthy monster!”

The crowd parted, revealing the woman who had quieted the blustering man. She was incredibly beautiful, her limbs long and slender, her narrow face framed by jet-black hair that fell across her shoulders. She smiled at Frankenstein as he walked slowly towards her.

He leant in until his enormous face was only millimetres from hers. “What did you say?” he asked. His voice sounded like tectonic plates shifting.

“I said you’ll never find him, you filthy monster,” she replied, calmly. “He floats above the earth like a God, while you crawl on your stomach like a beetle. You could never hope to understand him, or find him, or stop him.”

A smile broke slowly across Frankenstein’s face, and hers faltered in response. “When I pierce Alexandru’s heart, and his warm blood sprays across my face,” he said, softly, “I will think of you.”

He stood up, abruptly, and the woman recoiled, as if anticipating a blow. Instead, the monster turned his back on her and strode across the dining hall, towards the door where Jamie was standing.

“Everybody moving,” he bellowed. “Let’s get the hell out of here.”

“Who are they?” whispered Jamie as the monster passed him.

“Vampire lovers,” spat Frankenstein. “Acolytes. They follow vampires around like doting children, give them money, places to stay, hoping to be turned. They’re the worst kind of scum.”

*

The Blacklight team returned to the helicopters as silently as they had advanced. Admiral Seward had called the four Officers into his vehicle, his voice tight and strained, as though he was almost too angry to speak. Jamie was riding in the third of the four armoured cars, sandwiched on to a bench between two Operators he didn’t know. As they crawled along the country road towards the drop point, the inquest began.

“Just bloody groupies. Someone tipped Alexandru off,” said the Operator to Jamie’s right.

“You think so?” said another. “What was your first clue? When he wasn’t there?”

“Go to hell,” said the first Operator.

They rode in silence for several minutes, until the same man spoke again.

“The Director didn’t look happy,” he said.

“That,” said the Operator opposite Jamie, “is the understatement of the year.”

They arrived back at the Loop at midnight.

The exhausted men were dismissed and fled for the lifts, while Jamie, Frankenstein and Morris waited in the Ops Room for Admiral Seward to finish his phone call to the Chief of the General Staff.

When the Director appeared, ten minutes later, he was white with anger, the veins standing out on his neck and the backs of his hands like ropes. He walked slowly to the front of the room and took a deep breath, as if to steady himself.

“I’m sure I don’t need to tell you,” he said, his voice that of a man trying his hardest to keep his temper, “that tonight was nothing less than a catastrophic embarrassment for this Department. Do I need to tell you that?”

“No sir,” they said.

“Good. That’s good. The only silver lining is that the men and women we apprehended were clearly already aware of our existence, so the PR damage is minimal. The damage to your careers, on the other hand, and to mine, is likely to be significantly more severe.”

He clenched and unclenched his fists, several times.

“I’m going to leave it to you to ascertain exactly how this disaster was perpetrated, although I’m sure we all know the answer. I will have a full report into how this came to happen on my desk in the morning, or I will have your resignations. Is that clear?”

They told him it was, and he nodded, stiffly.

“I suggest you start your investigation in the cellblock. Beyond that, I have nothing to say to any of you. Goodnight, gentlemen.”

Seward walked slowly across the room, opened the door and left without looking back. Jamie, Frankenstein and Morris waited until they were certain he was gone, and then began to talk.

“How did this happen?” asked Morris.

Frankenstein grunted. “As if we all don’t know,” he said, looking steadily at Jamie.

“What’s that supposed to mean?” demanded the teenager.

“It means your girlfriend tipped off Alexandru,” Frankenstein replied, his voice maddeningly calm. “It means she went to him when she escaped, then told him to wait two hours after she left so she could come back here and save the day. It means she played you, again.”

“You’re wrong,” said Jamie, and the venom in his own voice shocked even him.

“It makes sense, Jamie,” said Morris. “Who else could have done it?”

“I don’t know,” replied Jamie, fighting hard to control his temper. “But it wasn’t her. That I do know.”

Frankenstein began to say something, but then the radio on Jamie’s belt buzzed, a thick whirring noise that made all three jump. He pulled the handset from his belt, thumbed the RECEIVE button and held the handset to his ear. When he heard the voice on the other end, he nearly dropped it on to the table in front of him.

“Good evening, Jamie,” said Alexandru Rusmanov. His voice was slick, like castor oil. “How are you?”

The colour drained from the teenager’s face, and Frankenstein and Morris leant towards him, concern on their faces.

“Who is it?” asked Morris.

Jamie composed himself.

Think of your mother. Think of your mother. Think of your mother.

“I’m fine, Alexandru,” he said slowly, causing Morris to gasp and Frankenstein’s eyes to open wide. “How are you?”

“I’m a little bit annoyed, to tell you the truth,” the vampire replied, his tone friendly and cheerful. “I was in the middle of a party, thrown by some of my most loyal subjects, when all of a sudden I was told I had to leave. And all because some child who should already be dead has decided to take it upon himself to hunt me down. Can you imagine?”

“I think I—”

“No, you can’t!” roared Alexandru, his pleasant demeanour gone, replaced by the screeching voice of a madman. “You can’t even begin to imagine what you’ve done this night! Your tiny little human brain is incapable of even attempting to grasp the repercussions of your actions!”

Jamie closed his eyes. He had never been so scared in all his life.

“But you will,” continued Alexandru, and now he was friendly again, his voice warm and charming. “You will understand. I’ll make you understand, starting now. I’ve just killed a lot of people, and every single one of them has you to thank for their deaths.”

There was a click, and the line went dead.

Jamie was about to tell his friends what Alexandru had said, was about to try and articulate the way the madness in the vampire’s voice had made him feel, the basic wrongness of it, the terrible, unspeakable horror he had heard, when an alarm exploded through the base, and the giant wall screen burst into life.

ALERT STATUS 1

IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE REQUIRED

ALL DEPARTMENTS RESPOND

Morris ran to a console in the middle of the room. He read the screen, then looked up at Jamie and Frankenstein.

“It’s coming from Russia,” he said.

Department 19 - 3 Book Collection

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