Part 51
Chapter XLVIII: Beheading the Snake
'Good evening.'
'Listen, I'm here to organise the monthly supply. If Johnny doesn't want it, I know lots of guys who do.'
The man struggled with himself, then shrugged, feigning nonchalance.
Stepping back around the partition, I walked along the side of the room, and trotted up the stairs. Pulling open some large double doors, I came into a spacious, expensive office. Closing the door behind me, and deadbolting it as a precaution, I leaned against it casually.
'Shut your mouth puppy, I'm here for information.'
'Who the fuck do you think you are, asshole?', the man screamed in a high-pitched voice, reaching for a gun from the back of his belt.
'You don't have to tell me man! You're dead bitch!' The Tong leader screamed as he fired, the bullet penetrating my chest under the ribcage, a trickle of blood forming over my clothing, before receding, the bullet falling to the floor. I stood, arms folded, smirking at the Tong as the gun shook in his now-limp grasp.
Johnny screamed, firing again. The noise had drawn attention to the room, Tong members banging heavily against the door, shouting for their doomed leader. The bullet hit again, in the abdomen, but I ignored the shock of pain, drawing forwards as Johnny leaned back against the wall, eyes going wide under his ridiculous sunglasses.
'We have the Nosferatu. If you want him back, come to the Fu Syndicate building. Alone.'
The screen flickered, and then the image disappeared. The Fy Syndicate building was a large building at the edge of Chinatown. Now I knew where the Nosferatu was. I also knew that if they wanted me to come, nothing would happen to the vampire. Not, at least, until they had dealt with me. The banging on the door was beginning to try my patience. I turned, unlocking the door with one hand as I gripped the hilt of the katana in the other. I stepped through the door, being met with a wave of gunfire. The small bullets penetrated my skin, causing mild pain, yet nothing debilitating. Maybe if I suffered under several rounds from several men, I may be brought down, but firing as they were, the bullets were but mosquito bites. In one quick motion I drew the katana from it's sheath, drawing it through one of the Tong members, his body falling to the floor, the flesh divided, the throat slit. I turned to the other man, gripping the hilt in both hands, thrusting it forwards to impale the Tong thug, his body prone against a wooden pillar. Leaving the sword in his body, I turned, taking in the three other men who had come to the top floor. The first I grabbed, throwing him bodily over the balcony. He screamed as he fell, his head making a sickening crunching noise as it came into contact with the corner of the bar, his neck twisted at an odd angle, his body unmoving. The second stared at me, trying to squeeze the trigger in his shaking hands. Feeling the bloodlust come over me, the desire to hunt, I let loose the Beast. Jumping, I dragged the man to the floor, my claw-like fingernails digging deeply into his skin as I tore at him, his screaming resounding loudly above the thumping drum beat. Raising my hands in a club-like motion, I brought them down heavily into his face, smashing the bone, destroying the man. I drew myself up in anger as I felt another bullet penetrate my back. Growling, I turned, facing the man who had dared shoot me. Pulling the katana from the dead body, I advanced upon him.
'What in god's name are you doing?', he screamed, before the bullet took him in the throat, his body sprawling against the bottles on the display shelf, knocking them to the floor where they shattered. I turned towards the last few Tong members, eyes widening as I saw the shotgun being aimed at me. That was no mosquito. I dove to the side, coming off the bar, crouching behind the countertop.
'Unfortunately for everyone here, even if I didn't want to play, Johnny did. Guess no-one's getting out of here alive.'
'I think you'll need to find a new club. Tell the police whatever you want.'
Unlike the shootout at the diner, it was unlikely the police would even bother investigating this place. It was pretty much assured that I'd just cut Chinatown's crime rate by at least a half. Open-shut case of gangwar. I left the building, breathing in the cold air deeply. Oxygen wasn't essential, but old habits die hard. The Fu Syndicate was waiting. Maybe the longer they waited, the more nervous they would get, the more likely they'd make a mistake. The whole setup was a trap, and I had a feeling that I was expected. On the other hand, I'd never been to Chinatown before, and I felt like exploring.
The Fu Syndicate could wait.