the risk of sunshine than deal with his mood.
At least he had a good killing to look forward to.
On his signal, Balthazar ghosted over the damp pavement, becoming one with the shadow of the building across the way. There was a clear night sky overhead, but the added moonlight was a largely irrelevant complication. Caldwell’s downtown had enough ambient illumination that he could have read a novel even here in this narrow alley.
Assuming he were magically literate.
Staying in the shadows was not only part of the vampire myth, but a very prudent reality for them all.
With a practiced movement, he withdrew his scythe from its holster, freeing the weapon from the strap that ran across his back. Balthazar, on the other hand, preferred the more conventional double-dagger armaments, the pale blades flashing as he sank down on his thighs.
Footfalls came at them. Fast, multiple, but not at a run.
Two human males, hands in pockets, feet moving quickly, came down the alley. They paid no attention as they passed, and that probably saved their worthless little lives.
And then it was a waiting game.
A single set of footfalls now, at a much slower speed. Accompanied by the stench that preceded the undead.
As the lesser came into view, rounding a corner and hitting their straightaway, he, too, was paying no attention to them. He had cash in his hands, the sum of which he appeared to be obsessed with, counting, recounting, as he went by.
Xcor stepped out in his wake. “How much did you get for blowing them?”
The lesser wheeled around, shoving the money away into a baggy coat. Before it could respond, Balthazar sprang from his position, leaping high into the air and landing dagger-first. The slayer screamed as those blades penetrated his shoulder and throat, proving that though soulless and heartless, the bastards had central nervous systems that registered pain quite efficiently.
And that was when the bullets started flying.
Xcor was twisting around, prepared to swing his beloved scythe wide as soon as Balthazar rolled himself free, when a telltale popping sound echoed down at him. And then another.
And then a fury of them.
The discharging was too quick for even autoloaders.
The first hit he took was in the shoulder. Second was in the thigh. Third grazed his ear, leaving a burning that felt as if he had a bright red car blinker up there.
Balthazar was hit as well.
They had no choice but to run and pray. Was it humans? Unlikely, but not unheard-of. It could not be slayers; they were so pitifully armed, the heaviest firepower any of them brought into the alleys were nine-millimeters, and very few at that.
A quick dodge to the right and he and Balthazar were in a narrower lane, temporarily out of the onslaught. That would change as soon as the shooter or shooters got to the corner they had wheeled off around.
“Left!” Balthazar barked.
Sure enough, there was another opportunity in the maze of streets to pare off, and they ghosted down the next alley, ironically running past the pair of humans who had sauntered by previously. The two men were likewise going as fast as they could, having clearly heard the racket. Their speed was much slower, however.
So, as the machine gun came around the corner, they provided some vital cover.
Screams, deep throated and terror-filled, exploded as the next round of fire came down at them, the humans taking the brunt of the impacts.
“Left!” Xcor said, leaning into the turn.
His thigh was going numb, but he didn’t waste time glancing down to measure any damage. That would come later, assuming he survived.
Another bullet came close, the sound as it whistled by his ear loud enough to overpower even his sawing breath and thunderous boots.
Balthazar was right beside him, that big body going at a dead run.
More discharges pinged off of a Dumpster as they passed it. Off the brick wall. Off the pavement. From time to time there were pauses, as if the gun or guns were being reloaded—or mayhap there were a pair of them working together, one handing off the ammo as the other shot.
Keep going. It was all they could do.
None of the alleys they were coming upon offered anywhere meaningful to hide; in fact, there were not even doors to break through.
It was strictly a question of outrunning the number of rounds the shooters had brought with them. Assuming he and his fighter didn’t get gunned down first.
As the next rounds came at them, he knew without looking over his shoulder that