were falling faster than others, hitting hard enough to explode in little red puffs.

'Isn't this from like the Ten Commandments? Let's get out of here before the plague of locusts show up,' Lee suggested nervously.

'Well, actually, it's not an unknown phenomenon to have it rain frogs,' I said. 'Tornadoes or water spouts can pick them up and drop them someplace else. Fish too.'

'Not the time for trivia, Z,' Holly said.

I bit my tongue. My attempt at explaining the phenomenon was rather lame. We all knew what this meant. This was the day. One of the frogs examined me through the glass before the wiper batted it aside, leaving only a red smear.

MHI assembled in the parking lot of a small grocery store. We were only a few miles from the caverns, and Harbinger did not want us to hit the site until the sun was fully up. Not that I thought it would do much good; the clouds and rain were thick enough that it might as well have been night.

'How much light can a vampire stand?' I asked.

'Very little can cause them pain. A direct hit and they catch on fire. And maybe we'll get lucky and get a little sunshine,' Julie answered.

'At least it quit raining frogs,' Sam grunted.

A large contingent of us had assembled under the store awning, making last-minute preparations, asking questions, or just stretching our legs before the final fight. Some extremely curious locals had ventured out of their homes, trying to figure out what the large group of paramilitary-looking folks were doing in their small town. Considering the things that had happened over the last few days, we were not that weird in the grand scheme of things, but we still must have been a sight.

Sam nudged me and pointed across the lot. A local teenager in a yellow rain slicker approached one of our parked vehicles, a three-quarter-ton pickup hooked to a gooseneck horse trailer. It belonged to our orc contingent. Overcome by curiosity, the kid peered over the side door, only to stumble backwards and fall into a mud puddle when something large slammed into the sheet metal and growled.

'Hey, kid! It ain't polite to poke your nose in other folks' business. You trying to lose a hand?' Sam shouted.

'What was that? Who are you guys?' the kid shouted, suddenly afraid.

'It's your momma. And we're the circus. Now scram!' Sam let his duster jacket open to reveal his armor and. 45–70.

The kid pulled himself up and ran back toward his home, probably trying to figure out what exactly it was that he had seen in that horse trailer.

'Sam! Quit scaring the children.'

'Sorry, Julie,' Sam said as he grinned at me from under his mustache.

'Boone? You got anything about who's on guard?' Harbinger demanded.

'This one was high priority. Word is at least a squad of actual Feds on the cavern. Local guardsmen blocking the road. They've been checking in on a regular basis, so they're still alive,' he answered. 'We've got authority to deal with local infestations, so the soldiers should let us through. The Feds, on the other hand…'

'If they are on site, figure that they've been turned,' Julie said.

'You mean I might get to stake a Fed?' Sam asked with far too much eagerness. 'Oh, that would be fricking awesome.'

'Easy there, big fella. Only if they're dead,' Harbinger warned. 'This is it, folks. Any questions?'

The group was silent. Our radio channel was open so the Hunters still sitting in the running vehicles could hear. No one asked anything.

'Fine then.' Harbinger cleared his throat before continuing. 'Whatever happens, I want y'all to know that I'm proud. Most of you know how long I've been doing this, and you know I won't lie. This is the finest group of Hunters MHI has ever assembled. I mean that. You know what to do. You're the best of the best. I would take this crew against the gates of hell themselves if God would give us the contract. With these teams we could collect PUFF on the four horsemen of the apocalypse. It's an honor to have led you into battle, the greatest honor I've ever had. Like the memorial wall says, Sic transit gloria mundi. We're mortals, but the deeds we do are the stuff of legend, and your courage will live forever. Know that, and be sure. You're the modern versions of Beowulf, of St. George, of Odysseus. You're Van Helsing with firepower. You're Jack and the Beanstalk with automatic weapons. We're walking in the valley of the shadow of death, but we shall fear no evil! Because evil is about to get a stake put through its black heart because we are the baddest mother-fuckers to ever set foot in the valley!' he finished in a roar.

A cheer rose from the Hunters. I pumped my fist into the air and shouted. All of the horns were honked. The wargs in the trailer began to howl. I was surprised that nobody started shooting into the air. That was probably just because they wanted to save ammunition.

Harbinger paused, looking out into the rain. A malicious grin split his face. He finally continued. 'Good hunting. Move out.'

Chapter 26

The lead Suburban braked before the National Guard checkpoint. An old M113 armored personnel carrier, basically a bulletproof box on treads, blocked the road. The soldiers had been driven under cover, sitting in their vehicles trying to stay out of the horrible rain, lashing wind, and scattered frog showers. They regarded us warily as our convoy approached. One of the soldiers manned the big. 50 mounted on the armored personnel carrier and swiveled it in our general direction.

Boone and Harbinger exited the lead vehicle and approached the soldiers, hands held wide, indicating that they were no danger. After the events of the last few days, the soldiers weren't going to take any chances. I noted that having the APC parked in the center of the road was kind of redundant, since the storm had blown several large trees down, forming a very effective roadblock right behind their position. Some smart NCO had some of his men spread out into the trees.

'Poor guys. Stuck out in this weather. What are they supposed to do if a tornado hits? Hide under that tank?' Trip asked.

'It's their job. They're doing what they have to do,' Lee said. I felt his hands pull on the back of my seat as he tried to get a better view. 'I hope they let us through.'

The radio crackled, 'Pitt. Come up here. Just you.'

'Roger that,' I answered. 'Be right back, guys.' I pulled my black raincoat tight and stepped out of the warm vehicle into the screaming rain. The coat was bulky and long enough that it hid Abomination. I wasn't about to go anywhere this close to the Cursed One without my gun. I struggled to hold my hood down as the wind tried to tear it away. Branches tumbled across the road. It was raining sideways. I splashed down the road, past several other vans and SUVs, Hunters inside looking out at me from their relative comfort. I reached the roadblock.

Boone was speaking with one of the Guard. They appeared to be arguing. 'What's going on?' I shouted to be heard over the wind.

'Boone's trying to bluster his way through. He just barely got out of the Guard himself and these are his people. They still won't let us through without permission from the Feds stationed at the cavern itself, and they ain't responding on the radio.'

'Figure they're dead?'

'Something like that,' he answered. 'Do you sense anything?'

'I'm not psychic, Earl.'

'Do me a favor and try,' he ordered. 'You have a connection with this thing. We need to exploit every advantage. It's worth a shot.'

I pulled my hood low, trying to block the rain. I closed my eyes. Balancing in the road as the wind rocked me, coat billowing, I listened. Cold moisture leaked around the openings of my protection and down my armor. How was I supposed to sense them? I concentrated, remembering how I felt at those times when I had viewed Lord

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