~~Jack~~
He started to get up.
"Stop!" one of the hunters said. "Stop, or we'll keep shooting until you can't get up."
He continued to get up, a small grin on his lips. This was going to be fun. This was going to be so much damn fun.
"Shoot him," Elen said, voice cold and hard. "Don't kill him if you can help it." Well, nice to know they still wanted him alive. It'd make this slaughterfest all the easier.
The bullets began. Just like with Julias, it was like staring into fireworks, all going off at once in the dark hallway, complete with the ear-splitting cracks.
The bullets crashed against his suit, tore through it, and slammed into his skin; but they didn't penetrate. Hollow-point rounds were great at tearing flesh, but the Beast laughed as it hardened Jack's body. Useless, weak, pathetic metal. The fools didn't understand the only threat to him now, was fire, and they didn't bring fire. Perhaps they feared damaging the hospital? Their loss.
As the bullets crashed into him, and fell to the hospital floor, he smiled more, exposing his teeth and fangs. Tilting his head, he glared at Angela, stared, and her eyes widened as she realized he was mobile. Somewhere in all the chaos, the barely conscious woman managed to find one of the dropped pistols. She brought up the gun, and fired it at him, but the telltale sound of click click announced the empty clip. Her jaw dropped. Wonderful. Perfect. Let her soak in her fear. Let her roast in it for that moment, before he ripped her asunder.
As the bullets continued to slam into him, his body began to regenerate. The metal lodged into him from earlier fell out of him, joining the mess of metal of other bullets falling to the floor. The flesh within mended. Bones reformed and sealed. Muscle sewed itself back together. Skin knitted over the holes. Easy.
The conversation he'd had with his Beast was a blurry, fading thing, like a dream. He vaguely recalled that he knew it'd be like that, that whatever he'd done, whatever had happened, he wouldn't remember the details. He remembered her, though. He remembered the short brunette woman, sitting on her mountain of bodies. He remembered the smile on her lips, the sickle in her hand, the farmer's hat on her head. He remembered the crows that sat on her shoulders and hat, and on the rooftops. He remembered the thousands of rats that scurried around her, between her feet and the feet of her stool, and through the bodies they gnawed on. He remembered the Beast that existed within her, and its titanic, overwhelming size.
That was him now.
His smile faded for a moment, as once the gunfire settled, Jack looked down at the ashes of his sire. Julias. Dead. His sire was dead. He'd died with a smile on his face, but that didn't change that they'd murdered him, killed him, destroyed his life and silenced his voice.
How dare they. How. Fucking. Dare they.
He raised his eyes again, and found the hunters staring, jaws dropped, confusion and dismay carved into their faces; they hadn't expected a vampire to suddenly be immune to bullets. The fear on their faces, the sweet, delicious sight of their terror, almost made selling his soul worth it.
Jack raised a wrist to his mouth, bit into it, and tore a chunk of his flesh out. The hunters gasped and backed away; maybe they'd seen something like this before. He doubted it.
Two hunters approached quickly, grabbed Angela and SΓ‘ndor, and dragged them into the darkness with the other hunters. Their companions reloaded their guns, and pointed them at Jack, but didn't fire. They would soon, once they realized what he was doing, but he knew, and they knew, it wouldn't help them.
Jack swung his arm down at the floor, and splattered it with Kindred blood. A drop of will imbued into the flowing crimson kept it from burning into ash, and would keep it around for several minutes. And as the vitae set into the hospital floor, near the ashes of his dead sire, Jack could feel the pulsing wave of its power, his power. God, so much power, sweet, delicious, intoxicating power.
These kine couldn't see it, smell it, or hear it. They couldn't feel it. Jack felt it, and any Kindred in the area would. Any Kindred within a mile would. Each pulse a wave, each a thundering explosion, silent, unfelt, but blatant to any paranormal, he was sure. Others would know. That was fine, let them know. Let them witness his resurrection.
Five seconds after he spilled his blood, and created his summoning beacon, he smiled as he felt the call reach his flock. The room Julias had first used as cover had its door open, and as the fluttering noise in the background grew louder, one of the hunters turned to look in its direction. The noise grew louder, and louder, more fluttering, the sound of movement of small things in such number, it became a white noise; far too loud for white noise. Louder, and louder, and from all directions.
The cawing began. At first, just one, but one was the trigger that announced the flood. As if a host of angels β real angels, the ones in the bible, the freaky ones with extra mouths and eyes β had descended from the heavens to speak the word of God himself, a shrieking sound crashed against the hospital walls. The hunters jumped, spinning around and pointing their guns at patient rooms, and the two hallways, seeking the cause.
The banging began. Birds slammed into the windows, hard, hard enough to break beak and bone, hard enough to die. That was fine. His army would die for him; that's what armies were for, dying, in heaps and droves for their lord. Him.
The banging grew louder in only a few seconds, until it sounded like gunfire itself. Sturdy windows.
The hunter with the assault rifle moved forward, pointed at Jack, and started firing. Apparently this one had decided to spare their ammunition, likely having put some of it into Julias earlier, but not wasting any others until now. These bullets were not hollow-point. These bullets were meant to pierce. The only reason holes didn't punch through the hospital wall or floor, where the hunter had shot Julias, was because the hospital was built to survive a hurricane.
Jack smirked, and raised an arm, the injured limb already healed over from earlier wounds. The pieces of metal slammed into him, each hitting him with far more force than could ever be explained as anything but 'getting shot by a rifle'. The punch a proper assault rifle could give, combined with the pointed tip of the bullet, meant each bullet hit him with enough force to pierce through metal.
But they didn't pierce him. The vitae in him hardened his body, a mix of malleability and durability preventing the bullets from penetrating his skin. Metal slammed into him, and broke upon him, water against the shore. The hunter with the rifle stopped shooting, and Jack could see his jaw drop. Yes. Cower. Let the fear roll through you. Delicious.
Jack took a step forward, chuckling as he did. He felt good. He felt amazing. He felt hungry.
"You," Jack said to the man with the rifle. "Come here, and kneel."
Without hesitation, he came forward. Fool should have looked away before Jack could make eye contact, but fear had paralyzed him. His mind broke like tissue paper under water. One of the hunters reached out to stop him, but after a moment, she thought better of it. She turned around, grabbed Elen's chair, and started wheeling the woman away.
She didn't get far. The windows of the open patient rooms erupted, including Jack's mother's. An explosive force complete with an ear-splitting bang. Jack almost started to dance to the tune as more windows shattered under the impact of his servants. As the glass smashed inward, all the hunters turned to face the two open doors behind them, except the hunter under Jack's Dominate. The man with the rifle continued forward, came up to Jack, and fell onto his knees.
As if to announce the man's imminent demise, the hallway flooded with darkness. Loud, squawking, flapping darkness. The hunters threw their hands up over their heads, and tried to protect themselves from the onslaught, but the crows were unending. More of them poured in through the windows, and soon, patient rooms began to open. Crows were smart, very smart, and the only thing that stopped them from opening door levers was their absurdly small mass. That wasn't a problem when there were hundreds of them working together.
"Stop their escape. Kill them all," he said to his flock, "except for the Begotten. Capture the Begotten." Traitors didn't deserve death. Traitors deserved an eternity in the ninth circle of hell, in the frozen grip of Lucifer himself, or his maw, depending. Jack would recreate that Hell for this Begotten, while he still breathed. Heh, poor Judas.
Hundreds of crows became thousands. The swirling mass of endless black poured over anything and everything, like locusts, blanketing the walls, the floor, the doors, everything in fluttering obsidian.
Jack laughed as he held his hands out, and two familiar crows joined him. "Scully. Mulder. Is help coming?" The screams of the hunters buried his voice, but his voice was ancillary. Animalism was how he communicated with these friends of his, and now, it was easier than ever. As easy as being.