Midnight Rising(22)
Now, as the three remaining members of the Order filed in, Gideon wasn’t surprised to find Nikolai bringing up the rear. Although he was the youngest of the warriors, Niko was also the most relentless fighter Gideon had ever seen. An adrenaline junkie and vicious combatant, the Russian-born vampire never called it a night until dawn was creeping over the horizon, forcing him off the streets.
And when it came to high-octane weaponry, Niko was an absolute demon.
Tonight, as the black-clad warrior with the golden-blond hair and glacial blue eyes sauntered in behind the two newest members of the cadre, Kade and Brock, Gideon noted that he was armed with some of his latest creations. A nasty-looking 9mm semiauto with a clip full of titanium hollowpoint rounds rode at Niko’s hip, and a laser-sighted sniper rifle tricked out with the same custom ammo was slung from a strap over his shoulder.
Even from behind the glass enclosure of the compound’s tech lab, Gideon could smell fresh death on the warrior. Not human, as the Breed in general tried to maintain as peaceful a cohabitation as possible with their Homo sapiens cousins. They fed from humans in order to survive, but it was rare that a vampire killed his Host. It was a matter of simple logic after all. No sense wiping out your sole food source, or, for that matter, exposing yourself as a mortal threat to that food source and encouraging them to wipe you out instead.
But there was a small, splintered percentage of the vampire nation that didn’t give a damn for solid logic. Rogues—vampires who’d become addicted to blood and gone feral, living only to feed that addiction—were the ones who found themselves in the crosshairs of the Order’s lethal brand of justice.
The Order had been combating the problematic minority within the Breed since the Middle Ages, a task that had given the warriors a reputation as merciless killers among the vampire nation at large. Not that Gideon or any of his brethren were looking for accolades or public adoration. They had a grim job to do, and they did it very well.
Gideon met the three returning warriors in the corridor outside the lab, wrinkling his nose at the Rogue stench that Nikolai carried in with him.
“I take it the hunting was decent tonight.”
Niko grinned. “It ended on a good note at any rate. Tracked and smoked a suckhead out of the city after he attacked a woman walking her dog in Beacon Hill.”
“My man here tracked the Rogue thirty-five miles—on foot,” Brock added, giving a roll of his dark brown eyes. “Had the Rover gassed up and waiting on the corner. We could have run the son of a bitch to the ground in three minutes flat, but Jackie Joyner decides to hoof it instead.”
Niko chuckled. “Hey, might as well make it interesting. Besides, it was a slow night up until then.”
“Been a slow month,” Kade replied, his tone not complaining so much as stating fact.
Things around the city had become considerably quieter since last February, when the Order had finally killed the vampire responsible for a rash of violence in and around Boston. Marek was no more, and following his death the warriors had been hunting down and eliminating all those who’d served him. As far as that went, Marek’s human Minions were no problem—the blood-depleted mind slaves could not survive without their Master; wherever they were, they simply stopped breathing at the same time he did, and dropped dead of what would appear to be abrupt, yet perfectly natural, causes.
Marek’s personal retinue of Rogues, on the other hand, were not as accommodating as their human counterparts. The blood-addicted vampires who’d been recruited, and sometimes forced, under Marek’s command as his bodyguards and lieutenants were now left to their own misrule. Without Marek around to keep them in line and provide the victims required to slake their Bloodlust, the Rogue vampires had dispersed into the surrounding human populations to hunt like the insatiable predators they were.
Since the winter, the Order had smoked ten of the suckheads between Boston and Marek’s last known headquarters in the Berkshires region two hours to the west. Eleven Rogues, counting the one Niko took out tonight.
And although what Kade had said about the current state of quiet was true, Gideon had lived long enough to know that a calm like the one they knew now wasn’t meant to last. It was often just the lull preceding a hellish storm.
Given what the Order had uncovered on that Bohemian mountain last February, there was little question that a storm of epic proportions was on the rise. An ancient evil had been sleeping in the crypt on that mountain—a vampire unlike any in existence today. Now that powerful, alien creature was loose somewhere, and the Order’s newest, most critical mission was to find it and destroy it before its terror was unleashed on the world.