Ehyeh-asher-ehyeh (I am that I am)



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DEEP INSIDE HELL

"And again I saw how they began to gore each other and to devour each other,

and the earth began to cry aloud.

And I raised mine eyes again to heaven,

and I saw in the vision,

and behold there came forth from heaven beings who were like white men."


Book of Enoch 87: 1, 3

Apocrypha

As their chartered jet left Benito Juarez Airport, Zarach looked out his window. "Don't even think

about sleep tonight," he declared as soon as they got in the air, towards New York. "I doubt if

there will be much rest for any of us before dawn."
They were sitting across from each other, and Methos, sprawled on his luxurious seat with a beer

bottle on the tray in front of him, brought his eyes back from looking out at the night sky. Another

long night—at this rate Lilitu wouldn't have to fight them. She could just wait for them to collapse

from exhaustion right in front of her troops. It would be ironic to lose one's head just because one

was too tired to lift it, he thought.
Sitting beside Zarach, Myrddin looked up from his computer and said, "Just like old times. The

situation sounds pretty grim. Do we have anything resembling a plan?"


"Yes," Methos answered grinning. "Find them, and kill them all."
"I don't know yet," admitted Zarach. "We are not dealing with the usual battle between Immortals

in the Game. Normally, Lilitu would have planned this campaign with great care, working for many

years to ensure that it ran smoothly. In the old days, she used to send bands of spies and

saboteurs into the city disguised as good people. Working slowly and cautiously, these 'workers',

mortals and Immortals, established themselves in the human community, rising to positions of

power among the unsuspecting ranks of their prey. Thus they learned all the secrets necessary to

guarantee the success of a sneak attack. Nothing was left to chance. When the surprise strike

finally took place, these spies turned on their former comrades, destroying them without mercy."


Heru-sa-aset stroked his cheek. "We all know this first hand, Zarach."
"Yes; we all do," Zarach continued. "Sometimes the strategy worked, sometimes it didn't. Much

depended on the strength of the Headless Children she used, their loyalty, cunning, and discipline.

In this case, however, Lilitu has forfeited any such advantage by calling for an immediate surprise

attack. She hopes to catch her enemies unprepared and unaware. And it just might work; the

mortals may not suspect such a bold, cunning stroke. However, considering the size and scope of

the assault, the dangers are many. For both sides."


Aylón frowned. "The human governments recently have become a hotbed of intrigue and

dissension. The mortals are not the unshakable rock they once were. Lilitu is evidently hoping that

internal bickering among the leaders of the nations will hamper their efforts to marshal enough

forces to combat her. Not to mention the fact that as of now, they consider these international

emergencies as natural, not man-made, disasters. There's a lot of talk about the end of the world

as written in the Bible, etc. They don't really know what they're dealing with; they don't know

about Immortals; they especially don't know about Lilitu!"
"Or about us," Zarach contributed.
Methos shrugged. "After all the terrorism of the twenty-first century, everyone is suspicious and on

alert. Plus, let's not make the mistake of underestimating mortals. They're not stupid; they can see

a pattern right in front of their faces. And in defense of their loved ones, they can be formidable

fighters!" He raised his arms above his head and stretched languidly. "You know? I'm beginning to

feel I am being underpaid for this work. After this episode is over, I'd like to renegotiate my

contract within the Ancient Gathering," he said smiling, and then drank from his beer.


Myrddin smiled across at the elusive member of their party. "No argument from me, Methos. You

are a rare treasure. You are worth your weight in gold."


"Don't give him any ideas," Heru-sa-aset said, grinning. "He's already too arrogant for his age." His

smile left as he began to plot. "In the meantime, I've already ordered my agents to acquire several

of those special 'items' developed by the Army. They could prove to be very useful. And there

would be some 'special' stuff in New York, along with a new military jet waiting for us in my hangar

at the La Guardia airport. I think you will find it … intriguing."
"Oh, good!" Methos exclaimed, raising his beer bottle in a salute. "I love your toys—especially the

'intriguing' ones."


At the same time Myrddin asked, "A new jet?"
"Yes, very advanced. A prototype designed to find anything we look for—like Lilitu's stronghold,"

Heru-sa-aset replied.


"Speaking of your contacts, Prince," Zarach said looking at the Egyptian. "What's the word from

Washington?" Before leaving Elena, Corazón Negro and the MacLeods, Heru-sa-aset had made a

few calls.
"I've only been in touch with New York. The Governor there wisely agreed with me," Heru-sa-aset

answered, "that it is only fitting that he offer the use of the National Guard, considering the scope

of lawlessness in New York City. The Governor also alerted the President, but the conference won't

be cancelled."


Zarach considered this for a long while. "So they are on alert? Good. But … why not encourage the

introduction of federal troops?" he asked finally. "They would be more reliable."


"More disciplined, better equipped and higher in number," Heru-sa-aset nodded, raising a finger.

"But the American Army can only be used inside the country in the case of an extreme emergency,

and for defense only. It protects the American President and his civilian government against a

military coup. The National Guard is the domestic branch of the military. Also, the Army is more

difficult to influence. Unless you have more connections within the Pentagon than one might

reasonably expect ...?"


Zarach shook his head almost imperceptibly, and Methos studied him while appearing nonchalant.

Zarach was somewhat recovered from Lilitu's attack days ago, but he still retained some of the

stunned look about him that had accompanied his displacement, as if it were a struggle for him to

remain fully engaged with those around him.


"So you see," Heru-sa-aset continued, "The Governor is ready to deploy the Guard. As Methos said,

the last century they have trained more carefully because of domestic terrorism activities. All that

remains is for the mayor in New York to accept the offer, if he has choice in the matter."
"The mayor or the Congressional oversight committee," Zarach said, still seeming to pay only half

attention. He gestured toward the phone. "Do it, my friend."


Heru-sa-aset took the phone. "Secure line? Good." He punched in a number, and did not have to

wait long. "Good evening, Senator. Yes, it's me. Forgive me for disturbing you at home ... Are you

able to talk? Yes, Senator. I'm acutely aware of what's happening around the world..."
As Heru-sa-aset spoke, Methos could see the fire slowly creeping back into Zarach's eyes. The sight

was at the same time heartening and alarming.


"If I remember correctly," Heru-sa-aset was saying into the phone, "your friends on the oversight

committee owe you several favors? And I believe the Governor is already on the verge of declaring

a state of emergency in the city of New York, correct? Yes, yes. I believe you should encourage the

committee in that direction. Best for everyone, don't you think?"


Methos noticed that Heru-sa-aset was careful not to mention names.
"Yes, that's right," said the Egyptian Prince. "The Governor is going to offer the National Guard. It's

imperative that the oversight committee accepts this offer. And perhaps you could put a call

through to the mayor as well—use your influence. Oh, and a citywide curfew is advisable also. How

long can we reasonably expect these measures to be authorized for?" Heru-sa-aset listened,

nodded. "Yes, I understand. I know you'll do your best ... Yes, I've heard your name mentioned as

a vice-presidential candidate ... What do I think? I think your services are far too valuable in the

Senate. Goodnight, Senator." Heru-sa-aset hung up the phone. "Twenty-four hours. The troops will

go in. State of emergency, curfew. But if something doesn't happen within a day—" he threw up his

hands.
Aylón leaned back in his seat. "It's a day more than we had. We are alone in this, my friends."
"In the common vernacular, gentlemen, we're screwed," Methos said.
"There must be a way, don't you think?" Myrddin prodded, looking at the Old Man of the Mountain.
But Aylón did not respond at once. He was not the type to banter about ideas, to work out details

by thinking aloud or in conjunction with others. He considered. He pondered. He weighed options.

And when he was ready, he would speak.
Methos looked at Zarach. It was the two-colored eyes, he decided, than made his Immortal father

seem tired. "We're fucked," Methos rephrased.


"The Governor will be willing to keep the National Guard in New York on alert beyond the twenty-

four hours, even if not actually deployed," Heru-sa-aset said. "I know the troops won't do our work

for us. But they will make it more difficult for the Headless Children to carry out their plans."
Zarach nodded his agreement, but not enthusiastically. "Yes. The troops will be extra obstacles for

them, and for the most part, order will be restored. The Governor will return authority to the mayor

and the city council at the end of the twenty-four hour time frame. There'd be too much public

backlash otherwise. The crisis will pass. The troops will go home."


"The 'crisis' as they see it will have passed," said Methos. "But our 'crisis' is just beginning," he

stated, looking at the Egyptian Prince.


Heru-sa-aset did not argue the point, and Methos knew enough to bow to the Prince's superior

knowledge of the inner workings of American politics.


All sat in silence for several minutes. Aylón was the first to speak. "Once martial law is no longer in

effect in New York, Lilitu will have a free hand."


Zarach nodded silently. "While the troops are still deployed, in that span of time, we must find Lilitu

and kill her," he stated firmly. "We will be in New York, but must be ready to leave on a moment's

notice, to strike at Mother personally."
"Otherwise, there will be nothing to stop her," Myrddin commented softly.
Zarach stood. He paced down the length of the jet, then came back to look at his comrades-in-

arms. "Time is running against us. Already too many have died, mortal and Immortal alike.

Myrddin, we must find her stronghold, at all costs. In fact, if we find her and decapitate her before

the attack, we might be able to prevent many deaths in New York."


"I'm working on it," Myrddin answered tapping the keys of his computer.

====================================


Island of Nod

Somewhere in the Pacific Ocean

March 29, 2013
Lilitu stormed through the remnants of the dissolving vision. All around her, elaborate arcane forms

streaked and ran like watercolors of gray tones. The vivid images and incantations that had

sustained the ritual fell about her like a gentle rain to puddle at her feet. She rushed angrily

through the puddles, each footstep leading her instinctively toward more familiar stomping

grounds. The topography of the melting vision gave way to a landscape of death.
Somewhere within her, hatred raised one sleepy eye, stretched and leaned comfortably against her

soul. She was far angrier than she was focused. Far angrier, she repeated to herself, as if to steel

her conviction. It would not be long now. Already she could see the familiar outlines of New York

rising out of the misty rain inside her mind. That's where the attack would be. Soon she would be

triumphant. The Ancient Gathering, no doubt, would be waiting for her.
If only they would not be waiting for her.
She could deal with just about anything else right now except for the looks of bravado on their

faces. There was a time—yes, she admitted, even millennia did little to dim the vividness of the

memory—when she had welcomed that look on the faces of her kin. When she had courted it.

Staying out those few extra years just to see its momentary flicker on the others, before the

expression fused into the harsher lines of anger and indignation.
But that was a very long time ago, she reminded herself. Hundreds of lifetimes ago.

She had a new army now. A mass whose 'bravado' was—quite rightly—feared even in the courts of

the Immortals. She would be subject to that bravado. No; she was their Goddess. She would be

strong. She would be aloof. She would be unassailable. She would be angry. She thought, I just

have to stay angry.
Lilitu closed her green eyes, ready to send part of her power toward the Headless Children already

in place in New York. Her eternal night, her inner darkness, was about to fall onto the city.


"I am that I am!" she yelled, raising her arms toward the darkness.

====================================


New York

March 29, 2013

Vlad Tepes, the mythical eternal dragon, Capo de Capo of the Russian Mafia, read his e-mail a

second time, then laughed. A deep, booming laugh that filled the Headless Children headquarters in

New York.
"A funny message, Voivode?" asked Rasputin, who was just receiving his own transmission on his

wrist computer. "You seem happy."


"Very happy," Vlad answered, grinning. "It is good news from Livia. Excellent news from across the

ocean. You will be surprised and pleased."


Rasputin's eyes narrowed in thought. An opportunist, he believed in taking advantage of every

chance to make himself popular within the Headless Children security brigade. "I suspect that

tonight we will meet our just reward. Let me read this."
The monk studied his e-mail. It was written in the complex code used by the Headless Children's

spies to report important information to the organizational headquarters in the island of Nod.

Knowing that untapped phone lines were impossible, the Hunter's cryptographers working for Lilitu

had devised a nearly unbreakable code based on a randomly generated number sequence derived

daily from the temperatures of twenty-seven cities throughout the world. As members of the inner

circle of the Headless Children, Vlad and Rasputin could decode the message mentally. Scanning his

little digital screen, the monk nodded in satisfaction. The information was straightforward and to

the point. The news could not be much better.


"Everything is in order. The leaders are gathering at the United Nations just as Mother predicted.

Our time is now," Vlad said smiling.


"The mortals will have extreme security systems around the area. We are few and work mostly in

secret. Any ideas?" Rasputin asked.


"Wise words," answered Vlad, still smiling. "However, they are just a bunch of talking monkeys.

We, on the other hand, will be widely feared, and widely respected. We shall exploit that difference

in perception to our advantage." The Voivode's eyes narrowed, as if receiving an inner thought.

"Besides, Mother gave me exactly what we need for this war."


The monk's dark eyes were burning. "What do you mean?" Rasputin inquired, uncomfortable at

being surprised.


Vlad's muscles tightened. The Voivode had a habit of saving his best news for the last possible

instant. "You'll see. Follow me."


Rasputin followed Vlad toward another room. "Enter," the Voivode gestured absently toward the

cleared patch of floor at the room's center and turned away. Until very recently, this space had

been as heaped with arcane paraphernalia as the rest of the cramped sanctum. To all appearances,

the room's new arrangement was the result of a fastidious application of blasting powder.


He is insane, Rasputin thought. Dangerously insane. Cautiously, he gathered his strength. For

hours, the monk had endured the smug glances, the knowing chuckles, and the too-familiar

touches of his comrade-in-arms. Each of the hundred tiny gestures had been calculated to convey

the same unsettling message—I'm in charge here.


Rasputin cursed himself for a fool. It had happened that night of the first meeting of the Headless

Children. The entire congregation had gathered to worship Lilitu. At its center, every one of them

plunged into the very heart of the nightmare to come, New York's destruction—Lilitu's graveyard.

They had followed. He could still recall the vivid towers of pitted steel and sizzling neon rising

above him on all sides from hours ago. He could feel the teasing hint of the familiar behind the

rambling processions of bus stops, tenements and yellow police tape. The city he knew was soon to

be wasted.
But something fundamental had been changed. That was why Lilitu had brought them there—so

that they could see with their own eyes the changes that soon would be. Ripples from a single

stone would drop upwards into the river of Mother's eternal night, into oblivion.
At first, the alterations would be subtle but sweeping. Lilitu was patiently reshaping the city in her

own image. Rasputin had thought that the anomalous element to be introduced into the city should

be they, the Headless Children. The very words seemed to whisper of blasphemous secrets and

unholy predations. It was a breath straight from the eternal grave. It was words of power, a name

to conjure with. The mere mention of the cult of enemies of humankind conjured images of

moonless nights centuries distant, nights when Rasputin' forbearers had hunted—and been hunted

in turn—among the blasted crags of infinity. And the Headless Children had gone to great lengths

to distance themselves from such recollections.


Rasputin could remember the first caress of Lilitu's dark sorcery upon him. He remembered Mother

going down under the enemy assault. He remembered the sick feeling in his stomach as he found

himself involuntarily rushing to her aid—as if just reaching her would be the culmination of all his

centuries of eternal life, of all his strivings, all his sacrifices. Damn her.


Then he was at her side. She touched him. She knew him. She smiled.
Damn it, he hated that smile. It was a smile she reserved for meetings upon thresholds. She would

take your hand and smile in that certain way and you knew with unshakable certainty that she had

contrived this entire improbable gathering just to steal this one sympathetic moment with you. To

squeeze a hand, to exchange an exaggerated sigh, and then to be torn away again, becoming

everyone's once more.
Rasputin was not quite sure how she had pulled them all out, gotten them to fight again. That was

the reality, of course, not the damned smile. She didn't need them half as much they needed her.

They all knew it. Even if it were nice to pretend otherwise, if only for a short while.
But upon her homecoming nights ago, she was furious. It was something between Lilitu and the

Ancient Gathering, Rasputin was never exactly sure of what. Mother was hot, raging on about

invaders, earthquakes, and traitors.
It was at precisely that instant that Vlad had caught the mad monk's eye. Vlad saw, damn him.

Rasputin didn't know how he saw, but in that instant the Voivode knew everything. Over the last

days, Vlad had gone to great pains to let Rasputin know that he knew. These warnings—the

elemental regalia that Livia and the others had supported the monk's aid in this war personally—

were only the latest in a long string of insinuations. The monk had followed his master's

instructions to the letter. He'd thought that would be the end of it. He would present his hard-won

treasures before Lilitu. He would be humiliated. He would be exposed. He would perhaps even be

blackmailed.


But this? Surely Vlad wasn't going through with this. From his place near the doorway, Rasputin

looked at the Voivode. But Vlad was lost in his preparations.


Rasputin stared at Vlad for a long moment, his thoughts racing through the possible scenarios—

intrigues, threats, blackmail, confession, violence, submission, bribery, and reconciliation. He picked

up and examined each in turn like a rare jewel. Just as carefully, he set each aside again,

dismissing it. Gradually, something crystallized within him. His features became hard, angular, and

sharp.
It was the cold, crystal-clear realization that Lilitu would never share her power with any of them.

She would use their power, and then discard them. They were her pawns, her sacrificial lambs.

They were all doomed.
Resignedly, Rasputin had made his own preparations. He had placed his unorthodox ward over the

eye of the storm, the diagram's easternmost point. It was a plank made from gallows, long, thin,

straight as a stave. The wood had the added virtue of never having touched the earth. He was now

committed. From this point, there was no turning back from this mad course. Forcing down any

further uncertainties, Rasputin had paced off the precise distance to the southernmost point, the

hall of fire. Here he'd drawn forth from his bundle a rusted dagger. The classical lines of the

Russian design were unmistakable, even under the years of wear and corrosion. Rasputin had

placed the knife carefully, its blade pointing treacherously inward, toward the center of the room

where Vlad must stand to invoke the darkness.
Another exact turning had brought Rasputin to the furthest west, the waters of oblivion. Without

ceremony, he'd deposited the cup of hemlock. He had not paused to glance into the dark waters at

the bottom of the chalice. They would only remind him of those other dark waters and the faces of

the Headless Children, round and bright as moons. He'd hurriedly turned and moved to the

northern corner of the room.
Pausing to judge his mark, Rasputin had cast his final treasure to the ground. It struck, the rotting

purse spilling thirteen of its thirty coins. A very inauspicious throw. The monk had let it die.


Standing now with Vlad, Rasputin turned to him. Surely, the game was up now. The Voivode was

going to expose him. Vlad would turn on him, mock him, and scorn him. He would bellow

something dramatic like: now take your proper place at the center of these treacheries that you

have brought into the Headless Children. But as he thought further about it, Rasputin saw that Vlad

was composed, hauntingly still. Rasputin recognized that stillness. It was the lull, the pregnant

pause into which the blood spills.


No, this was foolishness. It had to be stopped. Vlad would ruin everything. What possible use could

these assembled barbs and insinuations serve in an actual ritual? An invocation of the darkness was

a thing of delicacy and great danger. What kind of madman would knowingly ward himself in these

petty treacheries?


Vlad's voice was calm. "Rasputin?"
"Yes."
"Are you ready?"
Rasputin swallowed thickly, his voice almost breaking in a sudden attack of terror. "Voivode, we

can't..." he began, but fell silent when he saw the darkness—the twisting strands of dimness

stretching toward the floor from Vlad's dangling fingertips.
It had already begun.
Vlad reached out one trembling hand toward the mad monk. As his hand turned upward, Rasputin

could see the vicious parallel slashes running down the Voivode's forearm. There was a hole

gouged in the center of the upturned palm. A single black and red stone was pressed deeply into

the center of the wound. In Rasputin's excitable state, the whole resembled nothing more than a

single unblinking eye. Lilitu's eye.
"She has shown me all, our dear Mother. I have peered into her eye, seen into its very depths! And

she promised to let me use her darks powers in order to destroy the Ancient Gathering!" Vlad

exclaimed.
Rasputin could only look on in growing dismay as Vlad staggered forward. "But it is not any of

these things that accomplishes her Endgame," the Voivode laughed. He coughed, releasing a fine

spray of darkness. Fingertips groped for Rasputin's face. The monk braced himself and stood

unflinchingly before the ravages of the evil he felt around him, reaching for him.


Then, as if struck by an entirely different thought, Vlad let his hand drop absently to his side. He

mumbled something and, turning away, began smoothing the wrinkles from his ceremonial robe.


Vlad looked around the room as if seeing it for the first time. Like a magpie, he turned from one

curiosity to another. At times he stumbled. At times, he dashed things from their cubbyholes.

"Lilitu's black power is ours now," the Voivode announced. "We must hurry... We must attack

now... Nothing can stop us... We are invincible... The mortals will be nothing in the face of our

power."
Bowing, Rasputin slipped from the room without a backward glance and hurried down toward their

troops waiting to attack.


====================================
Island of Nod

Somewhere in the Pacific Ocean

March 29, 2013
Lilitu's laughter shook the stonewalls of the cave, so that in her delight she caused mild tremors on

the lighted surface of the world. It was no matter. No one suspected she was there. In fact, no one

had reason to believe she existed at all.
But now she was whole. She was the beginning and the end, the bringer of death.
What pleasure it would give her to play childish games again with the fate of humankind…

====================================


New York

March 29, 2013
Zarach stood staring outside the jet's window, gazing into infinity. His mind was plotting, trying to

find the answer to the riddle.


In the halls of power, creatures existed to whom years were playthings and the real world was a

distant, unreal thing. Yet the real world had a way, on occasion, of making its presence known, of

asserting itself. Change, so long held at bay, had come crashing down upon Immortals, an

avalanche sweeping all before it. The Endgame was at hand. The events in these modern days

were moving at an alarming pace. The mortal world could not be kept at bay. Not forever.
Sitting besides Zarach, Heru-sa-aset asked, "Do you feel this move is wise?"
Continuing to look outside, Zarach scratched the stubble on his chin as he answered. "The shorter

the lines we have to watch, the stronger our defenses can be. If we spread ourselves too thin, Lilitu

will slip through. If we pull tight, nothing gets through."
"But if the Headless Children do get through," Heru-sa-aset said, "they will be in the city's center.

We must press our lines forward, not withdraw them so the enemy can strike swiftly at out heart."

Zarach stood, shaking his head patiently but firmly. "We are going to match them for manpower.

We've going to concentrate our special abilities."


"But surely we must have contingencies, the airport—"
"Keep a screen around the La Guardia airport, Prince. Keep it protected at all costs. When the big

push comes, we must take your fancy war jet at once in order to reach Lilitu quickly and kill her."

Zarach shrugged. "This has got to be it. We'll never get this many Immortals together and

organized. We make our stand here, in New York." Zarach finished, sitting again.


Heru-sa-aset nodded, looking at his hands.
Beside the Egyptian, Myrddin turned his laptop so the others could see its screen. "Look," the Druid

said. The monitor showed a very detailed image of the New York City area, focusing on the United

Nations headquarters.
Zarach noted dots of different colors. Myrddin nodded at him, then pointed at one of the dots. "Red

shows New York cop foot patrols. Blue shows the current location of Secret Service, FBI and other

security teams."
Zarach nodded. The map was very sophisticated. Clearly it was being fed by a direct link to a

satellite. Myrddin never spared any expense for his toys.


Heru-sa-aset studied the map with intense care. Finally, without looking up he said, "All right, we

can go in here, then toward here. We come around this place," the Egyptian went on, giving

commentary that followed the map. "And we could enter in here."
The map showed the point where they would hit the Headless Children.
Zarach sat quietly, his hands and interlocked fingers resting on his lap. "If the United Nations falls,

with all the leaders dead, there is little chance of getting the world back."


Heru-sa-aset leaned back against his seat. "I agree. We can hold on here. We have to. We shorten

the lines; make sure we're not broken. I suspect the Headless Children high command in New York

will be antsy. We can figure time is on our side. We hold out long enough, those bastards will start

slitting each other's necks and forget all about Lilitu."


Zarach pondered that, nodded thoughtfully. "The Headless Children are not known for their

solidarity," he agreed.


At that moment, the fasten seat belt signed and the pilot said. "Two minutes."
"I know," Heru-sa-aset responded. "Prepare yourselves."
====================================
United Nations Headquarters, New York

March 29, 2013

Robert Sacchi, a seven-year veteran of the Secret Service, stood on a tower overlooking the events

unfolding below. He was in charge of a squad of sixteen agents, and each squad commander

reported to a superior. It wasn't often that the Secret Service broke down into squads like this, but

given the size of this particular event, it was the best way to keep track of everything and

everyone.
Over the streets, the lights moved in a constant pattern that over the last few hours had become

familiar. Then suddenly, as Robert Sacchi was just about to turn away, he thought he caught a

glimpse of something large and black blocking a portion of the distance building lights, moving

about forty feet above the city.


He keyed his mike. "Can I get confirmation that the airspace has been cleared?"
"Roger that," a voice responded. "Airline flights have been shifted to the north approaches."
"Thanks," Sacchi said, staring intently at the area where he thought he'd seen the black form.

Nothing.
He scanned the horizon along the buildings. Nothing.


Maybe he was just getting too paranoid for his own good. He was starting to imagine things. And in

his job, that wasn't a good thing to do.


He went back to scanning the road that led onto the United Nations, and all the stretch limos still

waiting to be cleared. This was going to be a long night before it was over. A very long night.

====================================

"This isn't right!" Rasputin sputtered through clenched teeth.


Vlad barely suppressed his rage. "The attack must go forward, monk. It is a simple order."
Rasputin obviously felt otherwise. In his agitation, he paced among the preternatural shadows that

concealed the two from view; he ran his fingertips along his hair, up and down, one thumb above

another, pinkies together along the crest of his head. Ostensibly, he had left behind the religious

trappings that had so bound his mortal life, but like a penitent with lapsed confessions, he didn't

like to press his luck.
"The attack cannot go forward until you draw in your patrols, Rasputin," Vlad pressed.
Rasputin abruptly ceased his pacing, shoved a stubby finger toward Vlad. "Somebody has screwed

up the orders. This can't be right. I'm not letting all the credit for this attack go to damned--"


"…To damned warlords?" Vlad offered, allowing a certain level of menace to creep into his voice.

Rasputin glared at his fellow commander and groped for a less inflammatory term. "To… to others,"

he spit out at last.
"I see," said Vlad, forcing himself to use of a normal clipped tone so as not to betray his growing

ire. "Your patrols will ensure that our victory will be complete. None of those people will escape us,

and no one from the outside will be able to interfere."
"I want to reconsider this!" bellowed Rasputin.
"Lower your voice, monk!" Vlad barked forcefully, but without imprudent volume. "If you shout

again, I will remove your head from your shoulders. Now, give the order, or step aside for someone

who will … someone who can," the Voivode ordered.
"I won't take that from you," Rasputin threatened, his voice rising very close to the level that Vlad

had decided would require drastic action.


Vlad, however, stood at perfect attention. Only his steeled nerves kept him from striking out.

"Take?" asked the Voivode's icy-calm voice. "There's nothing for you to take, monk. Your job is to

give—to give the orders that were entrusted to you."
"My patrols are ordered to stand by," Rasputin continued. "To sit back and just watch the assault.

My boys can kill as well as anybody. However—"


"The orders have changed, monk," Vlad menaced again.
"What about the Ancient Gathering? They could be anywhere," Rasputin thought aloud.
"If they show up, they will find their way blocked," Vlad answered. "There will be no help for the

mortals." The Voivode stepped closer to Rasputin, whose every ounce of determination was barely

preventing him from fleeing into the night. "Give the order," Vlad said. "The attack will go forward."

The Voivode turned and walked away, secure in the knowledge that his directive would be carried

out promptly.
Rasputin, watching Vlad, thought he could hear the other Immortal humming faintly as he left.

Vlad was filled with pride at the skillful advance of his squadron of legionnaires. The inky blackness

crept forward, wrapped tightly around the base of the building, and then oozed up the long ramp

and stairs to the main entrance. The other exists were being secured as well, the Voivode knew,

most notably the parking area attached to the building where intelligence reported at least fifty

drivers and a hundred body guards awaited their international leader bosses.


A man stepped in front Vlad. "Parking area secured, sir."
"And the other exits?"
"Secure, sir."
"All of them?"
"Yes, sir."
"Very well," Vlad said, smiling. "Take your positions." The Voivode raised his radio to his mouth.
"Commander?"
"Yes, sir?" a voice responded almost immediately.
"Exterior secure," Vlad reported. "Phase two complete."
"Phase three commencing, sir."
"Confirmed," Vlad reattached the radio to his belt.
Now everywhere Vlad looked, the shadows were alive with slow, methodical movements. Not

figures emerging from the substance of the shadow itself, but larger shapes, vaguely humanoid—

some more than others—moved in ranks toward the building. The shapes varied in outline, as well

as number and configuration of limbs, but the figures shared an immenseness of stature. They

towered over Vlad. The impression given by this new advance was almost that the buildings of the

city were closing in on the United Nations.


It might as well be so, thought Vlad, so sure was he of his plans. He had served Lilitu long enough

to know that Mother did not lend support—much less a full squadron of her powers—to affairs that

were chancy.
The black-clad and masked Hunters moved forward also, continued forward unopposed and

converged upon the darkness-shrouded building, at which point they separated into patrols. One

patrol headed toward the parking-area elevators. Another prepared to force entry through the main

doors. Others began to scale the walls.


Vlad was amazed at the efficiency of this mass attack, but he reminded himself that they'd been

training specifically for missions such as this, perhaps for this exact mission.


But Vlad's time of being an onlooker was at an end. There was blood to be spilled, and he would

have some for himself. One final time, he checked his sidearm and the special grenades attached to

his bandolier, reminding himself that they were here not to capture or enslave, but to kill and

destroy, with malice and prejudice. Then, with the ease that came with Lilitu's borrowed power, he

released his physical form to join with the blackness before him, and led that blackness upward

along the outside of the building, past the ascending shadows and Hunters, and on to the victims

waiting inside.
====================================

Special Agent Robert Sacchi couldn't even begin to identify what he was seeing coming toward him.

Pure dimness. A cloud of pure darkness. Or a shade of something very obscure that seemed to

have substance. Just obscurity. It fascinated him and scared him to death in the same instant.

He keyed his microphone. "Any contact at all with the Council Chamber?"
"None," came the response.
"Damn," he said softly, glancing at the shadows. He had no choice. He flipped a switch and gave

the order. "Code one. Evacuate."


Around him Secret Service Agents moved as a tight unit, and not far behind him the rest of the

security forces jumped into action, each group taking care of their orders. The President should be

instantly surrounded and moved quickly with the Secretary of Defense toward one of the waiting

cars outside.


Along the road that led back from the United States Headquarters and all the way into the city,

Special Agent Sacchi knew all traffic was being cleared. The cars were going to leave this place far,

far faster than they had come onto it. The evacuation procedures should work to the last detail.

He just hoped it was going to be fast enough.


Across the surrounding area, the cloud of blackness continued to spread. At that instant, he lost contact with his men, and then all hell broke loose. Robert Sacchi never knew what killed him.
====================================
The Conference Building, which connected the General Assembly and Secretariat Buildings,

extended along the waterfront for four hundred feet and was cantilevered over the Franklin D.

Roosevelt Drive. Its narrow top level on the fourth floor housed the dining rooms and an industrial

size kitchen. More than half a mile of teak railing from Burma ran along three sides of an outside

terrace on three levels of the Conference Building.
On the second and third floors were the three Council Chambers, each of which was seventy-two

feet wide, one hundred thirty-five feet long and twenty-four feet high. The Security Council

Chamber was furnished by Norway and designed by the Norwegian Arnstein Arneberg. A large

mural by Per Krohg of Norway—symbolizing the promise of future peace and individual freedom—

covered most of the east wall. There were 164 seats for the public and 118 for the press, all of

them currently filled.


At least one member, and some of they represented each of the nations of the world by the leaders

of those nations.


The entire building crawled with security as the representatives of every major nation gathered for

the opening ceremonies of the emergency international peace conference, to be held this very

night. The nighttime was lit with spotlights. Track sensors guarded the United Nations, and three

different security satellites provided constant surveillance of the entire area. The U.S. Secret

Service and the FBI, working with each government's security agency, were responsible for the

security of all the world's leaders. As far as they did all concerned, not even a fly could get near

these leaders without them know about it.
United Nations ground security had been given over to almost 5000 of New York's finest, patrolling

on a constant basis. Both the FBI and the Secret Service had a command post set up outside the

Security Council Chamber, where the opening ceremonies would take place.
The line of limos jammed the road like a traffic jam at rush hour. The backup, of course, was

exacerbated by the intense security check each car had to go through just to get near.


Inside the building, the cold of the winter day was long forgotten in the Security Council Chamber,

as the packed bodies in the gallery and the heat from the television lights forced the temperature in

the room up far above normal. Several of the attendants, despite the intense media scrutiny of

these hearings, had taken off their jackets. Many viewers were fanning themselves with personal

computers or papers. Their doubts about the recent events around the world were clear with every

action of the hearings' chairman, the flamboyant General Perez.


Perez was a white-haired man who was clearly using the hearings on the catastrophes around the

world to propel his own career towards the White House. In front of the hot room, at the witness

table, was Dr. Ann Ford of the Geology Department at UCLA. Sitting among an international group

of scientists at the long wooden table, she had a commanding presence. A strong, good-looking

woman in her late forties, she had been called upon to explain to the Security Council the basic

science behind the natural catastrophes around the world. She had prepared herself extensively

with the drafting of her presentation. She needed to explain events—not only to the Council, but

also to the audience on the other side of the television cameras—that she and her fellow scientists

didn't understand quite well themselves.
Considering the interest the public had taken in the destruction of major cities under bizarre

circumstances, there was no doubting her presentation would make the news. Dr. Ford, an expert

on plate tectonics, had decided that too many religious ideas had resulted in persecution based on

the long-standing tradition of fearing the unknown. So the best thing to do, she had determined,

was to help the regular people understand the events for what they really were. The bigots like

General Perez would fold like wet tissue if public opinion shifted against them.


But at the moment, the public was scared to death. The Vatican, a large section of Jerusalem, a

Buddhist Shrine in Nepal and an entire island in the Okinawa chain of Japan were gone. General

Perez was a master of playing that to the hilt.
"Lights, please?" Dr. Ford said.
A few people murmured something about that helping the heat, at least.
As the lights dimmed around, Dr. Ford started. "As you all know," she said, spacing each letter as

she began her presentation, "strange events have occurred all around the world. Those

catastrophes, I must say, are beyond our understanding for the moment." This statement was

greeted by cries and complaints. In the meantime, images on the screen showed various pictures

taken via satellite, along with a graph displaying a diagonal line that indicated the day and hour of

the devastations. One image took over the screen, focusing attention on the volcano erupting in

Nepal. Around Dr. Ford, the crowd's interest increased. Some revulsion emerged as men and

women confronted the images of the destruction.


"This volcano had been dormant for nine centuries. According to the best seismologists in the

world, our colleagues from the University of Tokyo," she said, nodding at one of the men sitting by

her, "it was lightly expected to erupt again," The image on the screen changed, showing the

vestiges of the Vatican. "This is what was left of the Vatican after the earthquake." The screen

shifted once more. "Here we can see Jerusalem, covered by a sandstorm. And here," she pointed

to the new photograph of the ocean, "was the place were Taketomi Island used to be." The room

felt silent. "Our satellites show no trace of any of these events before they happened, no

preparation, nothing!" Dr. Ford paused for breath, and then went on. "Ladies and gentlemen, these

tragedies occurred in the blink of an eye."
The lights slowly brightened.
General Perez turned from the man he'd been talking to and smiled at Dr. Ford, like a father smiling

at a small child who had just done something cute. "Thank you for the lights, Dr. Ford," he said in a

vaguely patronizing tone. "It was quite—how should I say it?—educational."
Some of the crowd snickered.
"However," Perez went on, "it failed to address the larger issue which, I might add, is the focus of

this hearing. Four words: What is causing them?"


There was a low rumble among the crowd. "Well, General Perez," Dr. Ford responded, "we in the

scientific community are doing everything we can to—"


"Well," Perez interrupted, "in that case, as always, you scientists are doing the best you can." The

General made a pause as his aide moved behind the panel and handed him a black folder filled with

documents. "And right now, the whole world is in danger."
"General, we are talking about global disasters, meteorological catastrophes, and we don't know

if—"
"Meteorological catastrophes?" Perez asked, his voice calm and strong over the silent crowd as he

played to the television cameras. Perez smiled and wiped a drop of sweat from the side of his head.

He was going to attack Dr. Ford, and attack her hard. "Are you blind? Let me remind you, 'doctor',

that these 'natural disasters' are happening in a pattern. Surely even you could notice that the

major religions on the world have been attacked."


"What I did say—"
"Let me tell you what you said," Perez said, talking over Dr. Ford's objections without hesitation. He

raised a blown-up photo of the Vatican. "You came here, and frankly, I could say everyone of us

expected some sort of explanation about these attacks, excuse me, 'natural events' as you called

them. Instead, you entered this room just to tell us what we already knew: that you have not a

single clue."
"General, you must understand that—"
Perez ignored her words and spoke to the cameras and crowd. "These are not isolated incidents,

Dr. Ford. Somehow, they are connected." He picked up the folder filled with documents and held it

up for the crowd to see. "Right here I have proof!"
"General, there is no enemy. This is not a war," Dr. Ford said, her voice becoming more forceful.
But Perez ignored her. "Of course it's war. These attacks are not at random. This whole thing

started nine days ago in Australia. Remember the murders there? Some radical group is plotting to

put the world under siege," he concluded, an intense look of concern on his face.
Dr. Ann Ford tried to shout over the noise, to engage the General. "Sir, you are not being—"
"And there are even rumors, Dr. Ford," Perez said, turning to stare directly at her, "of a single mind

behind the events." A number of people actually gasped at that statement. "Dr. Ford, we deserve

the right to defend ourselves against any threat. As we speak, numerous countries are mobilizing

their armies toward their frontiers. I would think that a menace as this one should be of paramount

importance to you scientists."
"They are," Dr. Ford said firmly. "But this is not the way to confront this. I would like to see that

folder."
"Why?" Perez asked, pounding the folder, and then waving it in front of the crowd. "Someone is

attacking us, and we must defend ourselves."
"But you don't know that for sure! You don't know anything for sure!" Dr. Ford shouted, clearly

angry now. "You are the one who wants to put the world under siege."


"Ladies and gentlemen," General Perez said, now more than ever playing for the cameras. "The

truth is that the United Nations is ready to face any danger. We must find who the enemy is and

destroy them..."
At that moment, Dr. Ford felt the darkness enter the room, pressing hard upon her. It was an

almost palpable thing, and with a start, she realized the probable source of the danger just as the

deep and resonant voice of Perez called out. The sound was distorted, but the scientist was

thinking the words too, so she understood it immediately.


"We are under attack!"
Dr. Ford felt the inky mass of darkness begin to press its way into her body, and the mindless,

horrific, plasmic mass did not discriminate. She fell to the ground and rolled as if the pitch encasing

and invading her were fire that could be extinguished.
But it did not relent. However, it did slowly part. After it did, Dr. Ford saw the horrors the light of

the room revealed, the good doctor silently prayed that the darkness might return and she be

granted a quick and painless death under cover of the senses-dulling cloud.
Even so, hers was not among the screams that sounded then, and the wails and jeers were from

offender and victim alike. She shivered and felt the blood around her, smelled it, lots of blood

everywhere.
The darkness rippled into pieces, and amid the patchwork maze those fragments made, the

geologist witnessed every nightmare she could ever imagine. The reality of the victims before her

made any other possibilities unthinkable. Burned, twisted, torn apart bodies were everywhere.
"Run for cover!" General Perez shouted. Dr. Ford recognized his voice, filled with fear, with

desperation.


She knew they were doomed. The sounds of machine guns filled the air. The grotesque attack

could only be the result of a powerful organization. But who? And how in the God's name had they

entered here? How had they managed to bypass all the security of the United Nations? And even

more frightening: Perez had been right, the assault was indeed a joint effort, undoubtedly by the

diabolical group responsible for much of the evil and brutality of the past days around the world.
How and why the group had gathered for such an assault was beyond Dr. Ford's reasoning. But

then, much about what was happening was beyond her. The 'why' wasn't so mysterious, she

supposed, if this group had managed to organize themselves beyond the 'how'. However, the 'why'

still applied to many questions, every one of them with the same answer. Why now? Why New

York? Simple: total extermination. World genocide, starting with the world's leaders, so

conveniently assembled like a group of sacrificial lambs.


The screams of pain and the sound of the machine guns increased their resonance. "The exits are

closed!" someone yelled. "There's no way out! This way, Mr. President!"


Feeling hopeless, Dr. Ann Ford, professor of geology at the University of California-Los Angeles,

mother of ten-year-old Alex and eight-year-old Tanja, wife of attorney Robert Ford, and a member

in good standing of the Lutheran Church of Santa Monica, closed her eyes, praying to God for

either a quick escape or a quick death.


At that moment, an unnatural silence felt over the chamber, inside and out.
Dr. Ford raised her eyes and met those of a man dressed in black under a bulky Combat-Armor

with a terrorist's mask on his face, night-vision goggles, and a complicated-looking, obviously

computerized pulse-rifle in his hands. The Smart-Pulse-Rifle prototype was a very rare model M-52V

10mm pulse-gun-machine, not yet in the market. Using a body brace and gyro-stabilized support

arm, the assault rifle was a computer-aimed, video targeted automatic weapon—a very

sophisticated light machine gun. The attackers apparently combined the specialized techno-combat

training of the twenty-century fighting-men with those qualities universal to 'grunts' through the

ages.
"They are here!" shouted the masked man in front of Dr. Ford. "They are here! The Ancient

Gathering!" He turned to retreat, weapon held tightly as a nightmarish silhouette materialized out

of the smoke behind him. It struck like lightning. The man fired reflexively, wildly. The torrent of

bullets almost decapitated another terrorist nearby.
The chamber trembled under the geologist's feet, and for a moment, darkness returned. At that

instant, Dr. Ford was sure about one thing: new players had come into the arena. Somehow, she

could feel them.
Terrified and curious both, Dr. Ford shot a look at the huge man who had killed the terrorist. She

saw black Arab robes, a beard, and some kind of tattoos on his face. The man looked powerful

and dangerous, and above all, unstoppable. Tendrils formed of darkness groped like living things

seeped across the floor, dancing and whirling at the periphery of the new arrival, but not touching

him.
The masked men opened fire simultaneously, lighting up the smoke like a welders' arc. Thunder

and lightning filled the chamber again. "Let's get the fuck out of here!" a voice said.


"Watch it ... behind you. Fucking move, will you!" another man shouted in a language Dr. Ford

recognized as Greek. She was ashen, confused. Gulping for air like a grouper. They'd just been

talking a moment before. How could the situation have unraveled so fast? Who had attacked them?

And who was attacking the attackers?


One terrorist strayed too close, and the Arab's scimitar—my God, it was a 'scimitar!'—bit into him,

cutting him in two. The comrades of the fallen man were so terrified that for an instant they

hesitated before they charged upon their prey, rifles blazing.
But the bullets never made contact. Unbelievably, around the huge Arab, the projectiles changed

their trajectory. A second huge man appeared in scene, and Dr. Ford saw the defining moment of

this bond when the Arab locked his gaze with a shaven-head man and whipped a second sword

from his back and extended it, pommel first, toward the new arrival.


Shattering windows sounded above the cacophony of terror. Then, as if the panic and

disorientation were not enough, hell truly broke loose when grenades burst and spread across the

assembly.
"Get the presidents out!" yelled a young blond-haired man, taking Dr. Ford's arm and helping her to

stand. For a moment, she stared into his amazing two-colored eyes. "Take them all out of here!"


Then the attackers pounced upon them. The doctor screamed. Suddenly, a sword flashed in front

her and lopped off one of the terrorist's arms. Its keening wail was so high-pitched that it sounded

above the other ruckus. Shattered glass panes dropped near Dr. Ford.
"Get out of here!" the blond young man ordered at her as he threw her toward what she hoped

was a clear exit, invisible in the smoke.


"Get out while you still can! Run for your lives!" a tall, thin, black-haired man screamed. He had a

sword too and his face was painted in blue. He was already fighting against the shadows.


Running in the direction he'd suggested, Dr. Ford spared a glance to see what had become of her

rescuer. A tenebrous tendril as thick as his leg was knotted about the blond-haired man's waist and

it spun about like a bucking stallion, smashing the man time after time onto the tiled floor of the

chamber.
Dr. Ford felt a fleeting sense of pity, but she was too scared and felt too helpless to assist, but as

she tried to run a bullet hit her leg and she immediately fell back to the floor, awash in pain. Desperate, she stood again and bolted, limping slowly, surveying the battlefield, which was a

blur, a body-strewn wasteland she had to navigate. She nearly stumbled over a man's shattered

body. It could have been Perez for all she knew—or cared.
"Hunters!" someone yelled.
"I'm Death! I'm the last Horseman!" the man painted in blue yelled. "Come and get me!"
Who the hell were the Hunters and the Last Horseman? Unable to find a way out, she found

herself, in the space of a few heartbeats, safely ensconced in the cubicle of wood, which had made

up the lectern for her speech and was still, miraculously, whole. There was a single moment of

clarity amidst the chaos of darkness, blood and ruin. It was refreshed in her mind during each split-

second interval of the thunderous pounding her body sustained. A million thoughts raced through

her mind. She guessed herself not so much in shock as completely and utterly baffled. She heard

the screams and threats and war cries all around her, and discovered, to her horror, that she was

kneeling in a puddle of blood. She forced herself to remain calm. Panicking now would only bring

the attackers upon her quickly. But when a pair of red eyes seemed to flash from the darkness

directly toward the spot where she crouched, she lost her resolve. She tried to stand and to run for

her life again, in spite of her injury and her terror.
"Get out of my way!" a man shouted behind Dr. Ford. She turned and saw that the new arrival was

a man with long gray hair and beard, dressed in a white robe, like a Druid from the history books?


The man raised a huge golden sword at the shadows in front of him, and as Dr. Ford ducked again,

the man commanded. "Burn!"


Tendrils of fire seemed to explode out of the blade, searching for victims in the terrorists ahead. An

explosion rocked the top of the building. Gouts of flame burst from the upper windows and fled into

the night with the shriek of tormented spirits. Dozens of bodies, mostly dead but some still alive

and now shrieking, began to burn.


====================================


Feeling the darkness around him, Methos' senses instantly grew hyper-alert, compensating for the

sudden loss of sight. Someone nearby screamed—a primeval instinct in any crowd plunged into

darkness and live ammunition, and one that didn't die with the mortal soul—but Methos had not

survived so many centuries by panicking.


Instead, a long forgotten memory possessed him at once: he was no longer just the Immortal

Methos. He was much more than that. He was now more than the calculating son of a bitch Joe

Dawson used to call him. His entire body felt it. His primordial soul changed. In the midst of battle,

he became Death once more.


He noticed everything at once: the crowd being attacked, trying to escape the fusillade of bullets.

Zarach and Aylón taking advantage of the darkness to move closer toward the terrorists, killing

enemies at their path, charging like lions through a herd of herbivores.
The screams continued, a pregnant sound that fell over the room. Methos knew this assembly had

not expected a sudden attack, but he also knew this was no accident. Where are the fucking

emergency lights? Even evil creatures need to see! He wondered, as he shifted his weight, and saw

that there was some light from emergency units, that it was flickering— No, he corrected himself,

the light wasn't moving; the shadows were.
Moving forward, Methos discerned swirling in the shadows. Patterns formed as the unnatural

blackness maneuvered to surround the mortals present. The gunshots, red and yellow, enhanced

the effect. Then the darkness caught up with him, closed around him, and blotted out again what

little light there was. Alerted to the unnatural quality of the enveloping blackness, Methos now

perceived that there was weight and substance to the shadow, and it pressed against him with

increasing determination. Tentacles of blackness took form, grabbed at his arms, his legs, and his

sword.
The rumble continued as, one after another, the emergency lights exploded. Sparks streamed

through the gallery like rockets, and as they died, the true darkness of the night descended to add

its influence to the preternatural shadow.
Methos struck at the tentacles. He couldn't afford to be immobilized. It was a strange sensation, his

sword slicing through palpable darkness. The severed tentacles dissipated into nothingness, and

the shadows drew back from him momentarily, only to renew their assault from different directions.
Chaos took hold all around Methos. The shadows advanced and retreated menacingly; tentacles

struck forceful blows that knocked mortals to the ground. Other strands of black, proving only to be

diversions, passed harmlessly through fist or sword set against him. But always, in the midst of all,

were the swirling shadows, sweeping through the large chamber like churning storm clouds, so that

one moment Methos was standing side-by-side with Myrddin, and the next, after the darkness

closed in, he felt alone among the placeless expanse of black.


Methos tried to be sure of his blows. He caught a glimpse of Zarach striking at a shadow but

instead smashing his blade into the face of a terrorist. The man went down in a heap.


Aylón too, seemed to be holding his own against Lilitu's attack—for what else could it be? No other

creature could wield such power. Beyond keeping the tentacles at bay, however, Methos was

unsure how to deal with the problem. A dozen yards away, a mass of black writhed and jerked

violently on the floor. Something like an arm emerged; clothed in a formal jacket that Methos seen

on a bodyguard moments ago. Now the arm, and the man to whom it was attached, struggled

against the relentless shadow that pressed him to the floor.


Methos' wild thoughts of what to do next—how to find Lilitu controlling the darkness, how to stop

the attack at the source—were interrupted by the discovery that his problems had just multiplied

many times over.
More remaining emergency lights produced a strobe effect through the dancing shadows, and

advancing through the disorienting scene were many larger, monstrous shapes.


"Get out while you still can! Run for your lives!" Methos shouted, hoping to get the attention of

Zarach or one of his brothers-in-arms who might make a difference.


Methos found himself staring at the terrorists that seemed to be coming from every direction. One

pressed ahead of the others, and Methos saw eyes, blazing red with hatred and hunger.


"Hunters!" Myrddin yelled.
Pleased to have an opponent more tangible than the elusive shadows, Methos stepped forward to

meet the challenge. His sword whistled through the air, and one of the Hunter's arms fell to the

floor in a spray of bloody ichors. The man shrieked and staggered back toward his mates, which

were still advancing deliberately. Methos licked his lips and tasted some of the mess that had

splattered across his face.
"I'm Death! I'm the last Horseman!" Methos roared. "Come and get me!"
The Hunters hesitated for a moment, having seen what he did to their more impatient comrade.

Throughout the chamber, most of the bodyguards of the presidents were going down, and quickly.


Then Methos clearly heard Myrddin shouting. "Burn!"
Glass shattered. Shards of the outer windows exploded inward, dug into clothing and flesh alike.

Methos shielded his eyes but ignored the other dozens of glass splinters and the heat that tore into

him. Some Hunters started to burn. At the same time, the Hunters in front of him renewed their

attack.
Methos struck hard and true. His razor-sharp sword cut through two bodies at the same time. The

Hunters stumbled backward and collapsed for good. And Methos—no, Death—again waded into the

fray.
====================================


Heru-sa-aset ignored the pounding of the darkness against his back. He slashed with his sword,

and three Hunters dropped to their knees. The simultaneous roar of what he had noted were

Smart-Pulse-Rifles was deafening. Heru-sa-aset's blade ripped through the Hunters again, tearing

away limbs, shattering bones. Another roaring filled the environment.
The darkness behind Heru-sa-aset trembled as a hail of bullets tore at it. The Egyptian just frowned

and the gunfire never touched him. The lead seemed to bend around the ancient Immortal. He

stood untouched in a torrent of gunfire.
"Surprised?" he asked the Hunters, and then he attacked with all his force. Blood splashed against

his arms and face as he decapitated two more Hunters.


Then Myrddin yelled, "Burn!"
Tendrils of fire passed next to the Egyptian Prince, as if the tongues of flames had a life of their

own, burning the Hunters next to Heru-sa-aset. The ancient Immortal heard the explosion above

him as shattered glass felt upon him like rain.
Heru-sa-aset adapted well in any kind of battle. After all, his powers predated logic, and certainly

went far beyond it. He ran like a wolf toward his enemies. The scent of battle filled his nostrils. It

was a delicious aroma of fear and courage at the same time. In front of him, five more Hunters

were reloading their firearms. And more important, beyond the terrorists, the Egyptian Prince saw

one of the primary forces of the attack, the bastard Rasputin.
Behind him, Myrddin attacked with his long sword, Excalibur, one more time. Then the Druid rolled

to one side and then somersaulted to his feet. Heru-sa-aset nodded approvingly that Myrddin was

wily enough to keep the Hunters between himself and Rasputin.
Even so, one Hunter open fire. Heru-sa-aset flicked his eyes along the path of the bullets, keeping

it constantly and instantly in focus. He might protect himself from it, but there was nothing he

could do for Myrddin other than charge.
Heru-sa-aset began his bolt down the slope as bullets struck Myrddin in the leg. He winced, but did

little more than stagger. Heru-sa-aset snarled a smile.


"Just fire, damn you!" shouted Rasputin to the Hunters. "Shoot them! Shoot them all!"
Six more shots were fired, and this time Heru-sa-aset made them pass through the air around him.

Then he briefly met the gaze of Rasputin, who had by now spotted him.


Rasputin shouted at the Hunters. "To your left!"
The Hunters turned to face Heru-sa-aset, but he was already on top of them. The Egyptian Prince

went right for their necks. He attacked hard to right, then left, and back again. Heads rolled on the

ground.
"Over here!" Rasputin ordered his men one more time.
Bullets screeched past Heru-sa-aset and two found their marks as he charged another Hunter. One

bullet merely scathed him, but the other pounded fully into his chest, and he felt it rattle through

his rib cage.
Heru-sa-aset leaped again, but he was snatched from the air by a tendril of darkness. It looped

around his back and knotted onto him. The jerk was sudden and unexpected, stunning Heru-sa-

aset for a second. But only for a second. The Egyptian Prince wanted to save some surprise for

later in the battle, but the situation had turned ugly too quickly, so he called his inner power. The

darkness around him melted and continued to disintegrate.
Heru-sa-aset's consciousness drifted in the air. Now he could see the entire battlefield at once, and

he did so in an instant. He noted that Myrddin and Methos seemed to have their situation under

control.
But Rasputin was a different matter. His dread gaze bore upon the rising Immortal as well. "What

are you waiting for? This one is dangerous!"


Spinning quickly, Heru-sa-aset formed a funnel cloud that elongated toward the ground, and

touched down like a dancing tornado. Within the center of the vortex, the shape of his body could

be seeing appearing, until at last the final wisps of haze evaporated and Heru-sa-aset was left

standing before his opponent.


Heru-sa-aset grimaced at Rasputin and mocked at his words. "Dangerous? I think, bastard, I have

seen your best trick, but you have no idea what I might yet reveal to you."


There was gunfire behind Heru-sa-aset, but it was not directed at him. Even so, he risked a glance

backwards and saw that the Hunters were firing at Methos and Myrddin, who were charging hell-

bent toward them.
With a roar more animal than human, Rasputin charged at Heru-sa-aset. The Prince faked a dodge

to the other direction before rolling back to his own left. Rasputin reacted quickly, but his ankle

gave way slightly and the advantage of his reach was negated.
Heru-sa-aset completed his maneuver and struck at the rear of Rasputin's leg. The monk began

fighting a slow retreat, concentrating on defense.


Rasputin was anxiously looking around, but Heru-sa-aset forced him to delay a moment longer. The

Prince focused his senses searching for a weak point he might exploit. Every chain had its weak

link, and the Egyptian was adept at pinpointing such.
Then he struck. His sudden motion revealed the Prince's intentions to Rasputin, but he was already

inside the monk's guard. He slapped hard at Rasputin with one hand, and flesh and gore instantly

spread from the point of impact. The follow-up came immediately. Heru-sa-aset's blade crashed

through the fractured chest, and with a spray of blood, splashed into the flesh.


Rasputin bucked like a raging stallion and howled a high, piercing squeal that shattered the room.

But Heru-sa-aset held on. With a quick movement, the Egyptian Prince divided Rasputin's body in

two. As long as the head remained attached to its neck, there would be no Quickening.

Nevertheless, Rasputin was out of the fight, forever. And his beheading could always come later…


Methos looked at this. His clothes were shredded in many places, and his skin bore the marks of

burns from the tentacles that lashed him, but he was parrying the thrusts of the living darkness.

The tentacles stretched from the shadows beneath one corpse, and yet another tendril began to

blossom forth. It wriggled through the air and joined the assault against Methos.


Heru-sa-aset's face spilt with a grin of admiration, for Methos' movements were breathtakingly fast.

Four tenebrous arms sought to smite him now, but the sword in his hands was an even faster blurs

that knocked aside virtually every lunge against him. Some few glancing blows penetrated his wall

of defense, but even these Methos fended off before they could grip him.


Myrddin was yelling loudly. " We can't hold out much longer."
Heru-sa-aset knew Myrddin was correct. Fortunately, he had more tricks up his sleeves—tactics

that would never be expected from the Ancient Gathering.

====================================
Myrddin thanked Avalloc—the main God of Avalon—or whatever deity might be listening for this

strength in his time of need. The last time he'd seen Heru-sa-aset, the Prince was fighting against

Rasputin. He knew the Egyptian would defeat the monk, and that he could hold the attack long

enough.
Fortunately, the foolish Hunters had made an error only too typical of those Myrddin found himself

battling—underestimating their enemy. The Druid was far more powerful than he looked. He could

remember at least seven previous times when this mistake had saved his life and caused his

opponents’ defeat. He hoped this would be the eighth. While he was unable to watch the progress

of Heru-sa-aset against Rasputin, he assumed that the Egyptian would not enter into such a fray

unless he thought his own chances of survival were at least reasonable.
Myrddin battled against the Hunters in front of him, but at that instant he felt the bullet hitting his

leg as the approaching presence of another Immortal, a Headless Child, no doubt. Dark tendrils

faded away. Darkness vaporized into a void.
Behind him, Methos' gaze narrowed. "What the fuck?"
With that, Vlad stepped toward them. "I don't need to hide in the shadows. Behold the strength of

Dracula!"


Methos raised his sword, mocking, "Bella Lugosi was more believable, motherfucker."
Myrddin yelled. "Move!"
Vlad cackled. "The last resort of a badly beaten Ancient Gathering!" his angry eyes seethed with

fire and danced with shadows as he charged toward Methos and Myrddin.


They moved aside, avoiding Vlad's furious charge. Then Myrddin realized as he moved, the Voivode

was favoring his left foot. He'd been sure it had been Dracula's right foot that had been struck by a

bullet.
Myrddin gasped and tightened his jaw. He was a master of the unspoken. He could read epics from

the body language of others, and in a flash he also realized that Methos had come to the same

conclusion.
"Now then, Voivode," Methos said calmly into the void of darkness and pain. "Let's finish what we

started five hundred years ago!" He spun this time to face Vlad and pressed a flurry of attacks that

drove the Voivode back, then back again as Dracula struggled to defend himself against the

powerhouse blows.


Methos feinted at his opponent's legs, drawing the Voivode's long Toledo sword down, then came

up with an overhead slice at the head. He lured Vlad's blade into a defensive position perpendicular

to his body. Quickly, he slipped into the Dracula's guard, catching the broadsword with his own.
Vlad jumped back quickly and swung before Methos could raise his weapon back into proper

position to defend. The Voivode caught Methos across his chest, a wicked slash that flayed the first

layer of muscle. Methos hissed and spun away, bleeding.
At that moment Myrddin attacked Vlad from the other side. The Voivode had just enough time to

turn and parry the killing blow, his eyes shining with fury. They battled in darkness, the Druid on

the attack. Again and again, Vlad found himself forced to retreat to what he hoped was a better

position. But then Methos rejoined the fight.


With a roar and mighty slash of his sword, Methos locked blades with Vlad once more and pressed

his back against the blackness.


Grimly, both members of the Ancient Gathering came at Vlad, striking blow after furious blow. Even

the Voivode's speed was not enough, and he took a painful slice from Methos across the ribcage.

Vlad roared and tried to dart away, but Myrddin was right on him. As Myrddin swung again, Vlad

ducked assuming a crouching position and came up again. But then he felt the unmistakable pain

of Methos blade entering his abdomen. Myrddin pulled his feet from under the Voivode with a

sweep of his leg.


And then everything went dark again. Blackness, living shadows. A cloud of it enveloped Methos

and Myrddin, blocked out their vision, muffled sound. The gunfire sounded again, but the inky

blackness coated them like a second skin. Chills shot through their bodies, and their muscles

started to spasm. The sensation was repulsive, unnatural, evil.


"Move!" Methos shouted. "Move aside!"
Myrddin was disoriented by the shadows, but he dove hard, hoping it was away from Vlad. He felt

the drag of the darkness clinging to him like a greedy lover, but the force of his lunge tore him

free. He landed on the floor, rolled and jumped to his feet. The gunfire was louder now.
"Use the fire again, Myrddin!" Methos' voice sounded far away. "We need to find Vlad!"

====================================


Aylón was ragged. Much of his face was burned away, and his chest and clothes were in tatters.

But the potent force that feed him was still strong enough to hold him together, to pull him back

from the brink of the abyss.
As the Hunters attacked him, Aylón, with a simple gesture, sent the tendrils of darkness hurtling

toward the terrorists who were dogging him. The Hunters shifted their fire. The bullets shredded

one of the snaking black tentacles, but several others found their marks, knocking Hunters aside,

crushing some of them against the solid walls.


The chamber was full of smoke and gunfire. Some Hunters reloaded the shotguns and fired another

burst. Aylón charged in behind the blast. He jumped out of the way—no, not jumped, hovered. The

Old Man of the Mountain floated in the air, hanging there as if suspended by a cable. That small

moment of unexpected floating was enough to throw the Hunter's timing off. They tried to dodge,

but Aylón's huge scimitar raked across their heads. Aylón landed, sword in hand, wading into the

fray again.


But then Methos yelled, "Use the fire again, Myrddin!" His voice sounded far away, distorted by the

unnatural darkness. "We need to find Vlad!"


Aylón looked at Myrddin a cross the chamber. Balanced on the Druid's right palm was a ball of

flame, a fire conjured from thin air. Methos dove as the Druid hurled the fire. It passed right over

Methos, shot across the room, and landed amidst a new group of Hunters. The fireball erupted into

a true inferno, burning terrorists. Amidst horrible screams, smoke filled the chamber, growing

thicker every second, threatening to use up any breathable air.
And more Hunters were pressing the attack. Myrddin and Methos advanced in front of the blazing

rifles, apparently looking for Vlad.


At that time Aylón gazed at Zarach. The bullets were striking the two-colored eyes Immortal,

driving him back half a step every few seconds, but the entry holes were closing over as quickly as

they appeared—and Zarach merely smiled.
Myrddin launched another ball of flame. Some Hunters flung themselves to the side, but others

weren't so quick. The flame struck them and burst into a great conflagration. They whipped around

and flailed madly, but the fire raged, burning away clothes, hair and flesh.
Then Aylón eyed Vlad. He had sensed him and another presence since the beginning.
Vlad launched himself to the ground. But the fire was hotter than he could stand. As soon as he

landed, he jumped away from the ground as if it were now burning. The Voivode screamed, a

panicked, terror-filled sound. He slapped at his legs, his chest, his face, trying to put out the

flames.
That was all Aylón saw of him because at that moment more Hunters attacked him. But the Old

Man of the Mountain was moving also, blasting away everything in his way, ending all with his

scimitar, practically ignoring the hail of Smart-Pulse-Rifle fire from the terrorists. Aylón had

remained incredibly calm throughout the fight, despite the seemingly long odds he'd faced. Now

that most of the Hunters were dispatched, he took on an almost demonically gleeful aspect. His

eyes shone with delight seeing his enemies being destroyed, in the broken and burning bodies.

Now he was preparing to finish the job.


They needed to do that quickly. The darkness around started to disappear. That could mean only

two things: Lilitu was losing her powers; or the Headless Children in charge of the assault were

dead, or escaping.

====================================


Zarach clearly heard Heru-sa-aset. "Dangerous? I think, bastard, I have seen your best trick, but

you have no idea what I might yet reveal to you."


The Son of the Endless Night turned just in the right instant to watch the Egyptian Prince tearing

apart Rasputin's body. At that very moment Methos yelled. "Use the fire again, Myrddin!" His voice

sounded far away. "We need to find Vlad!"
Zarach eyed Myrddin spreading his balls of fire, and Vlad jumping on the ground, trying to avoid

the flames. Then the Voivode disappeared in front of Zarach's eyes.


Now was the time, and Zarach knew it. The Headless Children attacking the United Nations were

defeated, and Lilitu's powers were fading away. Now was the moment for the Son of the Endless

Night.
He looked at the Hunters in front of him. "Are you ready?"
As the Hunters moved closer, Zarach changed. Not merely his attitude, or his bearing. His form

itself changed, grew taller, darker—as if the smoke and shadows filling the chamber were drawn

toward him, drawn into him. The room was growing brighter as the darkness was sucked into

Zarach. He was growing shadowy, pools of obscurity seeping into his many wounds, as if his body

could contain the eternal night.
The Hunters fired again. Some of the bullets passed through him now; others seemed to disappear

into the darkness around him. None hurt him. At some point, Zarach's arms became no longer

arms, but spiraling black tentacles, obsidian cobras poised to strike. All this was shifting among the

smoke and deepening dying shadows. Nothing remained clear except Zarach's two-colored eyes,

glowing bright and fierce.
Then the Hunters realized: this was more than a mere Immortal. The fiery eyes, the blue tattoos on

his face, the pure darkness disappearing through a man-shaped portal from hell. This was a demon

that would subjugate them all.
The power within Zarach answered. The fire that was hatred and anger, violence, rose up inside

him, took hold of his limbs and gave him strength.


His enemies down or immobilized, Zarach charged. The first blast from his two sai—his Chinese

trident-like weapons—ripped apart four Hunters. The second strike three. Finally, Zarach sank his

blades into the chest of one last man.
Then the shadows finally contracted into Zarach's body, seemed to wither and crack, and a

moment later, light returned to the chamber.

====================================
For a moment there was total silence. Zarach stood at the very center of the carnage that had been

the interior of the Security Council Chamber. All around him stretched a wasteland of smashed

chairs, broken glass, puddles of mingled gore and fire-retardant chemicals. And the dead. Sighing,

he surveyed the full scope of the devastation. Interior walls had been violently reduced to rubble.

The entryways portals were toppled and trampled, badly scored by fire. World leaders, their staff,

the viewing public, and reporters, black-clothed Hunters—so many had died! So many!


Fifty-five seconds. The whole battle, the massacre, had lasted only fifty-five seconds.
Zarach's gaze traveled uninterrupted around the vast chamber. Nothing above knee-height

remained standing, save Aylón, Heru-sa-aset, Myrddin and himself. Zarach, however, could not

long dwell upon this tragedy. There was still far too much at stake. He looked at his comrades in

the Ancient Gathering. "Where is Methos?"


"I think he went after Vlad," Myrddin announced, his gaze opened wide by the devastation in front

of him.
"We must go after him. And be quick about it. We don't have the leisure to stand here all night

discussing the matter while the mortal forces come and find us. Let's move," Aylón said starting to

walk.
Zarach was distracted by the soft but unmistakable sound of stifled sobbing. He instinctively moved

toward the noise, not entirely motivated by sympathy. After he removed the debris, Dr. Ann Ford

emerged from what was left of the podium. "Oh my God! What happened? Who are you?" she said

holding the hand Zarach was offering her.
Zarach caught her with his bizarre eyes. "No one," he whispered. "Relax," he suggested her. Then

he looked at his brothers-in-arms. "Join me. We must use the Voice all together at the same time

to erase our presence for the minds of the survivors. We must hurry."
All of them nodded and closed their eyes, gathering all their combined strength to use the Voice

upon the mortals inside the room.

====================================
The fog of war. It had been so long, but Methos still found it revitalizing. But he knew it was

impossible to keep the mortal forces away completely, even if the Ancient Gathering carried the

night. And there was no guarantee that they would triumph. As word trickled back, it was becoming

evident that Lilitu was fighting as an Immortal possessed.


The hell with this, Methos decided. He dogged behind a car, scanned the darkness for the Immortal

presence, felt it, and moved forward.


The street seemed like the last chance to hold the line. The battle inside the United Nations was

over. However, helicopters and sirens filled the area.


While it was still dark enough for him to hide, Methos raised his sword. That motherfucker Vlad

might be nearly invulnerable, but stealthy he was not. There. He heard the plodding footsteps. Vlad

was also quick, but he wasn't going to get away from Methos. He gauged the distance of the

footsteps, and then sprung up.


This time Methos had a second trick. Seven .44 magnum slugs into the darkness. Nothing. Maybe

he hit him. Maybe. He popped out the empty clip, slammed in a full one. He wasn't sure, but he

thought he saw something like a smile in the blackness.
"Oh yeah? Well, fuck you, buddy."
He opened up again. This time the darkness staggered, stumbled a step, hesitated, but kept

moving.
"You like that, motherfucker? You want some more?" Methos held his ground, ejected that clip, and

slammed in a last one. Seven more shots into the darkness, now within ten yards.
The Immortal's presence moved behind him. "What are you doing?" said a familiar but out-of-place

voice, intruding upon Methos' thoughts.


Methos whirled and leveled his Desert Eagle gun—at Aylón. The Old Man of the Mountain wasn't

smiling—he almost never smiled—but just like the darkness yards away, there was something

about him, his manner, which suggested danger.
Aylón tapped the Desert Eagle, still aimed at him. "I wouldn't bother pointing out that since you

just fired all your shots." He nodded toward the darkness disintegrating in front of them. "If you're

trying to lure the mortal forces to you, you're doing a good job. We must go."
"What about Vlad?" Methos asked angrily. "We can't let him get away, dammit!"
"We'll get him another time. We must go to the airport and leave this city. Martial law will be

declared. We need to find Lilitu. Vlad is unimportant for now. We must go before the bridges and

tunnels are closed."
Methos narrowed his eyes, furrowing his brow. He was angry. Angry about how brusque Aylón was,

as if nothing had happened. But this wasn't the time to bring it up. There wasn't the time, with

Mother still on the loose. So Methos said the first thing that came into his mind. "This whole mess

sucks. Like the Yankees, man."


Aylón cocked his head. "You lose money on the Mets or something? Let's go."
As they walked, the other members of the Ancient Gathering joined them. Methos gazed at them.

Their faces were icy-cold. They were all recovered from their multiple wounds. Indeed they were

powerful!
"How many? How many died?" Methos asked.
"Too many," Zarach replied, shaking his head a little.
"Okay," said Methos. "If you guys are finished, let's get the hell out of here."
The other four Immortals looked at him. There they were again, standing as if nothing had

happened, like if the United Nations, and the world, weren't being decimated by Lilitu's war.


Methos thought for a moment. He remembered hearing the screams of pain inside the United

Nations, but he'd been absorbed in his own fight... Then he looked more closely and saw the blood

on his hands. Blood dripping. Not his own blood, either. In his mind, he could recall vividly the

bastards who, a few minutes before, had been Hunters, dying under the power of the last

Horsemen, the one called Death.

====================================




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