Axler,_James_-_Deathlands_47_-_Gaia's_Demise
Ryan glanced in the rearview mirror
"We're not going to get away," he shouted grimly.
"We have to," Mildred answered, then shrugged and dropped her heavy
med kit. "Heave the supplies! Lose everything!"
Stunned for a moment by the incredible act, Ryan resolutely reached
behind for his backpack. Mildred knew her stuff, and whatever it was
that was after them, he didn't want it to reach them for the sake of a
few pounds.
With the motorcycles moving at top speed, the companions raced
through the forest in a nightmare of dodging trees and crashing through
bushes.
Unstoppable, the death wave from the Kite swept onward, getting
closer and closer with each passing moment…
Gaia's Demise
#47 in the Deathland series
James Axler
A GOLD EAGLE BOOK FROM WORLDWIDE
TORONTO • NEW YORK • LONDON • AMSTERDAM
• PARIS • SYDNEY • HAMBURG • STOCKHOLM • ATHENS •
TOKYO • MILAN MADRID • WARSAW • BUDAPEST • AUCKLAND
If you purchased this
book without a cover you should be aware that
this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed"
to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received
any payment for this "stripped book."
As always,
for Melissa
First edition October 1999
ISBN 0-373-62547-2
GAIA'S DEMISE
Copyright © 1999 by Worldwide Library.
All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction
or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any
electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented,
including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information
storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written
permission of the publisher, Worldwide Library, 225 Duncan Mill Road,
Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.
All characters in this book have no existence outside the
imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone
bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by
any individual known or unknown to the author, and all incidents are
pure invention.
® and TM are trademarks of the publisher. Trademarks indicated with
® are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the
Canadian Trade Marks Office and in other countries.
Printed in U.S.A.
…for when all the strong elements,
military and feudal, were unhinged, mighty forces became adrift, and
the void was open. And after a pause, into the void strode a maniac of
ferocious genius, the repository and expression of the most virulent
hatred that has ever corroded the human heart. The door of opportunity
was open, the dreadful time was at hand, and God help us, it was all
about to begin once more…
—Sir Winston Churchill,
The Hinge of Fate, 1938
THE DEATHLANDS SAGA
This world is their legacy, a world born in the violent nuclear
spasm of 2001 that was the bitter outcome of a struggle for global
dominance.
There is no real escape from this shockscape where life always hangs
in the balance, vulnerable to newly demonic nature, barbarism,
lawlessness.
But they are the warrior survivalists, and they endure—in the way of
the lion, the hawk and the tiger, true to nature's heart despite its
ruination.
Ryan Cawdor: The privileged son
of an East Coast
baron. Acquainted with betrayal from a tender age, he is a master of
the hard realities.
Krysty Wroth: Harmony ville's own
Titian-haired
beauty, a woman with the strength of tempered steel. Her premonitions
and Gaia powers have been fostered by her Mother Sonja.
J. B. Dix, the Armorer: Weapons
master and Ryan's
close ally, he, too, honed his skills traversing the Deathlands with
the legendary Trader.
Doctor Theophilus Tanner: Torn
from his family and
a gentler life in 1896, Doc has been thrown into a future he couldn't
have imagined.
Dr. Mildred Wyeth: Her father was
killed by the Ku
Klux Klan, but her fate is not much lighter. Restored from predark
cryogenic suspension, she brings twentieth-century healing skills to a
nightmare.
Jak Lauren: A true child of the
wastelands, reared
on adversity, loss and danger, the albino teenager is a fierce fighter
and loyal friend.
Dean Cawdor: Ryan's young son by
Sharona accepts
the only world he knows, and yet he is the seedling bearing the promise
of tomorrow.
In a world where all was lost, they are humanity's last hope…
Prologue
A hundred years ago, a rain of nuclear bombs obliterated
civilization in a few minutes of blazing horror. It was the end of the
world. Doomsday. Skydark.
The great cities were gone in a blinding flash, replaced by bomb
craters whose deadly glow illuminated the nighttime sky. Mountains rose
and fell, valleys slammed shut and lakes boiled under the atomic
bombardment, permanently altering the topography of North America.
Burning clouds of isotopes and poisons filled the sky in an endless,
raging hurricane, and acid rain pounded the lush farmland and forests
of the continent into sterile desert.
With the first nuclear explosion, the tissue-thin tapestry of
civilization was ripped apart. The rule of law was replaced overnight
with the somber, draconian edict of survival of the fittest. Cannibals
hunted prey, cold-hearts brutally raided farms and slavers seized
anybody they could as chattel. Plus, lost in the wilds of the new world
were functioning predark war machines. Shielded against the onslaught
of the atomic holocaust, the computer-operated juggernauts were
patiently waiting to continue a war that was long finished, and death
was almost always the reward for the person who foolishly awoke one of
the terrible sleeping giants.
In crumbling ruins, ragged people fought to the death over a dented
can of food or a single precious bullet.
Any type of gun was more valuable than gold, defense against the
horrible swarms of muties, twisted abominations that arose from the
nuke craters and feasted on the flesh of humanity.
Slowly, over the long decades, civilization of a sort was returning
to the world. Crude walled cities were rising from the ashes of the
past. The populations of these villes were ruthlessly governed by
self-appointed barons, each ruler backed by a private army of brutal
sec men. Whips and chains kept the people inside, while barbed wire and
blasters kept the muties out.
Electricity was seldom seen, starvation universal, rape a daily
event, death the only known means of escape. This was America in the
late twenty-first century. Welcome to the Deathlands.
But one small handful of people refused to surrender hope. Ryan
Cawdor and his companions traveled the continent searching for
someplace where they could settle down and live in peace. Armed with
functioning pre-dark weapons, the companions killed only when
necessary, and preferred trading for supplies rather than stealing. In
a world gone mad, these simple acts of dignity nearly made them legends.
In addition, Ryan Cawdor and the others knew the greatest military
secret of the predark world: the redoubts.
Hidden across America, these often huge underground bunkers were
built by the government to withstand direct nuclear hits. Powered by
the near limitless energy of nuclear reactors, most redoubts were still
intact after a century, incredible havens of safety with fluorescent
lights, air-conditioning and drinkable water. Originally, the
subterranean bases were stockpiled with everything needed to rebuild
the country after the coming apocalypse—weapons, tools, military
vehicles, fuel and medicine. Those countless tons of supplies were long
gone, with only a few forgotten boxes of dusty weapons and dehydrated
food packs remaining. However, these meager scraps from the past were
more than enough to give the companions a fighting chance to stay
alive. And sometimes they came across a major prize.
Yet even more importantly, the redoubts were linked together by the
incredible mat-trans units. These amazing machines depended on
technology advanced almost beyond understanding. The mat-trans units
could transfer a living person from one redoubt to another in only
seconds, which allowed the companions to quickly leave a dangerous
area, hunt for food and continue their search for a permanent home.
Unfortunately, it now seemed possible that others might also know
the vital secret of the redoubts.
A few days earlier, a stranger named Overton had attacked Ryan's
home ville of Front Royal with an army of sec men. The troops were
wearing impossibly clean blue shirts and were armed with predark
weapons in mint condition. Overton's goal was to conquer Front Royal by
any means available, then physically link it with two neighboring
villes in Virginia, creating a single massive walled city, a gigantic
metropolis the likes of which hadn't been seen for more than a century.
The would-be usurper was finally neutralized by Ryan, but the reasons
behind the insane plan were lost in violent death, and the mysterious
origin of the weapons was never resolved.
Had Overton been working alone in his plan to seize control of those
three East Coast baronies? Or was he a vanguard, an advance agent
paving the way for somebody else? Was creating a new metropolis in
Deathlands the final goal, or only the first step of a much larger
plan? And was the secret of the redoubts' existence still safe?
A dying man had said the answers to these questions could be found
in a distant ville called Shiloh. While the baron at Front Royal
started to rebuild the badly damaged ville, Ryan Cawdor and the
companions left on a perilous overland journey to try to discover if
the brutal war for the baronies was indeed over.
Or only just beginning…
Chapter One
"Black dust!" the man screamed, pointing toward the horizon. "What
the hell is that?"
A dozen people at the campsite stopped whatever they were doing and
turned to look in the direction indicated. Cresting a hill far down the
road was a wag of some sort—no, it was a rolling box of metal, with a
stream of faint bluish smoke coming from its rear. The sides were
sloped at sharp angles, no windshield or windows were visible and it
had numerous big black wheels. There wasn't a single visible piece of
wood in the whole contraption.
"A wag," a teenager murmured, wiping his mouth on a dirty sleeve as
he placed aside his plate of stew. Standing, the teenager grabbed a
longblaster from the top of a woodpile and worked the bolt, chambering
a round. He licked dry lips as a soft wind ruffled the thin rags that
were his clothing.
Another man stood and pulled a crossbow into view from his nest of
clothes. "A metal wag. I never seen one that moved before!"
Leaning heavily on a repaired crutch, an elderly man glanced over
his shoulder to a nearby grassy field. A crude wall of thickets and
sharp sticks formed a defensive barrier around the clearing, and in the
middle stood a faded yellow school bus, its many windows heavily
patched with gray tape and bits of plastic. The wheels were sunk into
the hard ground, and a tilted stone chimney rose from the back. The
rusted remains of a few other wags doted the field, the grass thin
enough in spots to see the cracked black material underneath. Way off
by itself, the rounded shell of a beetle-shaped vehicle was surrounded
by weeds, the open front door showing that the interior had been
completely stripped except for a cushioned seat that had a hole cut in
the bottom. The opening continued through the chassis and deep into the
ground. Fat flies buzzed around the battered wag, and for an unknown
reason, a half moon was painted on the door.
"A working wag," Tant breathed excitedly. The young man drew a bulky
revolver from the belt holding his buckskin jacket closed, and lovingly
ran his hands over the Parkerized finish of the big-bore weapon. The
wooden handle had been replaced with bone long ago. "Must be some
baron," a pretty blonde suggested, and she pulled a long carving knife
from her sleeve.
"Or slavers," another man grumbled, touching a ragged scar that
completely circled his thick neck. In his massive hands, he held a
metal rod tipped with a razor-sharp radiator fan. The ends glistened,
mirror bright in the morning sun. "They got wags. Well, sometimes."
"We best leave it alone," an old woman stated. She hobbled a bit
closer to the roadway but didn't cross onto the gravel of the berm. She
knew her place. That honor was for menfolk only.
"Let them leave without a toll?" an old man snapped angrily,
watching the wag come steadily closer. His face was deeply lined, but
not from hunger, and a puckered star on the right cheek marked where he
had been shot in the face at close range. His boots were patched, his
jacket was lined with the fur of mountain lion and a brace of oiled
revolvers jutted from his wide leather belt. "Black dust, what for,
woman?"
Her weak eye wandering aimlessly, the old woman scowled down the
road and gestured at the strange vehicle. "Are ya daft, Spector? That
ain't be no civvy wag. That's a war wag, a tank!"
Raising a hand to strike her, Spector held his anger at the
outburst, knowing she was only doing so for the good of the collectors.
Dimly, he recalled hearing the word before from Grandda. His father's
father had been a great leader of the collectors, siring fourteen
children before dying. A mutie had leaped from the belly of a deer they
killed one winter and tore off his arms before the others could
bludgeon it to death.
Drawing a blaster, Spector squinted against the distance. Naw,
couldn't be a real tank as the wag didn't have those metal belts on
either side that chewed up the streets. It had whatyacallems.
"Tires," Tant said, loading a massive crossbow. The quarrel was of
green wood, but the barbed tip was steel, lashed into place with human
hair.
"Blasters," he added, scowling. "Them there be fancy autoblasters on
its top!"
"Autoblasters?" asked a pregnant girl brandishing an ax, a naked
child hiding behind her voluminous skirts.
"Fire more slugs than a hundred sec men at once!"
A young man with only the wispy hint of a beard on his jaw curled a
lip. "Horseshit," he declared.
"It's the truth."
"Let it pass, Da," a redheaded boy suggested, the glass bottle in
his hands sloshing slightly. The whiskey bottle with its burning rag of
a fuse was actually only filled with urine, but most folks thought it
to be a Molotov and steered clear of the pretend firebomb.
Pushing back his cap, Spector stood firm before the steady advance
of the war wag. "Anybody can pass," he stated, shifting his grip on his
wheelgun. "Long as they pays a toll. This be our road, child! Don't we
sweep away the leaves in the fall and fill in the holes after the
snows? Our grandies guarded this here road for the eagle god, and so do
we. Ain't nobody pass 'less they pays a toll. One can food, one bullet
or a day of work."
The group took heart from the ancient words and formed a line across
the long expanse of concrete. Only the faintest suggestions of ruins
marked where the mighty booths stood, but those had been destroyed in
skydark. There were cracks in the surface, but those had been carefully
patched. Every weed was pulled, the loose gravel along the east side
raked into neat order and the grassy strip to the west trimmed neatly.
Beyond the strip lay the broken remains of shattered concrete, trees
growing wild from the cracks, and most of the surface masked by decades
of grass and vines. But that wasn't their side. That was the north, and
they were the southbound. The war between the two rival gangs had ended
many winters ago in a bloody fight still referred to as Death Day. Now
only the south remained to rule the great road of exit that stretched
from the mountains to the terrible ocean.
The big wag was a lot closer now, its speed unchanging. Spector
could see it was a lot bigger than he'd first thought, and the body was
made of different colors, not painted camouflage like hunters did to
hide in the bush. No, sir, the metal itself was a clean green in one
area, and blackened with fire damage in another, as if the machine were
pieced together from a dozen damaged wags. Surprisingly, it made
excellent camouflage. Once in thick bushes, the machine would be damn
difficult to spot. Big cans and bags were strapped to the sides under
layers of fishing nets.
"Loot," Tant said greedily, releasing the safety lock on his
crossbow. "Look at it! They got so much they can't keep it all inside!"
Spector stepped between the man and the approaching wag so that the
needle tip of the quarrel touched his chest. "We ain't be thieves or
coldhearts," the older man stated. "This be our road, and we take
tolls. That be all. No raping the women or taking more than usual.
Understand?"
Tant felt a rush of heat to his face, partly from shame but the rest
from anger. His hands tightened on the stock and trigger of the
crossbow, the muscles in his arms hardening as he fought conflicting
emotions. Spector stayed motionless, letting the younger man decide the
matter for himself. A good leader didn't always command, but sometimes
listened. The engine noise of the war wag was discernible when the
younger man finally relaxed his aggressive stance.
"Sorry," he apologized, and fired.
At point-blank range, the shaft went completely through the old
man's chest. Staggering backward onto the road, Spector fell to his
knees and Tant swung the stock of the crossbow like a club. Spector's
head broke apart, one eye flying off into the wood, bones and brains
spilling onto the pale concrete.
Retrieving the blaster from the dead man's clothing, Tant turned to
face the rest of the collectors. The butt of the weapons were still
warm from the dead man, and somehow that gave the killer a rush of
courage.
"Now I am in charge!" Tant shouted, thrusting a blaster into the
air. "And I say we take everything from everybody who tries to pass!
Why should we starve when food comes to us by itself?"
Eagerly, the
rest of the family took up the cry and several stepped closer to spit
on the sprawled form of Spector. Only a few of the older women and
younger children didn't
join the rally against their fallen leader
and quickly moved away from the others. Their brethren seemed like
outlanders to them, strangers drunk on the freshly spilled blood.
"Rules, reg'lations," one man slurred, brandishing
a glass tipped spear. "What mean they? The strong live, the weak die.
That be the
rules here!"
"So speaks Ben, my new lieutenant," Tant shouted. "For I am the
leader
now."
The collectors roared their approval, and Tant threw his crossbow at
the man. The weapon landed at his feet, which were swaddled in plastic
and rags in place of boots. Passing his spear to a man with a club, Ben
knelt before his new leader and lifted the gore-smeared weapon with a
grim reverence.
"Death to the outlanders," Ben said, bowing his head.
"Death to all!" Tant shouted, staring hatefully at the wag coming
straight toward them. The vehicle hadn't attempted to swerve into the
trees or stop and turn. More fools they, for this was where they would
die, and that machine become his to command.
"Positions!" Tant ordered, cocking both hammers on his warm blasters.
The collectors scrambled to their pits and dropped out of sight as
Ben raced into the bushes to kick at a block of wood half-hidden amid
the greenery. With the block gone, a weight dropped out of sight into
the ground and from the trees a barrier swung into the sky on squealing
hinges and slammed down hard across the roadway. The heavy beam was a
chiseled tree trunk, bristling with rusty nails and bearing the
eight-sided metal disk of the tribe painted the magic colors of red and
white. All travelers stopped at the sight of the sign of power.
"Hold for a toll!" Tant shouted with an amiable smile, tucking one
blaster into his belt.
The wag didn't slow.
"There be muties ahead!" he added in warning, his smile dropping
into a sneer. "Much danger! Death everywhere."
As if in reply, brilliant headlights flashed into operation, the
beams temporarily blinding the collectors. Cursing in rage, most
dropped
their blasters to cover their eyes. Only a few managed to wildly fire
their weapons at the invader. Fletched arrows struck the side of the
vehicle, the wooden shafts shattering on the armor. A spear smashed on
the turret, the glass tip exploding into glittering
sparkles. Homemade bullets musically ricocheted off the chassis,
leaving gray smears, and the one round that hit a tire simply sank
into the resilient material and disappeared, doing no visible damage.
Then the powerful engines of the war wag revved louder, and it
surged forward with renewed speed, covering the last fifty yards to the
gate in only seconds. The wag smashed into the stout barrier headfirst,
and the wood exploded into splinters, a rain of nails spraying from the
impact.
Baring his teeth in rage, Tant stood firm and steadily fired his
revolvers at the looming wag until they clicked on empty chambers. For
the briefest flicker of time, Tant saw a single eye looking at him
through a tiny slit in the metal hull of the incredible machine, an eye
of icy blue. That was when his resolve broke, and the killer dashed for
the safety of the berm, but it was already too late.
The great machine leaped forward in a surge of speed, and the prow
slammed into him with the force of an avalanche. Pain filling his
world, Tant dropped to the roadway and went directly underneath the
juggernaut.
For an electric moment of time, he waited to be crushed
flat, when Tant realized in a rush of clarity that there was space
below the wag. The bottom was almost a yard off the ground! He started
to laugh in relief, when the machine sharply turned and the last two
wheels went straight for his head, missing his face by an inch but
rolling over his left arm, mashing it flat, every bone pulverized from
the colossal weight. Shrieking at the pain, Tant tried to pull away and
the bottom of the wag slammed against his head, sending him into
blackness. Seconds later, the sprawled body of Tant appeared behind the
transport, with a small cut on his forehead and his entire right arm
bloody pulp. Tears streaming from his aching eyes, Ben rushed over and
shot Tant in the heart with a crossbow quarrel, making himself the new
leader.
"TRIPLE STUPE BASTARDS," Ryan Cawdor muttered, easing his foot off
the gas of the LAV-25 armored personnel carrier. "Guess they never saw
an APC before and didn't know what it could do."
"Well, they sure know now," J. B. Dix said, tilting back his fedora
as he watched the tiny outpost vanish into the distance behind them
through an aft blaster port. When satisfied the danger was over, J.B.
removed his finger from the trigger of his Uzi submachine gun and slung
the deadly weapon over a shoulder. Lying on the deck between his boots
was a bulging satchel of explosives, with a Smith & Wesson M-4000
scattergun tucked between the straps. Even in the tight confines of the
APC, the Armorer never let his weapons get far away from a ready hand.
Ryan nodded in agreement as he steered the wag around a fallen tree
and some large potholes. The driver's seat of the predark machine was
designed for soldiers from that time period, large men loaded with lots
of equipment. Ryan was barely comfortable in the chair, and his wild
mane of black hair brushed against the control panel set in the ceiling
directly above the Plexiglas ob port used to see outside. The man's
face was seamed by a long scar, courtesy of his brother Harvey, and a
crude leather patch covered his left eye. A SIG-Sauer blaster, with a
built-in baffle sound suppressor, was tucked into the leather holster
at his right hip, the curved handle of a panga knife jutting from its
customary sheath, within easy access. Hanging nearby from hooks set
into the rough metal walls were a bolt-action longblaster and a sleek
AK-47 machine gun.
Sitting against the aft doors, Jak Lauren merely grunted in reply as
he continued to strop a knife on a whetstone with steady strokes. The
pale teenager was dressed in camou-colored military fatigues and a
battered vest decorated with feathers and bits of mirror and metal sewn
into the seams and collar. But that was a trick; razor blades were sewn
inside the collar and any enemy grabbing him soon discovered that the
hard way when they lost fingers. The youth was a true albino. His skin
was dead white, and ruby-red eyes peered from a cascade of snowy hair.
A massive Colt Python .357 jutted from his belt, and at least a dozen
leaf-bladed throwing knives were hidden on his person.
"Fools die," Jak stated coldly, tucking away the leaf-bladed
throwing knife and, like magic, another appeared in his hand. "What
else new?"
"I saw wags on the side of the road," Dean Cawdor said, a Browning
Hi-Power blaster held casually as he watched the horizon for any signs
of pursuit. "Think they might try and come after us?"
"Those wrecks? Even if the wags worked, they'll be busy squabbling
over who's in charge now that we killed their leader," J.B. stated,
adjusting his wire-rimmed glasses to a more comfortable position.
"Good," Dean said, clicking the safety on his blaster with a
flick of his thumb. The boy tucked the blaster into his belt.
Although only eleven years old, going on twelve, Dean already carried
himself with the deadly assurance of a seasoned warrior and seemed to
look more like his father with every passing day.
"I just thank Gaia they thought a wooden beam would stop us," Krysty
Wroth said gruffly. "Could have been a lot worse."
The shapely redhead squatted comfortably on the steps leading to the
overhead turret, checking the loads in her Smith & Wesson .38.
Krysty had lost the blaster in that hellish garage at Front Royal when
she'd gotten caught by Overton's sec men. But J.B. had found the
blaster under a bench when he'd done some work on the LAV, the weapon
discarded there, apparently, by one of the blue shirts. The neat .38
handled better than the pow
erful .357, and she was happy
to have it once again in hand.
Krysty was a beautiful woman, her complexion flawless, her
abundance of fiery hair gently moving as if stirred by secret winds
only she could feel.
"Those coldhearts could have smashed a hornet's nest against the
side of the LAV," she continued. "And then we would have been in real
trouble."
"Hornets?" Jak asked, pausing in his work.
A tall man with silver-gray hair was resting against the ammo locker
and raised his head at the conversation, arching an eyebrow. "Indeed,
madam, I do understand," Doc Tanner rumbled in a deep stentorian bass.
"Once the nest hit us, the hornets would target our wag as an enemy and
come swarming in through every blaster port and vent. Their painful
stings would soon drive us outside where the others could easily slay
us in the confusion."
Wearing a frilly shirt and an outlandish frock coat, the old man
would have been a strange sight even in his own time period, and his
resplendent crop of hair made Doc appear much older than he really was.
A slim ebony swordstick was laid casually across his lap, and a massive
double-barreled blaster jutted from the cavalry gun belt around his
waist. The Civil War museum piece seeming incongruous with the rest of
his dapper attire.
Krysty gestured with an open palm. "Old trick," she said. "My mother
used it often against the big muties."
The old man pulled a few inches of shiny steel blade from within the
ebony stick, then slammed the sword back into its sheath. "Deuced
clever, I must admit."
Ryan glanced over his shoulder at Krysty. "Hornets," he said after a
while. "Glad you're on our side, lover. That would work even better on
folks in an open cart, or on horseback."
"Pretty good," Jak agreed, tucking away his whetstone.
Biting off a piece of beef jerky, Dr. Mildred Wyeth chewed and
swallowed the mouthful before speaking. A stocky black woman with
bright, intelligent eyes, her lightweight denim jacket was unbuttoned,
showing a heavy flannel shirt and a gun belt supporting a sleek target
pistol, the ammo loops on the side of the belt filled with oily brass
cartridges. A rare predark field-surgery kit holding medical supplies
lay protectively between her boots, the canvas lovingly patched here
and there.
"For some reason, that reminds me of a war story I once heard,"
the physician said. "Way back before skydark, some nation, I forget
which, sent a battalion of their best tanks into northern Africa to
establish a supply base for their troops. They expected little
resistance from the locals as the farmers had almost no technology.
They carried stone knives and went hunting with blowguns. It was
supposed to be a slaughter, and it was. But for the other side."
Both hands steady on the steering levers, Ryan barked one of his
rare laughs. "So the tanks got destroyed, eh? Good for the Africans."
"How?" Dean asked curiously, resting both elbows on his knees and
leaning forward. Mildred and Doc came from before skydark and knew all
sorts of things. Some of the information was useful for staying alive,
but some was just fun to hear about—wild stories about things like
airplanes and supermarkets.
Wrapping the remaining piece of jerky in a clean handkerchief,
Mildred tucked the dried meat into a pocket for later. For once,
they had plenty of supplies. Front Royal had given them all the food,
fuel and ammo they could carry for this trip. Their mission
was too important to chance failure over a can of beans or a
handful of bullets. But as her Baptist minister father drilled into her
as child, waste not, want not. Life in the radioactive hell of
Deathlands was bitterly harsh, and every morsel of food saved could
mean another day of life.
"How did they stop the invasion of armored tanks? Simple, really,"
she answered. "The locals would run away from the tanks, carefully
luring them near the edge of a high cliff. Then when the tank was in
the right position, hunters hidden in the bushes would use blowguns to
shoot a poisoned dart into the tiny slots in the armor that the drivers
used to see through. Blind and paralyzed, the soldiers couldn't change
course, and the massive machines would roll off the cliff and smash to
pieces when they hit the bottom."
"A veritable David-versus-Goliath story," Doc rumbled in wry
amusement. "Good for the hunters."
Dean stole a glance at his father. "So the fancier the tech, the
easier it is to smash," the boy concluded.
"Usually," Ryan answered, busy driving. "But not always, son."
"Everything has a weak point, but sometimes Goliath still wins,"
J.B. added, pulling a fat cigar from the breast pocket of his jacket
and placing it in the corner of his mouth. "Sad but true."
"Ahem," Mildred said, leaning forward in her seat until almost
touching noses with the man. "It smells quite bad enough in here with
seven sweaty people packed like sardines. We don't need you adding to
the pollution by smoking a hundred-year-old cigar."
"This is a brand-new one," J.B. retorted, pulling the stogie free
and gesturing. "Hand rolled on the thighs of expert virgins exclusively
for the baron of Front Royal himself!"
Everybody in the APC burst into laughter.
"My dear John Barrymore," Doc chuckled. "Expert virgins?"
"Nice work if you can get it," Krysty said, smiling.
As the military transport easily rolled over a low hill, Ryan merely
snorted as he shifted gears.
"Didn't mean it that way," J.B. said with a frown.
"Horseshit," Jak scoffed.
Quizzically, J.B. took a sniff. "Seems to be mostly tobacco," he
said slowly. "But yeah, I think there's a little horse in here, too."
"Also makes your breath taste awful," Mildred added softly.
J.B. winked at the physician and tucked the cigar away. "Don't want
that, do we?"
Blushing slightly, Mildred started to add something, but was cut off
when the wag jounced over some rough ground and the companions were
nearly thrown from their seats. Desperately, the friends grabbed for
anything welded solidly to the frame of the APC. The interior of the
LAV-25 had been badly damaged by fire when its prior owners died, and
the seat belts were only ashen smudges on the bare metal skeletons of
the wall seats. Layers of blankets cushioned the seat struts enough for
them to sit on for long periods, but every serious pothole threatened
to throw them to the floor.
"Need rope," Jak muttered, releasing his grip on the belt of linked
25 mm rounds going into the electric cannon in the turret. "Make belts."
"Good idea," Dean said, massaging a bruised elbow. "But we already
used it all tying our extra supplies to the outside."
"Hold on to your ass harder," J.B. suggested with a grin.
Extracting herself from a jumble of fallen supplies, Krysty ducked
around the ammo belt feeding the machine gun and walked to the front of
the wag. "Have we lost the road?" she asked, resting a slim hand on
the back of the chair in an effort to stay upright.
"Ten miles ago," Ryan answered brusquely, concentrating on the task
of driving. A strange rustling noise came from the outside as the LAV
plowed through some bushes. "We're crossing a field at present, heading
straight for a blast crater. J.B., give me a rad count!"
Quickly, the man checked the predark device pinned to his collar.
"No rads," he reported. "Must have been a clean bomb."
"Clean?" Doc asked in surprise.
Reclaiming her seat, Mildred answered, "The isotopes used have a
short half-life. There would be no residual radiation remaining after
only a few years."
"Clean," Jak snorted. "Right."
Dean pressed his face to a defensive blaster port and saw only a
rippled expanse of glass stretching in every direction. "Must have been
a big nuke."
"No such thing as a small nuclear blast," Ryan stated.
Curiously, the boy studied the unearthly landscape surrounding the
APC and tried to imagine what the area was like before everything was
vaporized in a microsecond flash. Had there been a thriving city here,
or a military complex? Or was this a lost strike, a bomb that missed
its target and destroyed only woods and fields? There was no way to
ever know. Nothing remained but the solid slab of slightly bluish
glass, the soil fused crystalline from the extreme heat of the hellish
detonation. Distorted objects were almost visible within the
translucent material, broken buildings forever trapped in the middle of
toppling over, and some charred human figures who would spend eternity
desperately trying to swim to the surface of the solidified pool.
The boy turned away from the blaster port, lost in thought. None of
the other companions spoke, the sterile vista outside affecting even
these hardened warriors. Hours passed with a low hum filling the wag
from the tires under the vehicle as the APC raced across the wide
expanse of the cracked glass lake. Only the soft crackle of static from
the radio marred the near silence. The electronic device had been
salvaged from the ruins of another APC, and since it was tuned to the
command channel of the blue shirts—the invading force at Front
Royal—Ryan brought the radio along just in case. But with the heavy
blanket of decaying isotopes in the planetary atmosphere, even the most
powerful radio transmitters had a range of only a mile. Nearly useless,
but it took up little space.
Shifting gears, Ryan guided the APC up a sharp incline and off the
fused soil onto dead earth, not even weeds growing from the gray,
sterilized soil. Slowly, over the miles, streaks of dark earth reached
into the dead zone, and soon tufts of grass dotted the land. Trundling
through a shallow river, the LAV broached some gentle rolling hills,
and soon the black ribbon of an ancient road was visible in spots
through the dense covering of weeds.
"Get hard, people!" Ryan ordered, downshifting so their speed was
more manageable. "We're past the crater, so Shiloh must be close."
With trained ease, the companions prepared their weapons, sliding
off safeties and making sure spare ammo was available. Jak climbed into
the turret of the APC and checked the action of the 25 mm cannon, while
Doc took the gunner's spot and readied the 7.62 mm ultrafast chain gun.
"Gaia, I hate crossing nuke craters," Krysty muttered, unwrapping
some tape from the handle of a gren and placing the live
charge in the pocket of her shaggy coat.
"Bad vibrations from all the death?" Mildred asked, closing the
cylinder of her Czech ZKR Olympic target pistol. The physician knew
that Krysty could sometimes perceive things beyond the usual five
senses of other people. Her early warnings of unseen danger had saved
their lives more than once.
"Just the opposite," Krysty said. "I can't feel anything in those
cursed areas. Absolutely and completely nothing."
"Sort of like going blind," Mildred suggested.
Krysty nodded and gave a shiver. "Very much so, yes."
Glancing at a map taped to the wall, Ryan followed the ancient road
to a lush forest of trees. Turning eastward, he started a long sweep
around the obstruction until reaching a wide field. He braked to a
halt, but didn't turn off the engines, and for a few minutes, the
companions studied the area carefully with weapons in hand. A few
hundred yards ahead of them, the ground seemed to stop abruptly, and
beyond was the limitless vista of the open sea. The sound of distant
waves breaking on a rocky shore could be faintly heard over the rumble
of the engines.
"Clear," Jak said from the turret.
"Clear," Doc agreed.
Waiting another minute, Ryan finally turned off the engines and
silence filled the transport. Rising from the chair, the one-eyed
warrior took his Steyer longblaster from the wall and worked the bolt,
chambering a round for immediate use. "Jak, stay where you are and
cover us in case of trouble. When we move out, I'll be on point. Dean,
stay with Mildred, Krysty, then
Doc. J.B., take rearguard."
Leaning the rifle against a stack of crates, Ryan worked the slide
on his SIG-Sauer 9 mm pistol and holstered the deadly blaster. "Stay
sharp," he ordered, reclaiming his rifle. "This is just a recce, not a
stand-up fight like at the caves. Keep a two-yard spread, and no noise.
Overton's blue shirts could be close, and we want to take them by
surprise."
"Ready?" J.B. asked, jerking back the bolt of his Uzi. "Go," Ryan
said.
J.B. unlocked the aft double doors and kicked them open. The armored
slabs swung aside on squealing hinges, and a wealth of fresh air poured
into the vehicle. Hopping to the ground, J.B. gratefully stretched his
legs as he listened to the sounds of life. Crickets were chirping, and
a bird sang softly. Good—their presence meant there were no big
predators.
The rest of the companions watched from the blaster ports, the
barrels of their weapons sticking out of the APC like porcupine quills.
Satisfied there was no immediate danger, J.B. slung the Uzi over a
shoulder and pulled the minisextant from under his shirt. Centering the
mirror on the dim sun, he cut the horizon in two, adjusting the focus
with tiny movements until satisfied. "This is Shiloh, North Carolina,"
he stated, tucking the device away.
"Good." Ryan stepped to the ground and the men moved away to clear
the way for the rest of the companions. The last person exiting, Dean
closed the double doors and heard Jak bolt them from the inside.
Sweeping across the field in a standard search pattern, the
companions found nothing of interest, which annoyed and disappointed
them at the same time.
"Any signs of military traffic?" Ryan asked, feeling the tension of
expected battle flow from his body. "Campfires, spent shells in the
grass, a used latrine?"
"No signs of anything," J.B. answered, tugging his fedora down tight
as protection from the wind.
Going to the edge of the field, Mildred found herself looking down
at the ruins of a predark city partially covered with sand dunes.
The beaches were festooned with driftwood and seaweed, and the
ragged stumps of concrete pillions—the decaying remains of a once
mighty seaport—jutted from the waves like the broken teeth of a sunken
corpse. A telephone pole without wires rose from a sand dune, its
crossbars filled with bird nests. Off by itself, a rusty stop sign
waggled in the gusting wind.
Overhead, the purple sky was slashed with streaks of fiery orange,
black clouds racing by as if moved by private hurricanes. Sheet
lightning flashed, and distant thunder rumbled in natural majesty above
the rattling stop sign.
The other companions joined Krysty at the edge of the cliff, and
scowled at the ruins below.
"Son of a bitch. You sure this is the right place?" Ryan demanded
gruffly.
Behind the companions, the main engine of the predark wag ticked
softly as the metal slowly cooled. Then the top hatch of their armored
vehicle squealed open on stubborn hinges, and Jak rose into view. Even
with the armor and weapons of the Bradley APC surrounding him, Jak was
clearly uneasy amid this desolation.
The youth said nothing, but his expression was one of intense scorn.
"This isn't their base," Krysty stated, lowering her blaster. "This
isn't the home ville of anybody."
"Obviously, madam," Doc announced lugubriously, easing down the
hammer of his gigantic LeMat pistol. "Nobody resides at this location
but ghosts, and mayhap a few sand crabs. It is a simple village
returned to its primordial state, with nary a humble cottage remaining
to be balanced by a river's brim."
"Walt Whitman?" Mildred asked, squinting, thumbs hooked into her gun
belt.
"No. Me," the man said, smiling broadly. "Just me this time."
Removing his hat, J.B. grimaced as he smoothed the brim. "Crap," he
announced. "There's not a blaster or a war wag in sight, and the blues
were lousy with pre-dark military supplies. Seemed like Overton had
more weapons than Wizard Island and the Anthill combined!"
Dean scratched his head. "Mebbe this is the wrong Shiloh," the boy
suggested. "We knew it wasn't the one in Virginia because that town got
nuked in skydark."
"Could be the Civil War battleground we once visited in The
Smokies," Mildred offered. "There's even a redoubt nearby, the one with
all the tunnels. That could be where they're getting the weapons and
wags from."
"Makes sense," Ryan said, nosily sucking on a hollow tooth. "But
Tennessee is a mighty long way from Front Royal. If their home base is
there, why choose a ville in Virginia as their capital city?"
"A diversion," J.B. stated, as if it were obvious. "Or mebbe Overton
lied."
Mildred fiercely shook her head. "No way. He was in too much pain to
be inventive. The home base of the people who attacked Front Royal is
someplace named Shiloh. That we can count on as a fact."
The salty breeze from the Lantic felt good on his skin as Ryan
stepped closer to the cliff for a better view. He heard a stick snap
under his boots. Only the noise sounded more metallic than wooden.
"Everybody freeze," he ordered softly.
The companions went motionless, straining to detect any possible
dangers. The field was empty, and nothing could be heard but the waves
on the beach below.
"Now listen to me very carefully. Back away from the cliff and only
step in the exact same spots you did getting here," Ryan continued in a
deceptively calm voice. His heart was pounding in his chest, and
suddenly his palms were damp with sweat.
"What's wrong?" Dean asked, worried. His father looked so strange,
every muscle was straining, yet he was poised as if in the middle of
walking.
Not daring to even turn his head, Ryan spoke to the ocean. "I just
stepped on a land mine."
Chapter Two
Dropping the Uzi, J.B. lay flat on his belly and crawled closer to
the motionless man. Gently parting the autumn grass, he saw a low swell
in the soil under Ryan's boot.
"Dark night, you're right!" J.B. whispered. "Now stay calm, and
don't move. If it hasn't gone off yet, it's not a TD or fire-string."
"Explain that to me later." Ryan
felt the ground give slightly under his weight. "Hurry.
The cliff is giving way."
Sliding his knife from its sheath, J.B. started quickly trimming
away the grass and soon had a clear view of the mechanism. It was a fat
disk with handles and a low cylinder rising from the middle topped with
a simple pressure switch.
"Everybody get behind the LAV," J.B. ordered. "It's a Bouncing
Betty."
Watching where they stepped, the others retreated to a safe distance
and climbed back into the LAV.
"Hope the hull will stop a Betty," Krysty said, as she flipped up
the driver's hatch and stood on the seat to see outside.
Doc climbed into the turret and did the same with the auxiliary
hatch. Dean wiggled up there with him and squinted into the distance at
the men on the cliff.
"What's a Betty?" the boy asked nervously.
Bent over, watching through a blaster port, Mildred said, "The worst
type of land mine," she replied. "If any of the damn things can be
called good. This type will blow off your father's leg with the first
explosion, then a secondary charge will heave the mine a yard into the
air and a third charge will spray out a ring of steel bearings. Cut a
dozen men in two at fifty yards. It's designed not to kill, but to
maim."
"Gotta be Overton," the boy growled, his hand going white on the rim
of the hatch. "Who else has predark weapons like that?"
Krysty glanced at the turret. "Agreed. We walked straight into a
trap. This was the perfect location to recce the ruins of Shiloh, and
they knew it. Those blue shirts of his must have gambled we would go
check the place and planted some mines here just in case."
"Bastards!" Jak spit.
"Clever bastards," Mildred corrected, licking dry lips.
Minutes passed with only the steady ocean wind blowing over the
field, and J.B. cursing as he worked on the mine.
"Well?" Ryan asked, his heart pounding in his chest. The Deathlands
warrior had faced death a hundred times, but this was unclean somehow,
cowardly. They sometimes used booby traps, but they were always
designed to kill enemies, not mutilate. Was this revenge for what he
had done to Overton? No, that made no sense. It was impossible for them
to know who would step on the mine. Just the luck of the draw it was
him, nothing more.
"Don't rush me," J.B. whispered, probing the mechanism with homemade
tools—a coiled spring from a pen and a piece of stiff wire from a coat
hanger.
Sweat trickling down his face, Ryan thought of how he sometimes
teased J.B. about the oddball bits of junk the Armorer gathered in
their journeys. He would never do that again.
Wiping off his face with the back of a hand, J.B. grunted something
to himself and finally stood alongside the trapped man.
"Well, old buddy, I've got good news and bad news," J.B. said while
drawing his scattergun and working the pump action, ejecting live
shells until it was empty. "I can get you free, and the primary charge
won't go off."
Ryan knew what that meant. "But the other two will."
The man nodded as he slid in fresh shells, simple buckshot instead
of the usual flesh-shredding alloy flechettes. "So when you move,
hit the ground to get under the spray."
"And the scattergun is going to buy us some yardage." It wasn't a
question.
J.B. lay on his belly and aimed the S&W M-4000 at Ryan's
partially raised combat boot. "Best idea I got. You ready?"
An insane laugh bubbled up from inside and Ryan couldn't stop
himself from chuckling. "I have a choice?"
"Nope."
"Then I'm ready. Now." Moving like lightning, Ryan dived to the left.
He was still airborne when the ground burst apart with a soft thump
and the deadly mine leaped skyward. Instantly, J.B. triggered the
scattergun, the blast slamming the land mine far over the edge of the
cliff. Half a heartbeat later, the device violently detonated, and a
hissing sound filled the air from the passage of the bearings. The half
ring of trees along the clearing shook madly, leaves and branches
tumbling to the ground in a cascade of destruction, along with the
occasional bird and squirrel. Bloody
feathers and bits fur were all that remained of the minced bodies.
The reverberations of the blast echoed for a few moments, then
silence returned—dead silence without a bird singing or a cricket
chirping.
"Thanks," Ryan said as he rose from the ground.
"Easy as pie," J.B. said, standing and dusting off his clothes. The
Armorer kicked a clump of earth with his boot and watched it disappear
over the edge of the cliff. "However, if that had been a PMR-2, or a
Valamora…" He left the thought unfinished.
Ryan grunted in acknowledgment. "Let's go."
With extreme care, the two men retraced their steps to the APC,
watching the ground closely, placing the toe of each boot into the heel
mark of the footprint they made walking to the cliff. As they neared
the wag, Krysty stuck her head out of the top hatch and whistled
sharply. The men jerked their heads upward, and watched as she raised
an open hand with the fingers splayed, then closed it into a fist. She
then tapped her wrist twice with one finger.
"Company coming," J.B. whispered, working the bolt on his Uzi as
quietly as he could.
Ryan nodded, leveling his longblaster. "And fast. We better chance
running the last yards. Go!"
Sprinting forward, the men raced around the LAV. In the open
doorway, Mildred and Doc waited with weapons poised and stepped out of
the way as the two men scrambled inside just as they all heard the soft
noise of a gasoline engine from the trees.
"There were voices on the radio," Krysty announced from the driver's
seat as Ryan closed the aft doors and J.B. slammed home the locking
bolt. "Somebody must have heard the land mine go off and sent out sec
men on a recce."
"Kill the engines and play dead," Ryan directed, sliding the barrel
of his Steyr out a blaster port. "Let's see who it is before we do
anything. Jak, man the cannon. Dean, the chain gun."
Everybody moved quickly, and the rumblings of the diesel engines
died away just as a Hummer packed with armed men rolled into view
through the bushes. All of them were wearing blue shirts and carrying
AK-47 assault rifles. At the sight of the APC sitting in the field, the
driver slammed on the brakes, nearly losing several of the sec men.
"Hey, Sarge, is that one of our wags?" a blue shirt asked, puzzled.
"Shit, no! It's a bunch of ours put back together!" answered the
driver in horror.
"Ryan," a burly sec man cursed. Ammo belts for a machine gun were
draped across his chest like bandoliers, and he was cradling a massive
M-60 machine rifle. "It must be that bastard Ryan."
"Cawdor? Black dust, let's get the fuck out of here before he
returns!"
"Yeah, sure," the driver said, lifting a rocket launcher into view
from the empty front seat. "Let's blow it to hell first."
As the sec man leveled the rocket launcher, a sharp crack came from
the APC and he toppled over with most of his head gone, blood
everywhere. The LAW hit the dirt and rolled away into the weeds.
The big sergeant pushed the dead man from the Hummer and, loudly
grinding gears, he slammed the Hummer into reverse. The blue shirts
behind him wildly fired their assault rifles, the 7.62 mm rounds
ricocheting harmlessly off the hull of the APC.
"Alive?" Jak asked, jerking back the arming bolt on the belt-fed
cannon.
"Fuck them," Ryan snarled, firing his longblaster out the aft
blaster port again.
Jak ripped loose with a string of shells just as the Hummer charged
backward out of the clearing, the barrage of rounds tearing apart the
spot where it had just been.
"Can't let them get away!" J.B. growled, burping the Uzi. "We could
have an army after us next time!"
"Hold on!" Krysty cried, and the LAV rolled after the fleeing Hummer
in full reverse.
Once past the bushes, the woman jammed on the brakes and jerked the
steering levers hard. The heavy APC wheeled around in a sharp turn and
paused. There was some dust hanging in the air from the passage of the
Hummer, but no sign of the vehicle itself.
"Where are they?" Krysty asked, squinting through the tiny ob port
in the armored hull. The overgrown roadway stretched to the south and
north, directly ahead of the copse of trees.
Ryan and the others pressed their faces to the ob ports and blaster
ports. The billowing dust obscured the fields and trees in every
direction.
"Three o'clock!" Mildred shouted. "They just went around that bend
in the road."
Krysty pressed the gas pedal to the floor. The big Detroit engines
purred for a moment, building power, then awoke with a roar. Their
eight wheels spun crazily in the loose dirt, then the five-ton wag
leaped after the enemy. Grabbing stanchions, Ryan climbed forward to a
position near Krysty. He braced one hand against the low ceiling,
while the other gripped the back of her chair for support. He swayed
with every bounce, but remained standing. Ryan watched the speedometer
steadily climb to fifty-five, then inch toward sixty mph, nearly the
top speed for the predark wag. He also saw the fuel gauge drop just as
fast. They were burning fuel at an unprecedented rate. There had been
no chance to fill the tanks before the chase, and soon the LAV would
run out of juice, becoming a perfect target for the rockets of the blue
shirts.
For the hundredth time, the man wondered where the blues were
getting their predark weapons.
In triumph, J.B. cried out, "There they are again!"
The Hummer barreled along at its top speed, often going airborne for
a moment as it hit fallen logs and other hidden objects. With twice the
number of tires, the massive LAV plowed over such minor obstructions
with only minor jarring. On the flat surfaces, the Hummer started to
pull away, but when the road got rough again, the LAV caught up quickly.
Jak fired single rounds from the 25 mm cannon at the zigzagging
Hummer. He was tempted to go full-auto, but the linked belt of shells
was already half consumed and there was no spare. He wasn't going to
waste the precious ammo on a fast-moving target unless absolutely
necessary.
Crouched in the small space for the gunner, Dean drilled a spray of
rounds toward the fleeing blues, sparks off the Hummer registering
several hits. The enemy fired back with AK-47 machine guns, a hail of
rounds peppering the armored hull of the APC with no effect. Then the
big M-60 spoke, chugging out a slow stream of 7.62 mm rounds. Random
dents appeared in sections of the weakened hull, and the Plexiglas
shield in a ob port shattered into pieces.
"Those are armor-piercing rounds!" Ryan cursed, glancing about the
interior of the wag to access the damage. There were no new spots of
sunlight to indicate a penetration. "Anybody hurt?"
Hugging her med kit, Mildred looked over the crew. "No blood
showing," she reported in relief.
"Not yet, anyway," J.B. growled, slapping a fresh clip into his Uzi.
"But we better chill these bastards quick!"
Hesitating to use the deafening LeMat inside the wag, Doc grabbed a
spare AK-47 and started shooting through the starboard blaster port,
spent brass spitting from the ejector in short golden bursts. But after
only a dozen rounds, the weapon stopped with the bolt thrown back,
showing the clip was empty.
Raking the Hummer with sporadic bursts, Dean concentrated the
whining chain gun on the sec man with the M-60. Sparks flew off the
armored body of the military transport, but nothing more. The 7.62 mm
rounds were unable to achieve penetration.
"Aim for the tires!" Mildred suggested, placing her shots with care.
Clutching his chest, the big man in the Hummer cried out and dropped
the M-60 over the side.
"Already did," the boy replied hotly. "Must be puncture proof like
our own."
Rummaging in the pile of supplies, Doc was unable to locate any more
ammo clips for the Kalashnikov, so he dropped the useless blaster and
drew the LeMat, waiting for a suitable target to present itself.
Just then, the Hummer deliberately slowed, and a lone man jumped
out, carrying a short plastic tube. As the APC bore down on the man, he
extended the tube to a full yard in
length and pointed it toward them.
"That's a LAW!" Krysty shouted in warning, starting to fishtail the
wag to make them harder to hit.
"Hold us steady!" Ryan spit, thrusting his longblaster out the
smashed ob port and firing a fast five times at the stationary target.
The sec man staggered from the multiple impacts and toppled over.
Promptly, there was a bright flash on the ground and something streaked
across the road to disappear in the distance.
As the APC thumped over the body, Ryan quickly reloaded his rifle.
That rocket would have blown the APC apart, but the blues couldn't use
the antitank while still riding in the Hummer because of the
back-blast. Launching a LAW rocket spewed a fifteen-foot-long cone of
flame out the back end. The back-blast would have fried every one of
them alive. Leaving the wag had been a gutsy move that nearly
succeeded. Their adversaries had guts, and that alone made them truly
dangerous.
In a deafening explosion, Doc fired the LeMat. The buffeting
concussion slapped the companions, but the spare gas can strapped to
the side of the Hummer erupted into a fireball. Screaming in pain, the
blues beat at their burning clothing with jackets, and Krysty plowed
straight into the pool of fire, coming out the other side in a
heartbeat. The blues weakly began shooting again. They were toasted,
but still alive, and the Hummer wasn't seriously damaged.
One of the blues threw a lump at the APC, and the war wag shook as
something exploded under the prow.
"Chem gren," J.B. stated, tilting his head. "We better hope they
don't have any thermite. That would melt our hull like
candle wax!"
"Payback," Jak growled, switching the selector switch on the cannon
to its top position. A stuttering stream of shells chugged from the
muzzle, the barrage of 25 mm rounds tearing up the surface of the road
as he tracked the fleeing vehicle.
Stoically, the sec men maintained fire with the Kalashnikovs as
their blackened wag darted off the road and into a field of wild corn.
The tall stalks swallowed the vehicle whole.
Inside the wag, the floor was coated with hot brass shells that
poured from the turret. Her hair a wild corona, Krysty shifted levers,
and the LAV executed a sharp turn, two of the wheels leaving the ground
as it angled after the fleeing blues into the abandoned farmland.
Straight ahead was a solid wall of sundried corn stalks. There was no
sign of the Hummer or its crew. Behind them, the fire on the road was
starting to spread to the dry plants.
"Where are they?" Krysty demanded as the APC plowed through the wild
corn, crushing the brittle stalks beneath its tires. It sounded like a
million winter leaves rustling in a strong wind.
Ryan dropped the spent clip from his SIG-Sauer and slammed in a
fresh one. "Circle to the right. We must have passed them."
"Look for the smashed stalks of their trail!" Mildred added.
J.B. started for the rear of the wag. "Everybody keep a watch for
any loops! They might try to swing around and get behind us!"
Unexpectedly, the shortwave radio lashed on top of their bedrolls
began to crackle with a transmission, the words barely discernible
above the background noise. There were just a few hastily barked
commands, then hissing silence again.
Stepping close, Doc turned up the volume to the maximum. The normal
static boomed in the confines of the wag, and after a few moments he
lowered the volume to its normal level.
"They're trying to call somebody for help," he announced. "Most
disconcerting."
"Can we tell which way? Triangulate on the signal?" Mildred asked
hopefully.
Still watching their wake, J.B. shook his head. "Not without special
equipment. Dish antenna and such."
"Damn."
"They had to be close," Ryan said thoughtfully, shifting his stance
against the shaking of the floor. "Krysty, go left!"
The woman obeyed and the signal faded.
"Go back!"
She sent the APC as ordered and cried out in delight as they found
the path of flattened plants. Hitting the gas pedal, Krysty steered the
massive transport straight along the slim trail, the unbroken stalks on
either side spraying into the air from the passage of their much wider
vehicle.
As they followed a serpentine curve through the corn, the Hummer
came into view once more. Struggling with the hot breech of the chain
gun, Dean fed in a new ammo belt. At his father's command, he raked the
Hummer. A blue shirt loading his blaster cried out and dropped the
weapon, almost falling from the Hummer. The others hauled the corpse
back inside, and used the dead man as a shield, firing from behind his
bloody form. Then a bulky satchel came flying over the Hummer from the
front seat and landed squarely before the LAV.
"Shit!" Krysty shouted, and yanked on the steering levers, sending
the LAV into the unbroken stalks to their left.
The world seemed to shatter from the titanic force of the
detonation, blinding light flooding in through every port, and the war
wag shook as it was slapped by the gigantic concussion. Ropes holding
the supplies snapped and the piles of boxes toppled over, burying J.B.
and knocking Jak out of the turret. He hit the floor sprawling and went
limp.
The crackling radio clearly gave a report to somebody about a
satchel charge of C-4 being used, results unknown.
"I'll give you unknown," Krysty growled, shifting into high gear and
making the massive machine go faster.
The dry cornstalks shattered as the APC streaked across the field,
the big engines screaming. The muscles stood out on Krysty's arms as
she worked the levers, forcing the multiton wag into a tight arc,
swinging back the way they had just come. A few seconds passed, and she
spied a dark blotch moving amid the cornstalks directly ahead of them.
"Go for it," Ryan commanded, and braced for the impact.
Grimly, Krysty held the course. At the last moment, the driver saw
them suddenly looming close and screamed in horror. Then the Hummer
disappeared from sight below the prow of the LAV. The companions lost
their footing as the nose of the war wag went high, aiming toward the
sky. Underneath the floor was a terrible crunching noise, mixed with
high-pitched shrieking. The APC tilted at an angle, almost flipping
over, then leveled out and was back in the corn again, riding on even
ground.
Braking to a halt, Krysty returned to the crash site and stopped a
short distance from the flattened wreck. Stepping from the rear of the
APC, the companions approached the destroyed Hummer, warily walking
over the crushed cornstalks to avoid the pieces of broken machinery and
twitching meat.
Gore-splattered limbs jutted from the smashed chassis, red blood and
gasoline dripping from a dozen spots. An eye lay on the ground near the
splintery stock of a Kalashnikov. Shards of glass from the windshield
were sprinkled across the cornstalks like diamond
dust. Circling around the site, Ryan found a sec man dangling out of
the
crumpled metal, still struggling to get free in spite of the fact his
body was shredded below the waist. "Help me…" he panted, blood welling
from his mouth at the words and dribbling down his chin.
"I'll end the pain," Ryan said, going closer, a hand on his blaster.
"Just tell me where your home base is. Who is your leader?" There were
more questions he wanted to ask. A lot more. But those were the most
important—where and who. "H-help me…"
"Where is your home base!" the warrior demanded. Drooling blood, the
man blindly reached out a trembling hand with only two remaining
fingers.
"He can't hear you," J.B. said, resting his Uzi on a shoulder.
Ryan turned. "Mildred?" The physician shook her head. "Fair enough."
Drawing his blaster, Ryan put a 9 mm round into the dying soldier. The
man jerked at the impact and went still.
"Let's go," Ryan said, holstering the piece. "There's nothing here
to salvage."
Doc sniffed the air. "And we had best hurry, my dear Ryan. I think
the cornfield is on fire."
"Yeah," Dean said from the turret, squinting into the distance. "And
it's coming this way fast."
Chapter Three
Moving quickly past the remnants of the Hummer, the companions
climbed into the APC and took seats. Settling in, Doc began the lengthy
process of reloading his LeMat, while Mildred checked on the
unconscious Jak. The teen was lying on a bedroll, a wet compress on his
bruised forehead. He had received a small concussion from a falling
ammo box, but otherwise seemed undamaged.
"Let's go," Ryan said, slamming home the bolt. "This corn is burning
fast as a fuse."
Starting the engines took a few tries, but Krysty finally got the
diesels to turn over. A slight shudder was detectable in the floor as
she struggled to slide the stick shift into neutral.
As the wag rumbled forward, a nasty grinding noise came from the
engine. It became steadily louder.
"Fireblast, we do have damage!" Ryan cursed. "Must have been that
damn satchel charge. No chance to fix it now. Keep going!"
Fluttering his eyelids, Jak tried to speak and began to cough.
Dampening a cloth with water from a canteen, Mildred turned to the
youth and saw gray tendrils of smoke rising from the nearby vents.
Dropping the canteen, she tried to slide the vent covers closed, but
they were firmly jammed in place. Muttering curses her minister father
wouldn't have approved, the physician grabbed some more rags from the
pile and started stuffing the openings closed. Dean rushed to assist
and, working at opposite ends of the craft, they got the larger holes
sealed. That helped, but not much. Wisps still seeped into the vehicle
around the doors and hatches.
"Get moving!" Mildred barked, splashing more water on the rags to
keep them wet. "We have to get out of this or risk suffocation!"
"I'm worried about that," Ryan answered, placing a palm on the hull.
The metal was still cool to the touch. "It's the external fuel cans.
Those flames get too close and we ignite like a bomb."
"Drop them," J.B. stated, snatching another duffel bag from the
loose items on the floor. Yanking open the top, he began tossing in
food packs and spare ammo in case they were forced to abandon the LAV
to run for their lives. He might be mistaken, but the engines sounded
bad, and seemed to be getting worse by the second.
Ryan forced his attention away from the struggling engines. "Can't
lose the fuel. We're going to need every drop to reach the next Shiloh.
We're low as it is. Worst comes, we can always cut the cans loose."
"Might have to!" Krysty shouted. As she peered out the broken ob
port, smoke stung her eyes and made them water. "The fire is keeping us
from the road, and I can't see a thing through this bastard corn. Gone
wild, this stuff could stretch for miles. Which direction do we go,
north or south?"
Restraining a cough, Ryan gestured. "Doc, you're the tallest. Get
into that turret and guide us!"
"With the greatest pleasure." As the old man holstered his blaster
and clambered into the turret, J.B. passed up his Navy telescope.
Forcing back the top hatch, Doc tied a handkerchief to his mouth as
protection from the thickening smoke, then extended the antique
instrument to its full length.
"Forest to the right, ocean to the left," he loudly announced,
studying the golden field. "The corn goes for another mile and then
seems to abruptly stop. There might be a dip in the ground!"
"Or another cliff," Krysty added, working the clutch and throttle
trying to smooth out the engine vibrations.
Bending at the knees, Doc stooped back inside and dogged the hatch
shut. "Indeed, madam." He coughed to clear his throat. "Our choices are
exceedingly poor."
"The fire is closer," Dean said from the aft doors, a note of
tension in his voice. "I can see flames over the top of the cornstalks."
In spurts, the LAV straggled to roll through the ancient farmland,
the dry plants bending slowly out of their way, then rising intact
again as the APC crept along.
Studying the motion of the billowing smoke, Ryan made his decision.
"The wind is from the sea, going toward the cliff. Head for the trees."
Her prehensile hair coiled protectively against her scalp, Krysty
stomped on the gas pedal. "Do my best," she muttered, mentally sending
a prayer to Gaia to aid them once more this day.
Behind them, thick plumes of black smoke masked the horizon, wild
tongues of orange flame rising to fill the sky with hellish
illumination as the rapidly growing inferno raged completely out of
control.
ON THE OTHER SIDE of a distant mountain range, a small child
stumbled through a lush field of green grass. It had been early morning
since her mother left to gather wood for their campfire, and now it was
late afternoon. Susie was trying not to cry, but she was hungry and
dared not eat the dead squirrel before the greenish meat was cooked.
That was how her daddy had died so many months ago. She missed him so
much, and often awoke crying from bad dreams, seeing him thrash about
foaming at the mouth until her mommy cut his throat. Susie never wanted
to eat meat after that, but it was the only food they had. She had
tried grass, but it tasted nasty and too much made her bad sick.
"Mommy?" she called out softly, hugging a bundle of rags. Her dolly
had once had a head, but it was long ago. "Mommy, where are you?"
Only the whispery winds in the trees answered.
Following a bear path through the woods, the tearful child watched
the prickly bushes for signs of muties that might attack, clutching her
doll for protection. She was supposed to run away from strangers and
animals, but if something was hurting her mommy, Susie would kill it
dead with the sharp knife hidden inside her dolly. Oh, yes, she would.
Daddy had showed her how.
A strange sound caught her attention, and she headed in that
direction. Pushing her way through some vines, the girl cried out in
delight at finding a bush still heavy with summer berries. Odd that the
bear hadn't eaten them, but this would mean more meat for her mommy to
eat! That should make her so happy. Greedily, Susie stuffed her face
with the mushy blueberries, rivulets of purple juice flowing down her
chin, until she thought her belly might burst. It felt so good not be
hungry again, if only for a little while.
Taking one last handful, the child curiously walked through the
trees munching steadily. The weird noise came again, louder this time,
and there were faint voices—men talking and shouting.
Susie started to run and shout for her mother, but stopped. People
were dangerous, even the right ones without extra arms and such.
Sometimes they tried to eat you, or worse, her mother had warned. Susie
carefully obeyed the warning, even though she wasn't sure what could be
worse than getting eaten by a nasty mutie.
More voices came through the forest, and the crack of a whip. That
sound she knew from when they stayed at a ville and the sec men beat a
man to death for stealing a blaster from the baron. It was a very bad
thing to do because blasters were only for sec men, or barons. Her
mommy wouldn't let her watch the beating, but Susie heard the whips,
and it seemed to take forever for the poor thief to die. Her daddy said
it was a good thing he got chilled. Thieves were worse than muties
because muties didn't know any better.
Wiping her hands clean on her ragged dress, Susie followed the faint
voices through the foliage until coming to the top of a steep hill.
Filling the valley below was a wonderful ville, unlike anything she had
ever seen before. There were houses made of brick, and many, many
people, some in chains and others herding them forward with whips. More
thieves? A squat building near a river had six big chimneys with black
smoke pouring into the purple sky. Thick rope stretched from the
building to a machine, then spread out across the ville like a
spiderweb. A tremendous bowl sat in the middle of the ville, the huge
white machine towering over the tall chimneys and casting the land
underneath into dark shadows.
More people were digging into the side of a rocky hill, chained
thieves dragging stone blocks over to a wall they were building around
the whole area. A wall of stone. Susie was in awe. She had never seen
such a thing before. It was wonderful! Certainly no mutie or mean old
coldheart could get through that. Well, except for sting-wings, and
they were little.
"Hold it right there, kid!" an adult voice growled.
Still holding her doll, Susie turned and looked up at the two big
men standing in the weeds. They were wearing clean blue shirts and
carrying longblasters. The tall man had a bushy beard, and the other
was short and fat.
"Hello, sec men," she said, giving a curtsy. Her mommy said to
always be polite to sec men, or they would tell the baron on you. "I'm
looking for my mommy. Have you seen her?"
"Oh, crap. This must be that bitch's kid," the tall man growled
irritably. "I was hoping she would run away and get lost or something."
"Well, she didn't," his companion snapped, doing something to his
weapon. "And you know what that means."
Frightened, Susie stayed still as the adults argued. When the sec
men were done, mebbe they could help her. She thought about offering
them some berries, but only had a few and wanted to save them for her
mommy.
The tall man scratched at his beard. "Come on, Sarge. She's too
small to work in the mines."
"And we can't let her go. No exceptions, or it's our necks. That's
what the boss said." The short man aimed his longblaster at her. She
hugged her doll tight, feeling very scared for some reason. Susie
wanted to run, but knew they could catch her easy.
"Aw, she's just a kid!" He sounded very angry for some reason.
"Not any more."
The blaster fired once, the sharp report seeming to echo through the
forest and into the valley where the giant machine stood poised and
nearly ready to be activated.
WIPING AT THE DIRTY windshield with his hand, Stephen stared at the
blockhouse ahead of the caravan and frowned in displeasure. In a squeal
of metal on metal, he ground the rickety old van to a halt. In slow
procession, the two trucks behind the rusty wag also stopped, the
drivers fumbling with the unfamiliar brakes and gearshifts.
Chewing a lip, Stephen rested his arms on top of the steering wheel.
Straight ahead was a fork in the road, the left branch going to some
nameless pesthole ville, the right heading directly toward Front Royal.
Strategically positioned between the branches was a stout blockhouse
made of whole logs cemented together into a formidable structure.
Blaster slots were notched into the thick walls, the only door fronted
by a half circle of sandbags a full yard high. A dozen sec men armed
with blasters stood behind the sandbags watching him sitting in the
lead wag, but that wasn't what made Stephen so apprehensive. It was
their clothes. They were wearing the wrong clothes.
Setting the parking brake with a yank, Stephen stared at the leader
of the sec men as he came closer. The rest of the troopers stayed where
they were, their longblasters held casually, but with their fingers on
the triggers. They weren't expecting any trouble, just ready for it.
From previous trips, Stephen knew there were more sec men hidden in the
trees to give additional support should the need arise. This fork was a
major approach to the ville and was always well-defended.
It was the shirts that bothered him. The material was brown, not the
blue of Overton's private army. What had happened in Front Royal during
his absence?
As the sergeant stopped well away from the van, Stephen rolled down
the window and managed to smile, politely keeping both of his hands in
plain sight. He had a revolver at his hip, and a shotgun was clipped to
the ceiling. But the slightest move toward either of those weapons
would probably be the last thing he ever did.
"Hey," the sec man said in greeting.
Stephen nodded. "Good morning, sir. How much?"
Hooking thumbs into his gun belt, the sergeant snorted a laugh.
"That's all done with. No more tolls on this road by order of Baron
Cawdor."
Something was wrong here; Stephen knew it and took a chance.
"Cawdor?" he asked, trying to sound puzzled. "I thought the baron here
was named Overton."
A sneer replaced the smile. "He's dead. Got chilled by his own
troops. Nathan Cawdor is the rightful baron here."
Dead? So the invasion failed. Sweat broke out over Stephen's body as
he smiled to the news. "Great! I heard Overton was a real son of a
bitch."
"Pretty bad," the sec man agreed, looking at the line of trucks.
"All three of these wags belong to you?"
"Yeah, we caravan through the hills together. Safer that way, you
know, muties and coldhearts."
The smile returned, but not with much warmth. "I hear you. Much
trouble in the passes?"
"No. A few stickies, nothing more. We travel at night when it's too
cold for anybody to try jacking us."
"Pretty smart." The smile stayed, but the eyes became hard. "What's
the cargo?"
Stephen started to say wire, but stopped himself. For some reason
Overton had wanted insulated cable from predark buildings and lots of
it Who knew why? Mebbe he wanted to electrify all of Front Royal. Yeah,
right. Few villes were able to sustain a constant supply of
electricity. Most folks considered it a myth. And there was no chance
that Nathan would want the cable for the same purpose as Overton. But
what else could copper wiring be used for? An answer was needed
immediately, and Stephen surprised himself by dredging up a vague
memory of a phrase he heard somewhere.
"Refined metal," he lied smoothly. "For making jacketed bullets."
The sec man looked properly impressed. "Plus, a few passengers."
"Muties?"
"Norms, I assure you."
Narrowing his eyes, the sergeant seemed skeptical. "How many?"
"Ten."
"Any skilled workers, carpenters, masons?"
"Hell, I have no idea," Stephen answered honestly. "You'd have to
ask them."
"Mebbe I will. Any jolt or weed?"
"I don't traffic in drugs," Stephen snapped, then hastily added,
"sir."
The sec man chuckled. "Saved yourself a hanging here, friend. You
must have been here before."
The words were so matter-of-fact, Stephen almost admitted the truth.
Only a lifelong habit of lying stopped him. So the sec men were looking
for folks who dealt with Overton, eh? That news could be worth
something to a smart man.
"Nope," he replied amiably. "The last owner sold me his wags for
some predark medicine I found in a ruin. He had the bleeding cough and
was dying."
A minute passed, with the sergeant studying the expression on
Stephen's face.
"It was a fair trade," Stephen added hastily, as if cutting off an
expected argument. "He lived."
The sec man made no reply.
Stephen knew this was another test to rattle his nerves, so he tried
to appear frightened, which was easy, and slightly confused. Innocent
folks always seemed to be confused.
"Nothing else?" the man asked. The guards at the blockhouse were
watching the exchange, their blasters pointing toward the caravan. From
a truck behind him, Stephen heard one of the other drivers nervously
cough, the noise unnaturally loud in the tense silence.
"Okay, okay, I'm also hauling shine," Stephen admitted, ever so
slowly lifting a clay jug into view. There was a cross of tape on the
side patching a small crack. "Good stuff, mighty smooth."
"Nothing wrong with hauling shine," the sergeant said tersely, a
hand going to the checkered grip of the blaster on his hip. "If it's
clean. An outlander sold some to us once that killed two of my men and
made another go blind. Took us a week to find him again, then it took
him a week to die."
Wordlessly, Stephen uncorked the jug and took a long pull. The
home-brew whiskey burned his gullet like flaming battery acid, but he
managed not to gag.
"Have a sip," he said hoarsely, offering the jug. "Good for what
ails you."
Grinning, the sergeant started to reach for the container, then
glanced at the blockhouse. "Thanks anyway, but it's not allowed," he
said sternly, lowering his hand. "The baron forbids drinking on duty."
"A wise policy," Stephen agreed, placing aside the jug. "Smart man."
"That he is." The sergeant turned toward the cabin and tugged on an
earlobe, then dusted off his shoulder. The guards relaxed and slung
their blasters. A few started smoking hand-rolled cigs.
"Okay, here are the rules," the sergeant said, speaking in an odd
singsong way as if quoting from memory. "There ain't no jolt or slaves
in Front Royal. Anybody says different is lying. Stealing gets you
whipped, rape gets you hanged. Stay on the road. There are land mines
in the fields. Watch out for cougars, we've had some killings at the
farms. You spot anybody wearing a blue shirt, avoid them like a mutie
with the plague. Report finding a blue, and you get a reward.
Understand?"
"Sure. A blue shirt?"
"That's what I said." The soldier waved the van onward. "Welcome to
Front Royal."
Starting the engine, Stephen touched two fingers to his forehead,
and the sergeant actually snapped a formal salute in return. Once the
road took the blockhouse out of sight, Stephen braked to a halt and
climbed from the van. As he stiffly walked over to the first truck, the
driver stuck his head out the window. The glass was long gone, replaced
by a sheet of tar paper to help cut the wind.
"What now, fatty?" the muscular man snarled. Dressed in badly cured
animal skins, he reeked of rotting flesh enough to mask the sour stink
of his unwashed body. In the front seat alongside him was a skinny
woman snoring loudly, a chicken bone from dinner sticking out of her
slack mouth.
"Taking a leak," Stephen said, strolling into the forest. "Be right
back."
The moment he was hidden by the bushes, Stephen bent over and
violently retched, the shine burning much worse coming out than it had
going in. When he was finished, Stephen wiped off his mouth with some
leaves and weakly stumbled to the van. Starting the engine with
fumbling hands, he continued driving toward the ville.
Okay, Overton was dead; now he would work for Nathan Cawdor. Fine.
Barons were all the same, murdering coldhearts who lived on blood. Only
their names changed. And if Nathan was a good man, well, then, he could
always travel north to BullRun ville and work for the mad bitch in
charge up there. She kept a mutie assassin to chill her enemies. That
was more reasonable. But either way, he would stay in business, finding
things for the monsters who ruled the world. Life would go on without
interruption.
Stephen was a survivor.
THE SOUND OF HAMMERING filled the streets and houses of Front Royal,
along with the steady sawing of wood.
Watching the work across the ville, Baron Nathan Cawdor stood on the
third floor of the destroyed keep, the shattered brick walls rising
only to his knees. At the base of the keep, workers picked through the
rubble, salvaging individual bricks and cleaning them off to add to the
growing pile.
A few blocks away, scaffolding rose around the ville castle like
loving hands, holding the weakened walls in place until the sloping
supports could be trusted to hold the awesome weight of the new granite
blocks.
Day and night, the construction continued, repairing the tremendous
damage done by the invaders. The bodies were gone from the streets,
the damaged cobblestones in the main courtyard replaced with fresh
ones. The new horse stable was only a wooden skeleton, the horses
temporarily housed in the great hall of Castle Cawdor.
Nathan shivered slightly from a cold wind. His clothes were patched
but spotlessly clean, the boots shiny with polish. Oiled blasters rode
at each hip, and a monstrously huge .44-caliber Desert Eagle pistol
rested in a position of honor in a shoulder holster. The weapon had
been pried from the cold gray hand of Overton as he lay sprawled in the
mud.
"Afternoon, my husband," a lovely woman said, advancing with a cape
folded over an arm. Her long hair was tied back off her plain face, and
a knit scarf was wound about her throat, accenting her pale skin. She
wore a long coat over a loose gown of royal brown, and heavy pants
peeked out from below the pleated skirt. An Ingram M-10 submachine gun
had been slung over her shoulder for easy access.
Lady Tabitha Cawdor walked toward her husband and offered him the
garment. "It's too cold for you to be standing here without a coat."
"Do our sec men have coats?" Nathan replied wearily, watching the
armed guards walk the palisades of the walled ville. Many had tied
blankets around their bodies with lengths of rope as protection from
the
wind. Others wore less and shivered. "Do the workers below, do the old?"
Gently, Tabitha brushed a hand against the baron's scarred cheek.
Her fingernails were stubby and cracked, her hand covered with scabs,
the wounds still healing from her many days of torture. "No, my love,
they do not."
"Then while I stay here in public sight, neither do I," Nathan
answered. "If I can't make them warm, I can at least share the weather
and make them feel less miserable."
She glanced at the sky and drew her coat closed tighter. "Any sign
of snow?"
"Thankfully, no. Every day gets us closer to repairing the wall and
drawbridge. Once we're behind stone again, I can turn our attention to
fixing the homes and other buildings. How's the laundry coming?"
Tabitha almost smiled. Laundry, such a nice way of referring to
stripping the dead of their torn clothing. "The sewing is nearly done
on the shirts," she reported. "Next we dye the blue cloth brown, or
rather purple, as quickly as we can. In a few days, everybody will have
an extra shirt to wear. Then we start on the boots and pants. Come the
full moon, even the old will be warm."
"Good. And the food supply?"
"Adequate. With the hunters bringing in more meat daily, we should
survive until spring." She offered the coat again. "Please?"
"I can't."
Tabitha gestured at herself. "Yet I can?"
"You just gave birth," he said tolerantly. "They understand."
Pushing a wheelbarrow full of bricks, a man wearing rags for boots
paused to catch his breath in the street below and waved at the couple
standing high above the ville. Nathan stood taller and nodded in reply.
Flexing his hands to restore circulation, the worker returned to his
task and pushed the bricks toward the construction crew at the barbican
of the front gate.
"Is the baby healthy?" Nathan asked in sudden concern, taking his
wife by the arm. "Is that why you're really here?"
"Alexander is fine. Sleeping with his wet nurse, and a dozen sec
men," Tabitha added pointedly, patting his cold hand. She was too thin
and sickly to breast-feed the infant. However, many woman in the ville
had lost newborns in the terrible war, and it had been no problem to
find one willing to suckle the next baron.
"The guards are necessary. Overton tried using you to seize the
ville," Nathan growled, the tendons in his neck tightening from barely
controlled rage. "Our son would make an even better key."
"Your uncle's bastard son is dead," she reminded him, shivering in
spite of the warmth of her coat.
"Besides," a new voice stated, "I'm here now."
The Cawdors turned at the pronouncement and watched as Clemont
Brigitine Turpin stepped into view from the exposed stone stairwell.
The grizzled soldier was dressed in heavy leather clothing, with an
Enfield longblaster slung across his wide back. Two bandoliers of ammo
crisscrossed his chest, the handle of a knife jutted from his boot and
a hatchet was slung at his side where a handblaster should have been.
"My dear Lieutenant Turpin," Tabitha said, smiling.
His broad features dusky with a growing beard, the big man scowled.
"Clem," he replied in a friendly manner. "Just Clem, my lady. I ain't
no royalty. Just a grunt."
"Chief of my sec men," Nathan corrected sternly, noting the other
man's serious expression. Few things bothered Clem, and most of those
got aced immediately. The big backwoodsman wasn't a believer in either
forgiveness or patience.
Just then a squad of sec men climbed out of the hole in the floor
where the stairs ended and moved quickly across the bare expanse of
concrete. Longblasters at the ready, the guards circled the Cawdors,
keeping close together. Every man carried an AK-47 salvaged from the
war, a bulging pouch of precious ammo clips slung over his side.
"What's the matter?" Nathan demanded. "Have more blues been found in
the woods?"
"Hell, no," Clem drawled, his thick accent slurring the words.
"Patrol finds them, they chill them. Don't need to bring that detail to
you. But there's a new problem, yeah. Our spy from Bull Run ville says
their baron believes you plan on invading them with the new troops that
arrived last month."
Softly, the mountain wind ruffled their clothing, finding bare skin
through every tiny lace hole and opening.
"But Overton's troops are dead."
"She don't know that."
"And she wouldn't believe us if we told her." Nathan glanced at the
handful of people working on the front gate. "We will have to move fast
if they're planning on attacking first. The ville can't withstand a
charge by blind rabbits at the moment. Not until that damn drawbridge
is repaired!"
"We can stop them," Clem stated confidently.
Nathan frowned. "Unless she's not sending her army, but just one
man. One thing, actually."
Clem furrowed his brow. "Y'all mean an assassin?"
"A mutie by the name of Sullivan." Nathan drew the Desert Eagle and
dropped the clip to examine the load. "Shitfire, I had heard the thing
was dead years ago. I once saw him rip the throat out of a griz bear on
a bet. Didn't even work up a sweat."
"Are you serious?" Tabitha asked, sounding frightened.
"Totally. He's a monster, and damn hard to kill. Many have tried and
failed. Sullivan drank their blood and mutilated the corpse for laughs."
Without speaking, Tabitha tucked her hands up the sleeves of her
coat, and they heard the soft metallic clack of a blaster's hammer
being cocked.
"I'll be in the nursery until further notice," she announced, and
strode toward the stairs.
"Stay with her!" Clem ordered, pointing, and half of the attending
sec men started after the woman. The rest clustered tighter around the
baron.
"Sullivan," Nathan muttered, checking the ammo in his snub-nosed .38
revolver. "This could be worse than Overton."
"Mebbe you should stay out of sight till I find this asswipe," Clem
suggested, sliding the Enfield off his shoulder and working the bolt.
"Direct the rebuilding from inside the castle, or mebbe the barracks?"
"I won't hide," Nathan answered brusquely, holstering the blaster.
"Besides, Sullivan is an expert at disguises. He can even mimic another
person's voice so that in the darkness you think it's them. Damnedest
thing. I heard that was how he chilled the last baron of Bull Run
castle."
"I could interrogate everybody new," Clem suggested. An assassin was
something novel to the hunter. Barroom brawls were more his kind of
fight.
Walking to the edge of the roof, Nathan gazed upon the hustling
ville. "Not necessary. Sullivan can use gloves and cosmetics to hid his
green skin, and wigs to cover his bald head, but there's one thing he
can't alter. His height. Take troops, ten-on-ten formation. The second
group stays away from the first to give cover fire. Then go through the
ville and strip naked anybody you find over six feet tall. Men and
women."
The remaining sec men murmured in apprehension.
"We'll also double-check any crips," Clem added. "Pretending you
don't have legs would be a good way to hide height."
Nathan nodded. "Consider anybody sitting a potential enemy, and be
ready to act."
"Oh, we'll capture him, Baron," a sec man stated confidently,
brandishing his blaster. "Have no fear of that!"
"Capture? Don't even try," Nathan retorted, turning away from the
ville. "When you find a bald man with greenish skin, chill him on
sight. Which means a head shot, one in each eye. Then set the body on
fire."
Then Nathan added softly, almost as if speaking to himself,
"Hopefully, that will be enough."
Chapter Four
Shuddering and clanking, the APC crept along the smooth shore of the
North Carolina river basin. The soft sand rose high, almost to the rims
of the seven tires. The eighth hung in tatters off the rim, flopping
about uselessly as the wag forged onward with ever decreasing speed.
With the tip of his knife, Ryan removed the damp rag from an ob port
and looked outside. On the horizon, black clouds filled the sky, and
orange flames licked upward from the raging inferno of the cornfield.
"Far enough?" Krysty coughed. The interior of the wag was misty with
smoke and reeked of pungent human sweat.
"Yeah," he decided. "We're a good mile clear of the cornfield. Stop
here and let's see how much of a wag we still have."
"Sure," Krysty grunted, fighting the clutch to shift into park. The
gear refused to cooperate, so she tried neutral and managed to kill the
engines. The cacophony from underneath the metal floor receded and
finally stopped.
Climbing into the turret, Doc threw open the top hatch, and cool
fresh air flooded into the APC. "Ah, ambrosia of the gods," he said,
inhaling deeply.
Fanning herself, Mildred sported a smile. "That's redundant."
"Yet still true, madam.
Pro veritas Libertas!"
Rising from his seat, J.B. pulled at the sticky clothes clinging to
his body. "I'm going to see what the damage is," he said, getting a
tool kit from a storage locker under the seat.
"I'll cover you," Ryan stated, removing a canteen from the wall.
"Krysty, prime the chain gun in case we get visitors. Doc, Dean, start
transferring the gas from the external cans to the fuel tank. Mildred,
Jak, you two stay right there. That was a hell of a knock you took."
"N-never better," the teenager whispered weakly from the floor,
moving his arm to expose the bloody bandage on his head. His normally
pale skin was flushed pink, his shirt damp with sweat. Mildred had
given the teen two aspirin for the pain, and checked the focus of his
vision. She said it had to do with concussions and brain damage.
"Glad to hear it," J.B. said, undogging the aft doors. '"Cause you
look half-dead."
"F-fuck you."
As J.B. exited the wag with Doc and Dean right behind, Ryan
exchanged a look with the physician.
Mildred nodded, waving him on. "Go fix this thing."
Stepping over the youth, Ryan took an AK-47 from a stack and checked
the blaster. There was a full clip in the breech, and he had a good
dozen loose rounds in his pants pocket. Climbing out, Ryan walked
around the wag checking for any signs of external damage.
The armor plating was dirty and scratched with blurry streaks from
where soft-lead bullets ricocheted off the hull. Blood was splattered
everywhere from the blue shirts they had crushed. While Dean stood
guard with his Browning in hand, Doc was busy untying the fuel cans
from the charred netting. On the ground, a pair of legs jutted from
underneath the vehicle and J.B. could be heard muttering curses to the
sound of metal hitting metal.
Resting the stock of the AK-47 on a hip, Ryan knelt in the sand.
"How's it look?" he asked.
"Found a busted axle," J.B. replied, "and we're definitely losing
oil and hydraulic fluid. Dark night, this thing is a mess!"
"What are the chances it'll carry us to the next Shiloh?"
"Considering what was done to this wag, it's a wonder the thing got
us here."
"Fireblast." Ryan glanced around. They were trapped with a dead wag
in the middle of nowhere. Not good. "Can you fix it?"
"Don't know, but I'll try. Only need four wheels to stay mobile."
"Good thing we have eight."
"Seven, but that should be enough."
"Need anything?" Ryan had great belief in the talents of the
Armorer. The man was a master gunsmith, an expert at booby traps and
could fix anything made of steel that rolled or floated.
"Some light would be great."
From a box strapped to the hull, Ryan retrieved an oil lantern. The
reservoir was half-full, more than enough. Igniting the wick with a
butane lighter, he trimmed the flame to something manageable and passed
the lantern under the APC.
"Thanks."
"No prob."
"My dear Ryan, would you suppose it safe enough for us to chance a
campfire?" Doc asked, passing a fuel can to Dean. "I fear we shall be
here through the night, and nobody could possibly notice our small
column of smoke amid that Dantean conflagration."
"Nights get cold. Be nice to have hot food," the boy added, hugging
the container with both arms. Setting the bottom of the can on his
belt buckle to help with the weight, Dean waddled around the wag with
his precious cargo.
Ryan nodded. "Keep it small."
An explosion sounded from the east, and Ryan spun about, his weapon
ready. A fireball rose skyward from the blanket of black clouds masking
the wildfire. Then the Deathlands warrior felt his heart race as a
small mushroom cloud formed above the cornfield, the sea winds
dissolving the eerie sight almost as soon as it formed.
Backing closer to the wag, Ryan listened to the crackle of static on
the radio, waiting to hear voices, but minutes passed in silence. It
had to have been some ammo cooking off from the heat. The way that
Hummer was bouncing around, the blues could have dropped any number of
weapon or grens.
"Gaia's demise," Krysty said unexpectedly from the turret Ryan
stared up at her. She seemed strangely tense and nervous. "What
was that you said?"
"Gaia's demise," she repeated. "The end of the world."
"Just rising smoke, lover," he said. "Any hot explosion will make a
mushroom cloud. Nothing special."
Staring at the distant fields of fire, Krysty made no reply, her
hands poised on the rapid-fire cannon, long hair billowing in the sea
breeze.
"Lend me a hand," Mildred called, climbing from the APC with an
arm load of boxes.
Shouldering his longblaster, Ryan took the top crate and found it
full of pots and pans. "The fire is just for warmth," he said gruffly.
"We shouldn't stay here longer than necessary."
"I'm not making dinner," Mildred replied, placing the box on the
ground and removing some glass jars. "Going to brew some coffee. Help
us stay sharp. Been a long day, and it's not over yet."
"Sounds good," he said, relenting, feeling his stomach respond to
the possibility of eating. Damn, he was a lot hungrier than he wanted
to admit.
"Mebbe we can break open a few of the MRE packs." he added. "Hunting
would be pointless. The fire will have scared away any game for miles."
Mildred lifted a silvery foil envelope into view. "Way ahead of you."
Taking a seat on a rock, Ryan balanced the AK-47 on his lap and
watched as she ripped open a package and spread out its contents,
carefully inspecting the smaller envelope of beef stew, another of
coffee, sugar, a log of processed cheese, crackers, salt, pepper,
chewing gum. The MRE food packs were Meals Ready to Eat, military
rations from long before skydark. The Mylar foil was chem proof and
airtight. If the packs were stored carefully, the condensed food would
last forever. But the tiniest pinhole could turn the chow into deadly
poison. They occasionally found a few MRE packs or
self-heats in the redoubts, and sometimes they were edible, but
more often they weren't. These came from Overton, and the foil was in
perfect condition, almost brand-new.
"Behold, madam," Doc announced, dropping a load of gnarled gray
sticks on the ground. "Driftwood a-plenty. Is this enough, or shall you
require more?"
"That's enough," Mildred announced, starting to whittle on a piece
of driftwood with her belt knife. She piled the shavings together and
carefully lit them with a single match. The flickering flame almost
died, then brightened and spread across the dry wood.
"There we go," she said, adding small sticks to the growing fire.
"Just need some water for the pot."
"I'll go get some," Dean offered, setting down the last fuel
container. "The wag is topped off."
"Fine. Get it from the basin," Mildred directed him, opening a
second envelope and pouring the contents into an iron pot. "The water
here is fresh, fed by the river, not salt."
"Be right back," the boy said. Grinning, he grabbed a bucket and
dashed around the APC.
Thrusting his stick into the hard packed sand, Doc squatted on his
heels. "Ah, the vigor of youth." He chuckled. "Pity it's wasted on the
young."
As Mildred fed the fire, Ryan watched the growing shadows,
maintaining a constant vigil. The moonlight on the water gave a clear
field of fire in case somebody approached by boat, or swam toward
shore. There was no smell of salt here. This water fed from several
inland rivers and flowed to the sea in a sort of natural harbor. The
light from the fire had nearly disappeared to the east, the shoreline
was empty for more than a mile to the south and dense forest was
to the north. It wasn't the best of spots for a camp, but good
enough for one night. Nobody could get close without being detected.
Carrying a brimming bucket, Dean returned to find Doc breaking
sticks of driftwood over his knee and adding them a piece at a time to
the crackling campfire. Mildred was already stirring a pot of stew, a
row of tin mess kits laid out with salt and forks. With his back to the
APC, his father stood guard, the AK-47 balanced in his hands.
"Over here," Ryan called.
The boy complied, and his father checked the water with a rad
counter. There was only the usual background reading. "Clean enough,"
he decided. "Better filter it anyway."
"Okay." Carefully, Dean poured the fluid through a clean piece of
cloth and filled a large coffeepot. Placing it next to the fire,
Mildred added a handful of crystals and soon the smell of beef stew and
coffee spread across the site, the campfire throwing shadows on the
aide of the APC as night slowly claimed the smoky Carolina sky.
"Hey, is that coffee I smell?" J.B. called out, wiggling the toe of
a combat boot.
"Sure is," Ryan answered. "Want some?"
"Pretty soon," he replied to the tune of metallic pounding. "Is
Krysty inside?"
"Yeah."
"Ask her to try the main engine."
"I heard," she replied from above. Climbing down from the turret,
the redhead took the driver's seat, turned the ignition and pumped the
gas pedal as the engine struggled to catch.
"Nothing," she shouted out the side blaster port. Only a slice of
the road was visible through the tiny slit, showing the legs of the
Armorer underneath the APC and Ryan standing near an open toolbox.
There was some more clanging. "Again!"
With little hope, Krysty turned the key and was astonished when the
big Detroit power plant roared into life, gray smoke puffing from the
louvered exhaust ports.
"Damn, I'm good," J.B. said from under the wag.
Turning off the engine, Krysty waited a few
moments, then turned it on again. She did this several times.
"We have an engine again," Krysty announced. "Runs smooth as silk."
"Good work," Ryan told J.B., giving the man a hand as he crawled out
into view.
Standing, J.B. placed the lantern aside. "No, not good news. 'Cause
engine is all we have." He was inspecting a shiny ring of metal.
"What's that?" Ryan asked curiously.
"A bearing cone."
Ryan moved closer. "Never saw one before."
"Folks aren't supposed to. These are sealed units and don't come
off, or apart."
"From the Hummer?" Mildred asked.
"No, it's ours and I found two more on the ground. That was the
grinding noise. The bearings are busted." J.B. placed some tools in the
kit and closed the box. "We took shrapnel damage from that satchel
charge. The minor engine is leaking coolant from a bad crack in the
block. I used some parts from the main engine to patch the second, so
we have lights and heat. But as for going anywhere, the wag might as
well be sunk in concrete. The transmission assembly is in pieces. Don't
know how we got this far."
The man began wiping his greasy hands with a rag soaked in fuel.
When most of the black was rubbed off, he walked to the campfire and
poured a cup of coffee. "This wag has definitely taken the last train
west."
"You sure?" Mildred asked.
J.B. sipped the coffee, holding the tin cup in both hands to savor
the warmth. "Oh, yeah."
"Triple red, people!" Ryan commanded, standing and working the bolt
on his AK-47. "The blues would be fools not to sweep this area on a
recce first chance they get. They
catch us standing here chatting, and it's the long sleep."
The tired expressions of the companions vanished in a heartbeat, and
they drew weapons.
"Dean, prep a LAW rocket," Ryan added brusquely.
The boy nodded and raced toward the APC.
Her boots ringing on the metal floor, Krysty walked through the APC
and sat in the doorway. Behind her, Jak lay snoring peacefully amid the
piles of supplies.
"Okay, so we walk out of here," Krysty said. "The question is where.
Do we continue on to Shiloh, or the closest redoubt?"
"Front Royal," Dean suggested, climbing into the wag. "We can get
another wag there."
"Doubtful," his father replied.
"Besides, my young friend, traveling anywhere on foot means we have
to leave most of the supplies behind," Doc stated. "A most dangerous
proposition. Too many weapons will slow us and get us chilled just as
fast as not enough."
"Maybe we could rig a litter," Mildred suggested.
"We're not leaving anything behind," Ryan announced. Kneeling by the
dying red embers of the campfire, he poured a cup of coffee and
drained it in a few gulps.
"And we're not walking, either," he stated. "J.B., let me see the
map."
Digging in his bag, the Armorer unearthed the folded plastic sheet
and passed it over. Carefully spreading the map on the ground near the
remains of the fire, Ryan flicked a butane lighter and read by the tiny
flame. Aside from blasters, he considered butane lighters the greatest
invention of the predark world. A hundred years later and the things
still worked.
"Look at this," he said, jabbing a finger at the map. "We can travel
by water. North Carolina is damn near split in half with this river
basin. We'll build a raft and row inland. Get us halfway to the next
Shiloh, and only about sixty miles south of the redoubt in Kentucky. We
can get more supplies and ammo there. Not much, but some."
"And then what?" Krysty asked.
He scratched an ear. "Don't know. We can try and buy a wag, or some
horses, from a local ville. Got more than enough spare blasters. And
even if we don't find anything, the basin will still carry us a week of
walking in two days."
"Upstream," the redhead stated.
"Flat water," J.B. corrected. "Easy stuff. No rapids or whitewater
falls."
"A raft," Doc said hesitantly, rubbing his chin. "Dubious, sir. Most
dubious."
Brushing back her beaded hair, Mildred looked up from the map. "We
can do it. We've built them before."
"Indeed, we have, madam. But a raft large enough to hold all of the
supplies? It would require two, maybe three, really big ones. Chopping
down that many trees will take us a week. Maybe more."
Suddenly, the chain gun roared into life, shattering the night. The
companions dived for cover, digging into the beach, their weapons
sweeping for targets, as a stuttering stream of 7.62 mm rounds sliced
across the landscape and started tearing apart a tree. Bark flew off
the trunk, splinters went everywhere, then there was a crack and the
oak dropped heavily to the ground. The chain gun stopped, followed by
ringing silence.
The top hatch swung open, and Dean rose into view. "We don't need
axes," the boy stated confidently. "We can shoot down all the logs we
want."
As he rose from the damp ground, Ryan's first reaction was fury,
until he realized the cold common sense of the matter. "Good work, son.
But next time, trim the top first, then cut out the bottom."
"Sure, Dad!"
"But the noise!" Mildred complained. "No, wait. Skip that. We need
to get the cutting done now, before scouts arrive."
"Exactly. And it makes no difference if we use all the ammo. Can't
haul the chain gun or the cannon along. Both are too heavy."
Tilting back his fedora, J.B. gave a twisted grin. "That 25 mm
cannon will level the forest in a few minutes. We'll have enough logs
for an armada of rafts."
"Even better," Ryan said. "Doc, we have enough rope?"
"Certainly, and sufficient canvas for tents."
The tents would cover the supplies on the raft and keep them dry,
and would hide exactly what the companions were hauling from observers.
Many folks would eagerly risk death for the chance of getting their
hands on a working blaster.
"Sounds good," Ryan decided. "Dean, cut more trees. Keep going till
I say stop. Doc, you're on sentry duty with me. Here!"
Doc caught the AK-47 and checked the longblaster, while Ryan
chambered a round into his Steyr SSG-70. "Krysty, stand ready with a
LAW. Shoot on sight. Mildred, make lots more coffee and stew."
"I'll dig a shallow pit to hide the flames."
"And I'll start removing the tires from the LAV," J.B. said, pouring
a fresh cup of coffee while it was still warm. "Attached to the bottom
of a raft, they'll triple our buoyancy. Which means that much more ammo
and food comes along for the ride."
"Excellent."
"One good thing about this," Krysty said, walking closer out of the
darkness with the rocket launcher resting on a shoulder.
"What's that?" Ryan asked. As far as he was concerned, they were
standing on the gallows just waiting for the noose.
"At least we won't be encountering any land mines."
"Hopefully. Okay, let's move with a purpose, people!" Ryan ordered.
"It's a race against the clock now."
Chapter Five
Falling…forever falling… Down through infinity he plummeted, the
burning stars swirling around and around, comets lancing out to pierce
his naked flesh with white-hot heat. Red blood erupted from the
ghastly wounds, then froze solid from the horrible cold.
Desperately, he tried to draw a breath and scream from the terrible
pain, but there was no air, only the incredible cold and endless
falling. Hurtling at unimaginable speeds, faster and faster into a void
beyond comprehension.
A meteor raced by, twisted faces trapped in its fiery tail. The
faces looked deep into his eyes, and he couldn't turn away. Shame
filled his tormented soul as more faces were presented in a hellish
pageant. A litany of crimes. Some wept for clemency, others raged in
bestial fury, while a few simply stared with the utter emptiness of
acceptance. Fire engulfed him, and he entered the faces, shattering the
skull bones and plunging into the morass of living brain tissue like a
surgeon's scalpel.
Now he was swimming in blood, rising bubbles filled with nightmarish
scenes. Animals stood before him on display, and opened their own
chests to spill their beating organs on steel tables under harsh
lights. And none of them had hearts, only clocks, bloody clocks ticking
softly inside their dying bodies. He ordered them to go away, then
pleaded with hot tears flowing down his cheeks, to no avail. The
animals died in droves, only to be replaced with men in chains, their
knowing eyes damning him for the monster he was.
Wailing, he clawed at his face to stop the visions, fingernails
gouging into his eyes. But his hands were ghostly things, phantasms of
ethereal flesh, and there was nothing he could do to stop or even slow
the grotesque litany. The clothing of the men melted away, their hairy
bodies becoming the supple flesh of beautiful women. Long flowing hair,
full breasts, only the best. An endless parade of naked woman
whipped and humbled, chained supine on the terrible table as the silver
knives removed their skin and flesh. Eyes staring, clocks for hearts!
Impossible beings gruffly laughed behind him and placed cold hands on
his own bare flesh
. Revulsion filled him like acid, and he
tried to
vomit, but could only convulse, muscles writhing, limbs flailing.
Then a special face filled his vision, expanding to fill the ocean
of blood until the mouth was a door that opened on a dead man hanging
by his own belt in a filthy underground cell. Not my fault! The silent
words echoed in his head as the beating of his heart changed into the
ticking of a clock, the noise building into a deafening crescendo until
shattering the universe into a million shards of tinkling glass that
fell away in a molten rain.
There a flash of light, and he was falling through a blue sky with
white clouds. Mountains appeared, oceans, forests! A hurricane wind
buffeted his form with savage fury, as the world expanded, rushing ever
closer. Suddenly, his lungs filled with air and at last he could
scream, a raw wail of anguish and absolute terror that lasted forever.
With pillow softness, he slammed into the ground and lay there
breathing in the sweet earth slightly damp from a summer rain, tufts of
grass tickling his face. Alive, he was alive!
Painfully standing, Silas found himself in a field of green grass
under a blue sky dotted with white clouds overhead. But those colors
were wrong. The sky was purple, slashed with orange fire. Wasn't it? A
low rock wall cut across a field, and a copse of trees stood guard to
the west, stout protection against the coming storm. The nuke storm.
Skydark, doomsday. Not his fault!
A town of old buildings was in the distance, a church tower bell
ringing the time as a beautiful woman in a flowing dress floated toward
him, her hair flowing in the wind. She was carrying a bouquet of
flowers that died, withered and blossomed again in an endless cycle of
death and rebirth. Not his fault!
"Why, there you are!" The woman laughed. "But I should introduce
myself, my name is Tanner, Emily Tanner."
Snarling in glee, Silas reached behind his back and drew a small
automatic. "Excellent," he cackled. Jacking the slide and leveling the
weapon at her face, he pulled the trigger. The gun violently exploded,
a fireball engulfing his hand as the weapon detonated blowing off his
fingers.
Emily neither flinched nor frowned as Silas screamed from the pain,
staring at the white bones protruding from the ruin of his arm, warm
red blood pumping out of the shattered limb.
"My husband is Dr. Theophilus Tanner," she continued, twirling the
flowers like a lace umbrella on her shoulder. "Do you know my husband,
by any chance?"
"Not my fault!" Silas shrieked, dropping to his knees and trying to
staunch the flow of blood from the arm with his free hand. But the
flesh was too slippery, and he couldn't get a grip on the tattered rags
of meat.
In the distance, a steam locomotive puffed along iron rails, gliding
past the black doors of a redoubt, and nearby a child raced across the
field, guiding a kite in the sky, the cloth tail dancing merrily. A
small dog yipped and barked alongside the child, and Silas vaguely
recognized the boy as himself. How could that be? Then a dark shape
stepped between them, blotting out the golden sun.
"Hello, fool," Doc snarled, slowly drawing a blade from the ebony
shaft of his walking stick. The needle-sharp tip glistened in the
bright sunlight, and it flashed forward.
Silas could only gasp as the steel slashed across his face, opening
the flesh to the bone, his cheek peeling away and rivers of blood
gushing forth. He tried to beg for mercy, but no words would come and
the blade slashed across his throat, filling his lungs with choking
blood. It slashed again, between his naked legs, his penis dropping to
the soil. A black wave of ants boiled out of the soil, covering the
twitching member and consuming the tender pink flesh.
Emily laughed gaily and threw flower petals as Doc began to dissect
the scientist, his heart falling onto the ground, the gears and
pendulums still connected by the major arteries, beating away to force
the blood from his countless wounds.
Suddenly, the sky turned purple, and sheet lighting thundered as Doc
peeled off more skin from Silas's naked form, his beating organs
splayed on the grass like offerings to some pagan god. The pain was
beyond imagination, and the blood was everywhere, now inches deep
across the entire field. Then Doc dropped the sword and drew a huge
pistol. Silas begged for death, for release from the incredible agony.
But Doc pointed the weapon away from Silas and fired, the muzzle-flash
igniting the blood into a lake of flame. Tongues of fire filled his
mouth and the open cavity of his chest. It crawled up his rectum and
inside his belly until it bulged. The bugs swarmed over him, through
the crackling flames, endless, eating his flesh, and Silas drew in a
lungful of fire and insects as he was consumed alive…
BOLTING UPRIGHT in bed, Silas Jamaisvous screamed at the darkness,
his hands clawing at empty air.
With a bang, the door to his bedroom slammed open and armed sec men
wearing clean blue shirts rushed in, the muzzles of their AK-47
blasters searching for intruders.
"What is it, sir?" a corporal demanded, his face tense with worry.
"Are you hurt? Were you attacked?"
Silas tried to speak, but his throat was too dry and sore to do much
more than squeak.
"Nobody in the closet," a blue shirt said, closing the door.
"Window locked tight," another sec man reported, jiggling the steel
lattice that covered the huge window overlooking the Great Project. The
tiny dots of torches moved in the blackness on the distant ground, the
cool fire of orange moonlight bathing the huge satellite dish that
dominated the ville by its sheer size.
"Out of the way, fools," a major commanded, brushing through the sec
men. Going to a humming refrigerator, the officer grabbed a frosty
bottle of mineral water and crossed the room to thrust it into the
elderly man's hands. Silas greedily drank the icy water, savoring every
drop as the horrible delusions of his nightly dream faded.
"Thank you, Sheffield," he whispered, placing the empty bottle on
his sweaty blankets.
Major William Sheffield merely nodded, and returned to the
refrigerator for another bottle. The airtight cap was loose, these
bottles refilled from a nearby stream, but it was still mineral water.
Only weeks ago, the stream had been polluted with acid rain and tox
chems to the point it was gelatinous. Now the stream flowed pure and
clean again, thanks to the Great Project.
"Same dream, sir?" Sheffield asked softly, guiding the bottle to the
man's pale lips.
Silas nodded as he drank again, strength and sanity returning with
every beat of his heart.
"The same," he acknowledged as a tremor shook his body and the old
wound in his thigh ached deeply. "It has been the same nightmare every
night since I tried to force a chron jump! Was I insane? The jump
haunts me, chases me through my dreams every night. No escape. There is
no escape. How did Tanner survive a chron jump sane? What makes him so
special? Was it the redoubt itself? Did the computers malfunction?"
Sheffield gestured. "Everybody out!" he thundered. "Stat!" Stiffly
saluting, the guards shuffled into the corridor and closed the door.
"I don't think it's wise to be discussing such things in front of
the troops, sir," the major said, drawing a chair closer. He took the
seat and glanced about. "The fewer people who know the existence of the
redoubts, the better."
"Yes. You are quite correct," Silas agreed, mopping the sweat off
his face with the edge of his blankets. The bed was moist beneath him,
and there was the unmistakable ammonia stink of urine mixed with the
sweat. Damn it, the dream was killing him. He awoke feeling weaker at
every dawn, another slice of his sanity gone forever.
Back at El Morro in San Juan, the scientist had believed he held the
key to controlled jumps through the redoubts, and had attempted to go
backward through time to slay Tanner—at least he thought that was why
he wanted to go back. He assumed there had been good reasons for the
gamble, but they were gone, along with most of his memory. At first,
Silas thought he had jumped back to the late 1800s of Vermont. But it
became clear rather quickly that he had become mired in a jump
nightmare. One that would leave him for a few months, and then return
in shocking clarity. First no more than once a month, then once a week,
now three or four times a week. Soon it would be every night, and after
that who knew? Perhaps it would start claiming him during the day, and
his brilliant mind would be gone forever, trapped in an endless fantasy
of his own creation. From somewhere deep in his childhood the words "as
ye sow, so shall ye reap" came unbidden to his mind. Silas shook off
the religious nonsense. The dream was merely a forced feedback loop
from the electromagnetic field of the mat-trans chambers, probably
augmented by his proximity to the high-voltage transformers of the
dish. Yes, of course, that was the answer. Once the Great Project was
finished and the Kite was operational, he could leave Tennessee and be
free from the dream forever.
"If I don't go mad first," he muttered, plucking nervously at his
bushy eyebrows.
"Sir?" Sheffield asked.
"Nothing important, Major." Silas wanted to leave the bed and wash,
but that would have to wait until the sec chief departed. A wave of
shame tightened his chest, and he forced it away by sheer force of will.
"Has there been any word on Tanner and the others?" Silas asked
harshly.
Sheffield scowled. "Nothing for over a week, sir. They left Front
Royal in a repaired LAV-25 and disappeared. But we have sec men
watching every drivable road from the north, south and east, with land
mines and traps on all major bridges. Ryan will never reach Tennessee
alive."
Rubbing his sore leg, Dr. Silas Jamaisvous stared at the eager young
officer sitting rigidly on the small chair. The man was so strong and
proud. His blue uniform was spotless, his blasters glistening with oil,
boots polished like a mirror.
"That's what Overton said once," Silas stated coldly.
"But I'm not playing politics with Cawdor," Sheffield said,
standing. "Believe me, as long as they keep to the roads, I'll present
you with their heads on a silver plate in only a matter of days, mebbe
less!"
"Perhaps. But isn't the Bradley Light Armored Vehicle, Piranha
class, Model 25, amphibious? Isn't the transport also designed to be
used as a boat?"
The sec man was confused. "Is it, sir?"
"That is unknown to me," Silas scowled. "I think we had better find
out very quickly."
Chapter Six
A sting-wing darted from the rushes along the basin.
Standing on the shore, the gentle waves lapping around his combat
boots, Ryan saw the movement out of the corner of his eye. He drew his
SIG-Sauer and fired. The silenced 9 mm blaster coughed, and the winged
mutie exploded in midair, bloody feathers tumbling down onto the beach.
There was a disturbance under the sand, and blue-shelled crabs rose
into view like ghosts from a grave. They climbed over the tiny corpse,
tearing the mutie apart with their sharp pincers and stuffing their
mouths full. One large azure crab had a dozen tiny copies on its back
and passed morsels of the sting-wing over its quivering antennae to the
clicking brood.
A gray dawn was beginning to break in the fiery sky, and Ryan stood
guard over the others as they finished conveying the last of the fresh
water and ammo onto the bobbing rafts. Stout ropes moored the crude
craft to the stump of a dead tree, a gentle current tugging them away
from the shore.
There had been enough logs from the felled trees to build a dozen
rafts, but the companions decided on just two. Lashed together with
ropes and chains, the first was small, only ten feet squared, three of
the inflated tires from the LAV bolted to the belly of the craft. A
small pile of ammo, food and other supplies lay in the middle of the
raft. A sheet of canvas covered the goods, and multiple ropes secured
the cargo. A tiller made from a door off an ammo locker was at one end,
tight between two upright stanchions. J.B. was dubious of the
arrangement, but Ryan had assured the man it would work fine.
The second raft was much bigger, thirty feet squared, with four
piles of supplies set between the tires bolted underwater at each
corner. This kept the center clear, helped to balance the craft and
gave the companions something to crouch behind in case of a fight.
Another door served as a tiller. The bobbing craft were attached to
each other with stout metal chains, which would keep them together
through riptides or fog. But in case of emergency, they could cut the
larger raft loose to block pursuit, and shoot the ammo boxes on board
to eliminate their pursuers.
The end of the logs were ragged and full of splinters, and the
companions had done nothing to change that. The wild array of jagged
kindling made a very good defense against unwanted passengers—man or
mutie— climbing on board.
Ryan studied the rafts with a critical gaze. Tree trunks with the
bark still on, old rope, rusty chains and a handful of nails. They
didn't look like much, but hopefully they would last long enough to get
them to Tennessee.
Whistling a sea chantey, Doc was on the larger craft, testing the
ropes holding down the canvas-covered piles. Jak stood on the other
with his back to the shore, taking care of business.
"Well, that's it for the supplies," Krysty said, wading to shore
from the front raft. She stomped the red river mud off her boots,
sending the crabs scurrying away, dragging their breakfast along with
them.
"All the fuel's on board?" Ryan asked.
"Yes." Krysty shook her head, her hair spreading out a corona of
fiery glory to rival the coming dawn. "Food, blankets, all six of the
rocket launchers. I'm surprised how much the rafts could hold."
"Just hope it's enough," Ryan said grimly, then glanced at the
nearby APC. "Better wake Dean and Mildred, and get going. We can each
catch some more sleep once we're far from here."
"I'll get them, lover," she said, and walked off.
"Lend me a hand, Ryan?" J.B. grunted, dragging a lumpy duffel bag
toward the water.
"What is it?" Ryan asked, grabbing the rope and helping to lift the
bag off the ground.
"Battery from the APC," J.B. replied as they waded into the cold
water and splashed toward the nearer raft. "I'm going to wire a
headlight to the thing so we can see at night. Scare a lot of folks and
save us a pile of killing."
With the morning breeze ruffling his silvery mane of long hair, Doc
watched the two men approach from the second raft, his .44 LeMat held
tight, the hammer cocked back and ready.
"The halogen bulb will explode," Ryan stated. "Won't be able to take
that much direct current."
"I used different thickness of wires to cut the voltage so the
headlight wouldn't blow. I can make it work. Shit!" J.B. shifted his
balance, nearly going under as his boot slipped on a smooth rock.
"Close call."
Ryan changed their direction away from the cargo raft. "Then we put
this on the lead raft, so we can see where we're going."
"Sounds good."
Zipping his pants closed, Jak turned and gave the men a hand hauling
the heavy bag over the ring of splinters.
"Good for fishing," the teenager commented, lacing the bag to the
ropes covering the canvas mound. "Fish see light at night, come close,
spear all we want."
"We never made any spears," J.B. said, heading for the cargo raft.
Jak jerked a thumb. "Doc has. Long ones."
"You made spears?" Ryan called out, climbing on board. He was
dripping wet from the waist down, the water trickling down between the
log deck and back into the basin. "Good thinking."
"These are not spears, my dear Ryan, but poles for punting," Doc
replied, trimming small branches off a sapling with his pocketknife.
"Barge poles," J.B. translated as the older man gave him a boost on
board. A thick piece of canvas draped over the splinters gave easy
access to the deck of the homemade craft. "We can use them to push the
raft along, in case we get stuck on a sandbar."
"Exactly." Tilting the pole, Doc visually inspected the shaft,
rotating it this way and that. "A bit off plumb but nothing serious."
He tossed it onto the deck.
"Punting," Ryan said as he changed into dry clothes and socks. He
laid the wet garments on top of the canvas mound to let the sun dry
them.
Trimming another sapling, Doc shrugged. "It is an Old English word,
and I disremember its origin. Sorry."
Sliding on his boots, Ryan saw that Dean was walking backward along
the shore, unraveling a greasy length of knotted rags from a slopping
bucket. The other end of the line went through the top hatch of the LAV
and down inside. Backpacks perched on their heads, Mildred and Krysty
were already wading across the basin, heading for different rafts. Once
the boy played out the length to the end, he lit the end with a butane
lighter. The shredded blankets began to burn fiercely, giving off huge
volumes of greenish smoke, the fire crawling up the length very
slowly.
Dean waited a moment to make sure the fire had caught, then waded
into the river. As soon as he was in the water, the crabs came out of
hiding and began to finish the last few scraps of the dead sting-wing,
rooting in the sand for every tiny gobbet of flesh.
"Hate to lose the wag," Krysty commented as she changed her pants.
"No choice. It's deadweight," Ryan stated. "And with any luck, if
some blues find the wag, they'll think we all died the explosion."
"Can't hurt."
When Dean was on board, Ryan looked around the beach and ordered a
last check of the supplies. It would take the grease fuse hours to
reach the APC, but time was still against them. The blues could arrive
at any moment, and if they left something important behind there would
be no easy way to get it back.
"We have canned food, MRE packs, seven ammo boxes, a case of grens,
bedrolls, blankets," Doc called out from the cargo raft. "Extra rope—"
"All of the rope," J.B. interrupted.
"Fuel, fresh water, pots and pans."
"Med kit," Mildred added, patting the bag at her side.
"Same," Jak announced, squatting by the mound, looking under the
canvas. "Ready go."
The sun broke the horizon at that moment, flooding the world with
its dim light. "All right, then," Ryan decided. "Cast off!"
At the helm, Krysty snapped the mooring line like a whip, and the
knot around the tree stump came undone. Urged on by the gentle
currents, the rafts began to leisurely float away from the Carolina
shoreline.
Using the poles, the companions guided the rafts into the deep water
where the saplings couldn't touch bottom. Drifting freely, Doc and Jak
worked the tillers, steering them farther out until land was no longer
in sight.
Behind them, a faint trail of smoke was discernible, rising above
the horizon from the smoldering remains of the cornfield.
Shifting his weight from boot to boot, Dean tried to gain his
balance on the moving raft. "I thought having the tires under the logs
would make these things steady," he said, swallowing hard.
"It does," J.B. replied, spooning cold soup from a U.S. Army tin
can. "Dark night, you should been with us a few years back when we took
a raft trip down the Hudson in Newyork. Now, that was a rough ride."
Slightly green, the boy nodded assent and sat on the deck, waiting
for his stomach to catch up with them from the beach.
Hours passed. The companions took turns at the helm and catching up
on the sleep lost during the frenzied building of the raft during the
night. The gentle current was getting stronger, urging them on a more
southerly course, but they angled the rudder against the easy pull and
maintained a steady course to the north and Tennessee.
"I make our speed at three knots," J.B. announced, studying the sun
overhead. "Not bad."
"Wind is with us," Ryan said, testing the breeze with a damp finger.
"That helps."
A bug buzzed near the raft, and a fish leaped from the basin and
back into the water. The insect disappeared.
"I'll catch us dinner," Dean said, and unscrewed the handle of his
bowie knife, withdrawing line and hooks.
"You'll need bait," Krysty commented, and reached inside a box to
retrieve a wad of grease-soaked paper. "Try some of the fatback. It's
getting old, and we can't risk eating it anymore."
"Fish love bacon," Jak added, whittling on a sliver of wood from the
end of a log. "Rancid, the best."
Cutting off a tiny cube, Dean baited a hook and cast it overboard,
raising and lowering the line to suggest life in the bait.
"How odd," Mildred said, kneeling on the raft and almost sticking
her face into the water. "Those are barracuda. Saltwater fish."
"Must be muties," J.B. stated, as if that settled the matter.
She stood. "Could be. But they seem to be dying."
"Should they not?" Doc asked, amused.
The physician waved that aside. "That isn't the point. How did ocean
fish get this far into a freshwater basin?"
"Mebbe caught by the tide or something."
"Perhaps," she relented. "I only hope that—"
The raft shook hard as it struck something underwater. J.B. shifted
the helm, and Ryan did the same.
"Sandbar?" Krysty asked, looking overboard, one hand gripping the
ropes tight. "No, look!"
Just below the surface of the water was the wreck of a sailing ship.
The hull was smashed inward near the bow, schools of fish darting about
the rigging and cabin.
"
Obsession," Krysty read off the submerged ship. "Nice
name."
As they passed by, Doc reached out with his ebony stick and tapped
the propellers. The blades turned without hindrance and spun merrily.
"The engine is gone," Ryan said, frowning. "She's been looted."
Jak grabbed a barge pole and thrust it downward, meeting no
resistance. "Clear water," he announced.
"Must be floating freely."
Mildred frowned. "Lord, I hope so."
More and more wreckage filled the waters beneath them until it
seemed as if they were sailing over a submerged junkyard of smashed,
rotting, vessels.
"Ten o'clock," Ryan warned, pointing at the horizon, one arm on the
helm.
A smudge on the horizon grew steadily in size until they could see
that the dark mass was a pile of wreckage, rising from the water like
an island. An oil tanker lay among a pile of destroyers, gunboats,
battleships, aircraft carriers, boats and seagoing vessels of every
kind, all jammed together.
"Tumble down?" Jak asked.
Blinking from the windblown spray on his face, Ryan agreed. When
skydark raped the world, debris from the nuked cities rained across the
continent. The Manhattan blast threw cars and buses across the greater
tristate area, the vehicles blown off bridges and shotgunning out of
tunnels to fly for a hundred miles from the concussion of the nukes.
Houses had been found on mountaintops, toilet seats in the middle of a
desert and once Ryan found an intact bridge spanning a grassy field in
the middle of nowhere. Anything close to an atomic blast was vaporized,
but the objects farther away were melted and sprayed outward, then
smashed apart and sent flying, and after that, merely airborne.
"The debris must have been drawn here by the current," Ryan guessed.
"Then one ship got caught on a sandbar or mebbe it got entangled with
another sunken ship. A second was caught, and so on until there was an
island."
"Or maybe it was an oil rig," Mildred said. "But I honestly don't
recall if there was any deep-sea drilling going on offshore of North
Carolina."
"Want to stop by and see if it's inhabited?" J.B. asked, adjusting
his glasses. "Might have some wags we could trade for, salvage."
Ryan frowned. "Pointless to try. Even if we found a wag, how the
hell would we get it to the shore? Best keep traveling."
"Besides," Krysty added, placing a hand on her blaster and loosening
it in the holster, "after that bastard Poseidon, I don't trust sailors
much."
"Amen to that," Mildred added grimly.
RISING FROM HIS CHAIR, the old man shuffled across the bridge of the
predark battleship in bare feet, his single garment of stitched canvas
highly decorated with embroidery patterns and service medals from a
hundred nations.
Slanted windows fronted three sides of the room, affording a
panoramic view of the river basin. On a clear day, green haze could be
seen from the distant shore, but everywhere else the blue waters of the
basin ruled supreme.
The bridge was a half circle of electronic equipment as dead as the
previous owners of the vessel. Radar screens were dark and lifeless,
radios silent as the deep waters themselves. Near the stairwell, a
stove made from an oil drum radiated heat. On top of the stove was a
sterling-silver punch bowl full of simmering fish stew, the tiny heads
bobbing about staring at nothing amid the long strands of kelp and
diced turtle eggs.
Crumbling some dried mold into the stew, the commodore used a spoon
carved from a lifeboat to take a taste, then added a bit more. The
stores in the holds of the ships that comprised the island were finally
running low after so many decades, but that didn't matter anymore, as
all of his people would soon be dead.
The thought saddened him, and the whitehair walked to the southern
window to gaze out upon the featureless vista of his watery domain. The
commodore sighed. The crew of the Navy had lived here since skydark.
Sometimes they sent expeditions to the shores for food or tools, but
the crew always came back. There didn't seem to be any other living
beings in the world. They found ruins, but no people. Just twisted,
shambling mockeries of people, mindless creatures who wantonly killed
with their clawed hands and howled at the sight of fire. Sometimes a
hellhound was found, but thankfully those were rare. And very deadly.
Now the Navy men were alone. The last humans in the world. A plague
had swept through the island ville ten winters ago, killing half the
population and every woman. Even the babes. For over ten long years,
the surviving men had lived in the towering pile of metal. He knew some
of his crew found relief doing things the Manifest didn't approve. But
if it kept them quiet, so be it. In life, some poor bastard was always
the barrelboy.
A smudge of smoke on the western horizon caught his attention, and
the whitehair walked to the telescope to train the instrument in that
direction. The focus was poor, one lens replaced by a lens from a pair
of eyeglasses, but he managed to achieve a kind of clarity. The smoke
wasn't the plume of a seagoing vessel heading their way. There was just
some sort of fire on the mainland. But under the magnification of the
scope, he noticed something moving on the water, moving against the
current. How could that be?
At first, he couldn't believe his eyes, thinking madness had finally
claimed his mind. But the longer he watched, the more convinced he
became that this real. Not a delusion brought on by loneliness and
advanced age.
"Women!" the commodore cackled as he adjusted the focus of his
telescope. Two tiny rafts were coming this way, and two of the
occupants were clearly women, a redhead and a black woman. "Those are
women!"
The commodore trembled slightly as the memory of his last woman
filled his entire body, the softness of her skin, the weight of a
breast in the palm of his hand, the feel of a nipple as it hardened
with desire, the scent of her moist passion, the delicious heat as he
slid inside.
Then he noticed their position. By the blood of the captain, the
rafts were hundreds of yards past the island and dangerously close to
the currents'.
Quickly shuffling across the tilted floor of the battleship, the old
man tugged repeatedly on a tasseled cord and a bell rang loudly, the
peels echoing slightly as they reverberated down the metal hallway of
the military ship.
"General quarters!" the whitehair shouted over the bell. "We have
company a port beam!"
"Company?" said a big man appearing at the bottom of the angled
ladder. Bare chested, he was covered with homemade tattoos, and a
machete hung at his right hip. "Who left the island without permission,
sir?"
"Nobody, bosun! It's new folks! Fellow survivors!"
Trying to hide a smile, the man looked skeptically at the whitehair.
"Been having a nip of the brew again, have we, sir?"
"It's true, you ass!" the commodore yelled. "Outlanders are here,
and two are women. Live women!"
The bosun recoiled. "It's a lie."
"No, mate, it's true! See for yourself!"
Bounding up the stairs, he rushed to the telescope and soon found
the pair of rafts to the west of the island. "By the coast gods," he
cursed. "It's a bunch of people, and some are women, and they're near
the damn currents! They'll be swept away and killed!"
The commodore stomped a foot. "I know, you fool! Send the last
working longboat, use every drop of juice! But get those women. We must
have them alive!"
"Women," the bosun repeated, rubbing a sweaty hand on his thigh.
"Aye, we'll get them, sir, and chill anybody who dares to try to stop
us!"
WATCHING AS THE JUNKYARD island receded into the distance, the
companions started to relax when the side of a huge oil tanker split
apart as colossal doors spread wide. Filling the interior was a
full-size dockyard. Oil lanterns hung in clusters, boxes and crates
were stacked before warehouses and swarms of men worked with winches
and cranes. Then from the shadows, two sleek speedboats darted into
view, skipping across the waves at incredible velocities.
"Triple red!" Ryan shouted, keeping a grip on the helm and drawing
his hand blaster. With a thumb, he flicked off the safety.
Prepared for possible trouble, the companions leveled their weapons
and dropped into firing positions, tracking the incoming ships.
Dean dropped the clip in his Browning Hi-Power to check the load,
then slammed it back in again, jacking the slide. "They might be
friendly," he ventured hopefully.
"Not at that speed," J.B. admonished. "Friends don't come charging
full speed at total strangers."
A bearded man on board one of the rushing vessels called out through
a megaphone, but the words were distorted from the sheer distance.
"Something about heave to," Krysty said, brushing the tangles of
hair away from her ears. "But I couldn't get the rest over the noise of
those engines."
Ryan grunted at the pronouncement. He knew her hearing was a lot
sharper than most people's.
"Fuck them," Jak spit, easing back the hammer on his .357 magnum
Colt. "Lies, anyhow."
Withdrawing the Navy telescope from his pouch, J.B. extended the
device to its full length. "Hard to see with all the bouncing," he
complained, using a hand to cushion the telescope end rather than press
the hard metal directly on his face. Only a fool did such a thing. It
was a good way to lose the eye completely.
"Well?" Ryan demanded impatiently.
"They're heavily armed," J.B. announced, compacting the scope to the
size of a soup can, "and carrying nets."
"Alive," Mildred growled, drawing her ZKR blaster. "We know what
that means."
Suddenly, the two speedboats began to separate, arcing in different
directions around the near stationary rafts. Taking a stance on the
rolling deck, the physician braced her blaster at the wrist and drew in
a slow breath. The foremost speedboat was still far away when she fired
three times. The pilot slumped at the wheel, and the craft veered off
sharply heading out to sea.
"Take the tiller!" Ryan ordered.
Holstering his piece, Jak switched with the big man, and Ryan
unlimbered the Steyr. Working the bolt to chamber a round, he wrapped
the strap about his forearm to help steady the aim and tracked the
coming speedboat through the scope for a single heartbeat, then fired.
The cowling flipped off the outboard motor, and the engine caught
fire. The boat slowed dramatically, and the men on board threw buckets
of water on the burning machinery. Then J.B. opened up with the Uzi.
Black dots peppered the hull, a windshield cracked, two men dropped and
another tumbled overboard, his face gone.
Sporadic gunfire came from the junkyard island as the rafts
continued floating away, the current that had carried them there
building in strength. Then another vessel appeared from within the
tanker, a huge powerful boat covered with predark weapons—machine guns
and torpedo tubes.
"Damn, it's a PT boat from World War II!" Mildred shouted. "That can
easily catch us and blow these rafts out of the water!"
"Unfortunately, they do not want us dead," Doc said grimly, cocking
the hammer on his LeMat. "However, we do not reciprocate the
sentiment." Doc fired twice, the booming revolver sounding as if it
exploded rather than merely discharged, a lance of flame more than a
foot long vomiting from its pitted muzzle. The first .44 miniball
missed, but the second round impacted directly on the hull, making only
a small dent.
"By the Three Kennedys!" he cursed, waving the weapon to disperse
the smoke. "That floating tank is armored better than the
Merrimac!"
Holding his blaster in both hands, Dean emptied a clip at the
massive boat. If the boy hit the vessel it wasn't discernible. He
reloaded and tried again.
"They're not even going to waste ammo shooting," J.B. drawled,
slapping a fresh clip into the Uzi and triggering short controlled
bursts. Instead of the men, he was aiming for the torpedo tubes, hoping
for an explosion. "They'll just ram us, and bust these rafts into
kindling!"
"Then rescue the female survivors," Mildred said, stuffing her
jacket pockets with grens for close combat.
"Rape, you mean." Thumbing fresh rounds into her Smith & Wesson
pistol, Krysty could see the men on board, laughing and jeering in
unbridled lust. The sight made her blood run cold. After being almost
raped twice in her lifetime, she would rather chill herself than let
them have her as a prisoner, a helpless plaything to be abused for
their sexual torture. Or even worse, a breeder to bear children as fast
as possible until she died on a birthing bed whelping another slave for
them to ravage.
Grabbing the AK-47, Krysty flipped the selector switch to full-auto
and emptied the last clip at the rapidly approaching warship. The
fusillade of rounds ricocheted off the hull with no effect.
Swaying to the motion of the building waves, Ryan swept the enemy
boat with rounds from the Steyr, but the copper-jacketed 7.62 mm rounds
of the longblaster were useless against the military armor of the
hulking PT boat.
"Fireblast!" he stormed, dropping the spent weapon. "Small arms are
useless against that behemoth. Mind the backwash. I'm going to use a
LAW!"
Grabbing a fat tube from under the canvas mound, Ryan yanked the
weapon to its full length. The sights popped up on top, and a large red
button was exposed.
"Clear?" Ryan demanded, zeroing the aft port. The water was getting
rough, waves chopping at the raft.
"Clear!" Krysty shouted.
Heading straight toward the rafts, the PT boat loomed before them as
Ryan pressed the launch button. A volcanic cone of exhaust stretched
for several yards from the rear of the tube, and a rustling firebird
launched from the tube and streaked toward the PT boat.
The rocket hit the vessel amidships, punching through the hull and
detonating. Torn to pieces, the deck lifted off the gunwale as the boat
was blown apart, men and machinery spewing outward in a geyser of
destruction.
As the current quickly took the rafts away from the sinking
wreckage, Ryan tossed the spent tube overboard and grabbed another.
Warily, he waited for another speedboat to appear, but no more vessels
ventured from the junkyard ville.
"I don't like this," Krysty said suspiciously. "They gave up too
quickly."
Holstering his blaster, Dean suggested, "Mebbe they don't have any
more boats."
"I saw a dozen more at the dock," J.B. replied, feeling uneasy. "A
few had to be in working condition."
"There's something wrong here," Ryan agreed, collapsing the
launcher. "Damned if I know what, though."
"We shot the shit out of them," Mildred stated forcibly. "They're
just scared of folks with guns."
"Could be," Ryan said reluctantly. "Then again, they charged
straight into our blasters and didn't shoot back when they wanted
prisoners. That doesn't sound cowardly."
"No," she agreed. "No, it doesn't."
Unexpectedly, the rafts lurched in a rush of acceleration that
nearly knocked the companions off their feet.
"Now, what was that?" Krysty demanded. "A riptide?"
"Hey," Jak said, throwing his weight against the tiller. There was
no response. "Going south. Can't stop."
"Same here," Doc shouted, struggling with the helm. "The current is
too strong."
Choppy waves broke over the front of the first raft, covering the
companions with misty spray.
"Does that taste salty?" Krysty asked, touching her lips.
In sudden understanding, Mildred dipped a hand into the rough water
and licked a finger. That was brine, sure enough.
"Sweet Jesus, this is why they stopped chasing us!" Mildred shouted.
"We're caught in an underwater river!"
Once, long ago, the physician had seen a television program on such
events. A severe earthquake would occasionally lower a large section of
land, and the sea would rush along an existing riverbed, pushing the
fresh water out of its way as it plowed inland. Nukes or some natural
disaster had to have rearranged the Carolinas, and now they were
trapped in a reverse river, probably heading for a blast crater.
"This is taking us to a blast crater!" she shouted over the raging
waters. "A really huge mucking big one!"
"We could jump," Dean offered hesitantly, with no real enthusiasm
for the plan.
"Caught in the flow," Ryan grunted, straining at the helm. The
aluminum door was shaking wildly in his grasp, but seemed to be helping
a little. No rocks hit yet. "Jump and we'd be dragged into the
whirlpool."
"The what?"
"Two rivers going in opposite directions—of course there's a
whirlpool." J.B. yanked off his glasses and placed them securely in a
shirt pocket.
"There it is!" Krysty cried out, pointing.
An islet of land was faintly visible ahead of them, the blue water
from the river rushing toward the east, and the darker sea waters
racing toward the west. At the apex of the islet was a large depression
of white water.
Mist rose from the location, and a low steady roar could be heard, then
felt in the trembling logs of the raft.
"Hot pipe, no wonder they stopped chasing us!" Dean panted, stuffing
MRE packs into his pockets.
After lashing a rope around about her waist, Krysty joined Ryan at
the helm, fighting for control of the craft. "Easy. Don't fight it!"
Ryan shouted. "Trim into the flow. We need speed!"
"Fast, then sharp!" J.B. called out from the cargo raft, with Doc
beside him at the tiller.
"Together!" Ryan shouted, stealing a glance at the chains mooring
the crafts in tandem. "Must be together, or we go in!"
"Follow your lead!"
Hair plastered to her head, Krysty yelled, "We going to shoot past
the rim?"
"Unless you got a better idea!"
The entire world seemed to be vibrating. Spray soaked them in a
matter of seconds, the thickening mist blocking any view of what was
coming. A low moan came from the vortex, the noise raising and lowering.
Suddenly, the mists parted and there it was again. The river dropped
away to their left, the swirling cone of water extending out of sight.
Every loose item on the raft tumbled away as the craft tilted
dangerously to the right. Pots, pans and the last LAW rocket flew off
and the supplies bulged under the canvas sheet, straining to break
loose.
Speech was impossible, so Ryan shouted orders into Krysty's ear. She
nodded and drew her revolver, praying to Gaia that the others would
understand. Krysty fired three shots into the air, then two shots, then
one.
In unison, both teams strained at the helms, forcing the doors to
angle away from the whirlpool. Instantly, they began to swing that way.
But the hinges were tearing free from the log, and the shaking doors
slashed flesh like a butcher's knife. Blood flowed from their hands as
the companions fought for their lives against the savage fury of nature.
The rafts broke free of the whirlpool, sent flying yards high by
their momentum to violently splash down in the briny waters on the
other side of the islet. The logs writhed, and a dozen ropes snapped,
but the chains held and the rafts didn't break apart.
Everybody took the moment of peace to catch their breath, and flex
tired hands. Behind them, the vortex swirled and moaned, but the ocean
waters were now working with them to shove the rafts away from the
deadly whirlpool.
Drenched, J.B. grabbed Mildred by the collar and soundly kissed her.
She returned the favor.
Doc merely beamed like an idiot. "By gad, we made it! Huzzah!"
"Not yet," Ryan shouted, his ears ringing slightly from the pounding
surf. "White water ahead!"
Rising from the rushing waters were dozens of rocks and boulders,
the river crashing against them in foamy waves that shot twenty feet
into the sky.
In shock, Dean realized they were going downhill, the river waters
increasing to incredible speeds. The crashing waves hid the rocks from
sight, and the mounting currents buffeted the rafts helplessly from
side to side. He wanted to shout advice, or a suggestion, but not a
damn thing came to mind.
"We're heading for shore!" Ryan bellowed, tightening his grip on the
battered door from the APC. Through the waves, he could see green trees
to their right. The islet had to have been the tip of a delta. Dry land
was only yards away.
Then the front raft bounced off a rock, and the timbers cracked from
the impact, the chains straining to hold the tiny craft together.
Another boulder appeared, and Jak shoved with a pole as Ryan and Krysty
leaned into the tiller. At the last moment, the craft swung away from
the granite outcropping with the second raft sluggishly lagging along
in its wake. But not fast enough.
A green wall of moss-covered granite loomed into sight, and the
cargo raft smacked the rock a glancing blow, the logs yawning wide
below their boots as the ropes were tested to the breaking point. Once
more the chains saved the raft from total destruction.
The sky was full of falling water, boulders everywhere. Then a low
thunder could be heard, a rumble that grew in force of volume until
there was nothing else in the world.
A terrible suspicion grew in Ryan, and he again tried for the shore,
but it was too little, too late. The companions didn't have time to
curse or scream as the homemade rafts sailed over the edge of the
gigantic waterfall and tumbled downward into the misty abyss.
Chapter Seven
Storm clouds hide the stars overhead, thunder rumbling softly in the
distance as the blue shirt rattled the lock on the storage hut.
Satisfied it was secure, the sec man walked around the corner, heading
for the next point on his nightly sweep of the complex. The chore was
an easy job, the forced workers at the ville were starved to near death
and beaten constantly. Any worker who showed any sign of rebellion or
pride was executed immediately. Some were gut shot to slowly bled to
death, while others were staked out and fed to the muties hiding in the
hills. The lucky ones were set on fire, or simply buried alive. Dr.
Jamaisvous demanded that the construction schedules always be met, and
he wouldn't tolerate any excuse for failure. No sec man would dare to
risk receiving the type of punishment they dished out on a daily basis.
Whistling a tune, the sec man turned a corner and recoiled from a
sharp pain. Breathless, he stared at the wooden handle jutting from his
chest and felt the strength flow from his limbs. With fading eyesight,
he realized a grinning slave in rags was holding the shaft of the
pickax.
"Victory or death," the slave whispered as the guard toppled over
into a pool of blood.
More slaves scurried into view and carried the warm corpse into the
slave quarters, while dirt was kicked over the spilled life fluid. A
crowd of starving people blocked the doorway, but they instantly parted
before the murderers and closed after they passed, hiding any possible
sight of what was happening.
The back room of the slave quarters was the lav, merely some holes
sawed into the floor above a reeking pit. In a dark corner, they
stripped the sec man naked. His boots went one way, pants another,
holster, blaster and ammo elsewhere.
"Is that enough?" a woman grunted excitedly, fondling the wheelgun
as if it were a living pet. A jagged scar covered half of her face, the
eye dead white. "Do we have enough?"
"Yes," a bald man replied coldly. "This gives us twelve rounds for
every blaster."
"A full charge and a reload," another gushed. "Black dust, I never
thought we would ever get that much."
The bald man cocked back the hammer on the wheelgun. "Get the
torches. When you hear the first shots, start the fires."
"Victory or death," the conspirators whispered in unison.
"Death to Jamaisvous," the leader growled. "Now, go!"
THE CAPTAIN of the guards was in a kiosk sipping a warm beer when a
strangled cry came from the darkness. Dropping his boots to the floor,
the sec man stood and drew his blaster. Listening carefully, he edged
to the doorway and pushed open the door with fingertips. Nothing was in
sight.
"Damn stingwing again," he muttered.
Instantly, there was a flash of silver and the captain was driven
back into the kiosk by a slave holding a stick with a jagged sliver of
glass tied to the end. With his throat slashed, it was impossible for
the sec man to breathe. Blood filled his mouth and trickled onto his
shirt. With fumbling hands, he tried to fire his blaster, but another
slave was upon him, slashing with another piece of glass. Pain lanced
his hand, and he saw the grinning man holding the bloody blaster, his
own twitching finger still on the trigger.
The guard spit at the slaves, and they stabbed him in the eyes,
breaking their glass knives. Screaming, he fell to his knees. More
glass was produced, and the killers slashed at his belly until his
intestines slithered onto the gory floor as months of abuse were paid
back with interest in a few hellish seconds. Finally, the corpse
dropped lifeless upon the steaming entrails.
"Victory or death," the slaves whispered to one another, and began
rummaging through the room for more ammo, or anything else that might
be used as a weapon.
PAUSING IN HIS PATROL of the grounds beneath the dish, a corporal
fought back a yawn and strained to hear what had made the strange
noise. It was a sort of moan, mixed with a slapping sound. Was some sec
man having sex with a slave while on duty? He'd have the man's balls
cut off for dereliction of duty.
The noises came again, and he followed them to a spot beneath the
dish. The night here was as black as pitch, a circle of night within
night, and the corporal proceeded at a careful pace.
A toolshed sat near the concrete base that supported the dish.
Bending close to a window, he heard the noises more clearly and
grinned. A slave's rags were draped over the window to hide what was
going on inside, but through the rips in the cloth he could see three
naked women stroking one another, caressing and kissing, hands cupping
breasts and stroking between open thighs. Unable to tear his eyes away
from the delicious sight, he pressed closer to the window as a
large-breasted slave lay down upon a worktable asking to be taken. An
older woman with streaks of silver in her red hair climbed on her face
and began rocking back and forth. Then the younger blonde buried her
face between the woman's thighs. Their moans and cries of pleasure grew
louder as their sex play became more passionate and inventive.
Rubbing the front of his clothing, the corporal glanced around to
make sure nobody else was near, then holstered his blaster and slid a
hand into his pants for some relief himself.
Instantly, the shadows rose behind him and a woman grunted with
exertion as she drove two long spikes into each of his ears.
Convulsing, the corporal gurgled incoherently. The slave waited until
he was still, then scratched on the window. A few seconds later, the
three women stepped from the hut, wearing blue shirts and boots, and
carrying blasters.
"Here," said the fourth slave, passing over a set of keys.
"Victory or death," the older woman whispered in reply, and they
separated quickly, leaving the corpse on the cold ground.
WEARILY WALKING from his bathroom, Silas Jamaisvous turned off the
lights and poured himself a stiff drink from a crystal decanter. The
amber color of the predark liquor was that of new honey, the smell
ambrosia. He only hoped it would mix with the drugs and give him a
night of dreamless sleep for once.
Opening a small vial, he added a measured dose of morphine, then
doubled the amount. Even with the drug, he still wasn't sleeping well.
The dream, always the terrible dream.
Draining the glass in a few swallows, Silas sat on his bed and
kicked off his velvet slippers. The room was nicely warm, the heavy
curtains blocking any noise of the troops on patrol outside. It had
been a long and fruitful day of work. The master computer system for
the Kite seemed to be working fine today, but the real test would come
tomorrow when they tested the focusing mechanism. Having the ultimate
weapon meant nothing unless it could be used with surgical skill. Clubs
were for cavemen, and he was a scientist.
Snuggling under the covers, Silas fought against the drug coursing
through his veins, formulas and mathematical equations filling his
mind. But finally, he relaxed and let hated sleep claim him once again.
Almost immediately, sweat formed on his brow, and his eyelids began to
flutter.
Groaning and mumbling in the delirium, the man couldn't hear the
cover come off the air-conditioning vent in the wall. It was maneuvered
inside the shaft, and a figure slowly emerged from the wall, lowering
himself to the floor, the bare feet making not a sound. The invader
waited until his vision became adjusted to the dark, then drew a length
of rope from around his waist. Holding an end in each hand, he crept
toward the snoring man.
Standing above the sleeper, the slave watched the rise and fall of
the madman's chest, savoring this moment of revenge. Then he bent over
to slide the garrote around the unprotected throat of the man who had
tortured to death so many people in the name of his holy science.
"Victory or death," he said through clenched teeth. "And it's death
for you, whitecoat!"
A muffled cough sounded and the room flashed with light. The slave
stumbled backward, bleeding from the chest. He hit the wall and dropped
the garrote, drawing a blaster. Again the cough sounded, the
muzzle-flash of the silenced weapon strobing the darkness as the
soft-nosed rounds punched the slave to the ground with sledgehammer
force.
Brilliant lights flooded the room, and Major William Sheffield
walked over to the dying slave, the unfired blaster still in the
unfortunate wretch's hands.
Coolly, Sheffield shot the skinny man once in each eye, cracking
open the skull. A trickle of brains flowed down the wall and onto the
floor.
"Secure the room," the major ordered, and a platoon of sec men
poured in from the hallway to swarm around Silas, forming a living wall
of protection.
A sec man exited the closet with a silenced pistol, an electronic
device of some kind strapped to his face.
"It was amazing," the guard said, sliding off the visor. "I could
actually see in the dark. Everything was colored green, but I could
truly see."
"Yes, you did well," Sheffield said, swinging his weapon at the
guard. "Pity you let the slave get so close to the commander."
"Sir?" the guard asked, frightened.
Sheffield shot the man in the heart, the .45-caliber round from the
U.S. Army Colt automatic driving him into the closet.
Crossing the room, he shot the man again to make sure of the job,
then strode over to the mumbling scientist.
"Dr. Jamaisvous?" he said loudly, shaking the man. There was no
response. Impatiently, he slapped the old man hard. Nothing, but more
mumbling.
"Okay, we handle this ourselves," Sheffield stated to the troops.
"Sound the call, but do it quietly. We know the slaves have been
planning something for a while. I thought it was a mass escape, but it
looks like they might plan on killing us first."
Cradling an AK-47 longblaster, a corporal wearing a bulletproof vest
snorted. "Bad choice, sir. They might have had a chance in hell of
running away."
INSIDE THE MAIN OFFICE for the power plant, the chief engineer for
the complex stopped eating a sandwich when he heard an odd banging
noise. Grabbing some gloves, he quickly stepped onto the main floor of
the plant to see if there was something wrong with the cranky steam
generators again. The damn things were always overheating, losing
pressure or blowing a valve.
Clearly highlighted in the red glow of the main furnace, the
engineer gasped at the sight of three sec men lying on the ground,
slaves beating them with coal shovels. Then one slave turned the edge
of the shovel on a cringing guard and decapitated the man on the spot,
the head rolling away, leaving a crimson trail.
"Motherfuckers!" the engineer shouted, and grabbed his blaster, but
a shovel from behind smashed his arm. His dropped weapon skittered away
under a lathe.
Clutching the broken arm, the engineer tried to make it back to the
office, but halfway there he saw slaves standing in the doorway, the
men and women armed with the AK-47 blasters from the arms locker.
"As if you scum know how to operate a blaster," he said with a
sneer, backing away. But fear filled his belly, and bitter vomit rose
in his throat.
In reply, the slaves clicked off the safeties and worked the bolts,
chambering rounds.
"No, stop. I can help you!" he pleaded, tears running down his
chubby cheeks. "I know what's going on here. I can protect you from the
Kite!"
"Liar," a slave snarled, and fired once, hitting him in the left
knee.
The pain was excruciating, and the engineer dropped to the floor,
clutching the ghastly wound, a shard of white bone visible in the
flesh. "No, please! Let me live! I beg you!"
"As you let the children live?" another spit. "And the women after
you used them?"
"Please…"
"Yes, we should let him live," a tall woman said unexpectedly. "Let
him stay alive all the way to the furnace!"
The slaves crowded around the engineer and bodily hauled him away.
Though weak from blood loss, the terrified engineer fought like a wild
animal, kicking and biting, until beaten partially senseless by the
wooden stocks of the blasters.
Weeping uncontrollably, the engineer was shoved into the second
furnace and the grille slammed shut. There came the telltale whoosing
sound of building pressure, and he screamed for salvation. Then the
searing flames engulfed the man, and he keened hideously. Unconcerned,
the slaves walked away, leaving him to enjoy his last few moments alone
with his precious machines.
SILENTLY MOUTHING CURSES, a sec man toppled off the roof of the
power plant, his face dark purple, a length of knotted rope wound
around his constricted throat.
Screaming, a sec man stumbled out of the officers' lav, his pants
dragging around his ankles and blood pouring from his ass, the feather
shaft of an arrow protruding from between his plump cheeks.
The door to the dining hall was thrown open and slaves poured out,
carrying weapons and ammo belts. Inside, a dozen sec man lay sprawled
on the linen-covered tables, black tongues sticking out of their
foaming mouths, the beer mugs dripping a bluish liquid on the freshly
scrubbed floor.
Shouting orders, armed sec men piled out of the barracks, and the
night came alive with blasterfire as they were cut down in the street
by hidden snipers.
Suddenly, sirens blared and lights clicked on, filling the complex
with blinding illumination. But the tactic failed miserably. Instead of
startling the slaves and making them run away in fear, it gave them
heart. They used the visibility to shoot down additional sec men, men
seized their longblasters to kill more of the blue shirts. "Victory or
death!" a woman yelled, waving a bloody longblaster. The rally cry was
repeated by a hundred people in rags, brandishing weapons of every
possible description.
IN A THUNDEROUS crash, the side of the main warehouse broke apart
and an Abrams M-1 tank rolled out of the building, crashing under its
massive armored treads several Hummers that had been commandeered by
slaves.
Oddly, nobody fired a weapon at the tank, and the commander began to
laugh as the gunner tracked the machine guns of the military juggernaut
after the slaves scattering throughout the complex.
As the Abrams rumbled past the barracks, a glass window shattered
and a slave leaped upon the machine, clinging to the thick barrel of
the 120 mm cannon like a monkey. More laughter sounded from within the
Abrams, and then a series of metallic clanks announced the main gun
was being loaded. Light poured from the barrel, and the slave released
the handle of the gren in his hand and threw it down the barrel. The
men inside cursed in shock. Releasing the cannon, the slave fell to the
soil and tried to run, but the military tank loomed above him like a
wall of death. He darted to the left, the right, but not fast enough.
The treads caught his leg, and he was pulled underneath the massive
machine shrieking and wailing until his head was mashed flat.
Then the gren detonated, flame shooting from the cannon and out
every port and hatch. Steam rising from its vents, the Abrams stood
motionless in the street, the smell of death pouring from the broken
vehicle.
With the destruction of the Army tank, the fighting became pandemic
in the ville. Shots rang out constantly, screams coming from every
building. The fighting went hand-to-hand at the armory, as each side
straggled to reclaim the precious cache of ammo. Triumphantly, the sec
men gained control of the building, ruthlessly shooting the slaves
crawling in through the broken windows and shimmying out the fireplace
flue.
Then a horn sounded a single clear note, and the slaves raced away
from the structure. Weapons at the ready, the sec men stuffed grens
into their pockets and waited for the next assault when the floor below
erupted in a strident blast. The entire building lifted into the air,
the tunnels below the foundation clearly visible for a split second
before the tons of masonry plummeted earthward in a grisly rain.
That was the turning point of the battle. Now the slaves openly
challenged the sec men, blaster for blaster, man for man, and the blues
were decimated every time they tried to make a stand. Soon the sec men
were ducking for cover, then retreating to strategic locations, and
finally running for their lives before the relentless advance of the
ragged horde.
"RETREAT TO THE BUNKER!" cried the sec chief, launching a flare into
the nighttime sky. The incandescent charge soared upward and detonated
in a pyrotechnic display visible from everywhere in the complex.
A shot hit him in the chest, the blow to his vest only making him
grunt. Then a tracer round took him in the throat, and the man toppled
off the roof of the Hummer, launching a second flare with his last
ounce of strength. The charge went wild, rocketing down a street,
glancing off the side of a building and streaking into the night to
explode among the trees. Few saw the heroic act, even fewer the second
flare. But the first signal had been spotted, and the wounded blue
shirts obeyed the desperate command, fleeing toward the concrete block
located in an open field.
The bunker was a stout concrete building, its original purpose lost
forever in time. But the windows were sealed with iron plate, the walls
reinforced with multiple layers of bricks, the domed roof smooth
concrete over riveted sheets of cold iron.
"Hurry!" a corporal shouted, standing in the doorway, one hand on
the portal, the other gripping the jamb. Sec men stood behind him,
firing their blasters in controlled bursts at the bloodthirsty throng
racing across the field. Dozens of sec men poured into the building,
plunging deeper into the structure to make room for their brethren
guards so close on their heels.
Carrying a flamethrower, a sec chief appeared from within the
bunker. "That's everybody. Close the door."
"We have a man out there!" the door guard dared to respond.
The sec chief squinted into the chaos. A single sec men was running
toward the bunker only a few yards ahead of the slave army. Arms
pumping, legs flashing, the blue shirt raced pell-mell across the
field, leading the way for the howling killers, a herald announcing the
holocaust.
"Fuck him! This is a direct order. Close the door, Corporal."
Confused, the sec man jerked his head at the running blue shirt so
close to the bunker, and the slaves so close behind. With a grave
expression, he began to push the heavy door closed, the opening
narrowing by the heartbeat.
"Wait," the runner wheezed. "Please, wait!"
The armored door closed with a boom, the heavy locks sliding noisily
across the array of iron bands.
Stumbling to a halt, the sec man stood in the middle of the field
staring dumbfounded at the bunker. "Damn you," he panted. "Damn you all
to hell."
A longblaster shot took the man in the shoulder, spinning him, blood
spraying from the impact. Now facing the triumphant slaves, the blue
shirt made no effort to run or draw the weapon at his hip. There seemed
to be no point to the act. Howling in victory, the slaves swarmed over
the standing man, and he disappeared within the mob.
Reaching the bunker, the slaves fired their blasters at the door and
walls, the 7.62 mm rounds chipping the bricks but nothing more.
"Find some explosives!" shouted a big woman, a pistol in one hand
and a bloody piece of scalp in the other. "Let's blast our way in!"
A scrawny man stood before the door as if defying it with his mere
presence. "I say we break it down and catch the bastards alive!" he
shouted. "Then we crucify the lot of them! Who's with me?"
The slaves cheered their approval. A bracing girder used for
supporting the dish was found, and ten of the largest slaves grabbed
hold and charged at the iron door. The end of the steel girder
flattened as it hit, and the door shook dangerously on its hinges.
"Again!" screamed the leader, and the girder slammed against the
iron portal, making it rattle loosely.
"It's coming free!" a woman shouted. "We're almost in!"
A tiny slot opened in the door and several blasters fired. Two
slaves toppled over with ghastly head wounds. But more rushed boldly to
take their place, and one man shoved an AK-47 into the port and emptied
the clip, twisting the barrel about in a circle, trying to chill
everybody on the other side. Screams of pain told of some degree of
success.
The girder crashed against the door once more, and suddenly clear
moonlight washed over the battlefield.
Startled, the slaves paused in the attack, some of them plainly
frightened. Above the complex, the ever present storm clouds were
thinning away to nothingness and twinkling stars could be seen
overhead, the fat moon a silvery orb to rule the sky.
"Beautiful," a woman cried.
A man recoiled in fear. "Ain't natural. No clouds in the sky? Ain't
natural, I tell ya!"
The leader of the slaves started to reply when he heard a low-key
humming and realized there was a surge of power going through the
high-tension lines feeding the dish, the accumulators audibly charging.
His heart pounding, the slave had no idea what to do. Was this an
attack? Were the blues electrifying the door?
Just then a man screamed, clawing wildly at his face; Then another
did the same, and another. Caterwauling people fell off the roofs of
buildings, untriggered rifles exploded, loose ammo crackling like
popcorn and Hummers burst into fireballs.
A FEW MINUTES LATER, the battered door to the bunker was forced open
by sec men who immediately retreated, covering their mouths and noses
and trying not to gag. The portal was closed posthaste, the edges
sealed with rags and anything that could be shoved into the jamb to
keep out the horrible stink.
The blue shirts knew they would have to wait a few hours for the
stench to dissipate. But there was no rush. The rebellion was over.
Everything within a mile of the bunker was now stone dead.
INSIDE THE MAIN LAB of the complex, Silas Jamaisvous stood at a
control panel, an empty syringe of adrenaline sticking out of his arm.
Woozy, he pulled down the switch operating the bus bar disconnecting
the main relay assembly from the power grid.
"It worked," he whispered in delight. "It really worked!"
"Yes, it did," Sheffield said from the corner of the lab. "And we
really need to talk about that."
Chapter Eight
Ryan awoke, still hearing the thunder of the waterfall.
"Son of a mutie bitch," he muttered. "We survived after all."
Struggling to his hands and knees, the man realized half of his face
was cold and the other side painfully hot. He been lying facedown in
the mud with the sun baking his blind side.
Painfully sitting upright, Ryan felt like the loser in an ax fight.
He remembered going over the waterfall and not much after that.
Sluggishly, the one-eyed man felt for his SIG-Sauer. He was amazed to
find it still there. Trembling fingers jacked the slide, and he
holstered the useless blaster. It was coated with mud. Firing a round
now might make the weapon explode.
Drawing the curved panga, he stood and surveyed the landscape. They
were in a shining sea of smooth water, tiny tufts of brown grass
dotting the surface, and farther out was the occasional dead tree
draped with moss and green with mold. The smell of salt was strong. The
water was about a foot deep, the ground underneath the soft muck of
decaying plants. It was a swamp formed from the runoff of the ocean
river. To the east rose a high cliff, a waterfall cascading from the
top, filling the air with a fine mist and a beautiful rainbow.
The Deathlands warrior frowned. Cliffs behind, swamp ahead, not much
choice of direction to take.
Wiping the salt mud off his face, Ryan counted off the rest of the
companions and was relieved to find everybody present. They were lying
limply about, but no limbs jutted at odd angles, and no pools of blood
were visible. Krysty lay near him, with one cowboy boot missing, her
fur coat looking like it had drowned itself. A few yards away, Mildred
was draped over a piece of the raft. The unconscious physician still
gripped her med kit.
The smaller raft was intact. One of the logs was broken in two, but
the canvas still retained the supplies within. But the cargo raft was
destroyed, boxes and timbers strewed everywhere for hundreds of yards.
Nobody dead, one raft still whole. With this little damage, Ryan
realized it couldn't have been a proper waterfall with a straight drop.
It had to have been merely a steep incline, and they were flushed onto
this muddy field like so much shit. Vaguely, Ryan had disjointed
memories of swimming, fighting to reach the surface, people shouting.
After that, it was blank. One raft lost. Could have been worse, a lot
worse.
"Krysty?" he asked, sloshing closer to the woman.
"I'm alive, lover," she replied, struggling into a crouch. "Just
barely, but still pulling air."
Finding the other boot, Ryan gave it to her, then helped the woman
to stand. "It's a miracle we survived," he stated.
"Thank Gaia." Krysty coughed and tried to wipe the clinging muck off
her sodden clothes.
Resembling a corpse escaping the grave, Mildred arose from the
watery mud. "Anybody hurt?" the physician asked wearily, feeling her
own arms and chest for broken bones.
"We're okay," Ryan replied. "Battered, but no serious damage."
"Good." Mildred hawked and spit to clear her mouth. "Looks like
we're in a runoff swamp," she said. "Better than a rad pit, I suppose."
Quickly, Ryan checked his lapel and saw no readings from the
miniature Geiger counter. "Clean," he reported, then actually smiled as
he noted the disheveled appearance of his friends, dark mud covering
them like camou armor. "Well, sort of anyway," he added.
Favoring his right leg, Doc struggled to stand, the black-powder
charges from the LeMat dribbling out of the holster and down his leg
like black blood.
"How inconvenient," he rumbled in annoyance, then addressed the
others. "By any chance, does anybody see my stick?"
"Over here," Dean cried, and splashed across the water. By a rotting
tree, he plunged his hands into the silt and pulled the ebony
swordstick free.
"I saw the light flashing off the silver," he said, returning the
weapon.
"Thank you, lad. Good show." Doc twisted the lion's-head handle and
pulled out the sword for inspection. The steel was foggy with
condensation, but otherwise undamaged.
Dean shrugged. "No prob."
His limp fedora perched on a stick to dry, J.B. was sitting on the
undamaged raft, holding his glasses by the stems and rinsing them in
the seawater.
Knife in hand, Jak stood nearby, staring hard at the desolate land
stretching before them. It resembled his home of Louisiana.
"Clean blasters!" the pale teenager barked as an order.
Sliding the patch to the front of his face, Ryan looked about and
saw nothing of possible menace. "Explain," he commanded.
Jak frowned. "Swamps alive. Lots life, snakes, rats. Not here, but
could be."
Heeding the sage advice, the companions moved to the raft and got
busy. Sparingly using the clean water from the canteens, they cleaned
their weapons and made sure each was in working order. Then with guards
posted, they attempted to clean themselves. Dean found a depression in
the land two feet deep, and they washed as thoroughly as possible in
the makeshift tub.
"What's wrong with the soap?" J.B. asked, trying to work up a lather
in his hands.
"This is salt water," Mildred said, pouring another skimmed cup of
swamp water over her hair. More silt rinsed out of her beaded plaits.
"It takes a special kind of soap to foam in brine."
"Swell," he grumbled.
After the ablutions, somewhat cleaner and pounds lighter, the
companions sat on the raft eating cold MRE rations. The warm water rose
to their knees, and they closely watched the surface for undulating
ripples that meant the presence of snakes. Swamps were the worst kind
of terrain to cross. Mud weighed you down, great holes could open
beneath you at any step, the air was thick and difficult to breathe,
plus most of the animals were poisonous.
Chewing a ration bar, Dean glanced at the waterfall. "Looks like we
walk from here."
"Where is here?" Krysty asked, her hair flexing and waxing around
her as if drying itself in the pale gray sunlight.
"I checked earlier," J.B. replied around a mouthful of peanut butter
and graham crackers. He took a pull of water to clear his throat.
"We're still in North Carolina. About twenty miles from the Tennessee
border."
"That's good news," Ryan said, wiping the inside of a metallic foil
bag with a finger to get the last of the military cheese. The stuff was
gray, but he knew that was the normal color of cheese. Carrot juice was
normally added to make it more appetizing, but he guessed the MRE packs
were designed to be cheap, as well as last forever.
Placing aside an empty envelope of corned-beef hash, Mildred rinsed
her spoon clean and tucked it into a pocket. "Well, if it's any
comfort, there's no way the blues will ever find us out here." She
gestured at the empty expanse.
Removing her coat, Krysty hung the garment over a dead tree. It had
felt as if she were carrying another person on her shoulders. "Hate to
leave the supplies," she said, stretching. "But I suppose there's no
way to haul them along."
"We can make backpacks," Ryan said, standing. Wading around the
stationary raft, he peeled away the canvas sheet and took stock of the
jumbled boxes. "Bare essentials. Only food and ammo. We each get one
gren, J.B. gets the rest of the explosives, Mildred any medical
supplies. Leave the rest."
"Dry socks," Jak added sternly. "Live in swamp, dry socks save feet."
"He's right," Mildred said, respectfully appraising the teenager.
"This place is a breeding ground for fungus. We'll change our socks
every time we break for food, and I'll spare some sulfur to try and
keep out infections."
"Swamps," Doc muttered, fluffing the muddy frills of his shirt.
"Sweet nature's toilet."
Everybody laughed, but it was Mildred's comment that struck a
resonating cord within Ryan, and once again he debated the wisdom of
their goal. Should they be heading for the town of Shiloh, or the site
of the infamous Civil War battle? The historic Shiloh was only a few
miles away from a redoubt. Shiloh ville won the debate because it was
closer.
"Might as well get moving," J.B. said, wiping off his palms with a
moist towelette included in the MRE pack. "Miles to go before we sleep
and all that, eh, Doc?"
"Without a doubt, my friend."
As the companions rose, the raft moved unexpectedly, floating to the
surface of the dirty water.
"Dark night," the man whispered in surprise. "Salt water is more
buoyant than fresh."
"Is this deep enough?" Krysty asked, lifting a boot and inspecting
the water-mark level.
Mildred pushed at the logs with a hand, and they moved. "Seems so,
yeah."
"There's no current," Dean said, crossing his arms. "Are we going to
drag it behind?"
Splashing closer, Ryan was already at the rear of the craft, lifting
the mooring lines from the mulch and testing their strength. "Half of
us will push," he stated, "the rest can drag."
ROWS UPON ROWS of cots filled the makeshift hospital of Front Royal,
temporarily located inside the long dining hall of Cawdor Castle. The
great table had been moved to the end of the hall and converted into a
surgical bed, leather straps draped over the bloodstained surface to
hold down the sec men who needed limbs removed or other major surgery.
The ville's supply of predark ether had been used up the first day, and
now the healer poured shine down the throats of his patients until they
fell unconscious.
Thankfully, the screams of agony hadn't been heard in days. The
seriously hurt were out of their misery, dead and buried, either from
the wounds they received in battle, or from the meatball surgery trying
to save them. The rest of the brown shirts and civilians lay on the
simple cots, waiting for medical attention to their bullet wounds and
stumps. The air reeked of feces, whiskey and blood, and the painful
moaning never stopped, day or night.
Several of the local gaudy sluts moved among the patients emptying
bedpans into a wheelbarrow they pushed along. In this time of
emergency, everybody in the ville worked. On the other side of the long
hall, a pair of children carried a steaming wooden bucket of freshly
brewed tea from the kitchen. Carefully, they filled the cup next to
each cot. If the cup was full, they dumped it on the floor and filled
it with fresh. Made from old willow bark, Healer Mildred had said the
brew would help some of the wounded with their pain. Amazingly, it did
with some, but others not at all.
Kneeling alongside a sec man who had been crushed by falling rocks
during the war, the new healer adjusted the folded blanket under his
head. "There, is that better?" Sullivan asked softly.
"No," the sec man moaned. "Neck still hurts…"
Irritably, Sullivan grabbed the trooper by the throat and savagely
twisted. There was a snap, and the patient went limp.
"See?" the mutie whispered in amusement. "I said that I could end
your pain."
There was no reply.
Moving to the next patient, Sullivan found the man soundly asleep.
Good. They should all fall asleep, then die. There were plenty of
troops in the world to replace them, so why did Baron Cawdor worry
about a few damaged people. It just made no sense. But then Sullivan's
job wasn't to be logical or reasonable, just to murder the baron and
leave. Nothing more. Of course, the baron was surrounded by a squad of
trigger-happy sec men, so the chilling would take some special planning.
Awake, and carving a pipe from a corncob, the next patient merely
had two broken legs that were setting nicely. Sullivan set the bones
himself, and made the cast from leather belts and kindling. Pretending
to be a healer was his easiest disguise. It was impossible to torture
people for years and not to learn something about how to keep them
alive. Being zealous in the questioning was a beginner's mistake. Cut
off a man's hand, and he would bleed to death in minutes. Ah, but bind
the arm with twine to retard the circulation, then cut off the hand,
and your patient could live for days. Any damn fool could stab to death
a man chained to the wall, but it took an artist to teasingly peel off
every inch of skin and still keep the prisoner alive and sane.
The door to the kitchen eased open, and a woman rushed into the
dining room. Adjusting the moist bandage on a burned face,
Sullivan noted her arrival with interest. Few of the locals seemed
to be in any hurry these days. It was as if the war had drained them of
not only their strength, but also their very will to live.
The newcomer was plump and full breasted, highly attractive for her
species. She looked over the hospital with obvious distaste, nose
wrinkling at the pungent stink. Sullivan didn't like the smell, either.
But it was either suffer the stink, or open the windows and have the
patients freeze to death at night. Personally, he preferred the latter.
Extremes of temperature meant little to his kind.
With a start, she saw him looming over a patient and hurried over,
holding her skirts in a fist to keep the cloth from touching the dead
and dying.
"Sullivan," she whispered, coming close. "They know! Run for the
hills."
Placing aside the sharpened piece of reed he was using to drain a
pus-filled wound, Sullivan slowly turned his head. Her eyes were
lovely, and as cold and hard as his own.
"May I beg pardon?" he asked politely. "My name is Daniel Lissman
and—"
"They know who you are, and why you are here!" she whispered
urgently, coming closer. "They call me Terry and I work in the gaudy
house. Last night I heard a couple of the troopers talking. They're
going to claim the baron's wife, Tabitha, is feeling poorly, fell off a
horse or something, and when you go into that room, you ain't coming
out!"
"Indeed," Sullivan murmured, stuffing his hands into his pockets and
thumbing back the hammers on the two snub-nosed revolvers. "And why do
you call me, what was the name…Sylvester?"
Glancing over a shoulder, Terry spoke fast. "Cut the shit. I also
fucked Overton's men when they were here, and aside from Ryan, you were
the only thing they feared. Big guy, no hair, likes to do the dead."
"Really now!"
She sidled closer, the thick smell of stale perfume and sweat
radiating from her body. "I saw you last night at the graveyard, so
don't tell me different."
Calmly, Sullivan debated the possibilities. This could be a trap by
the baron to trick him into revealing himself. Or it could be the
truth, a whore looking to connect to somebody more powerful for a
better life.
Slowly standing to his full height, the mutie looked down at the big
woman and spread his arms in a friendly manner.
"This is an interesting tale," Sullivan said, resting a hand on her
shoulder. She trembled at the contact, as he increased the pressure
until she thought the bones would break.
"We should discuss it in private," he added, lifting the woman a few
inches off the floor and carrying her away.
Terry tried to speak, but the pain was too great.
Moving quickly, Sullivan headed for the door to the basement. Once
out of sight, he could question this Terry thoroughly and learn the
truth.
"Wait, Healer!" a man shouted.
Only a yard from the door, Sullivan stopped and turned, hugging
Terry close to him as if they were close friends.
Maneuvering through the maze of cots, a brown shirt was rushing
toward them. He was armed, but the blaster was holstered. Sullivan
relaxed a little and smiled, his mind racing with new possibilities.
Unexpectedly, Terry slid her arm about his waist and shook her torso to
make her ample breasts jiggle. She was playing his lover. How very
interesting.
"How can I help you, Lieutenant?" the mutie asked politely.
The man gulped some air. "Lady Cawdor has fallen off her horse in
the stables. She can't breathe! Come quickly!"
"Oh, no!" Sullivan cried out, releasing his prisoner. Terry stayed
next to him, breathing hard. He could feel the heat of her breasts
through his clothing and was repulsed. "Elevate her legs at once and
loosen her clothing. I'll get some instruments and be right there!"
The sec man paused for a moment, unsure of what to do.
"Go!" Terry barked. "Every second you waste could mean her life,
fool!"
With a grim expression, the sec man nodded and dashed away.
"See?" Terry stated, rubbing her bruised ribs.
"You were correct," he said. "What is the price of this assistance?"
Terry leaned forward, her face shiny with avarice. "Take me with
you," she demanded, almost pleading. "I'm nothing here but a slut.
Somewhere else, with your help, I could marry well, become a lady.
Mebbe the wife of a baron!"
It was a fair price. He thought about the offer.
"Too much," Sullivan decided, and slapped her across the face, the
bones audibly cracking. Her skull partially crushed, Terry slumped to
the floor, burbling blood through the ruin of her mouth. Not caring if
anybody else was watching, Sullivan then kicked the woman, caving in
her chest. She tumbled across the floor, arms and legs flailing like a
rag doll's.
Moving to a cabinet, he ripped open a duffel bag, the old canvas
patched many times with different-colored cloth until it was almost a
camou pattern. Reaching inside, he started withdrawing glass bottles
filled with an oily liquid, greasy rags tied about the necks.
Lighting the rags, he threw the Molotov cocktails across the room in
every direction. Flames engulfed the cots, and the patients started to
scream, beating at the sticky fire covering their bodies with bandaged
hands. Sec men rushed in and gasped in horror. Sullivan used the
diversion to ruthlessly mow them down and steal a longblaster.
Stuffing the last two bottles into his jacket pockets, the mutie
stepped outside and hosed the street, shooting anybody in sight. The
screaming from inside the castle continued as he darted across the
courtyard, spraying controlled bursts from the Kalashnikov at the
rooftops and windows. No horses or wags were in sight, so he ran for
the barbican, hoping to cross the drawbridge and reach the safety of
the woods. Once he was among the trees, it would take an army of guards
to find him again.
A brick-lined tunnel went through the barbican of the outer wall,
and several men stood in a cluster near a smoking oil drum, the ragged
holes in the sides of the metal allowing the heat of the fire inside to
radiate outward. Without pause, Sullivan gunned them down, dropping his
blaster when it clicked empty and grabbing another weapon from one of
the dead men.
A swarm of brown shirts charged from the shadows, and Sullivan
kicked one in the throat. One fired a pistol, the round scoring a
bloody furrow along Sullivan's cheek. The mutie shot the norm in the
groin, and shoved the wooden stock of the longblaster backward,
crushing the chest of another. Then a wounded brown shirt lurched from
the pile of corpses and tackled him around the legs. Furious, Sullivan
kicked the man aside, and another grabbed his arm. The mutie buried his
teeth into the norm's throat and ripped out a chunk of flesh. He was
released instantly.
Sprinting from the tunnel, Sullivan scanned the other side of the
drawbridge for an ambush, saw nothing and charged for the distant
woods. Freedom was only a hundred yards of open field away. A flurry of
motion in the air caught his attention, and Sullivan spun, firing
upward. Unharmed by the bullets, the heavy fishing nets dropped across
the bridge, pinning him in place. Dropping the blaster, the mutie
grabbed the line and ripped a hole. But before he could wriggle
through, more netting fell from the palisades overlooking the bridge,
and then a third net, a forth and a fifth. Trapped under the layers,
Sullivan crouched, fumbling for a weapon when a stunning blow drove him
to the wooden planks. Dazed, the mutie drew his pocket pistols and got
off two rounds, when the blasters were pounded from his grasp by a
horde of sec men wielding clubs.
Roaring in wild fury, Sullivan managed to stand under the
combination of nets and men, struggling to reach the edge of the
drawbridge and the moat below. Already the gills in his throat were
opening for oxygen. Sullivan could breathe underwater, but the pitiful
humans would drown.
The brown shirts struck him from every direction, but he forged
onward and reached the cobblestones edging the bridge. Searing pain
lanced through his shoulder, and he saw the barbed point of an arrow
sticking out of his shirt. Mentally forcing away the pain, he lurched
forward again and another arrow slammed into his boot, pinning his foot
to the planks.
Reaching through the netting, Sullivan grabbed a knife from a brown
shirt and tried slashing his way loose, when another wave of humans
swarmed over him.
Pain filling his universe, he fell to the planks, never losing
consciousness as he was trussed with ropes, then bound with chains.
Cradling a broken arm, a sec man spit in Sullivan's face, and
another aimed a handcannon. A sergeant slapped the blaster away.
"He's trapped now, so don't chill the bastard," the brown shirt
growled. "We're gonna haul his ass to the docks and hang him before the
whole ville. Baron Cawdor himself is gonna tie the rope around its
stinking neck!"
Cheering in victory, the joyous brown shirts lifted their captive
off the bridge and hauled him back inside the ville. Masked by the
nets, the mutie managed to hide a smile and calmly waited to meet the
man he had been sent to kill.
Chapter Nine
Mindless miles of flat swampland stretched before the companions. In
hard labor the slow hours passed, noon coming and going as they trod
the sticky mud. The raft floated through the salty water, only
occasionally catching on sandbars and submerged tree trunks. Rumbling
storm clouds offered scant protection from the sun, and soon the swamp
was steaming from the heat, sweat pouring off their bodies. Everybody
stripped down as far as they dared, the bare necessities being boots
and gun belts, although J.B. clung to his fedora and Mildred her med
kit. Fat mosquitoes buzzed about them constantly, stealing sips of
their blood until Ryan opened the fuel can and splashed some about as
cologne. After that, they were left alone with the flies and the
itching bites.
The barge poles hadn't been found, and none of the local trees were
of any use, so Doc was on the point position, testing the unseen ground
ahead of them with his swordstick. A rope was tied around his waist as
a precaution, and twice he dropped into sink holes and had to be
dragged back to the surface.
"I have had fun before," Doc muttered, stabbing the water and taking
another step forward, "and this is not it."
"Could be worse," Mildred grunted, both hands holding tight to the
rope over her shoulder. The physician had removed her damp pants and
tied her shirttails in a knot between her breasts so she could take off
her sports bra. Support wasn't an issue here; the temperature was.
Winter in Virginia, summer in Carolina, how had any people survived
when skydark destroyed the weather patterns of the world this much?
"Worse? Hades only has nine levels, madam," Doc reminded her, a half
smile growing in spite of himself. He stabbed more water and found the
ground acceptable. "And this would be five, or six?"
"No more than four, surely."
Holding tightly on to the wet rope over his shoulder, Ryan leaned
into the task of hauling the raft. Privately, he appreciated the
banter. It helped relive the boredom of the endless walking.
Just then, something bawled across the swampland, the noise echoing
into the distance to be answered by another of the same.
"Gator," Jak stated, dropping the rope and drawing his Colt Python.
"Stay sharp. They fast."
Checking the draw on the SIG-Sauer, Ryan heard the harsh breathing
of some of the companions and decided he was pushing them too hard.
"Ten-minute break," he announced. "One sip of water each. If you've
got to use a bush, go in pairs."
"Rather have some more gasoline," Krysty said angrily, slapping at a
fly that landed on her bare arm. Her respect and love for life didn't
quite extend to the creatures that feasted on her blood. She kept her
pants on, as none of her underwear was dry enough to wear, and removed
her thick shirt. The bra she had found in the California redoubt was
thin lace and kept her cool enough, even if the underwire did itch a
bit.
"I'll get it," Dean offered. Releasing the rope, he disappeared
under the hot canvas to reappear with the fuel can.
"Pretty low," he stated, unscrewing the cap.
Krysty cupped her hands, and the boy poured her a small splash.
J.B. stepped out of the muck onto the raft and pulled out his
telescope. Extending the tube to its maximum length, he swept the
horizon ahead of them.
"Could be land to the northwest," he said, adjusting the focus.
"Yeah, that's green trees, pines and oak, which means dry land. Salt
water would kill those."
"Distance," Ryan asked, removing the bandanna around his forehead
and wringing it dry.
J.B. tucked the scope into his munitions bag. "Five miles, mebbe
less."
"Excellent." Doc exhaled, spitting on his chapped hands and rubbing
them together. "Under a spreading chestnut tree, the Deathlands warrior
stands…"
"Stop misquoting, Longfellow," Mildred snorted, spreading some
grease on her lips from a small tin box. The bearings were still in the
tires under the raft, the old grease a soothing balm for the thirsty
people.
Doc arched a silvery eyebrow. "Laughter is the best medicine, madam."
"Tell that to a person with rad poisoning."
"Cynic."
"Old coot."
With a warning shout, Krysty fired her blaster, the S&W .38
booming in the eerie stillness of the Carolina swamp. The others spun
about, weapons searching for danger.
"Sorry," she apologized, mopping the sweat off her brow. "Thought I
saw something move in the water."
Fanning himself with the hat, J.B. squinted. "Just a log."
"No, it isn't," Ryan said, wading around the raft. Drawing his
panga, he stabbed the log and lifted it out of the muck. There were
eyes and teeth. He twisted the blade, and the body dropped back into
the swamp and sank from sight.
"A mutie snake," he stated, sheathing the blade. "Bastard
bushmaster. Poisonous. Nice shooting."
"Thanks."
J.B. sneezed loudly.
The companions turned fast, their weapons level.
"We have company," the Armorer said, sliding the Uzi off his
shoulder.
A humanoid being stood thirty feet away from them. It was dressed in
tight clothing with most of its hairless body exposed. Tools hung off a
net vest, and a sleek metal helmet covered its head, three red eyes
staring out from the dark interior. The warrior was holding a long
bamboo spear, tipped with a mirror-bright steel blade. Minutes passed
in silence.
"Greetings," Ryan said in an even tone. The SIG-Sauer was in his
hand, but not pointing at the mutie.
The swamp dweller tilted its head and clicked loudly.
Surprisingly, Jak tried French. "
Parlez vous fran-gais?"
The being craned its head forward on a long neck and clicked some
more, then pointed its spear to the south, then the north.
"No farther," Krysty translated, her hair waving nervously about.
"He's claiming the rest of the swamp."
Surreptitiously, Dean moved his hand to the grip of his blaster.
Instantly, the mutie leveled his spear, two hands gripping the shaft as
if braced against a recoil.
"It's a distance weapon of some kind," J.B. said, working the bolt
on his Uzi.
"Everybody relax and put the blasters away," Ryan ordered,
stepping between the mutie and the others. "Trader always used to say
that it was easier to make deals than bullets. He hasn't attacked yet,
and we all know he had the element of surprise."
"We are headed for the land," Ryan said slowly, in case the
creature could understand. This swamp was close to Georgia, and they
once found a race of underwater muties there called Dwellers. They had
trouble speaking, but easily understood human speech.
"Doesn't look anything like a Dweller," Mildred noted.
The creature clicked at Ryan and dropped its spear into the water.
Finally understanding, Ryan slid the Steyr off his shoulder and hung it
back on upside down, then he drew his blaster and dropped it on the
deck
of the raft. Empty-handed, the two stood face-to-face, then the
creature clicked again and stepped aside.
"Thanks," Ryan said honestly. "Much appreciated."
The mutie clicked once loudly, then sank below the water, hardly
making a splash or a ripple.
"Fascinating," Doc said, and walking forward he probed the swamp
with his stick. The ebony shaft hit mud until he reached the spot where
the mutie had been standing. There was no detectable ground there.
Deciding to test the depth, he found it was beyond the limit of his
stick and arm combined.
"This is the end of the swamp," Doc stated, wiping off his stick on
a damp handkerchief. "We've reached deep water. Mayhap a lake, or even
the original river of this area before the nukes reshaped the
landscape."
Swatting at flies, Ryan studied the raft. "I think we lost enough
supplies that it'll float with all of us on board."
"Only one way to find out," J.B. said with a grin, dropping his rope.
Pushing the raft ahead of them, the companions trod water until no
longer able to touch bottom. Carefully, they climbed onto the craft and
saw that the salty water washed over the logs, but they stayed afloat.
"Some of us could swim alongside," Dean suggested, precariously
balanced on the very edge of the raft.
Harshly, Ryan vetoed that idea. "Everybody stays on board. There
could be anything swimming around down below."
"Bullets can't go very far through water," J.B. commented. "Nothing
can, really."
"So we move fast," Ryan stated. "J.B., use your shotgun. I'll use
the Steyr."
The Armorer stared at the water with scorn. "I guess we have to."
Going to opposite sides of the raft, the men flipped their
longblasters over and started using the wooden stocks as oars, steadily
stroking in unison. The others kept watch as the men slowly paddled
away from the swamp and into the hidden sea. Despite the crudeness of
the oars, they soon built up a good speed, and the dot of greenery
expanded to a wide strip. Soon they could discern a faint smell of
living plants.
"Land," Krysty said, sighing. "I'll cook dinner if somebody else
gets the wood."
"A deal, dear lady," Doc said. "Chopping wood will be a delight
after dragging the
Cornucopia through mud for ten miles."
"But, once we get to dry land," Dean said, "this raft will be
useless. Too bad there isn't some way to keep the cargo with us. I like
having enough to eat and spare ammo."
"Too true, lad," Doc rumbled.
"Got three wheels," Jak suggested, thumping the bottom of the raft.
Paddling in easy strokes, J.B. chewed the inside of his cheek,
"Yeah, mebbe. If there's enough wood, we could make a cart and roll the
stuff along. But we'd be traveling slower than shit in winter."
"Better dump the excess, and only take what we can carry," Ryan
decided, muscles rippling in his powerful arms as he pulled the blaster
through the water. Thankfully, the Steyr had a plastic stock, but J.B.
was doing irreparable harm to the tiger wood of his scattergun. "If we
travel too slowly, the blue shirts will find us, rather than the other
way around, and they have too many advantages as it is."
Resting his back against the canvas mound, Doc barked a bitter
laugh. "Too much ammunition. I daresay this is a problem we have never
faced before."
"Hush," Mildred said urgently, staring into the murky depths. "I saw
a disturbance underwater."
"Snake?" Jak asked, drawing his blaster.
"Could be."
Ryan and J.B. continued paddling, but watched the surface of the
water carefully for any unusual movements.
Suddenly, a hundred of the beings resembling the humanoid they had
encountered earlier silently rose from the water, completely
surrounding the raft and its startled occupants. Each was armed with a
long spear and what seemed to be a needle-thin knife made out of
intricately carved bone.
"It's a trap!" J.B. shouted, hefting the shotgun and pumping a round
into the chamber. But before he could act, the strange beings turned
their backs on the humans, forming a line around the raft, their bamboo
spears leveled as if for battle.
"What the—? They're here to protect us," the Armorer said in
realization, lowering the scattergun.
"We do have permission to be here," Ryan noted, placing the Steyr on
his lap.
"Protect us from what?" Mildred demanded suspiciously. Few folks
these days knew the word
honor, and even fewer obeyed its
simple rules.
"Look there!" Krysty pointed. Something large was moving through the
lake, coming straight toward the raft, the water foaming white in its
wake.
The mutie from the swamp rose into view as smoothly as if it were
riding an elevator. Excited, the creature waved its arms and gestured
at the land, clicking so fast the noise was like a stick dragged across
a picket fence.
"Thanks again," Ryan said with unaccustomed feeling. "Okay, move
with a purpose, people! We've got to get to land if there's going to be
trouble!"
Ryan and J.B. put their backs into stroking, and the rest of the
companions started paddling with their bare hands.
"Mebbe we should stay and help," Dean suggested, bent at his task.
"Too vulnerable out here," his father barked. "On land, we can offer
them assistance. But out here, we're only a liability, making them
protect two things."
The boy nodded in understanding and redoubled his efforts.
With excruciating slowness, they gradually pulled away from the line
of clicking beings when the raft violently shook as if it struck a
rock. For a heartbeat, the companions thought that's all it was, just a
rock. Then the tiny craft heaved upward, going higher and higher to
finally flip over and spill them overboard.
Desperately holding his breath, Ryan grabbed the sinking Steyr
before it got out of reach and started for the surface. Stroking with
one arm, he got a brief ; glimpse of a dark shape moving among them at
incredible speed. Whatever their attacker was, it wasn't one of their
guardians or a rock. A submarine? '
Reaching the surface, Ryan caught his breath and saw that the raft
was destroyed. The logs were smashed and floating away freely, the
thick chains snapped apart, the precious supplies sinking to the depths
below.
"Gator!" Jak shouted, splashing around, a knife in his hand.
Kicking to stay afloat, Ryan looked at the dry land so terribly far
away. "Back to the swamp!" he shouted, and started swimming in that
direction.
With every kick, every stroke, the man waited to feel the crushing
bite of the alligator seizing a limb. But he reached the muddy banks
alive and struggled into the knee-deep water. The others were only
seconds behind, and the companions moved away from the invisible border
and checked their weapons.
"Everybody here?" Ryan demanded, working the bolt on the Steyr.
"Looks like," J.B. announced, cleaning the droplets off his glasses.
"Dark night, was that a gator? The bastard thing must have been over
thirty feet long!"
"Seen bigger," Jak commented, shaking the excess moisture out of his
Colt Python.
"How did you chill it?" Mildred asked, pouring the water from her
med kit to lessen its weight.
"Didn't. Aced whole ville."
"Oh, hell," Doc said, scowling at his LeMat, the fresh charge of
black powder dribbling out. "Lost my sword-stick, too. Can somebody
loan me a blaster?"
Steyr in hand, Ryan tossed over the SIG-Sauer. Doc made the catch
and expertly dropped the clip to check the ammo, then slammed it back
into the butt of the pistol and jacketed the slide to chamber a round.
Doc might prefer an old-fashioned revolver, but he knew how to work a
modern blaster perfectly well.
"What's going to stop it?" Dean asked, checking his pockets for
spare clips. He found only two; the rest had gone to the bottom.
"Grens will," J.B. stated, passing out the military spheres from his
munitions bag. "Don't get crazy. That's it for explosives. One each.
The rest went down with the raft."
"This is enough," Krysty said, unwrapping the electrical tape from
the handle. The ball was green with a black stripe, high explosive with
steel shrapnel, exactly what they needed. Too bad they had only these
few charges.
Out on the watery expanse, noises and splashing were coming from
under the turbulent surface. Red blood spread outward from the aquatic
combat, obscuring whatever was happening.
"I don't think our friends are winning," Ryan growled.
Then a large shape rose into view. A dozen spears were sticking out
of its hoary hide, but the triumphant beast had a limp warrior dangling
from its huge jaws. Tossing the body aside, the gator rolled over,
showing its pale belly to the sky, then dived out of sight.
Tucking the gren into a pants pocket, Krysty furrowed her brow in
thought. "An animal that size can't live in this swamp," she decided.
"There's not enough food.
The mutie must come from somewhere else to feed on these guys when it's
hungry enough. It's probably the terror of their world."
"Starving mean dangerous," Jak noted grimly.
"Well, they tried to protect us, so we return the favor," Ryan
stated, making sure the panga was still in its sheath. "Besides, if
they lose, it'll come after us next, and without the raft there's no
way we'd last long enough in the water to ever reach land alive."
"Gator follow dry land," Jak agreed.
"Any weak points?" Mildred asked pointedly.
"Eyes, belly. Ears best, but hid."
In a rush of water, the bawling gator lifted into view again with
the chief clinging to its back by a bone knife, wildly stabbing at the
beast with a spear.
"Light it up!" Ryan shouted, and started firing.
The companions aimed for the head, away from the chief, but their
small-caliber rounds bounced off the thick hide. Only the .357 magnum
slugs from Jak's Colt Python punched holes in the gator. Then the chief
came free from the mutie creature and went flying. Riding the Uzi into
a tight group, J.B. sprayed half a clip of 9 mm Parabellum rounds,
hoping for a lucky strike. Undamaged, the beast was gone beneath the
choppy waves.
"By the Three Kennedys!" Doc shouted in frustration, and began the
laborious process of cleaning and reloading the .44 LeMat. As a
precaution against rain, he always keep a few charges of ball and
powder inside plastic film containers. It wasn't much, but until he got
fresh supplies of black powder, it was all he had for the handcannon.
Dean reloaded the Browning Hi-Power and splashed away from the
fight. "I know what to do. Jak, come with me!"
Snapping shut his Colt, the pale teenager stared at the running boy,
puzzled, then smiled and took off after him.
"Hurry!" Ryan shouted, removing the spent clip from the interior of
the Steyr and dropping in a fresh one.
There was some splashing nearby, and a score of the humanoids rose
from the lake and shuffled onto the swamp. Some were bleeding from
cuts, a few helped others walk and none looked in fighting shape. The
chief stood directing the others, and Ryan could now see the being
wasn't a human mutie, but more like an insect. A beautiful rainbow
chitin was exposed through the slashes, and small quivering antennae
were visible under the helmet, which Ryan now thought of as a crown, as
only the chief had one. The smooth tan hide covering the bug was
actually clothes, laced tight and with pockets. Some sort of fish hide,
and not the human skin it resembled from a distance.
"It's camou," Krysty stated, "to hide their natural bright colors."
"They look like water beetles," Mildred added thoughtfully. "Only
without the wings."
Ryan went to the chief and pointed toward the lake, then lifted his
hand. "One?" he asked, raising a finger.
The beetle warrior gave a single click.
"Okay, there's only one of the fuckers. If it was more, we'd be
running. But we can chill one gator."
"How?" J.B. asked, thumbing rounds into a spent clip.
"The mouth," Krysty replied stoically, snapping the cylinder of her
weapon closed. "We let it get close, then blow it apart from the
inside."
Holstering her ZKR, Mildred held out a hand. "Shotgun," she said to
the Armorer, and he passed over the weapon.
A beetle stuttered loudly and threw its spear into the lake as the
gator charged from the water, the shaft jutting from its head. The
beast shook off the spear and plowed through the beetles, snapping one
in its powerful jaws and crushing the insect. The warriors jumped on
it, stabbing wildly, but the spear points could do no more damage than
the 9 mm rounds of the blasters. Flipping on its back, the gator
crushed a beetle and lashed its tail at another, removing the head.
"Son of a bitch!" Mildred roared, and fired the shotgun. The spray
of buckshot hit the speckled hide, doing scant damage. Cursing
furiously, the woman worked the pump and ejected the rest of the
buckshot cartridges, then shoved in new ones from the loops on the
strap.
Pulling the pin, Krysty threw the gren, and it landed in the gator's
open mouth. But the beast hawked the obstruction loose and the sphere
rolled into the lake and detonated, throwing water to the sky.
Startled, the beetles backed away from the blast, and the gator
lashed out its tail randomly. Closing in for a kill, Mildred dived out
of the way just in time, losing her grip on the scattergun. It vanished
beneath the swampy brine.
The range was too close to try a gren again, so the humans pounded
the beast with their weapons, dodging out of the way when it came
close. The chief led the beetles back to the fight, and started
launching the barbed points of their spear like crossbow bolts from the
shafts. But nothing seemed to do anything more than annoy or distract
the thirty-foot reptile.
Taking a stance, Doc leveled the LeMat and pulled the trigger. The
percussion cap gave a bang, but the charge didn't ignite. A misfire.
For the first time ever, Ryan heard the old man use a word the scholar
normally pretended didn't even exist.
As if sensing a weak member in the pack, the gator charged at the
gray-haired man, its stubby legs propelling it just as fast on the mud
as in the water. Doc stood his ground and waited. Holding the blaster
with both hands, he triggered the weapon at point-blank range. The
LeMat threw flame and thunder, and the gator recoiled, hissing in pain
as black blood flowed from a puckered wound in its torso. It tried
circling Doc, and the man fired again, a miss. Then a piece of the
mutie's scalp was blown away, exposing its bare white skull. Doc fired
again and was rewarded with a dry click. Empty.
Rolling over, the gator lashed at Doc with its deadly tail. With the
grace of a fencer, Doc swayed out of the way and pulled the SIG-Sauer,
shooting a fast dozen times at the beast. But the 9 mm slugs glanced
harmlessly off the dense hide of the giant mutie.
While the humans reloaded, the beetles rallied and launched another
salvo of spearheads. By now the mutie was mad with blood lust and pain.
Bawling in rage, it snapped its terrible jaws and lashed its tail, the
entire lower half of its muscular body swaying from the pendulum force
of the killing limb.
Aiming from the hip, Ryan fired the Steyr at a rock under the beast,
and scored a ricochet into its belly, thin blood pumping from the
wound. The beast turned its furious attention on him alone. Ryan braced
for a charge, when there came the report of a big-bore handgun and he
saw the hide of the beast spray out dark blood. Instantly, the
creature shook itself as if trying to dislodge something on its skin.
Walking through the swamp, flies buzzing everywhere, Jak came on as
steady as a machine, firing his .357 magnum pistol again and again,
every round smacking into the mutie gator. With each impact, the gator
went mad as if jabbed with white-hot pokers. Its breathing became
labored, white foam dribbled from its jaws and weakly the beast charged
the pale teenager.
As Jak reloaded, Mildred stepped between them and fired the wet,
filthy scattergun, the flechette round blowing off the gator's front
leg. Now the animal screamed and hastily turned, hobbling for the deep
waters of the lake.
Ryan and the chief both shouted as the humans and beetles converged
on the killer. As the creature was no longer able to dodge, the
small-caliber rounds found its eyes. Blind, it spun in a circle,
lashing out with its tail and catching a beetle across the torso. But
the warrior was merely knocked aside and not pulverized. The beast was
weakening fast. Mildred fired again, opening its chest, and the beetles
filled the wound with their spears, one penetrating more than a yard.
Dark blood poured from its mouth as the dying mutie crawled
relentlessly for the safety of the water. Then Ryan stepped in front of
the beast and fired directly into a gaping eye socket. The gator jerked
as if hitting a wall and dropped flat in the shallow swamp, a pool of
blood spreading wide until it seemed to cover the entire surface of the
Carolina swampland.
"That was one tough son of a bitch," J.B. stated, jerking the bolt
on the Uzi to clear a jam. "What the hell was on those bullets, the
snake?"
"Bushmaster," Dean said proudly, holding up the bloody snake head
for the others to see, the white fangs glistening in the afternoon
light, the hollow tips moist and still dripping. "I thought of the
poison, but only Jak's blaster could carry a dose."
"But my LeMat is more powerful," Doc said.
"You fire miniballs, solid slugs," Ryan explained. "The magnum was
loaded with hollowpoints. Perfect for the job."
"Just a drop of venom in each," Dean boasted, "and a dab of mud to
keep it there."
Doc smiled. "Good call there, young Dean. And exemplary shooting,
Jak."
"Shit," Jak said, dropping the spent shells from his blaster and
rinsing the weapon in the dirty water. "Big target. How miss?"
"I'm just glad it's chilled," Krysty stated wearily. She looked
around for a place to sit, and saw nothing.
Mildred straightened from examining the still form. "It's snuffed,"
she reported. "No doubt of that."
Shuffling forward, the chief offered his spear to Jak. The teenager
grunted in thanks, and Dean offered the bushmaster in return. It was
accepted reverently, then the chief called out a series of long clicks.
The surviving warriors waved their gory spears overhead and swarmed
over the gator hacking it to pieces. Whether for food, or just to make
sure it was really dead, none of the companions knew or cared.
"Now what?" Dean asked, rinsing his hands in the brine.
Ryan slung the longblaster over a shoulder and looked at the distant
speck of green. "We start swimming."
Chapter Ten
Reaching the shoals of the island, the companions climbed wearily
over the exposed tangles of tree roots and finally reached dry land.
Going inland, they found pine trees growing thick along the shoreline,
the ground covered with needles. Drained, the friends dropped to the
soft carpeting and fell asleep almost immediately. Ryan found himself
to be the last one awake, and dragged over a rock to sit on as he took
first guard duty. Hours later, Krysty awoke and relieved him at the
post. Choosing a spot, Ryan lay down and finally allowed himself to
succumb to exhaustion. This had been a long and hectic day.
RYAN AWOKE to the smell of coffee and roasting meat. Sitting
upright, he pushed aside the blanket covering him and stared at the
boxes and crates dotting the campsite.
A fire was crackling in a pit, and the carpet of needles had been
cleared away from any possible flying embers. J.B. was stirring
something in a pan that sizzled, and the coffeepot bubbled softly,
emitting the most tantalizing aroma. On guard duty, Mildred was sitting
with her back to a pine tree, blaster in hand. There was no sign of the
others.
"We got our supplies back," J.B. said in greeting, using a knife to
flip over some meat in the pan. "The beetles retrieved most of the
stuff from the bottom of the lake. They even found Doc's swordstick and
my hat."
"Damn nice of them. How bad is it?" Ryan asked, pouring himself a
cup of coffee. The smell alone invigorated the man. He understood how
predark folks could get hooked on the brew.
Using a sock to protect his hand, J.B. took the iron pan off the
fire and slid a steak onto a tin plate from an Army mess kit. "Good and
bad," he remarked, passing over the food. "The ammo is fine. The boxes
are airtight, and the brass was only underwater a short while. No
problem there. We got back four more grens and two Claymore mines. We
found a freshwater spring inland a couple of hundred paces from here.
Have to boil it first to be sure, but it reads clean."
"And," Ryan prompted, cutting into the meat. It was tough but
edible. He guessed it was some of the gator from yesterday.
"Everything else is gone, including the last rocket launcher. We
barely have enough food for another day. A lot of the MRE packs got
opened when the raft was torn apart, and more floated away. I think the
beetles stole some, but probably because they were pretty. Not for the
food. They have enough meat to feed a whole ville for a month. The can
of fuel is gone, as well as all of the medical supplies, bedrolls, rope
and the tent canvas. That is our only pan. So if you want hot food with
the steak, you have to wait till it's washed."
"This'll do," Ryan answered with a full mouth. Hunger was the best
sauce.
"On the other hand," J.B. added, gesturing with his head, "that huge
roll of leather over there is the gator. They skinned the huge bastard
and gave us the hide."
"Guess it's a reward for helping them." Ryan grinned, wiping his
mouth on his hand. "Make nice boots."
"Weighs a ton."
"So I would guess, but we can't leave it. That would insult the
chief." Ryan laid the plate aside. "Just stuff it in the big duffel bag
with some salt to keep the smell down. When we're a couple of miles
from here, we'll throw it away."
"Speaking of awful smells," Mildred said, tossing a bar of soap on
the ground at his boots, "you'll find the spring a hundred feet to the
north."
Ryan tucked the bar into a shirt pocket. Breakfast had disguised the
odors for a while, but now the stink of the swamp muck, mixed with
dried gator blood and sweat, was returning strong. "Anybody else there?"
"Everybody washed earlier. It's all yours."
Taking his weapons, Ryan moved through the pine trees, easily
finding the spring. Clear water bubbled from the ground, forming a
still pool, and Ryan checked the area. The water was crystal clear, and
nothing could get within ten feet of him without being seen first.
Stripping, the one-eyed man washed his clothes to get out the stink of
the swamp, then hung them over some bushes to dry in the sunlight.
Next, he grabbed a handful of pine needles and rubbed them vigorously
into his combat boots to remove the sour smell of sweat and sulfur.
Making sure his blasters were within easy reach, Ryan submerged his
tired body in the pool and scrubbed himself clean using the tiny bar of
soap from an MRE pack and some more pine needles. He was surprised at
the amount of grime that came out of his hair, and on impulse decide to
shave using his knife. When finished, Ryan felt enormously refreshed
and lay on the bank of the spring to let the warm breezes dry him off.
There was a rustle in the bushes, and he drew the blaster with
lightning speed as Krysty walked into view.
"Hi, lover," she said, smiling. "Nice view."
Immediately, Ryan felt himself stirring under her frank gaze. "You
missed breakfast," he said, clicking the safety back on.
She sat and kicked off her boots. "Had mine earlier. Doc and I have
been on recce. Dean spotted some smoke drifting over the trees, and we
followed it to a ville about five miles away. Good walls. No rads.
Seems okay."
His interest shifted to their mission. "Any chance of getting a wag
there?"
Krysty stroked his cheek, tracing a fingertip along the jagged scar.
The man wore his life on his body, the network of healed wounds telling
more than anything else could. He was a stone-cold killer when
necessary, and yet would share food with strangers—when there was
extra. No starry-eyed dreamer who lived on wishes, he was the ultimate
pragmatist, and yet many times during their travels they helped save
villes he might never see again. Ryan only wanted to live in peace, but
constantly shook the world until its teeth rattled. Krysty considered
him the only real man she had ever known.
"Ask me that again later," the redhead whispered, slowly unbuttoning
her shirt.
THE SUN WAS HIGH when the companions left the pine island and headed
for the mainland. They were carrying all of the remaining supplies,
along with the gift from the beetle warriors. A narrow land bridge
crossed the inlet, and soon they were walking through fields of scrub
grass. Broken stone walls sectioned the landscape, showing that the
area used to be farms at one time. Mountains rose in the far distance,
the rocky crags seeming to support the ominous dark clouds filling the
sky.
A beaten path wound through the grassy fields and windswept arroyos.
Soon the companions reached a flattened dirt road leading toward the
high stockade of a ville. The outer wall was made of logs and stones,
rising to twice a man's height, the top bristly with sharp sticks and a
few strands of rusty barbed wire.
Sec men armed with homemade blasters stood guard at the open
gateway, the man and woman watching the companions closely as they
approached. The guards were tense about the open display of blasters,
but they said nothing as Ryan and the others walked into the ville.
"They must get a lot of outlanders," Krysty surmised.
Ryan frowned. "Or the guards are fools."
Inside the walls, they found a bustling community built from the
remains of a predark city. The houses and buildings were arranged in
orderly rows, the streets clean hard-packed dirt. A gallows stood by
itself, though no rope dangled from the killing bar. People walked
about carrying baskets and buckets. The aroma of frying fish was in the
air, along with the smell of horses.
"Whoever built this place knew what they were doing," Mildred said
in admiration. "See how far apart the lavs are from the public water
well? No cholera here."
"Good defenses," Ryan agreed, gesturing to tall towers made from
felled trees. Sec men stood guard holding crossbows, with strange
curved axes hanging from thongs at their hips.
"Throwing axes," Jak noted while straightening his collar, being
very careful of the razor blades hidden within the fabric. "Mighty hard
learn, kill good."
Doing a recce, the companions entered the ville commons and watched
a potter spinning bowls from red clay, a horde of children staring in
fascination at the process. A fat woman was selling beer from a tub,
while a white-hair tailor mended the shirt still on a burly man and a
barber cut hair.
"Civilization," Mildred said, sighing. "Such as it is."
"Better than that junkyard ville," Dean stated.
"True enough."
Ryan worked the slide on his SIG-Sauer, ejecting a live round. The
brass spun in the air and he caught the bullet, returning it to the
clip.
"Now they know we're armed and have ammo," he said, holstering the
piece, "that should hold down the chilling."
The crack of a whip made Doc stop in the street, a hand going to his
swordstick. "Mother of God," he muttered.
Near a kindergarten jungle gym, now a coop full of cackling
chickens, a line of people tossed shafts of grain on a millstone. The
great slab of granite rotated along on top of another, grinding the
wheat into flour. Four thick poles embedded in the top stone were being
pushed along by a dozen people in chains, their backs bent to the
arduous task. An overseer watched their progress and touched up their
speed with the flick of his bullwhip.
"Slaves," Doc said, starting forward.
Ryan stopped him with a grip of iron. "We don't have the time or
the firepower," he said harshly. "First we take care of ourselves, then
we'll see what can be done about the slaves. Forget it for now."
Radiating fury, Doc glared at Ryan, a vein in his forehead pulsating
steadily. He knew the one-eyed man had never been a slave of another. A
captive, yes. Forced to work and kill for some baron's amusement, yes.
But never a slave, and so he couldn't really know the emotions welling
within him. Slowly, the old man relaxed his stance. "Yes, you are
correct," Doc rumbled. "It is not a matter to be taken
care of today."
Ryan nodded and continued walking.
Leaving the marketplace in their wake, the companions reached a
strip mall from predark days. The display windows were long gone,
replaced with wooden boards, but it was still a mall. The supermarket
was now a tavern, the bank a gaudy house. Some local toughs lounged
outside, chatting to a young woman with an old face. Upon seeing Ryan
walking their way, the men took their leave.
"Hey, miss!" J.B. called to the woman. "Over here!"
Dressed in the loose, revealing clothes of her trade, the blonde
ambled toward them and opened her blouse, exposing small but pert
breasts.
"Whatcha want, stud?" she asked coyly. "I'll do ya right here for
some of that brass I saw you flashing. Or we can go to my tent if
you're shy. I'm Dancing Feather, the hottest slut here, no matter what
that bitch at the Red Bear tavern says."
"That's not what we want," Ryan said, withdrawing a single 9 mm
round and bouncing it in his palm. "Tell us about this place. Who's in
charge?"
The whore beamed a smile and closed her blouse, stealing a quick
jealous glance at Krysty and Mildred.
"Old man Polk is the baron here," she said, sidling closer and
reaching out for the bullet. "He's okay. Finds us enough to eat each
winter, don't allow no rape in public. But ya better hop when he says
frog, or you'll serve the wheel. Any sec man can load that in his
blaster and fire it."
So that's where the slaves at the grinding stone came from—local
criminals slow to obey. Ryan withdrew his hand. "More."
Placing hands on hips, she glared in hostility, then burst into
laughter. "Okay, fair dealing. This is Flat Rock ville, and unless
you're a stupe, that's obvious." She jerked her head toward a squarish
boulder in the middle of the ville located near an empty flagpole and a
World War II howitzer in remarkably good condition.
"Get a lot of strangers?" Krysty asked.
"I sure do!" Feather grinned, wiggling her hips suggestively, then
ceasing the act since it was getting her nowhere. "Yeah, sometimes
outlanders arrive, but not very many these days of the mutie in the
water. Big nasty thing, lots of teeth and—"
"Not interested," Ryan interrupted. "Is there a stable where can we
buy horses?"
"Buy a horse?" Feather gasped. "You that rich?"
Ryan said nothing.
She shrugged. It wasn't her business. "Go down the street, past the
burned-down church. Then follow your nose."
Ryan tossed her the bullet. "Thanks."
Tucking the round someplace safe, the slut watched them walk away.
The bullet would buy her a week of sleeping under a roof and all the
stale bread she could eat. And just for talking. Outlanders were
idiots. Then she reconsidered that. Mebbe they really did have enough
jack to buy horses. They certainly gave up a brass easy enough.
Heading across the town, the companions passed numerous folks in the
street, many of them carrying long poles tipped with curved blades or
heavy nets laced with dull copper wiring.
"Gator hunters," J.B. guessed.
Shifting the duffel bag on his shoulder, Jak snorted. "Too late."
Beyond a hole in the ground filled with rubble and stained glass,
Ryan found their goal. The stable was a former gas station, the horses
corralled in the service bays, water troughs where the fuel pumps used
to be located. The office was now living quarters, ratty furniture
resting on bricks instead of legs. Iron grates covered the window, and
curtains made from shag carpet had been hung to afford some level of
privacy.
Ryan knocked on a metal sign bearing the logo of a winged horse.
"Customers!" he called out. "Anybody home?"
Out of a back room walked a man with a protruding belly, his clothes
covered with food stains, a throwing ax in his hand.
"Oh, just outlanders." He grimaced. "No jobs here. Got a stable boy
for the mucking. Try the farms north of here."
"We're here to buy," Ryan said, lifting a fistful of rounds from his
pocket. The action also showed the SIG-Sauer resting on his hip. The
demeanor of the stable owner changed on the spot.
"Well, well! Why didn't you say so?" he gushed, tossing aside the ax
and rushing over to push up the garage doors. They rose with a squeal
of tortured metal, and he stepped inside. "Want a horse, do you? Fat
Tom got the best in the world."
"Highly doubtful," Mildred commented, wrinkling her nose at the
smell of used hay and fish-oil lanterns.
A scrawny stable boy sat in the corner, polishing a saddle with spit
and a wad of congealed grease. Mounds of dirty hay covered the stained
concrete, and split rails sectioned the repair shop into a double row
of small stalls. Horses of various colors stood in each, nibbling hay,
and watching the humans with fearful expressions. Obviously, they were
beaten into submission and not won over with kindness. Ryan immediately
classified the stable owner as a coward. There was no other reason to
beat animals who delighted in working for humans. Men with horses had
conquered most of the old world, because they enjoyed being together.
"Not bad," J.B. said diplomatically, thinking he wouldn't want to
store shit here. "How many do you have?"
"Ten," Tom said proudly, picking his ear. "But one's a swayback
we'll be eating this winter, and two are colts not strong enough to
carry a baby."
Walking among the animals, Ryan studied them carefully. Good legs
and withers. No sign of split hooves or mange. Their coats were rough,
with burrs caught in the tails. The horses needed a serious currying,
but otherwise were in good health.
"We'll take them," Ryan decided.
"Which two? Or did you want three, mebbe?"
Her cascade of fiery hair gently waving, Krysty held out a hand and
stroked one of the nervous beasts. The animal instantly calmed and
nuzzled her palm affectionately. "We're buying all seven."
Fat Tom roared in laughter, his belly bouncing. "Not even Baron Polk
has that much jack! I need some for working the fields. You gonna feed
my family this winter? Thought not."
"Trade you," J.B. said, dropping the duffel bag to the ground.
The stable owner stroked his greasy chin. "Your redhead doesn't look
like she has the coughing sickness. Of course, I'd want to inspect her
cunny first before taking a ride, but if she's any good, I'd trade you
two horses for an hour with her."
"That's fifty-nine minutes longer than you would be breathing,"
Krysty said, low and cold, her blaster partially drawn.
The man cackled and slapped a knee. "Good un! She's a fireblast,
that one. Redheads, God love 'em."
"Try again," Ryan stated in a voice of granite.
"Well, I'll trade four horses for that fancy scattergun, four eyes."
"In your dreams." J.B. frowned.
Fat Tom shrugged. "Just talking. No offense meant."
Sensing the bargaining was getting serious, Ryan lowered his
backpack to the floor and withdrew an oily blanket. Unwrapping the
bundle, he hauled into view a AK-47 without a stock.
"Nuke me," the man whispered, reaching for the weapon and drawing
his hands away before touching it. "That a rapid fire?"
"Eight hundred rounds a minute."
He snorted. "Ain't that much ammo in the whole world!"
Ryan didn't contradict the man. "We have two clips, one with ten
live rounds, the other empty. Plus, fifty spent rounds you can reload.
The stock is gone, but you can whittle a new one."
"Ten rounds for a rapid fire. That's one trigger click. No deal."
Then he added, "Besides, got a blaster. Made it myself."
Ryan had spotted the weapon hanging on the wall when they first
entered. It was made of corroded iron pipes bound together with rusty
barbed wire and leather straps. He doubted if the shotgun would work
more than once without blowing apart. Suddenly, he knew the local was
lying
for some reason, and staffed his position to keep a
watch
on the garage doors.
J.B. dropped the heavy duffel bag. "Well, you haven't got one of
these."
Squinting suspiciously, Fat Tom watched as J.B. opened the
drawstrings and lifted out the roll of hide.
"Aw, I don't need a coat," Tom sniffed. "Never gets bad cold down
here."
With a flip, J.B. unrolled the skin, sending it across the floor of
the stable almost reaching the door. "It's not a jacket, you fat fool,"
he stated. "This is the hide of the gator from the swamp. That's a
hundred pairs of boots, plus gun belts and some jackets."
"No, it can't be." Tom touched the wide expanse of hoary skin in
disbelief. "You chilled Frankenstein."
"Just a gator," Jak corrected.
"A dead gator." Licking his lips, the stable owner looked at the
companions. "Well now, that is a lot of strong leather. Yeah, sure,
I'll trade you seven horses for ole Frank."
"Plus tack," Krysty added, the chestnut mare licking her palm. She
had already decided on which horse she would ride.
"Of course, of course," he muttered, fingering the hide. Even marked
with scars, burns and bullet holes, the durable skin was still
beautiful, and flexible. He could probably make bulletproof vests from
the stuff and sell them to barons for a fortune. Ammo, food and sluts
till he died.
"Anything you want," the man said, beaming. "Saddles and reins.
Blankets, too. I wouldn't want to cheat you on the trade. Fair deal
Tom, that's me. Ask anybody above the soil."
With instincts honed in a hundred trades, Ryan knew that was too
much, too fast. The hide had to be worth a hell of a lot more than they
thought possible. "Eight," he corrected, testing the limits of the
deal. "Plus tack, plus feed."
"But there's only seven of you!"
"And we'll need one to haul supplies."
"Oh, use the boy," Tom countered hotly. "He's young and strong, why
burden a horse? They're expensive."
The stable boy was cowering, and new shadows appeared on the wall
from people standing in the doorway.
"Incoming," Ryan said with a smile.
Tom scratched his head. "What's that mean, huh?"
"I know," J.B. answered, pulling the Uzi in front of him.
Doc crossed his arms and rested a hand on the LeMat. "Could be
friendlies," he hedged.
There came the click-clack of a blaster, and Ryan spun, shooting
from the hip just as the man with the shotgun fired. A sprinkling of
buckshot took Ryan in the shoulder as he dived for cover. Fat Tom
started pleading as the stocky man in the doorway fired again, blowing
the plump man off the floor.
"Three, two, one," Ryan said, standing.
In unison, the companions unleashed a volley of lead. Torn to
pieces, the attacker fell into the trough, the scattergun breaking in
two as it hit the ground. A line of holes in the trough began to leak
water. Then a flurry of arrows hissed into the stable, thudding into
the split rails, posts and walls.
"There's more," Krysty announced, snapping off shots. Nearby, Fat
Tom lay dead on the floor, his guts splattered over the wall and
dribbling onto his shocked face.
Crouched behind a bale of hay, J.B. shoved the Uzi over the top and
fired a short spray. A man cried out, but it sounded fake.
"It's the assholes from the tavern," Ryan said, clearing a jam.
"Bitch Feather," Jak snarled.
"No, this is my fault," Ryan stated harshly. "I wasn't paying
attention for once. Not a blaster in sight here, and we come waltzing
in with an arsenal. Of course somebody is going to try and chill us."
An ax flew between the horses and slammed into the floor, biting
inches into the wood, missing Doc's hand by a hair. He withdrew quickly.
"They will try," Doc corrected, watching the doorway that led to the
living quarters. A figure darted into view, and he snapped off a shot
from the LeMat, catching the man in the throat. Clutching his shredded
flesh, the man stumbled and fell, quietly bleeding to death in the
doorway.
The horses were whinnying in fear, making it hard to hear movements
outside. "You there, boy," Krysty demanded, crawling on her belly.
"Where's the back door?"
"Ain't got one," the boy whimpered, huddled in the corner. "Just the
front."
"Ladder to the hayloft?"
"The what?"
"Where you store the hay!" The boy gestured at the floor. In
understanding, Krysty cursed the slovenly stable owner. There was no
way out, and they were trapped in a tinderbox. "Sure hope they don't
want to burn us out!" she muttered.
"That would chill the horses," J.B. said, firing at the ground and
hitting a booted foot. The owner screamed, fell into view and was
chilled. "They can't get us, and we can't leave. It's a standoff."
"So what do we do?" Dean asked, sliding a fresh clip into his gun.
Surrendering their blasters wasn't an option. They would only get
chilled afterward as the coldhearts laughed at their stupidity.
"Change rules," Jak said, holding his breath as he fired his .357
magnum pistol. A rope overhead snapped, and the first door to the
garage rolled to the ground in a loud crash. The teenager tried the
same trick again, but the second door only slid halfway before getting
stuck. The third didn't move an inch.
"Use the horses," Ryan said, wriggling between the rails of a stall.
The nervous animal reared at his presence, but Ryan soothed the horse
with soft words. When it was calm, he laid a sack of feed across its
back, then draped over a blanket, cinching it tight with some reins.
Moving quickly, the others did the same. Then whooping and firing
their blasters, they chased the beasts out of the stable. The horses
stampeded for freedom, charging into the street past the waiting gang
of coldhearts.
"Fuck!" cried one, nearly trampled in the rush. "See those lumps?
They're on the damn horses!"
"Could be a diversion," said another, notching a steel arrow into
his crossbow. The deadly weapon was carved from solid oak, the steel
bow salvaged from a predark car chassis. His crossbow could drill a
three-pound bolt through a man at two hundred paces. Silent, and
reusable, it was his preferred weapon. He only wanted the blasters for
what they would buy—women, more arrows and jolt. Lots of jolt.
Charging inside, the coldhearts found the stable empty. "If they're
not on the horse, or in here—" a man started to say.
A sharp whistle made them spin, and the companions cut loose from
the living quarters, the barrage of rounds tearing the attackers apart,
limbs flailing from the multiple impacts of hot lead.
When the smoke cleared, Ryan took the point and entered the stable,
checking the bodies to make sure none were only pretending to be dead.
Without remorse, he dispatched a pair who seemed remarkably undamaged.
After gathering their backpacks, the companions walked from the stable
and found a squad of sec men racing their way.
"Here come the Marines," Mildred quipped, shifting the med kit over
her shoulder to a more comfortable position. She knew Ryan was wounded,
but there was little blood, and now wasn't a good time for repairs.
"What the fuck is going on here?" the sec man in the front demanded,
a loaded crossbow in steady hands. His head was shaved, except for a
thick lock hanging from the back, and his clothes were old but clean. A
quiver of arrows was draped over his shoulder, and zip gun was tucked
loosely into a holster designed for a much larger pistol.
"Who are you?" Ryan demanded, the stock of his longblaster resting
on a hip.
The man scowled. "I am Corporal Anson, sec chief for Baron Polk, and
I ask the questions here, outlander. Now for the second and last time,
what happened?"
"Dueling is forbidden, you know," another sec man added.
"Does this look like a duel?" Dean retorted.
The second man shrugged. "Could be."
Ignoring the fool, Ryan addressed the corporal. "We just arrived
today and came here to buy horses, when a gang tried to back-shoot us.
They aced Fat Tom, and we aced them. No duel, just a straight theft."
"Ratter, you alive?" Anson called into the stables.
A pile of hay shifted, and the stable boy crawled into view. "I
didn't see nothing," the youth said standing meekly. "I was working
hard."
"Hell boy, that's what you always say," the sec man grumbled.
"Can I go?" Ratter pleaded.
Anson swatted at the boy. "Git!"
Ratter dodged the blow and scampered out of sight around the stables.
Taking his time, the corporal studied the companions. "Well, your
story sounds legit, but I think we'd best go talk with the baron. He
doesn't like killing in his ville."
"Unless he authorizes it," Ryan said.
"Is it different where you come from?" Anson asked bluntly.
"No," Ryan admitted, slinging the blaster over his undamaged
shoulder. "Lead the way. Mebbe we can talk some business with the boss."
The corporal eased off the string on his crossbow. "It has been
known to happen. That is, if he decides not to hang you."
"Fair enough."
"Looking to become a sec man by any chance, there's lot of openings."
"Not likely," Ryan answered, then tried a shot in the dark. "We have
info on Frankenstein."
"You do?" Anson asked, excited. "What kind of information?"
Satisfied his hunch was correct, Ryan smiled and said no more.
After the people had gone, Feather snuck into the stable and found
Ratter looting the kitchen of food. Tiptoeing close, she hit the boy
over the head with a stone, and he dropped to the floor. Unsure of his
condition, Feather hit him a few more times until the blood ran freely
from his mouth and nose.
Tossing the stone away, Feather grabbed the bag and finished the job
he started, then left quickly.
As she pelted down the streets, the gaudy slut chortled in her
newfound wealth: a bag of food, weapons, clothes and a bullet. The old
doomie in town had been right— this was her lucky day! Pity about what
the mutie had foretold about the outlanders. The black-haired cyclops
seemed nice. Too bad he was going to die.
Chapter Eleven
"He will lie," said the female mutie, leaning on the table, "but
believe every word."
Lunch long done with, Baron Jackson Polk looked up from the
crumbling book on chemistry he was struggling to read and stared at the
doomie. "What was that?" the man asked.
Althea said nothing for a moment, listening to the silence of the
throne room. The predark auditorium was shaped like a seashell, with a
raised dais at the apex of the truncated cone. Radiating outward across
the room were hundreds of seats, and the softest whisper on stage would
carry to the farthest reaches. Simply amazing. Many of the farmers and
fishermen thought it was magic, and secretly worshiped the wizard
baron. Knowing a good thing when he heard it, Polk did nothing to
change their opinion, and having a doomie for a lover only helped his
mystique of being more than just a man.
Her solid white eyes seeing nothing, the beautiful mutie came closer
and took his hand. "The black man with one eye," Althea whispered, "he
will lie, but believe every word. He has come to kill, has already
killed and must kill more. His destiny is in blood and fire."
"An assassin?" Polk asked, probing for details.
"Yes and no. He hasn't come for you, doesn't know you, cares not for
you. He seeks the sky killer who threatens the world."
"Sky killer. A plane?"
The woman wobbled on her feet, and the baron snapped his fingers. A
servant appeared to slide a chair into place before she fell. Polk
waited until Althea caught her breath. When he'd first found the mutie
woman ten years ago, he took her to his bed because she was blind. His
disfigurements were such that he couldn't stand to have another person
see him without the robes of state. Then Polk learned of her gift and
realized what a treasure the doomie was. Twice in his reign as baron,
Althea had foretold of attacks by coldhearts, giving them enough time
to prepare a deadly welcome for the raiders, and once she warned him of
a close friend who plotted to chill him and become baron. Sadly, that
also come true. Althea was always correct.
But now the baron wondered if her gift of seeing the shadows of the
future had driven her over the edge into madness. Believe a liar—what
was the point in that? Besides which, she always reminded him that the
future wasn't set in stone. Sometimes when they were alone in his
chambers, Althea spoke of karma, a person's destiny, but also of yarma,
a person beating karma through courage and wisdom.
"Some water, my dear?" Polk suggested, pushing the carafe forward.
There was no response. "Wine, then?"
"I need sleep," Althea whispered, and walked from the throne room
holding her temples.
The moment she was gone, a sec man entered the throne room and
shouted, "My lord, several of the fishing captains request an audience."
"Let them enter," Polk commanded, rolling his chair to the edge of
the dais.
When the sailors arrived, they took seats in the first row and were
forced to crane their necks to look at the baron. Polk could smell the
salt and tar on them even from his elevated vantage point.
He glowered down at them. "Well?"
Twisting a cloth cap in craggy hands, a big man in rough-hewn
clothes stood, "I'm Dwight Lane, captain of the
Dixie Rebel.
Baron Polk, the big swamp mutie aced another five of my men yesterday
when it ripped apart my nets and stole a full day's catch of fish. My
lord, our crews are starving, and each has lost kin to the mutie."
"Some of us have lost more than that," Polk stated forcibly, his
anger readily present.
"Of course, sir," Lane said, smiling uncomfortably. "Now, what we
would like, with your permission, is to organize the crews of our five
ships, and the whole ville, into a single hunting party to track down
and kill the thing!"
"Useless," the baron stated. "Without blasters, nobody stands a
chance against the behemoth. Plus, there are the bugs to worry about. A
hunting party that size could easily be thought of as an invasion
force, and while we're hunting the beast, they're burning our homes."
"But something must be done!" Lane shouted.
Another captain stood, a grizzled sea dog with weathered skin like
canvas. "I was born here, my lord, but I'll be leaving on the next high
tide. Living be hard enough without working every other day to feed
that hell demon!"
"Give us the secret of the black powder!" another shouted.
"We'll make blasters and hunt it down ourselves."
"Then turn against me," Polk stated.
"To kill ole Frank!"
"Don't bother," Ryan called, walking down the center aisle. "We
already chilled the gator."
Murmurs ran through the crowd of people, some frightened, others
disbelieving, as the ville sec men led the way for the heavily armed
outlanders. The strangers were carrying more blasters than anyone had
ever seen before.
Drawing a flintlock pistol from under his blanket, Polk used both
hands to cock back the striking hammer. Their leader was a big man with
hair black as midnight, and a patch covered one eye. But Althea spoke
of a black man with one eye. This fellow was close, but clearly not the
killer she spoke about.
"Who are you?" Polk demanded.
"Outlanders from the north, my lord," Anson announced. "They had
some trouble with Fat Tom, a horse merchant who tried to steal their
weapons."
"And they chilled him first," Polk deduced. "The man was a coward
and a thief. Good riddance."
"What was that you said about ole Frank being dead?" Lane asked. "Is
it true?"
"Lies," another sailor said scornfully. "They're not from here, why
should they care?"
"We don't," Ryan replied. "It attacked, so we chilled it. Nothing
more."
"Big words," Polk said slowly. "Prove it. Bring the body in here."
Ryan met the man's gaze. "How much is the reward?" A public
statement was what the one-eyed man wanted, something the baron
couldn't pretend had never been agreed upon. A man's word was often
only as good as the number of people who heard it.
The baron rolled to the very edge of the stage, the front wheels of
his chair hanging off the edge. "Everybody from the Dead Swamp to the
ravine knows I posted a bounty on the mutie. What is it you want?
Blasters? I'll pay you blasters."
"Got them, and better than you have," Ryan said in frank honesty.
"But we could use some horses."
"One each," Polk stated. "My very best, with full tack."
"We also need to carry supplies."
Polk grew grim. "Enough haggling. Ten of my top animals and all the
ammo and food you can carry without breaking your bones. Just prove to
me it's dead!"
The man threw off the blanket, and his pant legs were flat with
nothing inside. "He took my legs and my son on the same day. If you
knew my hatred of the beast, you'd shit with fear. Now, if you truly
took care of Frankenstein, I'll pay your price. But if this is a trick,
you won't leave this room alive." Somehow, only those last words echoed
throughout the auditorium.
Sliding the duffel bag off his shoulder, J.B. tossed it onto the
floor. "There, all the proof you should need."
Impatiently, Baron Polk snapped his fingers, and servants rushed to
gathered the bag. Opening it under his supervision, they removed the
leathery roll and spread it across the stage.
It was thirty feet long, eight wide, the colors matched and there
was the scar from his own pistol! The baron couldn't believe it. This
was the hide of the monster, every bullet hole and ridge layer of rough
hide forever burned into his memory from that awful day.
"How?" he weakly whispered.
"We joined forces with the beetle warriors," Ryan said. "They helped
a lot. Mean fighters."
Lane sneered. "The clicks? Bah, man, nobody has seen them in years.
They're breathing dirt."
"We fought side by side with their chief yesterday afternoon," Ryan
stated. "Nice folks, once you get to know them."
Polk waved the trifle of the beetles aside. He didn't care if they
laid claim to the Dead Swamp and Salt Lake. They were of no conceivable
use to him.
"So it's finally over, the beast is dead. Truly dead." Polk sat up
straight in his chair. "Name your price."
"Exactly what we agreed upon. Ten horses and supplies, blankets,
food enough for a week. A tent if you have any."
"We don't."
"Then some canvas will do, and we'll make a tent."
"And explosives," J.B. added.
"Are you insane? "
"We had a deal," Ryan reminded harshly.
"And I will honor that," Polk retorted. "But not at the expense of
my people. Horses, tack, food, blankets and such, all you can carry.
Shine and women, all you want. But not one live round and no explosives
of any kind. I won't have you strip this ville defenseless. Understood?"
"Black powder," Doc added. "One pound."
The man chewed his cheek for a while in thought. "Who says we got
any?"
Doc glared. "I heard the earlier conversation as we entered, and I
have seen your cannon, sir. It is a fully functioning weapon."
"That it is," Polk said with pride. "Half a pound, no more."
"Done?"
"Done," Ryan said.
Polk turned his attention to the others in the throne room. "Captain
Lane, I believe we now have nothing further to discuss. So I shall
expect the quota of fish delivered to my ville to be doubled by the
next moon. Anything less will be considered theft from me and dealt
with harshly."
"Of course, Baron," the man managed to say without stuttering.
As the fishermen took their leave, Polk turned to a waiting steward.
"Get a carpenter and nail this on the wall behind my throne," he
directed him. "Let everybody see that ole Frank is dead."
"At once, Baron," the liveried man said with a bow.
"Now, as for you outlanders," Polk said genially. "Please stay for
dinner. I wish to hear the details of the matter."
Apprehensive, Ryan glanced at his friends. They seemed uneasy, too,
but he couldn't think of a polite way to refuse.
"Certainly, Baron," he said. "Our pleasure. But we do need to leave
first thing in the morning."
"Why the rush? Stay awhile. I have a great need for people with your
talents."
"Sorry, but we have to find some friends," Ryan said evenly.
Polk nodded. "And chill them. Yes, I can see it in your faces. Fair
enough. You did your part, and I will do mine."
THE COMPANIONS CHECKED the horses and supplies as they were
delivered to the courtyard of the ville, and everything was in fine
shape. Dinner proved to be sixteen different things done to fish, and a
roasted opossum. The companions ate the food, but Jak was in heaven. He
stuffed himself with four portions and had to loosen his belt when they
finally left the table for cigars and brandy. Around midnight, Polk
took his leave, and the companions were left to their own devices. Doc,
Jak and Dean excused themselves, while the rest took advantage of the
baron's liquor cabinet. The brandy was merely winter wine, but strong
flavored with plenty of kick.
"Too bad Clem decided to stay at Front Royal," Mildred said, sipping
her drink. "We could have used him fighting that damn mutie. The man is
a hell of a shot."
"He wasn't so hot," J.B. muttered. "Just an unwashed mountain man.
Completely useless."
Ryan and Krysty remained neutral to the conversation, sensing a
personal matter going on.
Wiggling closer, Mildred pressed a warm hip against the man. "I know
that Clem liked me," she said, "but there's my medical condition to
consider."
Glasses in hand, J.B. stared at her in total confusion.
Mildred took his hand. "I have a very small heart, and there's only
room for one man there."
Speechless, J.B. squeezed her hand with all of his strength. If it
hurt, she said nothing. Releasing her, J.B. rose and strode out of the
room. Mildred sighed and sipped at her drink again.
"Damn men and their idiot pride," Krysty said, sloshing her drink as
she gestured. "You better go have your way with him right now."
"That was my plan," Mildred said with a smile, placing aside her
unfinished brandy. "See you in the morning."
"Remember how shy I was when we first met?" Ryan said with a grin
as the woman strode from the room.
Krysty stared at the man over the rim of her glass. "You damn near
forced me on the spot. I barely was able to seduce you in time."
Reaching out a hand, Ryan gently stroked her living hair, and the
woman trembled under his touch,
"We should go to bed
ourselves."
She hiccuped. "My plan exactly."
"Mebbe."
WALKING ALONE through the quiet street, Doc paused in the darkness
just outside the circle of light from a crackling campfire.
"Hey, there," he called to the group, "mind if I join you?"
Dropping the chicken leg he had been gnawing, the overseer stood up
with a hand on his bullwhip. The big man had his weight equally
balanced on both feet, and Doc knew immediately this was a trained
killer. He had expected no less.
"Whatcha want?" the overseer growled dangerously.
"To get warm." Doc grinned. "Maybe talk some business."
"Yeah?"
"Of course."
As Doc approached, the slaves whispered among themselves.
"Shut up," said the boss, not even glancing in their direction, and
the slaves went immediately dead quiet.
Stepping into the light, the big man saw Doc was clearly armed with
a blaster, but that only made them equal. In the right hands, a
bullwhip could cut a man like an ax. All it required was the room to
swing.
"What kind of business we talking here, whitehair?" the overseer
asked, grinning. "Mebbe ya need something warm to pass the night? They
ain't pretty, but they'll do what they're told, by thunder. Long as you
don't chill them, you can do whatever you wish. You want a man or a
woman?"
Disgusted, Doc went for his blaster. The plan had been to chat with
the man, get his confidence, lure him into a false sense of security,
then strike. But the odious callousness of the overseer was beyond his
limits of endurance.
The blaster came out of the holster and the bullwhip cracked, the
weapon slapped from his grasp.
"So this is jacking, eh?" the overseer snarled, the leather spinning
about his body. "Nobody steals my animals!"
The whip lashed out, and Doc stabbed upward with his stick, the
knotted leather wrapped around the ebony shaft. The overseer cursed and
pulled hard to free his weapon. Doc resisted for a moment, then
released the stick and it went flying toward the man. Caught by
surprise, the slave master dropped the whip to dodge out of the way.
Still holding the handle, Doc lunged forward with the bare blade of
his sword and stabbed it deeper into the man's belly, then twisted the
blade to enlarge the hole. Blood gushed from the wound, and the
overseer sighed as he fell to his knees and toppled to the ground.
Retrieving the ebony cane, Doc wiped the blade clean on the dead man
before sheathing the sword. After locating his LeMat, the scholar
rummaged through the fellow's clothing, unearthing a ring of keys and a
tiny .22-caliber homemade blaster. Mildred called such things zip guns,
but he had no idea why.
"Here," he said softly, tossing the keys to the first prisoner. "The
guards at the gate are drunk on brandy I bought for them, but move
fast. I do not know when the shift changes. The swamp mutie is dead, so
lay a fake trail to the east, then double back and scatter into the
forest."
Doc pressed the zip gun into the hand of a woman prisoner. "Know how
to use this?"
She nodded and pulled back the rubber band to see if there was a
cartridge inside the thin pipe.
"Here is a knife each," Doc said, dropping a bundle on the ground.
"And some bread. It was the best I could do."
"Bless you," she whispered, hugging the weapon.
"Why?" a man asked gruffly, working the locks on his ankles. There
was a click, and he stood free from the chains. Red rings circled his
ankles from the constant rubbing of the iron cuff, scars that would
never go away, inside or out.
"Did you like being a slave?" Doc shot back.
"No," the man spit.
"Neither did I. Good luck." Doc turned and walked into the shadows.
THERE WAS A KNOCK on the bedroom door.
Grabbing his longblaster, Ryan rolled naked out of bed, and Krysty
leveled her own revolver at the door.
"Yeah?" Ryan asked, pretending to yawn.
"Me," a familiar voice said.
Sensing trouble, Ryan padded across the room and unbolted the door,
letting Mildred slip through.
"What's the matter? Is the baron planning on robbing us?" Krysty
asked, stepping into pants.
"Worse. The old coot freed the slaves," she said quickly.
His chest glistening with sweat, Ryan inhaled deeply. "I expected as
much. Do the sec men know what happened?"
"Not yet, but they will soon."
Ryan laid the blaster on the warm bed and started to get dressed.
"Wake the others and get the horses."
"Already done. They're downstairs packing food."
"Let's go."
Hurrying downstairs, the companions mounted their horses and rode
casually to the front gate. The guards were snoring on the ground, and
they passed through without hindrance.
Once outside the walls, they pressed the horses into a full gallop.
"Which way are the slaves heading?" Ryan demanded.
"The freed prisoners," Doc said, stressing the words, "are
dispersing into the forest."
"That's east," Dean said, tightening the reins on his mare. "Good,
because we're going north."
"West," his father corrected.
"But the closest Shiloh is in Tennessee," J.B. said, holding on to
his fedora.
Just then, barking hounds sounded from the ville and a bell began to
clang.
"I'll explain later," Ryan said, urging his mount to greater speed.
Privately, the one-eyed man wanted to be furious at Doc for causing
this unnecessary trouble, but he couldn't find a good reason. They had
been planning on leaving in the morning anyway, and to be honest, Ryan
had briefly considered freeing the slaves himself. He supposed there
were just some things a man had to do no matter what the consequences.
Chapter Twelve
Dawn was breaking on the horizon, the indigo clouds of night
lightening into the purple and orange of a new day. Sleepy people rose
from their cots and beds, stumbling out of their cottages and huts,
shuffling across the dirt to start another long day in the bitter
fields. The rains had come late this year, and the soil was yielding
poor crops. Many of the plants grew twisted and wrong, the grain
inedible or deadly poison. Game was scarce, and few cans of predark
food were found these days, so farming was the only hope of surviving
another year.
Suddenly, the roar of a powerful machine broke the morning stillness
as an open-topped wag full of armed sec men drove into the middle of
the ramshackle ville. The machine was closely followed by a line of
trucks draped in canvas. Armored and bristling with weapons, the war
wags stopped with a squeal of brakes in the middle of the gawking
crowd, the population backing away from the fearful machine. Some of
the smaller children started to cry, clutching their mothers, while
burly men with callused hands stepped forward brandishing sickles and
axes.
"What are you doing here?" a towering giant demanded, squinting in
hostility. "Go away!"
In the vehicle, a clean-shaved lieutenant in a crisp blue shirt
stood and raised a small cone to his mouth. "Greetings and salutations,
my fellow Americans." His loud voice boomed across the motley
collection of huts. "I bring you great news from the baron of the
United States!"
Instantly, a few men on the outskirts of the crowd dropped whatever
they were doing and raced into the field. But black shapes plowed
through the summer weeds to cut them off, and the men found a dozen
more Hummers encircling the little ville.
"Return and obey!" a loud voice ordered.
Most of the escapees turned and skulked back to the crowd. But two
bolted past the war machines, nimbly racing for the forest. The deadly
whine of autofire sounded, brass shells arcing into the air like a
golden rainbow. The stuttering line of tracer rounds reached out to
sweep across the escapees, and the dead men tumbled to the ground, torn
to pieces from the heavy-caliber bullets.
"As I said," repeated the sec man in the first Hummer, "greetings
and salutations. We have come to offer you a once-in-a-lifetime chance
to help feed your families and assist in rebuilding our wounded nation
into the glory it once was! America reborn from the ashes! And only you
can help!"
Murmurs came from the crowd. Some glanced at the fields, and the
ring of wags turned on their headlights.
"Don't live in no America!" an old man shouted. "This be Tennessee!"
The lieutenant scowled at the man until he lowered his head. "As I
was saying," the blue shirt continued, "you will receive the fabulous
honor of being allowed to work for the glorious Great Project and help
us rebuild America! It is a noble cause, one you will tell your
grandchildren about with pride. Yes, you very people can become
soldier-workers whose strong backs and brave hearts will gloriously
fulfill our nation's ultimate destiny!"
There were more murmurs from the farmers, and the sec man began to
wonder if any of them knew half the words he was using from the speech
given to him. He decided it was time to cut to the bone of the matter.
The officer tossed the paper aside. The major was an ass; he knew
how to do this. "All right, listen up you, brain-dead hillbilly scum!"
he snarled. "We're here to gather everybody in the ville capable of
doing a day's work. No pregnant women, crips or babies. But everyone
else is coming with us!" He paused a moment to let that sink in.
"We asked this service of Shiloh ville down the road. The leaders of
that ville foolishly refused us." The sec man paused again. "We begged
them to reconsider, but they refused to help America and forced us to
punish them severely."
The lieutenant took a breath and lowered his voice. "Shiloh will no
longer worry about how to bring in their crops or hunt for food." The
whisper changed to a shout. "Or anything! Have you seen what remains of
their ville? Well, have you?"
Sobs came in reply, and he knew they had seen. This was why Dr.
Jamaisvous waited a day before sending them to the next ville, to let
the word spread and the fear build.
"As workers for the New American Army, you'll receive three meals a
day, clean housing, and after one season you'll be sent home with a
blaster and a pocketful of ammo. We have done this before and will do
so again."
Faint hope brightened in their faces, and he smiled benignly at the
crowd. God, what a lie, the officer thought, but kept a straight face.
"That's the deal. Work and reap rewards. Or defy us, and force us to
again bring down terrible destruction."
As if on cue, the overcast atmosphere rumbled and miraculously
cleared, the heavily polluted clouds thinning until an azure sky was
visible. Sunlight flooded the ville. Some of the people stared in
wonder; others gasped in fear at the unnatural sight.
"Yes! The sky is ours to command. Watch!"
Another rumble, and the clouds rolled in to obscure the sun. As they
touched, sheet lightning flashed and continued raging for more than a
minute.
"Get in the bastard wags," the lieutenant ordered, supremely
confident.
Beaten, the people of the ville walked toward the waiting line of
vehicles. Sec men armed with long-blasters separated them, the men
going in one truck, the women into another. A young woman saw the
leering faces of the blue shirts and realized her horrible fate. With
an anguished cry, she pulled out a knife from under her skirt and slit
her own throat. Bright blood gushed from the wound, and she fell limply
to the ground. At the sight, the farmers tensed, fear overlapping into
anger, rage fueling courage. Heads started to rise in defiance, and
hands became fists.
In unison, the sec men fired their weapons into the air, and the
heavy autofires on the wags added their awesome barks to the deafening
cacophony. Hot shells rained over the farmers, making them wince and
hide behind raised hands. Stunned, shaken, their hesitant resolve
broke, and once more they started to climb into the wags. Iron shackles
lay on the floor and they chained themselves without instructions,
knowing it would be the last free act of their short lives but having
no other choice.
As the wags started rolling away, the babies wailed as the
whitehairs held them tight. Nobody left in the ville believed that they
would ever see any the departing villagers again. Not alive, anyway.
HOOVES POUNDING the misty ground, the companions rode hell-bent for
leather through the early Carolina morning. The Flat Rock sec man had
chased them for miles through the night, but Baron Polk had dealt fair
and given the companions his best mounts. They easily outdistanced the
older nags. However, soon after losing the sec men, they began to hear
the long howl of hunting dogs. Hounds were a lot faster than horses on
a short pull, and the companions were forced to slow and try to
stealthily evade the relentless dogs.
"It's been a couple of hours since we heard them," J.B. said,
glancing over his shoulder. "I think we finally lost them."
"Can't hear anything," Krysty said, closing her eyes to listen hard.
The breeze rustled the leaves on the trees and a small animal was being
eaten alive by something that purred, but nothing else. No barking
dogs, no shouting riders. "I think we lost them."
"Said so," Jak stated. "Double back over creek, sprinkle black
powder. Works good."
"My black powder," Doc complained, uncomfortably rolling to the gait
of his animal. At least he still had enough for a few reloads, which
was better than nothing.
Reaching a creek, the companions reined in their mounts and let the
wheezing animals drink for a while, before forcing them onward.
"But they were still thirsty," Dean said, stroking the sweaty neck
of his pinto mare. She nickered in response, her long
ears twitching happily.
Rocking at the hips to the gentle stride of his stallion, Ryan
answered, "Never let a horse drink its fill. Slows them down too much.
They get enough to stay healthy, no more."
"Should feed them soon," Krysty added, leaning forward as her mare
daintily stepped over a pile of bricks. "We left in such a rush, we
forgot to bring along feed."
Tightening her thighs, and holding on to the pommel of her saddle
with both hands, Mildred leaned sideways and studied the grass rising
from the low mist. "Plenty of grass around," she said, swinging back
upright. "It shouldn't hurt them too much to live on just summer grass
for a while."
"Okay, short break," Ryan said, reining his stallion to a stop. "No
fire, cold food only. Stay alert. We leave in five minutes."
Guiding the horses to a nice section of grass, the companions
tethered the reins to bushes and tugged hard to make sure they were
secure. Shaking themselves to adjust to the lack of weight on their
backs, the horses relaxed and began chomping at the tender blades,
munching contentedly.
Opening his saddlebag, Dean took out an MRE envelope and ripped it
open. Most of the food packets he dumped back inside the bag, but he
kept the one marked Creamed Beef. Ripping off a corner, he sucked the
food down and stuffed the empty foil back in the saddlebag. Loose trash
on the trail would lead the dogs to them like bees to honey.
"Hey, Dad, can horses eat apples?" Dean asked, wiping off his mouth
with a pocket rag. "There are some trees over there."
"Sure can," Ryan said around a mouthful of dried fish. Swallowing,
the man looked over the area and nodded in approval. "Go gather a
bunch. Doc, stay with him as cover."
Pulling up his pants, Doc stepped into view from behind a bush.
"Certainly, my dear Ryan," he said, splashing some water from a canteen
onto his hands and washing quickly. "Hum, we shall need something to
carry the succulent fruit. John Barrymore, may we borrow your hat,
please?"
Arching both eyebrows, J.B. lowered the self-heat he was eating from
and turned slowly, but the man and boy were yards away and moving fast.
"Old coot," the Armorer growled, smiling.
Reaching the trees, Doc stood guard while Dean knelt on the ground,
and, folding up the front of his shirt,
started gathering apples. A
plump one rolled away, and he made a successful catch.
"None from there, dear boy," Doc said, the LeMat held ready. "Too
many bruised apples can give a horse cramps."
"Okay," he replied, then stood and emptied the fallen fruit from his
shirt. Tucking the garment into his pants, Dean grabbed hold of some
low branches and scampered up the trunk as if it were a ladder.
"Ah, youth," Doc said with a sigh, and removed a wedge of cheese
from the pocket of his frock coat. It was hard and crunchy on the
edges, but still edible. There was movement in the bushes. Doc dropped
the cheese and aimed the LeMat, thumbing back the trigger. Then he
spotted the squirrel nibbling an apple and withheld firing. The
miniball from his weapon would leave nothing of the squirrel to cook
for dinner. It was the one drawback of big-bore blasters. Game had to
be at least as large as a fox, or it was a waste of ammo. Retrieving
the cheese from the ground, Doc wiped it clean, cut away a suspicious
area and continued to eat.
"You know, horses are like wags, aren't they?" Dean spoke from the
foliage. "Got to constantly watch this and feed them that."
"True words, lad. But I would love to meet the wag that could make
more wags," Doc said, taking another bite. "I daresay humanity lost
something important when we stopped riding."
Returning to the others, Dean passed out the apples, keeping a
couple of the best for his mount.
"Here, girl," he said, offering the fruit. The pinto lifted its head
and sniffed the offering, then took the whole apple in its mouth and
started crunching.
"Careful fingers," Jak warned, feeding the fruit to his mount. The
horse was a young dappled stallion, lean muscles rippling under its
coat. "Can't see good. Take finger accidentally."
"I know," Dean replied, stroking his horses neck. "I watched Dad
before doing mine."
"Smart move," Mildred acknowledged, coming over and inspecting the
mare. "Damn, I thought she was limping. That's a bad cut on the
fetlock. You better clean that with witch hazel before it gets
infected."
"Me?"
Mildred went to her mount and came back with some bandages and a
plastic bottle. "A rider tends his own horse," she explained, giving
him the bottle and cloth rags. "They trust you more that way."
Speaking soft words, the boy tended the animal. It shook at the
sting of the witch hazel, stomping its hooves, but he got the cut
thoroughly cleaned and wrapped tightly.
"Gaia, they found us," Krysty said, standing and dropping the
partially peeled apple from her grasp.
Seconds later, howls sounded from the east.
"Mount up," Ryan commanded, rushing to his stallion.
He checked the belly cinch, then climbed into the saddle. Shaking
the reins free from the bush, he started off at a brisk canter. The
rest did the same, then kicked their horses into a full gallop.
"Thank God spurs haven't been rediscovered," Mildred said, holding
the pommel and bending low over her animal. "Come on, girl, faster!"
At top speed, the companions crossed a field, jumping over a low
hedge and starting a flight of robins.
"Fuck!" Jak cursed, glancing over a shoulder. "Give away position!"
Angling away from the soaring birds, Ryan led the companions over
some irregular terrain to where a broken expanse of a paved road peeked
out from the grass.
After a hundred yards, Doc reached into his saddlebag and found his
last container of black powder. Slowing to the rear of the pack, the
old man leaned low in the saddle and shook it out, the wind spreading
the powder into a fine spray. Stuffing the empty powder horn into a
pocket of his frock coat, Doc slumped in the saddle, concentrating on
staying mounted.
The sloping land flew beneath the pounding hooves of the horses, the
baying of the hounds rising and falling as the dogs found the
companions' trail, lost it and found it once again.
Ryan heard the low moan of winds whistling in a ravine. Moving to
the south, the warrior saw that the land was cracked wide alongside the
weedy field. Slowing his mount, he trotted close to the edge. The
division was shallow, only a sheer drop of one hundred feet, but there
was a bridge only a few hundred yards behind them. The structure was a
box trestle, dripping with ivy and hanging moss. Older than predark, it
looked solid and that was a gamble he was willing to take.
"No way we can jump this," Krysty said, fighting to retain control
of her mount. The horse was trying to walk in a circle to get away from
the chasm. She pulled on the reins to keep the animal under control.
"Whoa, girl. Good girl. Easy does it."
"Why should we jump?" Dean asked, confused. "There's a bridge."
"My point exactly." She smiled. "Once we're on the other side,
nobody can follow us. Especially the dogs."
"Follow me!" Ryan shouted. Kicking his mount into a gallop again, he
backtracked to the bridge and rode across to the other side.
"We were headed north," J.B. said, stopping near his friend. "Going
to try for an ambush?"
"Better," Ryan replied, sliding off the horse and heading toward one
of the pack animals. Digging in the bags, Ryan found a hurricane
lantern filled with oil reeking of fish.
"Good dry timbers," J.B. announced, running his hand along the
supporting beams.
"Trap?" Jak asked, holding the reins in one hand, his Colt Python
drawn to give cover. Far below, a riverbed was visible, but there was
no sign of any water. Just bare gray stones and smooth black pebbles
lying across the red clay bottom of the riverbed.
Removing the flue, Ryan tipped over the lantern, spilling out the
rancid oil. "No time for traps or bombs. Those dogs are too damn close."
"And the sec men right behind them," Mildred added tersely.
Removing the wick from the lamp, Ryan lit it with his butane
lighter. The rag caught at once, and he dropped it on the planks. Smoky
flames spread across the planks and over the sides, following the path
of the flowing oil.
The howling was closer.
"Let's go," Ryan grunted, climbing back into the saddle. "Just in
case one of the dogs makes it across before the bridge collapses."
Kicking their mounts into a gallop again, the companions rode away
from the burning bridge, knowing they were safe from pursuit for the
moment—but also knowing that there was no way back into North Carolina.
The plan to head into Tennessee was abandoned as they rode deeper into
the wild country of Georgia.
STANDING IN THE throne room of the castle, Nathan Cawdor bowed his
head in contemplation. He didn't believe in torture. It served no
purpose except personal revenge. Information was always more easily
bought, or stolen, than extracted.
But as he looked down upon Sullivan lying wrapped in his cocoon of
netting and chains, Nathan felt a fury build within. His mother had
referred to it as the blood-fire, a sort of madness for violence that
ruled the Cawdor bloodline.
"I have no wish to kill you," Nathan said. "Or rather, I had no
wish. To the best of my knowledge, you had harmed nobody within the
walls of this ville. Plus, you saved many lives in the hospital sewing
wounds and removing crushed limbs so gangrene wouldn't rot my men."
The room was packed with sec men and civilians. Justice wasn't
served in the dark. Only tyrants ruled from the shadows because
daylight made them wither and die.
Hands clasped behind his back, Nathan walked around the supine
prisoner. "No, my plan was to find you and send you back to BullRun
ville alive and unharmed."
The mutie sneered at the man, not believing a word of the pretty
speech. Barons would always say golden promises before the crowd, then
feast on flesh in private. Soon they would be alone, and Sullivan would
discover his real sentence.
In a flash of anger, Nathan kicked the bound man. "You idiot! I had
no wish to kill you. But after seeing what you did to the patients,
nukestorm, you set wounded men on fire merely to hide your escape with
their death screams!"
"Hang him!" a woman shouted from the crowd. "Peel off his skin and
feed it to the dogs!"
Patiently, Nathan allowed the interruption as the woman was the wife
of a now dead sec man. "Yes, Sullivan, I would be justified in
torturing you to the point of death, then leaving you alone in the
dungeon for a year to heal and grow strong, then start the torture
again, and continue on until I was too old to wield the pliers or hot
irons. So my sons would take over, and their sons and theirs, and it
would still not be enough! There can never be enough revenge for what
you did!"
Nathan turned away from the man and walked to his throne. Sitting
down heavily, he sighed. "There is no choice but the ultimate
punishment."
Sullivan tried not smile. This was why he had done the act, to
infuriate them beyond reason. Nathan always killed common thieves with
firing squads, and hanged rapists and other such scum. Only once did he
burn a man alive, a traitor who turned against the ville and allowed
coldhearts past the walls. But Sullivan couldn't be burned alive. His
skin was resistant to flames, and once his ropes were weakened he would
break loose, kill the startled baron with a single blow and escape over
the wall in the confusion. The fool was playing right into his hands.
Nathan drew a blaster and weighed the weapon in his palm,
deliberating justice the way a butcher did meat. Was this enough, or
too much?
Standing along side the throne, Lady Tabitha took his free hand in
both of hers. "You have no choice, dear."
"I know," Nathan said, bolstering the weapon. "This coldheart mutie
deserves the very worst punishment we have. Once, I burned a man alive
at the stake for treason, and you all still remember that smell. It
haunts me at night and clings to my clothes. No amount of washing or
soap will ever remove the memory. And that day I made a solemn vow to
never repeat that again for any reason."
The crowd held its breath, anxiously waiting.
"Captain of the guards!" Nathan called out formally.
Clem stepped forward and saluted. "Yes, my lord?"
"Bury him alive."
Icy panic filled the mutie as he realized this was a death sentence
with no escape. "No!" Sullivan screamed, and he stood, ripping the nets
apart with bare fingers. He shook back and forth, trying to escape from
the chains, but they weren't cold iron forged in some Deathlands
smithy, but predark steel. The metal didn't even strain at his awesome
strength. Gasping for air, terror a fist in his belly, the mutie
started to weep as his bones broke in the blind madness of trying to
escape.
There was a gunshot, and Sullivan fell to the floor, blood pooling
around him, spreading outward in pumping waves. He tried again to rise,
a chain snapping loose in his death throes. There was another shot, and
Sullivan collapsed, his body exhaling its last breath and going still.
Ceremoniously, Nathan slid the clip from the execution blaster and
laid them down separately on a silver tray. "And so it ends today," he
said sternly. "Anybody buried alive would soon go insane and live out
their last few hours in a delirium of escape and freedom fantasies. The
very worst thing I could do was threaten him with the act. Sullivan
punished himself, and I ended the matter."
"What about Baron Markham of Bull Run ville?" Clem drawled, watching
the corpse for any signs of returning life. "Y'all know she sent the
mutie here."
Leaning back in his throne, Nathan nodded agreement. "Because she
believed we were attacking her, and she was too weak fighting off some
samurai baron from Washington Hole to withstand an attack by us."
"I would be happy to make a stand against her, my lord," a bearded
lieutenant said, kneeling. "My life for yours!"
"Thank you, Jarod, but that won't be necessary," Nathan acknowledged
graciously. The baron turned to address another man. "Clem, would you
go to them as an ambassador and talk the truth? We aren't enemies. Tell
them of Overton and enlist their aid. His plan was to divide the
baronies so we couldn't work together. If that was his greatest fear,
then that's exactly what we should do. And quickly."
The chief of the sec men scratched his neck. "She may not believe
me, but I'll sure as shit try."
"Thank you."
"What about those Casanova assholes?"
"I'll deal with them later," Nathan said in a low, dangerous voice.
Clem smiled. "Gotcha. You're a pretty good baron."
Startled at first, Nathan smiled back at the man. "And I'm pleased
to also call you a friend."
"Beg pardon, my lord," a sec man asked politely. "What about the…ah,
Sullivan?"
Stepping in front of her husband, Tabitha scowled at the dead mutie.
"As he lived, so shall he die," she said in controlled anger. "Burn the
body."
IT TOOK A FULL CORD of wood to finally consume the mutie, his flesh
oddly resistant to the conflagration. But at least he was reduced to
ashes, the residue thrown into the river to be washed away.
Chapter Thirteen
Five large men walked their horses to the edge of the ravine and
stared at the ruined bridge.
"Escaped," the biggest man hissed. "They have escaped again. This is
intolerable!" An M-60 machine gun was resting on his shoulder as if the
massive weapon were a simple longblaster, the linked belt of ammo
dangling to his knees. A hairy pouch slung over his other shoulder
bulged with a spare belt. The handles of knives jutted from each boot,
and a revolver rode in a holster at the small of his back. Covered by
his loose shirt, it was almost undetectable.
"Mebbe we should give up," said one of the others, kicking some
charred wood over the edge. It tumbled out of sight. He tugged at his
good-luck necklace, which was made of human ears. "I mean, we've been
after these people since Thunder Pass!"
"Stop your complaining," a bald man snapped, his head covered with
colorful tattoos. He carried a machete in a shoulder holster, and dried
human scalps dangled from his belt as ornaments. "In the morning, we'll
find a way across once we have some daylight."
"How's the food?" a thin man asked. Clothes seemed to hang off his
skeletal frame, yet he ate more than any two of them. A sawed-off
shotgun rode at his hip, extra rounds lining his tan-colored belt. The
ornate buckle was carved from white bone.
"We're down to only a few pounds of meat," a hairy man said.
Carrying a bolt-action longblaster, he was bare chested in spite of the
evening chill, bandoliers of ammo crisscrossing his herculean torso.
"But we have those fresh supplies we caught escaping from the ville."
On the back of a pack horse, the bound captive squirmed and kicked
from within a rolled blanket. A bamboo tube fed enough air for the
gaudy slut to breathe, and the blanket hid her from the casual sight of
strangers.
"Gut and cook her," said Scarface, displaying pointed teeth.
Starting at his forehead, a long jagged slash traversed his features,
going into his shirt and out of sight. "We'll think better with a full
stomach."
TWO DAYS LATER, the companions were camped on the top of a hill
overlooking the ruins of a predark metropolis. Silvery with reflected
moonlight, dark monoliths rose from the jumble of fallen structures and
windblown debris. A great amphitheater, or sports arena, stood by
itself at the far end. No lights shone from the hundreds of windows,
and no smoke rose through the many holes in the roofs. There was no
smell of machinery, and no sounds marred the stillness of the evening.
"It's dead," Krysty stated knowingly, as she added more sticks to
the campfire. As a precaution, the companions had dug a hole for the
fire so the flames wouldn't be discernible to anybody below, but their
precautions seemed unwarranted.
"There's nothing on the map," J.B. said, sounding annoyed, squinting
to read by the flickering light. "My best guess would have been that
this area was nothing but peach orchards."
Ryan rubbed his unshaved chin. "Strange," he admitted. "Very
strange."
A few yards away, the horses whinnied in the darkness from hunger.
Yesterday, the companions had passed a field full of rye. But after
inspecting the grain, Mildred refused to let them feed any to the
horses. It was contaminated with an ersatz mold she said could be fatal.
Unfortunately, they were entering desert, and grass was getting
scarce. With no other choice, the companions went through their
supplies, feeding the horses everything they could—the rest of the
apples, bread, granola bars, crackers, dried vegetables and peanut
butter. Combined with the tiny sugar packets from the MRE coffee packs
and what green grass they could find, the mixture had sustained the
animals until now.
"We've got to find them something to eat, or the horses will start
to weaken," Ryan said, chewing on another piece of smoked fish. "Then
they'll rebel, and we'll have to chill them."
"Shoot the horses?" Dean asked askance, looking up from his work.
The Browning Hi-Power was lying on a clean piece of cloth completely
disassembled. The boy was cleaning each piece thoroughly before
rebuilding the blaster.
"No," his father replied coldly. "We'll ride them till they die. Get
every mile out of them we can. I'd prefer to find food and keep them
for the rest of our journey."
"Me, too!"
"Maybe we should check out the ruins," Mildred ventured, sipping her
tin cup of cold turkey bouillon. "Dried cereals on the supermarket
shelves, cans of corn, envelopes of oatmeal, could be lots of food down
there."
"The big one looks like a Hyatt," she continued.
"Good hotel. I always stayed at them for medical conferences."
Ryan sucked a hollow tooth. "Don't recall ever looting a hotel
before. But come to think of it, they would have lots of usable items.
Tons of canned goods for the kitchen, good knives, too. Soap and
shampoo, TP, radio and blasters in the sec office."
"Should be lots of clothing. I could use a new belt."
"Socks," Jak said.
"There could be nothing. Rats usually get everything not in a can,
and rust gets that," Ryan countered, putting aside the gnawed fish.
Whatever Flat Rock did to preserve the stuff almost made the things
inedible. His teeth ached from chewing on the smoked trout. "I think we
stand a better chance finding food on the road. We'll leave the roads
and start cutting cross-country."
"Well, there's a redoubt to the south of here," J.B. said, reading
the map. The firelight glistened off his glasses, casting tiny rainbows
across his face. "But it's over 150 miles away."
He turned the map over. "Now, just sixty miles to the north is the
town of Shiloh, of which we know nothing. But to the northwest is
Shiloh battlefield. There's a redoubt there, and it's only a hundred
miles away."
"Two birds, one stone," Krysty said sagely. "I vote for simplicity."
"Ville near redoubt had horses," Jak reminded them. He stood and
stretched his arms, working a kink from his neck. It had been a long
time since he did this much riding, and surprisingly, it was his back
that was sore, not his ass.
"That ville also had lots of folks who wanted us chilled," J.B.
reminded the teenager.
Jak drew his blaster and checked the load in the cylinder. "Don't
care. You decide. I relieve Doc horses." As silent as a jungle panther,
the pale teenager slipped into the darkness and was gone.
"Anything useful in the Shiloh redoubt?" Dean asked, assembling his
weapon without looking. Springs tucked into place neatly, and the
carriage entered the oiled frame without hindrance.
Watching the work with approval, Ryan shook his head. "The base
was stripped bare. Although, there are miles upon miles of tunnels
under the redoubt, and we never did more than a fast recce into those.
Could be anything stored down there."
Finished, the boy eased the clip into place and jacked the slide.
"Mebbe that's where Overton was getting his blasters from, the Shiloh
redoubt."
"Could be," Ryan said thoughtfully. "It just could damn well be the
spot."
The talk went on far into the night, and soon the decision was made.
They would bypass all of the towns named Shiloh on their list and head
straight for the Civil War battlefield of Shiloh Church.
THE CAMPFIRE WAS dwindling to red embers, the unburned ends of logs
glowing in the darkness. Soft snoring came from the still figures under
the blankets around the fire pit, along with the occasional mumbled
word.
Blaster resting on his lap, J.B. sat sipping cold coffee and
listening to the night. The insects and birds told more of what was
happening in the area than vision could. An owl hooted its eternal
question, something with wings soared overhead and a line of ants
marched over his combat boot seeking the crumbs from their dinner.
The thin grass rustled as a dry breeze blew over the campsite. Then
there was another rustle, but the breeze had ceased.
With instincts honed in a hundred battles, J.B. stood and threw a
bundle of branches onto the embers. The oil-soaked wood burst into
flames, filling the area with bright light that revealed a dozen
figures near the horses, fumbling with the reins.
"Thieves!" J.B. bellowed, firing single shots from the Uzi,
unwilling to go full-auto and possibly kill the horses. One murky
figure cried out, grabbing a shoulder. Another doubled over, clutching
his stomach, and toppled to the ground.
The companions clawed for their weapons and rolled away from the
campfire as the invaders seemed to stab themselves in the faces with
tiny sticks. Dodging left and right, J.B. fired twice more, then
something gentle hit his chest. He glanced down and saw a tiny barbed
quill jutting from a button.
"Blowpipes!" he cried, plucking the deadly barb from his clothing,
trying not to touch the glistening end. It had to be poison of some
kind.
A thundering roar illuminated the night as Doc triggered the LeMat.
Three more of the shapeless figures holding blowpipes cried out in pain
and fell aside, throwing their arms wide. A roar shook the darkness as
Mildred fired the S&W shotgun, then the gunshots overlapped one
another as the companions unleashed a hell-storm of lead and copper at
the intruders. Many of the figures dropped to the ground, but the ones
behind them leaped on the horses and galloped away, vanishing into the
night.
"They got the horses!" Krysty cried, kneeling in the cold soil, two
hands supporting her S&W .38. She strained to catch a glimpse of
the thieves, but even her vision couldn't find a target in the
blackness.
"More wood!" Dean shouted, and dropped a load onto the campfire.
The circle of light expanded, and something went motionless in the
tall weeds nearby. Springing forward, Mildred grappled with a man who
broke free from her clutches and started running. Jak threw a knife and
the figure stumbled, then Ryan tackled the intruder, driving him to the
ground.
Wrestling in the thrashing weeds, the man escaped again and Jak
slashed for the neck. The blade missed the target, but scored a deep
furrow across a leaf-covered shoulder. Pivoting, the intruder snarled
wordlessly, lashing out with hands full of vines. The thorns raked
Jak's face, just missing his eyes. The teenager thrust a knife into the
man's belly as Ryan clubbed the thief over the head with the SIG-Sauer.
With a crunch of bones, the man fell to the ground.
"Over here!" Krysty shouted, an oil lantern held high.
In the yellowish light of the fish-oil lantern, the humanoid on the
ground gasped for breath.
"Mutie," Jak growled, wiping his blade on the dirt. He usually
cleaned the knives on the clothes of the dead, but this time that
wouldn't work, as the horse thief was naked. Sort of. The humanoid
creature was covered with vines, but he wasn't wearing them; the plants
were part of him, the roots buried deep into his skin. His clothing was
merely leaves of different colors mimicking cloth.
The mutie spasmed once, then went still. The leaves limply drooped,
the vines turning brown.
"Symbionts," Mildred said, inspecting the still form. In death, it
simply looked like a man partially covered with ivy. Then she noticed
the thorns on the hands. Experimentally, she closed a limp hand into a
fist, and barbed thorns extended from the knuckles. Releasing the
hybrid, she stood. "Plants and man intermixed. They can't live without
each other."
"Bastard good disguise," Ryan grunted in annoyance. His shirt was
slashed, but the skin underneath only lightly scratched, with no
bleeding. "Triple-blasted stuff probably alters to any style, so they
can pretend to be part of your group in the darkness."
"Certainly easy enough to tell in the light," Doc agreed. "But by
then it is probably too late for most norms."
"We killed six," J.B. announced, the Uzi held steady. "But there
were at least twenty more from the tracks. It actually looked like some
acted as shields, dying so the rest could get the horses."
"Gaia," Krysty muttered. "They sure wanted the animals badly."
Breathlessly, Dean burst through the weeds. "They took everything,"
he panted, "horses, tack, reins, all of it. Nothing's left."
"Fireblast," Ryan said, removing the half clip from the SIG-Sauer
and slamming in a full magazine. "I don't care if it's a bastard army
of the things out there. We're going after those horses. Without them,
we're on foot. J.B., gather what supplies we have and divide them into
six packs. Mildred, bank the fire so it'll last through the night. Nice
and big. Understand?"
"Make them think we're still here. Gotcha."
"Jak, you're our best tracker. Find their trail and don't lose it!
We'll follow soon, so leave a trail for us." The pale teenager nodded
and blended into the weeds.
REACHING THE BOTTOM of the hill, the companions easily found the
tracks of the horses and followed them to a large pile of rubble. Ryan
whistled once, and Jak stepped out of the shadows under a rock slab.
"Went into ruins," Jak said. "Couldn't follow. Rads."
"Thought so," Ryan muttered. Piles of rubble rose over their heads,
the monolithic buildings soaring even higher. He checked the rad
counter on his lapel. The readings were nominal.
"The area is clear," he announced. "Let's go."
Staying low, the companions moved through the weeds and over the
predark wreckage, following the faint trail of the green muties. A
hoofprint in the soft sand, a broken weed, a tiny pool still rippling,
a crushed leaf bending back into shape, a drop of blood on a rock. Jak
moved almost without pause, the nebulous marks a wide highway for the
Cajun hunter. Ryan and Krysty stayed with him most of the way, but
sometimes they were forced to wait until he resurfaced a dozen yards
away, waving them onward.
Under the colored moonlight, the companions crept past a tall office
building that rose like a knife thrust from the mounds of broken
masonry. The front door was covered completely, but third-floor windows
were missing where the rubble was piled high, and they knew others had
been inside. Whether greenies or norms, it was impossible to tell.
Walking out of the crumbling suburbs, Ryan and the others found Jak
crouched, studying a broken parking lot of macadam. Ahead, the downtown
monoliths stood silent and foreboding. Nothing stirred the scrawny
weeds; not a
breath of air moved over the desert city.
"There." Jak finally pointed, then headed to the left.
A long squat building stood amid an array of houses crushed flat, a
sprinkling of sand dusting the ruins. The metal frame of a garage
sagged nearby, the beams consumed with rust and age. The building
itself was made of brick, granite slabs set as lintels around the doors
and windows. The roof was sharply sloped with no skylights or
ventilation grilles offering a possible entrance. A bare flagpole
leaned away from the building, large stone eagles flanking either side
of the recessed doorway. Words were carved into the granite lintel,
partially dissolved by acid rains.
"National Guard armory," Ryan whispered. "Is that the spot?"
"They there," Jak said, nodding, peeking between the fins of a
corroded car radiator. "Nasty."
"Yeah, this isn't some library or bank converted into a fortress,"
J.B. countered. "It's a military fort, built to store weapons and
troops."
"Blasters and ammo by the ton," Dean said eagerly, then frowned.
"No, those must be long gone."
Kneeling on the shell of a transmission, Krysty agreed. "Can't
chance a rush. That door is a death trap," she added softly,
scrutinizing the building. "One man with a rapid fire could hold off a
score of invaders."
"Not sure if the greenies have blasters, but we're not going to use
the door anyway," Ryan stated. "I know another way inside."
"The fort was designed to hold off rioting mobs," Mildred said,
shifting her hold on the med kit. "How are we going to get in?"
"Mobs are stupe," Ryan replied, his Steyr cradled in his arms. "Only
people are clever. Stay close. No noise, five-yard spread."
Slow and silent, they moved around the building with weapons at the
ready. In the backyard, the sand was winning over the weeds, the
sideways chassis of a large truck gradually returning to the earth from
which it was once mined. Empty oil drums used to store fuel were
scattered about amid broken pallets, miscellaneous metal parts of
unknown origin and stacks of rotting tires.
The rear of the armory was a solid wall of brick and granite, the
slit windows covered with bars and located some fifty feet off the
ground near the gutter of the sloped roof.
On the loading dock, massive steel doors stood in a row, blocking
any possible entrance that way, and off to the side, a short set of
stairs led to a smaller door of riveted steel.
In a two-on-two combat formation with Ryan on the point, the
companions proceeded along the cracked concrete to the loading dock as
if moving through a minefield. As he reached the top, a dark shape on
the floor smelled familiar, and Ryan touched the soft material. Warm
horse shit. Jak had been right. This was the place.
"How did you know?" asked Krysty, pressing her mouth to his ear.
"Front door too small for horses," Ryan whispered tersely. "Greenies
had to get the horses inside somehow."
At the loading doors, Ryan raised a hand palm outward and the others
froze. Inspecting the tracks, he found grease on one and tentatively
identified it as animal fat.
The glass in the view slot of the door was gone, replaced with wood
paneling. Drawing the SIG-Sauer, he aimed the barrel at the wood and
gave a horse whinny. Something moved inside and he emptied the clip,
the soft coughs of the silenced blaster counterpointed with snapping
noises as the slugs plowed through the paneling. Immediately, the
companions pushed up the door and found two greenies lying on the
floor, their vines already withering.
Lowering the door, Doc and Dean dragged the bodies into a corner
while J.B. stood guard with the Uzi. Straight ahead was an empty area
with faint stripes painted on the terrazzo floor, the warehouse for the
armory. Across the room was a door marked Washroom, and a hallway.
Keeping to the walls, the companions crossed the storage room in
groups, each covering the other in case of traps or snipers. But no one
had witnessed their intrusion.
Holstering the SIG-Sauer, Ryan removed the long-blaster from his
shoulder and gently worked the bolt, the click-clack sounding
unnaturally loud in the gloomy stillness. When no one challenged them,
Ryan held up two separated fingers, then pointed to the left and
the right. Understanding the signals, the companions split into
two groups to avoid offering a group target.
The quiet of the armory was unnerving. The thick walls kept out the
soft desert breeze, and not even the drip of water marred the near
perfect silence. Gaping doorways lined the corridor, opening onto dusty
offices, a looted storage closet and private bedrooms for officers.
The end of the hallway was a branching intersection with more doors.
Two proved to be locked, and by the cobwebs on the hinges it was safe
to say neither had been used in years. However, a set of double doors
had clean hinges, dripping with fat. Easing their way through, the
companions realized this was the barracks for the troops. The rows of
bunks were coated with dust and cobwebs, but a clear path led through
the barracks to a group of figures sitting in a circle, nosily eating.
Moonlight streamed through the right side windows, illuminating the
bizarre scene. A horse lay in the middle of the muties, its hide peeled
back to allow them easy access to the pale meat and organs. The leafy
muties were removing morsels with their bare hands and stuffing the
food into their mouths, gobbling and slavering in joyous repast.
Doc made a gagging noise and leveled the LeMat.
"Chill them!" Ryan shouted, triggering the Steyr, the 7.62 mm round
blowing the head off a feasting greenie.
Dumbfounded, the muties could only stare in shock as the humans
steadily advanced, firing their weapons. Mouths smeared with blood, the
greenies fell to the floor, riddled with bullets, but two of them
managed to grab blowpipes and stand before receiving fatal head wounds.
Moving among the dead, J.B. checked the corpses just to make sure,
and Ryan turned away, holstering his blaster. "Okay, let's find the
rest of the horses."
Quickly, the companions went through the armory, opening every door,
exploring every room. But they found only decay and refuse, gnawed
bones and junk. Within a quarter hour, they regrouped in the barracks.
"Hey, over here!" Dean called from the armory. "Found them!"
The companions converged on the corridor to find Dean standing near
an open doorway. The hinges had been ripped from the jamb, the door
itself resting against the wall. A strong smell of blood and feces
emanated from inside. The boy's face revealed barely controlled anger.
Lighting more candles, the companions proceeded carefully inside the
room. In the flickering glow, they saw the rest of the horses lying on
the floor, muffled cries coming their bound mouths.
"The monsters!" Mildred said, furious. "The greenies cut the leg
tendons so the horses couldn't run away."
"Damn," Jak said grimly. "No fix that."
Krysty drew her blaster. "Nobody can fix that kind of wound. These
horses are cripples. They'll never walk again."
"Stinking bastards," J.B. spit, leveling his Uzi. The Armorer fired
single shots, putting the crippled animals out of their misery.
"Done," he said finally, slamming a fresh magazine home. "Let's get
the hell out of here."
"Gladly, sir," Doc rumbled, wiping some splashed blood off his cheek.
Holding a candle high, Ryan inspected some shelves. Aside from empty
shoe boxes and wire coat hangers, there was nothing. "Damn. Find any of
our packs anywhere while you were searching?" he asked.
Making sure the horses were dead, Mildred stood. "Not a thing. Just
garbage and cobwebs."
"Great. No horses, no food, only the ammo in our pockets," Krysty
growled. "Mebbe we should just head for the nearest redoubt and jump
out of here. We're not going to take the blues with what we have."
"Mebbe," Ryan said, walking toward the door. In the corridor, he
turned, a new expression on his face. "Jak, in the parking lot you took
a while to decide coming here. Why?"
"Odd tracks," the teenager replied. "Horses here, greenies
elsewhere. We want horses. Came here."
"But they obviously took the saddles and backpacks someplace else."
He shrugged. "Looks like."
"Which means there are possibly a lot more of them," Doc stated,
then gestured grandly at the armory. "This degenerate abattoir is
merely their kitchen, for lack of a better word."
"We find their nest, we find our packs," Dean concluded. "The ruins
aren't very big. It'll only take us a few hours to recce."
"Agreed," Ryan said, working the bolt on his long-blaster. "Let's go
get those supplies back."
Chapter Fourteen
Hidden in the shadows, a greenie watched the norms below from behind
the sheet of mirrored glass in the tall building. He made fists, and
the knuckle-thorns slid in and out as he debated attacking them now or
waiting until they met the master and were helpless.
The choice was clear, and the symbiote left the room to gather more
of his leafy brethren. Soon, oh, so very soon, the feasting would begin.
RETURNING OUTSIDE, Jak found the trail in the parking lot and
started toward the ruins with the companions close behind. The moon was
descending toward a bank of clouds, signaling the end of night. Soon,
Ryan and the others would be visible.
The square foundations of homes and stores lined the streets in an
orderly procession, most of the holes filled with debris, sand and
weeds. Rubble was everywhere underfoot, along with bits of rusting
machinery and a dusting of sand. In another hundred years, the desert
would claim the predark city, eventually swallowing the monoliths under
windblown drifts. Already the windows facing windward were frosted
white from the constant bombardment of the hard particles.
Intent on the trail, Jak darted past a manhole missing its cover.
Ryan knew that the lid had been probably taken for the iron. Manhole
covers made good armor for war wags, or folks could melt them down for
horseshoes, or even nails. As a child, Ryan remembered finding a lot
more of the smaller items from similar predark ruins. But now the
buildings were getting picked clean, and people were turning to making
things once more. Doc considered that a step toward rebuilding
civilization, but Ryan wasn't sure. The first things most folks made
were blasters and gallows.
Stopping at an intersection, Jak went down on a knee to study the
ground closely, his fingers hovering above the pavement. A bug was
crushed at one point, and a stone overturned, its wet side now facing
the nighttime sky.
"Trouble?" Ryan asked, cradling the longblaster in his arms. He
could tell somebody had passed by very recently, but not how many, or
where they were headed. Jak's expertise was tracking.
"No prob," the teenager replied, starting to move about in an ever
expanding spiral. Frowning, he finally stood.
"Two groups," Jak stated, pointing toward particular buildings. "One
there, other there."
"Hotel and the sports arena. Any difference in the depths?" Ryan
asked. "The muties carrying the supplies should leave a deeper print."
"None, Mebbe share all."
"Or thrown it away," Mildred suggested. A plait of her hair was
blown into her mouth, and she spit it out. "We better move fast, or
we'll be feasting on horse steak for the next week."
"Okay, we split into teams. Krysty, Jak and I will check the arena.
You folks hit the hotel."
"Good or bad," Ryan continued, "we rendezvous at the insurance
company here in thirty minutes. If the other team hasn't arrived, go
find them."
"Thirty and counting," J.B. said, looking at his wrist chron.
"Check."
Without further comment, Ryan and the others headed toward the arena.
Unfolding the wire stock of his Uzi, J.B. took the point for his
group and started toward the hotel. The main building was a
mirrored-glass cylinder, and it was impossible to see if there were any
lights or movements in the upper stories. On street level, two low
wings stood on either side.
"Swimming pool and restaurant," Mildred said, stepping over a bent
driveshaft that was brown with rust, "if this hotel follows the usual
style."
"No tracks," Dean said, looking at the street, "that I can see."
"Nor I," Doc added, sliding the selector on his blaster from the
.63-caliber smooth bore, to the .44-caliber revolver. Against the
resilient greenies, the buckshot charge would do scant damage. But the
solid-lead mini-balls would, and could, remove heads with the precision
of a cannon.
The windows lining the east wing were gone, windblown sand filling
the pool nearly to the top. Swinging around the hotel, they found the
restaurant to be in a similar condition—broken and deserted. A lizard
darted from the shadows and disappeared into the soft sand as if it
were water. Not a trace remained of its passage.
"We go in," J.B. said, straightening his fedora and pulling on his
fingerless gloves tighter. "Remember, go for head shots, just like
stickies." Nobody replied, but they raised the sights of their blasters
higher.
Under a crumbling overhang, a rusted sign squeaked as it swung back
and forth from the gentle wind. Mildred stopped it with her hand, then
laid it down flat. Now that they could hear, there was only the soft
moan of the desert wind, and the patter of sand hitting glass.
Proceeding in silence, they found the lobby of the hotel dark and
smelling of mildew. The front counter sagged in the middle, and a
shoe-shine stand was alive with busy termites. The floor was bare
concrete, pronged strips at the bottom of the walls showing the floor
had once been carpeted.
"Damn, we could track them easy on carpeting," J.B. said, lighting a
candle. The tiny flame illuminated only a few yards, but it was better
than nothing.
"There's an interesting fact I learned on my junkets," the physician
said, holding her own candle high to inspect the ceiling. The tiles
were in place, with no indications of bullet holes or accumulated
residue from other candles or torches. "In my day, nobody wanted to
stay on the thirteenth floor of a skyscraper. Supposed to be bad luck.
So the hotel people used the thirteenth floor for themselves as offices
and storage. Often, the elevators don't even list it as existing, but
we could get there by taking the service stairs. Service elevator, too.
But without power, those are dead."
"Twenty stories," J.B. mused, looking behind the counter. Piles of
key cards lay on the floor, along with a smashed register. "Thirteen
would be a good spot for an ambush. Whether invaders started searching
at the bottom, or at the top, once they were higher than thirteen, the
greenies could come boiling out and trap their prey."
"So we start there," Doc said grimly. "Lead on, my friend."
Going past a line of pay phones and washrooms, J.B. pushed opened a
swing door with the barrel of his Uzi. Stacks of
chairs lined their left, wooden easels and plastic signboards to the
right.
"No cobwebs," Dean said, scuffing the floor.
Mildred reached out and lifted a green leaf off the sharp end of an
easel. "I'd say we found them."
The service elevator was straight ahead, steam tables and
room service carts in neat rows along a wall with faded lines painted
on the floor.
"Tidy folks," J.B. commented, the Uzi sweeping for targets.
Mildred nodded. "Hyatt was the best."
At a door marked Service Stairs, J.B. and Dean stood guard, while
Mildred turned the handle and eased it open. Almost instantly, a hairy
fat spider darted around the edge and dashed onto her hand. Disgusted,
the physician shook it off. The insect landed on the floor, and Doc
crushed it under his boot.
"Filthy things," he muttered. "Always did hate them. Especially
since our past close encounter."
As expected, the stairwell was pitch-dark, but under the candles
they could dimly see the stairs were marked with the prints of
countless bare feet. Assuming combat formation, the companions started
up the concrete stairs, watching for traps.
Oddly, their footsteps didn't echo, and, reaching the fourth floor,
they discovered why—the stairwell ended abruptly. Nothing was above
them but the empty interior of the gutted hotel, each level
painstakingly removed to make the building hollow.
Astonished, the companions stepped onto on the carpeted floor,
looking upward at seventeen stories of banked windows and a very
distant skylight. Vines and creepers covered the interior; hammocks
hung
like nesting pods along the sides. The middle was clear all the way to
the roof, the ragged ends of steel beams and rough concrete slabs
marring the vertical checkerboard of mirrored glass.
"Those hammocks are arranged so the greenies can catch sunlight
while sleeping," Mildred guessed. "They climb the vines to get to their
beds."
"We can't follow up there," Dean stated, listening to the building
creak faintly as it swayed in the wind. "We get halfway and snip! Down
we go."
"By Gadfrey, this is a mighty fine defense," Doc said in annoyance.
"Positively Horacic in its simplicity."
"But where the hell are they?" J.B. demanded, studying the floor
underfoot. The carpeting was clean, no spots from dropped food or
drink. "There's hammocks here for a hundred, mebbe more, and we've only
chilled twenty or so."
"Could be room for new families," Mildred said, wrinkling her nose
at the sharp smell of the vines. It was similar to ivy, but resembled
hemp. Clearly another mutation. "But more likely, the rest are chilled.
"
"Hey, that's why they risked death to get our horses," Dean
realized, a flash of anger coming, then going just as quickly. "They
were starving to death."
"Not much to eat in the desert," she agreed as a spider ran by,
boldly going over the toe of her boot.
"Sure as hell hope they're chilled," the Armorer said gruffly. A
vine brushed against his neck, and he swatted it away. "Otherwise,
there's only two options. They're either terrified of our blasters and
have ran away in hiding—"
"Or else," Doc finished with a grimace, "the greenies are preparing
a major ambush, and this whole city is one huge trap."
AS THE MISTS faded from the mat-trans unit, Dr. Silas Jamaisvous
appeared, standing on a hexagonal platform of tiny lights twinkling
from inside the hidden machinery. Next to him was a forklift, its
prongs filled with foam boxes sealed with yellow-and-black-striped
warning tape.
The man waited a few moments for indications of jump sickness to
hit, and was relieved when none occurred. Sometimes he was driven to
the floor in retching agony, but those bouts were occurring less
frequently these days. It was as if his constant nightmares of the
chron jump were somehow making him immune to the smaller miseries of
disintegration and instantaneous travel.
Climbing into the seat of the forklift, Silas started the electric
motor and carefully drove the machine off the portable gateway and onto
the bare concrete floor. Stacks and crates of every description filled
the Quonset hut, long rifle boxes, drums of fuel, foot lockers,
backpacks, everything his growing army needed. Even the hut had come
through the gateway, painstakingly carried one piece at a time until
Silas was finally able to have his troops take down the canvas tent
around the gateway and surround the unit with the more secure domain of
the hut.
Silas knew many of the secrets of the mat-trans system, and aside
from controlling the jump destination, the man also knew where a lot of
military equipment was stored, tons of materials and supplies that
hadn't been touched since he personally ordered Special Forces troops
to place it there a hundred-odd years ago. Richard Overton had marveled
at the AK-47 assault rifles and radios. But those were toys compared to
the weapon Silas was working on now, a weapon that would burn the
pollution from the Deathlands forever and give him absolute mastery of
the world. It would mean an end to war! After the necessary bloodshed
of retribution, of course. But then, nothing was free.
Parking near the door, Silas rose and placed a hand on a glowing pad
on the wall. There was a hum, and the door disengaged, cycling open
onto a small enclosure. Directly across the neatly mown grass was the
laboratory, to the right the barracks, to the left a brand new wall of
concertina wire, topped with crackling electric prods.
"Guards!" he called, stepping onto the neatly raked soil.
Several armed sec men in crisp blue shirts ran over immediately.
"Sir!" a young corporal saluted.
Silas returned the salute, trying not to appear dismayed at the age
of the trooper. Most of the replacement sec men were young, hastily
recruited from distant villes after the slaughter of so many veterans
by the rebelling slaves. The barbed wire was only one of many steps
taken to make sure such a disaster was never allowed to happen again.
He blamed himself for the slaughter. He had been too lenient last time.
No more.
"Drive the forklift outside the enclosure and have some workers haul
these components up the main ladder to the dish for assembly," Silas
commanded, walking stiffly and trying to hide his limp. "And make sure
that nobody is to enter the warehouse for the next twenty minutes. No,
make that an hour. Just to be safe."
"Safe, Dr. Jamaisvous?" the sec man asked, nervously glancing at the
thick door of veined steel.
The predark scientist scowled. "Your ape brain could never possibly
understand the reasons why. Just do as you are ordered."
"Yes, sir!" With exaggerated care, the sec man piloted the machine
along a walkway and through the gate in the electric fence.
Chained slaves were waiting there, and each took a box from the
stack and started shuffling toward the gigantic dish.
A teenager took a foam box and started for the ladder at the base of
the bunker. His steps were hesitant, and almost immediately he tripped
and dropped the container. The foam broke apart on the flagstones, and
the computer module inside tumbled into view and shattered on the
ground, pieces spraying for yards.
"Masters, I am sorry," the slave said, going to his knees and
hastily sweeping the bits into a pile with bare hands. "Forgive me!"
"Clumsy idiot!" an overseer cursed, and lashed the teen with a
knotted bullwhip. The sweat-stained shirt split across the back, and
blood welled from a deep slash. The slave cried out, and the laughing
sec man coiled the whip for another strike.
"Hold!" Silas roared.
The overseer froze, confusion on his features. "Sir?"
Silas stared at the bleeding youth. The strapping young farmer was
too tired to haul a small box a hundred feet. "Bleeding to death isn't
going to help this worker get more done today, is it?"
"I'll make him work," the overseer boasted, and the line of chained
slaves cowered.
Hands clasped, Silas stared coldly at the fool. "Indeed. You are
relieved of worker supervision and assigned to the wall," he said, his
voice rising in power. "We have no need of fools here. Go!"
Stunned, the overseer stumbled away, unable to comprehend what he
had done wrong.
Looking about, Silas choose a sec man and pointed. "You there,
Corporal!"
"Yes, Doctor?" the older man asked, saluting briskly.
"Congratulations. You are now an overseer. Feed these workers and
give them a ten-minute rest every two hours. Finishing a job is much
more important than trying to finish the job. Understand?"
The sec man saluted. "Yes, Doctor. Hail the New America!"
Sighing in frustration, Silas walked to the lab and locked the door
by throwing a dead bolt. Luxuriating in the air-conditioning for a
moment, he limped to a computer console and continued the diagnostics
on the new software. Building the dish was only the first step in
controlling the Kite. They also needed precise calculations to focus
the power station. Even the slightest mistake could result in nothing
happening to the target, or his own sec men dying in droves.
The intercom buzzed.
"What?" Silas snapped, pressing a button. "I told you I was never to
be interrupted in the lab!"
"Glorious news, sir!" A voice crackled through the speaker. "Ryan
has been captured!"
A minute passed before Silas could speak. "What was that again?" he
asked in disbelief.
"One of our patrols caught them in some ruins east of here. The
major has them in the main courtyard. Do you wish to talk with the
prisoners, or should we chill them, sir?"
"Do nothing!" Silas ordered, sliding a rainbow colored CD-ROM from
the mainframe computer and tucking it into a shirt pocket. "No, summon
more guards in case they try to escape. I will be there at once!"
Turning off the intercom, Silas hastily hobbled from the lab and
headed down a hallway for the exit. Could it be true
that after so long a time, he was finally going to chill Tanner? Maybe
that would stop the nightmares. His heart beat faster with hope. Yes,
it had to! Free, he would be free from that cursed man once and forever!
Rushing from the building, Silas found a dozen sec men around a
LAV-25 that was parked in the courtyard. Sheffield stood nearby with an
unreadable expression.
"What's wrong?" Silas asked.
"Judge for yourself, sir," the major replied, crossing his arms.
An iron cage was attached to the rear of the APC with heavy chains,
and it had obviously been dragged behind the transport through mud and
fields. Horribly jammed inside was a group of wounded men, arms and
legs sticking out of the bars of the impossibly tight confines.
More chains had been attached to a cross made of wooden beams. A man
was chained and tied to the beams, his arms outstretched. He was
covered with dirt, sweat cutting paths through the caked road dust.
Dressed in combat fatigues and military-style boots, he had long black
hair, was tall, heavily muscled, and a terrible scar bisected his face.
But the prisoner had two eyes, and his teeth were filed to sharp points.
A smoking cigar dangling from his mouth, a grinning sergeant stood
nearby the prisoners, his AK-47 leveled and ready as if expecting
trouble.
"Are you in charge of this patrol?" Silas asked in a deceptively
calm voice.
"Yes, sir, Dr. Jamaisvous!" the sec man stated proudly. "Gave us
quite a fight, but we brought Ryan in alive and kicking."
"Dullard! Poltroon!" Silas raged, hobbling closer. "This isn't
Cawdor! Can't you see he has two eyes!"
His smile fading quickly, the sergeant puffed nervously on the
cigar. This wasn't going as planned. "Well, we sort of figured he took
the eye from a dead man and shoved it in as a disguise. But we found
him with those five others—one's a blonde, another a redhead and they
had plenty of blasters."
"And he admitted to being Cawdor?" Sheffield asked in a monotone.
The sergeant scratched his head and looked at the other sec men,
watching from the hatches of the LAV. "Well, no. Not exactly, sir. But
we figured out who they were pretty fast. Who else could they be?"
"Anybody, you ass!" Silas lowered his bushy eyebrows until they
touched. "Mercies, coldhearts, ville sec men, anybody at all. Ryan
travels with six other people, not five!" he reminded harshly. "Two of
them women, not men. Can't you tell the difference, or haven't you read
the posted description? As per standing orders!"
"I…" The sergeant swallowed hard, losing his cigar. "My apologies,
sir. None of us can read."
Conflicting emotions raged within Silas, and he glared at the
sweating sec man for several minutes without talking. Finally, he spoke.
"You will have to do better next trip, Sergeant," Silas said
sternly, the threat of severe discipline clear in the tone.
"Yes, sir. Thank you, sir!" The man almost fawned in his gratitude.
"We'll leave today and find them fast!"
"See to it," the old man stated with a glare. "As for your
prisoners, it's no great loss. We can always use more workers. Put them
in chains and send the whole group to the wall. There's a constant need
for fresh bodies in the stone quarry."
"Yes, sir! At once!"
Silas dismissed the matter with a wave. "You may go."
As the LAV drove away, dragging the prisoners behind, the rest of
the guards returned to their duties, and Silas headed for the
laboratory. Holding a palm to the wall plate, Sheffield opened the door
for the man and entered after him, closing it tight behind them, making
sure the lock was engaged.
"How utterly disappointing," Silas remarked, leaning heavily on his
cane as they walked.
"Fucking idiots, is more like it," Sheffield growled. "Now that
we're alone, how do you wish the sergeant punished for the failure?"
"For being illiterate? No. We're short on men as it is. More the
fool I for not remembering when it is that I now live."
When, not
where, Sheffield noted privately. The
whitecoat often said such things, and he was starting to believe the
idea. It certainly explained where the military blasters came from. His
palm print opened doors everywhere across the complex, except for the
warehouse. Whatever was inside, the old man hoarded it like a virgin
did her cunny. Which only made Sheffield want it that much more.
Pausing at a control board, Silas checked the voltage on some dials,
then turned to the officer. "Major, do you know the alphabet or how
many continents there are? How many planets? What a gerund is? The name
of the moon, or any of the laws of thermodynamics?"
The sec man scowled. "The moon has a name?"
"Since the 1965 International Conference of Astronomers. Its
official name is Luna, and the sun is Sol."
"Interesting," he admitted. "But that doesn't put bullets in a
blaster. Just a pretty song, nothing more. I'm a practical man, sir.
Taught myself to read labels so I could steal food and not chems. I
learned to chill a man with just a knife in nine different ways, or
skin him alive to make him talk. I know how to cook dynamite, avoid rad
pits, raid a ville and fix wags. Do these other things matter in the
real world?"
"The real world," Silas repeated with a sigh. "No, I suppose they
don't. As a scientist, I must concede the logic of your argument."
Unexpectedly, Silas laid a hand on the man's shoulder. "However, if
you are to be my successor, they soon will. We shall start your lessons
with the most important one of all."
"The warehouse?" the major asked eagerly, naked avarice shining on
his face.
Smiling, Silas hobbled for the doorway. "That and much, much more.
Come with me."
APPROACHING THE SPORTS ARENA, Ryan called for a halt. The building
stood five stories tall, the outer wall ringed with clusters of lights.
Some small windows, or vents, were noticeable, but no doors.
"Jak, stay here as anchor," Ryan said cautiously. He had a feeling
they were being watched. "Krysty and I will sweep around the building
on a recce."
"No prob," Jak said, putting his back to the concrete wall of the
arena so he could see in every direction. Weeds and desolation filled
his vision. Predark ruins were nothing but unburied cemeteries to him.
Patrolling along the side, the man and woman soon found the front
entrance, metal rings in the concrete showing where a line of
turnstiles had to have once been. An iron grate was pulled off to the
side, and Krysty tugged on the barrier to see if it could move. Rust
had welded it into a solid mass.
"Nobody's used this for a while," she commented.
Ryan merely nodded, unable to shake the feeling of being scrutinized.
The interior Plexiglas doors were wide open, debris keeping them
from closing.
"Could be a trap," Krysty said, easing back the hammer of her
revolver.
"Could be anything," Ryan countered, then added, "What's that smell?"
Her hair flexing, Krysty sniffed. "Flowers?"
Moving deeper into the structure, they found the front hallway
completely filled with flowering plants of a thousand different colors,
the air rich with their sweet perfume.
"Don't see anything moving," Krysty said, watching for traitorous
intent among the leaves.
"Perfect place for the greenies to go camou," Ryan noted. The
hallway resembled a jungle with blossoms clustering thick on the walls,
yet the floor was bare, as if inviting visitors.
"How can they grow without sunlight?" he asked.
"Mebbe some of it is still outside," Krysty guessed. '"These could
be just the roots."
"Roots seek nourishment," Ryan noted grimly.
A short flight of wide stairs went up a level, the steps and
railings festooned with hanging leaves that offered no resistance to
being pushed aside. Bracing himself, Ryan experimentally tore off a
leaf. It came loose in a normal manner, and nothing else happened. They
both relaxed.
The perfume smell thickened as the hallway opened onto a sports
field, the ground covered with wags of every kind—cars, trucks, wooden
wagons, bicycles, motorcycles, Jeeps, vans and even a few Hummers.
Strewed among the vehicles were countless backpacks, suitcases, duffel
bags, swords and blasters of every description.
"Thank Gaia!" Krysty cried out. "There's our stuff!"
"What the hell is going on here?" Ryan demanded softly as they
approached the backpacks and saddlebags. "The greenies rob travelers
and just toss the stuff here to rot? That doesn't make any sense."
"Not to rot, as offerings," Krysty said, pointing with her blaster.
"I think this is their temple."
Standing majestically amid the piles of tributes was a huge flower,
its stalk thicker than a tree trunk. Rainbows marked in hypnotic swirl
patterns spread skyward from the plant. Oddly, there seemed to be no
pistil or stamen, and Krysty wondered how the plant reproduced without
pollination.
There was a funny tickling in his throat, and Ryan coughed on the
thick smell of the plant. However, it was remarkably pleasant, and he
felt his heart beating faster, a familiar tingle starting in his groin.
Fireblast, this was no place to think about sex, Ryan chastised
himself. Concentrate on the job, man!
Feeling woozy, Ryan tried to speak, but Krysty turned toward him,
her eyes moist with emotion, her face flushed red. The fiery heat of
lust welled within him, and Ryan crushed the redhead in his arms. Her
lips so soft and warm beneath his own, their tongues intertwined in a
long soulful embrace.
Something shouted a warning in his mind, but it was already too late.
As he murmured tender words, his hands roamed across her yielding
body, savoring the womanly curve of her firm buttocks as her hips
thrust against him in a delicious manner. Hands removed her coat—his or
hers, he had no idea—as somebody undid his gun belt and pants. Krysty
knelt before Ryan and took him full into her mouth, her fingers
stroking and caressing. He grabbed her hair and thrust himself harder
toward her, striving to get deeper into the sucking wetness. Her nails
raked across his muscular thighs, the pain shattering the wild delirium
for a split second.
That was when he noticed the bones on the ground, skeletons and
clothing covering the dirt, which was filled with tiny roots. It was a
carpet of death. Icy adrenaline flooded his body as the realization
came that they were in a terrible trap. This plant wasn't ambulatory
like some mutie foliage. Instead, it lured in victims with a sweet
perfume and drugged them into a sexual fervor until they had to mate.
Probably doing so on and on until they eventually died of starvation,
still trying to blindly copulate. Their rotting bodies would feed the
roots in the ground, and the death flower would blossom in hellish
beauty.
"No," Ryan whispered, trying to push Krysty away. "Trap…we gotta…go…"
She pulled away from him, her face distorted in animal need. "Take
me," Krysty commanded, starting to remove her clothes.
The blood was pounding louder than cannons in Ryan's ears, and he
heroically struggled to fight the drunkenness of unfettered desire by
thinking of dead friends and torture. He knew that once started, there
would be no stopping until they collapsed from exhaustion, and in that
weakened state, they would never again be able to resist until death
claimed them both. It was now or never, and the Deathlands warrior
forced himself to act.
"Wake up!" he cried, slapping her across the face as hard as he
could. "We're being drugged. Horses for them, humans for their god!"
In frustration, Krysty shoved Ryan backward and he fell to the
ground. Dropping her pants, the redhead sat astride him, tearing at his
shirt, uncaring of the long furrows her nails dug into his chest. As
she started to blindly hump against him, the electric velvet of
entering the woman almost shattered his last resolve of sanity.
Using his last ounce of strength, Ryan threw her off. She rolled
aside onto her hands and knees, rubbing her buttocks against his bare
stomach.
"Now!" she yelled at him, spreading her legs. "Inside me! Now!"
Ryan grabbed her, and with a guttural cry he climbed on top and
inside. The sensation was maddening, and Ryan bit his own tongue to
stop the sweet perfume from claiming him. Pain was the answer. Only
pain stopped the siren call of the plant's perfume. Then his memory
flared, recalling Krysty's special muscles, and how she used them as no
norm woman could to pleasure a man. Ecstasy worth dying for, pleasure
beyond understanding. Die inside her, yes, yes! That was worth any
price!
Ryan rammed his cock all the way inside her to bring him as close as
possible to her, then slapped the barrel of the SIG-Sauer across the
base of her skull. Krysty gave a gasp and slumped over unconscious.
A fresh wave of perfume flooded the arena as the flower spread wide
its glorious petals. It was fighting for its next meal.
Raw fury boiled inside Ryan at the concept, and he focused his rage
in order to survive.
"Die!" he roared, firing his blaster at the plant. Holes were
punched in the lush petals, and vines snipped, greenish sap oozing from
the small openings.
Standing on shaky legs, the mostly nude man grabbed his gun belt and
reloaded, his whole world reduced to the ammo clip and the gun.
Grabbing Krysty by the hair, knowing that to pull on the living
tendrils was agony to her, Ryan dragged the woman along behind him
across the feasting bower, sheer willpower placing one foot ahead of
the other. Whenever his will seemed to lag, Ryan fired the blaster
close to his face, the sting of the muzzle-flash shocking him back to
reality for a few precious moments.
Once past the doors, the perfume seemed to thin, but the desire
still raged within the man. The steps wavered under his sight, but he
plowed ahead, unstoppable in his determination to live. Sweat pouring
off his body, Ryan staggered through the hallway of flowers, raging at
the world, screaming curse words, doing anything he could think of to
keep his anger fully fueled. Another yard was crossed, and still
another.
Suddenly, reaching outside, Ryan stumbled to the concrete and kept
moving forward on his knees, dragging Krysty behind, firing his
blaster. A cool breeze blew over him, every breath taking away the
rutting madness from his mind and body. Overcome, he slumped to the
sidewalk and lost consciousness.
Minutes later, greenies rose from the weeds in the rubble and
started dragging the exhausted man and woman back inside the temple of
their living god.
Chapter Fifteen
Storm clouds filled the atmosphere above the planet Earth, and sheet
lightning flashed constantly while hurricanes and tidal waves savaged
the continents. And sterile deserts slowly spread across the world like
a plague of dry rot.
The burned-out hulks of numerous satellites circled the tortured
planet, some bristling with antennae, others smooth armored spheres of
unknown purpose or design. Stationary above the former state of
Tennessee floated a great black satellite, a slim ferruled cylinder
with enormous shiny wings outstretched. Raw sunlight fell upon the
millions of tiny glass squares composing the wings, and smooth pulses
of electricity fed down the central supports and into the cylinder.
There, computers hummed as accumulators stored the power, then from the
bottom of the cylinder a concave dish extended into view and began
beaming invisible rays at the ruined world below.
The beams spread outward in a cone formation as they bathed the
polluted air, making the storm clouds dissipate until there was only a
clear azure sky.
The rays descended until reaching an area in the desert where
strands of bare wire had been strung in yard-wide squares across miles
of dead land. The cone washed over the wire, and now tiny waves of
electricity flowed into a series of transformers that unleashed the
harnessed power in a network of high-tension lines toward a crumbling
city on the horizon.
The ruins seemed to stretch for miles, tilting skyscrapers
threatening to topple over, fires burning in gutted houses, rats
feasting on bloated corpses strewed along the streets. Blast craters
dotted the ground, their fused-glass bottoms glowing with deadly rads.
A layer of frost covered the city like a death shroud, and what few
bridges remained were eaten by blisters of red rust, just barely
hanging over polluted rivers full of dead fish and decomposing ship
hulls.
As the cables reached the decimated metropolis, slowly lights
flicked to life inside the buildings, and the picture began to change.
Window cracks sealed, and roofs straightened into proper alignment. The
frost melted away, and the weeds withered and died. The hordes of rats
ran shrieking into the sewers as the graffiti flowed off the sides of
the strong buildings, and grass began to grow in yards and trees began
to blossom. The roads smoothed as the potholes were filled, painted
lines racing into existence along the clean macadam. The bridges became
level, the rust falling away like autumn leaves, exposing the shiny
steel underneath. A car rolled around a corner, then another and
another until traffic flowed through the bustling city streets as in
the days before the nukestorm.
But the restoration didn't stop there. A tumble-down shack rose
again as a brick school, the field full of graves transformed into a
ballpark and a playground. The junkyards and bomb craters became fields
of golden wheat that reached into the distance. Factories disgorged
machinery and clothing into softly humming electric trucks. Machines
rolled out of warehouses and thrust electric prods into the rivers.
Soon the water boiled and began to run clear again, all the way to the
blue ocean. The prods were withdrawn, and fish jumped from the waters,
rejoicing in their newborn life.
Outside the city, hordes of slavering muties touched the electrified
fencing and withered into ash. Stalking the perimeter was a black dog
with writhing tentacles sprouting from its shoulders, accompanied by a
puma-like beast with a scorpion tail and insect mandibles. The beasts
moved like well-oiled machines, but they, too, bumped the fence and
vanished like flash paper in a candle's flame.
First one, then a dozen people appeared on the sidewalks, smiling
and not carrying blasters. Soon they become a hundred, a thousand. Far
away, farmers rose from the wastelands, the electric fences repelling
the muties, as tractors plowed the land, planting more crops. Then the
skies gently rumbled, and a soft clear rain fell on the world. Children
rushed outside to play in the falling water as forest turned green and
the world began to gradually turn into a blue-white sphere from the
view in space.
Then the television screen turned blue.
"And that is our weapon?" Major Sheffield asked, sitting back in the
chair, reeling from the amazing deluge of bizarre sights and sounds.
"Yes and no," Silas said, turning off the television and VCR.
"Unlimited electricity is merely one aspect of the Kite. The device
is actually simplicity itself, as you saw. Solar cells in a high Earth
orbit turn direct sunlight into electricity, which is gathered in
transformers and broadcast to Earth as low-frequency microwaves."
"Like the microwave oven you showed me?" the sec man asked in horror.
"Different frequency, but the same principle. However, these beams
cannot harm a fly, and are easily harnessed by those squares of wiring,
which can be placed above croplands or cattle-grazing fields. Doing no
harm to the cattle or crops, I might add. And then you have
electricity, free, clean power. Gigawatts upon gigawatts."
Silas hobbled over to the television and got the tape out of the
VCR. He slid the cassette into a box and stored it in a drawer along
with his other videotapes. "A single Kite was designed to supply enough
energy to run predark New York City and most of its suburbs. However,
nowadays that's enough for all of the North American continent."
"Incredible!" Sheffield exhaled, chaotic thoughts swirling in his
mind. "And this machine exists?"
"You have already seen it used against the slaves," Silas stated,
reclaiming his hardwood chair. His bad leg was stiffening, and it was
becoming difficult to rise from soft chairs without assistance. A
simply intolerable condition. "Unfortunately, its military applications
were also its doom. There is absolutely no way to stop such a microwave
satellite from being converted into a deadly weapon of war. Simply
change the focus, and you have a microwave beamer capable…" He smiled.
"Well, you know what it can do."
The grotesque vista of what had been found after opening the doors
to the bunker that night was a sight the officer would never forget.
"And you created this, sir?"
"Good Lord, no," Silas snapped, annoyed for some reason. "It was
invented by a fellow American, Paul Glaser of Boston, back in 1970, but
the United Nations would never allow the power stations to be built.
Partially because of business and politics, but mostly because whoever
got one in space first, could stop everybody else from building the
second power station. Thus, only one was ever built, and that was done
secretly. The Pentagon had planned for the coming war by building a
Kite, the mat-trans network…and other things."
Sheffield waited eagerly, but Silas didn't oblige with more
information. The sec man wasn't ready to learn of the redoubts. He was
already clearly reeling from the video. The silly thing was just a
promotional tape made to try to sway politicians. Silas easily changed
a few of the scenes to make the material more relevant Nothing could
explain the function and promise of a working Kite better then simply
seeing the device in action.
The officer rose and went to the barred window of the lab, staring
at the dark skies. "Why, with this satellite we could cook the rad pits
clean, or bury them under molten rock! Burn the rads and chems from the
atmosphere!"
"Correct." Silas smiled. "That is, once we achieve complete control.
At present, we have only a focus for a few minutes a day."
"Why is that?" the major asked.
Sensing danger, Silas grew cold. "Technical problems," he demurred.
"But those will soon be solved. All I need is more time to finish
creating software to master the Kite. Its security systems are quite
good, but can be beaten. Already I am up to five minutes a day before
being booted off-line by the onboard systems."
The major turned from the window. "Five minutes of the Kite could
stop an army!"
"If I do not miss."
The sec man studied the whitecoat. The man stood straight, but his
shoulders were hunched, dark circles around his eyes. He was exhausted,
possibly dying. "The nightmares are coming every night, aren't they?"
he guessed.
"Yes," Silas whispered, his face sagging. "It is becoming more
difficult to concentrate each passing day."
"Well, I could send out more patrols," the sec man ventured, leaning
forward in his chair. "Cover the fields, as well as the roads and
bridges. Try to find Ryan and others and chill them as quickly as
possible."
"Yes, do so. His death should end the nightmares and let me sleep
again." His voice broke in a sob. "Sleep!"
"But that would seriously weaken the defenses of the complex,"
Sheffield continued. "It might be best to recall all of our troops and
concentrate our strength here. We can mine the roads and lay more
traps. This project is too important to be derailed by some
mutie-loving outlanders."
"Which is why I am telling you this, as insurance against their
possible arrival. If I should die—" Silas paused uncomfortably, his
cheek twitching uncontrollably for a moment, "—or become insane, then
you shall assume the mantle of authority and bring America back from
these days of barbarism. Deathlands is ruled by the strongest, not the
wisest. Stupidity reins, muties and cannibals roam in packs, healers
tortured as sport to amuse drunk barons. The madness must be brought to
an end at any price. America will be reborn!"
"Victory or death," Sheffield said sarcastically.
Silas grunted. "Precisely. And today we shall start to clean house.
To remove some potentially dangerous trash."
"Sir?" the sec man asked nervously.
Wincing as he stood, Silas walked to a wall map, favoring his leg.
When Tanner stabbed him with that trick sword, he had to have severed a
nerve. The wound was healed, the muscles strong, yet Silas still limped
like the old man he appeared to be. Just another debt to be paid.
"Overton was sent to seize control of Front Royal, to turn it
against the other villes in the area in a civil war. When they were
weak, we would move in and forge the three largest into one huge city,
the capital of New America. My America!"
"But Overton failed," the major stated, "because of Ryan and the
others."
"Yes," Silas hissed, thumping his cane onto the floor. "So I am
going to remove those three villes in case they decide to join forces
against us. Look at this."
The sec chief walked closer as Silas drew some freehand curves on
the map with a black marker. "Bull Run is the farthest east, thus the
easiest to target. Next is Casanova and finally Front Royal. I can only
use the Kite once every twenty-four hours, so it will take three days
before Front Royal will be reduced to ashes."
"And I need targets to fire at." Silas lovingly stroked the map,
smearing the lines. "Each time will give me greater control of the
Kite, each use allowing me more access to its computers. In three days,
I will crack the final codes and have total command over the orbiting
power station."
"And what does the dish have to do with this?" the major asked
curiously.
"That is what I need to punch a radio signal through the static and
interference of the overhead storms and reach the Kite. How soon will
the repairs be completed?"
"Two days, three at the most."
Silas smiled. "Ah, then in four days, we become the new rulers of
America, and the great cleansing of humanity can finally begin.
Thousands of the impure will die. No more
muties! Isn't that glorious?"
"Oh, yes," the major agreed, feeling the two hearts in his chest
pound with anger. "What a wonderful day that will be for our people."
AS THE GREENIES DRAGGED the humans back toward the arena, two loud
reports split the night and the muties tumbled to the sidewalk with
most of their heads removed. Holstering the blaster, Jak hurried around
the curved building and inspected the sprawled man and woman.
"Ryan," the teenager said softly, shaking him by the shoulder. "What
happened?"
The warrior struggled into consciousness. "Wags," Ryan hoarsely
whispered. "Dozens of wags…"
"Inside arena?" Jak asked eagerly.
"Don't go! Plant fumes…" Ryan collapsed.
Standing, Jak glanced the entrance to the arena and sniffed. He
didn't smell anything but some flowers. What fumes? From the condition
of Ryan's and Krysty's clothes it looked as if they were caught in the
middle of hot sex, but while on a recce in hostile land? That didn't
make sense.
Adjusting what clothing they were still wearing to cover as much as
possible, Jak again looked at the arena and made a decision. Raising
the Colt Python, he loudly fired twice, then three times and once more.
He quickly reloaded and waited for the rest of his friends.
Minutes later, a long whistle cut the air. Cocking back the hammer
of his .357 magnum pistol, Jak replied with two short whistles and the
rest of the companions came charging into view.
"We were going to the insurance company and heard the shots," J.B.
said, easing the tension on the trigger of the Uzi. Then he spotted the
nearly naked couple. "What the hell happened here?"
"Ryan hauled out," the teenager said, glaring at the dark hallway of
the building. "Muties tried drag back in."
"Indeed," Doc rambled, removing his frock coat and draped it over
Krysty. "And what happened to their clothes?"
"Don't know," Jak answered, scratching his head. "Said wags inside.
Also plant fumes."
"Fumes?" Mildred carefully walked closer to the doorway and sniffed.
Instantly, she felt her heart beat fast and a sudden rush of warmth
between her legs. The physician backed away quickly and gulped in the
clean desert air.
"There's something odd with the atmosphere, sure enough." she
stated, staring hard at J.B. for a moment before forcing her mind back
to reality. What was wrong with her? All she could think about was sex!
Was that the problem?
Taking a lungful of air, Mildred walked into the entrance and
waited. Nothing happened and she felt no different. Exhaling, the
physician allowed herself a small sip of air, and her hips ached as her
tingling breasts brushed against the soft fabric of her bra. Hastily,
she rushed outside, gasping for breath.
"What's wrong, Millie?" J.B. said, holding her by the arms.
"S-some sort of drug," she replied, shaking. "Makes you crazy for
sex. Probably once you go in, you never come out again."
"So the wags are bait," Dean decided.
"A logical deduction," Doc mused, leaning on his stick.
"How utterly vulgar."
"Utterly lethal," Mildred corrected. "The question is, how do we
check inside? What we need are gas masks."
"I know something just as good," J.B. said, slinging his blaster.
"Got any shine?"
The teenager produced a bottle with less than half an inch of brown
fluid. "What for?"
"Protection," the Armorer said, taking the bottle and splashing some
of the homemade whiskey on a handkerchief.
Breathing through the reeking cloth, he approached the sports arena.
The alcohol fumes were giving him a slight headache, but aside from
that he felt normal. Holding his breath while he anointed the cloth
again, J.B. walked around the dead muties and ventured farther, past
the stairs, to finally reach the playing field.
In the dim moonlight, the scene explained itself. Bodies lay
everywhere, and a huge blossoming flower sat in the middle of a hundred
rusting wags. Their own backpacks were lying clearly in sight at the
base of the huge plant. An offering to the god of the greenies, or bait
for them? On a hunch, he fired a few rounds from the Uzi at the huge
blossom. The stalk shook from the passage of the bullets, but there was
no other effect. Realizing the shine was exhausted, J.B. retreated even
faster than he entered.
"The bastard thing must feed off the bodies as they rot away," he
finished explaining to the others.
"What if you were alone?" Dean asked.
It was a good question. "Probably just do yourself to death," J.B.
said, passing the boy his stuttergun. "However, there's enough wags in
there for an army, some of them in good condition, I'm going
to steal us some wheels to replace the horses."
"Not enough," Jak stated, inspecting the bottle. "Here," Mildred
said, passing over the bottle of witch hazel from her med kit. "Use it
sparingly. That's all we have."
J.B. removed the cap and took a sniff. "Whew! Even better than the
shine. This'll work fine."
"Not go alone. I come," Jak said, digging a rag from his jacket. It
was stained with oil from cleaning his blaster, but still serviceable.
"Get backpacks first?"
"I'm going to chill that big flower first," J.B. corrected, shoving
two more shells into the feed of his shotgun. "That seems to be the
source of the drug."
"How are you doing to ace the weed?" Dean asked, shouldering the
Uzi. "Bullets didn't work."
The Armorer frowned. "I know, and setting it on fire might only make
the perfume deadly. We need some way to neutralize that bastard thing,
kill it root and branch."
"Maybe there is some herbicide in one of the stores," Mildred
hesitantly suggested, glancing at the ruins. "No, these are office
buildings and such. Not a hardware store or greenhouse in sight."
"Explosives?" Jak asked.
J.B. frowned. "If we had a lot, sure."
"How about car batteries?" Doc suggested.
"Yeah, not bad," J.B. said, considering the idea. "Good call. I
think that should work fine. Jak with me. Doc, Dean, you two are on
guard duty. Mildred, see what you can do with Ryan and Krysty. Don't
start a fire. We aren't going be here that long."
Holding the witch-hazel-soaked masks, the men stealthily entered the
sports arena. The bones of a hundred corpses littered the floor, bits
of clothing and boots visible amid the greenery. Backpacks and duffel
bags were prominent lumps, and the barrels of discarded weapons were
everywhere. The men walked hurriedly among the wags, inspecting them
for damage and rust. Too many of the vehicles were civilian cars with
bald tires, the bodies stripped of bumpers, seats and chrome to save
weight and increase gas mileage. Few had hoods, and none had batteries.
Spotting a van in decent condition, J.B. used a knife blade to flip
the grille lock, lift the hood and check inside. The battery was gone
like the rest, a corroded mess eaten away by its own internal acids.
"Here," Jak announced, lugging a battery into view. The lead
terminals on top were covered with flaky white material, but the casing
seemed intact.
Removing the plastic caps with one hand, J.B. kept his mouth covered
as he walked the heavy battery to the plant and awkwardly poured out
the concentrated sulfuric acid onto the base of the stalk. Instantly,
the plant seemed to lose color and the aroma in the air took on a sour
smell.
Splashing on more witch hazel, Jak brought over another battery and
did the same thing to the flower. Now the leaves began to wilt, the
blossom closing its petals protectively. Dropping the dead battery, Jak
flexed his hand and a knife slid into his palm. Slashing at the fibrous
petals, he hacked open a hole, and J.B. poured the contents of another
old battery directly inside. Now visibly wilting, the flower withered
and began to turn brown.
Closely watching the roots they were standing on, the men nervously
waited a few minutes to make sure the acid had worked. Acid rain in the
Deathlands could strip the flesh off a man's bones it was so strong.
But out here on the East Coast, the rain wasn't that strong, and was
coming with less frequency. That was why Virginia and Georgia had
living green trees, and not just endless sterile sand.
Experimentally, J.B. lowered his cloth and inhaled. "Dark night,
what a smell!" He coughed, waving a hand at the air. "It's like burning
tires mixed with shit and rotten eggs."
"Feel okay?" Jak mumbled behind his wad of cloth.
"I feel like vomiting!" the man replied, holding his nose shut and
gasping for air through his mouth. "Shit! I can taste it!"
Hesitantly, Jak lowered his mask and risked a sniff. "Smelled
worse," he said, while pocketing the damp rag. "Not by much, though."
"Come on, let's find a wag we can use."
RYAN AWOKE to the sound of an engine. Groggily, the man grabbed for
his blaster and tried to sit up. "Not taking me anywhere!" he snarled,
fumbling at the gun belt.
"Hey!" a familiar voice shouted.
Dizzy, Ryan tried to focus his vision and realized he was fully
dressed and sitting on the sidewalk resting against the facade of the
arena. Mildred was beside him, her fingers on his wrist checking his
pulse. Doc and Dean stood a few yards away with blasters held at the
ready, obviously on guard duty.
"What happened?" he asked around a mouthful of hairy cotton. His
head was throbbing, and every muscle was sore.
Mildred released his wrist and offered a canteen, which was
gratefully accepted. "Jak chilled some greenies trying to drag you and
Krysty back inside the arena."
"Fucking plant!" Ryan snarled, forcing himself to stand. "Don't go
inside! The perfume is a drag!"
She nodded and took back the canteen. "Yeah, we figured that out
pretty quick. Put some witch hazel on rags, and J.B. and Jak aced the
flower and got us a wag."
Grunting in reply, Ryan drew the SIG-Sauer and checked the clip. It
was empty, and he seemed to have no more loaded magazines. Fireblast,
how many rounds had he fired to get them out of the building? Loose
rounds were sewn into his jacket, a few more in the pocket, and Ryan
started thumbing bullets into an exhausted clip.
"Glad to hear it's chilled," he stated grimly. "Where's Krysty? How
is she?"
"Fine, lover," the woman answered from the darkness. She was sitting
nearby on a piece of rubble, massaging her temples. The woman's wild
abundance of red hair was hanging limp. He had never seen her so tired
before. "Just don't expect much loving soon. Feel like I just lost my
cherry during a fistfight."
"Had to," Ryan stated, slamming in the slip and jacking the slide,
but clicking on the safety.
She hushed him with a finger on the lips. "I know. You saved us
both," Krysty said. "Thank you. I have a nukestorm of a headache, but
that's better than the alternative."
Revving engines sounded again, and a Hummer rolled from the
building, easily passing through the wide entrance. At the steering
wheel, J.B. bounced the wag down the front steps and parked on the
sidewalk. Jak stood in the rear, his hands gripping an M-60 machine gun
that rested on the gimbal of a short steel post, a long belt of
ammo hanging from the breech.
"Replacement for the horses," J.B. said with pride, turning off the
engine. "It's in great shape with a full tank of juice. We got our
backpacks again, plus a ton of ammo, six Kalashnikovs, the 7.62 mm
machine gun, half a case of grens and two LAWs. No food, but we're
armed for war."
"Better," Jak said, resting an arm on the M-60. "We know location."
Ryan came closer. "You found a map."
A nod. "Couple of blue shirts are staring at the dirt inside. They
must have stopped here on a recce, just like us."
"Indeed," Doc stated. "So where are they located?"
"Tennessee." J.B. grinned widely, holding out a folded piece of
plastic. "Big red circle around Shiloh battlefield."
"Excellent!"
"Idiots," Krysty snorted.
Accepting the map, Ryan studied it closely. "So they're right next
to the redoubt. About a hundred miles away."
"Less than a day in a Hummer," Dean added, climbing into the rear of
the vehicle and finding his backpack. Undoing the straps, he stuffed
his pockets with spare rounds for his blaster, and stuffed a chunk of
smoked fish whole into his mouth, chewing contentedly.
"It would be a day's journey if we travel straight there," Ryan
agreed, rubbing his cheek. Then the man hawked and spit to clear his
throat. There was still a faint taste of the perfume in his mouth. Damn
stuff was like glue. "But we're not going to travel directly to their
base. The blues are smart. There might be more land mines and traps on
the roads. How's the fuel?"
"Tanks are full of condensed fuel. That'll last us over a thousand
miles. Plus, we have a can of regular juice."
"Even better. So we take two days, mebbe three at the most." Ryan
spread the map on the hood of the Hummer and the others gathered
around. "We'll do an end run and head straight for this valley west of
Shiloh. If they're expecting us, they'll be watching the north, east
and south, but why waste sec men guarding their backs?"
"Sounds good," J.B. said, starting the engine. "Climb aboard and
let's smoke this ville."
"I just hope Overton didn't have a real army," Mildred said, taking
a seat in the rear. "You know, thousands of men, tanks, planes. Sounds
crazy, but he did have brand-new AK-47s, unlimited ammo, Hummers,
radios. Who knows what else?"
Spotting his Steyr on the floor, Ryan took the passenger seat next
to the driver. "We'll recce them from a distance, soft and low," he
said, checking over the blaster. He had no recollection of losing it
inside the arena, which only showed how far gone he had been. Hit his
woman and dropped his weapon. Fireblast, he had to have been totally
out of his mind.
"You sure that flower is aced?" Ryan asked grimly, settling the
longblaster into the crook of his arm.
"It's triple chilled," J.B. stated confidently. "Shriveled like
bacon in a pan."
"Has there been any problems with the greenies?" Krysty asked. "I
wonder why they haven't attacked yet."
"Killed god," Jak said, patting the vented barrel of the long M-60
blaster. "Scare most folks."
"Wished I could have seen it," Dean stated, loading another clip and
tucking it away in his jacket.
"Too dangerous," Mildred countered, setting her med kit on the
floor between her boots. "You're too young. The perfume might have
driven you permanently insane."
Then she hid a smile and added, "And Doc is too damn old."
"Indeed, madam," Doc rumbled in his deep stentorian voice. "Perhaps
you are unaware that some men are milk, while others are whiskey. Some
sour and turn bitter with age, while the years make others stronger."
"What a load of crap," she snorted, grinning in spite of herself.
"Crazy old coot."
"Ah, but that is my story and I am sticking to it."
Starting the Hummer, J.B. checked the gauges one last time, and
looked longingly at the dark video monitor set in the control hump
between the front seats. If the radio worked, the onboard computer
probably did, also. But without a CD-ROM to boot the system, it was
useless.
Turning on the headlights, J.B. pulled away from the arena, and
headed the wag westward out of the ruins. The potholes were bad, but he
managed to avoid most of them. The few he hit were taken easily by the
Hummer with only minor shaking of the passengers. He once rode in a
jeep, the military wag used before the Hummer was created and wondered
how anybody got to the fight without losing teeth.
The headlights illuminated something in the road ahead of them, and
J.B. turned to go around. But the obstruction continued onward until
reaching a gaping hole in the ground where a strip mall once stood.
Having no choice, J.B. angled away from the area and took off due
south. But again they found debris blocked their way. The piles of
rubble had been connected with chunks of concrete, effectively sealing
the area between the hotel and the insurance building.
"This looks fresh," Krysty warned, her hair blowing in the wind.
"Head north for the desert!" Ryan commanded. "We know that way is
clear."
The Hummer raced across the predark city, past the arena and the
armory, only to find more rubble stacked over ten feet high, rusty iron
rods sticking out of the broken concrete like pungi sticks.
"The little bastards have sealed us in!" J.B. cursed, accelerating
along the line of rubble. The crude wall was unbroken, extending from
building to building, the only breeches the foundation holes where
stores had burned to the ground.
"Try ramming through!" Dean suggested, trying to watch every
direction at once. The attack would come soon. No point to trapping a
prey unless you planned on doing some chilling.
"Can't! This is a Hummer, not an APC!"
"Try anyway!"
"Triple red! Here they come!" Ryan snapped, working the bolt on the
Steyr and firing smoothly. In the darkness, a greenie cried out and
fell to the ground.
But dozens more darted from the ruins, scrambling over one another
in their haste to reach the rolling transport. J.B. swerved wildly, but
more were ahead of them. Flooring the accelerator, the Armorer headed
straight toward the pack, screaming a battle cry. Suddenly, the M-60
began to chatter and the greenies fell away, missing arms and faces.
But as the Hummer plowed into the mob, they parted and dived for the
sides of the wag, holding on with one hand while thrusting with knives,
hoping for a lucky strike. The companions thrust blasters into leafy
faces and blew them off in ruthless slaughter.
Some of the muties dived under the vehicle, and it thumped over
them, their bones cracking audibly. J.B. veered to the left, then the
right, losing the howling pack, and raced across the open area between
the monoliths. But as they gained some distance, a steady hissing could
be heard, along with a metallic linking.
"They got a tire!" Ryan yelled. "Stop the wag and get that bastard
knife to dig it out. These military tires are self-sealing once the
hole is clear."
Brakes squealed in protest as J.B. slowed the Hummer and jumped to
the ground. Just as quickly, the companions formed a firing line
between the wag and the oncoming greenies. The night was strangely
still, not even insects chirping to break the quiet.
"Shoot on sight," Ryan shouted, facing away from the others to cover
their rear. "Our blasters have a lot more range than those blowpipes.
Don't let them get close!"
There was movement in the darkness, and the companions opened up
with their weapons, the muzzle-flashes illuminating the night for
yards. Greenies were running toward them with inhuman speed.
"Behind us!" Ryan shouted, firing.
Jak started to hammer the ruins with the M-60, the heavy weapon
laying down a hellstorm of copper-jacketed lead. In the far distance, a
glass window shattered and something screamed briefly, then went
silent. Howls sounded from behind them again, and as they turned, the
noise stopped, then started once more.
"Ignore the noises," Krysty said, dropping a speed loader into her
revolver. "Only shoot when you see them. That's an old trick to rattle
us and make us waste ammo."
"And we contemptuously thought they were unintelligent muties," Doc
stated, holding the LeMat in a combat grip to steady his aim. Only six
more shots and he was out. "More the fools we."
Swearing softly, Jak struggled with the bolt to clear a jam, the
live cartridge hitting the ground with a musical ting-a-ling. "They not
dumb."
"Got it!" J.B. cried, standing triumphant, the broken blade of a
knife shining between the teeth of his pliers. "Bastard thing was
wedged in tight. Almost as if they knew exactly where it should go."
"Get in, use the Uzi," Ryan ordered, sliding across the Hummer.
Taking the wheel, the man shoved the transmission into gear and started
forward slowly, allowing the companions to climb into the wag.
"Everybody in?" Ryan shouted as he gunned the engines.
"Clear!" Dean replied, shoving a fresh clip into the handle of his
Browning semiautomatic pistol.
A greenie stuck its head into view from a manhole and spit. Doc
cried out, dropping his blaster to the floor of the wag. Swinging the
M-60 about on its gimbal, Jak peppered the manhole with 7.62 mm rounds,
but the mutie was gone.
Krysty lobbed a gren at the hole. The sphere bounced twice and went
right into the opening.
Ryan hit the gas, and the Hummer raced away as flames erupted from
the ground, resembling the muzzle-flash of a cannon.
"Knife!" Mildred ordered, and Dean passed her a blade. The physician
sliced apart the sleeve of Doc's frock coat, exposing his upper arm.
There was a purplish bruise there, the flesh already tinged with yellow
around a tiny barbed dart. Plucking the dart free, Mildred cast it away
and cut a crisscross pattern into the flesh. Laboring to breathe, Doc
made no response, sweat appearing on his pale face. Sucking at the
wound, Mildred's mouth burned as his blood came out. She spit it
outside the wag and repeated the process until it no longer hurt her to
extract blood from the wound.
"That'll do," Mildred decided, looking at the spot with her
flashlight. "I got the poison out fast enough."
"Thanks," Doc mumbled, color already returning to his features.
"Don't thank me yet," the physician warned, opening her med kit and
pouring the last few drops of witch hazel on a bandage. "This will hurt
even worse. It'll keep you alive, though."
"I stand ready, madam," he said through gritted teeth.
Mildred laid the damp cloth on the wound, and Doc sharply inhaled at
the contact. She quickly tied it off with a field dressing as he
continued to breathe rapidly.
"Don't use that arm to shoot," Mildred ordered, wiping the blood off
her hands. "The recoil of that monster handcannon will open the wound
and make you start to bleed. This is only a pressure bandage. Once
we're clear, I'll stitch it closed properly."
Clumsily, Doc lifted the LeMat with his left hand and rested it on
the side of the Hummer. "I am no Sissiphant, madam," he stated.
She nodded in understanding. "You're welcome, you old coot." Just
then, a swarm of greenies charged from the darkness into the headlights
once more. Ryan wheeled away from them as Jak gave the muties another
taste of the M-60. Then J.B. added the ripping killpower of the Uzi,
and a handful of the attackers fell over dead.
This time, the greenies didn't get close and they raced away,
leaving them behind.
"Can't keep this up forever," Ryan stated, shifting gears.
"Eventually, they'll get our range and do us all like Doc."
"You have a plan. I can hear it your voice," Krysty said, using
fingernails to yank two spent cartridges from the cylinder of her
blaster. She slid in live rounds and eased the S&W closed.
"Whatever the hell it is, you have my vote to try."
"Me, too," Dean added, carefully removing a dart from the headrest
of the seat in front of him. He tossed it away, then spit on his
fingers and rubbed them clean on his pants.
Stomping on the gas pedal, Ryan turned the Hummer and headed
directly toward a group of greenies they'd encountered earlier. The
muties greeted them with a wave of barbed darts that hit the windshield
and bounced off.
Angling for the low point in the barrier, the Hummer started to
climb sideways up the mass of debris, the tires spinning wildly as
rocks crumbled away under their weight.
"Shift right!" Ryan bellowed, twisting the steering wheel.
The companions dived to the right side of the wag, their weight
holding it steady as the transport jounced and bumped over the timbers
and automobile parts. Then the rubble shifted, and the Hummer slid out
of control. There was a strident crash of wood, and the predark wag
reared on its aft wheels, threatening to flip over. Ryan hit the
brakes, then the gas, regaining control of the machine, and the Hummer
madly rolled back onto the street.
Waiting below, the greenies charged, and the companions fired in a
volley at the mass attack. Doc leveled his LeMat pistol and fired twice
through the chaos. A greenie loading a blowpipe jerked backward,
slamming into a greenie behind. They both fell, blood gushing from huge
wounds.
As the Hummer pulled away, its engine roaring in high gear, a dozen
of the muties lay sprawled on the cracked macadam, dead or merely
pretending. There was no way of knowing.
"Now we can leave!" Ryan shouted, fighting the wheel. The wag
streaked across the ruins. "It was a diversion to get them going in the
wrong direction. We're busting out of here right now!"
As they zigzagged past the potholes and manholes, the insurance
building rose before the companions, its mirrored windows darkly
reflecting the tiny racing vehicle.
"Blow us a hole!" Ryan commanded, heading straight for the
tinted-glass doors.
The 7.62 mm blaster ripped into life, spraying the facade of the
insurance building. Cracks appeared in the revolving doors, nothing
more. But the large ground-floor windows shattered into a million
pieces. Shifting gears, Ryan plowed through the jagged opening and into
the building. Cresting the sill, the wag landed on top of a mahogany
desk, smashing it under their tonnage. Fighting for control, Ryan
rammed into a room divider, and for a brief instant, he saw a skeleton
in a pin-striped rags holding a cup slumped before a dark computer
screen. Then everything went flying as the Hummer plowed across the
office, leaving a trail of total destruction.
A headlight winked out as Ryan headed straight for a short hallway.
The fit was so tight that sparks sprayed out from the armored chassis
scraping along the marble facade, then the wag smashed aside a set of
double doors and reached the cafeteria. Tables squealed as they were
forcibly shoved out of the way, plates, newspapers and chairs flying
everywhere.
The M-60 blaster spoke again, clearing away the windows, sand
pouring into the room. But the angle was too steep, and the Hummer
couldn't gain enough purchase in the shifting sands.
"Fireblast, we need a shim!" Ryan shouted, braking to a halt amid
the destruction. "J.B., Dean, get that soda machine!"
The two jumped from the Hummer and raced to the huge soda dispenser.
Rocking it back and forth, they got it moving and started slowly
waddling it toward the pile of sand pouring in though the broken window.
"Incoming!" Jak shouted, firing the M-60 into the hallway. A greenie
was torn apart and dropped to the carpeting.
Krysty pulled the pin on a gren and threw it hard at
the marble wall. The sphere hit and rebounded
out of
sight. A few moments later, a thunderous explosion shook the room and
smoke poured down the hallway. Jak wasted rounds shooting into the
smoke just in case. Muties crawled into view, blood gushing from
the
hideous stumps of missing limbs. But they still tried
to
reach the wag even as they died.
"This is not a fight, but a jihad!" Doc cried in realization. "A
holy war of revenge! They will never stop until we're dead."
A greenie dropped from the ceiling panels, landing amid the
companions. Krysty blew off its head, and Dean slit its throat as it
fell from the wag.
Suddenly there was a crash as the soda machine toppled over in
place. "Get in!" Ryan shouted, but the others were already aboard.
Gunning the engines, Ryan headed for the machine, knowing it could
never support the awesome weight of the Hummer for more than a few
seconds. But those moments should be everything he needed. The hood of
the war wag lifted as the wheels rolled on top of the soda machine,
metal started to crunch. Ryan hit the gas and shifted gears. The wag
started to lose some height. Greenies ran screaming into the room, and
Dean threw a gren. The LeMat boomed. A dart hit the inside of the
windshield, then with a lurch, the studded tires caught on the sill and
the Hummer climbed up and out the window, rolling into the night.
As they sped away from the ruins, Dean saw the interior of the
insurance building come alive with flames, black silhouettes of the
muties dashing about screaming in pain and rage.
"Goodbye, Georgia," Mildred growled, slumping in her seat. "We have
three days to rest before reaching Shiloh."
"Plenty of time," Ryan said, loosening his grip on the steering
wheel. "The only point on our side is that we're not racing against the
clock."
"Thank Gaia for that," Krysty said with a smile.
Chapter Sixteen
The awful stench was the first thing that Clem noticed. He sniffed
again and tried to figure out what it was. Wood smoke, definitely,
mixed with the tang of a blacksmith shop and other things he couldn't
recognize.
"Muties?" asked the young corporal riding point alongside him.
"Don't think so," Clem drawled, chucking the reins. "But I don't
like it. Blasters out, and watch yourselves."
The squad of brown shirts needed no further prompting and drew their
longblasters. In an effort to impress Baron Markham of BullRun ville
with the seriousness of the matter, Nathan Cawdor had given the
ambassadors the best AK-47s they had and plenty of ammo. Where words
might fail, anybody too stupid to listen to troopers armed with rapid
fires and talking peace was just too damn dumb to let live.
Cantering over one of the many low hillocks so prominent in northern
Virginia, the men stopped in their tracks, the horses whinnying in
fear.
Lying before them was desolation like nothing they had ever seen.
Stretching for perhaps a full mile were the ruins of the ville,
cottages and huts crumbling even as they watched. The castle itself was
mostly gone, a glowing pool of lava exactly where the predark fort
should be standing. Only a few of the outer buildings still existed.
Bricks fell from the side of building and hit the ground, bursting into
their component ash, the powdery cement blowing away as dry dust. Only
the windows seemed to be undamaged, the glass remarkably clear and
sparkling clean as if brand new.
There was a depression in the ground with the remains of fish at the
bottom, as if it were once a pond. Even the soil itself was blackened
as if charred by a terrible fire. Yet countless trees still stood, the
bark peeling off the gray trunks, brittle leaves carpeting the ville
even though it was only early autumn. A field of brown crops stretched
to the north, every breeze snapping the stalks and clearing whole
areas. The smoking corpses of people lay everywhere, their clothing
flaking into ash, their crispy skins split apart to expose cooked flesh
and black bones. Exploded blasters lay near the hands, the stocks
twisted and partially slagged.
Sprinkled across the horrible landscape were stingwings and birds
alike, wings outstretched as if still in flight. Skinny rats scampered
among the assorted destruction searching for food, but none was
touching the many corpses so readily evident.
"What the hell happened here?" Clem asked softly, pushing back his
bearskin hat. He might have to wear the uncomfortable uniform of Front
Royal while in the ville, but on the road, the mountain man quickly
returned to his more familiar garb.
"Not much left," a sec man whispered, the overwhelming feeling of
death filling the air.
"Nothing left," Clem corrected him. At those loud words, the
artesian well in the middle of the ville broke apart, the wooden beams
bursting into ash and the stones plummeting out of sight into the
ground. Minutes passed, but there was no sound of a splash from the
blocks striking water.
Frowning, Clem withdraw a plug of tobacco and bit off a chaw. He had
seen a hundred different kinds of chilling, but nothing resembling
this. The hooves of his stallion were already thick with the dust of
the land.
A sergeant checked the bulky rad counter they had found hidden in
Overton's room at Cawdor Castle. He worked a few dials and tapped the
meter. The needle swung about but didn't enter the red area. "Reading
clean," he announced. "No rads."
"Didn't think it was a nuke." Clem chewed thoughtfully. "And it sure
as shit wasn't acid rain."
A soft breeze from the mountains moved over the annihilated fields,
the plants crumbling into dust and blowing away. Then a section of the
castle broke part, the bricks and mortar separating as the masonry
tumbled to the ground.
"Well, lightning didn't do it, either," a private stated firmly. "I
seen lightning hit, and it don't do this."
Sliding off his horse, a lieutenant knelt on the road and reached
out to take a handful of the black soil. He carefully inspected it
before daring to take a sniff.
"No smell of fuel or black powder," he said, standing and tossing
the piece of dead earth away. "Hell, ain't no chem burn I know. Not
napalm, thermite or even willy peter."
Shifting in his saddle, Clem translated the term in his head. "Willy
peter" was slang for white phosphorus. J.B. had told him about the
predark chem. It burned ten times hotter than a Molotov cocktail, but
was controllable, unlike thermite. Once you ignited that stuff, all a
man could do was run away fast, or fry like a chicken on a spit.
Thunder rumbled, and the man glanced upward to see fiery streaks of
orange slashing across the purplish sky, a billowing array of dark
storm clouds ravaged by the endless hurricanes of the upper atmosphere.
Nothing unusual there.
Glancing down, he noticed the line in the soil where the strange
effect stopped and the green grass started once more. The boundary was
sharp, as if a line had been drawn with a sharp knife and a string.
What weapon could do that?
"Dead," a sec man whispered, making the sign of the cross. "All
dead."
"Whatever it was happened fast, too," Clem added, jerking his chin.
Off to the side lay the still body of a horse, half of the mare within
the circle of destruction, the rest on cool green grass.
The lieutenant went into the woods and returned with a long green
stick. Placing the tip against the black soil, the sec man pressed
downward, and it easily sank all the way down until his hand almost
touched the surface. Withdrawing the stick, he examined the length of
the sapling.
"No resistance," he rumbled, coughing to the taste of the bitter
ashes. "Whatever did this penetrated mighty deep into the earth."
"There's lava over there," a young sec man said hesitantly.
Impulsively, he reached for his blaster, then released the weapon.
There was nothing here to shoot. Whatever battle had been fought was
long over. "Mebbe it was a volcano? I heard of them from my ma. Mebbe
the ville just got cooked with steam."
Spitting out a long stream of brown juice, Clem frowned deeply. "Let
me tell ya, kid, no steam nor lava did that," he stated as a fact.
"Don't like this," the lieutenant muttered, cracking his knuckles
and stepping onto the strange soil. He sank to his knees and quickly
stepped back onto the road. A rat scurried by, and he resisted the
temptation to shoot it out of sheer annoyance.
"Mebbe Overton…" the corporal started.
Clem snorted and glanced around at the hellish vista. "Can't be. If
his coldhearts could do this, why not just show us and declare himself
baron? Who would be crazy enough to try and fight this with blasters
and knives?"
"More likely it's removing potential enemies," the sergeant said
gruffly, fighting to keep his horse calm. The animal was very unhappy
and wanted to leave the moment they had arrived. He didn't blame it a
bit. "Chill before getting chilled."
Nobody spoke for a few minutes, thinking seriously about that
possibility.
"Might be," Clem agreed, pausing to spit again. "That is, if this be
a weapon and not some bizarre natural effect of the Deathlands. We be
mighty close to the Washington Hole. All sorts of crazy stuff happens
there."
"Hey, look at this," the lieutenant said, holding up a small gray
object. "It's an intact bullet."
Leaning over in the saddle, a sec man glanced around closely. "Say,
there's lots of them. Over there, and there!"
"Weirdest thing," the lieutenant said, frowning. "It's not damaged
in the slightest."
"Oh, nuke me!" Clem exclaimed in sudden understanding, and he hawked
out the whole chaw. "They must of been shooting at the sky, and the
slug fell without hitting nothing!"
"The sky," a sec man whispered. "You mean, a plane?"
"Or a bomb?" another asked in a hoarse whisper.
"Fucked if I know!" Clem wheeled his horse about. "Everybody, back
to Front Royal! We got to warn Baron Cawdor before this thing strikes
again!"
"Wait, sir!" the lieutenant shouted, waving.
"What for?" Clem demanded hotly, the reins tight in his hands.
The sec man took the reins of his own mount and handed them to a
surprised Clem. "It took us two days to get here with full supplies. If
you drop everything except your blaster, and take my horse as a spare,
you can get there in one day."
Clem tied the reins to the pommel of his saddle. "Smart thinking.
See ya back the Front Royal!" With a war whoop, the chief of the sec
men kicked his horse into a full gallop. Yards away, his saddlebags
dropped to the road, then his water bag, the bedroll and then he was
gone from sight over a hillock.
"One day," the lieutenant said. "I just hope it's enough time to
evac the ville."
"To do what?" a sec man asked. "Run away?"
"And what else can we do against a plane dropping bombs?" the
sergeant retorted.
The rest of the brown shirts didn't reply as the lieutenant climbed
on the largest horse behind a private and they started riding southward
to their homes. Hopefully, the ville would still be there when they
arrived.
SMOKING A CIGAR in the morning light, the blue shirt watched the
road winding down the side of the steep hill through his binocs and
fought back a yawn. It was another two days until his relief came, and
he could go back to the complex for hot meals and slave girls. Sniper
duty was boring. Anybody he saw was fleeing the Tennessee River valley,
and he wasn't allowed to loot any food or have a woman. The survivors
might meet Ryan coming along on the road and give away his location.
The mined bridge over the river was clear as always. Horses and
people could cross safely, but Major Sheffield said that if a big wag
like an APC or a Hummer tried to go across, the whole thing would blow
sky-high. He'd liked to see that. It would help relieve the boredom.
To the south rose the foothills of the big mountains. They were
little things, only a couple hundred feet high, hardly worth calling a
hill. More of a mound, really. A dirt road wound down the steeply
sloped side, zigzagging along to finally go over the top near the peak.
Personally, the sec man didn't think any wag could travel over the
rocky terrain without busting an axle, or worse. It was for walking, or
horses, not wags.
Which meant he was here for nothing, doing nothing. He took another
drag on the cigar, and blew a smoke ring into the air, contemplating
randomly shooting at folks as they passed by just to watch them dance.
Then a speck rose over the crest, and he took a look with the
binocs. Probably just some more greenies from Georgia, or stickies.
Focusing the military glasses on the hill, he followed the roadway
until reaching the tiny dot again. The cigar dropped from his mouth,
and he leaned forward, nearly falling from his perch in the tree. It
was them! Holy shit, it was Ryan and his gang!
THE ROAD DOWN THE HILL was covered with rocks, making driving almost
impossible. The Hummer scraped bottom more than once when it rolled
over broken chunks of granite. The view was spectacular, although the
trees lining the serpentine road blocked most of their view of the
valley below. But they could catch glimpses of a river, and seemingly
endless forests of blue pine carpeting the landscape to the horizon.
Shifting gears and fighting for control, Krysty finally reached the
bottom of the road and floored the wag. The Hummer surged forward in a
burst of speed, and almost immediately there was a bang, the vehicle
veering to the left.
"Gaia!" she spit, fighting the wag to a stop. "That tire finally
blew."
"Better here than up there," J.B. said, climbing from the rear
seats.
"Well, we got almost fifty miles out of it. That's not bad. Time to use
the spare."
Dean stepped into the bushes for a moment, while Jak stood guard at
the M-60. The road ahead was level and straight, going directly to a
predark bridge.
"Bridge looks in good condition," Mildred said, adjusting the focus
on the binocs.
"We'll have to check for traps," Ryan commented. "This is close to
Shiloh, and the blues could be anywhere."
The words were still in the air when a volley of bullets chattered
across the armored chassis of the Hummer, closely followed by sound of
a distant rifle cutting through the peace of the forest. Everybody
dived for cover.
Lying in the dirt, Ryan worked the bolt on his Steyr SSG-70 rifle,
chambering a round for immediate use. "That sounds like an AK-47," he
said, sighting through the scope on the longblaster, sweeping the
trees. "Yeah, it's a blue. I caught a glimpse of a muzzle-flash in the
trees."
More rounds hit the wag, two impacting on the jack supporting the
vehicle. The flat was lying on the ground, the new tire resting against
the Hummer waiting to be attached. The jack was hit again and shook,
but didn't fall.
"There seems to be only one sniper," Doc said, moving away from the
wobbly vehicle.
"Only one firing," Ryan corrected him grimly. "There could more."
"Bastard's smart, too. He waited until I had the flat off, then
started firing. We're not going anywhere," J.B. stated, adjusting his
wire-rimmed glasses to sit more firmly on his face. Last thing he
wanted was for them to slide off in the middle of a battle.
"Anybody hurt?" Mildred asked from the bushes.
Just then another wave of bullets pounded over the armored hull of
the Hummer, sounding like hail on a tin roof. Several rounds hit a
tire, but didn't puncture the military rubber.
"Undamaged so far," Ryan answered, as trained hands fired the Steyr
and worked the bolt, loading another round. "But not for long. This guy
is good."
"Too good," J.B. added, firing the Uzi twice at random trees on the
distant hill. Return fire kicked up dust directly in front of him, and
the Armorer dived off the road into the bushes, crawling hastily away
from the spot at which he entered. Seconds later, that location shook
from a hail of incoming rounds.
"Much too bastard good," J.B. muttered.
A figure appeared from the trees, holding a silvered revolver. "Want
me to try a LAW?" Krysty offered, the plastic tube draped over her back.
Targeting the tops of trees, Ryan shook his head, firing again.
"Don't waste it. We still have a long way to go."
"Besides, he's not going to hurt us with an AK-47."
J.B. retorted, firing the Uzi randomly at the hilltop. "Not at this
range, anyway."
"Incoming!" Dean shouted, and a split-second later, a fiery dart
riding a contrail of smoke flashed by them, heading for the Hummer. A
wave of heat from the exhaust washed over the companions as the rocket
missed the wag by a foot and disappeared into the woods. Silence ruled
the area for long tense seconds, then the forest erupted into a
fireball of thundering flame.
"That was a LAW!" Ryan growled. "Okay, anybody got a gren?"
"At this range?" Krysty asked, puzzled.
"Just throw it as far as you can!"
Pulling the pin, the redhead dropped the handle and heaved the
sphere with all of her strength. The ball hit the road roughly thirty
yards away and rolled a few more before the charge exploded, throwing a
cloud of smoke and dirt into the air.
"Camouflage," Ryan said, throwing his own slightly to the left of
the first Another huge cloud of dirt covered the roadway, completely
masking the Hummer.
Sporadic fire came from the sniper as the companions used the rest
of the grens to maintain the dust cloud. Resting the flat tire against
his spine as protection from incoming rounds, J.B. hastily attached the
new tire, using only half the nuts. But he wasted a few precious
seconds making sure those were solid and tight.
"Done, go!" he shouted.
At the wheel, Mildred, the sole occupant of the wag, started the
engine and rolled away, crumpling the jack still attached at the frame
of the military vehicle. She cut a fast turn, throwing more clouds of
dirt into the air with the spinning tires, then charged headlong into
the trees and vanished among the foliage.
As if the sniper deduced their plan, another LAW streaked through
the dust to violently detonate a scant yard away from where the Hummer
had been parked.
"Now!" Ryan ordered, and he charged into the trees at a full run,
the rest of the companions only steps behind.
Moving fast through the pine trees, Ryan curved across the sloped
side of the valley, rising slowly alongside the sniper. Raising a fist,
he pointed directions, and the others split into teams to converge on
the sniper from different directions.
A Kalashnikov constantly chattered at the trees, the noise guiding
the companions to the location of the hidden gunner. Minutes later,
they found him.
The blue shirt was sitting on a hunter's box, just a few planks
nailed to branches, giving him a stable platform to hide in as he
waited for prey to come into view. The upper branches of the tree shook
as spent brass arched from the hot breech of his blaster. Soft curses
sounded, and the shooting stopped.
Creeping closer, Ryan saw the sec man rummaging frantically in a
duffel bag. Then he pulled another LAW into view with a satisfied cry.
"Don't!" Ryan barked, standing and working the bolt on the Steyr.
The weapon was already loaded, but the noise would drive home the point
that he was armed.
The sec man registered shock, then rage and dropped the LAW, going
for his longblaster. Without a qualm, Ryan fired, hitting the man in
the chest, the 7.62 mm round slamming him backward into the tree trunk.
Then J.B. added the fury of his Uzi, and the corpse tumbled from the
trees to land on a rock with a sickening crunch. Rivulets of blood
began dripping onto the ground from his hidden face.
"Doc, Dean, sweep the area for any more," Ryan ordered, approaching
the corpse. There was a map sticking out of his back pocket.
But before he could reach the document, the bushes parted and two
more blue shirts walked out, firing their Kalashnikovs. Diving for
cover, Ryan shot the closer man in the belly with his Steyr. The other
blue fired his longblaster, but then a knife sprouted from his throat.
Gagging on his own blood, the sec man fell to his knees, still
triggering the AK-47, shooting in every direction. Then Krysty stepped
from behind a tree and fired her hand blaster into his face, finishing
the job.
"Perimeter sweep, twenty yards!" Ryan ordered, rising from the
ground.
Krysty, Doc and Dean moved into the forest as J.B. climbed up the
crude ladder. On the platform, he stayed crouched, studying the forest
around them. When satisfied, he whistled an all-clear signal and
climbed back down with the duffel bag and the dead man's AK-47.
Ryan got the map as the Armorer checked the contents of the duffel.
"Dark night, he had two more LAWs, and an implo gren that could have
reduced the Hummer to a soup can!"
"If he got close enough," Ryan agreed, looking over the plastic
paper. It was the same as the other, just a map of Tennessee. Nothing
more.
A long whistle came from the forest, and Ryan answered with two
short ones. The rest of the companions stepped into sight from several
locations.
"Nobody that we can find," Krysty reported, holstering her
revolver. "Find anything useful?"
"Nothing so far," Ryan said, turning the map over. Nothing was
circled or highlighted as with the last one they had found, but there
was a notation scrawled at the bottom with indelible ink. Ryan looked
twice at the map to make sure he was reading it correctly.
"There's a name on this," he said, his features carved from stone.
"Might mean shit, but here it is."
"Who?" Jak asked, reloading.
"Checkpoints along Timber Ridge Road, password is El Morro.
Main-gate entry password…Jamaisvous."
"What did you say?" Doc whispered, dropping the LeMat from limp
fingers. The man looked as if he had just been hit wife a club.
"Silas," Ryan repeated, showing the map. "Silas Jamaisvous."
Without speaking, Doc retrieved the weapon, his mind lost in dark
thoughts. So it was about to all begin once more.
Stuffing ammo clips from the corpse into his pockets, Dean frowned.
"I thought he died in that mat-trans jump."
"We hoped he died," Krysty stated, her hair a flaming corona about
her tense face. "Guess not."
"Crap! We can't go anywhere near a redoubt," J.B. grunted, slinging
the duffel bag over a shoulder. "Silas knows the access codes, and
could have sec men waiting for us."
"Or worse," Jak added grimly.
"So what should we do?"
"We find his base and kill the son of bitch permanently this time,"
Ryan said, turning on a heel. "Come on, we still have to fix that tire
and get across the bridge. Once on the other side, we'll hide the wag
and proceed on foot."
Chapter Seventeen
Standing alone on the top floor of the observation tower at Casanova
ville, a sec man squinted at the cloudy sky and smiled.
"Almost lunchtime," the man commented aloud, his stomach rumbling in
harmony. Although the sun was blocked by heavy clouds, he could still
see that it was just reaching dead overhead. Noon. Soon a servant would
bring him a basket of food. The sentry only hoped it wasn't rat again.
They had been eating rat for the past month, and he was getting sick of
the same thing every freaking day. Sure, it was better than nothing,
but what good was being a sec man if you ate like a civilian?
With a sigh, he rested the heavy barrel of his muzzle-loading
longblaster on a shoulder. Spare pieces of flint were tucked into loops
on his belt, and his shirt pocket was neatly lined with paper
cartridges for charging his weapon. It was a bloody clever invention of
the baron's. Instead of counting as you poured black powder into your
weapon, he had made these little paper tubes from library books. A
person bit off the top and poured out the black powder inside. It was
exactly enough for a full charge, always the same. At the bottom was
the miniball, and you used a nimrod to stuff the paper that the
cartridge was made out of down the barrel to hold the load in place.
Powder, shot and wadding all in one. The sec men could fire ten times
faster than before, making their crew
of a hundred
shoot like a thousand!
One of the servants had dared to suggest it
was a
predark idea from something
called
the
Civil
War, and the liar
had
been beaten to death
right in
the market
square. Nobody insulted the baron
and lived.
Except his
mud
head of a
son,
that was.
Lightning flashed overhead, and the sentry felt a warm breeze blow
over the tower. In October? Suddenly, there was a loud peal
of
thunder, and bright light
flooded
the ville.
Glancing upward, he was stunned to see the sky become an impossibly
clear blue
color. He hadn't
ever seen
anything
like it before! Then his eyes began to sting, and
the
world went totally black. Blinking to clear his vision,
the
sentry realized in horror that he was blind. He began to itch all over,
as if a million insects were eating
his skin.
Dropping his longblaster,
the sec
man dashed for
the
stairs, going
for help, and went
straight off the edge of the
roof. He screamed all the way down to the
cobblestone
streets and abruptly stopped as he hit.
Nobody noticed. Cooked birds
were also plummeting
from
the sky, the leaves falling
from the wilting trees.
Tendrils
of smoke rose
from
the thatched
roofs of huts, people screamed, clawing at their faces, horses bolted
in panic, blasters exploded, removing hands and entire arms,
the
fuel dump fireballed and the artesian
well began to
boil. Becoming hotter by the second, the thick walls of the castle
started to turn reddish, then orange, and the melting stones
began
to sag toward the ground in thick glowing streams.
Support
timbers snapped, windows shattered, and the shrieking of people trapped
in the dungeon rose to anguished howls.
Minutes later, silence ruled what remained of Casanova. Not
a wall stood intact, not a creature moved, not a sound could be heard
except for a low bubbling from the white-hot
lava pool in the middle of the flaky black soil. Then a low rumble of
thunder sounded as lightning flashed, and the clear sky darkened again
to form a solid dome of stormy clouds over the precise circle of
destruction.
THE SOUNDS OF METAL ON METAL, and metal on stone, filled the hollow
expanse of the quarry. A wide road spiraled down the sides of the great
pit all the way to the cutting floor, where the slaves trimmed the
massive stone blocks into smooth rectangles. A sentry post was placed
at the bottom of the ramp, with another at the distant top.
At the bottom of the quarry was a runoff pool to catch the rain and
divert it from the workers. An electric sump pump sucked out the muddy
water, a feeder pipe rising along the quarry wall and disappearing over
the top. The feeder pipe was festooned with concertina wire to
discourage climbing. Near the pool was a set of stocks, where an
unconscious slave still stood, flies covering the bloody shreds of his
back.
On the cutting floor, an APC backed near a stone block, and the
driver got out. Carefully, he inspected the block for cracks, then
measured it with a yardstick and finally used a plumb line to make sure
it was squared off neat.
"This'll do," he announced. "Hitch the bitch, boys."
A team of slaves moved forward and began to attach long lengths of
steel chains from the
APC
to the block so it could be
dragged off to join the hundreds of others that were part of the wall
ringing the complex.
"Where we at?" an overseer asked, smoking a cigarette and offering
the pack. The slaves looked on with greed, but said nothing and
continued to work.
"Thanks." The driver took one and lit it with a stick match. "Just
starting the second course. Another month, it'll be ten feet high!"
"Shoot, what a sight. Ain't no mutie gonna get over that."
"Hell, boy, we couldn't smash through it now even with one of the
rocket-tube things."
"Ain't it the truth, brother."
When the slaves were done, the overseer checked the links around the
block, while the driver checked the tow bar on the APC, then climbed
inside. The slaves stood nearby, savoring the moment of not doing
anything.
"All set here!" the overseer called. "Roll away!"
"Back in a few!" the driver answered, waving an arm through the top
hatch and driving off slowly, the mammoth stone dragging behind
sounding like a baby earthquake.
"All right, break's over," the overseer called, hitching his pants.
"Get your lazy asses back to the face. We want another block by sunset."
The slaves shuffled off toward the bare rock face of the quarry,
joining other slaves already edging blocks and driving in wedges with
heavy sledgehammers. The newcomers had been chained in pairs, Mad Dog
with Cooler, Snake with Digger. The odd man out, Scarface, was paired
with an old slave called Bo, probably with the notion that the
whitehair would help slow down any possible trouble from the huge,
burly cannie.
Dragging the length of chain between his legs, Scarface picked up a
sledgehammer from a line of them and moved to a nearly finished block.
Bo placed the wedge in the thin crack outlining the stone, then
Scarface swung the sledgehammer, driving the steel wedge deep into the
surrounding stone. Bo placed another wedge into position, and the
cannie shifted his stance, pausing to spit on his hands to get a better
grip.
"Keep working," an overseer snarled, and flicked the tip of a
bullwhip lightly across the man's wide shoulders.
Scarface didn't flinch at the contact: he merely grunted.
As the overseer moved on to harass another, Scarface and Bo stepped
into the cool shadows under an overhang created by the removal of a
block. The rest of the crew was already there. Their whole shift had
received a beating for making the mistake of undercutting the face, but
it had been worth the pain. The recess gave them a spot on the floor
where they could be out of sight for minutes at a time, sometimes more.
"We can't take much more of this," Scarface said to the rest of his
chained crew. "They feed us crap and work us like dogs. Couple more
days of this, and we'll be too weak to even try and escape."
"Good thing about the accident," Snake growled.
Bo shivered, but Scarface agreed. A slave had fallen between a
moving stone block and the wall, getting crushed to death. The
overseers wanted nothing to do with cleaning the mess, any more than
the slaves did. However, Scarface and his crew walked to the front of
the line and offered to do it if they could have bigger water rations.
Laughing contemptuously, the overseers whipped them to the task, which
was exactly what the cannies wanted in the first place. The dead slave
was in such bad shape, nobody noticed the body was missing an arm and a
leg when he was buried.
Cooler and Mad Dog wanted to cook the limbs, but the smell would
have tipped off the guards, so they were forced to eat the flesh raw.
The food fueled them with new strength, but they wisely continued to
drag their feet like all the other starving slaves, and struggled to do
work that was easy for them. Even Bo had eaten the forbidden food. He
got horribly ill afterward, but ate again next time and kept it down.
"Only the leg remaining," Cooler said, watching the movement of the
armed people outside the hole. "We need a plan. And to choose just the
right moment." Snake nodded. "Aye, we won't get a second chance."
"We fail, we die," Digger agreed, licking the sweat off his arms. He
made a face, but kept at it. The salt kept you strong during such hard
work. That was all that mattered. Only strength would give them a
chance for freedom.
"So how about now?" Scarface said. "Right fucking now."
Sitting on the ground, Bo perked up his head. "In broad daylight?"
"Say the word and we follow," Mad Dog stated simply.
Scarface grunted. "You know what I gotta do," he said, hoisting the
sledgehammer.
Mad Dog nodded. "I'll pay the price to get us outta here. Just do it
fast!"
Digger and Snake took the man's arms, holding him motionless, while
Cooler stuffed the man's mouth with a shirt. Scarface swung the
sledgehammer. The lump of steel slammed onto Mad Dog's foot, crushing
it flat, the bones completely pulverized. His eyes wide with pain, the
cannie wildly fought to get loose, then Bo slammed a rock onto his head
and the man went still. Snake slid the shackles off Mad Dog's soft foot.
"You're free!" Bo gushed in excitement. "But how does that help the
rest of us?"
"Don't help you at all," Scarface said, and the sledgehammer swung
again, caving in the whitehair's head. The decapitated corpse trembled
and fell to the ground. Scarface then crushed the dead man's foot, and
he was free.
Swinging the length of iron chain, Scarface gauged its weight and
reach. When satisfied, the two men walked from the hole side by side,
as if shackled together.
Moving across the cutting floor, the men shuffled along like good
slaves to the sentry shack at the foot of the spiraling ramp. The
one-room shack was located on a ledge above the floor, the only access
a ladder the overseers drew inside.
Snake leaned against one of the support posts, and Scarface climbed
up to the man. Cresting the deck, Scarface looked about to make sure
the coast was clear, then wiggled onto the platform. On the ground,
Snake went behind the latrine and waited.
Sliding behind the shack where he was out of sight from the rest of
the quarry, Scarface put an ear to the wall of the shack and listened.
Muffled sounds could be heard, but those might be anything. Ten sec men
talking business, two just telling jokes.
Going to the window, he peeked inside and smiled. A naked slave was
facedown on a table, one sec men pumping at her face, the other
thrusting between her legs. Easing to the door, Scarface wrapped the
iron chains around his right fist and quietly entered.
Grunting and laughing, neither sec man noticed the presence of the
sweaty slave until he was upon them. Scarface slammed the nearest man
with the fist weighted with iron. The overseer's face caved in, pinkish
brains smearing over the cannie's armored hand.
"Black dust!" the other cried out, and pulled himself free to reach
for his blaster. But his pants were down around his ankles, the folds
of cloth tangling around the wheelgun. Scarface tipped over the table,
tumbling the girl onto the sec man. They both fell to the floor in a
tangle of naked limbs.
Rushing forward, the cannie wrapped the chain around the neck of the
blue shirt and pulled it tight The sec man gasped for air, punching
weakly at the massive arms of the coldheart, his straggles growing
weaker by the second. Finally, he resorted to clawing at the cannie
with his nails, raking bloody furrows into the tan skin. Annoyed,
Scarface jerked the chain once, and the sec man toppled over, his eyes
distended and hanging loose on limp white stalks of slimy ganglia.
"Who are you?" the girl whispered, drawing her rags protectively
closer. Blood dribbled down her thighs, and one eye was swollen shut.
"Just an escaped slave," Scarface said, stripping one corpse and
then the other. Their clothes were ridiculous small for the giant, but
he draped a gun belt over his shoulder as a bandolier and checked the
load in the wheelgun. It was clean and serviceable.
"Thank you," she whispered, and rushed forward to hug the killer.
"Oh, the things they did to me! I'll never feel clean again."
"Not a problem," Scarface said, taking her head in both hands as if
about to bestow a loving kiss. Then he savagely twisted his grip. Her
neck bones snapped, and the dead girl slumped to the floor on top of
the bleeding overseers. A peg on the wall held a ring of keys, and
Scarface easily found the one that unlocked his chains. Wrapping the
spare blaster in the two uniforms, he opened the door of the shed and
looked outside. Slaves were working in the quarry, the overseers
watching the slaves, but not one another. The fools.
Beyond the quarry, he could see green trees, and, rising above
those, was the dish, the shiny bowl dominating the valley.
Scarface looked again, wondering why it had caught his attention,
then he saw the machine was moving, rotating slowly. Curious. Some sort
of radio—that much he knew. But who were the whitecoats talking to?
Crawling to the edge of the platform, Scarface dropped the bundle to
Snake.
Rummaging through a small bookcase in the corner, he found a pack of
cigarettes, matches, a knife, a whistle and a pistol with a signal
flare inside. There was also a lever-action longblaster of a type he
was unfamiliar with, and a shotgun, both with extra shells sewn into
loops along their straps. Mighty useful indeed.
Stuffing the weapons into a bag, he slung it over his shoulder, then
paused and returned to the dead. Lifting the girl onto the table, he
chose a spot and bit in deep, his pointed teeth tearing away a mouthful
of tender flesh. He chewed the bloody gobbet quickly and swallowed.
"Fresh meat" he said, sighing. "Been too damn long."
There was movement at the door, and he spun with the blaster ready.
Scarface relaxed as the rest of his crew came inside the shack and
closed the door. Snake and Cooler were dressed as overseers. Mad Dog
was pale and dripping sweat but held on to Digger and stayed upright.
"Now what?" Snake asked.
Scarface passed over the shotgun. "Gonna get us some transport for
Mad Dog. Ain't leaving him behind."
"We steal a wag, they follow us forever," Cooler warned, testing the
edge on the knife. "And they got some machines like I never seen!"
"That doesn't matter," Scarface replied coolly. "Nobody can track us
if they think we're already dead."
"Dead?" Mad Dog whispered.
"Not just us," Snake said, smiling in understanding. "You mean
everybody is dead."
"Exactly." Working the lever on the longblaster, Scarface inspected
the round, then inserted it into the side port of the breech. "Help
yourselves to the meat, but don't stuff your bellies. We'll have to
move fast when the chance comes."
A SEC MAN in a crisp blue shirt drove a shiny clean Hummer down the
spiral ramp and onto the cutting floor. A sec man at the sentry post
waved as he passed by. Rolling through the slaves, coming very close to
a few and making them jump, the driver slowed to a halt near the runoff
pool. Sitting before a small wooden shack was an overseer armed with an
AK-47. He rose and walked to the wag.
"About time you showed," he growled. "I was about to start giving
out the dynamite and have the slaves whack it with hammers to set it
off. We got a bastard ton of rocks to clear before we can start cutting
more blocks. The major don't like it when we fall behind schedule."
The driver climbed from the wag and reached behind the seat to lift
a bulky bag into view. "Stuff it, shithead, and help me with the new
explosives."
"We got explosives!" the overseer replied hotly. "What we needed is
fuse, ya idiot."
"Not like this stuff, you don't," the driver retorted. Going to the
rear cargo area of the military wag, the sec man released a collection
of rubbery straps holding a large plastic box in place on top of a damp
folded blanket Lifting off the top, wisps of mist wafted away, exposing
fifty new sticks of explosive charges nestled inside, soft sponges
separating each stick.
"Color's odd," the overseer grumped. "You sure this dynamite is
still good?"
"Ain't dynamite."
He scowled. "Looks like it."
"Ain't."
"So what is it?"
"Something called TNT," the driver said, easing a stick from the
packing. "The major says it's much stronger, mebbe ten times, so we
better use a lot less."
The overseer glanced toward the vertical rock wall hanging above
them. "Ten times!"
Lifting out a single stick, the driver carefully crimped a detonator
cap on the end and added a fuse.
"One stick," the man said. "Well, if it ain't hot shit, one stick
won't cause us no prob. Mebbe chill a few slaves."
"What are we supposed to do with this old dynamite?"
"Boss says burn it."
"Burn it?"
The driver scoffed. "Easy as pie. I done it lots before. Slit the
dynamite open like a fish, then toss on a match. Nothing to it. This
TNT's supposed to be lots safer than dynamite. When that stuff gets
old, it starts sweating and becomes mighty unstable, blows if you fart
hard. Some damn fool slave drops a rock on it, and our dicks hit the
moon."
"Don't wanna do that," the overseer said, leering. "Found me a slut
for tonight and plan to do some riding."
"Enough for me?" the driver asked hopefully. "The major been working
the slaves so hard on the dish, it's like doing a corpse."
"Always room for a bud." He smiled, nudging the man with an elbow.
"You like dark meat or light?"
A shrug. "Ain't choosy."
As the men grinned at each other, a sharp crack echoed across the
quarry. The stick of explosive in his hand jumped, and the sec man
stared in horror at the gaping hole in the paper tube.
"Nuking hell!" he screamed.
"SHIT-FIRE!" Scarface cursed, working the lever to chamber a fresh
round. "The bullet didn't set it off!"
"And now they know we're here," Digger growled, wiping his bloody
mouth. "Better run while we can."
"Ain't leaving just so we can get caught and dragged back here
again," Scarface growled, firing another round.
The dirt kicked near the box of dynamite, and the sec man backed
away, unable to think of what else to do. Then there came another
crack. The box jumped, and the whole world vanished as a titanic blast
ripped apart the face of the cliff, spewing out rocks and debris for
hundreds of yards. The entire side of the mountain seemed to shift
position when a second explosion sounded. Although muffled by the
avalanche, the concussion was still louder, much more powerful, and a
geyser of stone rose into the sky on a column of boiling flame.
"Well, fuck me," Scarface whispered as the concussion buffeted the
sentry post with strident force.
The sides of the quarry rose and moved inward, dust filling the air
as thick as mud. Then the countless tons of granite fell on top of
overseers, sec men and slaves. More explosions came from the wags and
storage sheds, but they were pitifully weak compared to the
earth-shattering detonation of the fifty sticks of pristine TNT.
Welling from the depths of the vibrating quarry, a boiling cloud
expanded over the site, obliterating everything from sight. In the
nearby complex, sirens began to howl, and the great dish trembled from
the quake of the blast.
Already rushing up the crumbling spiral, the cannies reached the top
and dashed onto green grass seconds before the sloping road broke apart
and the pieces tumbled into the smoky abyss.
Some sec man came charging out of a barracks, and the cannies gunned
them down, pausing only to take their blasters. A line of trucks and a
lone APC stood on a bare patch of ground nearby. Not knowing how to rig
a tank, Scarface bypassed the military wag and used the stock of the
longblaster to break the window of the best-looking truck. Climbing
inside, he reached under the dashboard and ripped wires loose, then
started touching one to another until the engine started. Twisting the
connections closed, the cannie chief shoved the wag into gear and
roared off at top speed.
"Where now?" Cooler asked, breathing hard.
Scarface shifted gears. "We're going home."
"Virginny is due north of here," Snake said. "Mebbe a tad east."
"Too dangerous. I heard them say they were setting traps for someone
named Ryan," Digger answered, hugging the moaning Mad Dog close to his
chest. "He be coming after their boss. Got the roads covered north,
east and south of here."
"Remember that caravan we attacked? Heard someone yell for 'Ryan.'
Mebbe that's him. Great! Let the fuckers kill each other," Scarface
decided, steering into the trees, plowing through bushes and greenery.
"We'll avoid both by heading west."
Chapter Eighteen
High above the polluted world, the Kite floated along through the
cold vacuum of space. Tiny retro jets flared occasionally to correct
the satellite's altitude, adjusting pitch and yaw against the complex
gravitational forces of the Earth below and the moon above.
A thousand more satellite's moved around the world like bees buzzing
about a hive. Some were large and slow, barely tethered at the extreme
limits of Earth's gravitational field. Others were small and fast,
beeping antiques from a bygone age. Most sported huge dish antennae,
simple communications relays for television and the multinational
businesses of the predark world. Both as dead as dinosaurs. A few of
the satellites were of unknown purpose or origin, strange ovals whose
hulls were a flat black, making them nigh invisible against the starry
backdrop of space.
Several hundred miles away, a squat armored sphere bearing the
design of an American flag became alive with dim lights, and spun
weakly about on its vertical axis, pinhead sensors flickering as it
registered the presence of the huge oncoming satellite. Radar beams
scanned the goliath, and the master computer couldn't find a match
within its military data banks.
A radio signal was immediately sent to NORAD.
Command in Wyoming. But neither the mammoth Cheyenne Mountain nor
the North American Air Defense headquarters existed anymore, and the
request for instructions went unanswered. The guardian satellite
instantly tried contacting the Pentagon. No response. Then it tracked
desperately for Looking Glass, the flying headquarters of SAC, but the
Boeing 777 was nowhere to be located. Following the dictates of its
programming, the guardian demanded immediate verification from the
White house. There was only static. Finally the war satellite broke top
secret seals and beamed an emergency signal to the armored bunker at
Camp David. Nothing, only the crackle of the never ending sheet
lightning from the isotope-filled clouds masking the planet.
Subprograms flared into operation, but the auxiliary routines failed
to boot, so they were tried again a dozen times before the reserve
files were accessed. But the long ages and steady bombardment of the
solar winds had claimed a toll on the military orbiter. When reserve
files were sluggishly activated, the first was filled with corrupted
data, as well the second, but the fail-safe backup proved functional
and the weapon systems of the hunter-killer were brought online within
seconds.
Now a direct warning was broadcast at the intruder in international
Morse code. There was no reply. The mandatory warning was tried once
more with the same results. Hardwired circuits pulsed into life, and
hatches irised wide. Distance was gauged, speed, vectors, trajectory,
and two small missiles streaked toward the lumbering Kite.
The first went straight past the mile-wide power station, arcing off
into the limitless depths of deep space. The second detonated halfway
between the two machines, its chem warhead of thermite-beryllium
flowering into a hellish spray of metallic flame over two thousand
degrees Kelvin in temperature.
The Kite began to tilt slightly away from the guardian satellite.
Sensing the unauthorized invader was still coming, the hunter-killer
activated its armor-piercing rockets and prepared to launch, when the
warheads prematurely detonated inside the military satellite, blowing
the orbiter apart in a silent detonation. Utterly destroyed, the
crackling wreckage of the megamillion-dollar satellite began to drift
toward Earth with ever increasing speed. In minutes, the friction of
the thickening atmosphere rushing past its hull raised the temperatures
of the ceramics way beyond their design limit, and a spectacular tail
of flame stretched behind the plummeting machine, making it resemble a
comet for a few brief seconds before it was vaporized.
Serenely, the colossal Kite continued its journey toward a new
geosynchronous position directly above an insignificant river valley,
hidden somewhere in the ragged mountains of western Tennessee.
THE MURMURING WATER was only ten feet below as J.B. wrapped his legs
tighter around the wooden beam and scooted a few more inches along the
trestle of the old bridge. Cross braces supported the thick planks
above the man, and he moved from joist to joist, desperately grabbing
anything solid to maintain his precarious perch above the river.
The spray rising from the water made everything slick and soon
soaked his clothes through to the skin. Directly underneath his back,
black catfish and rainbow trout darted about in the endless flow, and a
winged eel broke the surface, jumping for the dancing sparkles
incorrectly thinking the reflected light was food.
Scooting forward another foot, J.B. cursed as a splinter jabbed
into his hand, and he bit the end, pulling it loose and spitting it
away. Another eel dived for the bloody tidbit and disappeared into the
river with its prize. Muttering darkly, J.B. finally reached the middle
of the bridge and found the explosive charge. The flat ceramic disk was
attached with steel bands bolted to the main timbers, dim telltales
winking in the damp shadows.
Bootsteps sounded on the planks above, and curly black hair framing
a scarred face appeared over the edge of the bridge. It took Ryan
several moments before he could find the Armorer esconced within the
maze of wood.
"How's it going?" Ryan asked.
"Found another land mine," J.B. replied, studying the predark
device. Easing his grip on the cross braces, the Armorer rested his
shoulders on the smooth butt of a joist, and traced the outline of the
mine with steady fingertips. "Silas is getting really serious with
these things. This model is a lot bigger than the last couple we found.
Must be ten pounds of plas here. That would remove the whole bridge and
most of the road on either side."
"Need anything?" Ryan asked, shaking the spray from his face.
"Yeah, turn off the river for a few minutes, will you?" J.B. grunted
in reply. Hugging a cross brace with his left arm, he reached into his
shirt and pulled out a pair of needle-nose pliers. A short length of
string was tied from the handle of the pliers to the buckle on his belt.
An oil lantern came into view at the end of a rope.
"More light?" Krysty asked from above.
"Got enough, thanks. The problem is I don't know this model," J.B.
muttered, working on a recessed bolt. "Ah, there's the control board…
Shit!"
There was a splash as the pliers dropped into the river.
Immediately, the fish nosed about the item to see if it was edible.
Discovering that it wasn't, they angrily slashed fins, spraying mud
over the tool, burying it completely.
"Bloody string was a good idea," he announced, reeling in the pliers
on the dripping twine.
"You're welcome, lover," Mildred replied. At that angle, she could
only see the man by his reflection in the flowing water.
"Everybody better move farther away," he suggested loudly. A line of
color ran along the cracks between the planks. Green and red. That was
power and a ground wire. He traced them into the shadows and spotted
other flat disks hidden amid the timbers. "There seems to be more
charges, one at either end of the bridge."
"A sandwich formation," Ryan answered. "Nowhere to run."
"Looks like. The ends are merely charges, no sensors or trips. It's
when you reach the middle of the bridge that all three go. Damn good
design. Best I've seen." He snipped a wire and waited for sudden
violent death. When nothing happened, he snipped another.
Squatting on the shore, Dean studied the river. "So how do the blues
get across?"
"Ford river," Jak said. "Not deep."
"The bottom is too soft," Doc stated knowingly. "We would be forced
to abandon the Hummer. A LAV could make the transition, but not our
current mode of transportation."
Levering a beveled plate out of the way, J.B. answered, "We can
cross the bridge anytime, only the Hummer can't. People, horses, most
civilian wags would roll over
with no trouble. But once the mine senses dense steel overhead, this
whole bridge will be matchsticks in a heartbeat."
"Can you remove the mine, let it sink in the river?" Ryan asked, a
spent round sliding from his shirt pocket and disappearing into the
water. The man was annoyed he had missed the brass. It could just as
easily have been a live round wasted due to carelessness. As a
reasonable precaution, Ryan had emptied his pockets of anything
valuable before leaning over the bridge. J.B. had done the same, his
collection of items piled on the floorboards of the Hummer. And just in
case the mine was tripped by magnetic fields, Ryan was stripped to the
SIG-Sauer, no spare clips, and not even a knife in his boot, to keep
the metal on his body to an absolute minimum.
"Not going to remove this device without power tools," J.B.
answered, grunting with effort. "It's here to stay, bolted into
position nine different ways. But I have a better plan." More muttering
sounded from under the bridge, along some hard banging and another
splash. "Shit!"
Suddenly, the birds in the trees stopped making noises, and the rest
of the companions drew blasters. Straining to hear voices or engines,
they waited for a patrol of blues to arrive. Tense minutes passed
before a sting-wing soared from the trees with a fresh kill in its
beak. The companions relaxed as the mutie flew away and the birds began
to chirp once more.
Ryan eased the safety back on the SIG-Sauer, when he realized that
J.B. was on the move below the bridge, wiggling quickly between the
braces and joists. The one-eyed warrior retreated to the safety of the
road, waiting as J.B. reached the shore and crawled backward onto the
grass. Gratefully, the man stood and lifted a thick wad of grayish clay
from inside his shirt.
"To hell with defusing the mine. I just removed the C-4 charge,"
J.B. announced with a slight smirk. "Let the damn thing ignite. It'll
only make a bang that wouldn't chill a fly."
"You sure about that?" Mildred asked, handing over a backpack.
Extracting dry clothes from within, J.B. quickly changed, using
stiff fingers to smooth his damp hair. Then, donning his dry fedora, he
slid the Uzi over a shoulder. "Well, just in case, I'll drive the
Hummer over alone," he suggested, adjusting his glasses.
Already at the wag, Ryan started the engine and stepped away from
the Hummer. A stick was pressed against the gas pedal and a piece of
rope held the steering wheel steady. At a leisurely pace, the armored
vehicle slowly rolled across the expanse of the wooden bridge, veering
a little off course toward the edge, but nothing dangerous. As the wag
reached the middle, there was a sharp explosion and debris sprayed into
the river, churning the surface and scaring away the fish. Smoke blew
away from the support beams, but nothing else occurred and the Hummer
reached the other side intact.
Sprinting forward, Ryan claimed the Hummer before it got too far
away, and turned off the engine. "It's safe," he announced, untying the
knotted rope and throwing away the stick. "Let's go."
Walking over, the companions piled their belongings into the rear of
the Hummer and took seats. Jak took the gunner position at the M-60,
and Doc stretched his long legs in the cargo area. Taking the front
seat, J.B. laid the Uzi on the floor and started carving the lump of
plastique into fat bricks. Gently, he wrapped each separately in a
piece of a blue shirt taken off a corpse and tucked the bricks into his
munitions bag.
"Can blow a lot of locks with this," he said, patting the bag
contentedly. "Good for starting fires in the rain, too."
"Plas?" Jak asked, shocked.
"Sure. Most explosives will simply burn if they're not inside a
container. You need a primer for TNT, or even a gunshot wouldn't set it
off. An electric charge or a small explosion makes C-4 detonate, but
fire only causes it to burn like coal."
Starting the warm engines, Ryan checked the fuel gauge, noting the
low level, and they headed into the deadly green hills once more. So
far, they had found mines on every bridge, and on a flat stretch of
ground there had been a collection of bloodstained crosses lining the
road, rotting corpses—without eyes or genitalia— brutally nailed to the
upright timbers. Oddly, the dead were all facing eastward, toward the
ville of the blue shirts. It was a clear warning about the dangers of
leaving. The mines were a more direct warning about entering the valley.
"And this is the back door," Krysty said, as if reading his thoughts.
"Silas didn't believe in half measures," Ryan agreed, shifting
gears. "Remember those homemade muties of his?"
"Nasty," Jak agreed.
"Maybe we should leave the roads," Mildred suggested. "Take to the
woods."
"Can't," Ryan replied bluntly. "The trees are too close, the slopes
too sharp. No way we could drive through these hills. Even walking
would be a bitch. We're stuck with the roads until reaching flatter
country."
"Besides, there could be patrols in the hills," J.B. added, resting
an arm out the window of the Hummer. "Land mines are easier to avoid
then sec men."
"Prefer sec men," Jak countered, shaking the length of linked ammo
to straighten a kink. "Mines always sharp, blues fall sleep sometimes."
"Only once, my friend," Doc answered, sliding a length of
razor-sharp sword from his ebony stick and slamming it back inside.
"And then never again."
ITS EIGHT WHEELS CHURNING out grass and dirt, the armored bulk of
the LAV-25 rolled to a stop near the edge of the quarry. Sec men rushed
to open the rear doors, and Silas hobbled from the war wag, stiffly
walking to the ragged end of the land.
"What in hell happened here?" the whitecoat roared, standing above
the abyss. "Were we attacked?"
"The damn fools must have set off the TNT," Major Sheffield said,
staring at the jumble of broken rock that rose halfway to the surface.
"It'll take weeks of hard work to reach the bottom again. Even longer
before we can start carving blocks for the outer wall. Months lost!"
"Any survivors?" Silas demanded in cold fury, his hand clenching the
cane hard.
Crossing his arms, Sheffield shook his head. "None."
"How lucky for the overseers," Silas snorted. "They would have
begged for death before I was through with them!"
"Any orders, sir?" Sheffield asked.
"Yes, of course. Halt the construction of the wall," Silas stated
grimly. "Assign every worker to the dish. Once done, we'll effect a
clear zone around the complex. That will afford us the security we need
to finish the wall at our
leisure."
"A clear zone?" the major asked.
Leaning heavily on his cane, Silas grunted. "We'll burn the whole
Tennessee valley to ash around our base for a hundred miles. Nobody
would dare to cross that."
The orbiter could do such a thing? Amazing. It truly was more
powerful than predark nukes. "How soon?" the sec chief asked, trying to
hide his excitement.
"Noon tomorrow—no, the day after. Tomorrow, I reduce Front Royal to
a lava pool." Silas then frowned. "What are the chances that Ryan had
something to do with this?"
"None at all," Sheffield stated firmly. "Any strangers found in the
valley have been shot on sight. Our sentries report in regularly, and
every passable road is heavily mined."
"Ah, that's not exactly correct, sir," a corporal hesitantly
offered, walking from the crowd of sec men.
Turning slowly, Silas leveled a hostile gaze at the youngster.
"Explain that statement," he growled.
The sec man saluted. "Sir! The sentry on the west road is late
reporting in, sir. We sent off his relief this morning, but no word on
either of them yet."
"The west! I should have known the coward would try and sneak up on
me from behind!" Silas glanced about nervously, feeling very vulnerable
standing in the open. "Send out a LAV and squad of men immediately."
"That is unwise, sir. We only have three armored wags remaining,"
the major reported succinctly. "We lost one during the cave-in. It must
have been parked near the edge and fell into the quarry."
"Irrelevant! I want armor on the west road within the hour." Licking
his dry lips, Silas hunched his shoulders as if braced for the killing
impact of a bullet. His face felt hot, and the center of his forehead
ached with a stabbing pain as if he had been already shot. A great
weariness filled the man, and in horror he felt himself starting to
slip into the dream state that heralded his recurring nightmare. Only
this time it was happening while he was wide awake!
Through sheer force of will, he banished the delirium, but a cold
certainty now gripped his heart and Silas knew that his days of sanity
were almost over. Soon, madness would rule his mind, and the scientist
would no longer be able to tell reality from delusion. He would
probably never even know when Tanner, or the major, took his life.
Breathing hard, Silas looked into the deep quarry, knowing that a
single step more would end his problems forever.
Just then, a stone broke away from the ragged edge of the ground and
fell into the quarry, clattering and clacking as it bounced
from boulder to boulder, finally disappearing into the shadowy dust
clouds far below. A few seconds later, there was a splash as it reached
the runoff pool.
Shuddering at the noise, Silas stepped way from the yawning stone
pit. No, not yet. His death at this time would only damn North America
to endless barbarism. Democracy had failed, the anarchy of choice and
the chaos of freedom combining to create skydark and nearly ending the
human race. Only the iron rule of science could save humankind from
extinction. The Great Project had to be completed first, no matter what
the personal cost. Then and only then could he allow himself to finally
die and escape the growing horrors of his own damaged mind.
Limping about, Silas started for the LAV. "Come along, Major. We're
returning to the complex. That one-eyed bastard could be watching us
right now through a sniper scope."
"Impossible. The nearest trees for cover are two hundred yards away.
The bushes on the hillside are even farther. He couldn't hit the ground
at that range. Not with a Winchester lever action, or a Kalashnikov.
Told me yourself that was why you chose those specific long-blasters.
Both are useless as sniper rifles."
"And what if Ryan is here with his Steyr?" Silas whispered, sweat
beginning to trickle down his face. "That is designed for
extreme-distance shots under tricky conditions. Perhaps I should stay
inside the bunker until this matter is resolved."
"A wise move. Or tell me the entrance code to the redoubts,"
Sheffield urged slyly, "just in case of an emergency."
Pausing near the doors of the LAV, Silas Jamaisvous stared at the
big sec chief. Proud and strong, he was the perfect human specimen, a
more than worthy successor to the dying scientist.
"Maybe you are right," Silas said slowly, and started to reach into
his coat. Then he stopped and stepped inside the APC.
"Not here," he said, taking a wall seat. "I will tell you in the
lab. We must not be overheard."
"Of course. As you say, sir," Sheffield replied, not taking his eyes
off the tiny sliver of the rainbow disk just barely visible tucked
inside the breast pocket of the white labcoat.
RYAN SLOWED the Hummer as another wag appeared around a gentle curve
in the road ahead of them. It was a predark truck in amazingly good
condition, the tires sporting plenty of tread, the headlights intact,
and not a speck of rust on the red-painted chassis. He could see two
men in the front cab, and more in the rear. All of them seemed to have
blasters.
"Stay loose," Ryan ordered, adjusting the SIG-Sauer at his hip.
"Don't shoot unless they do first. Not everybody on this road is going
to be a blue shirt."
"Mebbe," J.B. replied, pulling the Uzi onto his lap and snicking off
the safety.
Moving the Hummer to the far side of the road, Ryan carefully
watched the oncoming truck. The driver wasn't wearing a blue shirt.
They could just be some folks leaving the area. Or sec men in disguise.
The one-eyed man debated chilling the strangers purely as a precaution,
and decided against it.
Maintaining its speed, the truck swung away from the Hummer, twenty
feet of open space separating the vehicles. As the machines got closer,
Ryan nodded and casually saluted at the other driver, and the gesture
was returned.
"Big man," Krysty commented, her revolver in her hand but tucked out
of sight. "Looks a bit like Ryan."
He snorted in reply. "Everybody has scars."
Almost alongside each other, the truck began to slow, and the driver
pointed at the Hummer. The bald man in the passenger's seat rolled down
his window and stared at the companions, first in puzzlement, then
shock.
"Nuking hell, it is them!" he shouted, displaying pointed
teeth. "Chill them all!" Instantly, the predark wag veered across the
road, its engine revving with power.
"They're going for a ram!" Ryan warned, hitting the gas and sharply
twisting the steering wheel.
The M-60 started chattering, and the sec men in the other wag fired
back with an assortment of handblasters. The windshield on the truck
exploded into pieces, while rounds ricocheted off the sides of the
Hummer.
Firing one-handed, J.B. hosed the truck, but it was already too
late. The hood blew off the wag, steam erupted from the punctured
radiator and the truck slammed into the rear fender of the Hummer in a
crash of glass and screech of metal. Jak went flying from his position
behind the M-60, and the Hummer spun about from the collision, brakes
squealing.
Shaking and bouncing, the damaged truck rattled to a halt, the front
bumper crumpled tight onto the right tire, slicing the rubber into
shreds.
On the berm, Jak rose and started limping after the Hummer, firing
his .357 steadily at the stalled truck. The driver was fighting to
start the engine again, but only getting whirring noises. However, the
sec men in the rear opened fire on the pale teenager with their
blasters. Trapped on flat ground with absolutely no cover, Jak flinched
as a hot round scored past his cheek, singeing his skin.
"Cover him!" Ryan shouted, slamming on the gas and racing forward.
The companions opened fire with every weapon they had as the war wag
streaked across the road to pass straight by Jak and slam into the
truck. The impact knocked the sec men off their feet, the armored
Hummer almost flipping over the large truck.
Jumping from the military transport, Doc and Krysty grabbed Jak by
the arms and hauled the teenager off the road. Once he was in the
Hummer, Ryan backed way from the truck and spun in the dirt, guiding
the wag down the road at top speed.
"Those were cannies!" Dean stated, snapping off more shots at the
broken wag. The men were stumbling around the vehicle in a daze, firing
their weapons blindly.
J.B. slapped a fresh clip into the Uzi and worked the bolt. "Silas
hiring cannies as blues?"
"More likely they stole the truck," Doc stated, blowing flame and
thunder at the men with his LeMat. A cannie with a bandaged foot
recoiled from the subsonic arrival of the .44 miniball, his left arm
gone from the elbow down. "And I sincerely hope they ate the previous
owners!"
"Vicious old coot, aren't you?" Mildred asked.
"Just practical,
madam. A dead Silas can do us no more harm."
As the truck dwindled in the distance, the Hummer rolled around the
curve in the dirt road, and Ryan immediately slowed. Directly ahead of
them, a flat wooden bridge stretched across a gently flowing river.
"Fireblast! How many rivers do they have here!" Ryan cursed, then
ground to a halt. "There isn't time to defuse another bastard land
mine!"
Munitions bag in hand, J.B. hopped from the Hummer and started off
at a run. "I'll check! Mebbe it's clean!" The companions readied their
blasters, as the man rushed to the shore. Wading into the icy water up
to his waist, J.B. looked under the bridge and turned toward the others.
"Triple load!" he shouted through chattering teeth. "Same as before!
Ten, mebbe fifteen to defuse!"
"Do it!" Ryan shouted, gunning the engine. "We'll hold them off if
they're stupe enough to try again."
Mildred gave a sharp whistle, and Jak started firing the M-60.
Rattling and shaking, the predark truck appeared around the curve, the
cannies steadily firing their blasters.
Blue smoke trailed from its tailpipe, telling of serious engine damage.
The headlights were gone, smoke poured from under the hood, but it was
still moving, building speed and coming straight toward them this time.
As the companions cut loose with every weapon they had, Ryan studied
the battlefield. Dense trees lined both sides, so there was no chance
of driving through those. They couldn't cross the bridge, and if they
tried to swim across the river they would be sitting ducks for the
cannies to pick off with longblasters. Oddly, the battered truck was
coming straight down the middle of the road, as if inviting the
companions to try to get by, which made no sense. The Hummer was faster
and armored, so no way could the cannies stop it with another
sideswipe. Then the man saw the others were throwing handfuls of
something out the sides of the wag. One of the objects hit a rock and
loudly detonated.
"Blasting caps! Those'll blow our tires to pieces."
"But why did they come back?" Dean asked, rummaging in his clothes
for another clip. Briefly, he made a mental note that he should make a
vest or something with nothing but pockets for spare ammo. Yeah, that
was a good idea. "We weren't chasing after them."
"It's the Hummer," Krysty stated, thumbing fresh cartridges into her
blaster. "We busted their wag, so the cannies want this as a
replacement."
"And us for supplies," Mildred added grimly, working the pump on the
S&W shotgun she'd borrowed from J.B.
The boy registered surprise at the statement, then fierce hatred.
"Let them try," he growled, for a split second sounding exactly like
his father.
The truck was only fifty yards away and coming faster all the time.
Spitting a curse, Ryan turned in his seat and stared hard at the
bridge. Sure enough, there were small metallic dots scattered over the
weathered planks. More blasting caps had been strewed about to stop
anybody from following them across. Only now the small explosives might
also set off the land mines and chill J.B. while he was working
underneath, and there was no way to tell him of the charges on top of
the bridge. They were trapped.
Having no choice, Ryan started tying off the steering wheel with the
rope. "Get ready to go EVA!" he shouted, throwing the wag into neutral
and shoving the stick on the gas pedal. The engine roared to life.
"We've got to take them here on the road!"
"What for?" Jak demanded from the sputtering M-60. The dangling ammo
belt was nearly gone, but the teenager still rode the machine gun on
full-auto.
"Just do it!" Ryan shouted, throwing the Hummer into gear. The wag
lurched ahead, tires spinning in the dirt.
Spewing smoke and blasterfire, the rattling truck loomed before the
companions. Through the broken windshield, Ryan could see the cannie
driver watching eagerly as the two wags closed with frightening speed.
Then the scarred man's toothy expression rapidly changed as he realized
the Hummer wasn't trying to get around, but was on a collision course.
"Now!" Ryan shouted, diving from the wag. He hit the ground hard,
but managed to roll off the blow and stopped, lying on his side,
blaster still in his hands. Jak and Doc landed nearby, Mildred and
Krysty close behind. There was no sign of Dean.
Slamming on the brakes, the cannie driver bellowed in rage as the
two vehicles violently smashed into each other, glass shattering over
the sounds of crunching metal. Every loose item in the Hummer went
flying as its armored grille pushed in the front of the truck, the
working engine propelled backward into the cab, crushing a man with a
snake tattoo on his face.
Somebody began to scream as fuel gushed from a hole in the gas tank,
pooling on the ground under the destroyed wag. Bleeding and dazed, the
cannies stumbled from the truck, slipping on the shards of glass
scattered on the road.
Stiffly, Ryan rose from a crouch and leveled the SIG- Sauer. "Light
them up!" he shouted, and started firing.
Steady on one knee, Doc triggered the LeMat four times, and a cannie
flew backward to slam into the truck, his faceless corpse sliding to
the road, leaving a smear of pulped organs behind on the crumbled metal
chassis.
Lying on the berm, Dean was snapping off shots, and Mildred cut
loose with the shotgun, the flechette rounds cutting a
cannie in two.
Spotting his lost Colt Python in the dust, Jak dived for the blaster
and came up firing, the .357 hollowpoint rounds blowing fist-sized
holes in men and truck. Hit in the shoulder, a cannie dropped the ammo
clip for his AK-47. In panic, he ran away but got only a few yards
before reaching the blasting caps. The first blew off a foot. Crying in
shock, he fell to a knee and that, too, was removed. The man collapsed
to the ground and was torn into bloody pieces.
Then a large cannie lifted another as a shield and sprayed the
companions with a Kalashnikov on full-auto, the machine gun fiercely
chattering.
Hastily reloading, Krysty felt a tug on her bearskin coat, telling
of a near miss. As she dived for cover, Ryan slapped in a fresh clip,
stood and fired. The 9 mm round punched a neat hole in the forehead of
the dead man, an explosion of blood and brains washing over the cannie
behind him. Blind, the scarred man dropped the corpse and started to
randomly shoot his blaster. Krysty hit him in the shoulder, but he
didn't stop firing. Dean got him in the thigh, and Jak buried a knife
in his gut. Bleeding from a dozen wounds, the cannie dropped the spent
blaster, drew a knife and charged, shouting insanely. Stepping out of
the way, Ryan and Mildred both put lead in his chest, and finally Doc
removed his head completely with a deafening discharge from the .63
smoothbore of the powerful LeMat.
The companions stood tensely, listening for any movement, waiting
for another attack. Minutes passed slowly, and the fire under the truck
died away as the fuel was consumed.
"Okay, it's clear," Ryan decided, holstering his piece. "Let's
gather the blasters and get going. That smoke is going to attract
attention we don't want."
"Why didn't the big guy die faster?" Dean demanded, removing the
partially loaded clip from his blaster and inserting a full magazine.
"Went berserk," Mildred replied, holstering her ZKR target pistol.
"There was so much adrenaline pumping through his body, he could have
continued fighting for quite a while. It's rare, but does happen
sometimes in battle."
"He took that many slugs and stayed alive?"
"Oh, no, he was already dead. Just still moving."
"Mutie?" the boy asked.
The physician sighed. "Quite the human thing to do."
"Hey, look at this," Krysty said, lifting a bare leg.
"There are shackle scars on his ankle. These men were slaves."
"Escaped Silas," Jak replied, recovering his blades from the dead
men. He wiped them clean on the clothes of one of the fallen, then on
an oily cloth from the pocket of his fatigues. One blade he slid up his
sleeve; the other went into a boot.
"Which means overseers could be on their trail," Ryan stated,
finding the Steyr and checking the blaster for damage. It was dirty but
otherwise in fine shape.
Slinging the longblaster over a shoulder, Ryan hurried to the
Hummer. He started the engine and tried to drive it off the truck, but
the wag seemed stuck on something underneath. Shifting gears, Ryan
fought with the entangled wag, only making matters worse before
admitting defeat.
"Sounds like a broken axle," he stated, climbing from the Hummer.
"We walk from here."
A sloshing sound announced the arrival of J.B. from the river. As
the Armorer walked onto the shore, he was holding another large lump of
plastique. "Bridge is clear," he told them wearily. "Not yet," Doc
said, pointing with his swordstick. "It is covered with blasting caps."
Turning, J.B. snorted. "We can use some branches to simply sweep
them into the river. No prob."
"Unfortunately, the Hummer is out of commission," Ryan said. "The
front axle is busted, and the truck is dead. We forcibly removed the
engine and burned off the fuel."
"So I see," J.B. mused. "Must have been a hell of a fight. Any
chance they can be pushed?"
"Pushed?" Mildred repeated. "We move them to the bridge," J.B. said,
rubbing his arms for some warmth. He was chilled to the bone, but there
was no time to change clothes now. "Hopefully, nobody will come looking
for us, or the cannies, if they think we're already dead."
Understanding the plan, the companions got busy. Krysty stood guard
duty while Doc cut branches off the pines trees and J.B. cleared the
bridge. Then they emptied the Hummer of supplies, filling their
backpacks with everything they could comfortably carry. Shoving the wag
backward the few yards took all of them working together, the broken
axle refusing to turn very fast. But the companions eventually got it
to the middle of the bridge. The truck rolled much easier, and soon it
was nose to nose again with the Hummer.
"Leave some supplies and blasters," Ryan ordered, studying the
wreckage. "This has to look real. Silas is no fool."
"Can we still take along the M-60?" Dean asked. "No way they could
know we have one."
"Their wags' have 'em," Jak replied curtly. "If gone, what think?"
The boy frowned. "You're right. Leave it behind."
"Better move a couple of cannies to the Hummer to make the body
count balance," Mildred suggested.
While that was done, Ryan gave J.B. one of his dry shirts. Even
buttoned shut, the garment still hung loosely off the smaller man, but
his teeth stopped chattering and his hands ceased to shake.
Feeling better, J.B. placed the large wad of C-4 from the land mines
on the bumpers of the wags, and Ryan poured the extra fuel from their
spare canister over both machines. Then everybody moved across the
bridge before J.B. set the charges with one of his precious predark
timing pencils.
The friends headed into the trees, the bridge far from sight when
the first flat explosion sounded, closely followed by a cavalcade of
smaller detonations, crunching wood and multiple splashes.
"Sure hope that works," Mildred said, watching the birds take flight
overhead, frightened by the noises.
"Find out soon enough if it doesn't," Ryan replied, walking into the
growing shadows of the Tennessee pine trees.
Chapter Nineteen
The carpeting of pine needles underfoot made walking pleasant, and
the companions put several miles between them and the ruined bridge
before stopping for a needed break.
"How far away are we?" Krysty asked, sitting on a tree stump.
Unfolding some silver wrapping, she popped a stick of hundred-year-old
chewing gum into her mouth and started to suck the flavor from the
confection. It took too long for the stuff to get soft enough to
actually chew. The wrapper she tucked into a pocket to hide the fact
they had been here.
"Tell you in a minute," J.B. said, sliding on dry socks from his
backpack, then his shoes. His pants had dried from the quick march, and
he had changed into one of his own shirts a good mile ago.
Moving to a grassy area where the branches didn't block a view of
the sky, the Armorer used his minisextant to shoot the sun. "We
are…yep, just south of the Shiloh battlefield, east of the redoubt and
west of the ville full of those inbred crazies."
"I remember them," Mildred said, scowling, easing her med kit to the
soft ground. "That's probably where Silas gets his sec men."
"Indeed, madam, sec men or his slaves," Doc stated, taking the
opportunity to reload the LeMat. The bulky weapon was difficult enough
to charge standing still, and impossible to do so while walking. His
sure hands used a small brass
brush to purge each individual firing chamber, spent black powder
raining like ebony snow. An exact measure of fresh powder went in next,
then the lead ball and finally a wad of cotton. He tamped down each
charge with the built-in lever, then smeared a dollop of grease on the
chambers as protection from wetness and a lethal chain reaction cross
firing.
The physician nodded while awkwardly massaging her stiff shoulder.
Mildred knew she was carrying too many medical supplies but couldn't
force herself to leave anything potentially useful behind.
Screwing the cap back on his canteen, Ryan wiped his mouth and
glanced at the sky. "Day's nearly done," he said. "We'll use what light
there is left to head east toward the redoubt from here on. Need to
make sure we have someplace to retreat in case of trouble. If it's
clear, tomorrow we'll start sweeping the valley in sections and find
the base."
"Then chill all blues," Jak said, rubbing the scratch on his cheek
from the near miss before. There was a faint taste of blood in his
mouth, and when Jak turned to spit he saw a tiny flower struggling to
grow through the thick layer of needles. Hawking into the bushes, the
teenager gently pushed the needles away, giving the tiny plant a
fighting chance. His wife had always like daisies.
"We ace the blues and Silas. That way, we can be sure he'll never
bother Front Royal again," Ryan said grimly, picking up his
longblaster. "Or anybody else, for that matter."
Stealthily, the companions moved through the forest. The tall green
pines were dense, the air fresh with their clean scent. There were no
signs of people having ever been in these woods, not even debris from
predark houses. The land was pristine, almost primordial. Occasionally,
the call of a wild bird would echo through the branches, or a squirrel
would race by. Dean tracked the passage of the rodents with his
blaster, but didn't fire. He knew they were too close to the blue
shirts to risk shooting at anything.
Forcing their way through some blackberry bushes, the companions
paused at the sight of a bear tunnel going through some of the
thickets. Placing a finger on the trigger of his longblaster, Ryan
knelt to look inside the dim recesses of the thorny bushes.
"Nothing in sight," he announced.
Jak kicked at some dried droppings on the ground. "Month, mebbe
more. Bear long gone."
"Odd," J.B. said, picking a berry off a bush and inspecting it
carefully. "Animals don't usually leave a ready source of food."
"Mebbe he got chased away by a bigger bear," Dean suggested.
His father didn't reply, but chambered a round into the Steyr. A few
hundred yards later, they found the half-consumed carcass of a buck
deer on the stony ground, the rotting meat completely covered with busy
black ants. The ripening stench was awful, and they hurriedly arced
around the clearing, staying within the canopy of the trees.
Climbing over some fallen oak trees, Ryan discovered a tiny babbling
brook, really no more than a creek, cutting through a tangle of
underbrush. Tadpoles and crayfish were busy in the soupy mud. The water
read clean on his rad counter, so he filled his canteen and moved
onward. The rest of the companions hardly broke their stride, stepping
over the trickle of water. A gully cut through the trees, saplings and
birch standing ghostly white amid the dark pines. Climbing onto the
raised land, the companions started across a sloped field of stubby
grass. Soon, a river could be heard flowing nearby.
"Sounds like it's going in the right direction," J.B. said, tilting
his head toward the noise. "How about making another raft?"
"Had enough of that," Ryan muttered. Stopping abruptly, Mildred
stared hard at the northern sky. "Well, I'll be damned," she whispered.
"Didn't we leave the burning Hummer west of us?"
"Sure did," J.B. answered, then the man sniffed. What was that
bitter smell?
Mildred pointed. "Then what the hell is that?"
A thick
plume of smoke rose over the forest. The winds were thinning it across
the sky until it vanished, but this close the plume was a solid black.
"Way too big to be a campfire," Dean said thoughtfully. "Mebbe the
forest is on fire."
"Animals not left," Jak stated, drawing his Colt Python. "They be
first."
Her hair anxiously waving, Krysty sniffed a few times. "That's
coal," she stated as a fact. "A coal-burning fire."
"Plenty of coal in Tennessee," Doc said. "Perhaps it is a local
blacksmith."
"Have to be a damn huge one."
"Hmm, true, madam. I stand corrected. Perhaps some local baron has
built a foundry to reclaim predark metal."
"Could be anything, even a power plant," Ryan grunted. He had
encountered coal-burning power stations when he traveled with the
Trader. Mostly they were crude things, a rusty boiler whistling steam
at a homemade turbine attached to a hundred car generators. But even a
rickety machine like that made a lot of electricity. Lights, heaters,
electric fences.
"Silas," Doc whispered, fingering the silver lion's head on his
swordstick.
"Silent recce," Ryan declared, loosening the SIG-Sauer in its
holster. "Five-yard spread. Go."
The companions spread out and started into the forest once more.
After a while, they left the trees and found themselves standing on the
bank of a river. The water rushed over rocks, foaming white and
dangerous. On the other side was a dirt road deeply cut with rain
gullies. Beyond that were thick bushes and more trees. Other than the
companions, there was nothing else in sight. "There," Jak said,
gesturing with his Colt. A short way up the river was another bridge,
wider and more detailed than any of the others they had encountered so
far.
"Odd," Krysty noted. "That's the first bridge with handrails. The
others were just flat planks without railings."
"Doesn't look predark," Dean estimated. "Mebbe it's the first one
the blues built. You always do the first of anything a bit fancier than
needed."
"It does not go anywhere," Doc said, sounding annoyed. "They built a
bridge, but not a road?"
"Changed minds," Jak suggested.
"Or ran out of slaves," Mildred
countered.
Pensive, Ryan looked at the
sky. Night was
rapidly approaching. Should they continue to the redoubt, or check out
the smoke? Tough choice.
"We'll recce the smoke," he decided. "But if we encounter any large
groups of blue shirts, we run for the redoubt. Understood?" All nodded
their assent.
The companions stayed within the cover provided by the trees until
reaching the bridge. J.B. checked underneath from the shore, and they
crossed without trouble. Past the road, they went into the woods and
found the pines were only a few yards deep. They stopped in a neat
line, the land beyond dotted with stumps and sloping away to a valley.
"Eureka," Doc whispered, thumbing back the hammer on the LeMat.
A sprawling ville filled the floor of the mountain valley, at one
end a brick building with a tall circular chimney pouring out thick
smoke, insulated wires running from a battery of transformers and
spreading across the valley in a black spiderweb of technology. New
brick buildings stood alongside predark structures and a shiny new
Quonset hut. A stone wall was being built around the enclosure, the
tiny figures of sec men visible as they patrolled its top. Hundreds of
people were moving about on the ground, doing incomprehensible things
at that distance. Rising above everything was a huge white bowl set
within a framework of steel girders and I-beams that rested on a slab
of concrete. A slim pole thrust from the center of the bowl, pointing
toward the cloudy sky, and tiny lights winked.
"Dark night, this is even bigger than the Anthill mock-up of D.C.,"
J.B. muttered, cradling the Uzi in both arms.
"Fireblast! They have a bastard tank!" J.B. snorted. "Dead tank. See
there? A couple of the sec men are hammering on the top hatch with
chisels, trying to get inside." Ryan relaxed slightly. "Good."
"What bowl?" Jak asked, squinting in displeasure. Even though the
teenager used the redoubts and mat-trans units, he was no fan of
technology, and this smacked of predark science on a major scale.
"That, my friend, is a radio telescope," Mildred said softly, as if
afraid the people in the valley might her the words. "And it seems to
be fully restored."
Ryan scowled. "A sky talker."
"Has Silas managed to launch something into orbit?" Krysty asked.
"Not here," Ryan stated. "I've seen space ports, and this has none
of the right machines. No fuels tanks, or fire equipment, no bunkers."
He frowned. "But it sure as hell was built to do something important."
Mildred said something that sounded like "settee."
"Come again, madam?" Doc asked.
"SETI," she repeated. "That dish antenna was an old project even
before the nuke war. The search for extraterrestrial life. The
government was trying to talk, or at least listen, to alien
civilizations. See if we were alone in the universe."
Dean looked away from the dish. "You mean people on other worlds?"
he asked incredulously. "Never thought of such a thing."
"Most considered it crazy. Even if we reached anybody, the messages
would have taken dozens or even hundreds of years to get there and come
back."
"We ask the question, and our great-grandchildren hear the answer,"
Doc intoned, easing down the hammer and cocking it again. "Indeed, that
most certainly does seem like a waste of time and resources."
"Doesn't matter," Ryan said, sliding a finger under his eye patch to
gently scratch. The salt from the Carolina basin had never fully washed
out of the scarred hole, even with their bath in the fresh water river.
"Some predark whitecoat tried to talk with another in space. Doesn't
matter now. But this must be the home base for Silas and the blue
shirts. Only question is, what is the bastard using the antenna for?"
"Not for talking with alien beings," J.B. said, snorting rudely,
then removing his fedora and wiping the sweat off the inside. "Aliens,
ha!"
Above them, the darkening sky rumbled ominously, lightning flashing
from cloud to cloud.
"Satellite," Krysty suggested, brushing back her wild profusion of
fiery red hair. The cascade moved about her fingers in a familiar
fashion. "Mebbe he found something still in orbit and is trying to
using this radio to talk to it."
"Weapon, recon?" Jak asked, straight to the point.
The woman shrugged.
"Recce would be pointless," J.B. said. "Got to be a weapon of some
kind. Missiles, mebbe."
"Fabulous, just what the world needs," Mildred muttered. "Another
skydark to finish the job of exterminating humankind."
"I want to get closer," Ryan said, starting down the hill. "We need
to know what's going on." The ground sloped even more sharply as they
walked down the hillside, the angle becoming so pronounced the
companions stopped walking and slid along the seats of their pants. Any
attempt at running would have sent them tumbling head over heels into
the valley below. A ridge in the slope dropped five feet straight down
onto a gentler angle. A few yards away, a split-rail fence extended
across the slope, bare wires resting on glass knobs intertwined with
the green wood.
"New," Jak stated.
Picking up a stick, Dean started forward. "I'll see if it's live."
"Don't," Ryan barked, holding out a hand. "If that is electrified, a
touch might send off a signal that we're where. Live wires can be
rigged like the proximity fuse of a bomb."
The boy dropped the stick and backed away.
Going near the fence, Ryan aimed the Steyr at the ville below and
adjusted the focus of the telescopic sights to infinity. Pulling out
his Navy telescope, J.B. extended the tube to its fullest length and
did the same.
There was a quarry to the south, which seemed to have had a major
collapse. Tough break for the stone cutters, but of no interest to
them. Both men glanced briefly at the slaves hauling boxes to the dish
antenna, then scrutinized the stone wall for weak points. The gate was
impressive, but the section opposite the quarry was only two courses
high.
"Six feet?" J.B. expertly guessed.
Ryan grunted. "Mebbe less. If we need to gain entrance, that's the
doorway we'll use."
"Check. Lots of wags near the base of the dish."
"Might be the garage. Or their bolt-hole."
"It's a fort. There're no windows for ventilation."
Sweeping the compound, Ryan froze as he spied a LAV-25 parked near
the Quonset hut. The metallic structure had bars on the windows, an
armored door and was closed off with electric fencing. Whatever was
inside was very important to the these people. Inside the fencing, a
group of blues with blasters stood rigidly at attention around a tall,
almost feline man with silvery hair, a pronounced widow's peak and
bushy eyebrows. Dressed in a white laboratory coat, the thin man was
leaning heavily on a wooden cane, obviously favoring his left leg.
"That's where Doc stabbed him," J.B. said.
"Wish it had been the heart," Doc grumbled, staring into the ville,
unable to see anything clearly, but imagining every detail.
"It's Silas," Ryan agreed, adjusting the focus with fingertip
pressure. The circle view through the crosshairs jumped into crystal
clarity. "That other fellow must be the chief of the sec men. He's not
saluting, and they appear to be arguing."
"Silas didn't exactly tolerate the opinions of others," Krysty
added, squinting at the distant figures. The woman's vision was greater
than most people's, but this was beyond even her best. "Much less that
of his staff."
"Dark night!" J.B. cursed in frustration. "If we only had a weapon
with good range, we could ace them both right here and now!"
"That would pay many debts," Doc stated, the wind ruffling his long
silvery hair. His heart was pounding hard, but he somehow maintained an
outward calm. Kidnapper, torturer, killer, what there words could
describe the lunatic genius behind Overproject Whisper and all of its
subdivisions that had taken Dr. Theophilus Tanner away from his beloved
wife and children.
"Emily," Doc whispered, and for the tiniest flicker of time he
thought he heard her call his name in return. But it was only the cold
mountain winds, moaning through the pines of the Tennessee valley.
Stepping closer, Mildred placed a hand on the old man's arm and
squeezed gently. Doc started to speak, but his voice broke and he
turned away from the valley.
"Chilling the bastards would be nice," Krysty agreed. "But we still
need to find out what they are doing with that freaking big dish."
"True, but it would be a lot easier to recce if the baron and his
top gun were both breathing dirt." Ryan worked the bolt on the Steyr,
then wrapped the strap around his muscular forearm to help steady his
aim. The angle was wrong, so he lay down and placed the barrel on the
lowest rail of the fence. The electric wires hummed above, but he
reasoned his blaster was far enough away to not set off an alarm.
"Can't do it," J.B. said, collapsing his telescope. "Not shouldn't,
but you can't. It's beyond the range of your blaster."
"Beyond the effective range," Ryan corrected him, studying the wind
push as it pushed a stray piece of paper along the roof of a building.
The air was moving faster up here, slower down there. That meant less
sheerage, but greater density. "The rounds will reach them, just not
with their full force."
"What do bruises?" Jak demanded angrily. "Means it'll only chill the
mutie-maker, but not remove his entire head," Ryan said, wiggling into
a more comfortable position. The short grass was itchy under him, a
rock pressing into his hip. The Deathlands warrior ignored the tiny
disturbances and concentrated on the silver-haired man near the APC.
The element of surprise was his. But if he missed this time, Silas
might stay inside until further notice, never giving the companions
another clear shot. Was it worth the risk? Should he take the shot?
"Fuck, yes," Ryan growled softly to himself. Taking a deep breath
and holding it, he placed the crosshairs of the scope on the
whitecoat's chest, moved it a foot to the left, then six inches up, and
fired.
But even before he finished pulling the trigger, Ryan remembered
Overton's bulletproof jacket. Quickly, he worked the bolt and fired
again, lower this time, then again, slightly to the left, and once more
adjusting to the right.
"FOOL! MORON!" Silas raged, stamping his good foot and gesturing at
the exposed wiring of the transformer. "Look at this mess! You have the
goddamn fence wired completely wrong! I told you a looped circuit so
that a break in one area will not leave us defenseless across the
entire fence. Looped—don't you know the word?"
"Sir, I can handle this later," the major urged again. "We should be
inside out of sight."
Silas glared at him in outrage. "Not until we have this fixed! The
electric fence is our main protection from Ryan or another slave
revolt, and this idiot screwed up the wiring!"
Lashing out, Silas hit the man with his cane. "Now get gloves and
fix the circuits, while it's hot!"
"I'm not sure where the gloves are, sir," the sec man protested.
"Do it anyway," Silas growled.
The other sec men murmured in fear.
"While it's hot? I could be chilled, sir!" the man wailed.
Imperiously, Silas glared at the cringing man. "I have more sec men
if you should fail."
Damp with sweat, the blue shirt looked to his chief for assistance.
"Do as the commander orders," Sheffield said sternly. "And next
time, if you don't know what to do, ask for help before figuring it out
yourself."
"B-but, sir, I—"
"Enough!" Silas shouted, hitting the trooper again. "Stop weeping
like a caned child! Do your job, or die!"
Turning toward the Quonset hut, Silas took a single step and was
violently knocked backward a
full yard. Gasping for breath, his lungs feeling as if they were on
fire, Silas groaned and rubbed his chest in pain, fingers recoiling as
they encountered the red-hot lump of a flattened bullet. Instantly, the
predark scientists realized what was happening and tried to scramble
under the LAV. The boom of a high-powered rifle rolled over the
complex, and a second round plowed directly into his throat, clearing
the vest by an inch. Blood sprayed onto the stunned crowd of sec men,
the impact knocking Silas sideways, arms flailing. The second boom
arrived just as the third round punched a hole below his left eye, the
entire back of his head exploding into a grisly spray of brains and
bones.
Even as he fell, a fourth shot slammed into his vest again, driving
the corpse backward into the exposed wiring of the transformer. His
arms hit the bus bars. There was a crackle of power, and eighty
thousand volts of direct current flowed through the dead man in a
controlled lightning bolt. His hair burst into flames, his blood boiled
into steam, eyes exploded and his clothes ignited as writhing tendrils
of high voltage crawled over his twisting form.
Backing away in horror, Sheffield felt a breeze brush past his face
and realized what it was before the crack of the longblaster arrived.
Grabbing the closest sec man, he lifted the man off the ground and
swung the blue shirt between himself and the distant hills just in
time. Gasping for breath, the living shield jerked and spit out a
tongue and wads of brain tissue from his mouth as two more
copper-jacketed rounds arrived.
Holding the corpse up, the major moved behind the nearby LAV, then
tossed it aside. Safe for the moment, he could only watch as the body
of Silas Jamaisvous was slowly reduced to a grinning skeleton. For a
split second, there seemed to be a circuit board riveted to the man's
skull, and then that vanished in a whoof of flames.
"In the wag!" Sheffield bellowed, thumping a fist on the armor.
"Fire the chain gun at the hillside!"
"Where on the hill, sir?" a young voice asked from inside.
"Due south! Just above the ridge fence!" Then Sheffield quickly
added, "But don't open the hatch! Stay under cover!"
Blood and teeth sprayed from the turret, followed by the rolling
thunder of the longblaster.
"Damn you, Ryan," the chief blue shirt cursed, positive he knew the
identity of the sniper. Who else could it be, but the man Silas so
hated and feared. Suddenly, Sheffield was surprised to find a blaster
in his grip, and he holstered the useless weapon. At this range he
might as well throw rocks for all the good it would do. The officer
wasn't even sure the chain gun could reach the fence, but it would have
been worth a try.
The crackling discharge at the transformer finally ceased as the
material causing the short circuit was cleaned off the fully charged
bus bars. Gray ash, charred cloth and some smoking pieces of bone
sprinkled to the ground.
Then a flash of rainbow from the remains caught Sheffield's
attention, and he saw it was the computer disk Silas had refused to let
him inspect. He started for the disk, then stopped himself. A single
round from the sniper would also drive him into the transformer with
the same results. The disk seemed undamaged, but was temporarily out of
his reach.
Racing around a corner into the enclosure, a squad of armed sec men
came into view. "Sir, we heard shots."
a burly
sergeant started, then stopped talking as he took in the
grisly sight at the transformer.
"Holy shit," a corporal whispered, and another turned away to
noisily retch.
Fists clenched, both of his hearts wildly pounding, Sheffield fought
down the urge to stay where he was. But the man knew better than to
demonstrate any weakness in front of the his subordinates. Victory or
death. Boldly he walked from behind the transport.
"There are the intruders!" he bellowed, thrusting an arm toward the
nearby hills. "Send out every man we have, use the dogs and the Bell.
Find them! The man who chills them will be promoted to major and serve
as my right hand. No prisoners, do you understand me? I want them dead.
No prisoners!"
"Yes, sir!" the sergeant replied. Although visibly shaken, he
managed a salute and started off at a run already shouting orders. The
rest of the sec men closely followed, the excitement of the possible
promotion wiping the shock and fear from their faces.
"You!" Sheffield barked, pointing at the sec man in charge of the
transformer. "Turn the circuits off!"
Hesitantly, the blue shirt obeyed and, bracing for a shock, he threw
the insulated switch. There was a snap of power, and the hum of the bus
bars softly faded, but the huge copper coils continued to faintly
crackle with the secondary effects of recharging the accumulators.
Moving quickly, Sheffield retrieved the disk and shoved it into a
pocket. "Back on," he snapped impatiently, walking around the
transformer until the southern hills were no longer in sight.
"Power is restored, sir!" the sec man shouted, excited at still
being alive. "Should I summon some slaves to clean up…ah, gather the
remains?"
"That won't be necessary," Sheffield said coolly. Drawing a
handblaster, he aimed at the blue shirt and fired.
Shrieking in agony, the sec man fell to the ground, clutching his
groin, dark blood flowing across his clothes. Ruthlessly, Sheffield
fired again and again, first removing fingers, then other small body
parts until the slide of his blaster kicked back, showing it was out of
ammo. Reloading, the major started again, dissecting the man alive,
until blood loss made the tattered lump of human flesh stop making
noises and go unconscious.
Placing the weapon against the forehead of the gurgling thing on the
ground, he paused, then thumbed the safety back on.
"No, you die slow," the major stated, holstering the blaster.
"Unlike Silas, I don't tolerate failure."
Walking briskly to the lab, the new baron of the ville placed his
palm on the wall plate, and waited anxiously until it chimed and
unlocked the door. Hurrying inside, Sheffield stared through the
Plexiglas windows at the sloping hills encircling the complex.
"Better start running, Ryan," he said softly, almost in a whisper.
"Because you're next."
Chapter Twenty
"Let's go," Ryan said, standing. Working the bolt on the Steyr
SSG-70, he opened the breech to remove the spent clip and slid in a
fresh magazine.
"Did you get him?" Dean asked, shading his eyes with a hand. Sirens
started to howl, something was on fire, sending black smoke wafting
into the sky, and sec men seemed to be rushing about madly. The
electric lights in the guard towers flickered, died away completely,
then came back on again.
"Silas is dead," Ryan replied, easing the bolt home and starting up
the slope.
"Can't get much more dead," Krysty agreed, walking alongside him.
"He's gone forever."
"I am only sorry I did not get to pull the trigger," Doc replied,
staring backward at the busy ville.
"Put a few rounds into the transformer, too. But I missed the chief
sec man," Ryan said, stopping at the ridge and cupping his hands.
"Bastard moved fast."
Krysty stepped into his grip, and he boosted her up onto the higher
ground. Then she grabbed his arms and helped him climb the steep
embankment.
Uzi at the ready, J.B. watched the hillside as the rest of the
companions assisted one another, then Ryan covered him as the wiry
Armorer scrambled up on his own.
"Any chance they can know the shots came from this direction?"
Mildred asked worriedly, as they started quickly for the trees. She
would feel a lot safer once they gained some cover.
"No way," Ryan replied, striding along. "I could have taken that
shot from anywhere in the valley."
Just then, J.B. sneezed in warning and the companions went flat,
shifting for cover in the stubby grass. A few seconds later, a sec man
in a blue shirt walked out of the pine trees with an AK-47 cradled in
his arms. The man gasped at the sight of the armed companions and swung
the barrel of his blaster toward them. But there was a low cough, the
blue shirt fell to the ground, shook and went still.
A wisp of smoke still clinging to the muzzled of the silenced 9 mm
SIG-Sauer, Ryan crossed to the corpse and shot it again to make sure
the man was dead. Eagerly, Dean claimed the Kalashnikov and the spare
ammo. Krysty took the radio.
"We can monitor their communications with this," she said,
inspecting the device. "Help us avoid any more patrols." The radio was
turned on so the sentry could receive reports or instructions. She
adjusted the volume to its lowest setting, so as to not give away their
position. Ryan glanced at the walkie-talkie. "Air Force model," he
stated. "Very short range, these days even shorter. Probably reduced to
line of sight."
"Unless they use that big antenna," Doc suggested, entering the
woods. Immediately, he felt better with some protective cover around
them.
Shifting her med kit, Mildred shook her head, her beaded locks
bouncing wildly. "The dish antenna would have to be pointed in the
correct direction. Think of it as a radio cannon. It's got to be
pointed right at whom they want to talk with."
"Useless," Jak grunted, stepping over a fallen willow tree.
Ducking under a bristly pine branch, Dean asked, "We heading for the
redoubt?"
"First we cross the river," his father answered. "For once those
land mines will work for us. No APC or Hummer can follow."
"Sounds good," Krysty said. Just then, the speaker of the
walkie-talkie crackled loudly. "Sentry Twenty-four, any sign of the
intruders?" a male voice asked.
The companions paused as Krysty pulled the device into view and the
radio blared, "What is your status, Twenty-four? Are you in trouble?"
"Gaia, he means us," Krysty stated, turning off the radio with a
click. "Ryan, J.B., did either of you see any female sec men?"
"Hell, no," Ryan growled.
She shoved the radio into his hands. "Then you answer quick, or else
they'll know where we are."
He chewed a lip for a moment, then turned the radio back on. There
came a burst of static. "—entry Twenty-four, where are you?"
Coughing raggedly, Ryan fumbling with the volume. "Raiders…" he
gasped weakly into the transmitter. "Gut shot…hurts bad!" Ryan knew
there was nothing more painful than a gunshot wound in the belly. He
once saw a coldheart stab himself to stop the agony. Any differences in
his voice and that of the younger sec man would be attributed to the
terrible pain.
Biting his tongue not to speak, J.B. started rummaging inside his
munitions bag.
"Where are you, man?" the radio asked urgently. "What's your
location?"
Holding up the map from Georgia, J.B. pointed at the scrawl at the
bottom.
Nodding in comprehension, Ryan panted heavily, "Q-quarry…"
A crackle of static. "Shit-fire! Was it muties? Tanner?"
Doc arched an eyebrow, but held his peace.
Coughing some more, Ryan whispered, "Fifty… coming…your way…"
"How fucking many?" the sec man yelled, distorting the words.
Exhaling as if dying, Ryan released the transmit button and tossed
the radio back to Krysty. She made sure it was turned off and tucked
the device into a pocket of her bearskin coat.
"That bought us a few minutes," Ryan said. "They'll have to check
the quarry before doing anything else, just in case this was a real
report."
"More than enough time," J.B. agreed, heading into the bushes.
"Fifty," Jak said. "Smart. Send all troops."
Parting some bushes
with the barrel of his longblaster, Ryan grunted in reply. "That was
the idea."
The sun was starting to set as the companions moved out of the band
of trees. Crouching, they looked for guards, but the river and bridge
seemed to be clear. Running across the bridge in pairs, the companions
took refuge in the forest on the other side and waited to see if there
was any signs of pursuit. The forest and river were placid and calm.
"We're in the clear," Mildred stated confidently. "Come on, I'll
feel better once we are inside the redoubt and have a few feet of steel
between us and the blues."
"Wait," Krysty said, tilting her head toward the river. "Motorcycles
are coming our way, six, mebbe seven."
"Can't be after us," J.B. stated. "Must be going toward that quarry."
"Mebbe," Ryan said, "but we'd better make sure. Everybody take
positions behind the trees."
There was a roar of engines, and a group of sleek motorcycles rolled
into view along the riverbank. The riders sat inside a
roll cage, an array of steel bars forming a barrier around the men,
affording them tremendous protection from being clubbed or having an
enemy leap on the bikes. The bars were black, but the welds were shiny.
Clearly the cages were a recent addition to the machines. All of the
sec men were armed with squat Ingram M-10 machine pistols, instead of
the usual Kalashnikovs. The boxy blasters would be easy to wield while
inside the safety cage, unlike the long barreled AK-47. Bandoliers of
ammo clips hung across their chests, and each had a radio strapped to
the gas tank between their legs.
Slowing at the bridge, the pack split roughly in two, three
continuing toward the quarry, four rolling across the bridge. The
two-wheelers separated quickly, moving to the farthest edge of the
bridge, staying as far away from the midspan as possible. As they
entered the woods at a crawl, branches hit the cages and snapped off at
the trunks as the machines proceeded along the dirt path.
Suddenly, leaves erupted from the ground as Ryan fired his silenced
weapon. A blue shirt cried out and slumped onto the handlebars.
Stepping out from behind a tree, Jak jerked his arm and another sec man
clutched at the knife in his throat. Ryan fired again, just as the
third biker drew his M-10. The SIG-Sauer won that contest, and the
dead man slammed against the protective cage, making the riderless bike
topple to the ground.
The fourth sec man cursed as he fought to free the strap of his
subgun, which was tangled with the lock on the cage. Shouting in rage,
he walked his bike around in a circle, and twisted the handlebar
throttle, preparing to run when Doc circled around a nearby tree and
deftly thrust his sword between the iron bars directly into the
driver's left eye.
Releasing the sword, Doc watched as the sec man stayed frozen in
position, his dying brain no longer able to relay commands. The bike
rolled on for another few yards, then bumped into a bush and stopped
moving, the engine softly rumbling, faint blue exhaust blowing from the
chrome mufflers.
Going to the trapped motorcycle, Doc placed a boot on the cage and
yanked his sword free. The corpse jerked upright at the action as if
renewed with life, then it slumped over, releasing the handlebars, and
the engine died in perfect harmony.
Rushing out of hiding, the rest of the companions converged on the
fallen machines, turning off engines before the hot casings set the dry
leaves on fire. Extracting the drivers proved to be no problem. The
safety cages had curved doors that locked with a simple sliding bar
from the inside. The companions placed the corpses in a pile, and J.B.
slid a wad of C-4 and a pressure switch under the top corpse.
"Four bikes," Ryan said, checking over the M-10. The bolt was stiff
from poor cleaning, but it seemed in operational condition. "We have to
balance this carefully. Dean with Jak, Mildred with J.B., Doc with
Krysty. I'll ride with the backpacks." The companions quickly piled
their backpacks onto Ryan's machine, then joined their partners.
Setting the ignition
switch, Mildred waited until J.B. was in position before kicking the
big Harley into life. The 1450 cc engine purred with barely restrained
power. Twisting the handlebar throttle, the woman gunned the engine a
few times to clear the carbs, and rolled over to the others.
Krysty turned on the radio attached to her bike and heard only the
hiss and crackle of static. "Odd," she muttered, checking the radio in
her pocket. It was also silent. "They should be talking about the
quarry by now."
"Mebbe they already figure it was a trick," Dean suggested, one arm
around Jak's waist, the other holding an M-10 machine pistol. The boy
knew it was a crappy blaster. The stubby two-inch barrel gave no real
accuracy over any distance. However, the yard-long AK-47 was impossible
to use while inside the cage, especially riding behind another person,
and the subgun could shoot faster than his Browning Hi-Power.
"Could be," Ryan agreed, tapping the fuel gauge. Half-full, more
than enough. "If so, they're going to come after us in force. Night
will be here soon, so we'll stay in the trees until it's dark, then
make a run for the redoubt across the grasslands."
"I'll take rearguard," J.B. said, the Uzi in one hand, the M-10 in
the other. He was sitting reversed on the seat with his back to
Mildred, legs braced against the lower bars of the cage, the buddy-bar
snug between his thighs.
Dean changed position to copy the older man. The chrome steel of the
buddy-bar rose to his chest and was very uncomfortable, but the stance
gave him a good purchase to fight from. That was good enough.
"
Mehi loricatus oportet occulte!" Doc stated in Latin,
holstering the LeMat and tying down the flap. His hands clumsily worked
the arming bolt on the subgun, and he eased off the safety.
"No headlights," Mildred translated. "Bastards can't hit what they
can't find."
Starting forward into the growing darkness, Ryan zigzagged the big
bike past the lush growths of pine and willow. "Just shoot anybody you
see," he added grimly, bent low over the handlebars. "They won't be
trying to take us prisoners anymore."
IN THE LAB, Sheffield was awkwardly typing commands on the computer
keyboard. Impatiently, he watched the vector graphic grow and change on
the softly glowing screen. Checking the assignment integers, the man
cursed in frustration when he realized that the numbers were wrong. It
was aimed much too close to risk a shot. Now he would have to start all
over again!
"Good news, sir!" said a voice from the intercom on the desk. "We
got a report that the outlanders are at the quarry."
"The quarry?" he repeated slowly. "Who told you this?"
"A sentry reported in just before he died. We're sending most of
the troops there."
"Recall them immediately," the officer commanded. "It's a trick to
divert us. Send everybody to the south. That's where they really are."
Pursing his lips, Sheffield then continued, "The troops have a
maximum of forty minutes to find the assassins of Dr. Jamaisvous, then
recall them immediately."
"Sir?" the intercom asked puzzled.
"Just do as you're ordered, trooper."
"Yes, sir! Hail the New America!"
Cutting off the intercom, Sheffield returned to his work. Starting
the programming cycle again, he typed much more carefully, and a slow
smile grew as the flashing numbers on the computer screen began to take
on the desired configuration.
THE QUARTET OF BIKES raced across the open fields of Tennessee
bluegrass. Headlights off, it was difficult to see anything in the way,
and Ryan often found himself jerking the handlebars at the very last
moment to avoid hitting a large rock or some other obstacle. However,
it was a good half hour since they stole the motorcycles, and they were
more than halfway to the redoubt.
"How close are we?" Krysty shouted, her hair streaming in the wind.
"Just a few more miles!" J.B. yelled in reply.
"Great!"
"My dear Krysty, can you do something about your hair, please?" Doc
asked. "I can barely see!"
Grabbing handfuls, she stuffed the living tendrils gently into her
shirt collar and did the top button. "Better?" she shouted over a
shoulder.
"Infinitely so. My thanks!"
"No prob!"
Suddenly, bright lights illuminated the field in bouncing cones of
stark white light, and there came the slow chattering of subguns. A
copper-jacketed round zinged off the safety cage around Doc and Krysty,
another bullet slamming directly into the backpacks behind Ryan.
"It's other bikes!" he shouted, and slapped a switch, turning on his
own headlights. Now able to see clearly, the man pressed the big
motorcycle on to much greater speeds. The ground flashed below the
wheels in a constant blur. With Ryan cutting the way, the others also
increased their speed and pulled away from the oncoming motorcycles.
"Ace the leader!" J.B. shouted, cutting loose with the Uzi and
subgun. Targeting the closest headlight, he put a long burst from the
blasters just above the jiggling light source. There was a crash of
glass, and the Harley veered off abruptly, then hit something and
flipped over. Tumbling out of control, the bike rolled over and over,
the screaming sec man trapped inside the cage bouncing about like a
boneless rag doll.
Doc and Dean did the same, and another bike fell. Instantly, the
other two drivers turned off their halogen headlights, and soon the
noise of their engines could no longer be heard.
"Easy as pie," Dean said triumphantly. "Keep going!" Ryan shouted
over the roar of the Harley. "That was too easy. It's a trick to make
us slow down!"
"Trap ahead?" Krysty yelled.
"Could be! Everybody, stay sharp!"
The noise started soft and low, a distant beating of drums. But it
quickly increased in tempo and volume until a steady whomping sound was
heard, and the companions craned their necks about to find the source.
Unexpectedly, a dark shape swooped by overhead, silhouetted by the
lightning flashes in the rumbling storm clouds.
"That's a bastard helicopter!" Ryan growled, buffeted by the wind of
its passage. The chopper was the first flying machine the Deathlands
warrior had ever seen. Silas had to have found the mother lode of all
redoubts to loot. Maybe even a Deep Storage locker!
The Trader told stories around the campfires about predark vaults
full of dry nitrogen gas, the temperature lowered to below freezing.
Designed to keep ammo and food fresh for hundreds of years, Deep
Storage lockers were supposed to be fully stocked with everything. Not
the occasional box of ammo or handful of MRE packs, but literally tons
of food, tanks, missiles and enough ammo and blasters for the predark
Army. Silas with a Deep Storage locker—that would explain a lot.
The helicopter passed by again, lower this time.
"Why isn't it shooting?" Dean demanded, tracking its passage, but
withholding fire. The boy hated to admit it, but he was terrified.
Machines that flew—it was unnatural!
"He's getting our range!" J.B. shouted, firing some rounds into the
sky.
"That's a Bell bubble chopper," Ryan stated. "It has no armor, and
no blasters."
"Gives us a fighting chance to live," J.B. said. Dark night! A
helicopter. What else did the blues have in their arsenal?
"The vehicle is unarmed?" Doc demanded. "Then it is merely here to
frighten us, or track our location for others?"
"Hell, no!"
A powerful explosion ripped about the night, the ground shaking as a
column of boiling flame reached into the sky.
"That's dynamite or TNT," J.B. said, sticking both weapons through
the bars of the safety cage and firing, the winking muzzle-flashes
illuminating the man in the darkness. "The pilot is tossing out sticks
like bombs!"
Another column of strident fire blossomed directly ahead of the
companions. The concussion slapped them hard, and they fought to keep
the bikes upright as they narrowly skirted the steaming blast crater,
clumps of hard soil under their wheels making the bikes shake madly. A
fall now meant sure death.
"Figure eight for sixty!" Ryan shouted, leading the others sharply
to the left, then to the right in evasion tactics. "We go on the next
blast!"
Another blast roared, and Ryan killed the headlights. The companions
spread wildly across the field, only to meet again farther away.
"Volley fire," Ryan shouted. "Go!"
Doc, Dean and J.B. cut loose with
their blasters, filling the sky with a hail of bullets. As a clip was
emptied, they tossed it away, slapped in a fresh one and continued
shooting. Speed and luck were their only chances now. A single stick
landing in the middle of the bikes, and they would never hit the ground
alive.
"Forest ahead!" Ryan shouted, dodging a primitive plow. A ville had
to be close by. He only hoped they weren't friendly with the blues.
The subgun finally empty, Doc dropped the useless weapon and
triggered the LeMat. In the darkness, the muzzle-flash reached out for
more than a foot, the detonation sounding like a peal of thunder.
In throbbing majesty, the helicopter angled away and moved fast into
the night until it was gone. Tense minutes passed as they waited for
its thundering return on another bombing run, and then the companions
broached the forest and were riding under its canopy of branches.
Slowing, Ryan listened carefully for the pre-dark machine, but only the
hushed silence of the woods could be heard.
"Why did it leave?" Krysty asked suspiciously.
"Mayhap I hit the infernal contraption," Doc rumbled, studying the
sky dubiously.
Sliding the last spare clip into the subgun, J.B. scowled at the
clouds above. "Seems unlikely," the Armorer said. "But it's possible,
and those damn .44 mini-balls would punch right through a civilian
copter."
Smiling with his oddly perfect teeth, Doc fondly patted the huge
handcannon. "Which is why I still retain her, sir! Very few enemies,
indeed, need to be shot twice with this."
"Well, the Bell would have to leave if the old coot hit the rotor,"
Mildred added. "A helicopter can't fly straight without its tail rotor."
"At least the thing is gone," Dean said gratefully, yanking on the
bolt of the subgun, trying to free a jammed round. The misfire was
caught in the breech tight and wouldn't come loose. He might have to
disassemble the blaster before it would fire again.
Suddenly, the boy could see the blaster a lot clearer as a wealth of
moonlight flooded into the forest, the silvery light illuminating the
trees in a cool glow.
"Clouds broke," Krysty said, the hair on her head coiling tightly.
"Haven't seen that happen in quite awhile."
Squinting with his good eye, Ryan rubbed his unshaved chin, making
a sound like sandpaper. "You don't suppose—"
But the Deathlands warrior was interrupted as something rustled in
the trees, bouncing from limb to limb to land in the bushes. The same
thing happened again, and then once more, this time the object landing
in plain sight on the carpet of leaves. It was a blue jay, its feathers
splayed and steam rising off its body. "What in hell…?" Ryan said.
Everybody jumped and aimed their blasters as dozens more birds fell to
the ground, robins, hawks and owls, the impact of their bodies sounding
almost like hail. Then a scream-wing plummeted through the foliage to
hit the safety cage around Ryan. The dead mutie was only a foot away
from his face, and he stared at it hard. This was the closest he had
ever been a scream-wing. Steam hissed from its mouth and rectum, the
eyes had burst apart and its hide was bubbly as if the creature had
been dipped in boiling oil.
"The copter?" Dean asked fearfully. The boy had no idea what was
going on here. Cooked birds falling from the sky?
"Oh, my God," Mildred whispered, pointing behind them with a shaky
hand.
Thousands of leaves and needles were falling from the trees in a
heavy wave, the bare branches darkening, and some of the small growths
bursting into flame. The bushes began to smolder, and the grass
withered. It was as if the forest were dying before their very eyes.
There was a sharp line of the approaching destruction, green plants on
this side, withered death on the other.
"Sweet Jesus save us, it's a Kite!" Mildred fumbled twice in her
haste to kick the motorcycle into life. "That's what the bastard
Jamaisvous was talking to, a goddamn freaking Kite!"
"Silas ace plants?" Jak demanded.
"It kills everything!" the woman
shouted, and twisted the throttle to the last stop. The wheels spun
wildly in the loose leaves, spraying out debris, then contacted dirt
and the Harley roared forward, almost crashing into a tree. The cage
slammed into the trunk, ripping off bark and making J.B. drop the
subgun.
"Hey!" he cried out, nursing a wrist. There was a sharp pain inside
as if a bone had been broken.
"Fuck it!" the physician screamed, plowing through a bush. "Run, run
for your lives! And for God's sake don't look up!"
Starting their bikes, the others took off after the woman, not
exactly sure what was happening. Doc watched as the oncoming line of
destruction approached to within only a few yards of the rolling
motorcycle, when he began to twitch uncomfortably. It felt as if a
million insects were crawling over his skin, and the grip of the LeMat
started to grow warm.
"Faster, madam!" he shouted, almost throwing the blaster away. "We
have to go faster!"
Ahead of them, the forest was cool and green, the thick foliage
starkly lit by the full October moon. His left eye socket itching
madly, Ryan fought to control the Harley as he drove full tilt through
the woods, sometimes the trees so close he thought the safety cage
would jam tight between the trees. But the bark scraped loose, giving
scant inches, and the Harley roared onward.
Glancing behind, Krysty saw the crumbling forest was steadily
gaining on the bikes. "It's gaining on us!" she yelled, tears flowing
down her cheeks. It felt as if her hair were on fire, the pain almost
beyond endurance. She had a hard time thinking clearly, and more than
once the bike nearly toppled over from her clumsy driving. Silently,
she prayed to Gaia for the strength to live.
Their bikes riding side by side, the companions crashed through a
wall of thorny rosebushes, the safety cages holding most of the stems
at bay, but still their clothes snagged and trickles of blood flowed
from a dozen small cuts.
Ryan glanced into his rearview mirror. "We're not going to get
away!" he shouted grimly.
"We have to!" Mildred answered, then shrugged and dropped her heavy
med kit. "Heave the baggage! Lose everything!"
Stunned for a moment by the incredible act, Ryan resolutely reached
behind himself, grabbed a backpack and stuffed it through the warm bars
of his safety cage. When there was only one left, his speed noticeably
increased. The man hesitated for a heartbeat, then also threw away that
pack. Mildred knew her stuff, and whatever it was that was after them,
he didn't want it to reach them for the sake of a few pounds.
Dropping the subgun, J.B. watched the weapon fireball as the
crackling wave reached the blaster. The man hesitated for a tick, then
tossed away his precious accumulation of explosives and primers.
"Brace yourselves!" he shouted just as the bag thunderously
detonated, the blast toppling over the dying trees, bushes flying,
shrapnel zinging through the air in every direction.
Struggling with one arm at a time, Krysty got out of her heavy
bearskin coat and stuffed it through the cage. Dean dropped his
canteen, then the newly acquired Kalashnikov and the ammo clips. The
coat burst into flames, and the ammo exploded as the grass turned brown
underneath the items.
The brown line in the soil streaked after them, coming closer by the
second. Frantically, the companions emptied the pockets of MRE packs,
spare knives, extra ammo and everything else they could find.
"Radios!" Jak shouted, ripping the transmitter free and casting it
away.
With the motorcycles moving at top speed, the companions raced
through the forest in a nightmare of dodging trees and crashing through
bushes. Unstoppable, the death wave from the Kite swept onward, getting
closer and closer with each passing moment.
Chapter Twenty-One
Their load lightened, the companions began to pull away from the
wave of death, the crackling of the leaves slowly fading into the
distance. Soon it was gone from sight, and living green plants
surrounded them once more. The itching eased, and the metal of their
blasters started to cool. But the riders didn't slow their frantic pace
through the Tennessee woods. Soon, the trees began to thin, and the
companions broke out of the woods and onto smooth rolling grasslands
again. An hour passed in silent speed, clouds forming overhead to mask
the eternal stars and moon. Thankfully, there was no sign of the pools
and streams that had surrounded the redoubt before. The waters must
have receded over time and the land was alive again. But not for long.
"We should be safe now," Dean said hopefully. The boy held his
Browning Hi-Power and a single clip in sweaty hands, ready to lose both
should it prove necessary. He had tried unlacing his combat boots, but
it was plainly impossible to do that on a moving bike.
Shaking her head, Krysty released her hair from its confines, and
the fiery cascade flexed freely once more. "Thank Gaia that's over,"
she exhaled. "My hair was in agony!"
"Nobody stop until we reach the redoubt!" Mildred countered, still
hunched over the handlebars. "And watch the clouds! The Kite might be
skipping ahead of us, so we race straight into its beams."
Maneuvering his bike closer, Ryan shouted, "What was that?"
The open spaces allowing her to relax a notch, Mildred bit a lip and
tried to figure a way to explain what they had just faced. "In the
kitchens of the redoubts," she replied, "you've used the microwave oven
to boil water, and once we baked a potato. Same thing."
Ryan frowned as the engine of his bike sputtered, and he revved the
throttle. The Harley was dangerously low on fuel. "You called it a
Kite," he called out. "That a war satellite?"
She shrugged. "Not originally, but I guess it is now." The quivering
needle of the fuel gauge stopped moving as it reached the empty mark,
and Ryan concentrated on squeezing a few more miles out of the gas
vapors in the tank. Silas had found a microwave satellite and gotten
control with an old SETI dish. Good thing he had aced the old bastard
on sight. But if Silas was chilled, then who was operating the Kite?
The landscape began to take on a familiar shape, and Ryan began to
remember details of the last visit there, the fights, desperate
running, a bloody ambush and the endless chilling. It had been one of
their worst jumps, and the redoubt itself was as bare as a spent round.
There wasn't a can of beans, or anything useful inside just an armored
vault filled with predark works of art—bronzes statues and antique oil
paintings. Why would the Pentagon waste valuable space storing those
things away from the ravages of a nuke storm? That was just another of
the endless mysteries about the redoubts, and one he had no desire to
solve.
Just then a familiar shape rose from the ground in the glare of the
headlights. The front of the redoubt was as Ryan remembered, battered
and charred from the nuke blasts of skydark. But the armored door was
as sturdy as ever, and the companions would be safe once they got
inside.
"The redoubt!" Krysty shouted, slowing her speed.
Taking the lead, Ryan rolled his bike around the outcropping until
reaching the front of the underground base. Massive black doors stood
untarnished and immutable in a small recess, an armored keypad set into
the burnished jamb of the portal.
Braking to a halt, the companions turned off the engines and set the
kickstands. Silence greeted them, a soft wind blowing from the
direction of the distant forest.
"Thermal currents from the Kite," Mildred said to the unasked
question, as she stiffly climbed from the cage. For a second, she
looked for her med kit, then memory flared, and she grimly walked
toward the redoubt. They physician could assemble another kit over
time. More important, safety was only a few yards away.
Ryan was already standing at the door, tapping the entry code onto
the keypad when the ground underneath the man heaved and he was thrown
sprawling yards away.
Spitting curses, the companions drew their blasters as a nightmare
crawled out of the soil directly in front of the door. It was a twisted
mutie unlike anything they had ever seen before. The grotesque creature
possessed a misshapen head covered with different-sized eyes and
multiple ears. Its drooling mouth was filled with fangs, and a forked
tongue lolled over pale leathery lips. The long serpentine body was
covered with spotty fur as if it suffered from mange or rad poisoning.
However, massive muscles rolled beneath the leathery skin as the mutie
shambled closer on four powerful legs, two tiny shriveled limbs
dangling impotently from its hideous chest. Sharp claws ripped apart
the hard soil as the slavering beast started to crawl catlike toward
the companions.
"Silas!" J.B. cursed, working the bolt on his Uzi. "He knew we'd try
for the redoubt and left one of his DNA experiments for us!"
Rising to one knee, Ryan leveled the Steyr SSG-70. He was down to
only a few clips, but there was no time to waste with this mutie. They
had to get inside before the Kite returned. "Chill it!" he commanded,
triggering his longblaster.
In unison, the companions opened fire in a ragged volley, the
barrage of rounds tearing the screaming animal apart. It slumped to the
ground, bleeding from a dozen wounds.
"See any more around?" Ryan demanded, standing and chambering a
fresh round. He glanced at the ground for any suspicious movements,
then at the sky. The clouds were still thick and heavy. Good.
"Looks clear," Doc reported, studying the fields around them while
waving away the smoke from his LeMat.
Colt at the ready, Jak dropped to one knee and placed the flat of
his hand in the cold soil. "No vibrations," he reported.
"Nasty-looking bugger," J.B. stated, then stared in astonishment as
the dead mutie began to stir.
Sluggishly, the thing rose on its hind legs, the holes in its skin
closing into dainty puckered scars.
"By the Three Kennedys," Doc whispered as he switched the selector
pin on his LeMat from the .44 miniballs to the smoothbore .63 shotgun.
There was only a single load, but at such close range it should remove
the creature's head.
Hastily, Krysty thumbed fresh cartridges into her revolver as a rill
of porcupine quills extended protectively along the neck of the
snarling mutie. "Gaia protect us, it's regenerating," she said,
dropping a few rounds but reloading the blaster in record time. The
redhead closed the cylinder with a snap of her wrist and fired again
immediately. The soft-nosed bullets hit the creature in the chest and
neck with less effect this time. The wounds closed without scars after
only weeping a few drops of the weird semi-transparent green blood.
"How the hell are we going to chill something that can do that?" she
demanded, backing away.
"Don't have to chill it," Ryan yelled over his booming rifle. "Just
have to get past!"
Furiously working the bolt on his Steyr, Ryan pumped two rounds from
the longblaster directly into the beast, stalling for Doc until he was
ready. The long 7.62 mm cartridges each took out an eye, which started
to regrow. J.B. added a burst from the Uzi, concentrating on the chest.
Greenish blood spurted with every hit, the wounds closing faster as if
the mutie were accelerating the healing process.
Stepping closer, Doc ducked under a lashing tail and fired the LeMat
at point-blank range. The massive black-powder weapon vomited flame and
smoke from the wide muzzle, the shotgun round slamming the beast
backward against the door of the redoubt. But as the companions
watched, the growling mutie rose again. The gaping hole in its chest,
leaking a greenish ichor, began to close and the bleeding stopped.
Dodging to the left, then darting to the right, the mutie came ever
closer, a forked tongue running hungrily along its mottled jaws.
"Dark night!" J.B. snarled, releasing the Uzi and swinging the
S&W shotgun into play. Only four shells remained, and the Armorer
knew he had to make every one count.
Working the pump, he fired two shells at the creature, the spray of
flechettes tearing its head apart. But the bleeding pieces of flesh
slid together again, and a pair of scorpion tails arched from its
mottled back, the barbed tips glistening with moisture.
"Poison!" Mildred warned, targeting its face with her ZKR pistol.
Several of its eyes exploded from her soft lead rounds, and the hissing
mutie started directly toward her, the other orbs extending on pale
stalks.
Suddenly, clear moonlight flooded the battle scene.
"The Kite!" Krysty yelled, her flexing hair already coiling
protectively.
"Go for its head!" Ryan shouted, moving forward and firing with each
step. The companions aimed and unleashed a ragged volley, the beast
screaming in agony, the barrage of lead and steel tearing apart its
writhing form. But their weapons achieved only the same meager results.
The roar of an engine shook the night, and Jak raced away from the
redoubt on one of the stolen Harleys. The noise of the engine caught
the mutie by surprise, and it arched its back as if about to leap upon
the cowardly runaway. But the humans understood, and maintained their
useless blasterfire to hold the beast in place, as Jak turned the bike
and charged forward, gunning the big engine to top speed.
The engine coughed and died mere feet away from the snarling
creature, but continued rolling. The safety cage slammed into the
mutie, crushing it against the nuke-proof door of the redoubt with a
sickening crunch. Howling in pain, the bleeding creature clawed at the
metalwork, struggling wildly.
"Not dead? Try this!" Jak yelled, and fired his Colt Python directly
into its exposed brain, pink goo splattering onto the door and rocks.
Convulsing, the mutie jabbed the barbed tip of its scorpion tail
through the openings of the cage. Struggling to undo the lock of the
cage, Jak dropped his empty blaster and slashed at the creature with a
knife. It shook the wreckage in unbridled rage, and, incredibly, began
to shove the motorcycle off its trapped form.
"Cover fire!" J.B. shouted, emptying the shotgun as more pink brains
blew out of its smashed skull.
Only a second behind, Doc lunged forward, skewering the beast
through the chest, then twisting his sword, so the blade opened wide
the wound. Emerald blood poured from the gash, quickly slowing to a
trickle. A tail lashed at the old man, and he nimbly ducked out of the
way, slicing off the barbed tip.
A crackling sound could be heard from the distant line of trees,
withered leaves raining to the ground by the thousands.
Climbing on the wreckage, Krysty and Mildred emptied their blasters
at the creature, as Dean got Jak loose. They hastily retreated, and
seconds later Ryan crashed into the beast with another bike. A wash of
greenish blood vomited out the mutie's mouth, and Ryan fired his
handblaster at the beast. Ichor pouring from a dozen wounds, the mutie
spit sticky phlegm at the one-eyed man and demonically tried to rise
again.
Grinding gears, Ryan rolled the bike backward a few yards, then hit
the throttle and slammed into the creature again, driving the safety
cage of the first bike into its body, dicing the mutie into pieces.
Legs and claws wiggling, it began to reform once more, but it was
pinned helplessly to the wreckage.
"Stay close!" Ryan ordered, wriggling past the bikes and managing to
reach the keypad. It was covered with greenish blood, so he wiped the
alphanumeric pad clean with a bare hand and tapped in the entry code.
Avoiding the claws and whipping tail of the mutie, which were
stretching for them, the itching humans waited impatiently as the
massive doors cycled open, the brown grass sweeping closer by the
second.
"In!" Ryan commanded, and squeezed through the widening crack. As
the last person rushed through, the one-eyed man keyed the sequence
that would close the door.
Cutting away from the mouth of the access tunnel, just as a safety
precaution, J.B. paused as he looked over the garage of the underground
base. It seemed cleaner than he remembered from their last visit, and
there were tools on the walls. Dimly, he recalled the place had been
completely stripped, but they had been in so many redoubts it was easy
to get them confused occasionally.
"By gad, I hate Tennessee," Doc spit, bolstering his nearly spent
LeMat. "There are always traps of some kind at this accursed redoubt!"
"Check your ammo," Ryan said, checking his own blasters. The Steyr
was out, the SIG-Sauer down to six rounds.
"Out," J.B. snapped. "Haven't got a thing left."
Scowling, Dean dropped his clip and slapped it back in the butt of
his blaster. "Four rounds."
"One round," Mildred stated, patting her pockets. She had six speed
loaders for her target pistol, but none of them held a single bullet.
Just the casings she used for combat reloading.
"Same here," Krysty said, closing her revolver, then added, "You
want to drop that now, or are you keeping it as a souvenir?"
Jak stared at her, confused, then saw a ropy length of forked tongue
clenched tight in his grip. In disgust, he threw it away and wiped his
fingers clean on his pants. The teenager started to speak when alarms
cut loose all over the base, bells clanging, and Klaxons howling in
deafening volume.
"Fireblast! There must be leakage through the armor somewhere!" Ryan
cursed, looking about quickly. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary, but
then microwaves were invisible. "Head for the mat-trans chamber!"
Bypassing the bank of elevators, the companions raced down the
stairs. With each level they passed, the itchy sensation of the
microwaves lessened a little bit. Getting off at the fourth landing,
they raced down a long corridor lined with doors and slammed aside the
wooden door at the far end. Charging into the control room, the
companions slowed for a moment in spite of the horrible sensation on
their skin. The bodies of the dead from years before were gone, the
bullet holes in the consoles patched, the computers humming softly with
their lights twinkling. The spent brass covering the floor was gone,
and the walls looked freshly painted. Everything was clean and seemed
in proper working condition.
"Silas has been here." Krysty frowned, forcing herself not to cringe
from the growing misery of her living hair.
"Touch nothing!" J.B. warned, going to the door that led to the
mat-trans unit. He ran fingertips along the jamb and lintel before
opening the heavy portal.
"Clear," he reported. "Let's go!"
Rushing into the chamber, Ryan saw that the arma-glass walls had
also been painted, the deep purple identifying this as Tennessee now
painted over with a deep military green. However, the paint was peeling
from the armaglass. But the disguise might fool a casual observer.
"Hiding his location," Dean said, scratching at his forearms. "Smart
son of a bitch."
"Dead son of a bitch," Mildred corrected, then paused before
stepping onto the platform. "Damn. Think he might have jimmied the
controls?"
"Only one way to find out," Ryan said, and, pulling out an empty
clip for the Steyr, he tossed it the chamber.
The companions closed the door and waited in mounting pain, then
hastily opened it again. The metal-and-clear-plastic clip lay in plain
sight on the cold floor on the chamber. Nothing had happened.
"He did something, or the microwave is affecting it," J.B. said
woodenly, the alarms screaming in the background.
Touching her quivering hair, Krysty winced slightly. "It doesn't
hurt as badly here in the mat-trans unit," she said. "Mebbe we can
ride out the attack. The blues can't keep the Kite focused on us
forever."
"Yes, they can," Mildred replied coldly. "And this is only buying us
time. We're still being chilled, just slower than outside."
"What do?" Jak asked, rubbing his itchy face.
"It seems that we are to die today," Doc said, bowing his head in
finality. "Microwaves are seeping in, and the mat-trans unit is
deactivated. What other course do we have?"
"Fuck that We're trapped, not aced," Ryan spit, rubbing a fist in
the palm of his hand. "Mebbe…"
"What?" Krysty barked impatiently, her hands tucked under her arms,
to keep from clawing her skin off.
His empty socket feeling as if it were filled with hungry ants, Ryan
scowled. "There's a fission reactor in the basement. The extra
shielding might help protect us."
Tossing away his hat, J.B. wiped the hot sweat from his face.
"Mebbe," he panted in agreement. "B-but for how long?"
"Till we starve to death, or they fucking turn it off!" Ryan
growled, a red fury growing inside the man. "And then we'll go back and
smash that bastard machine just like we did Silas."
"A chance for life is all I ask," Doc said weakly. "Lead on, my dear
Ryan."
Turning for the door, Ryan braced himself for the pain waiting
outside the chamber. Then, closing his good eye tight, the man charged
into the control room, blindly stumbling through the maze of the
redoubt for the faint hope of survival deep within the radioactive
bowels of the military base.
Epilogue
Alone in the laboratory, Major Sheffield sat the computer desk and
carefully turned on predark machine. It cycled through the boot
programs in a few seconds, and the screen lit with a picture of a
hundred tiny icons. Reaching into his shirt pocket, the sec man pulled
out a CD-ROM, wiped some blood off the disk, then inserted it into the
little tray as he saw Silas do once. The device pulled the drawer back
inside, made soft noises, then cleared into a picture of Silas.
"Hello, Major," the whitecoat said without a smile. "If you are
listening to this, then I am dead, most likely from my own hand to stop
the nightmares. If so, now you are charged with the all-important task
of purifying North America, and the saving of the human race from the
growing threat of the muties."
"Think again, norm," the major said softly, his two hearts beating
hard. "And now it's Baron Sheffield."
The laser-disk ghost of Silas Jamaisvous went on undisturbed, "…and
thus the redoubts were originally conceived during World War II as
haven against the crude nukes of the time. However, upon creation of
the mat-trans unit, several interesting possibilities became evident
and the Pentagon decided to implement a particularly bold plan called
Overproject Whisper…"
The voice went on for hours, and Sheffield stayed through the night,
drinking in the most amazing story he had ever heard, all the more so
because he knew it to be completely true.
Almost unnoticed in the background, the computer that controlled the
Kite blinked steadily as the orbiter poured gigawatts of raw power onto
an insignificant patch of grasslands in the hills of Tennessee.
When the disk eventually finished, Sheffield turned the machine off
and walked to the barred window to watch the sun rise over the craggy
mountains of the valley.
"My mountains," he whispered, and slowly began to smile. "My valley,
my continent!"
There was a crackle from the intercom. "Sir?" a voice asked in
concern. "I heard a shout. Is everything all right, Major?"
"Everything is fine," the mutie replied. "And the next time you call
me 'Major,' I'll rip out your guts and feed them to the dogs!"
"S-sir?"
"I am Baron Sheffield!" he roared. Then he added softly, "The new
ruler of North America."
Axler,_James_-_Deathlands_47_-_Gaia's_Demise
Ryan glanced in the rearview mirror
"We're not going to get away," he shouted grimly.
"We have to," Mildred answered, then shrugged and dropped her heavy
med kit. "Heave the supplies! Lose everything!"
Stunned for a moment by the incredible act, Ryan resolutely reached
behind for his backpack. Mildred knew her stuff, and whatever it was
that was after them, he didn't want it to reach them for the sake of a
few pounds.
With the motorcycles moving at top speed, the companions raced
through the forest in a nightmare of dodging trees and crashing through
bushes.
Unstoppable, the death wave from the Kite swept onward, getting
closer and closer with each passing moment…
Gaia's Demise
#47 in the Deathland series
James Axler
A GOLD EAGLE BOOK FROM WORLDWIDE
TORONTO • NEW YORK • LONDON • AMSTERDAM
• PARIS • SYDNEY • HAMBURG • STOCKHOLM • ATHENS •
TOKYO • MILAN MADRID • WARSAW • BUDAPEST • AUCKLAND
If you purchased this
book without a cover you should be aware that
this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed"
to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received
any payment for this "stripped book."
As always,
for Melissa
First edition October 1999
ISBN 0-373-62547-2
GAIA'S DEMISE
Copyright © 1999 by Worldwide Library.
All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction
or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any
electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented,
including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information
storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written
permission of the publisher, Worldwide Library, 225 Duncan Mill Road,
Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.
All characters in this book have no existence outside the
imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone
bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by
any individual known or unknown to the author, and all incidents are
pure invention.
® and TM are trademarks of the publisher. Trademarks indicated with
® are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the
Canadian Trade Marks Office and in other countries.
Printed in U.S.A.
…for when all the strong elements,
military and feudal, were unhinged, mighty forces became adrift, and
the void was open. And after a pause, into the void strode a maniac of
ferocious genius, the repository and expression of the most virulent
hatred that has ever corroded the human heart. The door of opportunity
was open, the dreadful time was at hand, and God help us, it was all
about to begin once more…
—Sir Winston Churchill,
The Hinge of Fate, 1938
THE DEATHLANDS SAGA
This world is their legacy, a world born in the violent nuclear
spasm of 2001 that was the bitter outcome of a struggle for global
dominance.
There is no real escape from this shockscape where life always hangs
in the balance, vulnerable to newly demonic nature, barbarism,
lawlessness.
But they are the warrior survivalists, and they endure—in the way of
the lion, the hawk and the tiger, true to nature's heart despite its
ruination.
Ryan Cawdor: The privileged son
of an East Coast
baron. Acquainted with betrayal from a tender age, he is a master of
the hard realities.
Krysty Wroth: Harmony ville's own
Titian-haired
beauty, a woman with the strength of tempered steel. Her premonitions
and Gaia powers have been fostered by her Mother Sonja.
J. B. Dix, the Armorer: Weapons
master and Ryan's
close ally, he, too, honed his skills traversing the Deathlands with
the legendary Trader.
Doctor Theophilus Tanner: Torn
from his family and
a gentler life in 1896, Doc has been thrown into a future he couldn't
have imagined.
Dr. Mildred Wyeth: Her father was
killed by the Ku
Klux Klan, but her fate is not much lighter. Restored from predark
cryogenic suspension, she brings twentieth-century healing skills to a
nightmare.
Jak Lauren: A true child of the
wastelands, reared
on adversity, loss and danger, the albino teenager is a fierce fighter
and loyal friend.
Dean Cawdor: Ryan's young son by
Sharona accepts
the only world he knows, and yet he is the seedling bearing the promise
of tomorrow.
In a world where all was lost, they are humanity's last hope…
Prologue
A hundred years ago, a rain of nuclear bombs obliterated
civilization in a few minutes of blazing horror. It was the end of the
world. Doomsday. Skydark.
The great cities were gone in a blinding flash, replaced by bomb
craters whose deadly glow illuminated the nighttime sky. Mountains rose
and fell, valleys slammed shut and lakes boiled under the atomic
bombardment, permanently altering the topography of North America.
Burning clouds of isotopes and poisons filled the sky in an endless,
raging hurricane, and acid rain pounded the lush farmland and forests
of the continent into sterile desert.
With the first nuclear explosion, the tissue-thin tapestry of
civilization was ripped apart. The rule of law was replaced overnight
with the somber, draconian edict of survival of the fittest. Cannibals
hunted prey, cold-hearts brutally raided farms and slavers seized
anybody they could as chattel. Plus, lost in the wilds of the new world
were functioning predark war machines. Shielded against the onslaught
of the atomic holocaust, the computer-operated juggernauts were
patiently waiting to continue a war that was long finished, and death
was almost always the reward for the person who foolishly awoke one of
the terrible sleeping giants.
In crumbling ruins, ragged people fought to the death over a dented
can of food or a single precious bullet.
Any type of gun was more valuable than gold, defense against the
horrible swarms of muties, twisted abominations that arose from the
nuke craters and feasted on the flesh of humanity.
Slowly, over the long decades, civilization of a sort was returning
to the world. Crude walled cities were rising from the ashes of the
past. The populations of these villes were ruthlessly governed by
self-appointed barons, each ruler backed by a private army of brutal
sec men. Whips and chains kept the people inside, while barbed wire and
blasters kept the muties out.
Electricity was seldom seen, starvation universal, rape a daily
event, death the only known means of escape. This was America in the
late twenty-first century. Welcome to the Deathlands.
But one small handful of people refused to surrender hope. Ryan
Cawdor and his companions traveled the continent searching for
someplace where they could settle down and live in peace. Armed with
functioning pre-dark weapons, the companions killed only when
necessary, and preferred trading for supplies rather than stealing. In
a world gone mad, these simple acts of dignity nearly made them legends.
In addition, Ryan Cawdor and the others knew the greatest military
secret of the predark world: the redoubts.
Hidden across America, these often huge underground bunkers were
built by the government to withstand direct nuclear hits. Powered by
the near limitless energy of nuclear reactors, most redoubts were still
intact after a century, incredible havens of safety with fluorescent
lights, air-conditioning and drinkable water. Originally, the
subterranean bases were stockpiled with everything needed to rebuild
the country after the coming apocalypse—weapons, tools, military
vehicles, fuel and medicine. Those countless tons of supplies were long
gone, with only a few forgotten boxes of dusty weapons and dehydrated
food packs remaining. However, these meager scraps from the past were
more than enough to give the companions a fighting chance to stay
alive. And sometimes they came across a major prize.
Yet even more importantly, the redoubts were linked together by the
incredible mat-trans units. These amazing machines depended on
technology advanced almost beyond understanding. The mat-trans units
could transfer a living person from one redoubt to another in only
seconds, which allowed the companions to quickly leave a dangerous
area, hunt for food and continue their search for a permanent home.
Unfortunately, it now seemed possible that others might also know
the vital secret of the redoubts.
A few days earlier, a stranger named Overton had attacked Ryan's
home ville of Front Royal with an army of sec men. The troops were
wearing impossibly clean blue shirts and were armed with predark
weapons in mint condition. Overton's goal was to conquer Front Royal by
any means available, then physically link it with two neighboring
villes in Virginia, creating a single massive walled city, a gigantic
metropolis the likes of which hadn't been seen for more than a century.
The would-be usurper was finally neutralized by Ryan, but the reasons
behind the insane plan were lost in violent death, and the mysterious
origin of the weapons was never resolved.
Had Overton been working alone in his plan to seize control of those
three East Coast baronies? Or was he a vanguard, an advance agent
paving the way for somebody else? Was creating a new metropolis in
Deathlands the final goal, or only the first step of a much larger
plan? And was the secret of the redoubts' existence still safe?
A dying man had said the answers to these questions could be found
in a distant ville called Shiloh. While the baron at Front Royal
started to rebuild the badly damaged ville, Ryan Cawdor and the
companions left on a perilous overland journey to try to discover if
the brutal war for the baronies was indeed over.
Or only just beginning…
Chapter One
"Black dust!" the man screamed, pointing toward the horizon. "What
the hell is that?"
A dozen people at the campsite stopped whatever they were doing and
turned to look in the direction indicated. Cresting a hill far down the
road was a wag of some sort—no, it was a rolling box of metal, with a
stream of faint bluish smoke coming from its rear. The sides were
sloped at sharp angles, no windshield or windows were visible and it
had numerous big black wheels. There wasn't a single visible piece of
wood in the whole contraption.
"A wag," a teenager murmured, wiping his mouth on a dirty sleeve as
he placed aside his plate of stew. Standing, the teenager grabbed a
longblaster from the top of a woodpile and worked the bolt, chambering
a round. He licked dry lips as a soft wind ruffled the thin rags that
were his clothing.
Another man stood and pulled a crossbow into view from his nest of
clothes. "A metal wag. I never seen one that moved before!"
Leaning heavily on a repaired crutch, an elderly man glanced over
his shoulder to a nearby grassy field. A crude wall of thickets and
sharp sticks formed a defensive barrier around the clearing, and in the
middle stood a faded yellow school bus, its many windows heavily
patched with gray tape and bits of plastic. The wheels were sunk into
the hard ground, and a tilted stone chimney rose from the back. The
rusted remains of a few other wags doted the field, the grass thin
enough in spots to see the cracked black material underneath. Way off
by itself, the rounded shell of a beetle-shaped vehicle was surrounded
by weeds, the open front door showing that the interior had been
completely stripped except for a cushioned seat that had a hole cut in
the bottom. The opening continued through the chassis and deep into the
ground. Fat flies buzzed around the battered wag, and for an unknown
reason, a half moon was painted on the door.
"A working wag," Tant breathed excitedly. The young man drew a bulky
revolver from the belt holding his buckskin jacket closed, and lovingly
ran his hands over the Parkerized finish of the big-bore weapon. The
wooden handle had been replaced with bone long ago. "Must be some
baron," a pretty blonde suggested, and she pulled a long carving knife
from her sleeve.
"Or slavers," another man grumbled, touching a ragged scar that
completely circled his thick neck. In his massive hands, he held a
metal rod tipped with a razor-sharp radiator fan. The ends glistened,
mirror bright in the morning sun. "They got wags. Well, sometimes."
"We best leave it alone," an old woman stated. She hobbled a bit
closer to the roadway but didn't cross onto the gravel of the berm. She
knew her place. That honor was for menfolk only.
"Let them leave without a toll?" an old man snapped angrily,
watching the wag come steadily closer. His face was deeply lined, but
not from hunger, and a puckered star on the right cheek marked where he
had been shot in the face at close range. His boots were patched, his
jacket was lined with the fur of mountain lion and a brace of oiled
revolvers jutted from his wide leather belt. "Black dust, what for,
woman?"
Her weak eye wandering aimlessly, the old woman scowled down the
road and gestured at the strange vehicle. "Are ya daft, Spector? That
ain't be no civvy wag. That's a war wag, a tank!"
Raising a hand to strike her, Spector held his anger at the
outburst, knowing she was only doing so for the good of the collectors.
Dimly, he recalled hearing the word before from Grandda. His father's
father had been a great leader of the collectors, siring fourteen
children before dying. A mutie had leaped from the belly of a deer they
killed one winter and tore off his arms before the others could
bludgeon it to death.
Drawing a blaster, Spector squinted against the distance. Naw,
couldn't be a real tank as the wag didn't have those metal belts on
either side that chewed up the streets. It had whatyacallems.
"Tires," Tant said, loading a massive crossbow. The quarrel was of
green wood, but the barbed tip was steel, lashed into place with human
hair.
"Blasters," he added, scowling. "Them there be fancy autoblasters on
its top!"
"Autoblasters?" asked a pregnant girl brandishing an ax, a naked
child hiding behind her voluminous skirts.
"Fire more slugs than a hundred sec men at once!"
A young man with only the wispy hint of a beard on his jaw curled a
lip. "Horseshit," he declared.
"It's the truth."
"Let it pass, Da," a redheaded boy suggested, the glass bottle in
his hands sloshing slightly. The whiskey bottle with its burning rag of
a fuse was actually only filled with urine, but most folks thought it
to be a Molotov and steered clear of the pretend firebomb.
Pushing back his cap, Spector stood firm before the steady advance
of the war wag. "Anybody can pass," he stated, shifting his grip on his
wheelgun. "Long as they pays a toll. This be our road, child! Don't we
sweep away the leaves in the fall and fill in the holes after the
snows? Our grandies guarded this here road for the eagle god, and so do
we. Ain't nobody pass 'less they pays a toll. One can food, one bullet
or a day of work."
The group took heart from the ancient words and formed a line across
the long expanse of concrete. Only the faintest suggestions of ruins
marked where the mighty booths stood, but those had been destroyed in
skydark. There were cracks in the surface, but those had been carefully
patched. Every weed was pulled, the loose gravel along the east side
raked into neat order and the grassy strip to the west trimmed neatly.
Beyond the strip lay the broken remains of shattered concrete, trees
growing wild from the cracks, and most of the surface masked by decades
of grass and vines. But that wasn't their side. That was the north, and
they were the southbound. The war between the two rival gangs had ended
many winters ago in a bloody fight still referred to as Death Day. Now
only the south remained to rule the great road of exit that stretched
from the mountains to the terrible ocean.
The big wag was a lot closer now, its speed unchanging. Spector
could see it was a lot bigger than he'd first thought, and the body was
made of different colors, not painted camouflage like hunters did to
hide in the bush. No, sir, the metal itself was a clean green in one
area, and blackened with fire damage in another, as if the machine were
pieced together from a dozen damaged wags. Surprisingly, it made
excellent camouflage. Once in thick bushes, the machine would be damn
difficult to spot. Big cans and bags were strapped to the sides under
layers of fishing nets.
"Loot," Tant said greedily, releasing the safety lock on his
crossbow. "Look at it! They got so much they can't keep it all inside!"
Spector stepped between the man and the approaching wag so that the
needle tip of the quarrel touched his chest. "We ain't be thieves or
coldhearts," the older man stated. "This be our road, and we take
tolls. That be all. No raping the women or taking more than usual.
Understand?"
Tant felt a rush of heat to his face, partly from shame but the rest
from anger. His hands tightened on the stock and trigger of the
crossbow, the muscles in his arms hardening as he fought conflicting
emotions. Spector stayed motionless, letting the younger man decide the
matter for himself. A good leader didn't always command, but sometimes
listened. The engine noise of the war wag was discernible when the
younger man finally relaxed his aggressive stance.
"Sorry," he apologized, and fired.
At point-blank range, the shaft went completely through the old
man's chest. Staggering backward onto the road, Spector fell to his
knees and Tant swung the stock of the crossbow like a club. Spector's
head broke apart, one eye flying off into the wood, bones and brains
spilling onto the pale concrete.
Retrieving the blaster from the dead man's clothing, Tant turned to
face the rest of the collectors. The butt of the weapons were still
warm from the dead man, and somehow that gave the killer a rush of
courage.
"Now I am in charge!" Tant shouted, thrusting a blaster into the
air. "And I say we take everything from everybody who tries to pass!
Why should we starve when food comes to us by itself?"
Eagerly, the
rest of the family took up the cry and several stepped closer to spit
on the sprawled form of Spector. Only a few of the older women and
younger children didn't
join the rally against their fallen leader
and quickly moved away from the others. Their brethren seemed like
outlanders to them, strangers drunk on the freshly spilled blood.
"Rules, reg'lations," one man slurred, brandishing
a glass tipped spear. "What mean they? The strong live, the weak die.
That be the
rules here!"
"So speaks Ben, my new lieutenant," Tant shouted. "For I am the
leader
now."
The collectors roared their approval, and Tant threw his crossbow at
the man. The weapon landed at his feet, which were swaddled in plastic
and rags in place of boots. Passing his spear to a man with a club, Ben
knelt before his new leader and lifted the gore-smeared weapon with a
grim reverence.
"Death to the outlanders," Ben said, bowing his head.
"Death to all!" Tant shouted, staring hatefully at the wag coming
straight toward them. The vehicle hadn't attempted to swerve into the
trees or stop and turn. More fools they, for this was where they would
die, and that machine become his to command.
"Positions!" Tant ordered, cocking both hammers on his warm blasters.
The collectors scrambled to their pits and dropped out of sight as
Ben raced into the bushes to kick at a block of wood half-hidden amid
the greenery. With the block gone, a weight dropped out of sight into
the ground and from the trees a barrier swung into the sky on squealing
hinges and slammed down hard across the roadway. The heavy beam was a
chiseled tree trunk, bristling with rusty nails and bearing the
eight-sided metal disk of the tribe painted the magic colors of red and
white. All travelers stopped at the sight of the sign of power.
"Hold for a toll!" Tant shouted with an amiable smile, tucking one
blaster into his belt.
The wag didn't slow.
"There be muties ahead!" he added in warning, his smile dropping
into a sneer. "Much danger! Death everywhere."
As if in reply, brilliant headlights flashed into operation, the
beams temporarily blinding the collectors. Cursing in rage, most
dropped
their blasters to cover their eyes. Only a few managed to wildly fire
their weapons at the invader. Fletched arrows struck the side of the
vehicle, the wooden shafts shattering on the armor. A spear smashed on
the turret, the glass tip exploding into glittering
sparkles. Homemade bullets musically ricocheted off the chassis,
leaving gray smears, and the one round that hit a tire simply sank
into the resilient material and disappeared, doing no visible damage.
Then the powerful engines of the war wag revved louder, and it
surged forward with renewed speed, covering the last fifty yards to the
gate in only seconds. The wag smashed into the stout barrier headfirst,
and the wood exploded into splinters, a rain of nails spraying from the
impact.
Baring his teeth in rage, Tant stood firm and steadily fired his
revolvers at the looming wag until they clicked on empty chambers. For
the briefest flicker of time, Tant saw a single eye looking at him
through a tiny slit in the metal hull of the incredible machine, an eye
of icy blue. That was when his resolve broke, and the killer dashed for
the safety of the berm, but it was already too late.
The great machine leaped forward in a surge of speed, and the prow
slammed into him with the force of an avalanche. Pain filling his
world, Tant dropped to the roadway and went directly underneath the
juggernaut.
For an electric moment of time, he waited to be crushed
flat, when Tant realized in a rush of clarity that there was space
below the wag. The bottom was almost a yard off the ground! He started
to laugh in relief, when the machine sharply turned and the last two
wheels went straight for his head, missing his face by an inch but
rolling over his left arm, mashing it flat, every bone pulverized from
the colossal weight. Shrieking at the pain, Tant tried to pull away and
the bottom of the wag slammed against his head, sending him into
blackness. Seconds later, the sprawled body of Tant appeared behind the
transport, with a small cut on his forehead and his entire right arm
bloody pulp. Tears streaming from his aching eyes, Ben rushed over and
shot Tant in the heart with a crossbow quarrel, making himself the new
leader.
"TRIPLE STUPE BASTARDS," Ryan Cawdor muttered, easing his foot off
the gas of the LAV-25 armored personnel carrier. "Guess they never saw
an APC before and didn't know what it could do."
"Well, they sure know now," J. B. Dix said, tilting back his fedora
as he watched the tiny outpost vanish into the distance behind them
through an aft blaster port. When satisfied the danger was over, J.B.
removed his finger from the trigger of his Uzi submachine gun and slung
the deadly weapon over a shoulder. Lying on the deck between his boots
was a bulging satchel of explosives, with a Smith & Wesson M-4000
scattergun tucked between the straps. Even in the tight confines of the
APC, the Armorer never let his weapons get far away from a ready hand.
Ryan nodded in agreement as he steered the wag around a fallen tree
and some large potholes. The driver's seat of the predark machine was
designed for soldiers from that time period, large men loaded with lots
of equipment. Ryan was barely comfortable in the chair, and his wild
mane of black hair brushed against the control panel set in the ceiling
directly above the Plexiglas ob port used to see outside. The man's
face was seamed by a long scar, courtesy of his brother Harvey, and a
crude leather patch covered his left eye. A SIG-Sauer blaster, with a
built-in baffle sound suppressor, was tucked into the leather holster
at his right hip, the curved handle of a panga knife jutting from its
customary sheath, within easy access. Hanging nearby from hooks set
into the rough metal walls were a bolt-action longblaster and a sleek
AK-47 machine gun.
Sitting against the aft doors, Jak Lauren merely grunted in reply as
he continued to strop a knife on a whetstone with steady strokes. The
pale teenager was dressed in camou-colored military fatigues and a
battered vest decorated with feathers and bits of mirror and metal sewn
into the seams and collar. But that was a trick; razor blades were sewn
inside the collar and any enemy grabbing him soon discovered that the
hard way when they lost fingers. The youth was a true albino. His skin
was dead white, and ruby-red eyes peered from a cascade of snowy hair.
A massive Colt Python .357 jutted from his belt, and at least a dozen
leaf-bladed throwing knives were hidden on his person.
"Fools die," Jak stated coldly, tucking away the leaf-bladed
throwing knife and, like magic, another appeared in his hand. "What
else new?"
"I saw wags on the side of the road," Dean Cawdor said, a Browning
Hi-Power blaster held casually as he watched the horizon for any signs
of pursuit. "Think they might try and come after us?"
"Those wrecks? Even if the wags worked, they'll be busy squabbling
over who's in charge now that we killed their leader," J.B. stated,
adjusting his wire-rimmed glasses to a more comfortable position.
"Good," Dean said, clicking the safety on his blaster with a
flick of his thumb. The boy tucked the blaster into his belt.
Although only eleven years old, going on twelve, Dean already carried
himself with the deadly assurance of a seasoned warrior and seemed to
look more like his father with every passing day.
"I just thank Gaia they thought a wooden beam would stop us," Krysty
Wroth said gruffly. "Could have been a lot worse."
The shapely redhead squatted comfortably on the steps leading to the
overhead turret, checking the loads in her Smith & Wesson .38.
Krysty had lost the blaster in that hellish garage at Front Royal when
she'd gotten caught by Overton's sec men. But J.B. had found the
blaster under a bench when he'd done some work on the LAV, the weapon
discarded there, apparently, by one of the blue shirts. The neat .38
handled better than the pow
erful .357, and she was happy
to have it once again in hand.
Krysty was a beautiful woman, her complexion flawless, her
abundance of fiery hair gently moving as if stirred by secret winds
only she could feel.
"Those coldhearts could have smashed a hornet's nest against the
side of the LAV," she continued. "And then we would have been in real
trouble."
"Hornets?" Jak asked, pausing in his work.
A tall man with silver-gray hair was resting against the ammo locker
and raised his head at the conversation, arching an eyebrow. "Indeed,
madam, I do understand," Doc Tanner rumbled in a deep stentorian bass.
"Once the nest hit us, the hornets would target our wag as an enemy and
come swarming in through every blaster port and vent. Their painful
stings would soon drive us outside where the others could easily slay
us in the confusion."
Wearing a frilly shirt and an outlandish frock coat, the old man
would have been a strange sight even in his own time period, and his
resplendent crop of hair made Doc appear much older than he really was.
A slim ebony swordstick was laid casually across his lap, and a massive
double-barreled blaster jutted from the cavalry gun belt around his
waist. The Civil War museum piece seeming incongruous with the rest of
his dapper attire.
Krysty gestured with an open palm. "Old trick," she said. "My mother
used it often against the big muties."
The old man pulled a few inches of shiny steel blade from within the
ebony stick, then slammed the sword back into its sheath. "Deuced
clever, I must admit."
Ryan glanced over his shoulder at Krysty. "Hornets," he said after a
while. "Glad you're on our side, lover. That would work even better on
folks in an open cart, or on horseback."
"Pretty good," Jak agreed, tucking away his whetstone.
Biting off a piece of beef jerky, Dr. Mildred Wyeth chewed and
swallowed the mouthful before speaking. A stocky black woman with
bright, intelligent eyes, her lightweight denim jacket was unbuttoned,
showing a heavy flannel shirt and a gun belt supporting a sleek target
pistol, the ammo loops on the side of the belt filled with oily brass
cartridges. A rare predark field-surgery kit holding medical supplies
lay protectively between her boots, the canvas lovingly patched here
and there.
"For some reason, that reminds me of a war story I once heard,"
the physician said. "Way back before skydark, some nation, I forget
which, sent a battalion of their best tanks into northern Africa to
establish a supply base for their troops. They expected little
resistance from the locals as the farmers had almost no technology.
They carried stone knives and went hunting with blowguns. It was
supposed to be a slaughter, and it was. But for the other side."
Both hands steady on the steering levers, Ryan barked one of his
rare laughs. "So the tanks got destroyed, eh? Good for the Africans."
"How?" Dean asked curiously, resting both elbows on his knees and
leaning forward. Mildred and Doc came from before skydark and knew all
sorts of things. Some of the information was useful for staying alive,
but some was just fun to hear about—wild stories about things like
airplanes and supermarkets.
Wrapping the remaining piece of jerky in a clean handkerchief,
Mildred tucked the dried meat into a pocket for later. For once,
they had plenty of supplies. Front Royal had given them all the food,
fuel and ammo they could carry for this trip. Their mission
was too important to chance failure over a can of beans or a
handful of bullets. But as her Baptist minister father drilled into her
as child, waste not, want not. Life in the radioactive hell of
Deathlands was bitterly harsh, and every morsel of food saved could
mean another day of life.
"How did they stop the invasion of armored tanks? Simple, really,"
she answered. "The locals would run away from the tanks, carefully
luring them near the edge of a high cliff. Then when the tank was in
the right position, hunters hidden in the bushes would use blowguns to
shoot a poisoned dart into the tiny slots in the armor that the drivers
used to see through. Blind and paralyzed, the soldiers couldn't change
course, and the massive machines would roll off the cliff and smash to
pieces when they hit the bottom."
"A veritable David-versus-Goliath story," Doc rumbled in wry
amusement. "Good for the hunters."
Dean stole a glance at his father. "So the fancier the tech, the
easier it is to smash," the boy concluded.
"Usually," Ryan answered, busy driving. "But not always, son."
"Everything has a weak point, but sometimes Goliath still wins,"
J.B. added, pulling a fat cigar from the breast pocket of his jacket
and placing it in the corner of his mouth. "Sad but true."
"Ahem," Mildred said, leaning forward in her seat until almost
touching noses with the man. "It smells quite bad enough in here with
seven sweaty people packed like sardines. We don't need you adding to
the pollution by smoking a hundred-year-old cigar."
"This is a brand-new one," J.B. retorted, pulling the stogie free
and gesturing. "Hand rolled on the thighs of expert virgins exclusively
for the baron of Front Royal himself!"
Everybody in the APC burst into laughter.
"My dear John Barrymore," Doc chuckled. "Expert virgins?"
"Nice work if you can get it," Krysty said, smiling.
As the military transport easily rolled over a low hill, Ryan merely
snorted as he shifted gears.
"Didn't mean it that way," J.B. said with a frown.
"Horseshit," Jak scoffed.
Quizzically, J.B. took a sniff. "Seems to be mostly tobacco," he
said slowly. "But yeah, I think there's a little horse in here, too."
"Also makes your breath taste awful," Mildred added softly.
J.B. winked at the physician and tucked the cigar away. "Don't want
that, do we?"
Blushing slightly, Mildred started to add something, but was cut off
when the wag jounced over some rough ground and the companions were
nearly thrown from their seats. Desperately, the friends grabbed for
anything welded solidly to the frame of the APC. The interior of the
LAV-25 had been badly damaged by fire when its prior owners died, and
the seat belts were only ashen smudges on the bare metal skeletons of
the wall seats. Layers of blankets cushioned the seat struts enough for
them to sit on for long periods, but every serious pothole threatened
to throw them to the floor.
"Need rope," Jak muttered, releasing his grip on the belt of linked
25 mm rounds going into the electric cannon in the turret. "Make belts."
"Good idea," Dean said, massaging a bruised elbow. "But we already
used it all tying our extra supplies to the outside."
"Hold on to your ass harder," J.B. suggested with a grin.
Extracting herself from a jumble of fallen supplies, Krysty ducked
around the ammo belt feeding the machine gun and walked to the front of
the wag. "Have we lost the road?" she asked, resting a slim hand on
the back of the chair in an effort to stay upright.
"Ten miles ago," Ryan answered brusquely, concentrating on the task
of driving. A strange rustling noise came from the outside as the LAV
plowed through some bushes. "We're crossing a field at present, heading
straight for a blast crater. J.B., give me a rad count!"
Quickly, the man checked the predark device pinned to his collar.
"No rads," he reported. "Must have been a clean bomb."
"Clean?" Doc asked in surprise.
Reclaiming her seat, Mildred answered, "The isotopes used have a
short half-life. There would be no residual radiation remaining after
only a few years."
"Clean," Jak snorted. "Right."
Dean pressed his face to a defensive blaster port and saw only a
rippled expanse of glass stretching in every direction. "Must have been
a big nuke."
"No such thing as a small nuclear blast," Ryan stated.
Curiously, the boy studied the unearthly landscape surrounding the
APC and tried to imagine what the area was like before everything was
vaporized in a microsecond flash. Had there been a thriving city here,
or a military complex? Or was this a lost strike, a bomb that missed
its target and destroyed only woods and fields? There was no way to
ever know. Nothing remained but the solid slab of slightly bluish
glass, the soil fused crystalline from the extreme heat of the hellish
detonation. Distorted objects were almost visible within the
translucent material, broken buildings forever trapped in the middle of
toppling over, and some charred human figures who would spend eternity
desperately trying to swim to the surface of the solidified pool.
The boy turned away from the blaster port, lost in thought. None of
the other companions spoke, the sterile vista outside affecting even
these hardened warriors. Hours passed with a low hum filling the wag
from the tires under the vehicle as the APC raced across the wide
expanse of the cracked glass lake. Only the soft crackle of static from
the radio marred the near silence. The electronic device had been
salvaged from the ruins of another APC, and since it was tuned to the
command channel of the blue shirts—the invading force at Front
Royal—Ryan brought the radio along just in case. But with the heavy
blanket of decaying isotopes in the planetary atmosphere, even the most
powerful radio transmitters had a range of only a mile. Nearly useless,
but it took up little space.
Shifting gears, Ryan guided the APC up a sharp incline and off the
fused soil onto dead earth, not even weeds growing from the gray,
sterilized soil. Slowly, over the miles, streaks of dark earth reached
into the dead zone, and soon tufts of grass dotted the land. Trundling
through a shallow river, the LAV broached some gentle rolling hills,
and soon the black ribbon of an ancient road was visible in spots
through the dense covering of weeds.
"Get hard, people!" Ryan ordered, downshifting so their speed was
more manageable. "We're past the crater, so Shiloh must be close."
With trained ease, the companions prepared their weapons, sliding
off safeties and making sure spare ammo was available. Jak climbed into
the turret of the APC and checked the action of the 25 mm cannon, while
Doc took the gunner's spot and readied the 7.62 mm ultrafast chain gun.
"Gaia, I hate crossing nuke craters," Krysty muttered, unwrapping
some tape from the handle of a gren and placing the live
charge in the pocket of her shaggy coat.
"Bad vibrations from all the death?" Mildred asked, closing the
cylinder of her Czech ZKR Olympic target pistol. The physician knew
that Krysty could sometimes perceive things beyond the usual five
senses of other people. Her early warnings of unseen danger had saved
their lives more than once.
"Just the opposite," Krysty said. "I can't feel anything in those
cursed areas. Absolutely and completely nothing."
"Sort of like going blind," Mildred suggested.
Krysty nodded and gave a shiver. "Very much so, yes."
Glancing at a map taped to the wall, Ryan followed the ancient road
to a lush forest of trees. Turning eastward, he started a long sweep
around the obstruction until reaching a wide field. He braked to a
halt, but didn't turn off the engines, and for a few minutes, the
companions studied the area carefully with weapons in hand. A few
hundred yards ahead of them, the ground seemed to stop abruptly, and
beyond was the limitless vista of the open sea. The sound of distant
waves breaking on a rocky shore could be faintly heard over the rumble
of the engines.
"Clear," Jak said from the turret.
"Clear," Doc agreed.
Waiting another minute, Ryan finally turned off the engines and
silence filled the transport. Rising from the chair, the one-eyed
warrior took his Steyer longblaster from the wall and worked the bolt,
chambering a round for immediate use. "Jak, stay where you are and
cover us in case of trouble. When we move out, I'll be on point. Dean,
stay with Mildred, Krysty, then
Doc. J.B., take rearguard."
Leaning the rifle against a stack of crates, Ryan worked the slide
on his SIG-Sauer 9 mm pistol and holstered the deadly blaster. "Stay
sharp," he ordered, reclaiming his rifle. "This is just a recce, not a
stand-up fight like at the caves. Keep a two-yard spread, and no noise.
Overton's blue shirts could be close, and we want to take them by
surprise."
"Ready?" J.B. asked, jerking back the bolt of his Uzi. "Go," Ryan
said.
J.B. unlocked the aft double doors and kicked them open. The armored
slabs swung aside on squealing hinges, and a wealth of fresh air poured
into the vehicle. Hopping to the ground, J.B. gratefully stretched his
legs as he listened to the sounds of life. Crickets were chirping, and
a bird sang softly. Good—their presence meant there were no big
predators.
The rest of the companions watched from the blaster ports, the
barrels of their weapons sticking out of the APC like porcupine quills.
Satisfied there was no immediate danger, J.B. slung the Uzi over a
shoulder and pulled the minisextant from under his shirt. Centering the
mirror on the dim sun, he cut the horizon in two, adjusting the focus
with tiny movements until satisfied. "This is Shiloh, North Carolina,"
he stated, tucking the device away.
"Good." Ryan stepped to the ground and the men moved away to clear
the way for the rest of the companions. The last person exiting, Dean
closed the double doors and heard Jak bolt them from the inside.
Sweeping across the field in a standard search pattern, the
companions found nothing of interest, which annoyed and disappointed
them at the same time.
"Any signs of military traffic?" Ryan asked, feeling the tension of
expected battle flow from his body. "Campfires, spent shells in the
grass, a used latrine?"
"No signs of anything," J.B. answered, tugging his fedora down tight
as protection from the wind.
Going to the edge of the field, Mildred found herself looking down
at the ruins of a predark city partially covered with sand dunes.
The beaches were festooned with driftwood and seaweed, and the
ragged stumps of concrete pillions—the decaying remains of a once
mighty seaport—jutted from the waves like the broken teeth of a sunken
corpse. A telephone pole without wires rose from a sand dune, its
crossbars filled with bird nests. Off by itself, a rusty stop sign
waggled in the gusting wind.
Overhead, the purple sky was slashed with streaks of fiery orange,
black clouds racing by as if moved by private hurricanes. Sheet
lightning flashed, and distant thunder rumbled in natural majesty above
the rattling stop sign.
The other companions joined Krysty at the edge of the cliff, and
scowled at the ruins below.
"Son of a bitch. You sure this is the right place?" Ryan demanded
gruffly.
Behind the companions, the main engine of the predark wag ticked
softly as the metal slowly cooled. Then the top hatch of their armored
vehicle squealed open on stubborn hinges, and Jak rose into view. Even
with the armor and weapons of the Bradley APC surrounding him, Jak was
clearly uneasy amid this desolation.
The youth said nothing, but his expression was one of intense scorn.
"This isn't their base," Krysty stated, lowering her blaster. "This
isn't the home ville of anybody."
"Obviously, madam," Doc announced lugubriously, easing down the
hammer of his gigantic LeMat pistol. "Nobody resides at this location
but ghosts, and mayhap a few sand crabs. It is a simple village
returned to its primordial state, with nary a humble cottage remaining
to be balanced by a river's brim."
"Walt Whitman?" Mildred asked, squinting, thumbs hooked into her gun
belt.
"No. Me," the man said, smiling broadly. "Just me this time."
Removing his hat, J.B. grimaced as he smoothed the brim. "Crap," he
announced. "There's not a blaster or a war wag in sight, and the blues
were lousy with pre-dark military supplies. Seemed like Overton had
more weapons than Wizard Island and the Anthill combined!"
Dean scratched his head. "Mebbe this is the wrong Shiloh," the boy
suggested. "We knew it wasn't the one in Virginia because that town got
nuked in skydark."
"Could be the Civil War battleground we once visited in The
Smokies," Mildred offered. "There's even a redoubt nearby, the one with
all the tunnels. That could be where they're getting the weapons and
wags from."
"Makes sense," Ryan said, nosily sucking on a hollow tooth. "But
Tennessee is a mighty long way from Front Royal. If their home base is
there, why choose a ville in Virginia as their capital city?"
"A diversion," J.B. stated, as if it were obvious. "Or mebbe Overton
lied."
Mildred fiercely shook her head. "No way. He was in too much pain to
be inventive. The home base of the people who attacked Front Royal is
someplace named Shiloh. That we can count on as a fact."
The salty breeze from the Lantic felt good on his skin as Ryan
stepped closer to the cliff for a better view. He heard a stick snap
under his boots. Only the noise sounded more metallic than wooden.
"Everybody freeze," he ordered softly.
The companions went motionless, straining to detect any possible
dangers. The field was empty, and nothing could be heard but the waves
on the beach below.
"Now listen to me very carefully. Back away from the cliff and only
step in the exact same spots you did getting here," Ryan continued in a
deceptively calm voice. His heart was pounding in his chest, and
suddenly his palms were damp with sweat.
"What's wrong?" Dean asked, worried. His father looked so strange,
every muscle was straining, yet he was poised as if in the middle of
walking.
Not daring to even turn his head, Ryan spoke to the ocean. "I just
stepped on a land mine."
Chapter Two
Dropping the Uzi, J.B. lay flat on his belly and crawled closer to
the motionless man. Gently parting the autumn grass, he saw a low swell
in the soil under Ryan's boot.
"Dark night, you're right!" J.B. whispered. "Now stay calm, and
don't move. If it hasn't gone off yet, it's not a TD or fire-string."
"Explain that to me later." Ryan
felt the ground give slightly under his weight. "Hurry.
The cliff is giving way."
Sliding his knife from its sheath, J.B. started quickly trimming
away the grass and soon had a clear view of the mechanism. It was a fat
disk with handles and a low cylinder rising from the middle topped with
a simple pressure switch.
"Everybody get behind the LAV," J.B. ordered. "It's a Bouncing
Betty."
Watching where they stepped, the others retreated to a safe distance
and climbed back into the LAV.
"Hope the hull will stop a Betty," Krysty said, as she flipped up
the driver's hatch and stood on the seat to see outside.
Doc climbed into the turret and did the same with the auxiliary
hatch. Dean wiggled up there with him and squinted into the distance at
the men on the cliff.
"What's a Betty?" the boy asked nervously.
Bent over, watching through a blaster port, Mildred said, "The worst
type of land mine," she replied. "If any of the damn things can be
called good. This type will blow off your father's leg with the first
explosion, then a secondary charge will heave the mine a yard into the
air and a third charge will spray out a ring of steel bearings. Cut a
dozen men in two at fifty yards. It's designed not to kill, but to
maim."
"Gotta be Overton," the boy growled, his hand going white on the rim
of the hatch. "Who else has predark weapons like that?"
Krysty glanced at the turret. "Agreed. We walked straight into a
trap. This was the perfect location to recce the ruins of Shiloh, and
they knew it. Those blue shirts of his must have gambled we would go
check the place and planted some mines here just in case."
"Bastards!" Jak spit.
"Clever bastards," Mildred corrected, licking dry lips.
Minutes passed with only the steady ocean wind blowing over the
field, and J.B. cursing as he worked on the mine.
"Well?" Ryan asked, his heart pounding in his chest. The Deathlands
warrior had faced death a hundred times, but this was unclean somehow,
cowardly. They sometimes used booby traps, but they were always
designed to kill enemies, not mutilate. Was this revenge for what he
had done to Overton? No, that made no sense. It was impossible for them
to know who would step on the mine. Just the luck of the draw it was
him, nothing more.
"Don't rush me," J.B. whispered, probing the mechanism with homemade
tools—a coiled spring from a pen and a piece of stiff wire from a coat
hanger.
Sweat trickling down his face, Ryan thought of how he sometimes
teased J.B. about the oddball bits of junk the Armorer gathered in
their journeys. He would never do that again.
Wiping off his face with the back of a hand, J.B. grunted something
to himself and finally stood alongside the trapped man.
"Well, old buddy, I've got good news and bad news," J.B. said while
drawing his scattergun and working the pump action, ejecting live
shells until it was empty. "I can get you free, and the primary charge
won't go off."
Ryan knew what that meant. "But the other two will."
The man nodded as he slid in fresh shells, simple buckshot instead
of the usual flesh-shredding alloy flechettes. "So when you move,
hit the ground to get under the spray."
"And the scattergun is going to buy us some yardage." It wasn't a
question.
J.B. lay on his belly and aimed the S&W M-4000 at Ryan's
partially raised combat boot. "Best idea I got. You ready?"
An insane laugh bubbled up from inside and Ryan couldn't stop
himself from chuckling. "I have a choice?"
"Nope."
"Then I'm ready. Now." Moving like lightning, Ryan dived to the left.
He was still airborne when the ground burst apart with a soft thump
and the deadly mine leaped skyward. Instantly, J.B. triggered the
scattergun, the blast slamming the land mine far over the edge of the
cliff. Half a heartbeat later, the device violently detonated, and a
hissing sound filled the air from the passage of the bearings. The half
ring of trees along the clearing shook madly, leaves and branches
tumbling to the ground in a cascade of destruction, along with the
occasional bird and squirrel. Bloody
feathers and bits fur were all that remained of the minced bodies.
The reverberations of the blast echoed for a few moments, then
silence returned—dead silence without a bird singing or a cricket
chirping.
"Thanks," Ryan said as he rose from the ground.
"Easy as pie," J.B. said, standing and dusting off his clothes. The
Armorer kicked a clump of earth with his boot and watched it disappear
over the edge of the cliff. "However, if that had been a PMR-2, or a
Valamora…" He left the thought unfinished.
Ryan grunted in acknowledgment. "Let's go."
With extreme care, the two men retraced their steps to the APC,
watching the ground closely, placing the toe of each boot into the heel
mark of the footprint they made walking to the cliff. As they neared
the wag, Krysty stuck her head out of the top hatch and whistled
sharply. The men jerked their heads upward, and watched as she raised
an open hand with the fingers splayed, then closed it into a fist. She
then tapped her wrist twice with one finger.
"Company coming," J.B. whispered, working the bolt on his Uzi as
quietly as he could.
Ryan nodded, leveling his longblaster. "And fast. We better chance
running the last yards. Go!"
Sprinting forward, the men raced around the LAV. In the open
doorway, Mildred and Doc waited with weapons poised and stepped out of
the way as the two men scrambled inside just as they all heard the soft
noise of a gasoline engine from the trees.
"There were voices on the radio," Krysty announced from the driver's
seat as Ryan closed the aft doors and J.B. slammed home the locking
bolt. "Somebody must have heard the land mine go off and sent out sec
men on a recce."
"Kill the engines and play dead," Ryan directed, sliding the barrel
of his Steyr out a blaster port. "Let's see who it is before we do
anything. Jak, man the cannon. Dean, the chain gun."
Everybody moved quickly, and the rumblings of the diesel engines
died away just as a Hummer packed with armed men rolled into view
through the bushes. All of them were wearing blue shirts and carrying
AK-47 assault rifles. At the sight of the APC sitting in the field, the
driver slammed on the brakes, nearly losing several of the sec men.
"Hey, Sarge, is that one of our wags?" a blue shirt asked, puzzled.
"Shit, no! It's a bunch of ours put back together!" answered the
driver in horror.
"Ryan," a burly sec man cursed. Ammo belts for a machine gun were
draped across his chest like bandoliers, and he was cradling a massive
M-60 machine rifle. "It must be that bastard Ryan."
"Cawdor? Black dust, let's get the fuck out of here before he
returns!"
"Yeah, sure," the driver said, lifting a rocket launcher into view
from the empty front seat. "Let's blow it to hell first."
As the sec man leveled the rocket launcher, a sharp crack came from
the APC and he toppled over with most of his head gone, blood
everywhere. The LAW hit the dirt and rolled away into the weeds.
The big sergeant pushed the dead man from the Hummer and, loudly
grinding gears, he slammed the Hummer into reverse. The blue shirts
behind him wildly fired their assault rifles, the 7.62 mm rounds
ricocheting harmlessly off the hull of the APC.
"Alive?" Jak asked, jerking back the arming bolt on the belt-fed
cannon.
"Fuck them," Ryan snarled, firing his longblaster out the aft
blaster port again.
Jak ripped loose with a string of shells just as the Hummer charged
backward out of the clearing, the barrage of rounds tearing apart the
spot where it had just been.
"Can't let them get away!" J.B. growled, burping the Uzi. "We could
have an army after us next time!"
"Hold on!" Krysty cried, and the LAV rolled after the fleeing Hummer
in full reverse.
Once past the bushes, the woman jammed on the brakes and jerked the
steering levers hard. The heavy APC wheeled around in a sharp turn and
paused. There was some dust hanging in the air from the passage of the
Hummer, but no sign of the vehicle itself.
"Where are they?" Krysty asked, squinting through the tiny ob port
in the armored hull. The overgrown roadway stretched to the south and
north, directly ahead of the copse of trees.
Ryan and the others pressed their faces to the ob ports and blaster
ports. The billowing dust obscured the fields and trees in every
direction.
"Three o'clock!" Mildred shouted. "They just went around that bend
in the road."
Krysty pressed the gas pedal to the floor. The big Detroit engines
purred for a moment, building power, then awoke with a roar. Their
eight wheels spun crazily in the loose dirt, then the five-ton wag
leaped after the enemy. Grabbing stanchions, Ryan climbed forward to a
position near Krysty. He braced one hand against the low ceiling,
while the other gripped the back of her chair for support. He swayed
with every bounce, but remained standing. Ryan watched the speedometer
steadily climb to fifty-five, then inch toward sixty mph, nearly the
top speed for the predark wag. He also saw the fuel gauge drop just as
fast. They were burning fuel at an unprecedented rate. There had been
no chance to fill the tanks before the chase, and soon the LAV would
run out of juice, becoming a perfect target for the rockets of the blue
shirts.
For the hundredth time, the man wondered where the blues were
getting their predark weapons.
In triumph, J.B. cried out, "There they are again!"
The Hummer barreled along at its top speed, often going airborne for
a moment as it hit fallen logs and other hidden objects. With twice the
number of tires, the massive LAV plowed over such minor obstructions
with only minor jarring. On the flat surfaces, the Hummer started to
pull away, but when the road got rough again, the LAV caught up quickly.
Jak fired single rounds from the 25 mm cannon at the zigzagging
Hummer. He was tempted to go full-auto, but the linked belt of shells
was already half consumed and there was no spare. He wasn't going to
waste the precious ammo on a fast-moving target unless absolutely
necessary.
Crouched in the small space for the gunner, Dean drilled a spray of
rounds toward the fleeing blues, sparks off the Hummer registering
several hits. The enemy fired back with AK-47 machine guns, a hail of
rounds peppering the armored hull of the APC with no effect. Then the
big M-60 spoke, chugging out a slow stream of 7.62 mm rounds. Random
dents appeared in sections of the weakened hull, and the Plexiglas
shield in a ob port shattered into pieces.
"Those are armor-piercing rounds!" Ryan cursed, glancing about the
interior of the wag to access the damage. There were no new spots of
sunlight to indicate a penetration. "Anybody hurt?"
Hugging her med kit, Mildred looked over the crew. "No blood
showing," she reported in relief.
"Not yet, anyway," J.B. growled, slapping a fresh clip into his Uzi.
"But we better chill these bastards quick!"
Hesitating to use the deafening LeMat inside the wag, Doc grabbed a
spare AK-47 and started shooting through the starboard blaster port,
spent brass spitting from the ejector in short golden bursts. But after
only a dozen rounds, the weapon stopped with the bolt thrown back,
showing the clip was empty.
Raking the Hummer with sporadic bursts, Dean concentrated the
whining chain gun on the sec man with the M-60. Sparks flew off the
armored body of the military transport, but nothing more. The 7.62 mm
rounds were unable to achieve penetration.
"Aim for the tires!" Mildred suggested, placing her shots with care.
Clutching his chest, the big man in the Hummer cried out and dropped
the M-60 over the side.
"Already did," the boy replied hotly. "Must be puncture proof like
our own."
Rummaging in the pile of supplies, Doc was unable to locate any more
ammo clips for the Kalashnikov, so he dropped the useless blaster and
drew the LeMat, waiting for a suitable target to present itself.
Just then, the Hummer deliberately slowed, and a lone man jumped
out, carrying a short plastic tube. As the APC bore down on the man, he
extended the tube to a full yard in
length and pointed it toward them.
"That's a LAW!" Krysty shouted in warning, starting to fishtail the
wag to make them harder to hit.
"Hold us steady!" Ryan spit, thrusting his longblaster out the
smashed ob port and firing a fast five times at the stationary target.
The sec man staggered from the multiple impacts and toppled over.
Promptly, there was a bright flash on the ground and something streaked
across the road to disappear in the distance.
As the APC thumped over the body, Ryan quickly reloaded his rifle.
That rocket would have blown the APC apart, but the blues couldn't use
the antitank while still riding in the Hummer because of the
back-blast. Launching a LAW rocket spewed a fifteen-foot-long cone of
flame out the back end. The back-blast would have fried every one of
them alive. Leaving the wag had been a gutsy move that nearly
succeeded. Their adversaries had guts, and that alone made them truly
dangerous.
In a deafening explosion, Doc fired the LeMat. The buffeting
concussion slapped the companions, but the spare gas can strapped to
the side of the Hummer erupted into a fireball. Screaming in pain, the
blues beat at their burning clothing with jackets, and Krysty plowed
straight into the pool of fire, coming out the other side in a
heartbeat. The blues weakly began shooting again. They were toasted,
but still alive, and the Hummer wasn't seriously damaged.
One of the blues threw a lump at the APC, and the war wag shook as
something exploded under the prow.
"Chem gren," J.B. stated, tilting his head. "We better hope they
don't have any thermite. That would melt our hull like
candle wax!"
"Payback," Jak growled, switching the selector switch on the cannon
to its top position. A stuttering stream of shells chugged from the
muzzle, the barrage of 25 mm rounds tearing up the surface of the road
as he tracked the fleeing vehicle.
Stoically, the sec men maintained fire with the Kalashnikovs as
their blackened wag darted off the road and into a field of wild corn.
The tall stalks swallowed the vehicle whole.
Inside the wag, the floor was coated with hot brass shells that
poured from the turret. Her hair a wild corona, Krysty shifted levers,
and the LAV executed a sharp turn, two of the wheels leaving the ground
as it angled after the fleeing blues into the abandoned farmland.
Straight ahead was a solid wall of sundried corn stalks. There was no
sign of the Hummer or its crew. Behind them, the fire on the road was
starting to spread to the dry plants.
"Where are they?" Krysty demanded as the APC plowed through the wild
corn, crushing the brittle stalks beneath its tires. It sounded like a
million winter leaves rustling in a strong wind.
Ryan dropped the spent clip from his SIG-Sauer and slammed in a
fresh one. "Circle to the right. We must have passed them."
"Look for the smashed stalks of their trail!" Mildred added.
J.B. started for the rear of the wag. "Everybody keep a watch for
any loops! They might try to swing around and get behind us!"
Unexpectedly, the shortwave radio lashed on top of their bedrolls
began to crackle with a transmission, the words barely discernible
above the background noise. There were just a few hastily barked
commands, then hissing silence again.
Stepping close, Doc turned up the volume to the maximum. The normal
static boomed in the confines of the wag, and after a few moments he
lowered the volume to its normal level.
"They're trying to call somebody for help," he announced. "Most
disconcerting."
"Can we tell which way? Triangulate on the signal?" Mildred asked
hopefully.
Still watching their wake, J.B. shook his head. "Not without special
equipment. Dish antenna and such."
"Damn."
"They had to be close," Ryan said thoughtfully, shifting his stance
against the shaking of the floor. "Krysty, go left!"
The woman obeyed and the signal faded.
"Go back!"
She sent the APC as ordered and cried out in delight as they found
the path of flattened plants. Hitting the gas pedal, Krysty steered the
massive transport straight along the slim trail, the unbroken stalks on
either side spraying into the air from the passage of their much wider
vehicle.
As they followed a serpentine curve through the corn, the Hummer
came into view once more. Struggling with the hot breech of the chain
gun, Dean fed in a new ammo belt. At his father's command, he raked the
Hummer. A blue shirt loading his blaster cried out and dropped the
weapon, almost falling from the Hummer. The others hauled the corpse
back inside, and used the dead man as a shield, firing from behind his
bloody form. Then a bulky satchel came flying over the Hummer from the
front seat and landed squarely before the LAV.
"Shit!" Krysty shouted, and yanked on the steering levers, sending
the LAV into the unbroken stalks to their left.
The world seemed to shatter from the titanic force of the
detonation, blinding light flooding in through every port, and the war
wag shook as it was slapped by the gigantic concussion. Ropes holding
the supplies snapped and the piles of boxes toppled over, burying J.B.
and knocking Jak out of the turret. He hit the floor sprawling and went
limp.
The crackling radio clearly gave a report to somebody about a
satchel charge of C-4 being used, results unknown.
"I'll give you unknown," Krysty growled, shifting into high gear and
making the massive machine go faster.
The dry cornstalks shattered as the APC streaked across the field,
the big engines screaming. The muscles stood out on Krysty's arms as
she worked the levers, forcing the multiton wag into a tight arc,
swinging back the way they had just come. A few seconds passed, and she
spied a dark blotch moving amid the cornstalks directly ahead of them.
"Go for it," Ryan commanded, and braced for the impact.
Grimly, Krysty held the course. At the last moment, the driver saw
them suddenly looming close and screamed in horror. Then the Hummer
disappeared from sight below the prow of the LAV. The companions lost
their footing as the nose of the war wag went high, aiming toward the
sky. Underneath the floor was a terrible crunching noise, mixed with
high-pitched shrieking. The APC tilted at an angle, almost flipping
over, then leveled out and was back in the corn again, riding on even
ground.
Braking to a halt, Krysty returned to the crash site and stopped a
short distance from the flattened wreck. Stepping from the rear of the
APC, the companions approached the destroyed Hummer, warily walking
over the crushed cornstalks to avoid the pieces of broken machinery and
twitching meat.
Gore-splattered limbs jutted from the smashed chassis, red blood and
gasoline dripping from a dozen spots. An eye lay on the ground near the
splintery stock of a Kalashnikov. Shards of glass from the windshield
were sprinkled across the cornstalks like diamond
dust. Circling around the site, Ryan found a sec man dangling out of
the
crumpled metal, still struggling to get free in spite of the fact his
body was shredded below the waist. "Help me…" he panted, blood welling
from his mouth at the words and dribbling down his chin.
"I'll end the pain," Ryan said, going closer, a hand on his blaster.
"Just tell me where your home base is. Who is your leader?" There were
more questions he wanted to ask. A lot more. But those were the most
important—where and who. "H-help me…"
"Where is your home base!" the warrior demanded. Drooling blood, the
man blindly reached out a trembling hand with only two remaining
fingers.
"He can't hear you," J.B. said, resting his Uzi on a shoulder.
Ryan turned. "Mildred?" The physician shook her head. "Fair enough."
Drawing his blaster, Ryan put a 9 mm round into the dying soldier. The
man jerked at the impact and went still.
"Let's go," Ryan said, holstering the piece. "There's nothing here
to salvage."
Doc sniffed the air. "And we had best hurry, my dear Ryan. I think
the cornfield is on fire."
"Yeah," Dean said from the turret, squinting into the distance. "And
it's coming this way fast."
Chapter Three
Moving quickly past the remnants of the Hummer, the companions
climbed into the APC and took seats. Settling in, Doc began the lengthy
process of reloading his LeMat, while Mildred checked on the
unconscious Jak. The teen was lying on a bedroll, a wet compress on his
bruised forehead. He had received a small concussion from a falling
ammo box, but otherwise seemed undamaged.
"Let's go," Ryan said, slamming home the bolt. "This corn is burning
fast as a fuse."
Starting the engines took a few tries, but Krysty finally got the
diesels to turn over. A slight shudder was detectable in the floor as
she struggled to slide the stick shift into neutral.
As the wag rumbled forward, a nasty grinding noise came from the
engine. It became steadily louder.
"Fireblast, we do have damage!" Ryan cursed. "Must have been that
damn satchel charge. No chance to fix it now. Keep going!"
Fluttering his eyelids, Jak tried to speak and began to cough.
Dampening a cloth with water from a canteen, Mildred turned to the
youth and saw gray tendrils of smoke rising from the nearby vents.
Dropping the canteen, she tried to slide the vent covers closed, but
they were firmly jammed in place. Muttering curses her minister father
wouldn't have approved, the physician grabbed some more rags from the
pile and started stuffing the openings closed. Dean rushed to assist
and, working at opposite ends of the craft, they got the larger holes
sealed. That helped, but not much. Wisps still seeped into the vehicle
around the doors and hatches.
"Get moving!" Mildred barked, splashing more water on the rags to
keep them wet. "We have to get out of this or risk suffocation!"
"I'm worried about that," Ryan answered, placing a palm on the hull.
The metal was still cool to the touch. "It's the external fuel cans.
Those flames get too close and we ignite like a bomb."
"Drop them," J.B. stated, snatching another duffel bag from the
loose items on the floor. Yanking open the top, he began tossing in
food packs and spare ammo in case they were forced to abandon the LAV
to run for their lives. He might be mistaken, but the engines sounded
bad, and seemed to be getting worse by the second.
Ryan forced his attention away from the struggling engines. "Can't
lose the fuel. We're going to need every drop to reach the next Shiloh.
We're low as it is. Worst comes, we can always cut the cans loose."
"Might have to!" Krysty shouted. As she peered out the broken ob
port, smoke stung her eyes and made them water. "The fire is keeping us
from the road, and I can't see a thing through this bastard corn. Gone
wild, this stuff could stretch for miles. Which direction do we go,
north or south?"
Restraining a cough, Ryan gestured. "Doc, you're the tallest. Get
into that turret and guide us!"
"With the greatest pleasure." As the old man holstered his blaster
and clambered into the turret, J.B. passed up his Navy telescope.
Forcing back the top hatch, Doc tied a handkerchief to his mouth as
protection from the thickening smoke, then extended the antique
instrument to its full length.
"Forest to the right, ocean to the left," he loudly announced,
studying the golden field. "The corn goes for another mile and then
seems to abruptly stop. There might be a dip in the ground!"
"Or another cliff," Krysty added, working the clutch and throttle
trying to smooth out the engine vibrations.
Bending at the knees, Doc stooped back inside and dogged the hatch
shut. "Indeed, madam." He coughed to clear his throat. "Our choices are
exceedingly poor."
"The fire is closer," Dean said from the aft doors, a note of
tension in his voice. "I can see flames over the top of the cornstalks."
In spurts, the LAV straggled to roll through the ancient farmland,
the dry plants bending slowly out of their way, then rising intact
again as the APC crept along.
Studying the motion of the billowing smoke, Ryan made his decision.
"The wind is from the sea, going toward the cliff. Head for the trees."
Her prehensile hair coiled protectively against her scalp, Krysty
stomped on the gas pedal. "Do my best," she muttered, mentally sending
a prayer to Gaia to aid them once more this day.
Behind them, thick plumes of black smoke masked the horizon, wild
tongues of orange flame rising to fill the sky with hellish
illumination as the rapidly growing inferno raged completely out of
control.
ON THE OTHER SIDE of a distant mountain range, a small child
stumbled through a lush field of green grass. It had been early morning
since her mother left to gather wood for their campfire, and now it was
late afternoon. Susie was trying not to cry, but she was hungry and
dared not eat the dead squirrel before the greenish meat was cooked.
That was how her daddy had died so many months ago. She missed him so
much, and often awoke crying from bad dreams, seeing him thrash about
foaming at the mouth until her mommy cut his throat. Susie never wanted
to eat meat after that, but it was the only food they had. She had
tried grass, but it tasted nasty and too much made her bad sick.
"Mommy?" she called out softly, hugging a bundle of rags. Her dolly
had once had a head, but it was long ago. "Mommy, where are you?"
Only the whispery winds in the trees answered.
Following a bear path through the woods, the tearful child watched
the prickly bushes for signs of muties that might attack, clutching her
doll for protection. She was supposed to run away from strangers and
animals, but if something was hurting her mommy, Susie would kill it
dead with the sharp knife hidden inside her dolly. Oh, yes, she would.
Daddy had showed her how.
A strange sound caught her attention, and she headed in that
direction. Pushing her way through some vines, the girl cried out in
delight at finding a bush still heavy with summer berries. Odd that the
bear hadn't eaten them, but this would mean more meat for her mommy to
eat! That should make her so happy. Greedily, Susie stuffed her face
with the mushy blueberries, rivulets of purple juice flowing down her
chin, until she thought her belly might burst. It felt so good not be
hungry again, if only for a little while.
Taking one last handful, the child curiously walked through the
trees munching steadily. The weird noise came again, louder this time,
and there were faint voices—men talking and shouting.
Susie started to run and shout for her mother, but stopped. People
were dangerous, even the right ones without extra arms and such.
Sometimes they tried to eat you, or worse, her mother had warned. Susie
carefully obeyed the warning, even though she wasn't sure what could be
worse than getting eaten by a nasty mutie.
More voices came through the forest, and the crack of a whip. That
sound she knew from when they stayed at a ville and the sec men beat a
man to death for stealing a blaster from the baron. It was a very bad
thing to do because blasters were only for sec men, or barons. Her
mommy wouldn't let her watch the beating, but Susie heard the whips,
and it seemed to take forever for the poor thief to die. Her daddy said
it was a good thing he got chilled. Thieves were worse than muties
because muties didn't know any better.
Wiping her hands clean on her ragged dress, Susie followed the faint
voices through the foliage until coming to the top of a steep hill.
Filling the valley below was a wonderful ville, unlike anything she had
ever seen before. There were houses made of brick, and many, many
people, some in chains and others herding them forward with whips. More
thieves? A squat building near a river had six big chimneys with black
smoke pouring into the purple sky. Thick rope stretched from the
building to a machine, then spread out across the ville like a
spiderweb. A tremendous bowl sat in the middle of the ville, the huge
white machine towering over the tall chimneys and casting the land
underneath into dark shadows.
More people were digging into the side of a rocky hill, chained
thieves dragging stone blocks over to a wall they were building around
the whole area. A wall of stone. Susie was in awe. She had never seen
such a thing before. It was wonderful! Certainly no mutie or mean old
coldheart could get through that. Well, except for sting-wings, and
they were little.
"Hold it right there, kid!" an adult voice growled.
Still holding her doll, Susie turned and looked up at the two big
men standing in the weeds. They were wearing clean blue shirts and
carrying longblasters. The tall man had a bushy beard, and the other
was short and fat.
"Hello, sec men," she said, giving a curtsy. Her mommy said to
always be polite to sec men, or they would tell the baron on you. "I'm
looking for my mommy. Have you seen her?"
"Oh, crap. This must be that bitch's kid," the tall man growled
irritably. "I was hoping she would run away and get lost or something."
"Well, she didn't," his companion snapped, doing something to his
weapon. "And you know what that means."
Frightened, Susie stayed still as the adults argued. When the sec
men were done, mebbe they could help her. She thought about offering
them some berries, but only had a few and wanted to save them for her
mommy.
The tall man scratched at his beard. "Come on, Sarge. She's too
small to work in the mines."
"And we can't let her go. No exceptions, or it's our necks. That's
what the boss said." The short man aimed his longblaster at her. She
hugged her doll tight, feeling very scared for some reason. Susie
wanted to run, but knew they could catch her easy.
"Aw, she's just a kid!" He sounded very angry for some reason.
"Not any more."
The blaster fired once, the sharp report seeming to echo through the
forest and into the valley where the giant machine stood poised and
nearly ready to be activated.
WIPING AT THE DIRTY windshield with his hand, Stephen stared at the
blockhouse ahead of the caravan and frowned in displeasure. In a squeal
of metal on metal, he ground the rickety old van to a halt. In slow
procession, the two trucks behind the rusty wag also stopped, the
drivers fumbling with the unfamiliar brakes and gearshifts.
Chewing a lip, Stephen rested his arms on top of the steering wheel.
Straight ahead was a fork in the road, the left branch going to some
nameless pesthole ville, the right heading directly toward Front Royal.
Strategically positioned between the branches was a stout blockhouse
made of whole logs cemented together into a formidable structure.
Blaster slots were notched into the thick walls, the only door fronted
by a half circle of sandbags a full yard high. A dozen sec men armed
with blasters stood behind the sandbags watching him sitting in the
lead wag, but that wasn't what made Stephen so apprehensive. It was
their clothes. They were wearing the wrong clothes.
Setting the parking brake with a yank, Stephen stared at the leader
of the sec men as he came closer. The rest of the troopers stayed where
they were, their longblasters held casually, but with their fingers on
the triggers. They weren't expecting any trouble, just ready for it.
From previous trips, Stephen knew there were more sec men hidden in the
trees to give additional support should the need arise. This fork was a
major approach to the ville and was always well-defended.
It was the shirts that bothered him. The material was brown, not the
blue of Overton's private army. What had happened in Front Royal during
his absence?
As the sergeant stopped well away from the van, Stephen rolled down
the window and managed to smile, politely keeping both of his hands in
plain sight. He had a revolver at his hip, and a shotgun was clipped to
the ceiling. But the slightest move toward either of those weapons
would probably be the last thing he ever did.
"Hey," the sec man said in greeting.
Stephen nodded. "Good morning, sir. How much?"
Hooking thumbs into his gun belt, the sergeant snorted a laugh.
"That's all done with. No more tolls on this road by order of Baron
Cawdor."
Something was wrong here; Stephen knew it and took a chance.
"Cawdor?" he asked, trying to sound puzzled. "I thought the baron here
was named Overton."
A sneer replaced the smile. "He's dead. Got chilled by his own
troops. Nathan Cawdor is the rightful baron here."
Dead? So the invasion failed. Sweat broke out over Stephen's body as
he smiled to the news. "Great! I heard Overton was a real son of a
bitch."
"Pretty bad," the sec man agreed, looking at the line of trucks.
"All three of these wags belong to you?"
"Yeah, we caravan through the hills together. Safer that way, you
know, muties and coldhearts."
The smile returned, but not with much warmth. "I hear you. Much
trouble in the passes?"
"No. A few stickies, nothing more. We travel at night when it's too
cold for anybody to try jacking us."
"Pretty smart." The smile stayed, but the eyes became hard. "What's
the cargo?"
Stephen started to say wire, but stopped himself. For some reason
Overton had wanted insulated cable from predark buildings and lots of
it Who knew why? Mebbe he wanted to electrify all of Front Royal. Yeah,
right. Few villes were able to sustain a constant supply of
electricity. Most folks considered it a myth. And there was no chance
that Nathan would want the cable for the same purpose as Overton. But
what else could copper wiring be used for? An answer was needed
immediately, and Stephen surprised himself by dredging up a vague
memory of a phrase he heard somewhere.
"Refined metal," he lied smoothly. "For making jacketed bullets."
The sec man looked properly impressed. "Plus, a few passengers."
"Muties?"
"Norms, I assure you."
Narrowing his eyes, the sergeant seemed skeptical. "How many?"
"Ten."
"Any skilled workers, carpenters, masons?"
"Hell, I have no idea," Stephen answered honestly. "You'd have to
ask them."
"Mebbe I will. Any jolt or weed?"
"I don't traffic in drugs," Stephen snapped, then hastily added,
"sir."
The sec man chuckled. "Saved yourself a hanging here, friend. You
must have been here before."
The words were so matter-of-fact, Stephen almost admitted the truth.
Only a lifelong habit of lying stopped him. So the sec men were looking
for folks who dealt with Overton, eh? That news could be worth
something to a smart man.
"Nope," he replied amiably. "The last owner sold me his wags for
some predark medicine I found in a ruin. He had the bleeding cough and
was dying."
A minute passed, with the sergeant studying the expression on
Stephen's face.
"It was a fair trade," Stephen added hastily, as if cutting off an
expected argument. "He lived."
The sec man made no reply.
Stephen knew this was another test to rattle his nerves, so he tried
to appear frightened, which was easy, and slightly confused. Innocent
folks always seemed to be confused.
"Nothing else?" the man asked. The guards at the blockhouse were
watching the exchange, their blasters pointing toward the caravan. From
a truck behind him, Stephen heard one of the other drivers nervously
cough, the noise unnaturally loud in the tense silence.
"Okay, okay, I'm also hauling shine," Stephen admitted, ever so
slowly lifting a clay jug into view. There was a cross of tape on the
side patching a small crack. "Good stuff, mighty smooth."
"Nothing wrong with hauling shine," the sergeant said tersely, a
hand going to the checkered grip of the blaster on his hip. "If it's
clean. An outlander sold some to us once that killed two of my men and
made another go blind. Took us a week to find him again, then it took
him a week to die."
Wordlessly, Stephen uncorked the jug and took a long pull. The
home-brew whiskey burned his gullet like flaming battery acid, but he
managed not to gag.
"Have a sip," he said hoarsely, offering the jug. "Good for what
ails you."
Grinning, the sergeant started to reach for the container, then
glanced at the blockhouse. "Thanks anyway, but it's not allowed," he
said sternly, lowering his hand. "The baron forbids drinking on duty."
"A wise policy," Stephen agreed, placing aside the jug. "Smart man."
"That he is." The sergeant turned toward the cabin and tugged on an
earlobe, then dusted off his shoulder. The guards relaxed and slung
their blasters. A few started smoking hand-rolled cigs.
"Okay, here are the rules," the sergeant said, speaking in an odd
singsong way as if quoting from memory. "There ain't no jolt or slaves
in Front Royal. Anybody says different is lying. Stealing gets you
whipped, rape gets you hanged. Stay on the road. There are land mines
in the fields. Watch out for cougars, we've had some killings at the
farms. You spot anybody wearing a blue shirt, avoid them like a mutie
with the plague. Report finding a blue, and you get a reward.
Understand?"
"Sure. A blue shirt?"
"That's what I said." The soldier waved the van onward. "Welcome to
Front Royal."
Starting the engine, Stephen touched two fingers to his forehead,
and the sergeant actually snapped a formal salute in return. Once the
road took the blockhouse out of sight, Stephen braked to a halt and
climbed from the van. As he stiffly walked over to the first truck, the
driver stuck his head out the window. The glass was long gone, replaced
by a sheet of tar paper to help cut the wind.
"What now, fatty?" the muscular man snarled. Dressed in badly cured
animal skins, he reeked of rotting flesh enough to mask the sour stink
of his unwashed body. In the front seat alongside him was a skinny
woman snoring loudly, a chicken bone from dinner sticking out of her
slack mouth.
"Taking a leak," Stephen said, strolling into the forest. "Be right
back."
The moment he was hidden by the bushes, Stephen bent over and
violently retched, the shine burning much worse coming out than it had
going in. When he was finished, Stephen wiped off his mouth with some
leaves and weakly stumbled to the van. Starting the engine with
fumbling hands, he continued driving toward the ville.
Okay, Overton was dead; now he would work for Nathan Cawdor. Fine.
Barons were all the same, murdering coldhearts who lived on blood. Only
their names changed. And if Nathan was a good man, well, then, he could
always travel north to BullRun ville and work for the mad bitch in
charge up there. She kept a mutie assassin to chill her enemies. That
was more reasonable. But either way, he would stay in business, finding
things for the monsters who ruled the world. Life would go on without
interruption.
Stephen was a survivor.
THE SOUND OF HAMMERING filled the streets and houses of Front Royal,
along with the steady sawing of wood.
Watching the work across the ville, Baron Nathan Cawdor stood on the
third floor of the destroyed keep, the shattered brick walls rising
only to his knees. At the base of the keep, workers picked through the
rubble, salvaging individual bricks and cleaning them off to add to the
growing pile.
A few blocks away, scaffolding rose around the ville castle like
loving hands, holding the weakened walls in place until the sloping
supports could be trusted to hold the awesome weight of the new granite
blocks.
Day and night, the construction continued, repairing the tremendous
damage done by the invaders. The bodies were gone from the streets,
the damaged cobblestones in the main courtyard replaced with fresh
ones. The new horse stable was only a wooden skeleton, the horses
temporarily housed in the great hall of Castle Cawdor.
Nathan shivered slightly from a cold wind. His clothes were patched
but spotlessly clean, the boots shiny with polish. Oiled blasters rode
at each hip, and a monstrously huge .44-caliber Desert Eagle pistol
rested in a position of honor in a shoulder holster. The weapon had
been pried from the cold gray hand of Overton as he lay sprawled in the
mud.
"Afternoon, my husband," a lovely woman said, advancing with a cape
folded over an arm. Her long hair was tied back off her plain face, and
a knit scarf was wound about her throat, accenting her pale skin. She
wore a long coat over a loose gown of royal brown, and heavy pants
peeked out from below the pleated skirt. An Ingram M-10 submachine gun
had been slung over her shoulder for easy access.
Lady Tabitha Cawdor walked toward her husband and offered him the
garment. "It's too cold for you to be standing here without a coat."
"Do our sec men have coats?" Nathan replied wearily, watching the
armed guards walk the palisades of the walled ville. Many had tied
blankets around their bodies with lengths of rope as protection from
the
wind. Others wore less and shivered. "Do the workers below, do the old?"
Gently, Tabitha brushed a hand against the baron's scarred cheek.
Her fingernails were stubby and cracked, her hand covered with scabs,
the wounds still healing from her many days of torture. "No, my love,
they do not."
"Then while I stay here in public sight, neither do I," Nathan
answered. "If I can't make them warm, I can at least share the weather
and make them feel less miserable."
She glanced at the sky and drew her coat closed tighter. "Any sign
of snow?"
"Thankfully, no. Every day gets us closer to repairing the wall and
drawbridge. Once we're behind stone again, I can turn our attention to
fixing the homes and other buildings. How's the laundry coming?"
Tabitha almost smiled. Laundry, such a nice way of referring to
stripping the dead of their torn clothing. "The sewing is nearly done
on the shirts," she reported. "Next we dye the blue cloth brown, or
rather purple, as quickly as we can. In a few days, everybody will have
an extra shirt to wear. Then we start on the boots and pants. Come the
full moon, even the old will be warm."
"Good. And the food supply?"
"Adequate. With the hunters bringing in more meat daily, we should
survive until spring." She offered the coat again. "Please?"
"I can't."
Tabitha gestured at herself. "Yet I can?"
"You just gave birth," he said tolerantly. "They understand."
Pushing a wheelbarrow full of bricks, a man wearing rags for boots
paused to catch his breath in the street below and waved at the couple
standing high above the ville. Nathan stood taller and nodded in reply.
Flexing his hands to restore circulation, the worker returned to his
task and pushed the bricks toward the construction crew at the barbican
of the front gate.
"Is the baby healthy?" Nathan asked in sudden concern, taking his
wife by the arm. "Is that why you're really here?"
"Alexander is fine. Sleeping with his wet nurse, and a dozen sec
men," Tabitha added pointedly, patting his cold hand. She was too thin
and sickly to breast-feed the infant. However, many woman in the ville
had lost newborns in the terrible war, and it had been no problem to
find one willing to suckle the next baron.
"The guards are necessary. Overton tried using you to seize the
ville," Nathan growled, the tendons in his neck tightening from barely
controlled rage. "Our son would make an even better key."
"Your uncle's bastard son is dead," she reminded him, shivering in
spite of the warmth of her coat.
"Besides," a new voice stated, "I'm here now."
The Cawdors turned at the pronouncement and watched as Clemont
Brigitine Turpin stepped into view from the exposed stone stairwell.
The grizzled soldier was dressed in heavy leather clothing, with an
Enfield longblaster slung across his wide back. Two bandoliers of ammo
crisscrossed his chest, the handle of a knife jutted from his boot and
a hatchet was slung at his side where a handblaster should have been.
"My dear Lieutenant Turpin," Tabitha said, smiling.
His broad features dusky with a growing beard, the big man scowled.
"Clem," he replied in a friendly manner. "Just Clem, my lady. I ain't
no royalty. Just a grunt."
"Chief of my sec men," Nathan corrected sternly, noting the other
man's serious expression. Few things bothered Clem, and most of those
got aced immediately. The big backwoodsman wasn't a believer in either
forgiveness or patience.
Just then a squad of sec men climbed out of the hole in the floor
where the stairs ended and moved quickly across the bare expanse of
concrete. Longblasters at the ready, the guards circled the Cawdors,
keeping close together. Every man carried an AK-47 salvaged from the
war, a bulging pouch of precious ammo clips slung over his side.
"What's the matter?" Nathan demanded. "Have more blues been found in
the woods?"
"Hell, no," Clem drawled, his thick accent slurring the words.
"Patrol finds them, they chill them. Don't need to bring that detail to
you. But there's a new problem, yeah. Our spy from Bull Run ville says
their baron believes you plan on invading them with the new troops that
arrived last month."
Softly, the mountain wind ruffled their clothing, finding bare skin
through every tiny lace hole and opening.
"But Overton's troops are dead."
"She don't know that."
"And she wouldn't believe us if we told her." Nathan glanced at the
handful of people working on the front gate. "We will have to move fast
if they're planning on attacking first. The ville can't withstand a
charge by blind rabbits at the moment. Not until that damn drawbridge
is repaired!"
"We can stop them," Clem stated confidently.
Nathan frowned. "Unless she's not sending her army, but just one
man. One thing, actually."
Clem furrowed his brow. "Y'all mean an assassin?"
"A mutie by the name of Sullivan." Nathan drew the Desert Eagle and
dropped the clip to examine the load. "Shitfire, I had heard the thing
was dead years ago. I once saw him rip the throat out of a griz bear on
a bet. Didn't even work up a sweat."
"Are you serious?" Tabitha asked, sounding frightened.
"Totally. He's a monster, and damn hard to kill. Many have tried and
failed. Sullivan drank their blood and mutilated the corpse for laughs."
Without speaking, Tabitha tucked her hands up the sleeves of her
coat, and they heard the soft metallic clack of a blaster's hammer
being cocked.
"I'll be in the nursery until further notice," she announced, and
strode toward the stairs.
"Stay with her!" Clem ordered, pointing, and half of the attending
sec men started after the woman. The rest clustered tighter around the
baron.
"Sullivan," Nathan muttered, checking the ammo in his snub-nosed .38
revolver. "This could be worse than Overton."
"Mebbe you should stay out of sight till I find this asswipe," Clem
suggested, sliding the Enfield off his shoulder and working the bolt.
"Direct the rebuilding from inside the castle, or mebbe the barracks?"
"I won't hide," Nathan answered brusquely, holstering the blaster.
"Besides, Sullivan is an expert at disguises. He can even mimic another
person's voice so that in the darkness you think it's them. Damnedest
thing. I heard that was how he chilled the last baron of Bull Run
castle."
"I could interrogate everybody new," Clem suggested. An assassin was
something novel to the hunter. Barroom brawls were more his kind of
fight.
Walking to the edge of the roof, Nathan gazed upon the hustling
ville. "Not necessary. Sullivan can use gloves and cosmetics to hid his
green skin, and wigs to cover his bald head, but there's one thing he
can't alter. His height. Take troops, ten-on-ten formation. The second
group stays away from the first to give cover fire. Then go through the
ville and strip naked anybody you find over six feet tall. Men and
women."
The remaining sec men murmured in apprehension.
"We'll also double-check any crips," Clem added. "Pretending you
don't have legs would be a good way to hide height."
Nathan nodded. "Consider anybody sitting a potential enemy, and be
ready to act."
"Oh, we'll capture him, Baron," a sec man stated confidently,
brandishing his blaster. "Have no fear of that!"
"Capture? Don't even try," Nathan retorted, turning away from the
ville. "When you find a bald man with greenish skin, chill him on
sight. Which means a head shot, one in each eye. Then set the body on
fire."
Then Nathan added softly, almost as if speaking to himself,
"Hopefully, that will be enough."
Chapter Four
Shuddering and clanking, the APC crept along the smooth shore of the
North Carolina river basin. The soft sand rose high, almost to the rims
of the seven tires. The eighth hung in tatters off the rim, flopping
about uselessly as the wag forged onward with ever decreasing speed.
With the tip of his knife, Ryan removed the damp rag from an ob port
and looked outside. On the horizon, black clouds filled the sky, and
orange flames licked upward from the raging inferno of the cornfield.
"Far enough?" Krysty coughed. The interior of the wag was misty with
smoke and reeked of pungent human sweat.
"Yeah," he decided. "We're a good mile clear of the cornfield. Stop
here and let's see how much of a wag we still have."
"Sure," Krysty grunted, fighting the clutch to shift into park. The
gear refused to cooperate, so she tried neutral and managed to kill the
engines. The cacophony from underneath the metal floor receded and
finally stopped.
Climbing into the turret, Doc threw open the top hatch, and cool
fresh air flooded into the APC. "Ah, ambrosia of the gods," he said,
inhaling deeply.
Fanning herself, Mildred sported a smile. "That's redundant."
"Yet still true, madam.
Pro veritas Libertas!"
Rising from his seat, J.B. pulled at the sticky clothes clinging to
his body. "I'm going to see what the damage is," he said, getting a
tool kit from a storage locker under the seat.
"I'll cover you," Ryan stated, removing a canteen from the wall.
"Krysty, prime the chain gun in case we get visitors. Doc, Dean, start
transferring the gas from the external cans to the fuel tank. Mildred,
Jak, you two stay right there. That was a hell of a knock you took."
"N-never better," the teenager whispered weakly from the floor,
moving his arm to expose the bloody bandage on his head. His normally
pale skin was flushed pink, his shirt damp with sweat. Mildred had
given the teen two aspirin for the pain, and checked the focus of his
vision. She said it had to do with concussions and brain damage.
"Glad to hear it," J.B. said, undogging the aft doors. '"Cause you
look half-dead."
"F-fuck you."
As J.B. exited the wag with Doc and Dean right behind, Ryan
exchanged a look with the physician.
Mildred nodded, waving him on. "Go fix this thing."
Stepping over the youth, Ryan took an AK-47 from a stack and checked
the blaster. There was a full clip in the breech, and he had a good
dozen loose rounds in his pants pocket. Climbing out, Ryan walked
around the wag checking for any signs of external damage.
The armor plating was dirty and scratched with blurry streaks from
where soft-lead bullets ricocheted off the hull. Blood was splattered
everywhere from the blue shirts they had crushed. While Dean stood
guard with his Browning in hand, Doc was busy untying the fuel cans
from the charred netting. On the ground, a pair of legs jutted from
underneath the vehicle and J.B. could be heard muttering curses to the
sound of metal hitting metal.
Resting the stock of the AK-47 on a hip, Ryan knelt in the sand.
"How's it look?" he asked.
"Found a busted axle," J.B. replied, "and we're definitely losing
oil and hydraulic fluid. Dark night, this thing is a mess!"
"What are the chances it'll carry us to the next Shiloh?"
"Considering what was done to this wag, it's a wonder the thing got
us here."
"Fireblast." Ryan glanced around. They were trapped with a dead wag
in the middle of nowhere. Not good. "Can you fix it?"
"Don't know, but I'll try. Only need four wheels to stay mobile."
"Good thing we have eight."
"Seven, but that should be enough."
"Need anything?" Ryan had great belief in the talents of the
Armorer. The man was a master gunsmith, an expert at booby traps and
could fix anything made of steel that rolled or floated.
"Some light would be great."
From a box strapped to the hull, Ryan retrieved an oil lantern. The
reservoir was half-full, more than enough. Igniting the wick with a
butane lighter, he trimmed the flame to something manageable and passed
the lantern under the APC.
"Thanks."
"No prob."
"My dear Ryan, would you suppose it safe enough for us to chance a
campfire?" Doc asked, passing a fuel can to Dean. "I fear we shall be
here through the night, and nobody could possibly notice our small
column of smoke amid that Dantean conflagration."
"Nights get cold. Be nice to have hot food," the boy added, hugging
the container with both arms. Setting the bottom of the can on his
belt buckle to help with the weight, Dean waddled around the wag with
his precious cargo.
Ryan nodded. "Keep it small."
An explosion sounded from the east, and Ryan spun about, his weapon
ready. A fireball rose skyward from the blanket of black clouds masking
the wildfire. Then the Deathlands warrior felt his heart race as a
small mushroom cloud formed above the cornfield, the sea winds
dissolving the eerie sight almost as soon as it formed.
Backing closer to the wag, Ryan listened to the crackle of static on
the radio, waiting to hear voices, but minutes passed in silence. It
had to have been some ammo cooking off from the heat. The way that
Hummer was bouncing around, the blues could have dropped any number of
weapon or grens.
"Gaia's demise," Krysty said unexpectedly from the turret Ryan
stared up at her. She seemed strangely tense and nervous. "What
was that you said?"
"Gaia's demise," she repeated. "The end of the world."
"Just rising smoke, lover," he said. "Any hot explosion will make a
mushroom cloud. Nothing special."
Staring at the distant fields of fire, Krysty made no reply, her
hands poised on the rapid-fire cannon, long hair billowing in the sea
breeze.
"Lend me a hand," Mildred called, climbing from the APC with an
arm load of boxes.
Shouldering his longblaster, Ryan took the top crate and found it
full of pots and pans. "The fire is just for warmth," he said gruffly.
"We shouldn't stay here longer than necessary."
"I'm not making dinner," Mildred replied, placing the box on the
ground and removing some glass jars. "Going to brew some coffee. Help
us stay sharp. Been a long day, and it's not over yet."
"Sounds good," he said, relenting, feeling his stomach respond to
the possibility of eating. Damn, he was a lot hungrier than he wanted
to admit.
"Mebbe we can break open a few of the MRE packs." he added. "Hunting
would be pointless. The fire will have scared away any game for miles."
Mildred lifted a silvery foil envelope into view. "Way ahead of you."
Taking a seat on a rock, Ryan balanced the AK-47 on his lap and
watched as she ripped open a package and spread out its contents,
carefully inspecting the smaller envelope of beef stew, another of
coffee, sugar, a log of processed cheese, crackers, salt, pepper,
chewing gum. The MRE food packs were Meals Ready to Eat, military
rations from long before skydark. The Mylar foil was chem proof and
airtight. If the packs were stored carefully, the condensed food would
last forever. But the tiniest pinhole could turn the chow into deadly
poison. They occasionally found a few MRE packs or
self-heats in the redoubts, and sometimes they were edible, but
more often they weren't. These came from Overton, and the foil was in
perfect condition, almost brand-new.
"Behold, madam," Doc announced, dropping a load of gnarled gray
sticks on the ground. "Driftwood a-plenty. Is this enough, or shall you
require more?"
"That's enough," Mildred announced, starting to whittle on a piece
of driftwood with her belt knife. She piled the shavings together and
carefully lit them with a single match. The flickering flame almost
died, then brightened and spread across the dry wood.
"There we go," she said, adding small sticks to the growing fire.
"Just need some water for the pot."
"I'll go get some," Dean offered, setting down the last fuel
container. "The wag is topped off."
"Fine. Get it from the basin," Mildred directed him, opening a
second envelope and pouring the contents into an iron pot. "The water
here is fresh, fed by the river, not salt."
"Be right back," the boy said. Grinning, he grabbed a bucket and
dashed around the APC.
Thrusting his stick into the hard packed sand, Doc squatted on his
heels. "Ah, the vigor of youth." He chuckled. "Pity it's wasted on the
young."
As Mildred fed the fire, Ryan watched the growing shadows,
maintaining a constant vigil. The moonlight on the water gave a clear
field of fire in case somebody approached by boat, or swam toward
shore. There was no smell of salt here. This water fed from several
inland rivers and flowed to the sea in a sort of natural harbor. The
light from the fire had nearly disappeared to the east, the shoreline
was empty for more than a mile to the south and dense forest was
to the north. It wasn't the best of spots for a camp, but good
enough for one night. Nobody could get close without being detected.
Carrying a brimming bucket, Dean returned to find Doc breaking
sticks of driftwood over his knee and adding them a piece at a time to
the crackling campfire. Mildred was already stirring a pot of stew, a
row of tin mess kits laid out with salt and forks. With his back to the
APC, his father stood guard, the AK-47 balanced in his hands.
"Over here," Ryan called.
The boy complied, and his father checked the water with a rad
counter. There was only the usual background reading. "Clean enough,"
he decided. "Better filter it anyway."
"Okay." Carefully, Dean poured the fluid through a clean piece of
cloth and filled a large coffeepot. Placing it next to the fire,
Mildred added a handful of crystals and soon the smell of beef stew and
coffee spread across the site, the campfire throwing shadows on the
aide of the APC as night slowly claimed the smoky Carolina sky.
"Hey, is that coffee I smell?" J.B. called out, wiggling the toe of
a combat boot.
"Sure is," Ryan answered. "Want some?"
"Pretty soon," he replied to the tune of metallic pounding. "Is
Krysty inside?"
"Yeah."
"Ask her to try the main engine."
"I heard," she replied from above. Climbing down from the turret,
the redhead took the driver's seat, turned the ignition and pumped the
gas pedal as the engine struggled to catch.
"Nothing," she shouted out the side blaster port. Only a slice of
the road was visible through the tiny slit, showing the legs of the
Armorer underneath the APC and Ryan standing near an open toolbox.
There was some more clanging. "Again!"
With little hope, Krysty turned the key and was astonished when the
big Detroit power plant roared into life, gray smoke puffing from the
louvered exhaust ports.
"Damn, I'm good," J.B. said from under the wag.
Turning off the engine, Krysty waited a few
moments, then turned it on again. She did this several times.
"We have an engine again," Krysty announced. "Runs smooth as silk."
"Good work," Ryan told J.B., giving the man a hand as he crawled out
into view.
Standing, J.B. placed the lantern aside. "No, not good news. 'Cause
engine is all we have." He was inspecting a shiny ring of metal.
"What's that?" Ryan asked curiously.
"A bearing cone."
Ryan moved closer. "Never saw one before."
"Folks aren't supposed to. These are sealed units and don't come
off, or apart."
"From the Hummer?" Mildred asked.
"No, it's ours and I found two more on the ground. That was the
grinding noise. The bearings are busted." J.B. placed some tools in the
kit and closed the box. "We took shrapnel damage from that satchel
charge. The minor engine is leaking coolant from a bad crack in the
block. I used some parts from the main engine to patch the second, so
we have lights and heat. But as for going anywhere, the wag might as
well be sunk in concrete. The transmission assembly is in pieces. Don't
know how we got this far."
The man began wiping his greasy hands with a rag soaked in fuel.
When most of the black was rubbed off, he walked to the campfire and
poured a cup of coffee. "This wag has definitely taken the last train
west."
"You sure?" Mildred asked.
J.B. sipped the coffee, holding the tin cup in both hands to savor
the warmth. "Oh, yeah."
"Triple red, people!" Ryan commanded, standing and working the bolt
on his AK-47. "The blues would be fools not to sweep this area on a
recce first chance they get. They
catch us standing here chatting, and it's the long sleep."
The tired expressions of the companions vanished in a heartbeat, and
they drew weapons.
"Dean, prep a LAW rocket," Ryan added brusquely.
The boy nodded and raced toward the APC.
Her boots ringing on the metal floor, Krysty walked through the APC
and sat in the doorway. Behind her, Jak lay snoring peacefully amid the
piles of supplies.
"Okay, so we walk out of here," Krysty said. "The question is where.
Do we continue on to Shiloh, or the closest redoubt?"
"Front Royal," Dean suggested, climbing into the wag. "We can get
another wag there."
"Doubtful," his father replied.
"Besides, my young friend, traveling anywhere on foot means we have
to leave most of the supplies behind," Doc stated. "A most dangerous
proposition. Too many weapons will slow us and get us chilled just as
fast as not enough."
"Maybe we could rig a litter," Mildred suggested.
"We're not leaving anything behind," Ryan announced. Kneeling by the
dying red embers of the campfire, he poured a cup of coffee and
drained it in a few gulps.
"And we're not walking, either," he stated. "J.B., let me see the
map."
Digging in his bag, the Armorer unearthed the folded plastic sheet
and passed it over. Carefully spreading the map on the ground near the
remains of the fire, Ryan flicked a butane lighter and read by the tiny
flame. Aside from blasters, he considered butane lighters the greatest
invention of the predark world. A hundred years later and the things
still worked.
"Look at this," he said, jabbing a finger at the map. "We can travel
by water. North Carolina is damn near split in half with this river
basin. We'll build a raft and row inland. Get us halfway to the next
Shiloh, and only about sixty miles south of the redoubt in Kentucky. We
can get more supplies and ammo there. Not much, but some."
"And then what?" Krysty asked.
He scratched an ear. "Don't know. We can try and buy a wag, or some
horses, from a local ville. Got more than enough spare blasters. And
even if we don't find anything, the basin will still carry us a week of
walking in two days."
"Upstream," the redhead stated.
"Flat water," J.B. corrected. "Easy stuff. No rapids or whitewater
falls."
"A raft," Doc said hesitantly, rubbing his chin. "Dubious, sir. Most
dubious."
Brushing back her beaded hair, Mildred looked up from the map. "We
can do it. We've built them before."
"Indeed, we have, madam. But a raft large enough to hold all of the
supplies? It would require two, maybe three, really big ones. Chopping
down that many trees will take us a week. Maybe more."
Suddenly, the chain gun roared into life, shattering the night. The
companions dived for cover, digging into the beach, their weapons
sweeping for targets, as a stuttering stream of 7.62 mm rounds sliced
across the landscape and started tearing apart a tree. Bark flew off
the trunk, splinters went everywhere, then there was a crack and the
oak dropped heavily to the ground. The chain gun stopped, followed by
ringing silence.
The top hatch swung open, and Dean rose into view. "We don't need
axes," the boy stated confidently. "We can shoot down all the logs we
want."
As he rose from the damp ground, Ryan's first reaction was fury,
until he realized the cold common sense of the matter. "Good work, son.
But next time, trim the top first, then cut out the bottom."
"Sure, Dad!"
"But the noise!" Mildred complained. "No, wait. Skip that. We need
to get the cutting done now, before scouts arrive."
"Exactly. And it makes no difference if we use all the ammo. Can't
haul the chain gun or the cannon along. Both are too heavy."
Tilting back his fedora, J.B. gave a twisted grin. "That 25 mm
cannon will level the forest in a few minutes. We'll have enough logs
for an armada of rafts."
"Even better," Ryan said. "Doc, we have enough rope?"
"Certainly, and sufficient canvas for tents."
The tents would cover the supplies on the raft and keep them dry,
and would hide exactly what the companions were hauling from observers.
Many folks would eagerly risk death for the chance of getting their
hands on a working blaster.
"Sounds good," Ryan decided. "Dean, cut more trees. Keep going till
I say stop. Doc, you're on sentry duty with me. Here!"
Doc caught the AK-47 and checked the longblaster, while Ryan
chambered a round into his Steyr SSG-70. "Krysty, stand ready with a
LAW. Shoot on sight. Mildred, make lots more coffee and stew."
"I'll dig a shallow pit to hide the flames."
"And I'll start removing the tires from the LAV," J.B. said, pouring
a fresh cup of coffee while it was still warm. "Attached to the bottom
of a raft, they'll triple our buoyancy. Which means that much more ammo
and food comes along for the ride."
"Excellent."
"One good thing about this," Krysty said, walking closer out of the
darkness with the rocket launcher resting on a shoulder.
"What's that?" Ryan asked. As far as he was concerned, they were
standing on the gallows just waiting for the noose.
"At least we won't be encountering any land mines."
"Hopefully. Okay, let's move with a purpose, people!" Ryan ordered.
"It's a race against the clock now."
Chapter Five
Falling…forever falling… Down through infinity he plummeted, the
burning stars swirling around and around, comets lancing out to pierce
his naked flesh with white-hot heat. Red blood erupted from the
ghastly wounds, then froze solid from the horrible cold.
Desperately, he tried to draw a breath and scream from the terrible
pain, but there was no air, only the incredible cold and endless
falling. Hurtling at unimaginable speeds, faster and faster into a void
beyond comprehension.
A meteor raced by, twisted faces trapped in its fiery tail. The
faces looked deep into his eyes, and he couldn't turn away. Shame
filled his tormented soul as more faces were presented in a hellish
pageant. A litany of crimes. Some wept for clemency, others raged in
bestial fury, while a few simply stared with the utter emptiness of
acceptance. Fire engulfed him, and he entered the faces, shattering the
skull bones and plunging into the morass of living brain tissue like a
surgeon's scalpel.
Now he was swimming in blood, rising bubbles filled with nightmarish
scenes. Animals stood before him on display, and opened their own
chests to spill their beating organs on steel tables under harsh
lights. And none of them had hearts, only clocks, bloody clocks ticking
softly inside their dying bodies. He ordered them to go away, then
pleaded with hot tears flowing down his cheeks, to no avail. The
animals died in droves, only to be replaced with men in chains, their
knowing eyes damning him for the monster he was.
Wailing, he clawed at his face to stop the visions, fingernails
gouging into his eyes. But his hands were ghostly things, phantasms of
ethereal flesh, and there was nothing he could do to stop or even slow
the grotesque litany. The clothing of the men melted away, their hairy
bodies becoming the supple flesh of beautiful women. Long flowing hair,
full breasts, only the best. An endless parade of naked woman
whipped and humbled, chained supine on the terrible table as the silver
knives removed their skin and flesh. Eyes staring, clocks for hearts!
Impossible beings gruffly laughed behind him and placed cold hands on
his own bare flesh
. Revulsion filled him like acid, and he
tried to
vomit, but could only convulse, muscles writhing, limbs flailing.
Then a special face filled his vision, expanding to fill the ocean
of blood until the mouth was a door that opened on a dead man hanging
by his own belt in a filthy underground cell. Not my fault! The silent
words echoed in his head as the beating of his heart changed into the
ticking of a clock, the noise building into a deafening crescendo until
shattering the universe into a million shards of tinkling glass that
fell away in a molten rain.
There a flash of light, and he was falling through a blue sky with
white clouds. Mountains appeared, oceans, forests! A hurricane wind
buffeted his form with savage fury, as the world expanded, rushing ever
closer. Suddenly, his lungs filled with air and at last he could
scream, a raw wail of anguish and absolute terror that lasted forever.
With pillow softness, he slammed into the ground and lay there
breathing in the sweet earth slightly damp from a summer rain, tufts of
grass tickling his face. Alive, he was alive!
Painfully standing, Silas found himself in a field of green grass
under a blue sky dotted with white clouds overhead. But those colors
were wrong. The sky was purple, slashed with orange fire. Wasn't it? A
low rock wall cut across a field, and a copse of trees stood guard to
the west, stout protection against the coming storm. The nuke storm.
Skydark, doomsday. Not his fault!
A town of old buildings was in the distance, a church tower bell
ringing the time as a beautiful woman in a flowing dress floated toward
him, her hair flowing in the wind. She was carrying a bouquet of
flowers that died, withered and blossomed again in an endless cycle of
death and rebirth. Not his fault!
"Why, there you are!" The woman laughed. "But I should introduce
myself, my name is Tanner, Emily Tanner."
Snarling in glee, Silas reached behind his back and drew a small
automatic. "Excellent," he cackled. Jacking the slide and leveling the
weapon at her face, he pulled the trigger. The gun violently exploded,
a fireball engulfing his hand as the weapon detonated blowing off his
fingers.
Emily neither flinched nor frowned as Silas screamed from the pain,
staring at the white bones protruding from the ruin of his arm, warm
red blood pumping out of the shattered limb.
"My husband is Dr. Theophilus Tanner," she continued, twirling the
flowers like a lace umbrella on her shoulder. "Do you know my husband,
by any chance?"
"Not my fault!" Silas shrieked, dropping to his knees and trying to
staunch the flow of blood from the arm with his free hand. But the
flesh was too slippery, and he couldn't get a grip on the tattered rags
of meat.
In the distance, a steam locomotive puffed along iron rails, gliding
past the black doors of a redoubt, and nearby a child raced across the
field, guiding a kite in the sky, the cloth tail dancing merrily. A
small dog yipped and barked alongside the child, and Silas vaguely
recognized the boy as himself. How could that be? Then a dark shape
stepped between them, blotting out the golden sun.
"Hello, fool," Doc snarled, slowly drawing a blade from the ebony
shaft of his walking stick. The needle-sharp tip glistened in the
bright sunlight, and it flashed forward.
Silas could only gasp as the steel slashed across his face, opening
the flesh to the bone, his cheek peeling away and rivers of blood
gushing forth. He tried to beg for mercy, but no words would come and
the blade slashed across his throat, filling his lungs with choking
blood. It slashed again, between his naked legs, his penis dropping to
the soil. A black wave of ants boiled out of the soil, covering the
twitching member and consuming the tender pink flesh.
Emily laughed gaily and threw flower petals as Doc began to dissect
the scientist, his heart falling onto the ground, the gears and
pendulums still connected by the major arteries, beating away to force
the blood from his countless wounds.
Suddenly, the sky turned purple, and sheet lighting thundered as Doc
peeled off more skin from Silas's naked form, his beating organs
splayed on the grass like offerings to some pagan god. The pain was
beyond imagination, and the blood was everywhere, now inches deep
across the entire field. Then Doc dropped the sword and drew a huge
pistol. Silas begged for death, for release from the incredible agony.
But Doc pointed the weapon away from Silas and fired, the muzzle-flash
igniting the blood into a lake of flame. Tongues of fire filled his
mouth and the open cavity of his chest. It crawled up his rectum and
inside his belly until it bulged. The bugs swarmed over him, through
the crackling flames, endless, eating his flesh, and Silas drew in a
lungful of fire and insects as he was consumed alive…
BOLTING UPRIGHT in bed, Silas Jamaisvous screamed at the darkness,
his hands clawing at empty air.
With a bang, the door to his bedroom slammed open and armed sec men
wearing clean blue shirts rushed in, the muzzles of their AK-47
blasters searching for intruders.
"What is it, sir?" a corporal demanded, his face tense with worry.
"Are you hurt? Were you attacked?"
Silas tried to speak, but his throat was too dry and sore to do much
more than squeak.
"Nobody in the closet," a blue shirt said, closing the door.
"Window locked tight," another sec man reported, jiggling the steel
lattice that covered the huge window overlooking the Great Project. The
tiny dots of torches moved in the blackness on the distant ground, the
cool fire of orange moonlight bathing the huge satellite dish that
dominated the ville by its sheer size.
"Out of the way, fools," a major commanded, brushing through the sec
men. Going to a humming refrigerator, the officer grabbed a frosty
bottle of mineral water and crossed the room to thrust it into the
elderly man's hands. Silas greedily drank the icy water, savoring every
drop as the horrible delusions of his nightly dream faded.
"Thank you, Sheffield," he whispered, placing the empty bottle on
his sweaty blankets.
Major William Sheffield merely nodded, and returned to the
refrigerator for another bottle. The airtight cap was loose, these
bottles refilled from a nearby stream, but it was still mineral water.
Only weeks ago, the stream had been polluted with acid rain and tox
chems to the point it was gelatinous. Now the stream flowed pure and
clean again, thanks to the Great Project.
"Same dream, sir?" Sheffield asked softly, guiding the bottle to the
man's pale lips.
Silas nodded as he drank again, strength and sanity returning with
every beat of his heart.
"The same," he acknowledged as a tremor shook his body and the old
wound in his thigh ached deeply. "It has been the same nightmare every
night since I tried to force a chron jump! Was I insane? The jump
haunts me, chases me through my dreams every night. No escape. There is
no escape. How did Tanner survive a chron jump sane? What makes him so
special? Was it the redoubt itself? Did the computers malfunction?"
Sheffield gestured. "Everybody out!" he thundered. "Stat!" Stiffly
saluting, the guards shuffled into the corridor and closed the door.
"I don't think it's wise to be discussing such things in front of
the troops, sir," the major said, drawing a chair closer. He took the
seat and glanced about. "The fewer people who know the existence of the
redoubts, the better."
"Yes. You are quite correct," Silas agreed, mopping the sweat off
his face with the edge of his blankets. The bed was moist beneath him,
and there was the unmistakable ammonia stink of urine mixed with the
sweat. Damn it, the dream was killing him. He awoke feeling weaker at
every dawn, another slice of his sanity gone forever.
Back at El Morro in San Juan, the scientist had believed he held the
key to controlled jumps through the redoubts, and had attempted to go
backward through time to slay Tanner—at least he thought that was why
he wanted to go back. He assumed there had been good reasons for the
gamble, but they were gone, along with most of his memory. At first,
Silas thought he had jumped back to the late 1800s of Vermont. But it
became clear rather quickly that he had become mired in a jump
nightmare. One that would leave him for a few months, and then return
in shocking clarity. First no more than once a month, then once a week,
now three or four times a week. Soon it would be every night, and after
that who knew? Perhaps it would start claiming him during the day, and
his brilliant mind would be gone forever, trapped in an endless fantasy
of his own creation. From somewhere deep in his childhood the words "as
ye sow, so shall ye reap" came unbidden to his mind. Silas shook off
the religious nonsense. The dream was merely a forced feedback loop
from the electromagnetic field of the mat-trans chambers, probably
augmented by his proximity to the high-voltage transformers of the
dish. Yes, of course, that was the answer. Once the Great Project was
finished and the Kite was operational, he could leave Tennessee and be
free from the dream forever.
"If I don't go mad first," he muttered, plucking nervously at his
bushy eyebrows.
"Sir?" Sheffield asked.
"Nothing important, Major." Silas wanted to leave the bed and wash,
but that would have to wait until the sec chief departed. A wave of
shame tightened his chest, and he forced it away by sheer force of will.
"Has there been any word on Tanner and the others?" Silas asked
harshly.
Sheffield scowled. "Nothing for over a week, sir. They left Front
Royal in a repaired LAV-25 and disappeared. But we have sec men
watching every drivable road from the north, south and east, with land
mines and traps on all major bridges. Ryan will never reach Tennessee
alive."
Rubbing his sore leg, Dr. Silas Jamaisvous stared at the eager young
officer sitting rigidly on the small chair. The man was so strong and
proud. His blue uniform was spotless, his blasters glistening with oil,
boots polished like a mirror.
"That's what Overton said once," Silas stated coldly.
"But I'm not playing politics with Cawdor," Sheffield said,
standing. "Believe me, as long as they keep to the roads, I'll present
you with their heads on a silver plate in only a matter of days, mebbe
less!"
"Perhaps. But isn't the Bradley Light Armored Vehicle, Piranha
class, Model 25, amphibious? Isn't the transport also designed to be
used as a boat?"
The sec man was confused. "Is it, sir?"
"That is unknown to me," Silas scowled. "I think we had better find
out very quickly."
Chapter Six
A sting-wing darted from the rushes along the basin.
Standing on the shore, the gentle waves lapping around his combat
boots, Ryan saw the movement out of the corner of his eye. He drew his
SIG-Sauer and fired. The silenced 9 mm blaster coughed, and the winged
mutie exploded in midair, bloody feathers tumbling down onto the beach.
There was a disturbance under the sand, and blue-shelled crabs rose
into view like ghosts from a grave. They climbed over the tiny corpse,
tearing the mutie apart with their sharp pincers and stuffing their
mouths full. One large azure crab had a dozen tiny copies on its back
and passed morsels of the sting-wing over its quivering antennae to the
clicking brood.
A gray dawn was beginning to break in the fiery sky, and Ryan stood
guard over the others as they finished conveying the last of the fresh
water and ammo onto the bobbing rafts. Stout ropes moored the crude
craft to the stump of a dead tree, a gentle current tugging them away
from the shore.
There had been enough logs from the felled trees to build a dozen
rafts, but the companions decided on just two. Lashed together with
ropes and chains, the first was small, only ten feet squared, three of
the inflated tires from the LAV bolted to the belly of the craft. A
small pile of ammo, food and other supplies lay in the middle of the
raft. A sheet of canvas covered the goods, and multiple ropes secured
the cargo. A tiller made from a door off an ammo locker was at one end,
tight between two upright stanchions. J.B. was dubious of the
arrangement, but Ryan had assured the man it would work fine.
The second raft was much bigger, thirty feet squared, with four
piles of supplies set between the tires bolted underwater at each
corner. This kept the center clear, helped to balance the craft and
gave the companions something to crouch behind in case of a fight.
Another door served as a tiller. The bobbing craft were attached to
each other with stout metal chains, which would keep them together
through riptides or fog. But in case of emergency, they could cut the
larger raft loose to block pursuit, and shoot the ammo boxes on board
to eliminate their pursuers.
The end of the logs were ragged and full of splinters, and the
companions had done nothing to change that. The wild array of jagged
kindling made a very good defense against unwanted passengers—man or
mutie— climbing on board.
Ryan studied the rafts with a critical gaze. Tree trunks with the
bark still on, old rope, rusty chains and a handful of nails. They
didn't look like much, but hopefully they would last long enough to get
them to Tennessee.
Whistling a sea chantey, Doc was on the larger craft, testing the
ropes holding down the canvas-covered piles. Jak stood on the other
with his back to the shore, taking care of business.
"Well, that's it for the supplies," Krysty said, wading to shore
from the front raft. She stomped the red river mud off her boots,
sending the crabs scurrying away, dragging their breakfast along with
them.
"All the fuel's on board?" Ryan asked.
"Yes." Krysty shook her head, her hair spreading out a corona of
fiery glory to rival the coming dawn. "Food, blankets, all six of the
rocket launchers. I'm surprised how much the rafts could hold."
"Just hope it's enough," Ryan said grimly, then glanced at the
nearby APC. "Better wake Dean and Mildred, and get going. We can each
catch some more sleep once we're far from here."
"I'll get them, lover," she said, and walked off.
"Lend me a hand, Ryan?" J.B. grunted, dragging a lumpy duffel bag
toward the water.
"What is it?" Ryan asked, grabbing the rope and helping to lift the
bag off the ground.
"Battery from the APC," J.B. replied as they waded into the cold
water and splashed toward the nearer raft. "I'm going to wire a
headlight to the thing so we can see at night. Scare a lot of folks and
save us a pile of killing."
With the morning breeze ruffling his silvery mane of long hair, Doc
watched the two men approach from the second raft, his .44 LeMat held
tight, the hammer cocked back and ready.
"The halogen bulb will explode," Ryan stated. "Won't be able to take
that much direct current."
"I used different thickness of wires to cut the voltage so the
headlight wouldn't blow. I can make it work. Shit!" J.B. shifted his
balance, nearly going under as his boot slipped on a smooth rock.
"Close call."
Ryan changed their direction away from the cargo raft. "Then we put
this on the lead raft, so we can see where we're going."
"Sounds good."
Zipping his pants closed, Jak turned and gave the men a hand hauling
the heavy bag over the ring of splinters.
"Good for fishing," the teenager commented, lacing the bag to the
ropes covering the canvas mound. "Fish see light at night, come close,
spear all we want."
"We never made any spears," J.B. said, heading for the cargo raft.
Jak jerked a thumb. "Doc has. Long ones."
"You made spears?" Ryan called out, climbing on board. He was
dripping wet from the waist down, the water trickling down between the
log deck and back into the basin. "Good thinking."
"These are not spears, my dear Ryan, but poles for punting," Doc
replied, trimming small branches off a sapling with his pocketknife.
"Barge poles," J.B. translated as the older man gave him a boost on
board. A thick piece of canvas draped over the splinters gave easy
access to the deck of the homemade craft. "We can use them to push the
raft along, in case we get stuck on a sandbar."
"Exactly." Tilting the pole, Doc visually inspected the shaft,
rotating it this way and that. "A bit off plumb but nothing serious."
He tossed it onto the deck.
"Punting," Ryan said as he changed into dry clothes and socks. He
laid the wet garments on top of the canvas mound to let the sun dry
them.
Trimming another sapling, Doc shrugged. "It is an Old English word,
and I disremember its origin. Sorry."
Sliding on his boots, Ryan saw that Dean was walking backward along
the shore, unraveling a greasy length of knotted rags from a slopping
bucket. The other end of the line went through the top hatch of the LAV
and down inside. Backpacks perched on their heads, Mildred and Krysty
were already wading across the basin, heading for different rafts. Once
the boy played out the length to the end, he lit the end with a butane
lighter. The shredded blankets began to burn fiercely, giving off huge
volumes of greenish smoke, the fire crawling up the length very
slowly.
Dean waited a moment to make sure the fire had caught, then waded
into the river. As soon as he was in the water, the crabs came out of
hiding and began to finish the last few scraps of the dead sting-wing,
rooting in the sand for every tiny gobbet of flesh.
"Hate to lose the wag," Krysty commented as she changed her pants.
"No choice. It's deadweight," Ryan stated. "And with any luck, if
some blues find the wag, they'll think we all died the explosion."
"Can't hurt."
When Dean was on board, Ryan looked around the beach and ordered a
last check of the supplies. It would take the grease fuse hours to
reach the APC, but time was still against them. The blues could arrive
at any moment, and if they left something important behind there would
be no easy way to get it back.
"We have canned food, MRE packs, seven ammo boxes, a case of grens,
bedrolls, blankets," Doc called out from the cargo raft. "Extra rope—"
"All of the rope," J.B. interrupted.
"Fuel, fresh water, pots and pans."
"Med kit," Mildred added, patting the bag at her side.
"Same," Jak announced, squatting by the mound, looking under the
canvas. "Ready go."
The sun broke the horizon at that moment, flooding the world with
its dim light. "All right, then," Ryan decided. "Cast off!"
At the helm, Krysty snapped the mooring line like a whip, and the
knot around the tree stump came undone. Urged on by the gentle
currents, the rafts began to leisurely float away from the Carolina
shoreline.
Using the poles, the companions guided the rafts into the deep water
where the saplings couldn't touch bottom. Drifting freely, Doc and Jak
worked the tillers, steering them farther out until land was no longer
in sight.
Behind them, a faint trail of smoke was discernible, rising above
the horizon from the smoldering remains of the cornfield.
Shifting his weight from boot to boot, Dean tried to gain his
balance on the moving raft. "I thought having the tires under the logs
would make these things steady," he said, swallowing hard.
"It does," J.B. replied, spooning cold soup from a U.S. Army tin
can. "Dark night, you should been with us a few years back when we took
a raft trip down the Hudson in Newyork. Now, that was a rough ride."
Slightly green, the boy nodded assent and sat on the deck, waiting
for his stomach to catch up with them from the beach.
Hours passed. The companions took turns at the helm and catching up
on the sleep lost during the frenzied building of the raft during the
night. The gentle current was getting stronger, urging them on a more
southerly course, but they angled the rudder against the easy pull and
maintained a steady course to the north and Tennessee.
"I make our speed at three knots," J.B. announced, studying the sun
overhead. "Not bad."
"Wind is with us," Ryan said, testing the breeze with a damp finger.
"That helps."
A bug buzzed near the raft, and a fish leaped from the basin and
back into the water. The insect disappeared.
"I'll catch us dinner," Dean said, and unscrewed the handle of his
bowie knife, withdrawing line and hooks.
"You'll need bait," Krysty commented, and reached inside a box to
retrieve a wad of grease-soaked paper. "Try some of the fatback. It's
getting old, and we can't risk eating it anymore."
"Fish love bacon," Jak added, whittling on a sliver of wood from the
end of a log. "Rancid, the best."
Cutting off a tiny cube, Dean baited a hook and cast it overboard,
raising and lowering the line to suggest life in the bait.
"How odd," Mildred said, kneeling on the raft and almost sticking
her face into the water. "Those are barracuda. Saltwater fish."
"Must be muties," J.B. stated, as if that settled the matter.
She stood. "Could be. But they seem to be dying."
"Should they not?" Doc asked, amused.
The physician waved that aside. "That isn't the point. How did ocean
fish get this far into a freshwater basin?"
"Mebbe caught by the tide or something."
"Perhaps," she relented. "I only hope that—"
The raft shook hard as it struck something underwater. J.B. shifted
the helm, and Ryan did the same.
"Sandbar?" Krysty asked, looking overboard, one hand gripping the
ropes tight. "No, look!"
Just below the surface of the water was the wreck of a sailing ship.
The hull was smashed inward near the bow, schools of fish darting about
the rigging and cabin.
"
Obsession," Krysty read off the submerged ship. "Nice
name."
As they passed by, Doc reached out with his ebony stick and tapped
the propellers. The blades turned without hindrance and spun merrily.
"The engine is gone," Ryan said, frowning. "She's been looted."
Jak grabbed a barge pole and thrust it downward, meeting no
resistance. "Clear water," he announced.
"Must be floating freely."
Mildred frowned. "Lord, I hope so."
More and more wreckage filled the waters beneath them until it
seemed as if they were sailing over a submerged junkyard of smashed,
rotting, vessels.
"Ten o'clock," Ryan warned, pointing at the horizon, one arm on the
helm.
A smudge on the horizon grew steadily in size until they could see
that the dark mass was a pile of wreckage, rising from the water like
an island. An oil tanker lay among a pile of destroyers, gunboats,
battleships, aircraft carriers, boats and seagoing vessels of every
kind, all jammed together.
"Tumble down?" Jak asked.
Blinking from the windblown spray on his face, Ryan agreed. When
skydark raped the world, debris from the nuked cities rained across the
continent. The Manhattan blast threw cars and buses across the greater
tristate area, the vehicles blown off bridges and shotgunning out of
tunnels to fly for a hundred miles from the concussion of the nukes.
Houses had been found on mountaintops, toilet seats in the middle of a
desert and once Ryan found an intact bridge spanning a grassy field in
the middle of nowhere. Anything close to an atomic blast was vaporized,
but the objects farther away were melted and sprayed outward, then
smashed apart and sent flying, and after that, merely airborne.
"The debris must have been drawn here by the current," Ryan guessed.
"Then one ship got caught on a sandbar or mebbe it got entangled with
another sunken ship. A second was caught, and so on until there was an
island."
"Or maybe it was an oil rig," Mildred said. "But I honestly don't
recall if there was any deep-sea drilling going on offshore of North
Carolina."
"Want to stop by and see if it's inhabited?" J.B. asked, adjusting
his glasses. "Might have some wags we could trade for, salvage."
Ryan frowned. "Pointless to try. Even if we found a wag, how the
hell would we get it to the shore? Best keep traveling."
"Besides," Krysty added, placing a hand on her blaster and loosening
it in the holster, "after that bastard Poseidon, I don't trust sailors
much."
"Amen to that," Mildred added grimly.
RISING FROM HIS CHAIR, the old man shuffled across the bridge of the
predark battleship in bare feet, his single garment of stitched canvas
highly decorated with embroidery patterns and service medals from a
hundred nations.
Slanted windows fronted three sides of the room, affording a
panoramic view of the river basin. On a clear day, green haze could be
seen from the distant shore, but everywhere else the blue waters of the
basin ruled supreme.
The bridge was a half circle of electronic equipment as dead as the
previous owners of the vessel. Radar screens were dark and lifeless,
radios silent as the deep waters themselves. Near the stairwell, a
stove made from an oil drum radiated heat. On top of the stove was a
sterling-silver punch bowl full of simmering fish stew, the tiny heads
bobbing about staring at nothing amid the long strands of kelp and
diced turtle eggs.
Crumbling some dried mold into the stew, the commodore used a spoon
carved from a lifeboat to take a taste, then added a bit more. The
stores in the holds of the ships that comprised the island were finally
running low after so many decades, but that didn't matter anymore, as
all of his people would soon be dead.
The thought saddened him, and the whitehair walked to the southern
window to gaze out upon the featureless vista of his watery domain. The
commodore sighed. The crew of the Navy had lived here since skydark.
Sometimes they sent expeditions to the shores for food or tools, but
the crew always came back. There didn't seem to be any other living
beings in the world. They found ruins, but no people. Just twisted,
shambling mockeries of people, mindless creatures who wantonly killed
with their clawed hands and howled at the sight of fire. Sometimes a
hellhound was found, but thankfully those were rare. And very deadly.
Now the Navy men were alone. The last humans in the world. A plague
had swept through the island ville ten winters ago, killing half the
population and every woman. Even the babes. For over ten long years,
the surviving men had lived in the towering pile of metal. He knew some
of his crew found relief doing things the Manifest didn't approve. But
if it kept them quiet, so be it. In life, some poor bastard was always
the barrelboy.
A smudge of smoke on the western horizon caught his attention, and
the whitehair walked to the telescope to train the instrument in that
direction. The focus was poor, one lens replaced by a lens from a pair
of eyeglasses, but he managed to achieve a kind of clarity. The smoke
wasn't the plume of a seagoing vessel heading their way. There was just
some sort of fire on the mainland. But under the magnification of the
scope, he noticed something moving on the water, moving against the
current. How could that be?
At first, he couldn't believe his eyes, thinking madness had finally
claimed his mind. But the longer he watched, the more convinced he
became that this real. Not a delusion brought on by loneliness and
advanced age.
"Women!" the commodore cackled as he adjusted the focus of his
telescope. Two tiny rafts were coming this way, and two of the
occupants were clearly women, a redhead and a black woman. "Those are
women!"
The commodore trembled slightly as the memory of his last woman
filled his entire body, the softness of her skin, the weight of a
breast in the palm of his hand, the feel of a nipple as it hardened
with desire, the scent of her moist passion, the delicious heat as he
slid inside.
Then he noticed their position. By the blood of the captain, the
rafts were hundreds of yards past the island and dangerously close to
the currents'.
Quickly shuffling across the tilted floor of the battleship, the old
man tugged repeatedly on a tasseled cord and a bell rang loudly, the
peels echoing slightly as they reverberated down the metal hallway of
the military ship.
"General quarters!" the whitehair shouted over the bell. "We have
company a port beam!"
"Company?" said a big man appearing at the bottom of the angled
ladder. Bare chested, he was covered with homemade tattoos, and a
machete hung at his right hip. "Who left the island without permission,
sir?"
"Nobody, bosun! It's new folks! Fellow survivors!"
Trying to hide a smile, the man looked skeptically at the whitehair.
"Been having a nip of the brew again, have we, sir?"
"It's true, you ass!" the commodore yelled. "Outlanders are here,
and two are women. Live women!"
The bosun recoiled. "It's a lie."
"No, mate, it's true! See for yourself!"
Bounding up the stairs, he rushed to the telescope and soon found
the pair of rafts to the west of the island. "By the coast gods," he
cursed. "It's a bunch of people, and some are women, and they're near
the damn currents! They'll be swept away and killed!"
The commodore stomped a foot. "I know, you fool! Send the last
working longboat, use every drop of juice! But get those women. We must
have them alive!"
"Women," the bosun repeated, rubbing a sweaty hand on his thigh.
"Aye, we'll get them, sir, and chill anybody who dares to try to stop
us!"
WATCHING AS THE JUNKYARD island receded into the distance, the
companions started to relax when the side of a huge oil tanker split
apart as colossal doors spread wide. Filling the interior was a
full-size dockyard. Oil lanterns hung in clusters, boxes and crates
were stacked before warehouses and swarms of men worked with winches
and cranes. Then from the shadows, two sleek speedboats darted into
view, skipping across the waves at incredible velocities.
"Triple red!" Ryan shouted, keeping a grip on the helm and drawing
his hand blaster. With a thumb, he flicked off the safety.
Prepared for possible trouble, the companions leveled their weapons
and dropped into firing positions, tracking the incoming ships.
Dean dropped the clip in his Browning Hi-Power to check the load,
then slammed it back in again, jacking the slide. "They might be
friendly," he ventured hopefully.
"Not at that speed," J.B. admonished. "Friends don't come charging
full speed at total strangers."
A bearded man on board one of the rushing vessels called out through
a megaphone, but the words were distorted from the sheer distance.
"Something about heave to," Krysty said, brushing the tangles of
hair away from her ears. "But I couldn't get the rest over the noise of
those engines."
Ryan grunted at the pronouncement. He knew her hearing was a lot
sharper than most people's.
"Fuck them," Jak spit, easing back the hammer on his .357 magnum
Colt. "Lies, anyhow."
Withdrawing the Navy telescope from his pouch, J.B. extended the
device to its full length. "Hard to see with all the bouncing," he
complained, using a hand to cushion the telescope end rather than press
the hard metal directly on his face. Only a fool did such a thing. It
was a good way to lose the eye completely.
"Well?" Ryan demanded impatiently.
"They're heavily armed," J.B. announced, compacting the scope to the
size of a soup can, "and carrying nets."
"Alive," Mildred growled, drawing her ZKR blaster. "We know what
that means."
Suddenly, the two speedboats began to separate, arcing in different
directions around the near stationary rafts. Taking a stance on the
rolling deck, the physician braced her blaster at the wrist and drew in
a slow breath. The foremost speedboat was still far away when she fired
three times. The pilot slumped at the wheel, and the craft veered off
sharply heading out to sea.
"Take the tiller!" Ryan ordered.
Holstering his piece, Jak switched with the big man, and Ryan
unlimbered the Steyr. Working the bolt to chamber a round, he wrapped
the strap about his forearm to help steady the aim and tracked the
coming speedboat through the scope for a single heartbeat, then fired.
The cowling flipped off the outboard motor, and the engine caught
fire. The boat slowed dramatically, and the men on board threw buckets
of water on the burning machinery. Then J.B. opened up with the Uzi.
Black dots peppered the hull, a windshield cracked, two men dropped and
another tumbled overboard, his face gone.
Sporadic gunfire came from the junkyard island as the rafts
continued floating away, the current that had carried them there
building in strength. Then another vessel appeared from within the
tanker, a huge powerful boat covered with predark weapons—machine guns
and torpedo tubes.
"Damn, it's a PT boat from World War II!" Mildred shouted. "That can
easily catch us and blow these rafts out of the water!"
"Unfortunately, they do not want us dead," Doc said grimly, cocking
the hammer on his LeMat. "However, we do not reciprocate the
sentiment." Doc fired twice, the booming revolver sounding as if it
exploded rather than merely discharged, a lance of flame more than a
foot long vomiting from its pitted muzzle. The first .44 miniball
missed, but the second round impacted directly on the hull, making only
a small dent.
"By the Three Kennedys!" he cursed, waving the weapon to disperse
the smoke. "That floating tank is armored better than the
Merrimac!"
Holding his blaster in both hands, Dean emptied a clip at the
massive boat. If the boy hit the vessel it wasn't discernible. He
reloaded and tried again.
"They're not even going to waste ammo shooting," J.B. drawled,
slapping a fresh clip into the Uzi and triggering short controlled
bursts. Instead of the men, he was aiming for the torpedo tubes, hoping
for an explosion. "They'll just ram us, and bust these rafts into
kindling!"
"Then rescue the female survivors," Mildred said, stuffing her
jacket pockets with grens for close combat.
"Rape, you mean." Thumbing fresh rounds into her Smith & Wesson
pistol, Krysty could see the men on board, laughing and jeering in
unbridled lust. The sight made her blood run cold. After being almost
raped twice in her lifetime, she would rather chill herself than let
them have her as a prisoner, a helpless plaything to be abused for
their sexual torture. Or even worse, a breeder to bear children as fast
as possible until she died on a birthing bed whelping another slave for
them to ravage.
Grabbing the AK-47, Krysty flipped the selector switch to full-auto
and emptied the last clip at the rapidly approaching warship. The
fusillade of rounds ricocheted off the hull with no effect.
Swaying to the motion of the building waves, Ryan swept the enemy
boat with rounds from the Steyr, but the copper-jacketed 7.62 mm rounds
of the longblaster were useless against the military armor of the
hulking PT boat.
"Fireblast!" he stormed, dropping the spent weapon. "Small arms are
useless against that behemoth. Mind the backwash. I'm going to use a
LAW!"
Grabbing a fat tube from under the canvas mound, Ryan yanked the
weapon to its full length. The sights popped up on top, and a large red
button was exposed.
"Clear?" Ryan demanded, zeroing the aft port. The water was getting
rough, waves chopping at the raft.
"Clear!" Krysty shouted.
Heading straight toward the rafts, the PT boat loomed before them as
Ryan pressed the launch button. A volcanic cone of exhaust stretched
for several yards from the rear of the tube, and a rustling firebird
launched from the tube and streaked toward the PT boat.
The rocket hit the vessel amidships, punching through the hull and
detonating. Torn to pieces, the deck lifted off the gunwale as the boat
was blown apart, men and machinery spewing outward in a geyser of
destruction.
As the current quickly took the rafts away from the sinking
wreckage, Ryan tossed the spent tube overboard and grabbed another.
Warily, he waited for another speedboat to appear, but no more vessels
ventured from the junkyard ville.
"I don't like this," Krysty said suspiciously. "They gave up too
quickly."
Holstering his blaster, Dean suggested, "Mebbe they don't have any
more boats."
"I saw a dozen more at the dock," J.B. replied, feeling uneasy. "A
few had to be in working condition."
"There's something wrong here," Ryan agreed, collapsing the
launcher. "Damned if I know what, though."
"We shot the shit out of them," Mildred stated forcibly. "They're
just scared of folks with guns."
"Could be," Ryan said reluctantly. "Then again, they charged
straight into our blasters and didn't shoot back when they wanted
prisoners. That doesn't sound cowardly."
"No," she agreed. "No, it doesn't."
Unexpectedly, the rafts lurched in a rush of acceleration that
nearly knocked the companions off their feet.
"Now, what was that?" Krysty demanded. "A riptide?"
"Hey," Jak said, throwing his weight against the tiller. There was
no response. "Going south. Can't stop."
"Same here," Doc shouted, struggling with the helm. "The current is
too strong."
Choppy waves broke over the front of the first raft, covering the
companions with misty spray.
"Does that taste salty?" Krysty asked, touching her lips.
In sudden understanding, Mildred dipped a hand into the rough water
and licked a finger. That was brine, sure enough.
"Sweet Jesus, this is why they stopped chasing us!" Mildred shouted.
"We're caught in an underwater river!"
Once, long ago, the physician had seen a television program on such
events. A severe earthquake would occasionally lower a large section of
land, and the sea would rush along an existing riverbed, pushing the
fresh water out of its way as it plowed inland. Nukes or some natural
disaster had to have rearranged the Carolinas, and now they were
trapped in a reverse river, probably heading for a blast crater.
"This is taking us to a blast crater!" she shouted over the raging
waters. "A really huge mucking big one!"
"We could jump," Dean offered hesitantly, with no real enthusiasm
for the plan.
"Caught in the flow," Ryan grunted, straining at the helm. The
aluminum door was shaking wildly in his grasp, but seemed to be helping
a little. No rocks hit yet. "Jump and we'd be dragged into the
whirlpool."
"The what?"
"Two rivers going in opposite directions—of course there's a
whirlpool." J.B. yanked off his glasses and placed them securely in a
shirt pocket.
"There it is!" Krysty cried out, pointing.
An islet of land was faintly visible ahead of them, the blue water
from the river rushing toward the east, and the darker sea waters
racing toward the west. At the apex of the islet was a large depression
of white water.
Mist rose from the location, and a low steady roar could be heard, then
felt in the trembling logs of the raft.
"Hot pipe, no wonder they stopped chasing us!" Dean panted, stuffing
MRE packs into his pockets.
After lashing a rope around about her waist, Krysty joined Ryan at
the helm, fighting for control of the craft. "Easy. Don't fight it!"
Ryan shouted. "Trim into the flow. We need speed!"
"Fast, then sharp!" J.B. called out from the cargo raft, with Doc
beside him at the tiller.
"Together!" Ryan shouted, stealing a glance at the chains mooring
the crafts in tandem. "Must be together, or we go in!"
"Follow your lead!"
Hair plastered to her head, Krysty yelled, "We going to shoot past
the rim?"
"Unless you got a better idea!"
The entire world seemed to be vibrating. Spray soaked them in a
matter of seconds, the thickening mist blocking any view of what was
coming. A low moan came from the vortex, the noise raising and lowering.
Suddenly, the mists parted and there it was again. The river dropped
away to their left, the swirling cone of water extending out of sight.
Every loose item on the raft tumbled away as the craft tilted
dangerously to the right. Pots, pans and the last LAW rocket flew off
and the supplies bulged under the canvas sheet, straining to break
loose.
Speech was impossible, so Ryan shouted orders into Krysty's ear. She
nodded and drew her revolver, praying to Gaia that the others would
understand. Krysty fired three shots into the air, then two shots, then
one.
In unison, both teams strained at the helms, forcing the doors to
angle away from the whirlpool. Instantly, they began to swing that way.
But the hinges were tearing free from the log, and the shaking doors
slashed flesh like a butcher's knife. Blood flowed from their hands as
the companions fought for their lives against the savage fury of nature.
The rafts broke free of the whirlpool, sent flying yards high by
their momentum to violently splash down in the briny waters on the
other side of the islet. The logs writhed, and a dozen ropes snapped,
but the chains held and the rafts didn't break apart.
Everybody took the moment of peace to catch their breath, and flex
tired hands. Behind them, the vortex swirled and moaned, but the ocean
waters were now working with them to shove the rafts away from the
deadly whirlpool.
Drenched, J.B. grabbed Mildred by the collar and soundly kissed her.
She returned the favor.
Doc merely beamed like an idiot. "By gad, we made it! Huzzah!"
"Not yet," Ryan shouted, his ears ringing slightly from the pounding
surf. "White water ahead!"
Rising from the rushing waters were dozens of rocks and boulders,
the river crashing against them in foamy waves that shot twenty feet
into the sky.
In shock, Dean realized they were going downhill, the river waters
increasing to incredible speeds. The crashing waves hid the rocks from
sight, and the mounting currents buffeted the rafts helplessly from
side to side. He wanted to shout advice, or a suggestion, but not a
damn thing came to mind.
"We're heading for shore!" Ryan bellowed, tightening his grip on the
battered door from the APC. Through the waves, he could see green trees
to their right. The islet had to have been the tip of a delta. Dry land
was only yards away.
Then the front raft bounced off a rock, and the timbers cracked from
the impact, the chains straining to hold the tiny craft together.
Another boulder appeared, and Jak shoved with a pole as Ryan and Krysty
leaned into the tiller. At the last moment, the craft swung away from
the granite outcropping with the second raft sluggishly lagging along
in its wake. But not fast enough.
A green wall of moss-covered granite loomed into sight, and the
cargo raft smacked the rock a glancing blow, the logs yawning wide
below their boots as the ropes were tested to the breaking point. Once
more the chains saved the raft from total destruction.
The sky was full of falling water, boulders everywhere. Then a low
thunder could be heard, a rumble that grew in force of volume until
there was nothing else in the world.
A terrible suspicion grew in Ryan, and he again tried for the shore,
but it was too little, too late. The companions didn't have time to
curse or scream as the homemade rafts sailed over the edge of the
gigantic waterfall and tumbled downward into the misty abyss.
Chapter Seven
Storm clouds hide the stars overhead, thunder rumbling softly in the
distance as the blue shirt rattled the lock on the storage hut.
Satisfied it was secure, the sec man walked around the corner, heading
for the next point on his nightly sweep of the complex. The chore was
an easy job, the forced workers at the ville were starved to near death
and beaten constantly. Any worker who showed any sign of rebellion or
pride was executed immediately. Some were gut shot to slowly bled to
death, while others were staked out and fed to the muties hiding in the
hills. The lucky ones were set on fire, or simply buried alive. Dr.
Jamaisvous demanded that the construction schedules always be met, and
he wouldn't tolerate any excuse for failure. No sec man would dare to
risk receiving the type of punishment they dished out on a daily basis.
Whistling a tune, the sec man turned a corner and recoiled from a
sharp pain. Breathless, he stared at the wooden handle jutting from his
chest and felt the strength flow from his limbs. With fading eyesight,
he realized a grinning slave in rags was holding the shaft of the
pickax.
"Victory or death," the slave whispered as the guard toppled over
into a pool of blood.
More slaves scurried into view and carried the warm corpse into the
slave quarters, while dirt was kicked over the spilled life fluid. A
crowd of starving people blocked the doorway, but they instantly parted
before the murderers and closed after they passed, hiding any possible
sight of what was happening.
The back room of the slave quarters was the lav, merely some holes
sawed into the floor above a reeking pit. In a dark corner, they
stripped the sec man naked. His boots went one way, pants another,
holster, blaster and ammo elsewhere.
"Is that enough?" a woman grunted excitedly, fondling the wheelgun
as if it were a living pet. A jagged scar covered half of her face, the
eye dead white. "Do we have enough?"
"Yes," a bald man replied coldly. "This gives us twelve rounds for
every blaster."
"A full charge and a reload," another gushed. "Black dust, I never
thought we would ever get that much."
The bald man cocked back the hammer on the wheelgun. "Get the
torches. When you hear the first shots, start the fires."
"Victory or death," the conspirators whispered in unison.
"Death to Jamaisvous," the leader growled. "Now, go!"
THE CAPTAIN of the guards was in a kiosk sipping a warm beer when a
strangled cry came from the darkness. Dropping his boots to the floor,
the sec man stood and drew his blaster. Listening carefully, he edged
to the doorway and pushed open the door with fingertips. Nothing was in
sight.
"Damn stingwing again," he muttered.
Instantly, there was a flash of silver and the captain was driven
back into the kiosk by a slave holding a stick with a jagged sliver of
glass tied to the end. With his throat slashed, it was impossible for
the sec man to breathe. Blood filled his mouth and trickled onto his
shirt. With fumbling hands, he tried to fire his blaster, but another
slave was upon him, slashing with another piece of glass. Pain lanced
his hand, and he saw the grinning man holding the bloody blaster, his
own twitching finger still on the trigger.
The guard spit at the slaves, and they stabbed him in the eyes,
breaking their glass knives. Screaming, he fell to his knees. More
glass was produced, and the killers slashed at his belly until his
intestines slithered onto the gory floor as months of abuse were paid
back with interest in a few hellish seconds. Finally, the corpse
dropped lifeless upon the steaming entrails.
"Victory or death," the slaves whispered to one another, and began
rummaging through the room for more ammo, or anything else that might
be used as a weapon.
PAUSING IN HIS PATROL of the grounds beneath the dish, a corporal
fought back a yawn and strained to hear what had made the strange
noise. It was a sort of moan, mixed with a slapping sound. Was some sec
man having sex with a slave while on duty? He'd have the man's balls
cut off for dereliction of duty.
The noises came again, and he followed them to a spot beneath the
dish. The night here was as black as pitch, a circle of night within
night, and the corporal proceeded at a careful pace.
A toolshed sat near the concrete base that supported the dish.
Bending close to a window, he heard the noises more clearly and
grinned. A slave's rags were draped over the window to hide what was
going on inside, but through the rips in the cloth he could see three
naked women stroking one another, caressing and kissing, hands cupping
breasts and stroking between open thighs. Unable to tear his eyes away
from the delicious sight, he pressed closer to the window as a
large-breasted slave lay down upon a worktable asking to be taken. An
older woman with streaks of silver in her red hair climbed on her face
and began rocking back and forth. Then the younger blonde buried her
face between the woman's thighs. Their moans and cries of pleasure grew
louder as their sex play became more passionate and inventive.
Rubbing the front of his clothing, the corporal glanced around to
make sure nobody else was near, then holstered his blaster and slid a
hand into his pants for some relief himself.
Instantly, the shadows rose behind him and a woman grunted with
exertion as she drove two long spikes into each of his ears.
Convulsing, the corporal gurgled incoherently. The slave waited until
he was still, then scratched on the window. A few seconds later, the
three women stepped from the hut, wearing blue shirts and boots, and
carrying blasters.
"Here," said the fourth slave, passing over a set of keys.
"Victory or death," the older woman whispered in reply, and they
separated quickly, leaving the corpse on the cold ground.
WEARILY WALKING from his bathroom, Silas Jamaisvous turned off the
lights and poured himself a stiff drink from a crystal decanter. The
amber color of the predark liquor was that of new honey, the smell
ambrosia. He only hoped it would mix with the drugs and give him a
night of dreamless sleep for once.
Opening a small vial, he added a measured dose of morphine, then
doubled the amount. Even with the drug, he still wasn't sleeping well.
The dream, always the terrible dream.
Draining the glass in a few swallows, Silas sat on his bed and
kicked off his velvet slippers. The room was nicely warm, the heavy
curtains blocking any noise of the troops on patrol outside. It had
been a long and fruitful day of work. The master computer system for
the Kite seemed to be working fine today, but the real test would come
tomorrow when they tested the focusing mechanism. Having the ultimate
weapon meant nothing unless it could be used with surgical skill. Clubs
were for cavemen, and he was a scientist.
Snuggling under the covers, Silas fought against the drug coursing
through his veins, formulas and mathematical equations filling his
mind. But finally, he relaxed and let hated sleep claim him once again.
Almost immediately, sweat formed on his brow, and his eyelids began to
flutter.
Groaning and mumbling in the delirium, the man couldn't hear the
cover come off the air-conditioning vent in the wall. It was maneuvered
inside the shaft, and a figure slowly emerged from the wall, lowering
himself to the floor, the bare feet making not a sound. The invader
waited until his vision became adjusted to the dark, then drew a length
of rope from around his waist. Holding an end in each hand, he crept
toward the snoring man.
Standing above the sleeper, the slave watched the rise and fall of
the madman's chest, savoring this moment of revenge. Then he bent over
to slide the garrote around the unprotected throat of the man who had
tortured to death so many people in the name of his holy science.
"Victory or death," he said through clenched teeth. "And it's death
for you, whitecoat!"
A muffled cough sounded and the room flashed with light. The slave
stumbled backward, bleeding from the chest. He hit the wall and dropped
the garrote, drawing a blaster. Again the cough sounded, the
muzzle-flash of the silenced weapon strobing the darkness as the
soft-nosed rounds punched the slave to the ground with sledgehammer
force.
Brilliant lights flooded the room, and Major William Sheffield
walked over to the dying slave, the unfired blaster still in the
unfortunate wretch's hands.
Coolly, Sheffield shot the skinny man once in each eye, cracking
open the skull. A trickle of brains flowed down the wall and onto the
floor.
"Secure the room," the major ordered, and a platoon of sec men
poured in from the hallway to swarm around Silas, forming a living wall
of protection.
A sec man exited the closet with a silenced pistol, an electronic
device of some kind strapped to his face.
"It was amazing," the guard said, sliding off the visor. "I could
actually see in the dark. Everything was colored green, but I could
truly see."
"Yes, you did well," Sheffield said, swinging his weapon at the
guard. "Pity you let the slave get so close to the commander."
"Sir?" the guard asked, frightened.
Sheffield shot the man in the heart, the .45-caliber round from the
U.S. Army Colt automatic driving him into the closet.
Crossing the room, he shot the man again to make sure of the job,
then strode over to the mumbling scientist.
"Dr. Jamaisvous?" he said loudly, shaking the man. There was no
response. Impatiently, he slapped the old man hard. Nothing, but more
mumbling.
"Okay, we handle this ourselves," Sheffield stated to the troops.
"Sound the call, but do it quietly. We know the slaves have been
planning something for a while. I thought it was a mass escape, but it
looks like they might plan on killing us first."
Cradling an AK-47 longblaster, a corporal wearing a bulletproof vest
snorted. "Bad choice, sir. They might have had a chance in hell of
running away."
INSIDE THE MAIN OFFICE for the power plant, the chief engineer for
the complex stopped eating a sandwich when he heard an odd banging
noise. Grabbing some gloves, he quickly stepped onto the main floor of
the plant to see if there was something wrong with the cranky steam
generators again. The damn things were always overheating, losing
pressure or blowing a valve.
Clearly highlighted in the red glow of the main furnace, the
engineer gasped at the sight of three sec men lying on the ground,
slaves beating them with coal shovels. Then one slave turned the edge
of the shovel on a cringing guard and decapitated the man on the spot,
the head rolling away, leaving a crimson trail.
"Motherfuckers!" the engineer shouted, and grabbed his blaster, but
a shovel from behind smashed his arm. His dropped weapon skittered away
under a lathe.
Clutching the broken arm, the engineer tried to make it back to the
office, but halfway there he saw slaves standing in the doorway, the
men and women armed with the AK-47 blasters from the arms locker.
"As if you scum know how to operate a blaster," he said with a
sneer, backing away. But fear filled his belly, and bitter vomit rose
in his throat.
In reply, the slaves clicked off the safeties and worked the bolts,
chambering rounds.
"No, stop. I can help you!" he pleaded, tears running down his
chubby cheeks. "I know what's going on here. I can protect you from the
Kite!"
"Liar," a slave snarled, and fired once, hitting him in the left
knee.
The pain was excruciating, and the engineer dropped to the floor,
clutching the ghastly wound, a shard of white bone visible in the
flesh. "No, please! Let me live! I beg you!"
"As you let the children live?" another spit. "And the women after
you used them?"
"Please…"
"Yes, we should let him live," a tall woman said unexpectedly. "Let
him stay alive all the way to the furnace!"
The slaves crowded around the engineer and bodily hauled him away.
Though weak from blood loss, the terrified engineer fought like a wild
animal, kicking and biting, until beaten partially senseless by the
wooden stocks of the blasters.
Weeping uncontrollably, the engineer was shoved into the second
furnace and the grille slammed shut. There came the telltale whoosing
sound of building pressure, and he screamed for salvation. Then the
searing flames engulfed the man, and he keened hideously. Unconcerned,
the slaves walked away, leaving him to enjoy his last few moments alone
with his precious machines.
SILENTLY MOUTHING CURSES, a sec man toppled off the roof of the
power plant, his face dark purple, a length of knotted rope wound
around his constricted throat.
Screaming, a sec man stumbled out of the officers' lav, his pants
dragging around his ankles and blood pouring from his ass, the feather
shaft of an arrow protruding from between his plump cheeks.
The door to the dining hall was thrown open and slaves poured out,
carrying weapons and ammo belts. Inside, a dozen sec man lay sprawled
on the linen-covered tables, black tongues sticking out of their
foaming mouths, the beer mugs dripping a bluish liquid on the freshly
scrubbed floor.
Shouting orders, armed sec men piled out of the barracks, and the
night came alive with blasterfire as they were cut down in the street
by hidden snipers.
Suddenly, sirens blared and lights clicked on, filling the complex
with blinding illumination. But the tactic failed miserably. Instead of
startling the slaves and making them run away in fear, it gave them
heart. They used the visibility to shoot down additional sec men, men
seized their longblasters to kill more of the blue shirts. "Victory or
death!" a woman yelled, waving a bloody longblaster. The rally cry was
repeated by a hundred people in rags, brandishing weapons of every
possible description.
IN A THUNDEROUS crash, the side of the main warehouse broke apart
and an Abrams M-1 tank rolled out of the building, crashing under its
massive armored treads several Hummers that had been commandeered by
slaves.
Oddly, nobody fired a weapon at the tank, and the commander began to
laugh as the gunner tracked the machine guns of the military juggernaut
after the slaves scattering throughout the complex.
As the Abrams rumbled past the barracks, a glass window shattered
and a slave leaped upon the machine, clinging to the thick barrel of
the 120 mm cannon like a monkey. More laughter sounded from within the
Abrams, and then a series of metallic clanks announced the main gun
was being loaded. Light poured from the barrel, and the slave released
the handle of the gren in his hand and threw it down the barrel. The
men inside cursed in shock. Releasing the cannon, the slave fell to the
soil and tried to run, but the military tank loomed above him like a
wall of death. He darted to the left, the right, but not fast enough.
The treads caught his leg, and he was pulled underneath the massive
machine shrieking and wailing until his head was mashed flat.
Then the gren detonated, flame shooting from the cannon and out
every port and hatch. Steam rising from its vents, the Abrams stood
motionless in the street, the smell of death pouring from the broken
vehicle.
With the destruction of the Army tank, the fighting became pandemic
in the ville. Shots rang out constantly, screams coming from every
building. The fighting went hand-to-hand at the armory, as each side
straggled to reclaim the precious cache of ammo. Triumphantly, the sec
men gained control of the building, ruthlessly shooting the slaves
crawling in through the broken windows and shimmying out the fireplace
flue.
Then a horn sounded a single clear note, and the slaves raced away
from the structure. Weapons at the ready, the sec men stuffed grens
into their pockets and waited for the next assault when the floor below
erupted in a strident blast. The entire building lifted into the air,
the tunnels below the foundation clearly visible for a split second
before the tons of masonry plummeted earthward in a grisly rain.
That was the turning point of the battle. Now the slaves openly
challenged the sec men, blaster for blaster, man for man, and the blues
were decimated every time they tried to make a stand. Soon the sec men
were ducking for cover, then retreating to strategic locations, and
finally running for their lives before the relentless advance of the
ragged horde.
"RETREAT TO THE BUNKER!" cried the sec chief, launching a flare into
the nighttime sky. The incandescent charge soared upward and detonated
in a pyrotechnic display visible from everywhere in the complex.
A shot hit him in the chest, the blow to his vest only making him
grunt. Then a tracer round took him in the throat, and the man toppled
off the roof of the Hummer, launching a second flare with his last
ounce of strength. The charge went wild, rocketing down a street,
glancing off the side of a building and streaking into the night to
explode among the trees. Few saw the heroic act, even fewer the second
flare. But the first signal had been spotted, and the wounded blue
shirts obeyed the desperate command, fleeing toward the concrete block
located in an open field.
The bunker was a stout concrete building, its original purpose lost
forever in time. But the windows were sealed with iron plate, the walls
reinforced with multiple layers of bricks, the domed roof smooth
concrete over riveted sheets of cold iron.
"Hurry!" a corporal shouted, standing in the doorway, one hand on
the portal, the other gripping the jamb. Sec men stood behind him,
firing their blasters in controlled bursts at the bloodthirsty throng
racing across the field. Dozens of sec men poured into the building,
plunging deeper into the structure to make room for their brethren
guards so close on their heels.
Carrying a flamethrower, a sec chief appeared from within the
bunker. "That's everybody. Close the door."
"We have a man out there!" the door guard dared to respond.
The sec chief squinted into the chaos. A single sec men was running
toward the bunker only a few yards ahead of the slave army. Arms
pumping, legs flashing, the blue shirt raced pell-mell across the
field, leading the way for the howling killers, a herald announcing the
holocaust.
"Fuck him! This is a direct order. Close the door, Corporal."
Confused, the sec man jerked his head at the running blue shirt so
close to the bunker, and the slaves so close behind. With a grave
expression, he began to push the heavy door closed, the opening
narrowing by the heartbeat.
"Wait," the runner wheezed. "Please, wait!"
The armored door closed with a boom, the heavy locks sliding noisily
across the array of iron bands.
Stumbling to a halt, the sec man stood in the middle of the field
staring dumbfounded at the bunker. "Damn you," he panted. "Damn you all
to hell."
A longblaster shot took the man in the shoulder, spinning him, blood
spraying from the impact. Now facing the triumphant slaves, the blue
shirt made no effort to run or draw the weapon at his hip. There seemed
to be no point to the act. Howling in victory, the slaves swarmed over
the standing man, and he disappeared within the mob.
Reaching the bunker, the slaves fired their blasters at the door and
walls, the 7.62 mm rounds chipping the bricks but nothing more.
"Find some explosives!" shouted a big woman, a pistol in one hand
and a bloody piece of scalp in the other. "Let's blast our way in!"
A scrawny man stood before the door as if defying it with his mere
presence. "I say we break it down and catch the bastards alive!" he
shouted. "Then we crucify the lot of them! Who's with me?"
The slaves cheered their approval. A bracing girder used for
supporting the dish was found, and ten of the largest slaves grabbed
hold and charged at the iron door. The end of the steel girder
flattened as it hit, and the door shook dangerously on its hinges.
"Again!" screamed the leader, and the girder slammed against the
iron portal, making it rattle loosely.
"It's coming free!" a woman shouted. "We're almost in!"
A tiny slot opened in the door and several blasters fired. Two
slaves toppled over with ghastly head wounds. But more rushed boldly to
take their place, and one man shoved an AK-47 into the port and emptied
the clip, twisting the barrel about in a circle, trying to chill
everybody on the other side. Screams of pain told of some degree of
success.
The girder crashed against the door once more, and suddenly clear
moonlight washed over the battlefield.
Startled, the slaves paused in the attack, some of them plainly
frightened. Above the complex, the ever present storm clouds were
thinning away to nothingness and twinkling stars could be seen
overhead, the fat moon a silvery orb to rule the sky.
"Beautiful," a woman cried.
A man recoiled in fear. "Ain't natural. No clouds in the sky? Ain't
natural, I tell ya!"
The leader of the slaves started to reply when he heard a low-key
humming and realized there was a surge of power going through the
high-tension lines feeding the dish, the accumulators audibly charging.
His heart pounding, the slave had no idea what to do. Was this an
attack? Were the blues electrifying the door?
Just then a man screamed, clawing wildly at his face; Then another
did the same, and another. Caterwauling people fell off the roofs of
buildings, untriggered rifles exploded, loose ammo crackling like
popcorn and Hummers burst into fireballs.
A FEW MINUTES LATER, the battered door to the bunker was forced open
by sec men who immediately retreated, covering their mouths and noses
and trying not to gag. The portal was closed posthaste, the edges
sealed with rags and anything that could be shoved into the jamb to
keep out the horrible stink.
The blue shirts knew they would have to wait a few hours for the
stench to dissipate. But there was no rush. The rebellion was over.
Everything within a mile of the bunker was now stone dead.
INSIDE THE MAIN LAB of the complex, Silas Jamaisvous stood at a
control panel, an empty syringe of adrenaline sticking out of his arm.
Woozy, he pulled down the switch operating the bus bar disconnecting
the main relay assembly from the power grid.
"It worked," he whispered in delight. "It really worked!"
"Yes, it did," Sheffield said from the corner of the lab. "And we
really need to talk about that."
Chapter Eight
Ryan awoke, still hearing the thunder of the waterfall.
"Son of a mutie bitch," he muttered. "We survived after all."
Struggling to his hands and knees, the man realized half of his face
was cold and the other side painfully hot. He been lying facedown in
the mud with the sun baking his blind side.
Painfully sitting upright, Ryan felt like the loser in an ax fight.
He remembered going over the waterfall and not much after that.
Sluggishly, the one-eyed man felt for his SIG-Sauer. He was amazed to
find it still there. Trembling fingers jacked the slide, and he
holstered the useless blaster. It was coated with mud. Firing a round
now might make the weapon explode.
Drawing the curved panga, he stood and surveyed the landscape. They
were in a shining sea of smooth water, tiny tufts of brown grass
dotting the surface, and farther out was the occasional dead tree
draped with moss and green with mold. The smell of salt was strong. The
water was about a foot deep, the ground underneath the soft muck of
decaying plants. It was a swamp formed from the runoff of the ocean
river. To the east rose a high cliff, a waterfall cascading from the
top, filling the air with a fine mist and a beautiful rainbow.
The Deathlands warrior frowned. Cliffs behind, swamp ahead, not much
choice of direction to take.
Wiping the salt mud off his face, Ryan counted off the rest of the
companions and was relieved to find everybody present. They were lying
limply about, but no limbs jutted at odd angles, and no pools of blood
were visible. Krysty lay near him, with one cowboy boot missing, her
fur coat looking like it had drowned itself. A few yards away, Mildred
was draped over a piece of the raft. The unconscious physician still
gripped her med kit.
The smaller raft was intact. One of the logs was broken in two, but
the canvas still retained the supplies within. But the cargo raft was
destroyed, boxes and timbers strewed everywhere for hundreds of yards.
Nobody dead, one raft still whole. With this little damage, Ryan
realized it couldn't have been a proper waterfall with a straight drop.
It had to have been merely a steep incline, and they were flushed onto
this muddy field like so much shit. Vaguely, Ryan had disjointed
memories of swimming, fighting to reach the surface, people shouting.
After that, it was blank. One raft lost. Could have been worse, a lot
worse.
"Krysty?" he asked, sloshing closer to the woman.
"I'm alive, lover," she replied, struggling into a crouch. "Just
barely, but still pulling air."
Finding the other boot, Ryan gave it to her, then helped the woman
to stand. "It's a miracle we survived," he stated.
"Thank Gaia." Krysty coughed and tried to wipe the clinging muck off
her sodden clothes.
Resembling a corpse escaping the grave, Mildred arose from the
watery mud. "Anybody hurt?" the physician asked wearily, feeling her
own arms and chest for broken bones.
"We're okay," Ryan replied. "Battered, but no serious damage."
"Good." Mildred hawked and spit to clear her mouth. "Looks like
we're in a runoff swamp," she said. "Better than a rad pit, I suppose."
Quickly, Ryan checked his lapel and saw no readings from the
miniature Geiger counter. "Clean," he reported, then actually smiled as
he noted the disheveled appearance of his friends, dark mud covering
them like camou armor. "Well, sort of anyway," he added.
Favoring his right leg, Doc struggled to stand, the black-powder
charges from the LeMat dribbling out of the holster and down his leg
like black blood.
"How inconvenient," he rumbled in annoyance, then addressed the
others. "By any chance, does anybody see my stick?"
"Over here," Dean cried, and splashed across the water. By a rotting
tree, he plunged his hands into the silt and pulled the ebony
swordstick free.
"I saw the light flashing off the silver," he said, returning the
weapon.
"Thank you, lad. Good show." Doc twisted the lion's-head handle and
pulled out the sword for inspection. The steel was foggy with
condensation, but otherwise undamaged.
Dean shrugged. "No prob."
His limp fedora perched on a stick to dry, J.B. was sitting on the
undamaged raft, holding his glasses by the stems and rinsing them in
the seawater.
Knife in hand, Jak stood nearby, staring hard at the desolate land
stretching before them. It resembled his home of Louisiana.
"Clean blasters!" the pale teenager barked as an order.
Sliding the patch to the front of his face, Ryan looked about and
saw nothing of possible menace. "Explain," he commanded.
Jak frowned. "Swamps alive. Lots life, snakes, rats. Not here, but
could be."
Heeding the sage advice, the companions moved to the raft and got
busy. Sparingly using the clean water from the canteens, they cleaned
their weapons and made sure each was in working order. Then with guards
posted, they attempted to clean themselves. Dean found a depression in
the land two feet deep, and they washed as thoroughly as possible in
the makeshift tub.
"What's wrong with the soap?" J.B. asked, trying to work up a lather
in his hands.
"This is salt water," Mildred said, pouring another skimmed cup of
swamp water over her hair. More silt rinsed out of her beaded plaits.
"It takes a special kind of soap to foam in brine."
"Swell," he grumbled.
After the ablutions, somewhat cleaner and pounds lighter, the
companions sat on the raft eating cold MRE rations. The warm water rose
to their knees, and they closely watched the surface for undulating
ripples that meant the presence of snakes. Swamps were the worst kind
of terrain to cross. Mud weighed you down, great holes could open
beneath you at any step, the air was thick and difficult to breathe,
plus most of the animals were poisonous.
Chewing a ration bar, Dean glanced at the waterfall. "Looks like we
walk from here."
"Where is here?" Krysty asked, her hair flexing and waxing around
her as if drying itself in the pale gray sunlight.
"I checked earlier," J.B. replied around a mouthful of peanut butter
and graham crackers. He took a pull of water to clear his throat.
"We're still in North Carolina. About twenty miles from the Tennessee
border."
"That's good news," Ryan said, wiping the inside of a metallic foil
bag with a finger to get the last of the military cheese. The stuff was
gray, but he knew that was the normal color of cheese. Carrot juice was
normally added to make it more appetizing, but he guessed the MRE packs
were designed to be cheap, as well as last forever.
Placing aside an empty envelope of corned-beef hash, Mildred rinsed
her spoon clean and tucked it into a pocket. "Well, if it's any
comfort, there's no way the blues will ever find us out here." She
gestured at the empty expanse.
Removing her coat, Krysty hung the garment over a dead tree. It had
felt as if she were carrying another person on her shoulders. "Hate to
leave the supplies," she said, stretching. "But I suppose there's no
way to haul them along."
"We can make backpacks," Ryan said, standing. Wading around the
stationary raft, he peeled away the canvas sheet and took stock of the
jumbled boxes. "Bare essentials. Only food and ammo. We each get one
gren, J.B. gets the rest of the explosives, Mildred any medical
supplies. Leave the rest."
"Dry socks," Jak added sternly. "Live in swamp, dry socks save feet."
"He's right," Mildred said, respectfully appraising the teenager.
"This place is a breeding ground for fungus. We'll change our socks
every time we break for food, and I'll spare some sulfur to try and
keep out infections."
"Swamps," Doc muttered, fluffing the muddy frills of his shirt.
"Sweet nature's toilet."
Everybody laughed, but it was Mildred's comment that struck a
resonating cord within Ryan, and once again he debated the wisdom of
their goal. Should they be heading for the town of Shiloh, or the site
of the infamous Civil War battle? The historic Shiloh was only a few
miles away from a redoubt. Shiloh ville won the debate because it was
closer.
"Might as well get moving," J.B. said, wiping off his palms with a
moist towelette included in the MRE pack. "Miles to go before we sleep
and all that, eh, Doc?"
"Without a doubt, my friend."
As the companions rose, the raft moved unexpectedly, floating to the
surface of the dirty water.
"Dark night," the man whispered in surprise. "Salt water is more
buoyant than fresh."
"Is this deep enough?" Krysty asked, lifting a boot and inspecting
the water-mark level.
Mildred pushed at the logs with a hand, and they moved. "Seems so,
yeah."
"There's no current," Dean said, crossing his arms. "Are we going to
drag it behind?"
Splashing closer, Ryan was already at the rear of the craft, lifting
the mooring lines from the mulch and testing their strength. "Half of
us will push," he stated, "the rest can drag."
ROWS UPON ROWS of cots filled the makeshift hospital of Front Royal,
temporarily located inside the long dining hall of Cawdor Castle. The
great table had been moved to the end of the hall and converted into a
surgical bed, leather straps draped over the bloodstained surface to
hold down the sec men who needed limbs removed or other major surgery.
The ville's supply of predark ether had been used up the first day, and
now the healer poured shine down the throats of his patients until they
fell unconscious.
Thankfully, the screams of agony hadn't been heard in days. The
seriously hurt were out of their misery, dead and buried, either from
the wounds they received in battle, or from the meatball surgery trying
to save them. The rest of the brown shirts and civilians lay on the
simple cots, waiting for medical attention to their bullet wounds and
stumps. The air reeked of feces, whiskey and blood, and the painful
moaning never stopped, day or night.
Several of the local gaudy sluts moved among the patients emptying
bedpans into a wheelbarrow they pushed along. In this time of
emergency, everybody in the ville worked. On the other side of the long
hall, a pair of children carried a steaming wooden bucket of freshly
brewed tea from the kitchen. Carefully, they filled the cup next to
each cot. If the cup was full, they dumped it on the floor and filled
it with fresh. Made from old willow bark, Healer Mildred had said the
brew would help some of the wounded with their pain. Amazingly, it did
with some, but others not at all.
Kneeling alongside a sec man who had been crushed by falling rocks
during the war, the new healer adjusted the folded blanket under his
head. "There, is that better?" Sullivan asked softly.
"No," the sec man moaned. "Neck still hurts…"
Irritably, Sullivan grabbed the trooper by the throat and savagely
twisted. There was a snap, and the patient went limp.
"See?" the mutie whispered in amusement. "I said that I could end
your pain."
There was no reply.
Moving to the next patient, Sullivan found the man soundly asleep.
Good. They should all fall asleep, then die. There were plenty of
troops in the world to replace them, so why did Baron Cawdor worry
about a few damaged people. It just made no sense. But then Sullivan's
job wasn't to be logical or reasonable, just to murder the baron and
leave. Nothing more. Of course, the baron was surrounded by a squad of
trigger-happy sec men, so the chilling would take some special planning.
Awake, and carving a pipe from a corncob, the next patient merely
had two broken legs that were setting nicely. Sullivan set the bones
himself, and made the cast from leather belts and kindling. Pretending
to be a healer was his easiest disguise. It was impossible to torture
people for years and not to learn something about how to keep them
alive. Being zealous in the questioning was a beginner's mistake. Cut
off a man's hand, and he would bleed to death in minutes. Ah, but bind
the arm with twine to retard the circulation, then cut off the hand,
and your patient could live for days. Any damn fool could stab to death
a man chained to the wall, but it took an artist to teasingly peel off
every inch of skin and still keep the prisoner alive and sane.
The door to the kitchen eased open, and a woman rushed into the
dining room. Adjusting the moist bandage on a burned face,
Sullivan noted her arrival with interest. Few of the locals seemed
to be in any hurry these days. It was as if the war had drained them of
not only their strength, but also their very will to live.
The newcomer was plump and full breasted, highly attractive for her
species. She looked over the hospital with obvious distaste, nose
wrinkling at the pungent stink. Sullivan didn't like the smell, either.
But it was either suffer the stink, or open the windows and have the
patients freeze to death at night. Personally, he preferred the latter.
Extremes of temperature meant little to his kind.
With a start, she saw him looming over a patient and hurried over,
holding her skirts in a fist to keep the cloth from touching the dead
and dying.
"Sullivan," she whispered, coming close. "They know! Run for the
hills."
Placing aside the sharpened piece of reed he was using to drain a
pus-filled wound, Sullivan slowly turned his head. Her eyes were
lovely, and as cold and hard as his own.
"May I beg pardon?" he asked politely. "My name is Daniel Lissman
and—"
"They know who you are, and why you are here!" she whispered
urgently, coming closer. "They call me Terry and I work in the gaudy
house. Last night I heard a couple of the troopers talking. They're
going to claim the baron's wife, Tabitha, is feeling poorly, fell off a
horse or something, and when you go into that room, you ain't coming
out!"
"Indeed," Sullivan murmured, stuffing his hands into his pockets and
thumbing back the hammers on the two snub-nosed revolvers. "And why do
you call me, what was the name…Sylvester?"
Glancing over a shoulder, Terry spoke fast. "Cut the shit. I also
fucked Overton's men when they were here, and aside from Ryan, you were
the only thing they feared. Big guy, no hair, likes to do the dead."
"Really now!"
She sidled closer, the thick smell of stale perfume and sweat
radiating from her body. "I saw you last night at the graveyard, so
don't tell me different."
Calmly, Sullivan debated the possibilities. This could be a trap by
the baron to trick him into revealing himself. Or it could be the
truth, a whore looking to connect to somebody more powerful for a
better life.
Slowly standing to his full height, the mutie looked down at the big
woman and spread his arms in a friendly manner.
"This is an interesting tale," Sullivan said, resting a hand on her
shoulder. She trembled at the contact, as he increased the pressure
until she thought the bones would break.
"We should discuss it in private," he added, lifting the woman a few
inches off the floor and carrying her away.
Terry tried to speak, but the pain was too great.
Moving quickly, Sullivan headed for the door to the basement. Once
out of sight, he could question this Terry thoroughly and learn the
truth.
"Wait, Healer!" a man shouted.
Only a yard from the door, Sullivan stopped and turned, hugging
Terry close to him as if they were close friends.
Maneuvering through the maze of cots, a brown shirt was rushing
toward them. He was armed, but the blaster was holstered. Sullivan
relaxed a little and smiled, his mind racing with new possibilities.
Unexpectedly, Terry slid her arm about his waist and shook her torso to
make her ample breasts jiggle. She was playing his lover. How very
interesting.
"How can I help you, Lieutenant?" the mutie asked politely.
The man gulped some air. "Lady Cawdor has fallen off her horse in
the stables. She can't breathe! Come quickly!"
"Oh, no!" Sullivan cried out, releasing his prisoner. Terry stayed
next to him, breathing hard. He could feel the heat of her breasts
through his clothing and was repulsed. "Elevate her legs at once and
loosen her clothing. I'll get some instruments and be right there!"
The sec man paused for a moment, unsure of what to do.
"Go!" Terry barked. "Every second you waste could mean her life,
fool!"
With a grim expression, the sec man nodded and dashed away.
"See?" Terry stated, rubbing her bruised ribs.
"You were correct," he said. "What is the price of this assistance?"
Terry leaned forward, her face shiny with avarice. "Take me with
you," she demanded, almost pleading. "I'm nothing here but a slut.
Somewhere else, with your help, I could marry well, become a lady.
Mebbe the wife of a baron!"
It was a fair price. He thought about the offer.
"Too much," Sullivan decided, and slapped her across the face, the
bones audibly cracking. Her skull partially crushed, Terry slumped to
the floor, burbling blood through the ruin of her mouth. Not caring if
anybody else was watching, Sullivan then kicked the woman, caving in
her chest. She tumbled across the floor, arms and legs flailing like a
rag doll's.
Moving to a cabinet, he ripped open a duffel bag, the old canvas
patched many times with different-colored cloth until it was almost a
camou pattern. Reaching inside, he started withdrawing glass bottles
filled with an oily liquid, greasy rags tied about the necks.
Lighting the rags, he threw the Molotov cocktails across the room in
every direction. Flames engulfed the cots, and the patients started to
scream, beating at the sticky fire covering their bodies with bandaged
hands. Sec men rushed in and gasped in horror. Sullivan used the
diversion to ruthlessly mow them down and steal a longblaster.
Stuffing the last two bottles into his jacket pockets, the mutie
stepped outside and hosed the street, shooting anybody in sight. The
screaming from inside the castle continued as he darted across the
courtyard, spraying controlled bursts from the Kalashnikov at the
rooftops and windows. No horses or wags were in sight, so he ran for
the barbican, hoping to cross the drawbridge and reach the safety of
the woods. Once he was among the trees, it would take an army of guards
to find him again.
A brick-lined tunnel went through the barbican of the outer wall,
and several men stood in a cluster near a smoking oil drum, the ragged
holes in the sides of the metal allowing the heat of the fire inside to
radiate outward. Without pause, Sullivan gunned them down, dropping his
blaster when it clicked empty and grabbing another weapon from one of
the dead men.
A swarm of brown shirts charged from the shadows, and Sullivan
kicked one in the throat. One fired a pistol, the round scoring a
bloody furrow along Sullivan's cheek. The mutie shot the norm in the
groin, and shoved the wooden stock of the longblaster backward,
crushing the chest of another. Then a wounded brown shirt lurched from
the pile of corpses and tackled him around the legs. Furious, Sullivan
kicked the man aside, and another grabbed his arm. The mutie buried his
teeth into the norm's throat and ripped out a chunk of flesh. He was
released instantly.
Sprinting from the tunnel, Sullivan scanned the other side of the
drawbridge for an ambush, saw nothing and charged for the distant
woods. Freedom was only a hundred yards of open field away. A flurry of
motion in the air caught his attention, and Sullivan spun, firing
upward. Unharmed by the bullets, the heavy fishing nets dropped across
the bridge, pinning him in place. Dropping the blaster, the mutie
grabbed the line and ripped a hole. But before he could wriggle
through, more netting fell from the palisades overlooking the bridge,
and then a third net, a forth and a fifth. Trapped under the layers,
Sullivan crouched, fumbling for a weapon when a stunning blow drove him
to the wooden planks. Dazed, the mutie drew his pocket pistols and got
off two rounds, when the blasters were pounded from his grasp by a
horde of sec men wielding clubs.
Roaring in wild fury, Sullivan managed to stand under the
combination of nets and men, struggling to reach the edge of the
drawbridge and the moat below. Already the gills in his throat were
opening for oxygen. Sullivan could breathe underwater, but the pitiful
humans would drown.
The brown shirts struck him from every direction, but he forged
onward and reached the cobblestones edging the bridge. Searing pain
lanced through his shoulder, and he saw the barbed point of an arrow
sticking out of his shirt. Mentally forcing away the pain, he lurched
forward again and another arrow slammed into his boot, pinning his foot
to the planks.
Reaching through the netting, Sullivan grabbed a knife from a brown
shirt and tried slashing his way loose, when another wave of humans
swarmed over him.
Pain filling his universe, he fell to the planks, never losing
consciousness as he was trussed with ropes, then bound with chains.
Cradling a broken arm, a sec man spit in Sullivan's face, and
another aimed a handcannon. A sergeant slapped the blaster away.
"He's trapped now, so don't chill the bastard," the brown shirt
growled. "We're gonna haul his ass to the docks and hang him before the
whole ville. Baron Cawdor himself is gonna tie the rope around its
stinking neck!"
Cheering in victory, the joyous brown shirts lifted their captive
off the bridge and hauled him back inside the ville. Masked by the
nets, the mutie managed to hide a smile and calmly waited to meet the
man he had been sent to kill.
Chapter Nine
Mindless miles of flat swampland stretched before the companions. In
hard labor the slow hours passed, noon coming and going as they trod
the sticky mud. The raft floated through the salty water, only
occasionally catching on sandbars and submerged tree trunks. Rumbling
storm clouds offered scant protection from the sun, and soon the swamp
was steaming from the heat, sweat pouring off their bodies. Everybody
stripped down as far as they dared, the bare necessities being boots
and gun belts, although J.B. clung to his fedora and Mildred her med
kit. Fat mosquitoes buzzed about them constantly, stealing sips of
their blood until Ryan opened the fuel can and splashed some about as
cologne. After that, they were left alone with the flies and the
itching bites.
The barge poles hadn't been found, and none of the local trees were
of any use, so Doc was on the point position, testing the unseen ground
ahead of them with his swordstick. A rope was tied around his waist as
a precaution, and twice he dropped into sink holes and had to be
dragged back to the surface.
"I have had fun before," Doc muttered, stabbing the water and taking
another step forward, "and this is not it."
"Could be worse," Mildred grunted, both hands holding tight to the
rope over her shoulder. The physician had removed her damp pants and
tied her shirttails in a knot between her breasts so she could take off
her sports bra. Support wasn't an issue here; the temperature was.
Winter in Virginia, summer in Carolina, how had any people survived
when skydark destroyed the weather patterns of the world this much?
"Worse? Hades only has nine levels, madam," Doc reminded her, a half
smile growing in spite of himself. He stabbed more water and found the
ground acceptable. "And this would be five, or six?"
"No more than four, surely."
Holding tightly on to the wet rope over his shoulder, Ryan leaned
into the task of hauling the raft. Privately, he appreciated the
banter. It helped relive the boredom of the endless walking.
Just then, something bawled across the swampland, the noise echoing
into the distance to be answered by another of the same.
"Gator," Jak stated, dropping the rope and drawing his Colt Python.
"Stay sharp. They fast."
Checking the draw on the SIG-Sauer, Ryan heard the harsh breathing
of some of the companions and decided he was pushing them too hard.
"Ten-minute break," he announced. "One sip of water each. If you've
got to use a bush, go in pairs."
"Rather have some more gasoline," Krysty said angrily, slapping at a
fly that landed on her bare arm. Her respect and love for life didn't
quite extend to the creatures that feasted on her blood. She kept her
pants on, as none of her underwear was dry enough to wear, and removed
her thick shirt. The bra she had found in the California redoubt was
thin lace and kept her cool enough, even if the underwire did itch a
bit.
"I'll get it," Dean offered. Releasing the rope, he disappeared
under the hot canvas to reappear with the fuel can.
"Pretty low," he stated, unscrewing the cap.
Krysty cupped her hands, and the boy poured her a small splash.
J.B. stepped out of the muck onto the raft and pulled out his
telescope. Extending the tube to its maximum length, he swept the
horizon ahead of them.
"Could be land to the northwest," he said, adjusting the focus.
"Yeah, that's green trees, pines and oak, which means dry land. Salt
water would kill those."
"Distance," Ryan asked, removing the bandanna around his forehead
and wringing it dry.
J.B. tucked the scope into his munitions bag. "Five miles, mebbe
less."
"Excellent." Doc exhaled, spitting on his chapped hands and rubbing
them together. "Under a spreading chestnut tree, the Deathlands warrior
stands…"
"Stop misquoting, Longfellow," Mildred snorted, spreading some
grease on her lips from a small tin box. The bearings were still in the
tires under the raft, the old grease a soothing balm for the thirsty
people.
Doc arched a silvery eyebrow. "Laughter is the best medicine, madam."
"Tell that to a person with rad poisoning."
"Cynic."
"Old coot."
With a warning shout, Krysty fired her blaster, the S&W .38
booming in the eerie stillness of the Carolina swamp. The others spun
about, weapons searching for danger.
"Sorry," she apologized, mopping the sweat off her brow. "Thought I
saw something move in the water."
Fanning himself with the hat, J.B. squinted. "Just a log."
"No, it isn't," Ryan said, wading around the raft. Drawing his
panga, he stabbed the log and lifted it out of the muck. There were
eyes and teeth. He twisted the blade, and the body dropped back into
the swamp and sank from sight.
"A mutie snake," he stated, sheathing the blade. "Bastard
bushmaster. Poisonous. Nice shooting."
"Thanks."
J.B. sneezed loudly.
The companions turned fast, their weapons level.
"We have company," the Armorer said, sliding the Uzi off his
shoulder.
A humanoid being stood thirty feet away from them. It was dressed in
tight clothing with most of its hairless body exposed. Tools hung off a
net vest, and a sleek metal helmet covered its head, three red eyes
staring out from the dark interior. The warrior was holding a long
bamboo spear, tipped with a mirror-bright steel blade. Minutes passed
in silence.
"Greetings," Ryan said in an even tone. The SIG-Sauer was in his
hand, but not pointing at the mutie.
The swamp dweller tilted its head and clicked loudly.
Surprisingly, Jak tried French. "
Parlez vous fran-gais?"
The being craned its head forward on a long neck and clicked some
more, then pointed its spear to the south, then the north.
"No farther," Krysty translated, her hair waving nervously about.
"He's claiming the rest of the swamp."
Surreptitiously, Dean moved his hand to the grip of his blaster.
Instantly, the mutie leveled his spear, two hands gripping the shaft as
if braced against a recoil.
"It's a distance weapon of some kind," J.B. said, working the bolt
on his Uzi.
"Everybody relax and put the blasters away," Ryan ordered,
stepping between the mutie and the others. "Trader always used to say
that it was easier to make deals than bullets. He hasn't attacked yet,
and we all know he had the element of surprise."
"We are headed for the land," Ryan said slowly, in case the
creature could understand. This swamp was close to Georgia, and they
once found a race of underwater muties there called Dwellers. They had
trouble speaking, but easily understood human speech.
"Doesn't look anything like a Dweller," Mildred noted.
The creature clicked at Ryan and dropped its spear into the water.
Finally understanding, Ryan slid the Steyr off his shoulder and hung it
back on upside down, then he drew his blaster and dropped it on the
deck
of the raft. Empty-handed, the two stood face-to-face, then the
creature clicked again and stepped aside.
"Thanks," Ryan said honestly. "Much appreciated."
The mutie clicked once loudly, then sank below the water, hardly
making a splash or a ripple.
"Fascinating," Doc said, and walking forward he probed the swamp
with his stick. The ebony shaft hit mud until he reached the spot where
the mutie had been standing. There was no detectable ground there.
Deciding to test the depth, he found it was beyond the limit of his
stick and arm combined.
"This is the end of the swamp," Doc stated, wiping off his stick on
a damp handkerchief. "We've reached deep water. Mayhap a lake, or even
the original river of this area before the nukes reshaped the
landscape."
Swatting at flies, Ryan studied the raft. "I think we lost enough
supplies that it'll float with all of us on board."
"Only one way to find out," J.B. said with a grin, dropping his rope.
Pushing the raft ahead of them, the companions trod water until no
longer able to touch bottom. Carefully, they climbed onto the craft and
saw that the salty water washed over the logs, but they stayed afloat.
"Some of us could swim alongside," Dean suggested, precariously
balanced on the very edge of the raft.
Harshly, Ryan vetoed that idea. "Everybody stays on board. There
could be anything swimming around down below."
"Bullets can't go very far through water," J.B. commented. "Nothing
can, really."
"So we move fast," Ryan stated. "J.B., use your shotgun. I'll use
the Steyr."
The Armorer stared at the water with scorn. "I guess we have to."
Going to opposite sides of the raft, the men flipped their
longblasters over and started using the wooden stocks as oars, steadily
stroking in unison. The others kept watch as the men slowly paddled
away from the swamp and into the hidden sea. Despite the crudeness of
the oars, they soon built up a good speed, and the dot of greenery
expanded to a wide strip. Soon they could discern a faint smell of
living plants.
"Land," Krysty said, sighing. "I'll cook dinner if somebody else
gets the wood."
"A deal, dear lady," Doc said. "Chopping wood will be a delight
after dragging the
Cornucopia through mud for ten miles."
"But, once we get to dry land," Dean said, "this raft will be
useless. Too bad there isn't some way to keep the cargo with us. I like
having enough to eat and spare ammo."
"Too true, lad," Doc rumbled.
"Got three wheels," Jak suggested, thumping the bottom of the raft.
Paddling in easy strokes, J.B. chewed the inside of his cheek,
"Yeah, mebbe. If there's enough wood, we could make a cart and roll the
stuff along. But we'd be traveling slower than shit in winter."
"Better dump the excess, and only take what we can carry," Ryan
decided, muscles rippling in his powerful arms as he pulled the blaster
through the water. Thankfully, the Steyr had a plastic stock, but J.B.
was doing irreparable harm to the tiger wood of his scattergun. "If we
travel too slowly, the blue shirts will find us, rather than the other
way around, and they have too many advantages as it is."
Resting his back against the canvas mound, Doc barked a bitter
laugh. "Too much ammunition. I daresay this is a problem we have never
faced before."
"Hush," Mildred said urgently, staring into the murky depths. "I saw
a disturbance underwater."
"Snake?" Jak asked, drawing his blaster.
"Could be."
Ryan and J.B. continued paddling, but watched the surface of the
water carefully for any unusual movements.
Suddenly, a hundred of the beings resembling the humanoid they had
encountered earlier silently rose from the water, completely
surrounding the raft and its startled occupants. Each was armed with a
long spear and what seemed to be a needle-thin knife made out of
intricately carved bone.
"It's a trap!" J.B. shouted, hefting the shotgun and pumping a round
into the chamber. But before he could act, the strange beings turned
their backs on the humans, forming a line around the raft, their bamboo
spears leveled as if for battle.
"What the—? They're here to protect us," the Armorer said in
realization, lowering the scattergun.
"We do have permission to be here," Ryan noted, placing the Steyr on
his lap.
"Protect us from what?" Mildred demanded suspiciously. Few folks
these days knew the word
honor, and even fewer obeyed its
simple rules.
"Look there!" Krysty pointed. Something large was moving through the
lake, coming straight toward the raft, the water foaming white in its
wake.
The mutie from the swamp rose into view as smoothly as if it were
riding an elevator. Excited, the creature waved its arms and gestured
at the land, clicking so fast the noise was like a stick dragged across
a picket fence.
"Thanks again," Ryan said with unaccustomed feeling. "Okay, move
with a purpose, people! We've got to get to land if there's going to be
trouble!"
Ryan and J.B. put their backs into stroking, and the rest of the
companions started paddling with their bare hands.
"Mebbe we should stay and help," Dean suggested, bent at his task.
"Too vulnerable out here," his father barked. "On land, we can offer
them assistance. But out here, we're only a liability, making them
protect two things."
The boy nodded in understanding and redoubled his efforts.
With excruciating slowness, they gradually pulled away from the line
of clicking beings when the raft violently shook as if it struck a
rock. For a heartbeat, the companions thought that's all it was, just a
rock. Then the tiny craft heaved upward, going higher and higher to
finally flip over and spill them overboard.
Desperately holding his breath, Ryan grabbed the sinking Steyr
before it got out of reach and started for the surface. Stroking with
one arm, he got a brief ; glimpse of a dark shape moving among them at
incredible speed. Whatever their attacker was, it wasn't one of their
guardians or a rock. A submarine? '
Reaching the surface, Ryan caught his breath and saw that the raft
was destroyed. The logs were smashed and floating away freely, the
thick chains snapped apart, the precious supplies sinking to the depths
below.
"Gator!" Jak shouted, splashing around, a knife in his hand.
Kicking to stay afloat, Ryan looked at the dry land so terribly far
away. "Back to the swamp!" he shouted, and started swimming in that
direction.
With every kick, every stroke, the man waited to feel the crushing
bite of the alligator seizing a limb. But he reached the muddy banks
alive and struggled into the knee-deep water. The others were only
seconds behind, and the companions moved away from the invisible border
and checked their weapons.
"Everybody here?" Ryan demanded, working the bolt on the Steyr.
"Looks like," J.B. announced, cleaning the droplets off his glasses.
"Dark night, was that a gator? The bastard thing must have been over
thirty feet long!"
"Seen bigger," Jak commented, shaking the excess moisture out of his
Colt Python.
"How did you chill it?" Mildred asked, pouring the water from her
med kit to lessen its weight.
"Didn't. Aced whole ville."
"Oh, hell," Doc said, scowling at his LeMat, the fresh charge of
black powder dribbling out. "Lost my sword-stick, too. Can somebody
loan me a blaster?"
Steyr in hand, Ryan tossed over the SIG-Sauer. Doc made the catch
and expertly dropped the clip to check the ammo, then slammed it back
into the butt of the pistol and jacketed the slide to chamber a round.
Doc might prefer an old-fashioned revolver, but he knew how to work a
modern blaster perfectly well.
"What's going to stop it?" Dean asked, checking his pockets for
spare clips. He found only two; the rest had gone to the bottom.
"Grens will," J.B. stated, passing out the military spheres from his
munitions bag. "Don't get crazy. That's it for explosives. One each.
The rest went down with the raft."
"This is enough," Krysty said, unwrapping the electrical tape from
the handle. The ball was green with a black stripe, high explosive with
steel shrapnel, exactly what they needed. Too bad they had only these
few charges.
Out on the watery expanse, noises and splashing were coming from
under the turbulent surface. Red blood spread outward from the aquatic
combat, obscuring whatever was happening.
"I don't think our friends are winning," Ryan growled.
Then a large shape rose into view. A dozen spears were sticking out
of its hoary hide, but the triumphant beast had a limp warrior dangling
from its huge jaws. Tossing the body aside, the gator rolled over,
showing its pale belly to the sky, then dived out of sight.
Tucking the gren into a pants pocket, Krysty furrowed her brow in
thought. "An animal that size can't live in this swamp," she decided.
"There's not enough food.
The mutie must come from somewhere else to feed on these guys when it's
hungry enough. It's probably the terror of their world."
"Starving mean dangerous," Jak noted grimly.
"Well, they tried to protect us, so we return the favor," Ryan
stated, making sure the panga was still in its sheath. "Besides, if
they lose, it'll come after us next, and without the raft there's no
way we'd last long enough in the water to ever reach land alive."
"Gator follow dry land," Jak agreed.
"Any weak points?" Mildred asked pointedly.
"Eyes, belly. Ears best, but hid."
In a rush of water, the bawling gator lifted into view again with
the chief clinging to its back by a bone knife, wildly stabbing at the
beast with a spear.
"Light it up!" Ryan shouted, and started firing.
The companions aimed for the head, away from the chief, but their
small-caliber rounds bounced off the thick hide. Only the .357 magnum
slugs from Jak's Colt Python punched holes in the gator. Then the chief
came free from the mutie creature and went flying. Riding the Uzi into
a tight group, J.B. sprayed half a clip of 9 mm Parabellum rounds,
hoping for a lucky strike. Undamaged, the beast was gone beneath the
choppy waves.
"By the Three Kennedys!" Doc shouted in frustration, and began the
laborious process of cleaning and reloading the .44 LeMat. As a
precaution against rain, he always keep a few charges of ball and
powder inside plastic film containers. It wasn't much, but until he got
fresh supplies of black powder, it was all he had for the handcannon.
Dean reloaded the Browning Hi-Power and splashed away from the
fight. "I know what to do. Jak, come with me!"
Snapping shut his Colt, the pale teenager stared at the running boy,
puzzled, then smiled and took off after him.
"Hurry!" Ryan shouted, removing the spent clip from the interior of
the Steyr and dropping in a fresh one.
There was some splashing nearby, and a score of the humanoids rose
from the lake and shuffled onto the swamp. Some were bleeding from
cuts, a few helped others walk and none looked in fighting shape. The
chief stood directing the others, and Ryan could now see the being
wasn't a human mutie, but more like an insect. A beautiful rainbow
chitin was exposed through the slashes, and small quivering antennae
were visible under the helmet, which Ryan now thought of as a crown, as
only the chief had one. The smooth tan hide covering the bug was
actually clothes, laced tight and with pockets. Some sort of fish hide,
and not the human skin it resembled from a distance.
"It's camou," Krysty stated, "to hide their natural bright colors."
"They look like water beetles," Mildred added thoughtfully. "Only
without the wings."
Ryan went to the chief and pointed toward the lake, then lifted his
hand. "One?" he asked, raising a finger.
The beetle warrior gave a single click.
"Okay, there's only one of the fuckers. If it was more, we'd be
running. But we can chill one gator."
"How?" J.B. asked, thumbing rounds into a spent clip.
"The mouth," Krysty replied stoically, snapping the cylinder of her
weapon closed. "We let it get close, then blow it apart from the
inside."
Holstering her ZKR, Mildred held out a hand. "Shotgun," she said to
the Armorer, and he passed over the weapon.
A beetle stuttered loudly and threw its spear into the lake as the
gator charged from the water, the shaft jutting from its head. The
beast shook off the spear and plowed through the beetles, snapping one
in its powerful jaws and crushing the insect. The warriors jumped on
it, stabbing wildly, but the spear points could do no more damage than
the 9 mm rounds of the blasters. Flipping on its back, the gator
crushed a beetle and lashed its tail at another, removing the head.
"Son of a bitch!" Mildred roared, and fired the shotgun. The spray
of buckshot hit the speckled hide, doing scant damage. Cursing
furiously, the woman worked the pump and ejected the rest of the
buckshot cartridges, then shoved in new ones from the loops on the
strap.
Pulling the pin, Krysty threw the gren, and it landed in the gator's
open mouth. But the beast hawked the obstruction loose and the sphere
rolled into the lake and detonated, throwing water to the sky.
Startled, the beetles backed away from the blast, and the gator
lashed out its tail randomly. Closing in for a kill, Mildred dived out
of the way just in time, losing her grip on the scattergun. It vanished
beneath the swampy brine.
The range was too close to try a gren again, so the humans pounded
the beast with their weapons, dodging out of the way when it came
close. The chief led the beetles back to the fight, and started
launching the barbed points of their spear like crossbow bolts from the
shafts. But nothing seemed to do anything more than annoy or distract
the thirty-foot reptile.
Taking a stance, Doc leveled the LeMat and pulled the trigger. The
percussion cap gave a bang, but the charge didn't ignite. A misfire.
For the first time ever, Ryan heard the old man use a word the scholar
normally pretended didn't even exist.
As if sensing a weak member in the pack, the gator charged at the
gray-haired man, its stubby legs propelling it just as fast on the mud
as in the water. Doc stood his ground and waited. Holding the blaster
with both hands, he triggered the weapon at point-blank range. The
LeMat threw flame and thunder, and the gator recoiled, hissing in pain
as black blood flowed from a puckered wound in its torso. It tried
circling Doc, and the man fired again, a miss. Then a piece of the
mutie's scalp was blown away, exposing its bare white skull. Doc fired
again and was rewarded with a dry click. Empty.
Rolling over, the gator lashed at Doc with its deadly tail. With the
grace of a fencer, Doc swayed out of the way and pulled the SIG-Sauer,
shooting a fast dozen times at the beast. But the 9 mm slugs glanced
harmlessly off the dense hide of the giant mutie.
While the humans reloaded, the beetles rallied and launched another
salvo of spearheads. By now the mutie was mad with blood lust and pain.
Bawling in rage, it snapped its terrible jaws and lashed its tail, the
entire lower half of its muscular body swaying from the pendulum force
of the killing limb.
Aiming from the hip, Ryan fired the Steyr at a rock under the beast,
and scored a ricochet into its belly, thin blood pumping from the
wound. The beast turned its furious attention on him alone. Ryan braced
for a charge, when there came the report of a big-bore handgun and he
saw the hide of the beast spray out dark blood. Instantly, the
creature shook itself as if trying to dislodge something on its skin.
Walking through the swamp, flies buzzing everywhere, Jak came on as
steady as a machine, firing his .357 magnum pistol again and again,
every round smacking into the mutie gator. With each impact, the gator
went mad as if jabbed with white-hot pokers. Its breathing became
labored, white foam dribbled from its jaws and weakly the beast charged
the pale teenager.
As Jak reloaded, Mildred stepped between them and fired the wet,
filthy scattergun, the flechette round blowing off the gator's front
leg. Now the animal screamed and hastily turned, hobbling for the deep
waters of the lake.
Ryan and the chief both shouted as the humans and beetles converged
on the killer. As the creature was no longer able to dodge, the
small-caliber rounds found its eyes. Blind, it spun in a circle,
lashing out with its tail and catching a beetle across the torso. But
the warrior was merely knocked aside and not pulverized. The beast was
weakening fast. Mildred fired again, opening its chest, and the beetles
filled the wound with their spears, one penetrating more than a yard.
Dark blood poured from its mouth as the dying mutie crawled
relentlessly for the safety of the water. Then Ryan stepped in front of
the beast and fired directly into a gaping eye socket. The gator jerked
as if hitting a wall and dropped flat in the shallow swamp, a pool of
blood spreading wide until it seemed to cover the entire surface of the
Carolina swampland.
"That was one tough son of a bitch," J.B. stated, jerking the bolt
on the Uzi to clear a jam. "What the hell was on those bullets, the
snake?"
"Bushmaster," Dean said proudly, holding up the bloody snake head
for the others to see, the white fangs glistening in the afternoon
light, the hollow tips moist and still dripping. "I thought of the
poison, but only Jak's blaster could carry a dose."
"But my LeMat is more powerful," Doc said.
"You fire miniballs, solid slugs," Ryan explained. "The magnum was
loaded with hollowpoints. Perfect for the job."
"Just a drop of venom in each," Dean boasted, "and a dab of mud to
keep it there."
Doc smiled. "Good call there, young Dean. And exemplary shooting,
Jak."
"Shit," Jak said, dropping the spent shells from his blaster and
rinsing the weapon in the dirty water. "Big target. How miss?"
"I'm just glad it's chilled," Krysty stated wearily. She looked
around for a place to sit, and saw nothing.
Mildred straightened from examining the still form. "It's snuffed,"
she reported. "No doubt of that."
Shuffling forward, the chief offered his spear to Jak. The teenager
grunted in thanks, and Dean offered the bushmaster in return. It was
accepted reverently, then the chief called out a series of long clicks.
The surviving warriors waved their gory spears overhead and swarmed
over the gator hacking it to pieces. Whether for food, or just to make
sure it was really dead, none of the companions knew or cared.
"Now what?" Dean asked, rinsing his hands in the brine.
Ryan slung the longblaster over a shoulder and looked at the distant
speck of green. "We start swimming."
Chapter Ten
Reaching the shoals of the island, the companions climbed wearily
over the exposed tangles of tree roots and finally reached dry land.
Going inland, they found pine trees growing thick along the shoreline,
the ground covered with needles. Drained, the friends dropped to the
soft carpeting and fell asleep almost immediately. Ryan found himself
to be the last one awake, and dragged over a rock to sit on as he took
first guard duty. Hours later, Krysty awoke and relieved him at the
post. Choosing a spot, Ryan lay down and finally allowed himself to
succumb to exhaustion. This had been a long and hectic day.
RYAN AWOKE to the smell of coffee and roasting meat. Sitting
upright, he pushed aside the blanket covering him and stared at the
boxes and crates dotting the campsite.
A fire was crackling in a pit, and the carpet of needles had been
cleared away from any possible flying embers. J.B. was stirring
something in a pan that sizzled, and the coffeepot bubbled softly,
emitting the most tantalizing aroma. On guard duty, Mildred was sitting
with her back to a pine tree, blaster in hand. There was no sign of the
others.
"We got our supplies back," J.B. said in greeting, using a knife to
flip over some meat in the pan. "The beetles retrieved most of the
stuff from the bottom of the lake. They even found Doc's swordstick and
my hat."
"Damn nice of them. How bad is it?" Ryan asked, pouring himself a
cup of coffee. The smell alone invigorated the man. He understood how
predark folks could get hooked on the brew.
Using a sock to protect his hand, J.B. took the iron pan off the
fire and slid a steak onto a tin plate from an Army mess kit. "Good and
bad," he remarked, passing over the food. "The ammo is fine. The boxes
are airtight, and the brass was only underwater a short while. No
problem there. We got back four more grens and two Claymore mines. We
found a freshwater spring inland a couple of hundred paces from here.
Have to boil it first to be sure, but it reads clean."
"And," Ryan prompted, cutting into the meat. It was tough but
edible. He guessed it was some of the gator from yesterday.
"Everything else is gone, including the last rocket launcher. We
barely have enough food for another day. A lot of the MRE packs got
opened when the raft was torn apart, and more floated away. I think the
beetles stole some, but probably because they were pretty. Not for the
food. They have enough meat to feed a whole ville for a month. The can
of fuel is gone, as well as all of the medical supplies, bedrolls, rope
and the tent canvas. That is our only pan. So if you want hot food with
the steak, you have to wait till it's washed."
"This'll do," Ryan answered with a full mouth. Hunger was the best
sauce.
"On the other hand," J.B. added, gesturing with his head, "that huge
roll of leather over there is the gator. They skinned the huge bastard
and gave us the hide."
"Guess it's a reward for helping them." Ryan grinned, wiping his
mouth on his hand. "Make nice boots."
"Weighs a ton."
"So I would guess, but we can't leave it. That would insult the
chief." Ryan laid the plate aside. "Just stuff it in the big duffel bag
with some salt to keep the smell down. When we're a couple of miles
from here, we'll throw it away."
"Speaking of awful smells," Mildred said, tossing a bar of soap on
the ground at his boots, "you'll find the spring a hundred feet to the
north."
Ryan tucked the bar into a shirt pocket. Breakfast had disguised the
odors for a while, but now the stink of the swamp muck, mixed with
dried gator blood and sweat, was returning strong. "Anybody else there?"
"Everybody washed earlier. It's all yours."
Taking his weapons, Ryan moved through the pine trees, easily
finding the spring. Clear water bubbled from the ground, forming a
still pool, and Ryan checked the area. The water was crystal clear, and
nothing could get within ten feet of him without being seen first.
Stripping, the one-eyed man washed his clothes to get out the stink of
the swamp, then hung them over some bushes to dry in the sunlight.
Next, he grabbed a handful of pine needles and rubbed them vigorously
into his combat boots to remove the sour smell of sweat and sulfur.
Making sure his blasters were within easy reach, Ryan submerged his
tired body in the pool and scrubbed himself clean using the tiny bar of
soap from an MRE pack and some more pine needles. He was surprised at
the amount of grime that came out of his hair, and on impulse decide to
shave using his knife. When finished, Ryan felt enormously refreshed
and lay on the bank of the spring to let the warm breezes dry him off.
There was a rustle in the bushes, and he drew the blaster with
lightning speed as Krysty walked into view.
"Hi, lover," she said, smiling. "Nice view."
Immediately, Ryan felt himself stirring under her frank gaze. "You
missed breakfast," he said, clicking the safety back on.
She sat and kicked off her boots. "Had mine earlier. Doc and I have
been on recce. Dean spotted some smoke drifting over the trees, and we
followed it to a ville about five miles away. Good walls. No rads.
Seems okay."
His interest shifted to their mission. "Any chance of getting a wag
there?"
Krysty stroked his cheek, tracing a fingertip along the jagged scar.
The man wore his life on his body, the network of healed wounds telling
more than anything else could. He was a stone-cold killer when
necessary, and yet would share food with strangers—when there was
extra. No starry-eyed dreamer who lived on wishes, he was the ultimate
pragmatist, and yet many times during their travels they helped save
villes he might never see again. Ryan only wanted to live in peace, but
constantly shook the world until its teeth rattled. Krysty considered
him the only real man she had ever known.
"Ask me that again later," the redhead whispered, slowly unbuttoning
her shirt.
THE SUN WAS HIGH when the companions left the pine island and headed
for the mainland. They were carrying all of the remaining supplies,
along with the gift from the beetle warriors. A narrow land bridge
crossed the inlet, and soon they were walking through fields of scrub
grass. Broken stone walls sectioned the landscape, showing that the
area used to be farms at one time. Mountains rose in the far distance,
the rocky crags seeming to support the ominous dark clouds filling the
sky.
A beaten path wound through the grassy fields and windswept arroyos.
Soon the companions reached a flattened dirt road leading toward the
high stockade of a ville. The outer wall was made of logs and stones,
rising to twice a man's height, the top bristly with sharp sticks and a
few strands of rusty barbed wire.
Sec men armed with homemade blasters stood guard at the open
gateway, the man and woman watching the companions closely as they
approached. The guards were tense about the open display of blasters,
but they said nothing as Ryan and the others walked into the ville.
"They must get a lot of outlanders," Krysty surmised.
Ryan frowned. "Or the guards are fools."
Inside the walls, they found a bustling community built from the
remains of a predark city. The houses and buildings were arranged in
orderly rows, the streets clean hard-packed dirt. A gallows stood by
itself, though no rope dangled from the killing bar. People walked
about carrying baskets and buckets. The aroma of frying fish was in the
air, along with the smell of horses.
"Whoever built this place knew what they were doing," Mildred said
in admiration. "See how far apart the lavs are from the public water
well? No cholera here."
"Good defenses," Ryan agreed, gesturing to tall towers made from
felled trees. Sec men stood guard holding crossbows, with strange
curved axes hanging from thongs at their hips.
"Throwing axes," Jak noted while straightening his collar, being
very careful of the razor blades hidden within the fabric. "Mighty hard
learn, kill good."
Doing a recce, the companions entered the ville commons and watched
a potter spinning bowls from red clay, a horde of children staring in
fascination at the process. A fat woman was selling beer from a tub,
while a white-hair tailor mended the shirt still on a burly man and a
barber cut hair.
"Civilization," Mildred said, sighing. "Such as it is."
"Better than that junkyard ville," Dean stated.
"True enough."
Ryan worked the slide on his SIG-Sauer, ejecting a live round. The
brass spun in the air and he caught the bullet, returning it to the
clip.
"Now they know we're armed and have ammo," he said, holstering the
piece, "that should hold down the chilling."
The crack of a whip made Doc stop in the street, a hand going to his
swordstick. "Mother of God," he muttered.
Near a kindergarten jungle gym, now a coop full of cackling
chickens, a line of people tossed shafts of grain on a millstone. The
great slab of granite rotated along on top of another, grinding the
wheat into flour. Four thick poles embedded in the top stone were being
pushed along by a dozen people in chains, their backs bent to the
arduous task. An overseer watched their progress and touched up their
speed with the flick of his bullwhip.
"Slaves," Doc said, starting forward.
Ryan stopped him with a grip of iron. "We don't have the time or
the firepower," he said harshly. "First we take care of ourselves, then
we'll see what can be done about the slaves. Forget it for now."
Radiating fury, Doc glared at Ryan, a vein in his forehead pulsating
steadily. He knew the one-eyed man had never been a slave of another. A
captive, yes. Forced to work and kill for some baron's amusement, yes.
But never a slave, and so he couldn't really know the emotions welling
within him. Slowly, the old man relaxed his stance. "Yes, you are
correct," Doc rumbled. "It is not a matter to be taken
care of today."
Ryan nodded and continued walking.
Leaving the marketplace in their wake, the companions reached a
strip mall from predark days. The display windows were long gone,
replaced with wooden boards, but it was still a mall. The supermarket
was now a tavern, the bank a gaudy house. Some local toughs lounged
outside, chatting to a young woman with an old face. Upon seeing Ryan
walking their way, the men took their leave.
"Hey, miss!" J.B. called to the woman. "Over here!"
Dressed in the loose, revealing clothes of her trade, the blonde
ambled toward them and opened her blouse, exposing small but pert
breasts.
"Whatcha want, stud?" she asked coyly. "I'll do ya right here for
some of that brass I saw you flashing. Or we can go to my tent if
you're shy. I'm Dancing Feather, the hottest slut here, no matter what
that bitch at the Red Bear tavern says."
"That's not what we want," Ryan said, withdrawing a single 9 mm
round and bouncing it in his palm. "Tell us about this place. Who's in
charge?"
The whore beamed a smile and closed her blouse, stealing a quick
jealous glance at Krysty and Mildred.
"Old man Polk is the baron here," she said, sidling closer and
reaching out for the bullet. "He's okay. Finds us enough to eat each
winter, don't allow no rape in public. But ya better hop when he says
frog, or you'll serve the wheel. Any sec man can load that in his
blaster and fire it."
So that's where the slaves at the grinding stone came from—local
criminals slow to obey. Ryan withdrew his hand. "More."
Placing hands on hips, she glared in hostility, then burst into
laughter. "Okay, fair dealing. This is Flat Rock ville, and unless
you're a stupe, that's obvious." She jerked her head toward a squarish
boulder in the middle of the ville located near an empty flagpole and a
World War II howitzer in remarkably good condition.
"Get a lot of strangers?" Krysty asked.
"I sure do!" Feather grinned, wiggling her hips suggestively, then
ceasing the act since it was getting her nowhere. "Yeah, sometimes
outlanders arrive, but not very many these days of the mutie in the
water. Big nasty thing, lots of teeth and—"
"Not interested," Ryan interrupted. "Is there a stable where can we
buy horses?"
"Buy a horse?" Feather gasped. "You that rich?"
Ryan said nothing.
She shrugged. It wasn't her business. "Go down the street, past the
burned-down church. Then follow your nose."
Ryan tossed her the bullet. "Thanks."
Tucking the round someplace safe, the slut watched them walk away.
The bullet would buy her a week of sleeping under a roof and all the
stale bread she could eat. And just for talking. Outlanders were
idiots. Then she reconsidered that. Mebbe they really did have enough
jack to buy horses. They certainly gave up a brass easy enough.
Heading across the town, the companions passed numerous folks in the
street, many of them carrying long poles tipped with curved blades or
heavy nets laced with dull copper wiring.
"Gator hunters," J.B. guessed.
Shifting the duffel bag on his shoulder, Jak snorted. "Too late."
Beyond a hole in the ground filled with rubble and stained glass,
Ryan found their goal. The stable was a former gas station, the horses
corralled in the service bays, water troughs where the fuel pumps used
to be located. The office was now living quarters, ratty furniture
resting on bricks instead of legs. Iron grates covered the window, and
curtains made from shag carpet had been hung to afford some level of
privacy.
Ryan knocked on a metal sign bearing the logo of a winged horse.
"Customers!" he called out. "Anybody home?"
Out of a back room walked a man with a protruding belly, his clothes
covered with food stains, a throwing ax in his hand.
"Oh, just outlanders." He grimaced. "No jobs here. Got a stable boy
for the mucking. Try the farms north of here."
"We're here to buy," Ryan said, lifting a fistful of rounds from his
pocket. The action also showed the SIG-Sauer resting on his hip. The
demeanor of the stable owner changed on the spot.
"Well, well! Why didn't you say so?" he gushed, tossing aside the ax
and rushing over to push up the garage doors. They rose with a squeal
of tortured metal, and he stepped inside. "Want a horse, do you? Fat
Tom got the best in the world."
"Highly doubtful," Mildred commented, wrinkling her nose at the
smell of used hay and fish-oil lanterns.
A scrawny stable boy sat in the corner, polishing a saddle with spit
and a wad of congealed grease. Mounds of dirty hay covered the stained
concrete, and split rails sectioned the repair shop into a double row
of small stalls. Horses of various colors stood in each, nibbling hay,
and watching the humans with fearful expressions. Obviously, they were
beaten into submission and not won over with kindness. Ryan immediately
classified the stable owner as a coward. There was no other reason to
beat animals who delighted in working for humans. Men with horses had
conquered most of the old world, because they enjoyed being together.
"Not bad," J.B. said diplomatically, thinking he wouldn't want to
store shit here. "How many do you have?"
"Ten," Tom said proudly, picking his ear. "But one's a swayback
we'll be eating this winter, and two are colts not strong enough to
carry a baby."
Walking among the animals, Ryan studied them carefully. Good legs
and withers. No sign of split hooves or mange. Their coats were rough,
with burrs caught in the tails. The horses needed a serious currying,
but otherwise were in good health.
"We'll take them," Ryan decided.
"Which two? Or did you want three, mebbe?"
Her cascade of fiery hair gently waving, Krysty held out a hand and
stroked one of the nervous beasts. The animal instantly calmed and
nuzzled her palm affectionately. "We're buying all seven."
Fat Tom roared in laughter, his belly bouncing. "Not even Baron Polk
has that much jack! I need some for working the fields. You gonna feed
my family this winter? Thought not."
"Trade you," J.B. said, dropping the duffel bag to the ground.
The stable owner stroked his greasy chin. "Your redhead doesn't look
like she has the coughing sickness. Of course, I'd want to inspect her
cunny first before taking a ride, but if she's any good, I'd trade you
two horses for an hour with her."
"That's fifty-nine minutes longer than you would be breathing,"
Krysty said, low and cold, her blaster partially drawn.
The man cackled and slapped a knee. "Good un! She's a fireblast,
that one. Redheads, God love 'em."
"Try again," Ryan stated in a voice of granite.
"Well, I'll trade four horses for that fancy scattergun, four eyes."
"In your dreams." J.B. frowned.
Fat Tom shrugged. "Just talking. No offense meant."
Sensing the bargaining was getting serious, Ryan lowered his
backpack to the floor and withdrew an oily blanket. Unwrapping the
bundle, he hauled into view a AK-47 without a stock.
"Nuke me," the man whispered, reaching for the weapon and drawing
his hands away before touching it. "That a rapid fire?"
"Eight hundred rounds a minute."
He snorted. "Ain't that much ammo in the whole world!"
Ryan didn't contradict the man. "We have two clips, one with ten
live rounds, the other empty. Plus, fifty spent rounds you can reload.
The stock is gone, but you can whittle a new one."
"Ten rounds for a rapid fire. That's one trigger click. No deal."
Then he added, "Besides, got a blaster. Made it myself."
Ryan had spotted the weapon hanging on the wall when they first
entered. It was made of corroded iron pipes bound together with rusty
barbed wire and leather straps. He doubted if the shotgun would work
more than once without blowing apart. Suddenly, he knew the local was
lying
for some reason, and staffed his position to keep a
watch
on the garage doors.
J.B. dropped the heavy duffel bag. "Well, you haven't got one of
these."
Squinting suspiciously, Fat Tom watched as J.B. opened the
drawstrings and lifted out the roll of hide.
"Aw, I don't need a coat," Tom sniffed. "Never gets bad cold down
here."
With a flip, J.B. unrolled the skin, sending it across the floor of
the stable almost reaching the door. "It's not a jacket, you fat fool,"
he stated. "This is the hide of the gator from the swamp. That's a
hundred pairs of boots, plus gun belts and some jackets."
"No, it can't be." Tom touched the wide expanse of hoary skin in
disbelief. "You chilled Frankenstein."
"Just a gator," Jak corrected.
"A dead gator." Licking his lips, the stable owner looked at the
companions. "Well now, that is a lot of strong leather. Yeah, sure,
I'll trade you seven horses for ole Frank."
"Plus tack," Krysty added, the chestnut mare licking her palm. She
had already decided on which horse she would ride.
"Of course, of course," he muttered, fingering the hide. Even marked
with scars, burns and bullet holes, the durable skin was still
beautiful, and flexible. He could probably make bulletproof vests from
the stuff and sell them to barons for a fortune. Ammo, food and sluts
till he died.
"Anything you want," the man said, beaming. "Saddles and reins.
Blankets, too. I wouldn't want to cheat you on the trade. Fair deal
Tom, that's me. Ask anybody above the soil."
With instincts honed in a hundred trades, Ryan knew that was too
much, too fast. The hide had to be worth a hell of a lot more than they
thought possible. "Eight," he corrected, testing the limits of the
deal. "Plus tack, plus feed."
"But there's only seven of you!"
"And we'll need one to haul supplies."
"Oh, use the boy," Tom countered hotly. "He's young and strong, why
burden a horse? They're expensive."
The stable boy was cowering, and new shadows appeared on the wall
from people standing in the doorway.
"Incoming," Ryan said with a smile.
Tom scratched his head. "What's that mean, huh?"
"I know," J.B. answered, pulling the Uzi in front of him.
Doc crossed his arms and rested a hand on the LeMat. "Could be
friendlies," he hedged.
There came the click-clack of a blaster, and Ryan spun, shooting
from the hip just as the man with the shotgun fired. A sprinkling of
buckshot took Ryan in the shoulder as he dived for cover. Fat Tom
started pleading as the stocky man in the doorway fired again, blowing
the plump man off the floor.
"Three, two, one," Ryan said, standing.
In unison, the companions unleashed a volley of lead. Torn to
pieces, the attacker fell into the trough, the scattergun breaking in
two as it hit the ground. A line of holes in the trough began to leak
water. Then a flurry of arrows hissed into the stable, thudding into
the split rails, posts and walls.
"There's more," Krysty announced, snapping off shots. Nearby, Fat
Tom lay dead on the floor, his guts splattered over the wall and
dribbling onto his shocked face.
Crouched behind a bale of hay, J.B. shoved the Uzi over the top and
fired a short spray. A man cried out, but it sounded fake.
"It's the assholes from the tavern," Ryan said, clearing a jam.
"Bitch Feather," Jak snarled.
"No, this is my fault," Ryan stated harshly. "I wasn't paying
attention for once. Not a blaster in sight here, and we come waltzing
in with an arsenal. Of course somebody is going to try and chill us."
An ax flew between the horses and slammed into the floor, biting
inches into the wood, missing Doc's hand by a hair. He withdrew quickly.
"They will try," Doc corrected, watching the doorway that led to the
living quarters. A figure darted into view, and he snapped off a shot
from the LeMat, catching the man in the throat. Clutching his shredded
flesh, the man stumbled and fell, quietly bleeding to death in the
doorway.
The horses were whinnying in fear, making it hard to hear movements
outside. "You there, boy," Krysty demanded, crawling on her belly.
"Where's the back door?"
"Ain't got one," the boy whimpered, huddled in the corner. "Just the
front."
"Ladder to the hayloft?"
"The what?"
"Where you store the hay!" The boy gestured at the floor. In
understanding, Krysty cursed the slovenly stable owner. There was no
way out, and they were trapped in a tinderbox. "Sure hope they don't
want to burn us out!" she muttered.
"That would chill the horses," J.B. said, firing at the ground and
hitting a booted foot. The owner screamed, fell into view and was
chilled. "They can't get us, and we can't leave. It's a standoff."
"So what do we do?" Dean asked, sliding a fresh clip into his gun.
Surrendering their blasters wasn't an option. They would only get
chilled afterward as the coldhearts laughed at their stupidity.
"Change rules," Jak said, holding his breath as he fired his .357
magnum pistol. A rope overhead snapped, and the first door to the
garage rolled to the ground in a loud crash. The teenager tried the
same trick again, but the second door only slid halfway before getting
stuck. The third didn't move an inch.
"Use the horses," Ryan said, wriggling between the rails of a stall.
The nervous animal reared at his presence, but Ryan soothed the horse
with soft words. When it was calm, he laid a sack of feed across its
back, then draped over a blanket, cinching it tight with some reins.
Moving quickly, the others did the same. Then whooping and firing
their blasters, they chased the beasts out of the stable. The horses
stampeded for freedom, charging into the street past the waiting gang
of coldhearts.
"Fuck!" cried one, nearly trampled in the rush. "See those lumps?
They're on the damn horses!"
"Could be a diversion," said another, notching a steel arrow into
his crossbow. The deadly weapon was carved from solid oak, the steel
bow salvaged from a predark car chassis. His crossbow could drill a
three-pound bolt through a man at two hundred paces. Silent, and
reusable, it was his preferred weapon. He only wanted the blasters for
what they would buy—women, more arrows and jolt. Lots of jolt.
Charging inside, the coldhearts found the stable empty. "If they're
not on the horse, or in here—" a man started to say.
A sharp whistle made them spin, and the companions cut loose from
the living quarters, the barrage of rounds tearing the attackers apart,
limbs flailing from the multiple impacts of hot lead.
When the smoke cleared, Ryan took the point and entered the stable,
checking the bodies to make sure none were only pretending to be dead.
Without remorse, he dispatched a pair who seemed remarkably undamaged.
After gathering their backpacks, the companions walked from the stable
and found a squad of sec men racing their way.
"Here come the Marines," Mildred quipped, shifting the med kit over
her shoulder to a more comfortable position. She knew Ryan was wounded,
but there was little blood, and now wasn't a good time for repairs.
"What the fuck is going on here?" the sec man in the front demanded,
a loaded crossbow in steady hands. His head was shaved, except for a
thick lock hanging from the back, and his clothes were old but clean. A
quiver of arrows was draped over his shoulder, and zip gun was tucked
loosely into a holster designed for a much larger pistol.
"Who are you?" Ryan demanded, the stock of his longblaster resting
on a hip.
The man scowled. "I am Corporal Anson, sec chief for Baron Polk, and
I ask the questions here, outlander. Now for the second and last time,
what happened?"
"Dueling is forbidden, you know," another sec man added.
"Does this look like a duel?" Dean retorted.
The second man shrugged. "Could be."
Ignoring the fool, Ryan addressed the corporal. "We just arrived
today and came here to buy horses, when a gang tried to back-shoot us.
They aced Fat Tom, and we aced them. No duel, just a straight theft."
"Ratter, you alive?" Anson called into the stables.
A pile of hay shifted, and the stable boy crawled into view. "I
didn't see nothing," the youth said standing meekly. "I was working
hard."
"Hell boy, that's what you always say," the sec man grumbled.
"Can I go?" Ratter pleaded.
Anson swatted at the boy. "Git!"
Ratter dodged the blow and scampered out of sight around the stables.
Taking his time, the corporal studied the companions. "Well, your
story sounds legit, but I think we'd best go talk with the baron. He
doesn't like killing in his ville."
"Unless he authorizes it," Ryan said.
"Is it different where you come from?" Anson asked bluntly.
"No," Ryan admitted, slinging the blaster over his undamaged
shoulder. "Lead the way. Mebbe we can talk some business with the boss."
The corporal eased off the string on his crossbow. "It has been
known to happen. That is, if he decides not to hang you."
"Fair enough."
"Looking to become a sec man by any chance, there's lot of openings."
"Not likely," Ryan answered, then tried a shot in the dark. "We have
info on Frankenstein."
"You do?" Anson asked, excited. "What kind of information?"
Satisfied his hunch was correct, Ryan smiled and said no more.
After the people had gone, Feather snuck into the stable and found
Ratter looting the kitchen of food. Tiptoeing close, she hit the boy
over the head with a stone, and he dropped to the floor. Unsure of his
condition, Feather hit him a few more times until the blood ran freely
from his mouth and nose.
Tossing the stone away, Feather grabbed the bag and finished the job
he started, then left quickly.
As she pelted down the streets, the gaudy slut chortled in her
newfound wealth: a bag of food, weapons, clothes and a bullet. The old
doomie in town had been right— this was her lucky day! Pity about what
the mutie had foretold about the outlanders. The black-haired cyclops
seemed nice. Too bad he was going to die.
Chapter Eleven
"He will lie," said the female mutie, leaning on the table, "but
believe every word."
Lunch long done with, Baron Jackson Polk looked up from the
crumbling book on chemistry he was struggling to read and stared at the
doomie. "What was that?" the man asked.
Althea said nothing for a moment, listening to the silence of the
throne room. The predark auditorium was shaped like a seashell, with a
raised dais at the apex of the truncated cone. Radiating outward across
the room were hundreds of seats, and the softest whisper on stage would
carry to the farthest reaches. Simply amazing. Many of the farmers and
fishermen thought it was magic, and secretly worshiped the wizard
baron. Knowing a good thing when he heard it, Polk did nothing to
change their opinion, and having a doomie for a lover only helped his
mystique of being more than just a man.
Her solid white eyes seeing nothing, the beautiful mutie came closer
and took his hand. "The black man with one eye," Althea whispered, "he
will lie, but believe every word. He has come to kill, has already
killed and must kill more. His destiny is in blood and fire."
"An assassin?" Polk asked, probing for details.
"Yes and no. He hasn't come for you, doesn't know you, cares not for
you. He seeks the sky killer who threatens the world."
"Sky killer. A plane?"
The woman wobbled on her feet, and the baron snapped his fingers. A
servant appeared to slide a chair into place before she fell. Polk
waited until Althea caught her breath. When he'd first found the mutie
woman ten years ago, he took her to his bed because she was blind. His
disfigurements were such that he couldn't stand to have another person
see him without the robes of state. Then Polk learned of her gift and
realized what a treasure the doomie was. Twice in his reign as baron,
Althea had foretold of attacks by coldhearts, giving them enough time
to prepare a deadly welcome for the raiders, and once she warned him of
a close friend who plotted to chill him and become baron. Sadly, that
also come true. Althea was always correct.
But now the baron wondered if her gift of seeing the shadows of the
future had driven her over the edge into madness. Believe a liar—what
was the point in that? Besides which, she always reminded him that the
future wasn't set in stone. Sometimes when they were alone in his
chambers, Althea spoke of karma, a person's destiny, but also of yarma,
a person beating karma through courage and wisdom.
"Some water, my dear?" Polk suggested, pushing the carafe forward.
There was no response. "Wine, then?"
"I need sleep," Althea whispered, and walked from the throne room
holding her temples.
The moment she was gone, a sec man entered the throne room and
shouted, "My lord, several of the fishing captains request an audience."
"Let them enter," Polk commanded, rolling his chair to the edge of
the dais.
When the sailors arrived, they took seats in the first row and were
forced to crane their necks to look at the baron. Polk could smell the
salt and tar on them even from his elevated vantage point.
He glowered down at them. "Well?"
Twisting a cloth cap in craggy hands, a big man in rough-hewn
clothes stood, "I'm Dwight Lane, captain of the
Dixie Rebel.
Baron Polk, the big swamp mutie aced another five of my men yesterday
when it ripped apart my nets and stole a full day's catch of fish. My
lord, our crews are starving, and each has lost kin to the mutie."
"Some of us have lost more than that," Polk stated forcibly, his
anger readily present.
"Of course, sir," Lane said, smiling uncomfortably. "Now, what we
would like, with your permission, is to organize the crews of our five
ships, and the whole ville, into a single hunting party to track down
and kill the thing!"
"Useless," the baron stated. "Without blasters, nobody stands a
chance against the behemoth. Plus, there are the bugs to worry about. A
hunting party that size could easily be thought of as an invasion
force, and while we're hunting the beast, they're burning our homes."
"But something must be done!" Lane shouted.
Another captain stood, a grizzled sea dog with weathered skin like
canvas. "I was born here, my lord, but I'll be leaving on the next high
tide. Living be hard enough without working every other day to feed
that hell demon!"
"Give us the secret of the black powder!" another shouted.
"We'll make blasters and hunt it down ourselves."
"Then turn against me," Polk stated.
"To kill ole Frank!"
"Don't bother," Ryan called, walking down the center aisle. "We
already chilled the gator."
Murmurs ran through the crowd of people, some frightened, others
disbelieving, as the ville sec men led the way for the heavily armed
outlanders. The strangers were carrying more blasters than anyone had
ever seen before.
Drawing a flintlock pistol from under his blanket, Polk used both
hands to cock back the striking hammer. Their leader was a big man with
hair black as midnight, and a patch covered one eye. But Althea spoke
of a black man with one eye. This fellow was close, but clearly not the
killer she spoke about.
"Who are you?" Polk demanded.
"Outlanders from the north, my lord," Anson announced. "They had
some trouble with Fat Tom, a horse merchant who tried to steal their
weapons."
"And they chilled him first," Polk deduced. "The man was a coward
and a thief. Good riddance."
"What was that you said about ole Frank being dead?" Lane asked. "Is
it true?"
"Lies," another sailor said scornfully. "They're not from here, why
should they care?"
"We don't," Ryan replied. "It attacked, so we chilled it. Nothing
more."
"Big words," Polk said slowly. "Prove it. Bring the body in here."
Ryan met the man's gaze. "How much is the reward?" A public
statement was what the one-eyed man wanted, something the baron
couldn't pretend had never been agreed upon. A man's word was often
only as good as the number of people who heard it.
The baron rolled to the very edge of the stage, the front wheels of
his chair hanging off the edge. "Everybody from the Dead Swamp to the
ravine knows I posted a bounty on the mutie. What is it you want?
Blasters? I'll pay you blasters."
"Got them, and better than you have," Ryan said in frank honesty.
"But we could use some horses."
"One each," Polk stated. "My very best, with full tack."
"We also need to carry supplies."
Polk grew grim. "Enough haggling. Ten of my top animals and all the
ammo and food you can carry without breaking your bones. Just prove to
me it's dead!"
The man threw off the blanket, and his pant legs were flat with
nothing inside. "He took my legs and my son on the same day. If you
knew my hatred of the beast, you'd shit with fear. Now, if you truly
took care of Frankenstein, I'll pay your price. But if this is a trick,
you won't leave this room alive." Somehow, only those last words echoed
throughout the auditorium.
Sliding the duffel bag off his shoulder, J.B. tossed it onto the
floor. "There, all the proof you should need."
Impatiently, Baron Polk snapped his fingers, and servants rushed to
gathered the bag. Opening it under his supervision, they removed the
leathery roll and spread it across the stage.
It was thirty feet long, eight wide, the colors matched and there
was the scar from his own pistol! The baron couldn't believe it. This
was the hide of the monster, every bullet hole and ridge layer of rough
hide forever burned into his memory from that awful day.
"How?" he weakly whispered.
"We joined forces with the beetle warriors," Ryan said. "They helped
a lot. Mean fighters."
Lane sneered. "The clicks? Bah, man, nobody has seen them in years.
They're breathing dirt."
"We fought side by side with their chief yesterday afternoon," Ryan
stated. "Nice folks, once you get to know them."
Polk waved the trifle of the beetles aside. He didn't care if they
laid claim to the Dead Swamp and Salt Lake. They were of no conceivable
use to him.
"So it's finally over, the beast is dead. Truly dead." Polk sat up
straight in his chair. "Name your price."
"Exactly what we agreed upon. Ten horses and supplies, blankets,
food enough for a week. A tent if you have any."
"We don't."
"Then some canvas will do, and we'll make a tent."
"And explosives," J.B. added.
"Are you insane? "
"We had a deal," Ryan reminded harshly.
"And I will honor that," Polk retorted. "But not at the expense of
my people. Horses, tack, food, blankets and such, all you can carry.
Shine and women, all you want. But not one live round and no explosives
of any kind. I won't have you strip this ville defenseless. Understood?"
"Black powder," Doc added. "One pound."
The man chewed his cheek for a while in thought. "Who says we got
any?"
Doc glared. "I heard the earlier conversation as we entered, and I
have seen your cannon, sir. It is a fully functioning weapon."
"That it is," Polk said with pride. "Half a pound, no more."
"Done?"
"Done," Ryan said.
Polk turned his attention to the others in the throne room. "Captain
Lane, I believe we now have nothing further to discuss. So I shall
expect the quota of fish delivered to my ville to be doubled by the
next moon. Anything less will be considered theft from me and dealt
with harshly."
"Of course, Baron," the man managed to say without stuttering.
As the fishermen took their leave, Polk turned to a waiting steward.
"Get a carpenter and nail this on the wall behind my throne," he
directed him. "Let everybody see that ole Frank is dead."
"At once, Baron," the liveried man said with a bow.
"Now, as for you outlanders," Polk said genially. "Please stay for
dinner. I wish to hear the details of the matter."
Apprehensive, Ryan glanced at his friends. They seemed uneasy, too,
but he couldn't think of a polite way to refuse.
"Certainly, Baron," he said. "Our pleasure. But we do need to leave
first thing in the morning."
"Why the rush? Stay awhile. I have a great need for people with your
talents."
"Sorry, but we have to find some friends," Ryan said evenly.
Polk nodded. "And chill them. Yes, I can see it in your faces. Fair
enough. You did your part, and I will do mine."
THE COMPANIONS CHECKED the horses and supplies as they were
delivered to the courtyard of the ville, and everything was in fine
shape. Dinner proved to be sixteen different things done to fish, and a
roasted opossum. The companions ate the food, but Jak was in heaven. He
stuffed himself with four portions and had to loosen his belt when they
finally left the table for cigars and brandy. Around midnight, Polk
took his leave, and the companions were left to their own devices. Doc,
Jak and Dean excused themselves, while the rest took advantage of the
baron's liquor cabinet. The brandy was merely winter wine, but strong
flavored with plenty of kick.
"Too bad Clem decided to stay at Front Royal," Mildred said, sipping
her drink. "We could have used him fighting that damn mutie. The man is
a hell of a shot."
"He wasn't so hot," J.B. muttered. "Just an unwashed mountain man.
Completely useless."
Ryan and Krysty remained neutral to the conversation, sensing a
personal matter going on.
Wiggling closer, Mildred pressed a warm hip against the man. "I know
that Clem liked me," she said, "but there's my medical condition to
consider."
Glasses in hand, J.B. stared at her in total confusion.
Mildred took his hand. "I have a very small heart, and there's only
room for one man there."
Speechless, J.B. squeezed her hand with all of his strength. If it
hurt, she said nothing. Releasing her, J.B. rose and strode out of the
room. Mildred sighed and sipped at her drink again.
"Damn men and their idiot pride," Krysty said, sloshing her drink as
she gestured. "You better go have your way with him right now."
"That was my plan," Mildred said with a smile, placing aside her
unfinished brandy. "See you in the morning."
"Remember how shy I was when we first met?" Ryan said with a grin
as the woman strode from the room.
Krysty stared at the man over the rim of her glass. "You damn near
forced me on the spot. I barely was able to seduce you in time."
Reaching out a hand, Ryan gently stroked her living hair, and the
woman trembled under his touch,
"We should go to bed
ourselves."
She hiccuped. "My plan exactly."
"Mebbe."
WALKING ALONE through the quiet street, Doc paused in the darkness
just outside the circle of light from a crackling campfire.
"Hey, there," he called to the group, "mind if I join you?"
Dropping the chicken leg he had been gnawing, the overseer stood up
with a hand on his bullwhip. The big man had his weight equally
balanced on both feet, and Doc knew immediately this was a trained
killer. He had expected no less.
"Whatcha want?" the overseer growled dangerously.
"To get warm." Doc grinned. "Maybe talk some business."
"Yeah?"
"Of course."
As Doc approached, the slaves whispered among themselves.
"Shut up," said the boss, not even glancing in their direction, and
the slaves went immediately dead quiet.
Stepping into the light, the big man saw Doc was clearly armed with
a blaster, but that only made them equal. In the right hands, a
bullwhip could cut a man like an ax. All it required was the room to
swing.
"What kind of business we talking here, whitehair?" the overseer
asked, grinning. "Mebbe ya need something warm to pass the night? They
ain't pretty, but they'll do what they're told, by thunder. Long as you
don't chill them, you can do whatever you wish. You want a man or a
woman?"
Disgusted, Doc went for his blaster. The plan had been to chat with
the man, get his confidence, lure him into a false sense of security,
then strike. But the odious callousness of the overseer was beyond his
limits of endurance.
The blaster came out of the holster and the bullwhip cracked, the
weapon slapped from his grasp.
"So this is jacking, eh?" the overseer snarled, the leather spinning
about his body. "Nobody steals my animals!"
The whip lashed out, and Doc stabbed upward with his stick, the
knotted leather wrapped around the ebony shaft. The overseer cursed and
pulled hard to free his weapon. Doc resisted for a moment, then
released the stick and it went flying toward the man. Caught by
surprise, the slave master dropped the whip to dodge out of the way.
Still holding the handle, Doc lunged forward with the bare blade of
his sword and stabbed it deeper into the man's belly, then twisted the
blade to enlarge the hole. Blood gushed from the wound, and the
overseer sighed as he fell to his knees and toppled to the ground.
Retrieving the ebony cane, Doc wiped the blade clean on the dead man
before sheathing the sword. After locating his LeMat, the scholar
rummaged through the fellow's clothing, unearthing a ring of keys and a
tiny .22-caliber homemade blaster. Mildred called such things zip guns,
but he had no idea why.
"Here," he said softly, tossing the keys to the first prisoner. "The
guards at the gate are drunk on brandy I bought for them, but move
fast. I do not know when the shift changes. The swamp mutie is dead, so
lay a fake trail to the east, then double back and scatter into the
forest."
Doc pressed the zip gun into the hand of a woman prisoner. "Know how
to use this?"
She nodded and pulled back the rubber band to see if there was a
cartridge inside the thin pipe.
"Here is a knife each," Doc said, dropping a bundle on the ground.
"And some bread. It was the best I could do."
"Bless you," she whispered, hugging the weapon.
"Why?" a man asked gruffly, working the locks on his ankles. There
was a click, and he stood free from the chains. Red rings circled his
ankles from the constant rubbing of the iron cuff, scars that would
never go away, inside or out.
"Did you like being a slave?" Doc shot back.
"No," the man spit.
"Neither did I. Good luck." Doc turned and walked into the shadows.
THERE WAS A KNOCK on the bedroom door.
Grabbing his longblaster, Ryan rolled naked out of bed, and Krysty
leveled her own revolver at the door.
"Yeah?" Ryan asked, pretending to yawn.
"Me," a familiar voice said.
Sensing trouble, Ryan padded across the room and unbolted the door,
letting Mildred slip through.
"What's the matter? Is the baron planning on robbing us?" Krysty
asked, stepping into pants.
"Worse. The old coot freed the slaves," she said quickly.
His chest glistening with sweat, Ryan inhaled deeply. "I expected as
much. Do the sec men know what happened?"
"Not yet, but they will soon."
Ryan laid the blaster on the warm bed and started to get dressed.
"Wake the others and get the horses."
"Already done. They're downstairs packing food."
"Let's go."
Hurrying downstairs, the companions mounted their horses and rode
casually to the front gate. The guards were snoring on the ground, and
they passed through without hindrance.
Once outside the walls, they pressed the horses into a full gallop.
"Which way are the slaves heading?" Ryan demanded.
"The freed prisoners," Doc said, stressing the words, "are
dispersing into the forest."
"That's east," Dean said, tightening the reins on his mare. "Good,
because we're going north."
"West," his father corrected.
"But the closest Shiloh is in Tennessee," J.B. said, holding on to
his fedora.
Just then, barking hounds sounded from the ville and a bell began to
clang.
"I'll explain later," Ryan said, urging his mount to greater speed.
Privately, the one-eyed man wanted to be furious at Doc for causing
this unnecessary trouble, but he couldn't find a good reason. They had
been planning on leaving in the morning anyway, and to be honest, Ryan
had briefly considered freeing the slaves himself. He supposed there
were just some things a man had to do no matter what the consequences.
Chapter Twelve
Dawn was breaking on the horizon, the indigo clouds of night
lightening into the purple and orange of a new day. Sleepy people rose
from their cots and beds, stumbling out of their cottages and huts,
shuffling across the dirt to start another long day in the bitter
fields. The rains had come late this year, and the soil was yielding
poor crops. Many of the plants grew twisted and wrong, the grain
inedible or deadly poison. Game was scarce, and few cans of predark
food were found these days, so farming was the only hope of surviving
another year.
Suddenly, the roar of a powerful machine broke the morning stillness
as an open-topped wag full of armed sec men drove into the middle of
the ramshackle ville. The machine was closely followed by a line of
trucks draped in canvas. Armored and bristling with weapons, the war
wags stopped with a squeal of brakes in the middle of the gawking
crowd, the population backing away from the fearful machine. Some of
the smaller children started to cry, clutching their mothers, while
burly men with callused hands stepped forward brandishing sickles and
axes.
"What are you doing here?" a towering giant demanded, squinting in
hostility. "Go away!"
In the vehicle, a clean-shaved lieutenant in a crisp blue shirt
stood and raised a small cone to his mouth. "Greetings and salutations,
my fellow Americans." His loud voice boomed across the motley
collection of huts. "I bring you great news from the baron of the
United States!"
Instantly, a few men on the outskirts of the crowd dropped whatever
they were doing and raced into the field. But black shapes plowed
through the summer weeds to cut them off, and the men found a dozen
more Hummers encircling the little ville.
"Return and obey!" a loud voice ordered.
Most of the escapees turned and skulked back to the crowd. But two
bolted past the war machines, nimbly racing for the forest. The deadly
whine of autofire sounded, brass shells arcing into the air like a
golden rainbow. The stuttering line of tracer rounds reached out to
sweep across the escapees, and the dead men tumbled to the ground, torn
to pieces from the heavy-caliber bullets.
"As I said," repeated the sec man in the first Hummer, "greetings
and salutations. We have come to offer you a once-in-a-lifetime chance
to help feed your families and assist in rebuilding our wounded nation
into the glory it once was! America reborn from the ashes! And only you
can help!"
Murmurs came from the crowd. Some glanced at the fields, and the
ring of wags turned on their headlights.
"Don't live in no America!" an old man shouted. "This be Tennessee!"
The lieutenant scowled at the man until he lowered his head. "As I
was saying," the blue shirt continued, "you will receive the fabulous
honor of being allowed to work for the glorious Great Project and help
us rebuild America! It is a noble cause, one you will tell your
grandchildren about with pride. Yes, you very people can become
soldier-workers whose strong backs and brave hearts will gloriously
fulfill our nation's ultimate destiny!"
There were more murmurs from the farmers, and the sec man began to
wonder if any of them knew half the words he was using from the speech
given to him. He decided it was time to cut to the bone of the matter.
The officer tossed the paper aside. The major was an ass; he knew
how to do this. "All right, listen up you, brain-dead hillbilly scum!"
he snarled. "We're here to gather everybody in the ville capable of
doing a day's work. No pregnant women, crips or babies. But everyone
else is coming with us!" He paused a moment to let that sink in.
"We asked this service of Shiloh ville down the road. The leaders of
that ville foolishly refused us." The sec man paused again. "We begged
them to reconsider, but they refused to help America and forced us to
punish them severely."
The lieutenant took a breath and lowered his voice. "Shiloh will no
longer worry about how to bring in their crops or hunt for food." The
whisper changed to a shout. "Or anything! Have you seen what remains of
their ville? Well, have you?"
Sobs came in reply, and he knew they had seen. This was why Dr.
Jamaisvous waited a day before sending them to the next ville, to let
the word spread and the fear build.
"As workers for the New American Army, you'll receive three meals a
day, clean housing, and after one season you'll be sent home with a
blaster and a pocketful of ammo. We have done this before and will do
so again."
Faint hope brightened in their faces, and he smiled benignly at the
crowd. God, what a lie, the officer thought, but kept a straight face.
"That's the deal. Work and reap rewards. Or defy us, and force us to
again bring down terrible destruction."
As if on cue, the overcast atmosphere rumbled and miraculously
cleared, the heavily polluted clouds thinning until an azure sky was
visible. Sunlight flooded the ville. Some of the people stared in
wonder; others gasped in fear at the unnatural sight.
"Yes! The sky is ours to command. Watch!"
Another rumble, and the clouds rolled in to obscure the sun. As they
touched, sheet lightning flashed and continued raging for more than a
minute.
"Get in the bastard wags," the lieutenant ordered, supremely
confident.
Beaten, the people of the ville walked toward the waiting line of
vehicles. Sec men armed with long-blasters separated them, the men
going in one truck, the women into another. A young woman saw the
leering faces of the blue shirts and realized her horrible fate. With
an anguished cry, she pulled out a knife from under her skirt and slit
her own throat. Bright blood gushed from the wound, and she fell limply
to the ground. At the sight, the farmers tensed, fear overlapping into
anger, rage fueling courage. Heads started to rise in defiance, and
hands became fists.
In unison, the sec men fired their weapons into the air, and the
heavy autofires on the wags added their awesome barks to the deafening
cacophony. Hot shells rained over the farmers, making them wince and
hide behind raised hands. Stunned, shaken, their hesitant resolve
broke, and once more they started to climb into the wags. Iron shackles
lay on the floor and they chained themselves without instructions,
knowing it would be the last free act of their short lives but having
no other choice.
As the wags started rolling away, the babies wailed as the
whitehairs held them tight. Nobody left in the ville believed that they
would ever see any the departing villagers again. Not alive, anyway.
HOOVES POUNDING the misty ground, the companions rode hell-bent for
leather through the early Carolina morning. The Flat Rock sec man had
chased them for miles through the night, but Baron Polk had dealt fair
and given the companions his best mounts. They easily outdistanced the
older nags. However, soon after losing the sec men, they began to hear
the long howl of hunting dogs. Hounds were a lot faster than horses on
a short pull, and the companions were forced to slow and try to
stealthily evade the relentless dogs.
"It's been a couple of hours since we heard them," J.B. said,
glancing over his shoulder. "I think we finally lost them."
"Can't hear anything," Krysty said, closing her eyes to listen hard.
The breeze rustled the leaves on the trees and a small animal was being
eaten alive by something that purred, but nothing else. No barking
dogs, no shouting riders. "I think we lost them."
"Said so," Jak stated. "Double back over creek, sprinkle black
powder. Works good."
"My black powder," Doc complained, uncomfortably rolling to the gait
of his animal. At least he still had enough for a few reloads, which
was better than nothing.
Reaching a creek, the companions reined in their mounts and let the
wheezing animals drink for a while, before forcing them onward.
"But they were still thirsty," Dean said, stroking the sweaty neck
of his pinto mare. She nickered in response, her long
ears twitching happily.
Rocking at the hips to the gentle stride of his stallion, Ryan
answered, "Never let a horse drink its fill. Slows them down too much.
They get enough to stay healthy, no more."
"Should feed them soon," Krysty added, leaning forward as her mare
daintily stepped over a pile of bricks. "We left in such a rush, we
forgot to bring along feed."
Tightening her thighs, and holding on to the pommel of her saddle
with both hands, Mildred leaned sideways and studied the grass rising
from the low mist. "Plenty of grass around," she said, swinging back
upright. "It shouldn't hurt them too much to live on just summer grass
for a while."
"Okay, short break," Ryan said, reining his stallion to a stop. "No
fire, cold food only. Stay alert. We leave in five minutes."
Guiding the horses to a nice section of grass, the companions
tethered the reins to bushes and tugged hard to make sure they were
secure. Shaking themselves to adjust to the lack of weight on their
backs, the horses relaxed and began chomping at the tender blades,
munching contentedly.
Opening his saddlebag, Dean took out an MRE envelope and ripped it
open. Most of the food packets he dumped back inside the bag, but he
kept the one marked Creamed Beef. Ripping off a corner, he sucked the
food down and stuffed the empty foil back in the saddlebag. Loose trash
on the trail would lead the dogs to them like bees to honey.
"Hey, Dad, can horses eat apples?" Dean asked, wiping off his mouth
with a pocket rag. "There are some trees over there."
"Sure can," Ryan said around a mouthful of dried fish. Swallowing,
the man looked over the area and nodded in approval. "Go gather a
bunch. Doc, stay with him as cover."
Pulling up his pants, Doc stepped into view from behind a bush.
"Certainly, my dear Ryan," he said, splashing some water from a canteen
onto his hands and washing quickly. "Hum, we shall need something to
carry the succulent fruit. John Barrymore, may we borrow your hat,
please?"
Arching both eyebrows, J.B. lowered the self-heat he was eating from
and turned slowly, but the man and boy were yards away and moving fast.
"Old coot," the Armorer growled, smiling.
Reaching the trees, Doc stood guard while Dean knelt on the ground,
and, folding up the front of his shirt,
started gathering apples. A
plump one rolled away, and he made a successful catch.
"None from there, dear boy," Doc said, the LeMat held ready. "Too
many bruised apples can give a horse cramps."
"Okay," he replied, then stood and emptied the fallen fruit from his
shirt. Tucking the garment into his pants, Dean grabbed hold of some
low branches and scampered up the trunk as if it were a ladder.
"Ah, youth," Doc said with a sigh, and removed a wedge of cheese
from the pocket of his frock coat. It was hard and crunchy on the
edges, but still edible. There was movement in the bushes. Doc dropped
the cheese and aimed the LeMat, thumbing back the trigger. Then he
spotted the squirrel nibbling an apple and withheld firing. The
miniball from his weapon would leave nothing of the squirrel to cook
for dinner. It was the one drawback of big-bore blasters. Game had to
be at least as large as a fox, or it was a waste of ammo. Retrieving
the cheese from the ground, Doc wiped it clean, cut away a suspicious
area and continued to eat.
"You know, horses are like wags, aren't they?" Dean spoke from the
foliage. "Got to constantly watch this and feed them that."
"True words, lad. But I would love to meet the wag that could make
more wags," Doc said, taking another bite. "I daresay humanity lost
something important when we stopped riding."
Returning to the others, Dean passed out the apples, keeping a
couple of the best for his mount.
"Here, girl," he said, offering the fruit. The pinto lifted its head
and sniffed the offering, then took the whole apple in its mouth and
started crunching.
"Careful fingers," Jak warned, feeding the fruit to his mount. The
horse was a young dappled stallion, lean muscles rippling under its
coat. "Can't see good. Take finger accidentally."
"I know," Dean replied, stroking his horses neck. "I watched Dad
before doing mine."
"Smart move," Mildred acknowledged, coming over and inspecting the
mare. "Damn, I thought she was limping. That's a bad cut on the
fetlock. You better clean that with witch hazel before it gets
infected."
"Me?"
Mildred went to her mount and came back with some bandages and a
plastic bottle. "A rider tends his own horse," she explained, giving
him the bottle and cloth rags. "They trust you more that way."
Speaking soft words, the boy tended the animal. It shook at the
sting of the witch hazel, stomping its hooves, but he got the cut
thoroughly cleaned and wrapped tightly.
"Gaia, they found us," Krysty said, standing and dropping the
partially peeled apple from her grasp.
Seconds later, howls sounded from the east.
"Mount up," Ryan commanded, rushing to his stallion.
He checked the belly cinch, then climbed into the saddle. Shaking
the reins free from the bush, he started off at a brisk canter. The
rest did the same, then kicked their horses into a full gallop.
"Thank God spurs haven't been rediscovered," Mildred said, holding
the pommel and bending low over her animal. "Come on, girl, faster!"
At top speed, the companions crossed a field, jumping over a low
hedge and starting a flight of robins.
"Fuck!" Jak cursed, glancing over a shoulder. "Give away position!"
Angling away from the soaring birds, Ryan led the companions over
some irregular terrain to where a broken expanse of a paved road peeked
out from the grass.
After a hundred yards, Doc reached into his saddlebag and found his
last container of black powder. Slowing to the rear of the pack, the
old man leaned low in the saddle and shook it out, the wind spreading
the powder into a fine spray. Stuffing the empty powder horn into a
pocket of his frock coat, Doc slumped in the saddle, concentrating on
staying mounted.
The sloping land flew beneath the pounding hooves of the horses, the
baying of the hounds rising and falling as the dogs found the
companions' trail, lost it and found it once again.
Ryan heard the low moan of winds whistling in a ravine. Moving to
the south, the warrior saw that the land was cracked wide alongside the
weedy field. Slowing his mount, he trotted close to the edge. The
division was shallow, only a sheer drop of one hundred feet, but there
was a bridge only a few hundred yards behind them. The structure was a
box trestle, dripping with ivy and hanging moss. Older than predark, it
looked solid and that was a gamble he was willing to take.
"No way we can jump this," Krysty said, fighting to retain control
of her mount. The horse was trying to walk in a circle to get away from
the chasm. She pulled on the reins to keep the animal under control.
"Whoa, girl. Good girl. Easy does it."
"Why should we jump?" Dean asked, confused. "There's a bridge."
"My point exactly." She smiled. "Once we're on the other side,
nobody can follow us. Especially the dogs."
"Follow me!" Ryan shouted. Kicking his mount into a gallop again, he
backtracked to the bridge and rode across to the other side.
"We were headed north," J.B. said, stopping near his friend. "Going
to try for an ambush?"
"Better," Ryan replied, sliding off the horse and heading toward one
of the pack animals. Digging in the bags, Ryan found a hurricane
lantern filled with oil reeking of fish.
"Good dry timbers," J.B. announced, running his hand along the
supporting beams.
"Trap?" Jak asked, holding the reins in one hand, his Colt Python
drawn to give cover. Far below, a riverbed was visible, but there was
no sign of any water. Just bare gray stones and smooth black pebbles
lying across the red clay bottom of the riverbed.
Removing the flue, Ryan tipped over the lantern, spilling out the
rancid oil. "No time for traps or bombs. Those dogs are too damn close."
"And the sec men right behind them," Mildred added tersely.
Removing the wick from the lamp, Ryan lit it with his butane
lighter. The rag caught at once, and he dropped it on the planks. Smoky
flames spread across the planks and over the sides, following the path
of the flowing oil.
The howling was closer.
"Let's go," Ryan grunted, climbing back into the saddle. "Just in
case one of the dogs makes it across before the bridge collapses."
Kicking their mounts into a gallop again, the companions rode away
from the burning bridge, knowing they were safe from pursuit for the
moment—but also knowing that there was no way back into North Carolina.
The plan to head into Tennessee was abandoned as they rode deeper into
the wild country of Georgia.
STANDING IN THE throne room of the castle, Nathan Cawdor bowed his
head in contemplation. He didn't believe in torture. It served no
purpose except personal revenge. Information was always more easily
bought, or stolen, than extracted.
But as he looked down upon Sullivan lying wrapped in his cocoon of
netting and chains, Nathan felt a fury build within. His mother had
referred to it as the blood-fire, a sort of madness for violence that
ruled the Cawdor bloodline.
"I have no wish to kill you," Nathan said. "Or rather, I had no
wish. To the best of my knowledge, you had harmed nobody within the
walls of this ville. Plus, you saved many lives in the hospital sewing
wounds and removing crushed limbs so gangrene wouldn't rot my men."
The room was packed with sec men and civilians. Justice wasn't
served in the dark. Only tyrants ruled from the shadows because
daylight made them wither and die.
Hands clasped behind his back, Nathan walked around the supine
prisoner. "No, my plan was to find you and send you back to BullRun
ville alive and unharmed."
The mutie sneered at the man, not believing a word of the pretty
speech. Barons would always say golden promises before the crowd, then
feast on flesh in private. Soon they would be alone, and Sullivan would
discover his real sentence.
In a flash of anger, Nathan kicked the bound man. "You idiot! I had
no wish to kill you. But after seeing what you did to the patients,
nukestorm, you set wounded men on fire merely to hide your escape with
their death screams!"
"Hang him!" a woman shouted from the crowd. "Peel off his skin and
feed it to the dogs!"
Patiently, Nathan allowed the interruption as the woman was the wife
of a now dead sec man. "Yes, Sullivan, I would be justified in
torturing you to the point of death, then leaving you alone in the
dungeon for a year to heal and grow strong, then start the torture
again, and continue on until I was too old to wield the pliers or hot
irons. So my sons would take over, and their sons and theirs, and it
would still not be enough! There can never be enough revenge for what
you did!"
Nathan turned away from the man and walked to his throne. Sitting
down heavily, he sighed. "There is no choice but the ultimate
punishment."
Sullivan tried not smile. This was why he had done the act, to
infuriate them beyond reason. Nathan always killed common thieves with
firing squads, and hanged rapists and other such scum. Only once did he
burn a man alive, a traitor who turned against the ville and allowed
coldhearts past the walls. But Sullivan couldn't be burned alive. His
skin was resistant to flames, and once his ropes were weakened he would
break loose, kill the startled baron with a single blow and escape over
the wall in the confusion. The fool was playing right into his hands.
Nathan drew a blaster and weighed the weapon in his palm,
deliberating justice the way a butcher did meat. Was this enough, or
too much?
Standing along side the throne, Lady Tabitha took his free hand in
both of hers. "You have no choice, dear."
"I know," Nathan said, bolstering the weapon. "This coldheart mutie
deserves the very worst punishment we have. Once, I burned a man alive
at the stake for treason, and you all still remember that smell. It
haunts me at night and clings to my clothes. No amount of washing or
soap will ever remove the memory. And that day I made a solemn vow to
never repeat that again for any reason."
The crowd held its breath, anxiously waiting.
"Captain of the guards!" Nathan called out formally.
Clem stepped forward and saluted. "Yes, my lord?"
"Bury him alive."
Icy panic filled the mutie as he realized this was a death sentence
with no escape. "No!" Sullivan screamed, and he stood, ripping the nets
apart with bare fingers. He shook back and forth, trying to escape from
the chains, but they weren't cold iron forged in some Deathlands
smithy, but predark steel. The metal didn't even strain at his awesome
strength. Gasping for air, terror a fist in his belly, the mutie
started to weep as his bones broke in the blind madness of trying to
escape.
There was a gunshot, and Sullivan fell to the floor, blood pooling
around him, spreading outward in pumping waves. He tried again to rise,
a chain snapping loose in his death throes. There was another shot, and
Sullivan collapsed, his body exhaling its last breath and going still.
Ceremoniously, Nathan slid the clip from the execution blaster and
laid them down separately on a silver tray. "And so it ends today," he
said sternly. "Anybody buried alive would soon go insane and live out
their last few hours in a delirium of escape and freedom fantasies. The
very worst thing I could do was threaten him with the act. Sullivan
punished himself, and I ended the matter."
"What about Baron Markham of Bull Run ville?" Clem drawled, watching
the corpse for any signs of returning life. "Y'all know she sent the
mutie here."
Leaning back in his throne, Nathan nodded agreement. "Because she
believed we were attacking her, and she was too weak fighting off some
samurai baron from Washington Hole to withstand an attack by us."
"I would be happy to make a stand against her, my lord," a bearded
lieutenant said, kneeling. "My life for yours!"
"Thank you, Jarod, but that won't be necessary," Nathan acknowledged
graciously. The baron turned to address another man. "Clem, would you
go to them as an ambassador and talk the truth? We aren't enemies. Tell
them of Overton and enlist their aid. His plan was to divide the
baronies so we couldn't work together. If that was his greatest fear,
then that's exactly what we should do. And quickly."
The chief of the sec men scratched his neck. "She may not believe
me, but I'll sure as shit try."
"Thank you."
"What about those Casanova assholes?"
"I'll deal with them later," Nathan said in a low, dangerous voice.
Clem smiled. "Gotcha. You're a pretty good baron."
Startled at first, Nathan smiled back at the man. "And I'm pleased
to also call you a friend."
"Beg pardon, my lord," a sec man asked politely. "What about the…ah,
Sullivan?"
Stepping in front of her husband, Tabitha scowled at the dead mutie.
"As he lived, so shall he die," she said in controlled anger. "Burn the
body."
IT TOOK A FULL CORD of wood to finally consume the mutie, his flesh
oddly resistant to the conflagration. But at least he was reduced to
ashes, the residue thrown into the river to be washed away.
Chapter Thirteen
Five large men walked their horses to the edge of the ravine and
stared at the ruined bridge.
"Escaped," the biggest man hissed. "They have escaped again. This is
intolerable!" An M-60 machine gun was resting on his shoulder as if the
massive weapon were a simple longblaster, the linked belt of ammo
dangling to his knees. A hairy pouch slung over his other shoulder
bulged with a spare belt. The handles of knives jutted from each boot,
and a revolver rode in a holster at the small of his back. Covered by
his loose shirt, it was almost undetectable.
"Mebbe we should give up," said one of the others, kicking some
charred wood over the edge. It tumbled out of sight. He tugged at his
good-luck necklace, which was made of human ears. "I mean, we've been
after these people since Thunder Pass!"
"Stop your complaining," a bald man snapped, his head covered with
colorful tattoos. He carried a machete in a shoulder holster, and dried
human scalps dangled from his belt as ornaments. "In the morning, we'll
find a way across once we have some daylight."
"How's the food?" a thin man asked. Clothes seemed to hang off his
skeletal frame, yet he ate more than any two of them. A sawed-off
shotgun rode at his hip, extra rounds lining his tan-colored belt. The
ornate buckle was carved from white bone.
"We're down to only a few pounds of meat," a hairy man said.
Carrying a bolt-action longblaster, he was bare chested in spite of the
evening chill, bandoliers of ammo crisscrossing his herculean torso.
"But we have those fresh supplies we caught escaping from the ville."
On the back of a pack horse, the bound captive squirmed and kicked
from within a rolled blanket. A bamboo tube fed enough air for the
gaudy slut to breathe, and the blanket hid her from the casual sight of
strangers.
"Gut and cook her," said Scarface, displaying pointed teeth.
Starting at his forehead, a long jagged slash traversed his features,
going into his shirt and out of sight. "We'll think better with a full
stomach."
TWO DAYS LATER, the companions were camped on the top of a hill
overlooking the ruins of a predark metropolis. Silvery with reflected
moonlight, dark monoliths rose from the jumble of fallen structures and
windblown debris. A great amphitheater, or sports arena, stood by
itself at the far end. No lights shone from the hundreds of windows,
and no smoke rose through the many holes in the roofs. There was no
smell of machinery, and no sounds marred the stillness of the evening.
"It's dead," Krysty stated knowingly, as she added more sticks to
the campfire. As a precaution, the companions had dug a hole for the
fire so the flames wouldn't be discernible to anybody below, but their
precautions seemed unwarranted.
"There's nothing on the map," J.B. said, sounding annoyed, squinting
to read by the flickering light. "My best guess would have been that
this area was nothing but peach orchards."
Ryan rubbed his unshaved chin. "Strange," he admitted. "Very
strange."
A few yards away, the horses whinnied in the darkness from hunger.
Yesterday, the companions had passed a field full of rye. But after
inspecting the grain, Mildred refused to let them feed any to the
horses. It was contaminated with an ersatz mold she said could be fatal.
Unfortunately, they were entering desert, and grass was getting
scarce. With no other choice, the companions went through their
supplies, feeding the horses everything they could—the rest of the
apples, bread, granola bars, crackers, dried vegetables and peanut
butter. Combined with the tiny sugar packets from the MRE coffee packs
and what green grass they could find, the mixture had sustained the
animals until now.
"We've got to find them something to eat, or the horses will start
to weaken," Ryan said, chewing on another piece of smoked fish. "Then
they'll rebel, and we'll have to chill them."
"Shoot the horses?" Dean asked askance, looking up from his work.
The Browning Hi-Power was lying on a clean piece of cloth completely
disassembled. The boy was cleaning each piece thoroughly before
rebuilding the blaster.
"No," his father replied coldly. "We'll ride them till they die. Get
every mile out of them we can. I'd prefer to find food and keep them
for the rest of our journey."
"Me, too!"
"Maybe we should check out the ruins," Mildred ventured, sipping her
tin cup of cold turkey bouillon. "Dried cereals on the supermarket
shelves, cans of corn, envelopes of oatmeal, could be lots of food down
there."
"The big one looks like a Hyatt," she continued.
"Good hotel. I always stayed at them for medical conferences."
Ryan sucked a hollow tooth. "Don't recall ever looting a hotel
before. But come to think of it, they would have lots of usable items.
Tons of canned goods for the kitchen, good knives, too. Soap and
shampoo, TP, radio and blasters in the sec office."
"Should be lots of clothing. I could use a new belt."
"Socks," Jak said.
"There could be nothing. Rats usually get everything not in a can,
and rust gets that," Ryan countered, putting aside the gnawed fish.
Whatever Flat Rock did to preserve the stuff almost made the things
inedible. His teeth ached from chewing on the smoked trout. "I think we
stand a better chance finding food on the road. We'll leave the roads
and start cutting cross-country."
"Well, there's a redoubt to the south of here," J.B. said, reading
the map. The firelight glistened off his glasses, casting tiny rainbows
across his face. "But it's over 150 miles away."
He turned the map over. "Now, just sixty miles to the north is the
town of Shiloh, of which we know nothing. But to the northwest is
Shiloh battlefield. There's a redoubt there, and it's only a hundred
miles away."
"Two birds, one stone," Krysty said sagely. "I vote for simplicity."
"Ville near redoubt had horses," Jak reminded them. He stood and
stretched his arms, working a kink from his neck. It had been a long
time since he did this much riding, and surprisingly, it was his back
that was sore, not his ass.
"That ville also had lots of folks who wanted us chilled," J.B.
reminded the teenager.
Jak drew his blaster and checked the load in the cylinder. "Don't
care. You decide. I relieve Doc horses." As silent as a jungle panther,
the pale teenager slipped into the darkness and was gone.
"Anything useful in the Shiloh redoubt?" Dean asked, assembling his
weapon without looking. Springs tucked into place neatly, and the
carriage entered the oiled frame without hindrance.
Watching the work with approval, Ryan shook his head. "The base
was stripped bare. Although, there are miles upon miles of tunnels
under the redoubt, and we never did more than a fast recce into those.
Could be anything stored down there."
Finished, the boy eased the clip into place and jacked the slide.
"Mebbe that's where Overton was getting his blasters from, the Shiloh
redoubt."
"Could be," Ryan said thoughtfully. "It just could damn well be the
spot."
The talk went on far into the night, and soon the decision was made.
They would bypass all of the towns named Shiloh on their list and head
straight for the Civil War battlefield of Shiloh Church.
THE CAMPFIRE WAS dwindling to red embers, the unburned ends of logs
glowing in the darkness. Soft snoring came from the still figures under
the blankets around the fire pit, along with the occasional mumbled
word.
Blaster resting on his lap, J.B. sat sipping cold coffee and
listening to the night. The insects and birds told more of what was
happening in the area than vision could. An owl hooted its eternal
question, something with wings soared overhead and a line of ants
marched over his combat boot seeking the crumbs from their dinner.
The thin grass rustled as a dry breeze blew over the campsite. Then
there was another rustle, but the breeze had ceased.
With instincts honed in a hundred battles, J.B. stood and threw a
bundle of branches onto the embers. The oil-soaked wood burst into
flames, filling the area with bright light that revealed a dozen
figures near the horses, fumbling with the reins.
"Thieves!" J.B. bellowed, firing single shots from the Uzi,
unwilling to go full-auto and possibly kill the horses. One murky
figure cried out, grabbing a shoulder. Another doubled over, clutching
his stomach, and toppled to the ground.
The companions clawed for their weapons and rolled away from the
campfire as the invaders seemed to stab themselves in the faces with
tiny sticks. Dodging left and right, J.B. fired twice more, then
something gentle hit his chest. He glanced down and saw a tiny barbed
quill jutting from a button.
"Blowpipes!" he cried, plucking the deadly barb from his clothing,
trying not to touch the glistening end. It had to be poison of some
kind.
A thundering roar illuminated the night as Doc triggered the LeMat.
Three more of the shapeless figures holding blowpipes cried out in pain
and fell aside, throwing their arms wide. A roar shook the darkness as
Mildred fired the S&W shotgun, then the gunshots overlapped one
another as the companions unleashed a hell-storm of lead and copper at
the intruders. Many of the figures dropped to the ground, but the ones
behind them leaped on the horses and galloped away, vanishing into the
night.
"They got the horses!" Krysty cried, kneeling in the cold soil, two
hands supporting her S&W .38. She strained to catch a glimpse of
the thieves, but even her vision couldn't find a target in the
blackness.
"More wood!" Dean shouted, and dropped a load onto the campfire.
The circle of light expanded, and something went motionless in the
tall weeds nearby. Springing forward, Mildred grappled with a man who
broke free from her clutches and started running. Jak threw a knife and
the figure stumbled, then Ryan tackled the intruder, driving him to the
ground.
Wrestling in the thrashing weeds, the man escaped again and Jak
slashed for the neck. The blade missed the target, but scored a deep
furrow across a leaf-covered shoulder. Pivoting, the intruder snarled
wordlessly, lashing out with hands full of vines. The thorns raked
Jak's face, just missing his eyes. The teenager thrust a knife into the
man's belly as Ryan clubbed the thief over the head with the SIG-Sauer.
With a crunch of bones, the man fell to the ground.
"Over here!" Krysty shouted, an oil lantern held high.
In the yellowish light of the fish-oil lantern, the humanoid on the
ground gasped for breath.
"Mutie," Jak growled, wiping his blade on the dirt. He usually
cleaned the knives on the clothes of the dead, but this time that
wouldn't work, as the horse thief was naked. Sort of. The humanoid
creature was covered with vines, but he wasn't wearing them; the plants
were part of him, the roots buried deep into his skin. His clothing was
merely leaves of different colors mimicking cloth.
The mutie spasmed once, then went still. The leaves limply drooped,
the vines turning brown.
"Symbionts," Mildred said, inspecting the still form. In death, it
simply looked like a man partially covered with ivy. Then she noticed
the thorns on the hands. Experimentally, she closed a limp hand into a
fist, and barbed thorns extended from the knuckles. Releasing the
hybrid, she stood. "Plants and man intermixed. They can't live without
each other."
"Bastard good disguise," Ryan grunted in annoyance. His shirt was
slashed, but the skin underneath only lightly scratched, with no
bleeding. "Triple-blasted stuff probably alters to any style, so they
can pretend to be part of your group in the darkness."
"Certainly easy enough to tell in the light," Doc agreed. "But by
then it is probably too late for most norms."
"We killed six," J.B. announced, the Uzi held steady. "But there
were at least twenty more from the tracks. It actually looked like some
acted as shields, dying so the rest could get the horses."
"Gaia," Krysty muttered. "They sure wanted the animals badly."
Breathlessly, Dean burst through the weeds. "They took everything,"
he panted, "horses, tack, reins, all of it. Nothing's left."
"Fireblast," Ryan said, removing the half clip from the SIG-Sauer
and slamming in a full magazine. "I don't care if it's a bastard army
of the things out there. We're going after those horses. Without them,
we're on foot. J.B., gather what supplies we have and divide them into
six packs. Mildred, bank the fire so it'll last through the night. Nice
and big. Understand?"
"Make them think we're still here. Gotcha."
"Jak, you're our best tracker. Find their trail and don't lose it!
We'll follow soon, so leave a trail for us." The pale teenager nodded
and blended into the weeds.
REACHING THE BOTTOM of the hill, the companions easily found the
tracks of the horses and followed them to a large pile of rubble. Ryan
whistled once, and Jak stepped out of the shadows under a rock slab.
"Went into ruins," Jak said. "Couldn't follow. Rads."
"Thought so," Ryan muttered. Piles of rubble rose over their heads,
the monolithic buildings soaring even higher. He checked the rad
counter on his lapel. The readings were nominal.
"The area is clear," he announced. "Let's go."
Staying low, the companions moved through the weeds and over the
predark wreckage, following the faint trail of the green muties. A
hoofprint in the soft sand, a broken weed, a tiny pool still rippling,
a crushed leaf bending back into shape, a drop of blood on a rock. Jak
moved almost without pause, the nebulous marks a wide highway for the
Cajun hunter. Ryan and Krysty stayed with him most of the way, but
sometimes they were forced to wait until he resurfaced a dozen yards
away, waving them onward.
Under the colored moonlight, the companions crept past a tall office
building that rose like a knife thrust from the mounds of broken
masonry. The front door was covered completely, but third-floor windows
were missing where the rubble was piled high, and they knew others had
been inside. Whether greenies or norms, it was impossible to tell.
Walking out of the crumbling suburbs, Ryan and the others found Jak
crouched, studying a broken parking lot of macadam. Ahead, the downtown
monoliths stood silent and foreboding. Nothing stirred the scrawny
weeds; not a
breath of air moved over the desert city.
"There." Jak finally pointed, then headed to the left.
A long squat building stood amid an array of houses crushed flat, a
sprinkling of sand dusting the ruins. The metal frame of a garage
sagged nearby, the beams consumed with rust and age. The building
itself was made of brick, granite slabs set as lintels around the doors
and windows. The roof was sharply sloped with no skylights or
ventilation grilles offering a possible entrance. A bare flagpole
leaned away from the building, large stone eagles flanking either side
of the recessed doorway. Words were carved into the granite lintel,
partially dissolved by acid rains.
"National Guard armory," Ryan whispered. "Is that the spot?"
"They there," Jak said, nodding, peeking between the fins of a
corroded car radiator. "Nasty."
"Yeah, this isn't some library or bank converted into a fortress,"
J.B. countered. "It's a military fort, built to store weapons and
troops."
"Blasters and ammo by the ton," Dean said eagerly, then frowned.
"No, those must be long gone."
Kneeling on the shell of a transmission, Krysty agreed. "Can't
chance a rush. That door is a death trap," she added softly,
scrutinizing the building. "One man with a rapid fire could hold off a
score of invaders."
"Not sure if the greenies have blasters, but we're not going to use
the door anyway," Ryan stated. "I know another way inside."
"The fort was designed to hold off rioting mobs," Mildred said,
shifting her hold on the med kit. "How are we going to get in?"
"Mobs are stupe," Ryan replied, his Steyr cradled in his arms. "Only
people are clever. Stay close. No noise, five-yard spread."
Slow and silent, they moved around the building with weapons at the
ready. In the backyard, the sand was winning over the weeds, the
sideways chassis of a large truck gradually returning to the earth from
which it was once mined. Empty oil drums used to store fuel were
scattered about amid broken pallets, miscellaneous metal parts of
unknown origin and stacks of rotting tires.
The rear of the armory was a solid wall of brick and granite, the
slit windows covered with bars and located some fifty feet off the
ground near the gutter of the sloped roof.
On the loading dock, massive steel doors stood in a row, blocking
any possible entrance that way, and off to the side, a short set of
stairs led to a smaller door of riveted steel.
In a two-on-two combat formation with Ryan on the point, the
companions proceeded along the cracked concrete to the loading dock as
if moving through a minefield. As he reached the top, a dark shape on
the floor smelled familiar, and Ryan touched the soft material. Warm
horse shit. Jak had been right. This was the place.
"How did you know?" asked Krysty, pressing her mouth to his ear.
"Front door too small for horses," Ryan whispered tersely. "Greenies
had to get the horses inside somehow."
At the loading doors, Ryan raised a hand palm outward and the others
froze. Inspecting the tracks, he found grease on one and tentatively
identified it as animal fat.
The glass in the view slot of the door was gone, replaced with wood
paneling. Drawing the SIG-Sauer, he aimed the barrel at the wood and
gave a horse whinny. Something moved inside and he emptied the clip,
the soft coughs of the silenced blaster counterpointed with snapping
noises as the slugs plowed through the paneling. Immediately, the
companions pushed up the door and found two greenies lying on the
floor, their vines already withering.
Lowering the door, Doc and Dean dragged the bodies into a corner
while J.B. stood guard with the Uzi. Straight ahead was an empty area
with faint stripes painted on the terrazzo floor, the warehouse for the
armory. Across the room was a door marked Washroom, and a hallway.
Keeping to the walls, the companions crossed the storage room in
groups, each covering the other in case of traps or snipers. But no one
had witnessed their intrusion.
Holstering the SIG-Sauer, Ryan removed the long-blaster from his
shoulder and gently worked the bolt, the click-clack sounding
unnaturally loud in the gloomy stillness. When no one challenged them,
Ryan held up two separated fingers, then pointed to the left and
the right. Understanding the signals, the companions split into
two groups to avoid offering a group target.
The quiet of the armory was unnerving. The thick walls kept out the
soft desert breeze, and not even the drip of water marred the near
perfect silence. Gaping doorways lined the corridor, opening onto dusty
offices, a looted storage closet and private bedrooms for officers.
The end of the hallway was a branching intersection with more doors.
Two proved to be locked, and by the cobwebs on the hinges it was safe
to say neither had been used in years. However, a set of double doors
had clean hinges, dripping with fat. Easing their way through, the
companions realized this was the barracks for the troops. The rows of
bunks were coated with dust and cobwebs, but a clear path led through
the barracks to a group of figures sitting in a circle, nosily eating.
Moonlight streamed through the right side windows, illuminating the
bizarre scene. A horse lay in the middle of the muties, its hide peeled
back to allow them easy access to the pale meat and organs. The leafy
muties were removing morsels with their bare hands and stuffing the
food into their mouths, gobbling and slavering in joyous repast.
Doc made a gagging noise and leveled the LeMat.
"Chill them!" Ryan shouted, triggering the Steyr, the 7.62 mm round
blowing the head off a feasting greenie.
Dumbfounded, the muties could only stare in shock as the humans
steadily advanced, firing their weapons. Mouths smeared with blood, the
greenies fell to the floor, riddled with bullets, but two of them
managed to grab blowpipes and stand before receiving fatal head wounds.
Moving among the dead, J.B. checked the corpses just to make sure,
and Ryan turned away, holstering his blaster. "Okay, let's find the
rest of the horses."
Quickly, the companions went through the armory, opening every door,
exploring every room. But they found only decay and refuse, gnawed
bones and junk. Within a quarter hour, they regrouped in the barracks.
"Hey, over here!" Dean called from the armory. "Found them!"
The companions converged on the corridor to find Dean standing near
an open doorway. The hinges had been ripped from the jamb, the door
itself resting against the wall. A strong smell of blood and feces
emanated from inside. The boy's face revealed barely controlled anger.
Lighting more candles, the companions proceeded carefully inside the
room. In the flickering glow, they saw the rest of the horses lying on
the floor, muffled cries coming their bound mouths.
"The monsters!" Mildred said, furious. "The greenies cut the leg
tendons so the horses couldn't run away."
"Damn," Jak said grimly. "No fix that."
Krysty drew her blaster. "Nobody can fix that kind of wound. These
horses are cripples. They'll never walk again."
"Stinking bastards," J.B. spit, leveling his Uzi. The Armorer fired
single shots, putting the crippled animals out of their misery.
"Done," he said finally, slamming a fresh magazine home. "Let's get
the hell out of here."
"Gladly, sir," Doc rumbled, wiping some splashed blood off his cheek.
Holding a candle high, Ryan inspected some shelves. Aside from empty
shoe boxes and wire coat hangers, there was nothing. "Damn. Find any of
our packs anywhere while you were searching?" he asked.
Making sure the horses were dead, Mildred stood. "Not a thing. Just
garbage and cobwebs."
"Great. No horses, no food, only the ammo in our pockets," Krysty
growled. "Mebbe we should just head for the nearest redoubt and jump
out of here. We're not going to take the blues with what we have."
"Mebbe," Ryan said, walking toward the door. In the corridor, he
turned, a new expression on his face. "Jak, in the parking lot you took
a while to decide coming here. Why?"
"Odd tracks," the teenager replied. "Horses here, greenies
elsewhere. We want horses. Came here."
"But they obviously took the saddles and backpacks someplace else."
He shrugged. "Looks like."
"Which means there are possibly a lot more of them," Doc stated,
then gestured grandly at the armory. "This degenerate abattoir is
merely their kitchen, for lack of a better word."
"We find their nest, we find our packs," Dean concluded. "The ruins
aren't very big. It'll only take us a few hours to recce."
"Agreed," Ryan said, working the bolt on his long-blaster. "Let's go
get those supplies back."
Chapter Fourteen
Hidden in the shadows, a greenie watched the norms below from behind
the sheet of mirrored glass in the tall building. He made fists, and
the knuckle-thorns slid in and out as he debated attacking them now or
waiting until they met the master and were helpless.
The choice was clear, and the symbiote left the room to gather more
of his leafy brethren. Soon, oh, so very soon, the feasting would begin.
RETURNING OUTSIDE, Jak found the trail in the parking lot and
started toward the ruins with the companions close behind. The moon was
descending toward a bank of clouds, signaling the end of night. Soon,
Ryan and the others would be visible.
The square foundations of homes and stores lined the streets in an
orderly procession, most of the holes filled with debris, sand and
weeds. Rubble was everywhere underfoot, along with bits of rusting
machinery and a dusting of sand. In another hundred years, the desert
would claim the predark city, eventually swallowing the monoliths under
windblown drifts. Already the windows facing windward were frosted
white from the constant bombardment of the hard particles.
Intent on the trail, Jak darted past a manhole missing its cover.
Ryan knew that the lid had been probably taken for the iron. Manhole
covers made good armor for war wags, or folks could melt them down for
horseshoes, or even nails. As a child, Ryan remembered finding a lot
more of the smaller items from similar predark ruins. But now the
buildings were getting picked clean, and people were turning to making
things once more. Doc considered that a step toward rebuilding
civilization, but Ryan wasn't sure. The first things most folks made
were blasters and gallows.
Stopping at an intersection, Jak went down on a knee to study the
ground closely, his fingers hovering above the pavement. A bug was
crushed at one point, and a stone overturned, its wet side now facing
the nighttime sky.
"Trouble?" Ryan asked, cradling the longblaster in his arms. He
could tell somebody had passed by very recently, but not how many, or
where they were headed. Jak's expertise was tracking.
"No prob," the teenager replied, starting to move about in an ever
expanding spiral. Frowning, he finally stood.
"Two groups," Jak stated, pointing toward particular buildings. "One
there, other there."
"Hotel and the sports arena. Any difference in the depths?" Ryan
asked. "The muties carrying the supplies should leave a deeper print."
"None, Mebbe share all."
"Or thrown it away," Mildred suggested. A plait of her hair was
blown into her mouth, and she spit it out. "We better move fast, or
we'll be feasting on horse steak for the next week."
"Okay, we split into teams. Krysty, Jak and I will check the arena.
You folks hit the hotel."
"Good or bad," Ryan continued, "we rendezvous at the insurance
company here in thirty minutes. If the other team hasn't arrived, go
find them."
"Thirty and counting," J.B. said, looking at his wrist chron.
"Check."
Without further comment, Ryan and the others headed toward the arena.
Unfolding the wire stock of his Uzi, J.B. took the point for his
group and started toward the hotel. The main building was a
mirrored-glass cylinder, and it was impossible to see if there were any
lights or movements in the upper stories. On street level, two low
wings stood on either side.
"Swimming pool and restaurant," Mildred said, stepping over a bent
driveshaft that was brown with rust, "if this hotel follows the usual
style."
"No tracks," Dean said, looking at the street, "that I can see."
"Nor I," Doc added, sliding the selector on his blaster from the
.63-caliber smooth bore, to the .44-caliber revolver. Against the
resilient greenies, the buckshot charge would do scant damage. But the
solid-lead mini-balls would, and could, remove heads with the precision
of a cannon.
The windows lining the east wing were gone, windblown sand filling
the pool nearly to the top. Swinging around the hotel, they found the
restaurant to be in a similar condition—broken and deserted. A lizard
darted from the shadows and disappeared into the soft sand as if it
were water. Not a trace remained of its passage.
"We go in," J.B. said, straightening his fedora and pulling on his
fingerless gloves tighter. "Remember, go for head shots, just like
stickies." Nobody replied, but they raised the sights of their blasters
higher.
Under a crumbling overhang, a rusted sign squeaked as it swung back
and forth from the gentle wind. Mildred stopped it with her hand, then
laid it down flat. Now that they could hear, there was only the soft
moan of the desert wind, and the patter of sand hitting glass.
Proceeding in silence, they found the lobby of the hotel dark and
smelling of mildew. The front counter sagged in the middle, and a
shoe-shine stand was alive with busy termites. The floor was bare
concrete, pronged strips at the bottom of the walls showing the floor
had once been carpeted.
"Damn, we could track them easy on carpeting," J.B. said, lighting a
candle. The tiny flame illuminated only a few yards, but it was better
than nothing.
"There's an interesting fact I learned on my junkets," the physician
said, holding her own candle high to inspect the ceiling. The tiles
were in place, with no indications of bullet holes or accumulated
residue from other candles or torches. "In my day, nobody wanted to
stay on the thirteenth floor of a skyscraper. Supposed to be bad luck.
So the hotel people used the thirteenth floor for themselves as offices
and storage. Often, the elevators don't even list it as existing, but
we could get there by taking the service stairs. Service elevator, too.
But without power, those are dead."
"Twenty stories," J.B. mused, looking behind the counter. Piles of
key cards lay on the floor, along with a smashed register. "Thirteen
would be a good spot for an ambush. Whether invaders started searching
at the bottom, or at the top, once they were higher than thirteen, the
greenies could come boiling out and trap their prey."
"So we start there," Doc said grimly. "Lead on, my friend."
Going past a line of pay phones and washrooms, J.B. pushed opened a
swing door with the barrel of his Uzi. Stacks of
chairs lined their left, wooden easels and plastic signboards to the
right.
"No cobwebs," Dean said, scuffing the floor.
Mildred reached out and lifted a green leaf off the sharp end of an
easel. "I'd say we found them."
The service elevator was straight ahead, steam tables and
room service carts in neat rows along a wall with faded lines painted
on the floor.
"Tidy folks," J.B. commented, the Uzi sweeping for targets.
Mildred nodded. "Hyatt was the best."
At a door marked Service Stairs, J.B. and Dean stood guard, while
Mildred turned the handle and eased it open. Almost instantly, a hairy
fat spider darted around the edge and dashed onto her hand. Disgusted,
the physician shook it off. The insect landed on the floor, and Doc
crushed it under his boot.
"Filthy things," he muttered. "Always did hate them. Especially
since our past close encounter."
As expected, the stairwell was pitch-dark, but under the candles
they could dimly see the stairs were marked with the prints of
countless bare feet. Assuming combat formation, the companions started
up the concrete stairs, watching for traps.
Oddly, their footsteps didn't echo, and, reaching the fourth floor,
they discovered why—the stairwell ended abruptly. Nothing was above
them but the empty interior of the gutted hotel, each level
painstakingly removed to make the building hollow.
Astonished, the companions stepped onto on the carpeted floor,
looking upward at seventeen stories of banked windows and a very
distant skylight. Vines and creepers covered the interior; hammocks
hung
like nesting pods along the sides. The middle was clear all the way to
the roof, the ragged ends of steel beams and rough concrete slabs
marring the vertical checkerboard of mirrored glass.
"Those hammocks are arranged so the greenies can catch sunlight
while sleeping," Mildred guessed. "They climb the vines to get to their
beds."
"We can't follow up there," Dean stated, listening to the building
creak faintly as it swayed in the wind. "We get halfway and snip! Down
we go."
"By Gadfrey, this is a mighty fine defense," Doc said in annoyance.
"Positively Horacic in its simplicity."
"But where the hell are they?" J.B. demanded, studying the floor
underfoot. The carpeting was clean, no spots from dropped food or
drink. "There's hammocks here for a hundred, mebbe more, and we've only
chilled twenty or so."
"Could be room for new families," Mildred said, wrinkling her nose
at the sharp smell of the vines. It was similar to ivy, but resembled
hemp. Clearly another mutation. "But more likely, the rest are chilled.
"
"Hey, that's why they risked death to get our horses," Dean
realized, a flash of anger coming, then going just as quickly. "They
were starving to death."
"Not much to eat in the desert," she agreed as a spider ran by,
boldly going over the toe of her boot.
"Sure as hell hope they're chilled," the Armorer said gruffly. A
vine brushed against his neck, and he swatted it away. "Otherwise,
there's only two options. They're either terrified of our blasters and
have ran away in hiding—"
"Or else," Doc finished with a grimace, "the greenies are preparing
a major ambush, and this whole city is one huge trap."
AS THE MISTS faded from the mat-trans unit, Dr. Silas Jamaisvous
appeared, standing on a hexagonal platform of tiny lights twinkling
from inside the hidden machinery. Next to him was a forklift, its
prongs filled with foam boxes sealed with yellow-and-black-striped
warning tape.
The man waited a few moments for indications of jump sickness to
hit, and was relieved when none occurred. Sometimes he was driven to
the floor in retching agony, but those bouts were occurring less
frequently these days. It was as if his constant nightmares of the
chron jump were somehow making him immune to the smaller miseries of
disintegration and instantaneous travel.
Climbing into the seat of the forklift, Silas started the electric
motor and carefully drove the machine off the portable gateway and onto
the bare concrete floor. Stacks and crates of every description filled
the Quonset hut, long rifle boxes, drums of fuel, foot lockers,
backpacks, everything his growing army needed. Even the hut had come
through the gateway, painstakingly carried one piece at a time until
Silas was finally able to have his troops take down the canvas tent
around the gateway and surround the unit with the more secure domain of
the hut.
Silas knew many of the secrets of the mat-trans system, and aside
from controlling the jump destination, the man also knew where a lot of
military equipment was stored, tons of materials and supplies that
hadn't been touched since he personally ordered Special Forces troops
to place it there a hundred-odd years ago. Richard Overton had marveled
at the AK-47 assault rifles and radios. But those were toys compared to
the weapon Silas was working on now, a weapon that would burn the
pollution from the Deathlands forever and give him absolute mastery of
the world. It would mean an end to war! After the necessary bloodshed
of retribution, of course. But then, nothing was free.
Parking near the door, Silas rose and placed a hand on a glowing pad
on the wall. There was a hum, and the door disengaged, cycling open
onto a small enclosure. Directly across the neatly mown grass was the
laboratory, to the right the barracks, to the left a brand new wall of
concertina wire, topped with crackling electric prods.
"Guards!" he called, stepping onto the neatly raked soil.
Several armed sec men in crisp blue shirts ran over immediately.
"Sir!" a young corporal saluted.
Silas returned the salute, trying not to appear dismayed at the age
of the trooper. Most of the replacement sec men were young, hastily
recruited from distant villes after the slaughter of so many veterans
by the rebelling slaves. The barbed wire was only one of many steps
taken to make sure such a disaster was never allowed to happen again.
He blamed himself for the slaughter. He had been too lenient last time.
No more.
"Drive the forklift outside the enclosure and have some workers haul
these components up the main ladder to the dish for assembly," Silas
commanded, walking stiffly and trying to hide his limp. "And make sure
that nobody is to enter the warehouse for the next twenty minutes. No,
make that an hour. Just to be safe."
"Safe, Dr. Jamaisvous?" the sec man asked, nervously glancing at the
thick door of veined steel.
The predark scientist scowled. "Your ape brain could never possibly
understand the reasons why. Just do as you are ordered."
"Yes, sir!" With exaggerated care, the sec man piloted the machine
along a walkway and through the gate in the electric fence.
Chained slaves were waiting there, and each took a box from the
stack and started shuffling toward the gigantic dish.
A teenager took a foam box and started for the ladder at the base of
the bunker. His steps were hesitant, and almost immediately he tripped
and dropped the container. The foam broke apart on the flagstones, and
the computer module inside tumbled into view and shattered on the
ground, pieces spraying for yards.
"Masters, I am sorry," the slave said, going to his knees and
hastily sweeping the bits into a pile with bare hands. "Forgive me!"
"Clumsy idiot!" an overseer cursed, and lashed the teen with a
knotted bullwhip. The sweat-stained shirt split across the back, and
blood welled from a deep slash. The slave cried out, and the laughing
sec man coiled the whip for another strike.
"Hold!" Silas roared.
The overseer froze, confusion on his features. "Sir?"
Silas stared at the bleeding youth. The strapping young farmer was
too tired to haul a small box a hundred feet. "Bleeding to death isn't
going to help this worker get more done today, is it?"
"I'll make him work," the overseer boasted, and the line of chained
slaves cowered.
Hands clasped, Silas stared coldly at the fool. "Indeed. You are
relieved of worker supervision and assigned to the wall," he said, his
voice rising in power. "We have no need of fools here. Go!"
Stunned, the overseer stumbled away, unable to comprehend what he
had done wrong.
Looking about, Silas choose a sec man and pointed. "You there,
Corporal!"
"Yes, Doctor?" the older man asked, saluting briskly.
"Congratulations. You are now an overseer. Feed these workers and
give them a ten-minute rest every two hours. Finishing a job is much
more important than trying to finish the job. Understand?"
The sec man saluted. "Yes, Doctor. Hail the New America!"
Sighing in frustration, Silas walked to the lab and locked the door
by throwing a dead bolt. Luxuriating in the air-conditioning for a
moment, he limped to a computer console and continued the diagnostics
on the new software. Building the dish was only the first step in
controlling the Kite. They also needed precise calculations to focus
the power station. Even the slightest mistake could result in nothing
happening to the target, or his own sec men dying in droves.
The intercom buzzed.
"What?" Silas snapped, pressing a button. "I told you I was never to
be interrupted in the lab!"
"Glorious news, sir!" A voice crackled through the speaker. "Ryan
has been captured!"
A minute passed before Silas could speak. "What was that again?" he
asked in disbelief.
"One of our patrols caught them in some ruins east of here. The
major has them in the main courtyard. Do you wish to talk with the
prisoners, or should we chill them, sir?"
"Do nothing!" Silas ordered, sliding a rainbow colored CD-ROM from
the mainframe computer and tucking it into a shirt pocket. "No, summon
more guards in case they try to escape. I will be there at once!"
Turning off the intercom, Silas hastily hobbled from the lab and
headed down a hallway for the exit. Could it be true
that after so long a time, he was finally going to chill Tanner? Maybe
that would stop the nightmares. His heart beat faster with hope. Yes,
it had to! Free, he would be free from that cursed man once and forever!
Rushing from the building, Silas found a dozen sec men around a
LAV-25 that was parked in the courtyard. Sheffield stood nearby with an
unreadable expression.
"What's wrong?" Silas asked.
"Judge for yourself, sir," the major replied, crossing his arms.
An iron cage was attached to the rear of the APC with heavy chains,
and it had obviously been dragged behind the transport through mud and
fields. Horribly jammed inside was a group of wounded men, arms and
legs sticking out of the bars of the impossibly tight confines.
More chains had been attached to a cross made of wooden beams. A man
was chained and tied to the beams, his arms outstretched. He was
covered with dirt, sweat cutting paths through the caked road dust.
Dressed in combat fatigues and military-style boots, he had long black
hair, was tall, heavily muscled, and a terrible scar bisected his face.
But the prisoner had two eyes, and his teeth were filed to sharp points.
A smoking cigar dangling from his mouth, a grinning sergeant stood
nearby the prisoners, his AK-47 leveled and ready as if expecting
trouble.
"Are you in charge of this patrol?" Silas asked in a deceptively
calm voice.
"Yes, sir, Dr. Jamaisvous!" the sec man stated proudly. "Gave us
quite a fight, but we brought Ryan in alive and kicking."
"Dullard! Poltroon!" Silas raged, hobbling closer. "This isn't
Cawdor! Can't you see he has two eyes!"
His smile fading quickly, the sergeant puffed nervously on the
cigar. This wasn't going as planned. "Well, we sort of figured he took
the eye from a dead man and shoved it in as a disguise. But we found
him with those five others—one's a blonde, another a redhead and they
had plenty of blasters."
"And he admitted to being Cawdor?" Sheffield asked in a monotone.
The sergeant scratched his head and looked at the other sec men,
watching from the hatches of the LAV. "Well, no. Not exactly, sir. But
we figured out who they were pretty fast. Who else could they be?"
"Anybody, you ass!" Silas lowered his bushy eyebrows until they
touched. "Mercies, coldhearts, ville sec men, anybody at all. Ryan
travels with six other people, not five!" he reminded harshly. "Two of
them women, not men. Can't you tell the difference, or haven't you read
the posted description? As per standing orders!"
"I…" The sergeant swallowed hard, losing his cigar. "My apologies,
sir. None of us can read."
Conflicting emotions raged within Silas, and he glared at the
sweating sec man for several minutes without talking. Finally, he spoke.
"You will have to do better next trip, Sergeant," Silas said
sternly, the threat of severe discipline clear in the tone.
"Yes, sir. Thank you, sir!" The man almost fawned in his gratitude.
"We'll leave today and find them fast!"
"See to it," the old man stated with a glare. "As for your
prisoners, it's no great loss. We can always use more workers. Put them
in chains and send the whole group to the wall. There's a constant need
for fresh bodies in the stone quarry."
"Yes, sir! At once!"
Silas dismissed the matter with a wave. "You may go."
As the LAV drove away, dragging the prisoners behind, the rest of
the guards returned to their duties, and Silas headed for the
laboratory. Holding a palm to the wall plate, Sheffield opened the door
for the man and entered after him, closing it tight behind them, making
sure the lock was engaged.
"How utterly disappointing," Silas remarked, leaning heavily on his
cane as they walked.
"Fucking idiots, is more like it," Sheffield growled. "Now that
we're alone, how do you wish the sergeant punished for the failure?"
"For being illiterate? No. We're short on men as it is. More the
fool I for not remembering when it is that I now live."
When, not
where, Sheffield noted privately. The
whitecoat often said such things, and he was starting to believe the
idea. It certainly explained where the military blasters came from. His
palm print opened doors everywhere across the complex, except for the
warehouse. Whatever was inside, the old man hoarded it like a virgin
did her cunny. Which only made Sheffield want it that much more.
Pausing at a control board, Silas checked the voltage on some dials,
then turned to the officer. "Major, do you know the alphabet or how
many continents there are? How many planets? What a gerund is? The name
of the moon, or any of the laws of thermodynamics?"
The sec man scowled. "The moon has a name?"
"Since the 1965 International Conference of Astronomers. Its
official name is Luna, and the sun is Sol."
"Interesting," he admitted. "But that doesn't put bullets in a
blaster. Just a pretty song, nothing more. I'm a practical man, sir.
Taught myself to read labels so I could steal food and not chems. I
learned to chill a man with just a knife in nine different ways, or
skin him alive to make him talk. I know how to cook dynamite, avoid rad
pits, raid a ville and fix wags. Do these other things matter in the
real world?"
"The real world," Silas repeated with a sigh. "No, I suppose they
don't. As a scientist, I must concede the logic of your argument."
Unexpectedly, Silas laid a hand on the man's shoulder. "However, if
you are to be my successor, they soon will. We shall start your lessons
with the most important one of all."
"The warehouse?" the major asked eagerly, naked avarice shining on
his face.
Smiling, Silas hobbled for the doorway. "That and much, much more.
Come with me."
APPROACHING THE SPORTS ARENA, Ryan called for a halt. The building
stood five stories tall, the outer wall ringed with clusters of lights.
Some small windows, or vents, were noticeable, but no doors.
"Jak, stay here as anchor," Ryan said cautiously. He had a feeling
they were being watched. "Krysty and I will sweep around the building
on a recce."
"No prob," Jak said, putting his back to the concrete wall of the
arena so he could see in every direction. Weeds and desolation filled
his vision. Predark ruins were nothing but unburied cemeteries to him.
Patrolling along the side, the man and woman soon found the front
entrance, metal rings in the concrete showing where a line of
turnstiles had to have once been. An iron grate was pulled off to the
side, and Krysty tugged on the barrier to see if it could move. Rust
had welded it into a solid mass.
"Nobody's used this for a while," she commented.
Ryan merely nodded, unable to shake the feeling of being scrutinized.
The interior Plexiglas doors were wide open, debris keeping them
from closing.
"Could be a trap," Krysty said, easing back the hammer of her
revolver.
"Could be anything," Ryan countered, then added, "What's that smell?"
Her hair flexing, Krysty sniffed. "Flowers?"
Moving deeper into the structure, they found the front hallway
completely filled with flowering plants of a thousand different colors,
the air rich with their sweet perfume.
"Don't see anything moving," Krysty said, watching for traitorous
intent among the leaves.
"Perfect place for the greenies to go camou," Ryan noted. The
hallway resembled a jungle with blossoms clustering thick on the walls,
yet the floor was bare, as if inviting visitors.
"How can they grow without sunlight?" he asked.
"Mebbe some of it is still outside," Krysty guessed. '"These could
be just the roots."
"Roots seek nourishment," Ryan noted grimly.
A short flight of wide stairs went up a level, the steps and
railings festooned with hanging leaves that offered no resistance to
being pushed aside. Bracing himself, Ryan experimentally tore off a
leaf. It came loose in a normal manner, and nothing else happened. They
both relaxed.
The perfume smell thickened as the hallway opened onto a sports
field, the ground covered with wags of every kind—cars, trucks, wooden
wagons, bicycles, motorcycles, Jeeps, vans and even a few Hummers.
Strewed among the vehicles were countless backpacks, suitcases, duffel
bags, swords and blasters of every description.
"Thank Gaia!" Krysty cried out. "There's our stuff!"
"What the hell is going on here?" Ryan demanded softly as they
approached the backpacks and saddlebags. "The greenies rob travelers
and just toss the stuff here to rot? That doesn't make any sense."
"Not to rot, as offerings," Krysty said, pointing with her blaster.
"I think this is their temple."
Standing majestically amid the piles of tributes was a huge flower,
its stalk thicker than a tree trunk. Rainbows marked in hypnotic swirl
patterns spread skyward from the plant. Oddly, there seemed to be no
pistil or stamen, and Krysty wondered how the plant reproduced without
pollination.
There was a funny tickling in his throat, and Ryan coughed on the
thick smell of the plant. However, it was remarkably pleasant, and he
felt his heart beating faster, a familiar tingle starting in his groin.
Fireblast, this was no place to think about sex, Ryan chastised
himself. Concentrate on the job, man!
Feeling woozy, Ryan tried to speak, but Krysty turned toward him,
her eyes moist with emotion, her face flushed red. The fiery heat of
lust welled within him, and Ryan crushed the redhead in his arms. Her
lips so soft and warm beneath his own, their tongues intertwined in a
long soulful embrace.
Something shouted a warning in his mind, but it was already too late.
As he murmured tender words, his hands roamed across her yielding
body, savoring the womanly curve of her firm buttocks as her hips
thrust against him in a delicious manner. Hands removed her coat—his or
hers, he had no idea—as somebody undid his gun belt and pants. Krysty
knelt before Ryan and took him full into her mouth, her fingers
stroking and caressing. He grabbed her hair and thrust himself harder
toward her, striving to get deeper into the sucking wetness. Her nails
raked across his muscular thighs, the pain shattering the wild delirium
for a split second.
That was when he noticed the bones on the ground, skeletons and
clothing covering the dirt, which was filled with tiny roots. It was a
carpet of death. Icy adrenaline flooded his body as the realization
came that they were in a terrible trap. This plant wasn't ambulatory
like some mutie foliage. Instead, it lured in victims with a sweet
perfume and drugged them into a sexual fervor until they had to mate.
Probably doing so on and on until they eventually died of starvation,
still trying to blindly copulate. Their rotting bodies would feed the
roots in the ground, and the death flower would blossom in hellish
beauty.
"No," Ryan whispered, trying to push Krysty away. "Trap…we gotta…go…"
She pulled away from him, her face distorted in animal need. "Take
me," Krysty commanded, starting to remove her clothes.
The blood was pounding louder than cannons in Ryan's ears, and he
heroically struggled to fight the drunkenness of unfettered desire by
thinking of dead friends and torture. He knew that once started, there
would be no stopping until they collapsed from exhaustion, and in that
weakened state, they would never again be able to resist until death
claimed them both. It was now or never, and the Deathlands warrior
forced himself to act.
"Wake up!" he cried, slapping her across the face as hard as he
could. "We're being drugged. Horses for them, humans for their god!"
In frustration, Krysty shoved Ryan backward and he fell to the
ground. Dropping her pants, the redhead sat astride him, tearing at his
shirt, uncaring of the long furrows her nails dug into his chest. As
she started to blindly hump against him, the electric velvet of
entering the woman almost shattered his last resolve of sanity.
Using his last ounce of strength, Ryan threw her off. She rolled
aside onto her hands and knees, rubbing her buttocks against his bare
stomach.
"Now!" she yelled at him, spreading her legs. "Inside me! Now!"
Ryan grabbed her, and with a guttural cry he climbed on top and
inside. The sensation was maddening, and Ryan bit his own tongue to
stop the sweet perfume from claiming him. Pain was the answer. Only
pain stopped the siren call of the plant's perfume. Then his memory
flared, recalling Krysty's special muscles, and how she used them as no
norm woman could to pleasure a man. Ecstasy worth dying for, pleasure
beyond understanding. Die inside her, yes, yes! That was worth any
price!
Ryan rammed his cock all the way inside her to bring him as close as
possible to her, then slapped the barrel of the SIG-Sauer across the
base of her skull. Krysty gave a gasp and slumped over unconscious.
A fresh wave of perfume flooded the arena as the flower spread wide
its glorious petals. It was fighting for its next meal.
Raw fury boiled inside Ryan at the concept, and he focused his rage
in order to survive.
"Die!" he roared, firing his blaster at the plant. Holes were
punched in the lush petals, and vines snipped, greenish sap oozing from
the small openings.
Standing on shaky legs, the mostly nude man grabbed his gun belt and
reloaded, his whole world reduced to the ammo clip and the gun.
Grabbing Krysty by the hair, knowing that to pull on the living
tendrils was agony to her, Ryan dragged the woman along behind him
across the feasting bower, sheer willpower placing one foot ahead of
the other. Whenever his will seemed to lag, Ryan fired the blaster
close to his face, the sting of the muzzle-flash shocking him back to
reality for a few precious moments.
Once past the doors, the perfume seemed to thin, but the desire
still raged within the man. The steps wavered under his sight, but he
plowed ahead, unstoppable in his determination to live. Sweat pouring
off his body, Ryan staggered through the hallway of flowers, raging at
the world, screaming curse words, doing anything he could think of to
keep his anger fully fueled. Another yard was crossed, and still
another.
Suddenly, reaching outside, Ryan stumbled to the concrete and kept
moving forward on his knees, dragging Krysty behind, firing his
blaster. A cool breeze blew over him, every breath taking away the
rutting madness from his mind and body. Overcome, he slumped to the
sidewalk and lost consciousness.
Minutes later, greenies rose from the weeds in the rubble and
started dragging the exhausted man and woman back inside the temple of
their living god.
Chapter Fifteen
Storm clouds filled the atmosphere above the planet Earth, and sheet
lightning flashed constantly while hurricanes and tidal waves savaged
the continents. And sterile deserts slowly spread across the world like
a plague of dry rot.
The burned-out hulks of numerous satellites circled the tortured
planet, some bristling with antennae, others smooth armored spheres of
unknown purpose or design. Stationary above the former state of
Tennessee floated a great black satellite, a slim ferruled cylinder
with enormous shiny wings outstretched. Raw sunlight fell upon the
millions of tiny glass squares composing the wings, and smooth pulses
of electricity fed down the central supports and into the cylinder.
There, computers hummed as accumulators stored the power, then from the
bottom of the cylinder a concave dish extended into view and began
beaming invisible rays at the ruined world below.
The beams spread outward in a cone formation as they bathed the
polluted air, making the storm clouds dissipate until there was only a
clear azure sky.
The rays descended until reaching an area in the desert where
strands of bare wire had been strung in yard-wide squares across miles
of dead land. The cone washed over the wire, and now tiny waves of
electricity flowed into a series of transformers that unleashed the
harnessed power in a network of high-tension lines toward a crumbling
city on the horizon.
The ruins seemed to stretch for miles, tilting skyscrapers
threatening to topple over, fires burning in gutted houses, rats
feasting on bloated corpses strewed along the streets. Blast craters
dotted the ground, their fused-glass bottoms glowing with deadly rads.
A layer of frost covered the city like a death shroud, and what few
bridges remained were eaten by blisters of red rust, just barely
hanging over polluted rivers full of dead fish and decomposing ship
hulls.
As the cables reached the decimated metropolis, slowly lights
flicked to life inside the buildings, and the picture began to change.
Window cracks sealed, and roofs straightened into proper alignment. The
frost melted away, and the weeds withered and died. The hordes of rats
ran shrieking into the sewers as the graffiti flowed off the sides of
the strong buildings, and grass began to grow in yards and trees began
to blossom. The roads smoothed as the potholes were filled, painted
lines racing into existence along the clean macadam. The bridges became
level, the rust falling away like autumn leaves, exposing the shiny
steel underneath. A car rolled around a corner, then another and
another until traffic flowed through the bustling city streets as in
the days before the nukestorm.
But the restoration didn't stop there. A tumble-down shack rose
again as a brick school, the field full of graves transformed into a
ballpark and a playground. The junkyards and bomb craters became fields
of golden wheat that reached into the distance. Factories disgorged
machinery and clothing into softly humming electric trucks. Machines
rolled out of warehouses and thrust electric prods into the rivers.
Soon the water boiled and began to run clear again, all the way to the
blue ocean. The prods were withdrawn, and fish jumped from the waters,
rejoicing in their newborn life.
Outside the city, hordes of slavering muties touched the electrified
fencing and withered into ash. Stalking the perimeter was a black dog
with writhing tentacles sprouting from its shoulders, accompanied by a
puma-like beast with a scorpion tail and insect mandibles. The beasts
moved like well-oiled machines, but they, too, bumped the fence and
vanished like flash paper in a candle's flame.
First one, then a dozen people appeared on the sidewalks, smiling
and not carrying blasters. Soon they become a hundred, a thousand. Far
away, farmers rose from the wastelands, the electric fences repelling
the muties, as tractors plowed the land, planting more crops. Then the
skies gently rumbled, and a soft clear rain fell on the world. Children
rushed outside to play in the falling water as forest turned green and
the world began to gradually turn into a blue-white sphere from the
view in space.
Then the television screen turned blue.
"And that is our weapon?" Major Sheffield asked, sitting back in the
chair, reeling from the amazing deluge of bizarre sights and sounds.
"Yes and no," Silas said, turning off the television and VCR.
"Unlimited electricity is merely one aspect of the Kite. The device
is actually simplicity itself, as you saw. Solar cells in a high Earth
orbit turn direct sunlight into electricity, which is gathered in
transformers and broadcast to Earth as low-frequency microwaves."
"Like the microwave oven you showed me?" the sec man asked in horror.
"Different frequency, but the same principle. However, these beams
cannot harm a fly, and are easily harnessed by those squares of wiring,
which can be placed above croplands or cattle-grazing fields. Doing no
harm to the cattle or crops, I might add. And then you have
electricity, free, clean power. Gigawatts upon gigawatts."
Silas hobbled over to the television and got the tape out of the
VCR. He slid the cassette into a box and stored it in a drawer along
with his other videotapes. "A single Kite was designed to supply enough
energy to run predark New York City and most of its suburbs. However,
nowadays that's enough for all of the North American continent."
"Incredible!" Sheffield exhaled, chaotic thoughts swirling in his
mind. "And this machine exists?"
"You have already seen it used against the slaves," Silas stated,
reclaiming his hardwood chair. His bad leg was stiffening, and it was
becoming difficult to rise from soft chairs without assistance. A
simply intolerable condition. "Unfortunately, its military applications
were also its doom. There is absolutely no way to stop such a microwave
satellite from being converted into a deadly weapon of war. Simply
change the focus, and you have a microwave beamer capable…" He smiled.
"Well, you know what it can do."
The grotesque vista of what had been found after opening the doors
to the bunker that night was a sight the officer would never forget.
"And you created this, sir?"
"Good Lord, no," Silas snapped, annoyed for some reason. "It was
invented by a fellow American, Paul Glaser of Boston, back in 1970, but
the United Nations would never allow the power stations to be built.
Partially because of business and politics, but mostly because whoever
got one in space first, could stop everybody else from building the
second power station. Thus, only one was ever built, and that was done
secretly. The Pentagon had planned for the coming war by building a
Kite, the mat-trans network…and other things."
Sheffield waited eagerly, but Silas didn't oblige with more
information. The sec man wasn't ready to learn of the redoubts. He was
already clearly reeling from the video. The silly thing was just a
promotional tape made to try to sway politicians. Silas easily changed
a few of the scenes to make the material more relevant Nothing could
explain the function and promise of a working Kite better then simply
seeing the device in action.
The officer rose and went to the barred window of the lab, staring
at the dark skies. "Why, with this satellite we could cook the rad pits
clean, or bury them under molten rock! Burn the rads and chems from the
atmosphere!"
"Correct." Silas smiled. "That is, once we achieve complete control.
At present, we have only a focus for a few minutes a day."
"Why is that?" the major asked.
Sensing danger, Silas grew cold. "Technical problems," he demurred.
"But those will soon be solved. All I need is more time to finish
creating software to master the Kite. Its security systems are quite
good, but can be beaten. Already I am up to five minutes a day before
being booted off-line by the onboard systems."
The major turned from the window. "Five minutes of the Kite could
stop an army!"
"If I do not miss."
The sec man studied the whitecoat. The man stood straight, but his
shoulders were hunched, dark circles around his eyes. He was exhausted,
possibly dying. "The nightmares are coming every night, aren't they?"
he guessed.
"Yes," Silas whispered, his face sagging. "It is becoming more
difficult to concentrate each passing day."
"Well, I could send out more patrols," the sec man ventured, leaning
forward in his chair. "Cover the fields, as well as the roads and
bridges. Try to find Ryan and others and chill them as quickly as
possible."
"Yes, do so. His death should end the nightmares and let me sleep
again." His voice broke in a sob. "Sleep!"
"But that would seriously weaken the defenses of the complex,"
Sheffield continued. "It might be best to recall all of our troops and
concentrate our strength here. We can mine the roads and lay more
traps. This project is too important to be derailed by some
mutie-loving outlanders."
"Which is why I am telling you this, as insurance against their
possible arrival. If I should die—" Silas paused uncomfortably, his
cheek twitching uncontrollably for a moment, "—or become insane, then
you shall assume the mantle of authority and bring America back from
these days of barbarism. Deathlands is ruled by the strongest, not the
wisest. Stupidity reins, muties and cannibals roam in packs, healers
tortured as sport to amuse drunk barons. The madness must be brought to
an end at any price. America will be reborn!"
"Victory or death," Sheffield said sarcastically.
Silas grunted. "Precisely. And today we shall start to clean house.
To remove some potentially dangerous trash."
"Sir?" the sec man asked nervously.
Wincing as he stood, Silas walked to a wall map, favoring his leg.
When Tanner stabbed him with that trick sword, he had to have severed a
nerve. The wound was healed, the muscles strong, yet Silas still limped
like the old man he appeared to be. Just another debt to be paid.
"Overton was sent to seize control of Front Royal, to turn it
against the other villes in the area in a civil war. When they were
weak, we would move in and forge the three largest into one huge city,
the capital of New America. My America!"
"But Overton failed," the major stated, "because of Ryan and the
others."
"Yes," Silas hissed, thumping his cane onto the floor. "So I am
going to remove those three villes in case they decide to join forces
against us. Look at this."
The sec chief walked closer as Silas drew some freehand curves on
the map with a black marker. "Bull Run is the farthest east, thus the
easiest to target. Next is Casanova and finally Front Royal. I can only
use the Kite once every twenty-four hours, so it will take three days
before Front Royal will be reduced to ashes."
"And I need targets to fire at." Silas lovingly stroked the map,
smearing the lines. "Each time will give me greater control of the
Kite, each use allowing me more access to its computers. In three days,
I will crack the final codes and have total command over the orbiting
power station."
"And what does the dish have to do with this?" the major asked
curiously.
"That is what I need to punch a radio signal through the static and
interference of the overhead storms and reach the Kite. How soon will
the repairs be completed?"
"Two days, three at the most."
Silas smiled. "Ah, then in four days, we become the new rulers of
America, and the great cleansing of humanity can finally begin.
Thousands of the impure will die. No more
muties! Isn't that glorious?"
"Oh, yes," the major agreed, feeling the two hearts in his chest
pound with anger. "What a wonderful day that will be for our people."
AS THE GREENIES DRAGGED the humans back toward the arena, two loud
reports split the night and the muties tumbled to the sidewalk with
most of their heads removed. Holstering the blaster, Jak hurried around
the curved building and inspected the sprawled man and woman.
"Ryan," the teenager said softly, shaking him by the shoulder. "What
happened?"
The warrior struggled into consciousness. "Wags," Ryan hoarsely
whispered. "Dozens of wags…"
"Inside arena?" Jak asked eagerly.
"Don't go! Plant fumes…" Ryan collapsed.
Standing, Jak glanced the entrance to the arena and sniffed. He
didn't smell anything but some flowers. What fumes? From the condition
of Ryan's and Krysty's clothes it looked as if they were caught in the
middle of hot sex, but while on a recce in hostile land? That didn't
make sense.
Adjusting what clothing they were still wearing to cover as much as
possible, Jak again looked at the arena and made a decision. Raising
the Colt Python, he loudly fired twice, then three times and once more.
He quickly reloaded and waited for the rest of his friends.
Minutes later, a long whistle cut the air. Cocking back the hammer
of his .357 magnum pistol, Jak replied with two short whistles and the
rest of the companions came charging into view.
"We were going to the insurance company and heard the shots," J.B.
said, easing the tension on the trigger of the Uzi. Then he spotted the
nearly naked couple. "What the hell happened here?"
"Ryan hauled out," the teenager said, glaring at the dark hallway of
the building. "Muties tried drag back in."
"Indeed," Doc rambled, removing his frock coat and draped it over
Krysty. "And what happened to their clothes?"
"Don't know," Jak answered, scratching his head. "Said wags inside.
Also plant fumes."
"Fumes?" Mildred carefully walked closer to the doorway and sniffed.
Instantly, she felt her heart beat fast and a sudden rush of warmth
between her legs. The physician backed away quickly and gulped in the
clean desert air.
"There's something odd with the atmosphere, sure enough." she
stated, staring hard at J.B. for a moment before forcing her mind back
to reality. What was wrong with her? All she could think about was sex!
Was that the problem?
Taking a lungful of air, Mildred walked into the entrance and
waited. Nothing happened and she felt no different. Exhaling, the
physician allowed herself a small sip of air, and her hips ached as her
tingling breasts brushed against the soft fabric of her bra. Hastily,
she rushed outside, gasping for breath.
"What's wrong, Millie?" J.B. said, holding her by the arms.
"S-some sort of drug," she replied, shaking. "Makes you crazy for
sex. Probably once you go in, you never come out again."
"So the wags are bait," Dean decided.
"A logical deduction," Doc mused, leaning on his stick.
"How utterly vulgar."
"Utterly lethal," Mildred corrected. "The question is, how do we
check inside? What we need are gas masks."
"I know something just as good," J.B. said, slinging his blaster.
"Got any shine?"
The teenager produced a bottle with less than half an inch of brown
fluid. "What for?"
"Protection," the Armorer said, taking the bottle and splashing some
of the homemade whiskey on a handkerchief.
Breathing through the reeking cloth, he approached the sports arena.
The alcohol fumes were giving him a slight headache, but aside from
that he felt normal. Holding his breath while he anointed the cloth
again, J.B. walked around the dead muties and ventured farther, past
the stairs, to finally reach the playing field.
In the dim moonlight, the scene explained itself. Bodies lay
everywhere, and a huge blossoming flower sat in the middle of a hundred
rusting wags. Their own backpacks were lying clearly in sight at the
base of the huge plant. An offering to the god of the greenies, or bait
for them? On a hunch, he fired a few rounds from the Uzi at the huge
blossom. The stalk shook from the passage of the bullets, but there was
no other effect. Realizing the shine was exhausted, J.B. retreated even
faster than he entered.
"The bastard thing must feed off the bodies as they rot away," he
finished explaining to the others.
"What if you were alone?" Dean asked.
It was a good question. "Probably just do yourself to death," J.B.
said, passing the boy his stuttergun. "However, there's enough wags in
there for an army, some of them in good condition, I'm going
to steal us some wheels to replace the horses."
"Not enough," Jak stated, inspecting the bottle. "Here," Mildred
said, passing over the bottle of witch hazel from her med kit. "Use it
sparingly. That's all we have."
J.B. removed the cap and took a sniff. "Whew! Even better than the
shine. This'll work fine."
"Not go alone. I come," Jak said, digging a rag from his jacket. It
was stained with oil from cleaning his blaster, but still serviceable.
"Get backpacks first?"
"I'm going to chill that big flower first," J.B. corrected, shoving
two more shells into the feed of his shotgun. "That seems to be the
source of the drug."
"How are you doing to ace the weed?" Dean asked, shouldering the
Uzi. "Bullets didn't work."
The Armorer frowned. "I know, and setting it on fire might only make
the perfume deadly. We need some way to neutralize that bastard thing,
kill it root and branch."
"Maybe there is some herbicide in one of the stores," Mildred
hesitantly suggested, glancing at the ruins. "No, these are office
buildings and such. Not a hardware store or greenhouse in sight."
"Explosives?" Jak asked.
J.B. frowned. "If we had a lot, sure."
"How about car batteries?" Doc suggested.
"Yeah, not bad," J.B. said, considering the idea. "Good call. I
think that should work fine. Jak with me. Doc, Dean, you two are on
guard duty. Mildred, see what you can do with Ryan and Krysty. Don't
start a fire. We aren't going be here that long."
Holding the witch-hazel-soaked masks, the men stealthily entered the
sports arena. The bones of a hundred corpses littered the floor, bits
of clothing and boots visible amid the greenery. Backpacks and duffel
bags were prominent lumps, and the barrels of discarded weapons were
everywhere. The men walked hurriedly among the wags, inspecting them
for damage and rust. Too many of the vehicles were civilian cars with
bald tires, the bodies stripped of bumpers, seats and chrome to save
weight and increase gas mileage. Few had hoods, and none had batteries.
Spotting a van in decent condition, J.B. used a knife blade to flip
the grille lock, lift the hood and check inside. The battery was gone
like the rest, a corroded mess eaten away by its own internal acids.
"Here," Jak announced, lugging a battery into view. The lead
terminals on top were covered with flaky white material, but the casing
seemed intact.
Removing the plastic caps with one hand, J.B. kept his mouth covered
as he walked the heavy battery to the plant and awkwardly poured out
the concentrated sulfuric acid onto the base of the stalk. Instantly,
the plant seemed to lose color and the aroma in the air took on a sour
smell.
Splashing on more witch hazel, Jak brought over another battery and
did the same thing to the flower. Now the leaves began to wilt, the
blossom closing its petals protectively. Dropping the dead battery, Jak
flexed his hand and a knife slid into his palm. Slashing at the fibrous
petals, he hacked open a hole, and J.B. poured the contents of another
old battery directly inside. Now visibly wilting, the flower withered
and began to turn brown.
Closely watching the roots they were standing on, the men nervously
waited a few minutes to make sure the acid had worked. Acid rain in the
Deathlands could strip the flesh off a man's bones it was so strong.
But out here on the East Coast, the rain wasn't that strong, and was
coming with less frequency. That was why Virginia and Georgia had
living green trees, and not just endless sterile sand.
Experimentally, J.B. lowered his cloth and inhaled. "Dark night,
what a smell!" He coughed, waving a hand at the air. "It's like burning
tires mixed with shit and rotten eggs."
"Feel okay?" Jak mumbled behind his wad of cloth.
"I feel like vomiting!" the man replied, holding his nose shut and
gasping for air through his mouth. "Shit! I can taste it!"
Hesitantly, Jak lowered his mask and risked a sniff. "Smelled
worse," he said, while pocketing the damp rag. "Not by much, though."
"Come on, let's find a wag we can use."
RYAN AWOKE to the sound of an engine. Groggily, the man grabbed for
his blaster and tried to sit up. "Not taking me anywhere!" he snarled,
fumbling at the gun belt.
"Hey!" a familiar voice shouted.
Dizzy, Ryan tried to focus his vision and realized he was fully
dressed and sitting on the sidewalk resting against the facade of the
arena. Mildred was beside him, her fingers on his wrist checking his
pulse. Doc and Dean stood a few yards away with blasters held at the
ready, obviously on guard duty.
"What happened?" he asked around a mouthful of hairy cotton. His
head was throbbing, and every muscle was sore.
Mildred released his wrist and offered a canteen, which was
gratefully accepted. "Jak chilled some greenies trying to drag you and
Krysty back inside the arena."
"Fucking plant!" Ryan snarled, forcing himself to stand. "Don't go
inside! The perfume is a drag!"
She nodded and took back the canteen. "Yeah, we figured that out
pretty quick. Put some witch hazel on rags, and J.B. and Jak aced the
flower and got us a wag."
Grunting in reply, Ryan drew the SIG-Sauer and checked the clip. It
was empty, and he seemed to have no more loaded magazines. Fireblast,
how many rounds had he fired to get them out of the building? Loose
rounds were sewn into his jacket, a few more in the pocket, and Ryan
started thumbing bullets into an exhausted clip.
"Glad to hear it's chilled," he stated grimly. "Where's Krysty? How
is she?"
"Fine, lover," the woman answered from the darkness. She was sitting
nearby on a piece of rubble, massaging her temples. The woman's wild
abundance of red hair was hanging limp. He had never seen her so tired
before. "Just don't expect much loving soon. Feel like I just lost my
cherry during a fistfight."
"Had to," Ryan stated, slamming in the slip and jacking the slide,
but clicking on the safety.
She hushed him with a finger on the lips. "I know. You saved us
both," Krysty said. "Thank you. I have a nukestorm of a headache, but
that's better than the alternative."
Revving engines sounded again, and a Hummer rolled from the
building, easily passing through the wide entrance. At the steering
wheel, J.B. bounced the wag down the front steps and parked on the
sidewalk. Jak stood in the rear, his hands gripping an M-60 machine gun
that rested on the gimbal of a short steel post, a long belt of
ammo hanging from the breech.
"Replacement for the horses," J.B. said with pride, turning off the
engine. "It's in great shape with a full tank of juice. We got our
backpacks again, plus a ton of ammo, six Kalashnikovs, the 7.62 mm
machine gun, half a case of grens and two LAWs. No food, but we're
armed for war."
"Better," Jak said, resting an arm on the M-60. "We know location."
Ryan came closer. "You found a map."
A nod. "Couple of blue shirts are staring at the dirt inside. They
must have stopped here on a recce, just like us."
"Indeed," Doc stated. "So where are they located?"
"Tennessee." J.B. grinned widely, holding out a folded piece of
plastic. "Big red circle around Shiloh battlefield."
"Excellent!"
"Idiots," Krysty snorted.
Accepting the map, Ryan studied it closely. "So they're right next
to the redoubt. About a hundred miles away."
"Less than a day in a Hummer," Dean added, climbing into the rear of
the vehicle and finding his backpack. Undoing the straps, he stuffed
his pockets with spare rounds for his blaster, and stuffed a chunk of
smoked fish whole into his mouth, chewing contentedly.
"It would be a day's journey if we travel straight there," Ryan
agreed, rubbing his cheek. Then the man hawked and spit to clear his
throat. There was still a faint taste of the perfume in his mouth. Damn
stuff was like glue. "But we're not going to travel directly to their
base. The blues are smart. There might be more land mines and traps on
the roads. How's the fuel?"
"Tanks are full of condensed fuel. That'll last us over a thousand
miles. Plus, we have a can of regular juice."
"Even better. So we take two days, mebbe three at the most." Ryan
spread the map on the hood of the Hummer and the others gathered
around. "We'll do an end run and head straight for this valley west of
Shiloh. If they're expecting us, they'll be watching the north, east
and south, but why waste sec men guarding their backs?"
"Sounds good," J.B. said, starting the engine. "Climb aboard and
let's smoke this ville."
"I just hope Overton didn't have a real army," Mildred said, taking
a seat in the rear. "You know, thousands of men, tanks, planes. Sounds
crazy, but he did have brand-new AK-47s, unlimited ammo, Hummers,
radios. Who knows what else?"
Spotting his Steyr on the floor, Ryan took the passenger seat next
to the driver. "We'll recce them from a distance, soft and low," he
said, checking over the blaster. He had no recollection of losing it
inside the arena, which only showed how far gone he had been. Hit his
woman and dropped his weapon. Fireblast, he had to have been totally
out of his mind.
"You sure that flower is aced?" Ryan asked grimly, settling the
longblaster into the crook of his arm.
"It's triple chilled," J.B. stated confidently. "Shriveled like
bacon in a pan."
"Has there been any problems with the greenies?" Krysty asked. "I
wonder why they haven't attacked yet."
"Killed god," Jak said, patting the vented barrel of the long M-60
blaster. "Scare most folks."
"Wished I could have seen it," Dean stated, loading another clip and
tucking it away in his jacket.
"Too dangerous," Mildred countered, setting her med kit on the
floor between her boots. "You're too young. The perfume might have
driven you permanently insane."
Then she hid a smile and added, "And Doc is too damn old."
"Indeed, madam," Doc rumbled in his deep stentorian voice. "Perhaps
you are unaware that some men are milk, while others are whiskey. Some
sour and turn bitter with age, while the years make others stronger."
"What a load of crap," she snorted, grinning in spite of herself.
"Crazy old coot."
"Ah, but that is my story and I am sticking to it."
Starting the Hummer, J.B. checked the gauges one last time, and
looked longingly at the dark video monitor set in the control hump
between the front seats. If the radio worked, the onboard computer
probably did, also. But without a CD-ROM to boot the system, it was
useless.
Turning on the headlights, J.B. pulled away from the arena, and
headed the wag westward out of the ruins. The potholes were bad, but he
managed to avoid most of them. The few he hit were taken easily by the
Hummer with only minor shaking of the passengers. He once rode in a
jeep, the military wag used before the Hummer was created and wondered
how anybody got to the fight without losing teeth.
The headlights illuminated something in the road ahead of them, and
J.B. turned to go around. But the obstruction continued onward until
reaching a gaping hole in the ground where a strip mall once stood.
Having no choice, J.B. angled away from the area and took off due
south. But again they found debris blocked their way. The piles of
rubble had been connected with chunks of concrete, effectively sealing
the area between the hotel and the insurance building.
"This looks fresh," Krysty warned, her hair blowing in the wind.
"Head north for the desert!" Ryan commanded. "We know that way is
clear."
The Hummer raced across the predark city, past the arena and the
armory, only to find more rubble stacked over ten feet high, rusty iron
rods sticking out of the broken concrete like pungi sticks.
"The little bastards have sealed us in!" J.B. cursed, accelerating
along the line of rubble. The crude wall was unbroken, extending from
building to building, the only breeches the foundation holes where
stores had burned to the ground.
"Try ramming through!" Dean suggested, trying to watch every
direction at once. The attack would come soon. No point to trapping a
prey unless you planned on doing some chilling.
"Can't! This is a Hummer, not an APC!"
"Try anyway!"
"Triple red! Here they come!" Ryan snapped, working the bolt on the
Steyr and firing smoothly. In the darkness, a greenie cried out and
fell to the ground.
But dozens more darted from the ruins, scrambling over one another
in their haste to reach the rolling transport. J.B. swerved wildly, but
more were ahead of them. Flooring the accelerator, the Armorer headed
straight toward the pack, screaming a battle cry. Suddenly, the M-60
began to chatter and the greenies fell away, missing arms and faces.
But as the Hummer plowed into the mob, they parted and dived for the
sides of the wag, holding on with one hand while thrusting with knives,
hoping for a lucky strike. The companions thrust blasters into leafy
faces and blew them off in ruthless slaughter.
Some of the muties dived under the vehicle, and it thumped over
them, their bones cracking audibly. J.B. veered to the left, then the
right, losing the howling pack, and raced across the open area between
the monoliths. But as they gained some distance, a steady hissing could
be heard, along with a metallic linking.
"They got a tire!" Ryan yelled. "Stop the wag and get that bastard
knife to dig it out. These military tires are self-sealing once the
hole is clear."
Brakes squealed in protest as J.B. slowed the Hummer and jumped to
the ground. Just as quickly, the companions formed a firing line
between the wag and the oncoming greenies. The night was strangely
still, not even insects chirping to break the quiet.
"Shoot on sight," Ryan shouted, facing away from the others to cover
their rear. "Our blasters have a lot more range than those blowpipes.
Don't let them get close!"
There was movement in the darkness, and the companions opened up
with their weapons, the muzzle-flashes illuminating the night for
yards. Greenies were running toward them with inhuman speed.
"Behind us!" Ryan shouted, firing.
Jak started to hammer the ruins with the M-60, the heavy weapon
laying down a hellstorm of copper-jacketed lead. In the far distance, a
glass window shattered and something screamed briefly, then went
silent. Howls sounded from behind them again, and as they turned, the
noise stopped, then started once more.
"Ignore the noises," Krysty said, dropping a speed loader into her
revolver. "Only shoot when you see them. That's an old trick to rattle
us and make us waste ammo."
"And we contemptuously thought they were unintelligent muties," Doc
stated, holding the LeMat in a combat grip to steady his aim. Only six
more shots and he was out. "More the fools we."
Swearing softly, Jak struggled with the bolt to clear a jam, the
live cartridge hitting the ground with a musical ting-a-ling. "They not
dumb."
"Got it!" J.B. cried, standing triumphant, the broken blade of a
knife shining between the teeth of his pliers. "Bastard thing was
wedged in tight. Almost as if they knew exactly where it should go."
"Get in, use the Uzi," Ryan ordered, sliding across the Hummer.
Taking the wheel, the man shoved the transmission into gear and started
forward slowly, allowing the companions to climb into the wag.
"Everybody in?" Ryan shouted as he gunned the engines.
"Clear!" Dean replied, shoving a fresh clip into the handle of his
Browning semiautomatic pistol.
A greenie stuck its head into view from a manhole and spit. Doc
cried out, dropping his blaster to the floor of the wag. Swinging the
M-60 about on its gimbal, Jak peppered the manhole with 7.62 mm rounds,
but the mutie was gone.
Krysty lobbed a gren at the hole. The sphere bounced twice and went
right into the opening.
Ryan hit the gas, and the Hummer raced away as flames erupted from
the ground, resembling the muzzle-flash of a cannon.
"Knife!" Mildred ordered, and Dean passed her a blade. The physician
sliced apart the sleeve of Doc's frock coat, exposing his upper arm.
There was a purplish bruise there, the flesh already tinged with yellow
around a tiny barbed dart. Plucking the dart free, Mildred cast it away
and cut a crisscross pattern into the flesh. Laboring to breathe, Doc
made no response, sweat appearing on his pale face. Sucking at the
wound, Mildred's mouth burned as his blood came out. She spit it
outside the wag and repeated the process until it no longer hurt her to
extract blood from the wound.
"That'll do," Mildred decided, looking at the spot with her
flashlight. "I got the poison out fast enough."
"Thanks," Doc mumbled, color already returning to his features.
"Don't thank me yet," the physician warned, opening her med kit and
pouring the last few drops of witch hazel on a bandage. "This will hurt
even worse. It'll keep you alive, though."
"I stand ready, madam," he said through gritted teeth.
Mildred laid the damp cloth on the wound, and Doc sharply inhaled at
the contact. She quickly tied it off with a field dressing as he
continued to breathe rapidly.
"Don't use that arm to shoot," Mildred ordered, wiping the blood off
her hands. "The recoil of that monster handcannon will open the wound
and make you start to bleed. This is only a pressure bandage. Once
we're clear, I'll stitch it closed properly."
Clumsily, Doc lifted the LeMat with his left hand and rested it on
the side of the Hummer. "I am no Sissiphant, madam," he stated.
She nodded in understanding. "You're welcome, you old coot." Just
then, a swarm of greenies charged from the darkness into the headlights
once more. Ryan wheeled away from them as Jak gave the muties another
taste of the M-60. Then J.B. added the ripping killpower of the Uzi,
and a handful of the attackers fell over dead.
This time, the greenies didn't get close and they raced away,
leaving them behind.
"Can't keep this up forever," Ryan stated, shifting gears.
"Eventually, they'll get our range and do us all like Doc."
"You have a plan. I can hear it your voice," Krysty said, using
fingernails to yank two spent cartridges from the cylinder of her
blaster. She slid in live rounds and eased the S&W closed.
"Whatever the hell it is, you have my vote to try."
"Me, too," Dean added, carefully removing a dart from the headrest
of the seat in front of him. He tossed it away, then spit on his
fingers and rubbed them clean on his pants.
Stomping on the gas pedal, Ryan turned the Hummer and headed
directly toward a group of greenies they'd encountered earlier. The
muties greeted them with a wave of barbed darts that hit the windshield
and bounced off.
Angling for the low point in the barrier, the Hummer started to
climb sideways up the mass of debris, the tires spinning wildly as
rocks crumbled away under their weight.
"Shift right!" Ryan bellowed, twisting the steering wheel.
The companions dived to the right side of the wag, their weight
holding it steady as the transport jounced and bumped over the timbers
and automobile parts. Then the rubble shifted, and the Hummer slid out
of control. There was a strident crash of wood, and the predark wag
reared on its aft wheels, threatening to flip over. Ryan hit the
brakes, then the gas, regaining control of the machine, and the Hummer
madly rolled back onto the street.
Waiting below, the greenies charged, and the companions fired in a
volley at the mass attack. Doc leveled his LeMat pistol and fired twice
through the chaos. A greenie loading a blowpipe jerked backward,
slamming into a greenie behind. They both fell, blood gushing from huge
wounds.
As the Hummer pulled away, its engine roaring in high gear, a dozen
of the muties lay sprawled on the cracked macadam, dead or merely
pretending. There was no way of knowing.
"Now we can leave!" Ryan shouted, fighting the wheel. The wag
streaked across the ruins. "It was a diversion to get them going in the
wrong direction. We're busting out of here right now!"
As they zigzagged past the potholes and manholes, the insurance
building rose before the companions, its mirrored windows darkly
reflecting the tiny racing vehicle.
"Blow us a hole!" Ryan commanded, heading straight for the
tinted-glass doors.
The 7.62 mm blaster ripped into life, spraying the facade of the
insurance building. Cracks appeared in the revolving doors, nothing
more. But the large ground-floor windows shattered into a million
pieces. Shifting gears, Ryan plowed through the jagged opening and into
the building. Cresting the sill, the wag landed on top of a mahogany
desk, smashing it under their tonnage. Fighting for control, Ryan
rammed into a room divider, and for a brief instant, he saw a skeleton
in a pin-striped rags holding a cup slumped before a dark computer
screen. Then everything went flying as the Hummer plowed across the
office, leaving a trail of total destruction.
A headlight winked out as Ryan headed straight for a short hallway.
The fit was so tight that sparks sprayed out from the armored chassis
scraping along the marble facade, then the wag smashed aside a set of
double doors and reached the cafeteria. Tables squealed as they were
forcibly shoved out of the way, plates, newspapers and chairs flying
everywhere.
The M-60 blaster spoke again, clearing away the windows, sand
pouring into the room. But the angle was too steep, and the Hummer
couldn't gain enough purchase in the shifting sands.
"Fireblast, we need a shim!" Ryan shouted, braking to a halt amid
the destruction. "J.B., Dean, get that soda machine!"
The two jumped from the Hummer and raced to the huge soda dispenser.
Rocking it back and forth, they got it moving and started slowly
waddling it toward the pile of sand pouring in though the broken window.
"Incoming!" Jak shouted, firing the M-60 into the hallway. A greenie
was torn apart and dropped to the carpeting.
Krysty pulled the pin on a gren and threw it hard at
the marble wall. The sphere hit and rebounded
out of
sight. A few moments later, a thunderous explosion shook the room and
smoke poured down the hallway. Jak wasted rounds shooting into the
smoke just in case. Muties crawled into view, blood gushing from
the
hideous stumps of missing limbs. But they still tried
to
reach the wag even as they died.
"This is not a fight, but a jihad!" Doc cried in realization. "A
holy war of revenge! They will never stop until we're dead."
A greenie dropped from the ceiling panels, landing amid the
companions. Krysty blew off its head, and Dean slit its throat as it
fell from the wag.
Suddenly there was a crash as the soda machine toppled over in
place. "Get in!" Ryan shouted, but the others were already aboard.
Gunning the engines, Ryan headed for the machine, knowing it could
never support the awesome weight of the Hummer for more than a few
seconds. But those moments should be everything he needed. The hood of
the war wag lifted as the wheels rolled on top of the soda machine,
metal started to crunch. Ryan hit the gas and shifted gears. The wag
started to lose some height. Greenies ran screaming into the room, and
Dean threw a gren. The LeMat boomed. A dart hit the inside of the
windshield, then with a lurch, the studded tires caught on the sill and
the Hummer climbed up and out the window, rolling into the night.
As they sped away from the ruins, Dean saw the interior of the
insurance building come alive with flames, black silhouettes of the
muties dashing about screaming in pain and rage.
"Goodbye, Georgia," Mildred growled, slumping in her seat. "We have
three days to rest before reaching Shiloh."
"Plenty of time," Ryan said, loosening his grip on the steering
wheel. "The only point on our side is that we're not racing against the
clock."
"Thank Gaia for that," Krysty said with a smile.
Chapter Sixteen
The awful stench was the first thing that Clem noticed. He sniffed
again and tried to figure out what it was. Wood smoke, definitely,
mixed with the tang of a blacksmith shop and other things he couldn't
recognize.
"Muties?" asked the young corporal riding point alongside him.
"Don't think so," Clem drawled, chucking the reins. "But I don't
like it. Blasters out, and watch yourselves."
The squad of brown shirts needed no further prompting and drew their
longblasters. In an effort to impress Baron Markham of BullRun ville
with the seriousness of the matter, Nathan Cawdor had given the
ambassadors the best AK-47s they had and plenty of ammo. Where words
might fail, anybody too stupid to listen to troopers armed with rapid
fires and talking peace was just too damn dumb to let live.
Cantering over one of the many low hillocks so prominent in northern
Virginia, the men stopped in their tracks, the horses whinnying in
fear.
Lying before them was desolation like nothing they had ever seen.
Stretching for perhaps a full mile were the ruins of the ville,
cottages and huts crumbling even as they watched. The castle itself was
mostly gone, a glowing pool of lava exactly where the predark fort
should be standing. Only a few of the outer buildings still existed.
Bricks fell from the side of building and hit the ground, bursting into
their component ash, the powdery cement blowing away as dry dust. Only
the windows seemed to be undamaged, the glass remarkably clear and
sparkling clean as if brand new.
There was a depression in the ground with the remains of fish at the
bottom, as if it were once a pond. Even the soil itself was blackened
as if charred by a terrible fire. Yet countless trees still stood, the
bark peeling off the gray trunks, brittle leaves carpeting the ville
even though it was only early autumn. A field of brown crops stretched
to the north, every breeze snapping the stalks and clearing whole
areas. The smoking corpses of people lay everywhere, their clothing
flaking into ash, their crispy skins split apart to expose cooked flesh
and black bones. Exploded blasters lay near the hands, the stocks
twisted and partially slagged.
Sprinkled across the horrible landscape were stingwings and birds
alike, wings outstretched as if still in flight. Skinny rats scampered
among the assorted destruction searching for food, but none was
touching the many corpses so readily evident.
"What the hell happened here?" Clem asked softly, pushing back his
bearskin hat. He might have to wear the uncomfortable uniform of Front
Royal while in the ville, but on the road, the mountain man quickly
returned to his more familiar garb.
"Not much left," a sec man whispered, the overwhelming feeling of
death filling the air.
"Nothing left," Clem corrected him. At those loud words, the
artesian well in the middle of the ville broke apart, the wooden beams
bursting into ash and the stones plummeting out of sight into the
ground. Minutes passed, but there was no sound of a splash from the
blocks striking water.
Frowning, Clem withdraw a plug of tobacco and bit off a chaw. He had
seen a hundred different kinds of chilling, but nothing resembling
this. The hooves of his stallion were already thick with the dust of
the land.
A sergeant checked the bulky rad counter they had found hidden in
Overton's room at Cawdor Castle. He worked a few dials and tapped the
meter. The needle swung about but didn't enter the red area. "Reading
clean," he announced. "No rads."
"Didn't think it was a nuke." Clem chewed thoughtfully. "And it sure
as shit wasn't acid rain."
A soft breeze from the mountains moved over the annihilated fields,
the plants crumbling into dust and blowing away. Then a section of the
castle broke part, the bricks and mortar separating as the masonry
tumbled to the ground.
"Well, lightning didn't do it, either," a private stated firmly. "I
seen lightning hit, and it don't do this."
Sliding off his horse, a lieutenant knelt on the road and reached
out to take a handful of the black soil. He carefully inspected it
before daring to take a sniff.
"No smell of fuel or black powder," he said, standing and tossing
the piece of dead earth away. "Hell, ain't no chem burn I know. Not
napalm, thermite or even willy peter."
Shifting in his saddle, Clem translated the term in his head. "Willy
peter" was slang for white phosphorus. J.B. had told him about the
predark chem. It burned ten times hotter than a Molotov cocktail, but
was controllable, unlike thermite. Once you ignited that stuff, all a
man could do was run away fast, or fry like a chicken on a spit.
Thunder rumbled, and the man glanced upward to see fiery streaks of
orange slashing across the purplish sky, a billowing array of dark
storm clouds ravaged by the endless hurricanes of the upper atmosphere.
Nothing unusual there.
Glancing down, he noticed the line in the soil where the strange
effect stopped and the green grass started once more. The boundary was
sharp, as if a line had been drawn with a sharp knife and a string.
What weapon could do that?
"Dead," a sec man whispered, making the sign of the cross. "All
dead."
"Whatever it was happened fast, too," Clem added, jerking his chin.
Off to the side lay the still body of a horse, half of the mare within
the circle of destruction, the rest on cool green grass.
The lieutenant went into the woods and returned with a long green
stick. Placing the tip against the black soil, the sec man pressed
downward, and it easily sank all the way down until his hand almost
touched the surface. Withdrawing the stick, he examined the length of
the sapling.
"No resistance," he rumbled, coughing to the taste of the bitter
ashes. "Whatever did this penetrated mighty deep into the earth."
"There's lava over there," a young sec man said hesitantly.
Impulsively, he reached for his blaster, then released the weapon.
There was nothing here to shoot. Whatever battle had been fought was
long over. "Mebbe it was a volcano? I heard of them from my ma. Mebbe
the ville just got cooked with steam."
Spitting out a long stream of brown juice, Clem frowned deeply. "Let
me tell ya, kid, no steam nor lava did that," he stated as a fact.
"Don't like this," the lieutenant muttered, cracking his knuckles
and stepping onto the strange soil. He sank to his knees and quickly
stepped back onto the road. A rat scurried by, and he resisted the
temptation to shoot it out of sheer annoyance.
"Mebbe Overton…" the corporal started.
Clem snorted and glanced around at the hellish vista. "Can't be. If
his coldhearts could do this, why not just show us and declare himself
baron? Who would be crazy enough to try and fight this with blasters
and knives?"
"More likely it's removing potential enemies," the sergeant said
gruffly, fighting to keep his horse calm. The animal was very unhappy
and wanted to leave the moment they had arrived. He didn't blame it a
bit. "Chill before getting chilled."
Nobody spoke for a few minutes, thinking seriously about that
possibility.
"Might be," Clem agreed, pausing to spit again. "That is, if this be
a weapon and not some bizarre natural effect of the Deathlands. We be
mighty close to the Washington Hole. All sorts of crazy stuff happens
there."
"Hey, look at this," the lieutenant said, holding up a small gray
object. "It's an intact bullet."
Leaning over in the saddle, a sec man glanced around closely. "Say,
there's lots of them. Over there, and there!"
"Weirdest thing," the lieutenant said, frowning. "It's not damaged
in the slightest."
"Oh, nuke me!" Clem exclaimed in sudden understanding, and he hawked
out the whole chaw. "They must of been shooting at the sky, and the
slug fell without hitting nothing!"
"The sky," a sec man whispered. "You mean, a plane?"
"Or a bomb?" another asked in a hoarse whisper.
"Fucked if I know!" Clem wheeled his horse about. "Everybody, back
to Front Royal! We got to warn Baron Cawdor before this thing strikes
again!"
"Wait, sir!" the lieutenant shouted, waving.
"What for?" Clem demanded hotly, the reins tight in his hands.
The sec man took the reins of his own mount and handed them to a
surprised Clem. "It took us two days to get here with full supplies. If
you drop everything except your blaster, and take my horse as a spare,
you can get there in one day."
Clem tied the reins to the pommel of his saddle. "Smart thinking.
See ya back the Front Royal!" With a war whoop, the chief of the sec
men kicked his horse into a full gallop. Yards away, his saddlebags
dropped to the road, then his water bag, the bedroll and then he was
gone from sight over a hillock.
"One day," the lieutenant said. "I just hope it's enough time to
evac the ville."
"To do what?" a sec man asked. "Run away?"
"And what else can we do against a plane dropping bombs?" the
sergeant retorted.
The rest of the brown shirts didn't reply as the lieutenant climbed
on the largest horse behind a private and they started riding southward
to their homes. Hopefully, the ville would still be there when they
arrived.
SMOKING A CIGAR in the morning light, the blue shirt watched the
road winding down the side of the steep hill through his binocs and
fought back a yawn. It was another two days until his relief came, and
he could go back to the complex for hot meals and slave girls. Sniper
duty was boring. Anybody he saw was fleeing the Tennessee River valley,
and he wasn't allowed to loot any food or have a woman. The survivors
might meet Ryan coming along on the road and give away his location.
The mined bridge over the river was clear as always. Horses and
people could cross safely, but Major Sheffield said that if a big wag
like an APC or a Hummer tried to go across, the whole thing would blow
sky-high. He'd liked to see that. It would help relieve the boredom.
To the south rose the foothills of the big mountains. They were
little things, only a couple hundred feet high, hardly worth calling a
hill. More of a mound, really. A dirt road wound down the steeply
sloped side, zigzagging along to finally go over the top near the peak.
Personally, the sec man didn't think any wag could travel over the
rocky terrain without busting an axle, or worse. It was for walking, or
horses, not wags.
Which meant he was here for nothing, doing nothing. He took another
drag on the cigar, and blew a smoke ring into the air, contemplating
randomly shooting at folks as they passed by just to watch them dance.
Then a speck rose over the crest, and he took a look with the
binocs. Probably just some more greenies from Georgia, or stickies.
Focusing the military glasses on the hill, he followed the roadway
until reaching the tiny dot again. The cigar dropped from his mouth,
and he leaned forward, nearly falling from his perch in the tree. It
was them! Holy shit, it was Ryan and his gang!
THE ROAD DOWN THE HILL was covered with rocks, making driving almost
impossible. The Hummer scraped bottom more than once when it rolled
over broken chunks of granite. The view was spectacular, although the
trees lining the serpentine road blocked most of their view of the
valley below. But they could catch glimpses of a river, and seemingly
endless forests of blue pine carpeting the landscape to the horizon.
Shifting gears and fighting for control, Krysty finally reached the
bottom of the road and floored the wag. The Hummer surged forward in a
burst of speed, and almost immediately there was a bang, the vehicle
veering to the left.
"Gaia!" she spit, fighting the wag to a stop. "That tire finally
blew."
"Better here than up there," J.B. said, climbing from the rear
seats.
"Well, we got almost fifty miles out of it. That's not bad. Time to use
the spare."
Dean stepped into the bushes for a moment, while Jak stood guard at
the M-60. The road ahead was level and straight, going directly to a
predark bridge.
"Bridge looks in good condition," Mildred said, adjusting the focus
on the binocs.
"We'll have to check for traps," Ryan commented. "This is close to
Shiloh, and the blues could be anywhere."
The words were still in the air when a volley of bullets chattered
across the armored chassis of the Hummer, closely followed by sound of
a distant rifle cutting through the peace of the forest. Everybody
dived for cover.
Lying in the dirt, Ryan worked the bolt on his Steyr SSG-70 rifle,
chambering a round for immediate use. "That sounds like an AK-47," he
said, sighting through the scope on the longblaster, sweeping the
trees. "Yeah, it's a blue. I caught a glimpse of a muzzle-flash in the
trees."
More rounds hit the wag, two impacting on the jack supporting the
vehicle. The flat was lying on the ground, the new tire resting against
the Hummer waiting to be attached. The jack was hit again and shook,
but didn't fall.
"There seems to be only one sniper," Doc said, moving away from the
wobbly vehicle.
"Only one firing," Ryan corrected him grimly. "There could more."
"Bastard's smart, too. He waited until I had the flat off, then
started firing. We're not going anywhere," J.B. stated, adjusting his
wire-rimmed glasses to sit more firmly on his face. Last thing he
wanted was for them to slide off in the middle of a battle.
"Anybody hurt?" Mildred asked from the bushes.
Just then another wave of bullets pounded over the armored hull of
the Hummer, sounding like hail on a tin roof. Several rounds hit a
tire, but didn't puncture the military rubber.
"Undamaged so far," Ryan answered, as trained hands fired the Steyr
and worked the bolt, loading another round. "But not for long. This guy
is good."
"Too good," J.B. added, firing the Uzi twice at random trees on the
distant hill. Return fire kicked up dust directly in front of him, and
the Armorer dived off the road into the bushes, crawling hastily away
from the spot at which he entered. Seconds later, that location shook
from a hail of incoming rounds.
"Much too bastard good," J.B. muttered.
A figure appeared from the trees, holding a silvered revolver. "Want
me to try a LAW?" Krysty offered, the plastic tube draped over her back.
Targeting the tops of trees, Ryan shook his head, firing again.
"Don't waste it. We still have a long way to go."
"Besides, he's not going to hurt us with an AK-47."
J.B. retorted, firing the Uzi randomly at the hilltop. "Not at this
range, anyway."
"Incoming!" Dean shouted, and a split-second later, a fiery dart
riding a contrail of smoke flashed by them, heading for the Hummer. A
wave of heat from the exhaust washed over the companions as the rocket
missed the wag by a foot and disappeared into the woods. Silence ruled
the area for long tense seconds, then the forest erupted into a
fireball of thundering flame.
"That was a LAW!" Ryan growled. "Okay, anybody got a gren?"
"At this range?" Krysty asked, puzzled.
"Just throw it as far as you can!"
Pulling the pin, the redhead dropped the handle and heaved the
sphere with all of her strength. The ball hit the road roughly thirty
yards away and rolled a few more before the charge exploded, throwing a
cloud of smoke and dirt into the air.
"Camouflage," Ryan said, throwing his own slightly to the left of
the first Another huge cloud of dirt covered the roadway, completely
masking the Hummer.
Sporadic fire came from the sniper as the companions used the rest
of the grens to maintain the dust cloud. Resting the flat tire against
his spine as protection from incoming rounds, J.B. hastily attached the
new tire, using only half the nuts. But he wasted a few precious
seconds making sure those were solid and tight.
"Done, go!" he shouted.
At the wheel, Mildred, the sole occupant of the wag, started the
engine and rolled away, crumpling the jack still attached at the frame
of the military vehicle. She cut a fast turn, throwing more clouds of
dirt into the air with the spinning tires, then charged headlong into
the trees and vanished among the foliage.
As if the sniper deduced their plan, another LAW streaked through
the dust to violently detonate a scant yard away from where the Hummer
had been parked.
"Now!" Ryan ordered, and he charged into the trees at a full run,
the rest of the companions only steps behind.
Moving fast through the pine trees, Ryan curved across the sloped
side of the valley, rising slowly alongside the sniper. Raising a fist,
he pointed directions, and the others split into teams to converge on
the sniper from different directions.
A Kalashnikov constantly chattered at the trees, the noise guiding
the companions to the location of the hidden gunner. Minutes later,
they found him.
The blue shirt was sitting on a hunter's box, just a few planks
nailed to branches, giving him a stable platform to hide in as he
waited for prey to come into view. The upper branches of the tree shook
as spent brass arched from the hot breech of his blaster. Soft curses
sounded, and the shooting stopped.
Creeping closer, Ryan saw the sec man rummaging frantically in a
duffel bag. Then he pulled another LAW into view with a satisfied cry.
"Don't!" Ryan barked, standing and working the bolt on the Steyr.
The weapon was already loaded, but the noise would drive home the point
that he was armed.
The sec man registered shock, then rage and dropped the LAW, going
for his longblaster. Without a qualm, Ryan fired, hitting the man in
the chest, the 7.62 mm round slamming him backward into the tree trunk.
Then J.B. added the fury of his Uzi, and the corpse tumbled from the
trees to land on a rock with a sickening crunch. Rivulets of blood
began dripping onto the ground from his hidden face.
"Doc, Dean, sweep the area for any more," Ryan ordered, approaching
the corpse. There was a map sticking out of his back pocket.
But before he could reach the document, the bushes parted and two
more blue shirts walked out, firing their Kalashnikovs. Diving for
cover, Ryan shot the closer man in the belly with his Steyr. The other
blue fired his longblaster, but then a knife sprouted from his throat.
Gagging on his own blood, the sec man fell to his knees, still
triggering the AK-47, shooting in every direction. Then Krysty stepped
from behind a tree and fired her hand blaster into his face, finishing
the job.
"Perimeter sweep, twenty yards!" Ryan ordered, rising from the
ground.
Krysty, Doc and Dean moved into the forest as J.B. climbed up the
crude ladder. On the platform, he stayed crouched, studying the forest
around them. When satisfied, he whistled an all-clear signal and
climbed back down with the duffel bag and the dead man's AK-47.
Ryan got the map as the Armorer checked the contents of the duffel.
"Dark night, he had two more LAWs, and an implo gren that could have
reduced the Hummer to a soup can!"
"If he got close enough," Ryan agreed, looking over the plastic
paper. It was the same as the other, just a map of Tennessee. Nothing
more.
A long whistle came from the forest, and Ryan answered with two
short ones. The rest of the companions stepped into sight from several
locations.
"Nobody that we can find," Krysty reported, holstering her
revolver. "Find anything useful?"
"Nothing so far," Ryan said, turning the map over. Nothing was
circled or highlighted as with the last one they had found, but there
was a notation scrawled at the bottom with indelible ink. Ryan looked
twice at the map to make sure he was reading it correctly.
"There's a name on this," he said, his features carved from stone.
"Might mean shit, but here it is."
"Who?" Jak asked, reloading.
"Checkpoints along Timber Ridge Road, password is El Morro.
Main-gate entry password…Jamaisvous."
"What did you say?" Doc whispered, dropping the LeMat from limp
fingers. The man looked as if he had just been hit wife a club.
"Silas," Ryan repeated, showing the map. "Silas Jamaisvous."
Without speaking, Doc retrieved the weapon, his mind lost in dark
thoughts. So it was about to all begin once more.
Stuffing ammo clips from the corpse into his pockets, Dean frowned.
"I thought he died in that mat-trans jump."
"We hoped he died," Krysty stated, her hair a flaming corona about
her tense face. "Guess not."
"Crap! We can't go anywhere near a redoubt," J.B. grunted, slinging
the duffel bag over a shoulder. "Silas knows the access codes, and
could have sec men waiting for us."
"Or worse," Jak added grimly.
"So what should we do?"
"We find his base and kill the son of bitch permanently this time,"
Ryan said, turning on a heel. "Come on, we still have to fix that tire
and get across the bridge. Once on the other side, we'll hide the wag
and proceed on foot."
Chapter Seventeen
Standing alone on the top floor of the observation tower at Casanova
ville, a sec man squinted at the cloudy sky and smiled.
"Almost lunchtime," the man commented aloud, his stomach rumbling in
harmony. Although the sun was blocked by heavy clouds, he could still
see that it was just reaching dead overhead. Noon. Soon a servant would
bring him a basket of food. The sentry only hoped it wasn't rat again.
They had been eating rat for the past month, and he was getting sick of
the same thing every freaking day. Sure, it was better than nothing,
but what good was being a sec man if you ate like a civilian?
With a sigh, he rested the heavy barrel of his muzzle-loading
longblaster on a shoulder. Spare pieces of flint were tucked into loops
on his belt, and his shirt pocket was neatly lined with paper
cartridges for charging his weapon. It was a bloody clever invention of
the baron's. Instead of counting as you poured black powder into your
weapon, he had made these little paper tubes from library books. A
person bit off the top and poured out the black powder inside. It was
exactly enough for a full charge, always the same. At the bottom was
the miniball, and you used a nimrod to stuff the paper that the
cartridge was made out of down the barrel to hold the load in place.
Powder, shot and wadding all in one. The sec men could fire ten times
faster than before, making their crew
of a hundred
shoot like a thousand!
One of the servants had dared to suggest it
was a
predark idea from something
called
the
Civil
War, and the liar
had
been beaten to death
right in
the market
square. Nobody insulted the baron
and lived.
Except his
mud
head of a
son,
that was.
Lightning flashed overhead, and the sentry felt a warm breeze blow
over the tower. In October? Suddenly, there was a loud peal
of
thunder, and bright light
flooded
the ville.
Glancing upward, he was stunned to see the sky become an impossibly
clear blue
color. He hadn't
ever seen
anything
like it before! Then his eyes began to sting, and
the
world went totally black. Blinking to clear his vision,
the
sentry realized in horror that he was blind. He began to itch all over,
as if a million insects were eating
his skin.
Dropping his longblaster,
the sec
man dashed for
the
stairs, going
for help, and went
straight off the edge of the
roof. He screamed all the way down to the
cobblestone
streets and abruptly stopped as he hit.
Nobody noticed. Cooked birds
were also plummeting
from
the sky, the leaves falling
from the wilting trees.
Tendrils
of smoke rose
from
the thatched
roofs of huts, people screamed, clawing at their faces, horses bolted
in panic, blasters exploded, removing hands and entire arms,
the
fuel dump fireballed and the artesian
well began to
boil. Becoming hotter by the second, the thick walls of the castle
started to turn reddish, then orange, and the melting stones
began
to sag toward the ground in thick glowing streams.
Support
timbers snapped, windows shattered, and the shrieking of people trapped
in the dungeon rose to anguished howls.
Minutes later, silence ruled what remained of Casanova. Not
a wall stood intact, not a creature moved, not a sound could be heard
except for a low bubbling from the white-hot
lava pool in the middle of the flaky black soil. Then a low rumble of
thunder sounded as lightning flashed, and the clear sky darkened again
to form a solid dome of stormy clouds over the precise circle of
destruction.
THE SOUNDS OF METAL ON METAL, and metal on stone, filled the hollow
expanse of the quarry. A wide road spiraled down the sides of the great
pit all the way to the cutting floor, where the slaves trimmed the
massive stone blocks into smooth rectangles. A sentry post was placed
at the bottom of the ramp, with another at the distant top.
At the bottom of the quarry was a runoff pool to catch the rain and
divert it from the workers. An electric sump pump sucked out the muddy
water, a feeder pipe rising along the quarry wall and disappearing over
the top. The feeder pipe was festooned with concertina wire to
discourage climbing. Near the pool was a set of stocks, where an
unconscious slave still stood, flies covering the bloody shreds of his
back.
On the cutting floor, an APC backed near a stone block, and the
driver got out. Carefully, he inspected the block for cracks, then
measured it with a yardstick and finally used a plumb line to make sure
it was squared off neat.
"This'll do," he announced. "Hitch the bitch, boys."
A team of slaves moved forward and began to attach long lengths of
steel chains from the
APC
to the block so it could be
dragged off to join the hundreds of others that were part of the wall
ringing the complex.
"Where we at?" an overseer asked, smoking a cigarette and offering
the pack. The slaves looked on with greed, but said nothing and
continued to work.
"Thanks." The driver took one and lit it with a stick match. "Just
starting the second course. Another month, it'll be ten feet high!"
"Shoot, what a sight. Ain't no mutie gonna get over that."
"Hell, boy, we couldn't smash through it now even with one of the
rocket-tube things."
"Ain't it the truth, brother."
When the slaves were done, the overseer checked the links around the
block, while the driver checked the tow bar on the APC, then climbed
inside. The slaves stood nearby, savoring the moment of not doing
anything.
"All set here!" the overseer called. "Roll away!"
"Back in a few!" the driver answered, waving an arm through the top
hatch and driving off slowly, the mammoth stone dragging behind
sounding like a baby earthquake.
"All right, break's over," the overseer called, hitching his pants.
"Get your lazy asses back to the face. We want another block by sunset."
The slaves shuffled off toward the bare rock face of the quarry,
joining other slaves already edging blocks and driving in wedges with
heavy sledgehammers. The newcomers had been chained in pairs, Mad Dog
with Cooler, Snake with Digger. The odd man out, Scarface, was paired
with an old slave called Bo, probably with the notion that the
whitehair would help slow down any possible trouble from the huge,
burly cannie.
Dragging the length of chain between his legs, Scarface picked up a
sledgehammer from a line of them and moved to a nearly finished block.
Bo placed the wedge in the thin crack outlining the stone, then
Scarface swung the sledgehammer, driving the steel wedge deep into the
surrounding stone. Bo placed another wedge into position, and the
cannie shifted his stance, pausing to spit on his hands to get a better
grip.
"Keep working," an overseer snarled, and flicked the tip of a
bullwhip lightly across the man's wide shoulders.
Scarface didn't flinch at the contact: he merely grunted.
As the overseer moved on to harass another, Scarface and Bo stepped
into the cool shadows under an overhang created by the removal of a
block. The rest of the crew was already there. Their whole shift had
received a beating for making the mistake of undercutting the face, but
it had been worth the pain. The recess gave them a spot on the floor
where they could be out of sight for minutes at a time, sometimes more.
"We can't take much more of this," Scarface said to the rest of his
chained crew. "They feed us crap and work us like dogs. Couple more
days of this, and we'll be too weak to even try and escape."
"Good thing about the accident," Snake growled.
Bo shivered, but Scarface agreed. A slave had fallen between a
moving stone block and the wall, getting crushed to death. The
overseers wanted nothing to do with cleaning the mess, any more than
the slaves did. However, Scarface and his crew walked to the front of
the line and offered to do it if they could have bigger water rations.
Laughing contemptuously, the overseers whipped them to the task, which
was exactly what the cannies wanted in the first place. The dead slave
was in such bad shape, nobody noticed the body was missing an arm and a
leg when he was buried.
Cooler and Mad Dog wanted to cook the limbs, but the smell would
have tipped off the guards, so they were forced to eat the flesh raw.
The food fueled them with new strength, but they wisely continued to
drag their feet like all the other starving slaves, and struggled to do
work that was easy for them. Even Bo had eaten the forbidden food. He
got horribly ill afterward, but ate again next time and kept it down.
"Only the leg remaining," Cooler said, watching the movement of the
armed people outside the hole. "We need a plan. And to choose just the
right moment." Snake nodded. "Aye, we won't get a second chance."
"We fail, we die," Digger agreed, licking the sweat off his arms. He
made a face, but kept at it. The salt kept you strong during such hard
work. That was all that mattered. Only strength would give them a
chance for freedom.
"So how about now?" Scarface said. "Right fucking now."
Sitting on the ground, Bo perked up his head. "In broad daylight?"
"Say the word and we follow," Mad Dog stated simply.
Scarface grunted. "You know what I gotta do," he said, hoisting the
sledgehammer.
Mad Dog nodded. "I'll pay the price to get us outta here. Just do it
fast!"
Digger and Snake took the man's arms, holding him motionless, while
Cooler stuffed the man's mouth with a shirt. Scarface swung the
sledgehammer. The lump of steel slammed onto Mad Dog's foot, crushing
it flat, the bones completely pulverized. His eyes wide with pain, the
cannie wildly fought to get loose, then Bo slammed a rock onto his head
and the man went still. Snake slid the shackles off Mad Dog's soft foot.
"You're free!" Bo gushed in excitement. "But how does that help the
rest of us?"
"Don't help you at all," Scarface said, and the sledgehammer swung
again, caving in the whitehair's head. The decapitated corpse trembled
and fell to the ground. Scarface then crushed the dead man's foot, and
he was free.
Swinging the length of iron chain, Scarface gauged its weight and
reach. When satisfied, the two men walked from the hole side by side,
as if shackled together.
Moving across the cutting floor, the men shuffled along like good
slaves to the sentry shack at the foot of the spiraling ramp. The
one-room shack was located on a ledge above the floor, the only access
a ladder the overseers drew inside.
Snake leaned against one of the support posts, and Scarface climbed
up to the man. Cresting the deck, Scarface looked about to make sure
the coast was clear, then wiggled onto the platform. On the ground,
Snake went behind the latrine and waited.
Sliding behind the shack where he was out of sight from the rest of
the quarry, Scarface put an ear to the wall of the shack and listened.
Muffled sounds could be heard, but those might be anything. Ten sec men
talking business, two just telling jokes.
Going to the window, he peeked inside and smiled. A naked slave was
facedown on a table, one sec men pumping at her face, the other
thrusting between her legs. Easing to the door, Scarface wrapped the
iron chains around his right fist and quietly entered.
Grunting and laughing, neither sec man noticed the presence of the
sweaty slave until he was upon them. Scarface slammed the nearest man
with the fist weighted with iron. The overseer's face caved in, pinkish
brains smearing over the cannie's armored hand.
"Black dust!" the other cried out, and pulled himself free to reach
for his blaster. But his pants were down around his ankles, the folds
of cloth tangling around the wheelgun. Scarface tipped over the table,
tumbling the girl onto the sec man. They both fell to the floor in a
tangle of naked limbs.
Rushing forward, the cannie wrapped the chain around the neck of the
blue shirt and pulled it tight The sec man gasped for air, punching
weakly at the massive arms of the coldheart, his straggles growing
weaker by the second. Finally, he resorted to clawing at the cannie
with his nails, raking bloody furrows into the tan skin. Annoyed,
Scarface jerked the chain once, and the sec man toppled over, his eyes
distended and hanging loose on limp white stalks of slimy ganglia.
"Who are you?" the girl whispered, drawing her rags protectively
closer. Blood dribbled down her thighs, and one eye was swollen shut.
"Just an escaped slave," Scarface said, stripping one corpse and
then the other. Their clothes were ridiculous small for the giant, but
he draped a gun belt over his shoulder as a bandolier and checked the
load in the wheelgun. It was clean and serviceable.
"Thank you," she whispered, and rushed forward to hug the killer.
"Oh, the things they did to me! I'll never feel clean again."
"Not a problem," Scarface said, taking her head in both hands as if
about to bestow a loving kiss. Then he savagely twisted his grip. Her
neck bones snapped, and the dead girl slumped to the floor on top of
the bleeding overseers. A peg on the wall held a ring of keys, and
Scarface easily found the one that unlocked his chains. Wrapping the
spare blaster in the two uniforms, he opened the door of the shed and
looked outside. Slaves were working in the quarry, the overseers
watching the slaves, but not one another. The fools.
Beyond the quarry, he could see green trees, and, rising above
those, was the dish, the shiny bowl dominating the valley.
Scarface looked again, wondering why it had caught his attention,
then he saw the machine was moving, rotating slowly. Curious. Some sort
of radio—that much he knew. But who were the whitecoats talking to?
Crawling to the edge of the platform, Scarface dropped the bundle to
Snake.
Rummaging through a small bookcase in the corner, he found a pack of
cigarettes, matches, a knife, a whistle and a pistol with a signal
flare inside. There was also a lever-action longblaster of a type he
was unfamiliar with, and a shotgun, both with extra shells sewn into
loops along their straps. Mighty useful indeed.
Stuffing the weapons into a bag, he slung it over his shoulder, then
paused and returned to the dead. Lifting the girl onto the table, he
chose a spot and bit in deep, his pointed teeth tearing away a mouthful
of tender flesh. He chewed the bloody gobbet quickly and swallowed.
"Fresh meat" he said, sighing. "Been too damn long."
There was movement at the door, and he spun with the blaster ready.
Scarface relaxed as the rest of his crew came inside the shack and
closed the door. Snake and Cooler were dressed as overseers. Mad Dog
was pale and dripping sweat but held on to Digger and stayed upright.
"Now what?" Snake asked.
Scarface passed over the shotgun. "Gonna get us some transport for
Mad Dog. Ain't leaving him behind."
"We steal a wag, they follow us forever," Cooler warned, testing the
edge on the knife. "And they got some machines like I never seen!"
"That doesn't matter," Scarface replied coolly. "Nobody can track us
if they think we're already dead."
"Dead?" Mad Dog whispered.
"Not just us," Snake said, smiling in understanding. "You mean
everybody is dead."
"Exactly." Working the lever on the longblaster, Scarface inspected
the round, then inserted it into the side port of the breech. "Help
yourselves to the meat, but don't stuff your bellies. We'll have to
move fast when the chance comes."
A SEC MAN in a crisp blue shirt drove a shiny clean Hummer down the
spiral ramp and onto the cutting floor. A sec man at the sentry post
waved as he passed by. Rolling through the slaves, coming very close to
a few and making them jump, the driver slowed to a halt near the runoff
pool. Sitting before a small wooden shack was an overseer armed with an
AK-47. He rose and walked to the wag.
"About time you showed," he growled. "I was about to start giving
out the dynamite and have the slaves whack it with hammers to set it
off. We got a bastard ton of rocks to clear before we can start cutting
more blocks. The major don't like it when we fall behind schedule."
The driver climbed from the wag and reached behind the seat to lift
a bulky bag into view. "Stuff it, shithead, and help me with the new
explosives."
"We got explosives!" the overseer replied hotly. "What we needed is
fuse, ya idiot."
"Not like this stuff, you don't," the driver retorted. Going to the
rear cargo area of the military wag, the sec man released a collection
of rubbery straps holding a large plastic box in place on top of a damp
folded blanket Lifting off the top, wisps of mist wafted away, exposing
fifty new sticks of explosive charges nestled inside, soft sponges
separating each stick.
"Color's odd," the overseer grumped. "You sure this dynamite is
still good?"
"Ain't dynamite."
He scowled. "Looks like it."
"Ain't."
"So what is it?"
"Something called TNT," the driver said, easing a stick from the
packing. "The major says it's much stronger, mebbe ten times, so we
better use a lot less."
The overseer glanced toward the vertical rock wall hanging above
them. "Ten times!"
Lifting out a single stick, the driver carefully crimped a detonator
cap on the end and added a fuse.
"One stick," the man said. "Well, if it ain't hot shit, one stick
won't cause us no prob. Mebbe chill a few slaves."
"What are we supposed to do with this old dynamite?"
"Boss says burn it."
"Burn it?"
The driver scoffed. "Easy as pie. I done it lots before. Slit the
dynamite open like a fish, then toss on a match. Nothing to it. This
TNT's supposed to be lots safer than dynamite. When that stuff gets
old, it starts sweating and becomes mighty unstable, blows if you fart
hard. Some damn fool slave drops a rock on it, and our dicks hit the
moon."
"Don't wanna do that," the overseer said, leering. "Found me a slut
for tonight and plan to do some riding."
"Enough for me?" the driver asked hopefully. "The major been working
the slaves so hard on the dish, it's like doing a corpse."
"Always room for a bud." He smiled, nudging the man with an elbow.
"You like dark meat or light?"
A shrug. "Ain't choosy."
As the men grinned at each other, a sharp crack echoed across the
quarry. The stick of explosive in his hand jumped, and the sec man
stared in horror at the gaping hole in the paper tube.
"Nuking hell!" he screamed.
"SHIT-FIRE!" Scarface cursed, working the lever to chamber a fresh
round. "The bullet didn't set it off!"
"And now they know we're here," Digger growled, wiping his bloody
mouth. "Better run while we can."
"Ain't leaving just so we can get caught and dragged back here
again," Scarface growled, firing another round.
The dirt kicked near the box of dynamite, and the sec man backed
away, unable to think of what else to do. Then there came another
crack. The box jumped, and the whole world vanished as a titanic blast
ripped apart the face of the cliff, spewing out rocks and debris for
hundreds of yards. The entire side of the mountain seemed to shift
position when a second explosion sounded. Although muffled by the
avalanche, the concussion was still louder, much more powerful, and a
geyser of stone rose into the sky on a column of boiling flame.
"Well, fuck me," Scarface whispered as the concussion buffeted the
sentry post with strident force.
The sides of the quarry rose and moved inward, dust filling the air
as thick as mud. Then the countless tons of granite fell on top of
overseers, sec men and slaves. More explosions came from the wags and
storage sheds, but they were pitifully weak compared to the
earth-shattering detonation of the fifty sticks of pristine TNT.
Welling from the depths of the vibrating quarry, a boiling cloud
expanded over the site, obliterating everything from sight. In the
nearby complex, sirens began to howl, and the great dish trembled from
the quake of the blast.
Already rushing up the crumbling spiral, the cannies reached the top
and dashed onto green grass seconds before the sloping road broke apart
and the pieces tumbled into the smoky abyss.
Some sec man came charging out of a barracks, and the cannies gunned
them down, pausing only to take their blasters. A line of trucks and a
lone APC stood on a bare patch of ground nearby. Not knowing how to rig
a tank, Scarface bypassed the military wag and used the stock of the
longblaster to break the window of the best-looking truck. Climbing
inside, he reached under the dashboard and ripped wires loose, then
started touching one to another until the engine started. Twisting the
connections closed, the cannie chief shoved the wag into gear and
roared off at top speed.
"Where now?" Cooler asked, breathing hard.
Scarface shifted gears. "We're going home."
"Virginny is due north of here," Snake said. "Mebbe a tad east."
"Too dangerous. I heard them say they were setting traps for someone
named Ryan," Digger answered, hugging the moaning Mad Dog close to his
chest. "He be coming after their boss. Got the roads covered north,
east and south of here."
"Remember that caravan we attacked? Heard someone yell for 'Ryan.'
Mebbe that's him. Great! Let the fuckers kill each other," Scarface
decided, steering into the trees, plowing through bushes and greenery.
"We'll avoid both by heading west."
Chapter Eighteen
High above the polluted world, the Kite floated along through the
cold vacuum of space. Tiny retro jets flared occasionally to correct
the satellite's altitude, adjusting pitch and yaw against the complex
gravitational forces of the Earth below and the moon above.
A thousand more satellite's moved around the world like bees buzzing
about a hive. Some were large and slow, barely tethered at the extreme
limits of Earth's gravitational field. Others were small and fast,
beeping antiques from a bygone age. Most sported huge dish antennae,
simple communications relays for television and the multinational
businesses of the predark world. Both as dead as dinosaurs. A few of
the satellites were of unknown purpose or origin, strange ovals whose
hulls were a flat black, making them nigh invisible against the starry
backdrop of space.
Several hundred miles away, a squat armored sphere bearing the
design of an American flag became alive with dim lights, and spun
weakly about on its vertical axis, pinhead sensors flickering as it
registered the presence of the huge oncoming satellite. Radar beams
scanned the goliath, and the master computer couldn't find a match
within its military data banks.
A radio signal was immediately sent to NORAD.
Command in Wyoming. But neither the mammoth Cheyenne Mountain nor
the North American Air Defense headquarters existed anymore, and the
request for instructions went unanswered. The guardian satellite
instantly tried contacting the Pentagon. No response. Then it tracked
desperately for Looking Glass, the flying headquarters of SAC, but the
Boeing 777 was nowhere to be located. Following the dictates of its
programming, the guardian demanded immediate verification from the
White house. There was only static. Finally the war satellite broke top
secret seals and beamed an emergency signal to the armored bunker at
Camp David. Nothing, only the crackle of the never ending sheet
lightning from the isotope-filled clouds masking the planet.
Subprograms flared into operation, but the auxiliary routines failed
to boot, so they were tried again a dozen times before the reserve
files were accessed. But the long ages and steady bombardment of the
solar winds had claimed a toll on the military orbiter. When reserve
files were sluggishly activated, the first was filled with corrupted
data, as well the second, but the fail-safe backup proved functional
and the weapon systems of the hunter-killer were brought online within
seconds.
Now a direct warning was broadcast at the intruder in international
Morse code. There was no reply. The mandatory warning was tried once
more with the same results. Hardwired circuits pulsed into life, and
hatches irised wide. Distance was gauged, speed, vectors, trajectory,
and two small missiles streaked toward the lumbering Kite.
The first went straight past the mile-wide power station, arcing off
into the limitless depths of deep space. The second detonated halfway
between the two machines, its chem warhead of thermite-beryllium
flowering into a hellish spray of metallic flame over two thousand
degrees Kelvin in temperature.
The Kite began to tilt slightly away from the guardian satellite.
Sensing the unauthorized invader was still coming, the hunter-killer
activated its armor-piercing rockets and prepared to launch, when the
warheads prematurely detonated inside the military satellite, blowing
the orbiter apart in a silent detonation. Utterly destroyed, the
crackling wreckage of the megamillion-dollar satellite began to drift
toward Earth with ever increasing speed. In minutes, the friction of
the thickening atmosphere rushing past its hull raised the temperatures
of the ceramics way beyond their design limit, and a spectacular tail
of flame stretched behind the plummeting machine, making it resemble a
comet for a few brief seconds before it was vaporized.
Serenely, the colossal Kite continued its journey toward a new
geosynchronous position directly above an insignificant river valley,
hidden somewhere in the ragged mountains of western Tennessee.
THE MURMURING WATER was only ten feet below as J.B. wrapped his legs
tighter around the wooden beam and scooted a few more inches along the
trestle of the old bridge. Cross braces supported the thick planks
above the man, and he moved from joist to joist, desperately grabbing
anything solid to maintain his precarious perch above the river.
The spray rising from the water made everything slick and soon
soaked his clothes through to the skin. Directly underneath his back,
black catfish and rainbow trout darted about in the endless flow, and a
winged eel broke the surface, jumping for the dancing sparkles
incorrectly thinking the reflected light was food.
Scooting forward another foot, J.B. cursed as a splinter jabbed
into his hand, and he bit the end, pulling it loose and spitting it
away. Another eel dived for the bloody tidbit and disappeared into the
river with its prize. Muttering darkly, J.B. finally reached the middle
of the bridge and found the explosive charge. The flat ceramic disk was
attached with steel bands bolted to the main timbers, dim telltales
winking in the damp shadows.
Bootsteps sounded on the planks above, and curly black hair framing
a scarred face appeared over the edge of the bridge. It took Ryan
several moments before he could find the Armorer esconced within the
maze of wood.
"How's it going?" Ryan asked.
"Found another land mine," J.B. replied, studying the predark
device. Easing his grip on the cross braces, the Armorer rested his
shoulders on the smooth butt of a joist, and traced the outline of the
mine with steady fingertips. "Silas is getting really serious with
these things. This model is a lot bigger than the last couple we found.
Must be ten pounds of plas here. That would remove the whole bridge and
most of the road on either side."
"Need anything?" Ryan asked, shaking the spray from his face.
"Yeah, turn off the river for a few minutes, will you?" J.B. grunted
in reply. Hugging a cross brace with his left arm, he reached into his
shirt and pulled out a pair of needle-nose pliers. A short length of
string was tied from the handle of the pliers to the buckle on his belt.
An oil lantern came into view at the end of a rope.
"More light?" Krysty asked from above.
"Got enough, thanks. The problem is I don't know this model," J.B.
muttered, working on a recessed bolt. "Ah, there's the control board…
Shit!"
There was a splash as the pliers dropped into the river.
Immediately, the fish nosed about the item to see if it was edible.
Discovering that it wasn't, they angrily slashed fins, spraying mud
over the tool, burying it completely.
"Bloody string was a good idea," he announced, reeling in the pliers
on the dripping twine.
"You're welcome, lover," Mildred replied. At that angle, she could
only see the man by his reflection in the flowing water.
"Everybody better move farther away," he suggested loudly. A line of
color ran along the cracks between the planks. Green and red. That was
power and a ground wire. He traced them into the shadows and spotted
other flat disks hidden amid the timbers. "There seems to be more
charges, one at either end of the bridge."
"A sandwich formation," Ryan answered. "Nowhere to run."
"Looks like. The ends are merely charges, no sensors or trips. It's
when you reach the middle of the bridge that all three go. Damn good
design. Best I've seen." He snipped a wire and waited for sudden
violent death. When nothing happened, he snipped another.
Squatting on the shore, Dean studied the river. "So how do the blues
get across?"
"Ford river," Jak said. "Not deep."
"The bottom is too soft," Doc stated knowingly. "We would be forced
to abandon the Hummer. A LAV could make the transition, but not our
current mode of transportation."
Levering a beveled plate out of the way, J.B. answered, "We can
cross the bridge anytime, only the Hummer can't. People, horses, most
civilian wags would roll over
with no trouble. But once the mine senses dense steel overhead, this
whole bridge will be matchsticks in a heartbeat."
"Can you remove the mine, let it sink in the river?" Ryan asked, a
spent round sliding from his shirt pocket and disappearing into the
water. The man was annoyed he had missed the brass. It could just as
easily have been a live round wasted due to carelessness. As a
reasonable precaution, Ryan had emptied his pockets of anything
valuable before leaning over the bridge. J.B. had done the same, his
collection of items piled on the floorboards of the Hummer. And just in
case the mine was tripped by magnetic fields, Ryan was stripped to the
SIG-Sauer, no spare clips, and not even a knife in his boot, to keep
the metal on his body to an absolute minimum.
"Not going to remove this device without power tools," J.B.
answered, grunting with effort. "It's here to stay, bolted into
position nine different ways. But I have a better plan." More muttering
sounded from under the bridge, along some hard banging and another
splash. "Shit!"
Suddenly, the birds in the trees stopped making noises, and the rest
of the companions drew blasters. Straining to hear voices or engines,
they waited for a patrol of blues to arrive. Tense minutes passed
before a sting-wing soared from the trees with a fresh kill in its
beak. The companions relaxed as the mutie flew away and the birds began
to chirp once more.
Ryan eased the safety back on the SIG-Sauer, when he realized that
J.B. was on the move below the bridge, wiggling quickly between the
braces and joists. The one-eyed warrior retreated to the safety of the
road, waiting as J.B. reached the shore and crawled backward onto the
grass. Gratefully, the man stood and lifted a thick wad of grayish clay
from inside his shirt.
"To hell with defusing the mine. I just removed the C-4 charge,"
J.B. announced with a slight smirk. "Let the damn thing ignite. It'll
only make a bang that wouldn't chill a fly."
"You sure about that?" Mildred asked, handing over a backpack.
Extracting dry clothes from within, J.B. quickly changed, using
stiff fingers to smooth his damp hair. Then, donning his dry fedora, he
slid the Uzi over a shoulder. "Well, just in case, I'll drive the
Hummer over alone," he suggested, adjusting his glasses.
Already at the wag, Ryan started the engine and stepped away from
the Hummer. A stick was pressed against the gas pedal and a piece of
rope held the steering wheel steady. At a leisurely pace, the armored
vehicle slowly rolled across the expanse of the wooden bridge, veering
a little off course toward the edge, but nothing dangerous. As the wag
reached the middle, there was a sharp explosion and debris sprayed into
the river, churning the surface and scaring away the fish. Smoke blew
away from the support beams, but nothing else occurred and the Hummer
reached the other side intact.
Sprinting forward, Ryan claimed the Hummer before it got too far
away, and turned off the engine. "It's safe," he announced, untying the
knotted rope and throwing away the stick. "Let's go."
Walking over, the companions piled their belongings into the rear of
the Hummer and took seats. Jak took the gunner position at the M-60,
and Doc stretched his long legs in the cargo area. Taking the front
seat, J.B. laid the Uzi on the floor and started carving the lump of
plastique into fat bricks. Gently, he wrapped each separately in a
piece of a blue shirt taken off a corpse and tucked the bricks into his
munitions bag.
"Can blow a lot of locks with this," he said, patting the bag
contentedly. "Good for starting fires in the rain, too."
"Plas?" Jak asked, shocked.
"Sure. Most explosives will simply burn if they're not inside a
container. You need a primer for TNT, or even a gunshot wouldn't set it
off. An electric charge or a small explosion makes C-4 detonate, but
fire only causes it to burn like coal."
Starting the warm engines, Ryan checked the fuel gauge, noting the
low level, and they headed into the deadly green hills once more. So
far, they had found mines on every bridge, and on a flat stretch of
ground there had been a collection of bloodstained crosses lining the
road, rotting corpses—without eyes or genitalia— brutally nailed to the
upright timbers. Oddly, the dead were all facing eastward, toward the
ville of the blue shirts. It was a clear warning about the dangers of
leaving. The mines were a more direct warning about entering the valley.
"And this is the back door," Krysty said, as if reading his thoughts.
"Silas didn't believe in half measures," Ryan agreed, shifting
gears. "Remember those homemade muties of his?"
"Nasty," Jak agreed.
"Maybe we should leave the roads," Mildred suggested. "Take to the
woods."
"Can't," Ryan replied bluntly. "The trees are too close, the slopes
too sharp. No way we could drive through these hills. Even walking
would be a bitch. We're stuck with the roads until reaching flatter
country."
"Besides, there could be patrols in the hills," J.B. added, resting
an arm out the window of the Hummer. "Land mines are easier to avoid
then sec men."
"Prefer sec men," Jak countered, shaking the length of linked ammo
to straighten a kink. "Mines always sharp, blues fall sleep sometimes."
"Only once, my friend," Doc answered, sliding a length of
razor-sharp sword from his ebony stick and slamming it back inside.
"And then never again."
ITS EIGHT WHEELS CHURNING out grass and dirt, the armored bulk of
the LAV-25 rolled to a stop near the edge of the quarry. Sec men rushed
to open the rear doors, and Silas hobbled from the war wag, stiffly
walking to the ragged end of the land.
"What in hell happened here?" the whitecoat roared, standing above
the abyss. "Were we attacked?"
"The damn fools must have set off the TNT," Major Sheffield said,
staring at the jumble of broken rock that rose halfway to the surface.
"It'll take weeks of hard work to reach the bottom again. Even longer
before we can start carving blocks for the outer wall. Months lost!"
"Any survivors?" Silas demanded in cold fury, his hand clenching the
cane hard.
Crossing his arms, Sheffield shook his head. "None."
"How lucky for the overseers," Silas snorted. "They would have
begged for death before I was through with them!"
"Any orders, sir?" Sheffield asked.
"Yes, of course. Halt the construction of the wall," Silas stated
grimly. "Assign every worker to the dish. Once done, we'll effect a
clear zone around the complex. That will afford us the security we need
to finish the wall at our
leisure."
"A clear zone?" the major asked.
Leaning heavily on his cane, Silas grunted. "We'll burn the whole
Tennessee valley to ash around our base for a hundred miles. Nobody
would dare to cross that."
The orbiter could do such a thing? Amazing. It truly was more
powerful than predark nukes. "How soon?" the sec chief asked, trying to
hide his excitement.
"Noon tomorrow—no, the day after. Tomorrow, I reduce Front Royal to
a lava pool." Silas then frowned. "What are the chances that Ryan had
something to do with this?"
"None at all," Sheffield stated firmly. "Any strangers found in the
valley have been shot on sight. Our sentries report in regularly, and
every passable road is heavily mined."
"Ah, that's not exactly correct, sir," a corporal hesitantly
offered, walking from the crowd of sec men.
Turning slowly, Silas leveled a hostile gaze at the youngster.
"Explain that statement," he growled.
The sec man saluted. "Sir! The sentry on the west road is late
reporting in, sir. We sent off his relief this morning, but no word on
either of them yet."
"The west! I should have known the coward would try and sneak up on
me from behind!" Silas glanced about nervously, feeling very vulnerable
standing in the open. "Send out a LAV and squad of men immediately."
"That is unwise, sir. We only have three armored wags remaining,"
the major reported succinctly. "We lost one during the cave-in. It must
have been parked near the edge and fell into the quarry."
"Irrelevant! I want armor on the west road within the hour." Licking
his dry lips, Silas hunched his shoulders as if braced for the killing
impact of a bullet. His face felt hot, and the center of his forehead
ached with a stabbing pain as if he had been already shot. A great
weariness filled the man, and in horror he felt himself starting to
slip into the dream state that heralded his recurring nightmare. Only
this time it was happening while he was wide awake!
Through sheer force of will, he banished the delirium, but a cold
certainty now gripped his heart and Silas knew that his days of sanity
were almost over. Soon, madness would rule his mind, and the scientist
would no longer be able to tell reality from delusion. He would
probably never even know when Tanner, or the major, took his life.
Breathing hard, Silas looked into the deep quarry, knowing that a
single step more would end his problems forever.
Just then, a stone broke away from the ragged edge of the ground and
fell into the quarry, clattering and clacking as it bounced
from boulder to boulder, finally disappearing into the shadowy dust
clouds far below. A few seconds later, there was a splash as it reached
the runoff pool.
Shuddering at the noise, Silas stepped way from the yawning stone
pit. No, not yet. His death at this time would only damn North America
to endless barbarism. Democracy had failed, the anarchy of choice and
the chaos of freedom combining to create skydark and nearly ending the
human race. Only the iron rule of science could save humankind from
extinction. The Great Project had to be completed first, no matter what
the personal cost. Then and only then could he allow himself to finally
die and escape the growing horrors of his own damaged mind.
Limping about, Silas started for the LAV. "Come along, Major. We're
returning to the complex. That one-eyed bastard could be watching us
right now through a sniper scope."
"Impossible. The nearest trees for cover are two hundred yards away.
The bushes on the hillside are even farther. He couldn't hit the ground
at that range. Not with a Winchester lever action, or a Kalashnikov.
Told me yourself that was why you chose those specific long-blasters.
Both are useless as sniper rifles."
"And what if Ryan is here with his Steyr?" Silas whispered, sweat
beginning to trickle down his face. "That is designed for
extreme-distance shots under tricky conditions. Perhaps I should stay
inside the bunker until this matter is resolved."
"A wise move. Or tell me the entrance code to the redoubts,"
Sheffield urged slyly, "just in case of an emergency."
Pausing near the doors of the LAV, Silas Jamaisvous stared at the
big sec chief. Proud and strong, he was the perfect human specimen, a
more than worthy successor to the dying scientist.
"Maybe you are right," Silas said slowly, and started to reach into
his coat. Then he stopped and stepped inside the APC.
"Not here," he said, taking a wall seat. "I will tell you in the
lab. We must not be overheard."
"Of course. As you say, sir," Sheffield replied, not taking his eyes
off the tiny sliver of the rainbow disk just barely visible tucked
inside the breast pocket of the white labcoat.
RYAN SLOWED the Hummer as another wag appeared around a gentle curve
in the road ahead of them. It was a predark truck in amazingly good
condition, the tires sporting plenty of tread, the headlights intact,
and not a speck of rust on the red-painted chassis. He could see two
men in the front cab, and more in the rear. All of them seemed to have
blasters.
"Stay loose," Ryan ordered, adjusting the SIG-Sauer at his hip.
"Don't shoot unless they do first. Not everybody on this road is going
to be a blue shirt."
"Mebbe," J.B. replied, pulling the Uzi onto his lap and snicking off
the safety.
Moving the Hummer to the far side of the road, Ryan carefully
watched the oncoming truck. The driver wasn't wearing a blue shirt.
They could just be some folks leaving the area. Or sec men in disguise.
The one-eyed man debated chilling the strangers purely as a precaution,
and decided against it.
Maintaining its speed, the truck swung away from the Hummer, twenty
feet of open space separating the vehicles. As the machines got closer,
Ryan nodded and casually saluted at the other driver, and the gesture
was returned.
"Big man," Krysty commented, her revolver in her hand but tucked out
of sight. "Looks a bit like Ryan."
He snorted in reply. "Everybody has scars."
Almost alongside each other, the truck began to slow, and the driver
pointed at the Hummer. The bald man in the passenger's seat rolled down
his window and stared at the companions, first in puzzlement, then
shock.
"Nuking hell, it is them!" he shouted, displaying pointed
teeth. "Chill them all!" Instantly, the predark wag veered across the
road, its engine revving with power.
"They're going for a ram!" Ryan warned, hitting the gas and sharply
twisting the steering wheel.
The M-60 started chattering, and the sec men in the other wag fired
back with an assortment of handblasters. The windshield on the truck
exploded into pieces, while rounds ricocheted off the sides of the
Hummer.
Firing one-handed, J.B. hosed the truck, but it was already too
late. The hood blew off the wag, steam erupted from the punctured
radiator and the truck slammed into the rear fender of the Hummer in a
crash of glass and screech of metal. Jak went flying from his position
behind the M-60, and the Hummer spun about from the collision, brakes
squealing.
Shaking and bouncing, the damaged truck rattled to a halt, the front
bumper crumpled tight onto the right tire, slicing the rubber into
shreds.
On the berm, Jak rose and started limping after the Hummer, firing
his .357 steadily at the stalled truck. The driver was fighting to
start the engine again, but only getting whirring noises. However, the
sec men in the rear opened fire on the pale teenager with their
blasters. Trapped on flat ground with absolutely no cover, Jak flinched
as a hot round scored past his cheek, singeing his skin.
"Cover him!" Ryan shouted, slamming on the gas and racing forward.
The companions opened fire with every weapon they had as the war wag
streaked across the road to pass straight by Jak and slam into the
truck. The impact knocked the sec men off their feet, the armored
Hummer almost flipping over the large truck.
Jumping from the military transport, Doc and Krysty grabbed Jak by
the arms and hauled the teenager off the road. Once he was in the
Hummer, Ryan backed way from the truck and spun in the dirt, guiding
the wag down the road at top speed.
"Those were cannies!" Dean stated, snapping off more shots at the
broken wag. The men were stumbling around the vehicle in a daze, firing
their weapons blindly.
J.B. slapped a fresh clip into the Uzi and worked the bolt. "Silas
hiring cannies as blues?"
"More likely they stole the truck," Doc stated, blowing flame and
thunder at the men with his LeMat. A cannie with a bandaged foot
recoiled from the subsonic arrival of the .44 miniball, his left arm
gone from the elbow down. "And I sincerely hope they ate the previous
owners!"
"Vicious old coot, aren't you?" Mildred asked.
"Just practical,
madam. A dead Silas can do us no more harm."
As the truck dwindled in the distance, the Hummer rolled around the
curve in the dirt road, and Ryan immediately slowed. Directly ahead of
them, a flat wooden bridge stretched across a gently flowing river.
"Fireblast! How many rivers do they have here!" Ryan cursed, then
ground to a halt. "There isn't time to defuse another bastard land
mine!"
Munitions bag in hand, J.B. hopped from the Hummer and started off
at a run. "I'll check! Mebbe it's clean!" The companions readied their
blasters, as the man rushed to the shore. Wading into the icy water up
to his waist, J.B. looked under the bridge and turned toward the others.
"Triple load!" he shouted through chattering teeth. "Same as before!
Ten, mebbe fifteen to defuse!"
"Do it!" Ryan shouted, gunning the engine. "We'll hold them off if
they're stupe enough to try again."
Mildred gave a sharp whistle, and Jak started firing the M-60.
Rattling and shaking, the predark truck appeared around the curve, the
cannies steadily firing their blasters.
Blue smoke trailed from its tailpipe, telling of serious engine damage.
The headlights were gone, smoke poured from under the hood, but it was
still moving, building speed and coming straight toward them this time.
As the companions cut loose with every weapon they had, Ryan studied
the battlefield. Dense trees lined both sides, so there was no chance
of driving through those. They couldn't cross the bridge, and if they
tried to swim across the river they would be sitting ducks for the
cannies to pick off with longblasters. Oddly, the battered truck was
coming straight down the middle of the road, as if inviting the
companions to try to get by, which made no sense. The Hummer was faster
and armored, so no way could the cannies stop it with another
sideswipe. Then the man saw the others were throwing handfuls of
something out the sides of the wag. One of the objects hit a rock and
loudly detonated.
"Blasting caps! Those'll blow our tires to pieces."
"But why did they come back?" Dean asked, rummaging in his clothes
for another clip. Briefly, he made a mental note that he should make a
vest or something with nothing but pockets for spare ammo. Yeah, that
was a good idea. "We weren't chasing after them."
"It's the Hummer," Krysty stated, thumbing fresh cartridges into her
blaster. "We busted their wag, so the cannies want this as a
replacement."
"And us for supplies," Mildred added grimly, working the pump on the
S&W shotgun she'd borrowed from J.B.
The boy registered surprise at the statement, then fierce hatred.
"Let them try," he growled, for a split second sounding exactly like
his father.
The truck was only fifty yards away and coming faster all the time.
Spitting a curse, Ryan turned in his seat and stared hard at the
bridge. Sure enough, there were small metallic dots scattered over the
weathered planks. More blasting caps had been strewed about to stop
anybody from following them across. Only now the small explosives might
also set off the land mines and chill J.B. while he was working
underneath, and there was no way to tell him of the charges on top of
the bridge. They were trapped.
Having no choice, Ryan started tying off the steering wheel with the
rope. "Get ready to go EVA!" he shouted, throwing the wag into neutral
and shoving the stick on the gas pedal. The engine roared to life.
"We've got to take them here on the road!"
"What for?" Jak demanded from the sputtering M-60. The dangling ammo
belt was nearly gone, but the teenager still rode the machine gun on
full-auto.
"Just do it!" Ryan shouted, throwing the Hummer into gear. The wag
lurched ahead, tires spinning in the dirt.
Spewing smoke and blasterfire, the rattling truck loomed before the
companions. Through the broken windshield, Ryan could see the cannie
driver watching eagerly as the two wags closed with frightening speed.
Then the scarred man's toothy expression rapidly changed as he realized
the Hummer wasn't trying to get around, but was on a collision course.
"Now!" Ryan shouted, diving from the wag. He hit the ground hard,
but managed to roll off the blow and stopped, lying on his side,
blaster still in his hands. Jak and Doc landed nearby, Mildred and
Krysty close behind. There was no sign of Dean.
Slamming on the brakes, the cannie driver bellowed in rage as the
two vehicles violently smashed into each other, glass shattering over
the sounds of crunching metal. Every loose item in the Hummer went
flying as its armored grille pushed in the front of the truck, the
working engine propelled backward into the cab, crushing a man with a
snake tattoo on his face.
Somebody began to scream as fuel gushed from a hole in the gas tank,
pooling on the ground under the destroyed wag. Bleeding and dazed, the
cannies stumbled from the truck, slipping on the shards of glass
scattered on the road.
Stiffly, Ryan rose from a crouch and leveled the SIG- Sauer. "Light
them up!" he shouted, and started firing.
Steady on one knee, Doc triggered the LeMat four times, and a cannie
flew backward to slam into the truck, his faceless corpse sliding to
the road, leaving a smear of pulped organs behind on the crumbled metal
chassis.
Lying on the berm, Dean was snapping off shots, and Mildred cut
loose with the shotgun, the flechette rounds cutting a
cannie in two.
Spotting his lost Colt Python in the dust, Jak dived for the blaster
and came up firing, the .357 hollowpoint rounds blowing fist-sized
holes in men and truck. Hit in the shoulder, a cannie dropped the ammo
clip for his AK-47. In panic, he ran away but got only a few yards
before reaching the blasting caps. The first blew off a foot. Crying in
shock, he fell to a knee and that, too, was removed. The man collapsed
to the ground and was torn into bloody pieces.
Then a large cannie lifted another as a shield and sprayed the
companions with a Kalashnikov on full-auto, the machine gun fiercely
chattering.
Hastily reloading, Krysty felt a tug on her bearskin coat, telling
of a near miss. As she dived for cover, Ryan slapped in a fresh clip,
stood and fired. The 9 mm round punched a neat hole in the forehead of
the dead man, an explosion of blood and brains washing over the cannie
behind him. Blind, the scarred man dropped the corpse and started to
randomly shoot his blaster. Krysty hit him in the shoulder, but he
didn't stop firing. Dean got him in the thigh, and Jak buried a knife
in his gut. Bleeding from a dozen wounds, the cannie dropped the spent
blaster, drew a knife and charged, shouting insanely. Stepping out of
the way, Ryan and Mildred both put lead in his chest, and finally Doc
removed his head completely with a deafening discharge from the .63
smoothbore of the powerful LeMat.
The companions stood tensely, listening for any movement, waiting
for another attack. Minutes passed slowly, and the fire under the truck
died away as the fuel was consumed.
"Okay, it's clear," Ryan decided, holstering his piece. "Let's
gather the blasters and get going. That smoke is going to attract
attention we don't want."
"Why didn't the big guy die faster?" Dean demanded, removing the
partially loaded clip from his blaster and inserting a full magazine.
"Went berserk," Mildred replied, holstering her ZKR target pistol.
"There was so much adrenaline pumping through his body, he could have
continued fighting for quite a while. It's rare, but does happen
sometimes in battle."
"He took that many slugs and stayed alive?"
"Oh, no, he was already dead. Just still moving."
"Mutie?" the boy asked.
The physician sighed. "Quite the human thing to do."
"Hey, look at this," Krysty said, lifting a bare leg.
"There are shackle scars on his ankle. These men were slaves."
"Escaped Silas," Jak replied, recovering his blades from the dead
men. He wiped them clean on the clothes of one of the fallen, then on
an oily cloth from the pocket of his fatigues. One blade he slid up his
sleeve; the other went into a boot.
"Which means overseers could be on their trail," Ryan stated,
finding the Steyr and checking the blaster for damage. It was dirty but
otherwise in fine shape.
Slinging the longblaster over a shoulder, Ryan hurried to the
Hummer. He started the engine and tried to drive it off the truck, but
the wag seemed stuck on something underneath. Shifting gears, Ryan
fought with the entangled wag, only making matters worse before
admitting defeat.
"Sounds like a broken axle," he stated, climbing from the Hummer.
"We walk from here."
A sloshing sound announced the arrival of J.B. from the river. As
the Armorer walked onto the shore, he was holding another large lump of
plastique. "Bridge is clear," he told them wearily. "Not yet," Doc
said, pointing with his swordstick. "It is covered with blasting caps."
Turning, J.B. snorted. "We can use some branches to simply sweep
them into the river. No prob."
"Unfortunately, the Hummer is out of commission," Ryan said. "The
front axle is busted, and the truck is dead. We forcibly removed the
engine and burned off the fuel."
"So I see," J.B. mused. "Must have been a hell of a fight. Any
chance they can be pushed?"
"Pushed?" Mildred repeated. "We move them to the bridge," J.B. said,
rubbing his arms for some warmth. He was chilled to the bone, but there
was no time to change clothes now. "Hopefully, nobody will come looking
for us, or the cannies, if they think we're already dead."
Understanding the plan, the companions got busy. Krysty stood guard
duty while Doc cut branches off the pines trees and J.B. cleared the
bridge. Then they emptied the Hummer of supplies, filling their
backpacks with everything they could comfortably carry. Shoving the wag
backward the few yards took all of them working together, the broken
axle refusing to turn very fast. But the companions eventually got it
to the middle of the bridge. The truck rolled much easier, and soon it
was nose to nose again with the Hummer.
"Leave some supplies and blasters," Ryan ordered, studying the
wreckage. "This has to look real. Silas is no fool."
"Can we still take along the M-60?" Dean asked. "No way they could
know we have one."
"Their wags' have 'em," Jak replied curtly. "If gone, what think?"
The boy frowned. "You're right. Leave it behind."
"Better move a couple of cannies to the Hummer to make the body
count balance," Mildred suggested.
While that was done, Ryan gave J.B. one of his dry shirts. Even
buttoned shut, the garment still hung loosely off the smaller man, but
his teeth stopped chattering and his hands ceased to shake.
Feeling better, J.B. placed the large wad of C-4 from the land mines
on the bumpers of the wags, and Ryan poured the extra fuel from their
spare canister over both machines. Then everybody moved across the
bridge before J.B. set the charges with one of his precious predark
timing pencils.
The friends headed into the trees, the bridge far from sight when
the first flat explosion sounded, closely followed by a cavalcade of
smaller detonations, crunching wood and multiple splashes.
"Sure hope that works," Mildred said, watching the birds take flight
overhead, frightened by the noises.
"Find out soon enough if it doesn't," Ryan replied, walking into the
growing shadows of the Tennessee pine trees.
Chapter Nineteen
The carpeting of pine needles underfoot made walking pleasant, and
the companions put several miles between them and the ruined bridge
before stopping for a needed break.
"How far away are we?" Krysty asked, sitting on a tree stump.
Unfolding some silver wrapping, she popped a stick of hundred-year-old
chewing gum into her mouth and started to suck the flavor from the
confection. It took too long for the stuff to get soft enough to
actually chew. The wrapper she tucked into a pocket to hide the fact
they had been here.
"Tell you in a minute," J.B. said, sliding on dry socks from his
backpack, then his shoes. His pants had dried from the quick march, and
he had changed into one of his own shirts a good mile ago.
Moving to a grassy area where the branches didn't block a view of
the sky, the Armorer used his minisextant to shoot the sun. "We
are…yep, just south of the Shiloh battlefield, east of the redoubt and
west of the ville full of those inbred crazies."
"I remember them," Mildred said, scowling, easing her med kit to the
soft ground. "That's probably where Silas gets his sec men."
"Indeed, madam, sec men or his slaves," Doc stated, taking the
opportunity to reload the LeMat. The bulky weapon was difficult enough
to charge standing still, and impossible to do so while walking. His
sure hands used a small brass
brush to purge each individual firing chamber, spent black powder
raining like ebony snow. An exact measure of fresh powder went in next,
then the lead ball and finally a wad of cotton. He tamped down each
charge with the built-in lever, then smeared a dollop of grease on the
chambers as protection from wetness and a lethal chain reaction cross
firing.
The physician nodded while awkwardly massaging her stiff shoulder.
Mildred knew she was carrying too many medical supplies but couldn't
force herself to leave anything potentially useful behind.
Screwing the cap back on his canteen, Ryan wiped his mouth and
glanced at the sky. "Day's nearly done," he said. "We'll use what light
there is left to head east toward the redoubt from here on. Need to
make sure we have someplace to retreat in case of trouble. If it's
clear, tomorrow we'll start sweeping the valley in sections and find
the base."
"Then chill all blues," Jak said, rubbing the scratch on his cheek
from the near miss before. There was a faint taste of blood in his
mouth, and when Jak turned to spit he saw a tiny flower struggling to
grow through the thick layer of needles. Hawking into the bushes, the
teenager gently pushed the needles away, giving the tiny plant a
fighting chance. His wife had always like daisies.
"We ace the blues and Silas. That way, we can be sure he'll never
bother Front Royal again," Ryan said grimly, picking up his
longblaster. "Or anybody else, for that matter."
Stealthily, the companions moved through the forest. The tall green
pines were dense, the air fresh with their clean scent. There were no
signs of people having ever been in these woods, not even debris from
predark houses. The land was pristine, almost primordial. Occasionally,
the call of a wild bird would echo through the branches, or a squirrel
would race by. Dean tracked the passage of the rodents with his
blaster, but didn't fire. He knew they were too close to the blue
shirts to risk shooting at anything.
Forcing their way through some blackberry bushes, the companions
paused at the sight of a bear tunnel going through some of the
thickets. Placing a finger on the trigger of his longblaster, Ryan
knelt to look inside the dim recesses of the thorny bushes.
"Nothing in sight," he announced.
Jak kicked at some dried droppings on the ground. "Month, mebbe
more. Bear long gone."
"Odd," J.B. said, picking a berry off a bush and inspecting it
carefully. "Animals don't usually leave a ready source of food."
"Mebbe he got chased away by a bigger bear," Dean suggested.
His father didn't reply, but chambered a round into the Steyr. A few
hundred yards later, they found the half-consumed carcass of a buck
deer on the stony ground, the rotting meat completely covered with busy
black ants. The ripening stench was awful, and they hurriedly arced
around the clearing, staying within the canopy of the trees.
Climbing over some fallen oak trees, Ryan discovered a tiny babbling
brook, really no more than a creek, cutting through a tangle of
underbrush. Tadpoles and crayfish were busy in the soupy mud. The water
read clean on his rad counter, so he filled his canteen and moved
onward. The rest of the companions hardly broke their stride, stepping
over the trickle of water. A gully cut through the trees, saplings and
birch standing ghostly white amid the dark pines. Climbing onto the
raised land, the companions started across a sloped field of stubby
grass. Soon, a river could be heard flowing nearby.
"Sounds like it's going in the right direction," J.B. said, tilting
his head toward the noise. "How about making another raft?"
"Had enough of that," Ryan muttered. Stopping abruptly, Mildred
stared hard at the northern sky. "Well, I'll be damned," she whispered.
"Didn't we leave the burning Hummer west of us?"
"Sure did," J.B. answered, then the man sniffed. What was that
bitter smell?
Mildred pointed. "Then what the hell is that?"
A thick
plume of smoke rose over the forest. The winds were thinning it across
the sky until it vanished, but this close the plume was a solid black.
"Way too big to be a campfire," Dean said thoughtfully. "Mebbe the
forest is on fire."
"Animals not left," Jak stated, drawing his Colt Python. "They be
first."
Her hair anxiously waving, Krysty sniffed a few times. "That's
coal," she stated as a fact. "A coal-burning fire."
"Plenty of coal in Tennessee," Doc said. "Perhaps it is a local
blacksmith."
"Have to be a damn huge one."
"Hmm, true, madam. I stand corrected. Perhaps some local baron has
built a foundry to reclaim predark metal."
"Could be anything, even a power plant," Ryan grunted. He had
encountered coal-burning power stations when he traveled with the
Trader. Mostly they were crude things, a rusty boiler whistling steam
at a homemade turbine attached to a hundred car generators. But even a
rickety machine like that made a lot of electricity. Lights, heaters,
electric fences.
"Silas," Doc whispered, fingering the silver lion's head on his
swordstick.
"Silent recce," Ryan declared, loosening the SIG-Sauer in its
holster. "Five-yard spread. Go."
The companions spread out and started into the forest once more.
After a while, they left the trees and found themselves standing on the
bank of a river. The water rushed over rocks, foaming white and
dangerous. On the other side was a dirt road deeply cut with rain
gullies. Beyond that were thick bushes and more trees. Other than the
companions, there was nothing else in sight. "There," Jak said,
gesturing with his Colt. A short way up the river was another bridge,
wider and more detailed than any of the others they had encountered so
far.
"Odd," Krysty noted. "That's the first bridge with handrails. The
others were just flat planks without railings."
"Doesn't look predark," Dean estimated. "Mebbe it's the first one
the blues built. You always do the first of anything a bit fancier than
needed."
"It does not go anywhere," Doc said, sounding annoyed. "They built a
bridge, but not a road?"
"Changed minds," Jak suggested.
"Or ran out of slaves," Mildred
countered.
Pensive, Ryan looked at the
sky. Night was
rapidly approaching. Should they continue to the redoubt, or check out
the smoke? Tough choice.
"We'll recce the smoke," he decided. "But if we encounter any large
groups of blue shirts, we run for the redoubt. Understood?" All nodded
their assent.
The companions stayed within the cover provided by the trees until
reaching the bridge. J.B. checked underneath from the shore, and they
crossed without trouble. Past the road, they went into the woods and
found the pines were only a few yards deep. They stopped in a neat
line, the land beyond dotted with stumps and sloping away to a valley.
"Eureka," Doc whispered, thumbing back the hammer on the LeMat.
A sprawling ville filled the floor of the mountain valley, at one
end a brick building with a tall circular chimney pouring out thick
smoke, insulated wires running from a battery of transformers and
spreading across the valley in a black spiderweb of technology. New
brick buildings stood alongside predark structures and a shiny new
Quonset hut. A stone wall was being built around the enclosure, the
tiny figures of sec men visible as they patrolled its top. Hundreds of
people were moving about on the ground, doing incomprehensible things
at that distance. Rising above everything was a huge white bowl set
within a framework of steel girders and I-beams that rested on a slab
of concrete. A slim pole thrust from the center of the bowl, pointing
toward the cloudy sky, and tiny lights winked.
"Dark night, this is even bigger than the Anthill mock-up of D.C.,"
J.B. muttered, cradling the Uzi in both arms.
"Fireblast! They have a bastard tank!" J.B. snorted. "Dead tank. See
there? A couple of the sec men are hammering on the top hatch with
chisels, trying to get inside." Ryan relaxed slightly. "Good."
"What bowl?" Jak asked, squinting in displeasure. Even though the
teenager used the redoubts and mat-trans units, he was no fan of
technology, and this smacked of predark science on a major scale.
"That, my friend, is a radio telescope," Mildred said softly, as if
afraid the people in the valley might her the words. "And it seems to
be fully restored."
Ryan scowled. "A sky talker."
"Has Silas managed to launch something into orbit?" Krysty asked.
"Not here," Ryan stated. "I've seen space ports, and this has none
of the right machines. No fuels tanks, or fire equipment, no bunkers."
He frowned. "But it sure as hell was built to do something important."
Mildred said something that sounded like "settee."
"Come again, madam?" Doc asked.
"SETI," she repeated. "That dish antenna was an old project even
before the nuke war. The search for extraterrestrial life. The
government was trying to talk, or at least listen, to alien
civilizations. See if we were alone in the universe."
Dean looked away from the dish. "You mean people on other worlds?"
he asked incredulously. "Never thought of such a thing."
"Most considered it crazy. Even if we reached anybody, the messages
would have taken dozens or even hundreds of years to get there and come
back."
"We ask the question, and our great-grandchildren hear the answer,"
Doc intoned, easing down the hammer and cocking it again. "Indeed, that
most certainly does seem like a waste of time and resources."
"Doesn't matter," Ryan said, sliding a finger under his eye patch to
gently scratch. The salt from the Carolina basin had never fully washed
out of the scarred hole, even with their bath in the fresh water river.
"Some predark whitecoat tried to talk with another in space. Doesn't
matter now. But this must be the home base for Silas and the blue
shirts. Only question is, what is the bastard using the antenna for?"
"Not for talking with alien beings," J.B. said, snorting rudely,
then removing his fedora and wiping the sweat off the inside. "Aliens,
ha!"
Above them, the darkening sky rumbled ominously, lightning flashing
from cloud to cloud.
"Satellite," Krysty suggested, brushing back her wild profusion of
fiery red hair. The cascade moved about her fingers in a familiar
fashion. "Mebbe he found something still in orbit and is trying to
using this radio to talk to it."
"Weapon, recon?" Jak asked, straight to the point.
The woman shrugged.
"Recce would be pointless," J.B. said. "Got to be a weapon of some
kind. Missiles, mebbe."
"Fabulous, just what the world needs," Mildred muttered. "Another
skydark to finish the job of exterminating humankind."
"I want to get closer," Ryan said, starting down the hill. "We need
to know what's going on." The ground sloped even more sharply as they
walked down the hillside, the angle becoming so pronounced the
companions stopped walking and slid along the seats of their pants. Any
attempt at running would have sent them tumbling head over heels into
the valley below. A ridge in the slope dropped five feet straight down
onto a gentler angle. A few yards away, a split-rail fence extended
across the slope, bare wires resting on glass knobs intertwined with
the green wood.
"New," Jak stated.
Picking up a stick, Dean started forward. "I'll see if it's live."
"Don't," Ryan barked, holding out a hand. "If that is electrified, a
touch might send off a signal that we're where. Live wires can be
rigged like the proximity fuse of a bomb."
The boy dropped the stick and backed away.
Going near the fence, Ryan aimed the Steyr at the ville below and
adjusted the focus of the telescopic sights to infinity. Pulling out
his Navy telescope, J.B. extended the tube to its fullest length and
did the same.
There was a quarry to the south, which seemed to have had a major
collapse. Tough break for the stone cutters, but of no interest to
them. Both men glanced briefly at the slaves hauling boxes to the dish
antenna, then scrutinized the stone wall for weak points. The gate was
impressive, but the section opposite the quarry was only two courses
high.
"Six feet?" J.B. expertly guessed.
Ryan grunted. "Mebbe less. If we need to gain entrance, that's the
doorway we'll use."
"Check. Lots of wags near the base of the dish."
"Might be the garage. Or their bolt-hole."
"It's a fort. There're no windows for ventilation."
Sweeping the compound, Ryan froze as he spied a LAV-25 parked near
the Quonset hut. The metallic structure had bars on the windows, an
armored door and was closed off with electric fencing. Whatever was
inside was very important to the these people. Inside the fencing, a
group of blues with blasters stood rigidly at attention around a tall,
almost feline man with silvery hair, a pronounced widow's peak and
bushy eyebrows. Dressed in a white laboratory coat, the thin man was
leaning heavily on a wooden cane, obviously favoring his left leg.
"That's where Doc stabbed him," J.B. said.
"Wish it had been the heart," Doc grumbled, staring into the ville,
unable to see anything clearly, but imagining every detail.
"It's Silas," Ryan agreed, adjusting the focus with fingertip
pressure. The circle view through the crosshairs jumped into crystal
clarity. "That other fellow must be the chief of the sec men. He's not
saluting, and they appear to be arguing."
"Silas didn't exactly tolerate the opinions of others," Krysty
added, squinting at the distant figures. The woman's vision was greater
than most people's, but this was beyond even her best. "Much less that
of his staff."
"Dark night!" J.B. cursed in frustration. "If we only had a weapon
with good range, we could ace them both right here and now!"
"That would pay many debts," Doc stated, the wind ruffling his long
silvery hair. His heart was pounding hard, but he somehow maintained an
outward calm. Kidnapper, torturer, killer, what there words could
describe the lunatic genius behind Overproject Whisper and all of its
subdivisions that had taken Dr. Theophilus Tanner away from his beloved
wife and children.
"Emily," Doc whispered, and for the tiniest flicker of time he
thought he heard her call his name in return. But it was only the cold
mountain winds, moaning through the pines of the Tennessee valley.
Stepping closer, Mildred placed a hand on the old man's arm and
squeezed gently. Doc started to speak, but his voice broke and he
turned away from the valley.
"Chilling the bastards would be nice," Krysty agreed. "But we still
need to find out what they are doing with that freaking big dish."
"True, but it would be a lot easier to recce if the baron and his
top gun were both breathing dirt." Ryan worked the bolt on the Steyr,
then wrapped the strap around his muscular forearm to help steady his
aim. The angle was wrong, so he lay down and placed the barrel on the
lowest rail of the fence. The electric wires hummed above, but he
reasoned his blaster was far enough away to not set off an alarm.
"Can't do it," J.B. said, collapsing his telescope. "Not shouldn't,
but you can't. It's beyond the range of your blaster."
"Beyond the effective range," Ryan corrected him, studying the wind
push as it pushed a stray piece of paper along the roof of a building.
The air was moving faster up here, slower down there. That meant less
sheerage, but greater density. "The rounds will reach them, just not
with their full force."
"What do bruises?" Jak demanded angrily. "Means it'll only chill the
mutie-maker, but not remove his entire head," Ryan said, wiggling into
a more comfortable position. The short grass was itchy under him, a
rock pressing into his hip. The Deathlands warrior ignored the tiny
disturbances and concentrated on the silver-haired man near the APC.
The element of surprise was his. But if he missed this time, Silas
might stay inside until further notice, never giving the companions
another clear shot. Was it worth the risk? Should he take the shot?
"Fuck, yes," Ryan growled softly to himself. Taking a deep breath
and holding it, he placed the crosshairs of the scope on the
whitecoat's chest, moved it a foot to the left, then six inches up, and
fired.
But even before he finished pulling the trigger, Ryan remembered
Overton's bulletproof jacket. Quickly, he worked the bolt and fired
again, lower this time, then again, slightly to the left, and once more
adjusting to the right.
"FOOL! MORON!" Silas raged, stamping his good foot and gesturing at
the exposed wiring of the transformer. "Look at this mess! You have the
goddamn fence wired completely wrong! I told you a looped circuit so
that a break in one area will not leave us defenseless across the
entire fence. Looped—don't you know the word?"
"Sir, I can handle this later," the major urged again. "We should be
inside out of sight."
Silas glared at him in outrage. "Not until we have this fixed! The
electric fence is our main protection from Ryan or another slave
revolt, and this idiot screwed up the wiring!"
Lashing out, Silas hit the man with his cane. "Now get gloves and
fix the circuits, while it's hot!"
"I'm not sure where the gloves are, sir," the sec man protested.
"Do it anyway," Silas growled.
The other sec men murmured in fear.
"While it's hot? I could be chilled, sir!" the man wailed.
Imperiously, Silas glared at the cringing man. "I have more sec men
if you should fail."
Damp with sweat, the blue shirt looked to his chief for assistance.
"Do as the commander orders," Sheffield said sternly. "And next
time, if you don't know what to do, ask for help before figuring it out
yourself."
"B-but, sir, I—"
"Enough!" Silas shouted, hitting the trooper again. "Stop weeping
like a caned child! Do your job, or die!"
Turning toward the Quonset hut, Silas took a single step and was
violently knocked backward a
full yard. Gasping for breath, his lungs feeling as if they were on
fire, Silas groaned and rubbed his chest in pain, fingers recoiling as
they encountered the red-hot lump of a flattened bullet. Instantly, the
predark scientists realized what was happening and tried to scramble
under the LAV. The boom of a high-powered rifle rolled over the
complex, and a second round plowed directly into his throat, clearing
the vest by an inch. Blood sprayed onto the stunned crowd of sec men,
the impact knocking Silas sideways, arms flailing. The second boom
arrived just as the third round punched a hole below his left eye, the
entire back of his head exploding into a grisly spray of brains and
bones.
Even as he fell, a fourth shot slammed into his vest again, driving
the corpse backward into the exposed wiring of the transformer. His
arms hit the bus bars. There was a crackle of power, and eighty
thousand volts of direct current flowed through the dead man in a
controlled lightning bolt. His hair burst into flames, his blood boiled
into steam, eyes exploded and his clothes ignited as writhing tendrils
of high voltage crawled over his twisting form.
Backing away in horror, Sheffield felt a breeze brush past his face
and realized what it was before the crack of the longblaster arrived.
Grabbing the closest sec man, he lifted the man off the ground and
swung the blue shirt between himself and the distant hills just in
time. Gasping for breath, the living shield jerked and spit out a
tongue and wads of brain tissue from his mouth as two more
copper-jacketed rounds arrived.
Holding the corpse up, the major moved behind the nearby LAV, then
tossed it aside. Safe for the moment, he could only watch as the body
of Silas Jamaisvous was slowly reduced to a grinning skeleton. For a
split second, there seemed to be a circuit board riveted to the man's
skull, and then that vanished in a whoof of flames.
"In the wag!" Sheffield bellowed, thumping a fist on the armor.
"Fire the chain gun at the hillside!"
"Where on the hill, sir?" a young voice asked from inside.
"Due south! Just above the ridge fence!" Then Sheffield quickly
added, "But don't open the hatch! Stay under cover!"
Blood and teeth sprayed from the turret, followed by the rolling
thunder of the longblaster.
"Damn you, Ryan," the chief blue shirt cursed, positive he knew the
identity of the sniper. Who else could it be, but the man Silas so
hated and feared. Suddenly, Sheffield was surprised to find a blaster
in his grip, and he holstered the useless weapon. At this range he
might as well throw rocks for all the good it would do. The officer
wasn't even sure the chain gun could reach the fence, but it would have
been worth a try.
The crackling discharge at the transformer finally ceased as the
material causing the short circuit was cleaned off the fully charged
bus bars. Gray ash, charred cloth and some smoking pieces of bone
sprinkled to the ground.
Then a flash of rainbow from the remains caught Sheffield's
attention, and he saw it was the computer disk Silas had refused to let
him inspect. He started for the disk, then stopped himself. A single
round from the sniper would also drive him into the transformer with
the same results. The disk seemed undamaged, but was temporarily out of
his reach.
Racing around a corner into the enclosure, a squad of armed sec men
came into view. "Sir, we heard shots."
a burly
sergeant started, then stopped talking as he took in the
grisly sight at the transformer.
"Holy shit," a corporal whispered, and another turned away to
noisily retch.
Fists clenched, both of his hearts wildly pounding, Sheffield fought
down the urge to stay where he was. But the man knew better than to
demonstrate any weakness in front of the his subordinates. Victory or
death. Boldly he walked from behind the transport.
"There are the intruders!" he bellowed, thrusting an arm toward the
nearby hills. "Send out every man we have, use the dogs and the Bell.
Find them! The man who chills them will be promoted to major and serve
as my right hand. No prisoners, do you understand me? I want them dead.
No prisoners!"
"Yes, sir!" the sergeant replied. Although visibly shaken, he
managed a salute and started off at a run already shouting orders. The
rest of the sec men closely followed, the excitement of the possible
promotion wiping the shock and fear from their faces.
"You!" Sheffield barked, pointing at the sec man in charge of the
transformer. "Turn the circuits off!"
Hesitantly, the blue shirt obeyed and, bracing for a shock, he threw
the insulated switch. There was a snap of power, and the hum of the bus
bars softly faded, but the huge copper coils continued to faintly
crackle with the secondary effects of recharging the accumulators.
Moving quickly, Sheffield retrieved the disk and shoved it into a
pocket. "Back on," he snapped impatiently, walking around the
transformer until the southern hills were no longer in sight.
"Power is restored, sir!" the sec man shouted, excited at still
being alive. "Should I summon some slaves to clean up…ah, gather the
remains?"
"That won't be necessary," Sheffield said coolly. Drawing a
handblaster, he aimed at the blue shirt and fired.
Shrieking in agony, the sec man fell to the ground, clutching his
groin, dark blood flowing across his clothes. Ruthlessly, Sheffield
fired again and again, first removing fingers, then other small body
parts until the slide of his blaster kicked back, showing it was out of
ammo. Reloading, the major started again, dissecting the man alive,
until blood loss made the tattered lump of human flesh stop making
noises and go unconscious.
Placing the weapon against the forehead of the gurgling thing on the
ground, he paused, then thumbed the safety back on.
"No, you die slow," the major stated, holstering the blaster.
"Unlike Silas, I don't tolerate failure."
Walking briskly to the lab, the new baron of the ville placed his
palm on the wall plate, and waited anxiously until it chimed and
unlocked the door. Hurrying inside, Sheffield stared through the
Plexiglas windows at the sloping hills encircling the complex.
"Better start running, Ryan," he said softly, almost in a whisper.
"Because you're next."
Chapter Twenty
"Let's go," Ryan said, standing. Working the bolt on the Steyr
SSG-70, he opened the breech to remove the spent clip and slid in a
fresh magazine.
"Did you get him?" Dean asked, shading his eyes with a hand. Sirens
started to howl, something was on fire, sending black smoke wafting
into the sky, and sec men seemed to be rushing about madly. The
electric lights in the guard towers flickered, died away completely,
then came back on again.
"Silas is dead," Ryan replied, easing the bolt home and starting up
the slope.
"Can't get much more dead," Krysty agreed, walking alongside him.
"He's gone forever."
"I am only sorry I did not get to pull the trigger," Doc replied,
staring backward at the busy ville.
"Put a few rounds into the transformer, too. But I missed the chief
sec man," Ryan said, stopping at the ridge and cupping his hands.
"Bastard moved fast."
Krysty stepped into his grip, and he boosted her up onto the higher
ground. Then she grabbed his arms and helped him climb the steep
embankment.
Uzi at the ready, J.B. watched the hillside as the rest of the
companions assisted one another, then Ryan covered him as the wiry
Armorer scrambled up on his own.
"Any chance they can know the shots came from this direction?"
Mildred asked worriedly, as they started quickly for the trees. She
would feel a lot safer once they gained some cover.
"No way," Ryan replied, striding along. "I could have taken that
shot from anywhere in the valley."
Just then, J.B. sneezed in warning and the companions went flat,
shifting for cover in the stubby grass. A few seconds later, a sec man
in a blue shirt walked out of the pine trees with an AK-47 cradled in
his arms. The man gasped at the sight of the armed companions and swung
the barrel of his blaster toward them. But there was a low cough, the
blue shirt fell to the ground, shook and went still.
A wisp of smoke still clinging to the muzzled of the silenced 9 mm
SIG-Sauer, Ryan crossed to the corpse and shot it again to make sure
the man was dead. Eagerly, Dean claimed the Kalashnikov and the spare
ammo. Krysty took the radio.
"We can monitor their communications with this," she said,
inspecting the device. "Help us avoid any more patrols." The radio was
turned on so the sentry could receive reports or instructions. She
adjusted the volume to its lowest setting, so as to not give away their
position. Ryan glanced at the walkie-talkie. "Air Force model," he
stated. "Very short range, these days even shorter. Probably reduced to
line of sight."
"Unless they use that big antenna," Doc suggested, entering the
woods. Immediately, he felt better with some protective cover around
them.
Shifting her med kit, Mildred shook her head, her beaded locks
bouncing wildly. "The dish antenna would have to be pointed in the
correct direction. Think of it as a radio cannon. It's got to be
pointed right at whom they want to talk with."
"Useless," Jak grunted, stepping over a fallen willow tree.
Ducking under a bristly pine branch, Dean asked, "We heading for the
redoubt?"
"First we cross the river," his father answered. "For once those
land mines will work for us. No APC or Hummer can follow."
"Sounds good," Krysty said. Just then, the speaker of the
walkie-talkie crackled loudly. "Sentry Twenty-four, any sign of the
intruders?" a male voice asked.
The companions paused as Krysty pulled the device into view and the
radio blared, "What is your status, Twenty-four? Are you in trouble?"
"Gaia, he means us," Krysty stated, turning off the radio with a
click. "Ryan, J.B., did either of you see any female sec men?"
"Hell, no," Ryan growled.
She shoved the radio into his hands. "Then you answer quick, or else
they'll know where we are."
He chewed a lip for a moment, then turned the radio back on. There
came a burst of static. "—entry Twenty-four, where are you?"
Coughing raggedly, Ryan fumbling with the volume. "Raiders…" he
gasped weakly into the transmitter. "Gut shot…hurts bad!" Ryan knew
there was nothing more painful than a gunshot wound in the belly. He
once saw a coldheart stab himself to stop the agony. Any differences in
his voice and that of the younger sec man would be attributed to the
terrible pain.
Biting his tongue not to speak, J.B. started rummaging inside his
munitions bag.
"Where are you, man?" the radio asked urgently. "What's your
location?"
Holding up the map from Georgia, J.B. pointed at the scrawl at the
bottom.
Nodding in comprehension, Ryan panted heavily, "Q-quarry…"
A crackle of static. "Shit-fire! Was it muties? Tanner?"
Doc arched an eyebrow, but held his peace.
Coughing some more, Ryan whispered, "Fifty… coming…your way…"
"How fucking many?" the sec man yelled, distorting the words.
Exhaling as if dying, Ryan released the transmit button and tossed
the radio back to Krysty. She made sure it was turned off and tucked
the device into a pocket of her bearskin coat.
"That bought us a few minutes," Ryan said. "They'll have to check
the quarry before doing anything else, just in case this was a real
report."
"More than enough time," J.B. agreed, heading into the bushes.
"Fifty," Jak said. "Smart. Send all troops."
Parting some bushes
with the barrel of his longblaster, Ryan grunted in reply. "That was
the idea."
The sun was starting to set as the companions moved out of the band
of trees. Crouching, they looked for guards, but the river and bridge
seemed to be clear. Running across the bridge in pairs, the companions
took refuge in the forest on the other side and waited to see if there
was any signs of pursuit. The forest and river were placid and calm.
"We're in the clear," Mildred stated confidently. "Come on, I'll
feel better once we are inside the redoubt and have a few feet of steel
between us and the blues."
"Wait," Krysty said, tilting her head toward the river. "Motorcycles
are coming our way, six, mebbe seven."
"Can't be after us," J.B. stated. "Must be going toward that quarry."
"Mebbe," Ryan said, "but we'd better make sure. Everybody take
positions behind the trees."
There was a roar of engines, and a group of sleek motorcycles rolled
into view along the riverbank. The riders sat inside a
roll cage, an array of steel bars forming a barrier around the men,
affording them tremendous protection from being clubbed or having an
enemy leap on the bikes. The bars were black, but the welds were shiny.
Clearly the cages were a recent addition to the machines. All of the
sec men were armed with squat Ingram M-10 machine pistols, instead of
the usual Kalashnikovs. The boxy blasters would be easy to wield while
inside the safety cage, unlike the long barreled AK-47. Bandoliers of
ammo clips hung across their chests, and each had a radio strapped to
the gas tank between their legs.
Slowing at the bridge, the pack split roughly in two, three
continuing toward the quarry, four rolling across the bridge. The
two-wheelers separated quickly, moving to the farthest edge of the
bridge, staying as far away from the midspan as possible. As they
entered the woods at a crawl, branches hit the cages and snapped off at
the trunks as the machines proceeded along the dirt path.
Suddenly, leaves erupted from the ground as Ryan fired his silenced
weapon. A blue shirt cried out and slumped onto the handlebars.
Stepping out from behind a tree, Jak jerked his arm and another sec man
clutched at the knife in his throat. Ryan fired again, just as the
third biker drew his M-10. The SIG-Sauer won that contest, and the
dead man slammed against the protective cage, making the riderless bike
topple to the ground.
The fourth sec man cursed as he fought to free the strap of his
subgun, which was tangled with the lock on the cage. Shouting in rage,
he walked his bike around in a circle, and twisted the handlebar
throttle, preparing to run when Doc circled around a nearby tree and
deftly thrust his sword between the iron bars directly into the
driver's left eye.
Releasing the sword, Doc watched as the sec man stayed frozen in
position, his dying brain no longer able to relay commands. The bike
rolled on for another few yards, then bumped into a bush and stopped
moving, the engine softly rumbling, faint blue exhaust blowing from the
chrome mufflers.
Going to the trapped motorcycle, Doc placed a boot on the cage and
yanked his sword free. The corpse jerked upright at the action as if
renewed with life, then it slumped over, releasing the handlebars, and
the engine died in perfect harmony.
Rushing out of hiding, the rest of the companions converged on the
fallen machines, turning off engines before the hot casings set the dry
leaves on fire. Extracting the drivers proved to be no problem. The
safety cages had curved doors that locked with a simple sliding bar
from the inside. The companions placed the corpses in a pile, and J.B.
slid a wad of C-4 and a pressure switch under the top corpse.
"Four bikes," Ryan said, checking over the M-10. The bolt was stiff
from poor cleaning, but it seemed in operational condition. "We have to
balance this carefully. Dean with Jak, Mildred with J.B., Doc with
Krysty. I'll ride with the backpacks." The companions quickly piled
their backpacks onto Ryan's machine, then joined their partners.
Setting the ignition
switch, Mildred waited until J.B. was in position before kicking the
big Harley into life. The 1450 cc engine purred with barely restrained
power. Twisting the handlebar throttle, the woman gunned the engine a
few times to clear the carbs, and rolled over to the others.
Krysty turned on the radio attached to her bike and heard only the
hiss and crackle of static. "Odd," she muttered, checking the radio in
her pocket. It was also silent. "They should be talking about the
quarry by now."
"Mebbe they already figure it was a trick," Dean suggested, one arm
around Jak's waist, the other holding an M-10 machine pistol. The boy
knew it was a crappy blaster. The stubby two-inch barrel gave no real
accuracy over any distance. However, the yard-long AK-47 was impossible
to use while inside the cage, especially riding behind another person,
and the subgun could shoot faster than his Browning Hi-Power.
"Could be," Ryan agreed, tapping the fuel gauge. Half-full, more
than enough. "If so, they're going to come after us in force. Night
will be here soon, so we'll stay in the trees until it's dark, then
make a run for the redoubt across the grasslands."
"I'll take rearguard," J.B. said, the Uzi in one hand, the M-10 in
the other. He was sitting reversed on the seat with his back to
Mildred, legs braced against the lower bars of the cage, the buddy-bar
snug between his thighs.
Dean changed position to copy the older man. The chrome steel of the
buddy-bar rose to his chest and was very uncomfortable, but the stance
gave him a good purchase to fight from. That was good enough.
"
Mehi loricatus oportet occulte!" Doc stated in Latin,
holstering the LeMat and tying down the flap. His hands clumsily worked
the arming bolt on the subgun, and he eased off the safety.
"No headlights," Mildred translated. "Bastards can't hit what they
can't find."
Starting forward into the growing darkness, Ryan zigzagged the big
bike past the lush growths of pine and willow. "Just shoot anybody you
see," he added grimly, bent low over the handlebars. "They won't be
trying to take us prisoners anymore."
IN THE LAB, Sheffield was awkwardly typing commands on the computer
keyboard. Impatiently, he watched the vector graphic grow and change on
the softly glowing screen. Checking the assignment integers, the man
cursed in frustration when he realized that the numbers were wrong. It
was aimed much too close to risk a shot. Now he would have to start all
over again!
"Good news, sir!" said a voice from the intercom on the desk. "We
got a report that the outlanders are at the quarry."
"The quarry?" he repeated slowly. "Who told you this?"
"A sentry reported in just before he died. We're sending most of
the troops there."
"Recall them immediately," the officer commanded. "It's a trick to
divert us. Send everybody to the south. That's where they really are."
Pursing his lips, Sheffield then continued, "The troops have a
maximum of forty minutes to find the assassins of Dr. Jamaisvous, then
recall them immediately."
"Sir?" the intercom asked puzzled.
"Just do as you're ordered, trooper."
"Yes, sir! Hail the New America!"
Cutting off the intercom, Sheffield returned to his work. Starting
the programming cycle again, he typed much more carefully, and a slow
smile grew as the flashing numbers on the computer screen began to take
on the desired configuration.
THE QUARTET OF BIKES raced across the open fields of Tennessee
bluegrass. Headlights off, it was difficult to see anything in the way,
and Ryan often found himself jerking the handlebars at the very last
moment to avoid hitting a large rock or some other obstacle. However,
it was a good half hour since they stole the motorcycles, and they were
more than halfway to the redoubt.
"How close are we?" Krysty shouted, her hair streaming in the wind.
"Just a few more miles!" J.B. yelled in reply.
"Great!"
"My dear Krysty, can you do something about your hair, please?" Doc
asked. "I can barely see!"
Grabbing handfuls, she stuffed the living tendrils gently into her
shirt collar and did the top button. "Better?" she shouted over a
shoulder.
"Infinitely so. My thanks!"
"No prob!"
Suddenly, bright lights illuminated the field in bouncing cones of
stark white light, and there came the slow chattering of subguns. A
copper-jacketed round zinged off the safety cage around Doc and Krysty,
another bullet slamming directly into the backpacks behind Ryan.
"It's other bikes!" he shouted, and slapped a switch, turning on his
own headlights. Now able to see clearly, the man pressed the big
motorcycle on to much greater speeds. The ground flashed below the
wheels in a constant blur. With Ryan cutting the way, the others also
increased their speed and pulled away from the oncoming motorcycles.
"Ace the leader!" J.B. shouted, cutting loose with the Uzi and
subgun. Targeting the closest headlight, he put a long burst from the
blasters just above the jiggling light source. There was a crash of
glass, and the Harley veered off abruptly, then hit something and
flipped over. Tumbling out of control, the bike rolled over and over,
the screaming sec man trapped inside the cage bouncing about like a
boneless rag doll.
Doc and Dean did the same, and another bike fell. Instantly, the
other two drivers turned off their halogen headlights, and soon the
noise of their engines could no longer be heard.
"Easy as pie," Dean said triumphantly. "Keep going!" Ryan shouted
over the roar of the Harley. "That was too easy. It's a trick to make
us slow down!"
"Trap ahead?" Krysty yelled.
"Could be! Everybody, stay sharp!"
The noise started soft and low, a distant beating of drums. But it
quickly increased in tempo and volume until a steady whomping sound was
heard, and the companions craned their necks about to find the source.
Unexpectedly, a dark shape swooped by overhead, silhouetted by the
lightning flashes in the rumbling storm clouds.
"That's a bastard helicopter!" Ryan growled, buffeted by the wind of
its passage. The chopper was the first flying machine the Deathlands
warrior had ever seen. Silas had to have found the mother lode of all
redoubts to loot. Maybe even a Deep Storage locker!
The Trader told stories around the campfires about predark vaults
full of dry nitrogen gas, the temperature lowered to below freezing.
Designed to keep ammo and food fresh for hundreds of years, Deep
Storage lockers were supposed to be fully stocked with everything. Not
the occasional box of ammo or handful of MRE packs, but literally tons
of food, tanks, missiles and enough ammo and blasters for the predark
Army. Silas with a Deep Storage locker—that would explain a lot.
The helicopter passed by again, lower this time.
"Why isn't it shooting?" Dean demanded, tracking its passage, but
withholding fire. The boy hated to admit it, but he was terrified.
Machines that flew—it was unnatural!
"He's getting our range!" J.B. shouted, firing some rounds into the
sky.
"That's a Bell bubble chopper," Ryan stated. "It has no armor, and
no blasters."
"Gives us a fighting chance to live," J.B. said. Dark night! A
helicopter. What else did the blues have in their arsenal?
"The vehicle is unarmed?" Doc demanded. "Then it is merely here to
frighten us, or track our location for others?"
"Hell, no!"
A powerful explosion ripped about the night, the ground shaking as a
column of boiling flame reached into the sky.
"That's dynamite or TNT," J.B. said, sticking both weapons through
the bars of the safety cage and firing, the winking muzzle-flashes
illuminating the man in the darkness. "The pilot is tossing out sticks
like bombs!"
Another column of strident fire blossomed directly ahead of the
companions. The concussion slapped them hard, and they fought to keep
the bikes upright as they narrowly skirted the steaming blast crater,
clumps of hard soil under their wheels making the bikes shake madly. A
fall now meant sure death.
"Figure eight for sixty!" Ryan shouted, leading the others sharply
to the left, then to the right in evasion tactics. "We go on the next
blast!"
Another blast roared, and Ryan killed the headlights. The companions
spread wildly across the field, only to meet again farther away.
"Volley fire," Ryan shouted. "Go!"
Doc, Dean and J.B. cut loose with
their blasters, filling the sky with a hail of bullets. As a clip was
emptied, they tossed it away, slapped in a fresh one and continued
shooting. Speed and luck were their only chances now. A single stick
landing in the middle of the bikes, and they would never hit the ground
alive.
"Forest ahead!" Ryan shouted, dodging a primitive plow. A ville had
to be close by. He only hoped they weren't friendly with the blues.
The subgun finally empty, Doc dropped the useless weapon and
triggered the LeMat. In the darkness, the muzzle-flash reached out for
more than a foot, the detonation sounding like a peal of thunder.
In throbbing majesty, the helicopter angled away and moved fast into
the night until it was gone. Tense minutes passed as they waited for
its thundering return on another bombing run, and then the companions
broached the forest and were riding under its canopy of branches.
Slowing, Ryan listened carefully for the pre-dark machine, but only the
hushed silence of the woods could be heard.
"Why did it leave?" Krysty asked suspiciously.
"Mayhap I hit the infernal contraption," Doc rumbled, studying the
sky dubiously.
Sliding the last spare clip into the subgun, J.B. scowled at the
clouds above. "Seems unlikely," the Armorer said. "But it's possible,
and those damn .44 mini-balls would punch right through a civilian
copter."
Smiling with his oddly perfect teeth, Doc fondly patted the huge
handcannon. "Which is why I still retain her, sir! Very few enemies,
indeed, need to be shot twice with this."
"Well, the Bell would have to leave if the old coot hit the rotor,"
Mildred added. "A helicopter can't fly straight without its tail rotor."
"At least the thing is gone," Dean said gratefully, yanking on the
bolt of the subgun, trying to free a jammed round. The misfire was
caught in the breech tight and wouldn't come loose. He might have to
disassemble the blaster before it would fire again.
Suddenly, the boy could see the blaster a lot clearer as a wealth of
moonlight flooded into the forest, the silvery light illuminating the
trees in a cool glow.
"Clouds broke," Krysty said, the hair on her head coiling tightly.
"Haven't seen that happen in quite awhile."
Squinting with his good eye, Ryan rubbed his unshaved chin, making
a sound like sandpaper. "You don't suppose—"
But the Deathlands warrior was interrupted as something rustled in
the trees, bouncing from limb to limb to land in the bushes. The same
thing happened again, and then once more, this time the object landing
in plain sight on the carpet of leaves. It was a blue jay, its feathers
splayed and steam rising off its body. "What in hell…?" Ryan said.
Everybody jumped and aimed their blasters as dozens more birds fell to
the ground, robins, hawks and owls, the impact of their bodies sounding
almost like hail. Then a scream-wing plummeted through the foliage to
hit the safety cage around Ryan. The dead mutie was only a foot away
from his face, and he stared at it hard. This was the closest he had
ever been a scream-wing. Steam hissed from its mouth and rectum, the
eyes had burst apart and its hide was bubbly as if the creature had
been dipped in boiling oil.
"The copter?" Dean asked fearfully. The boy had no idea what was
going on here. Cooked birds falling from the sky?
"Oh, my God," Mildred whispered, pointing behind them with a shaky
hand.
Thousands of leaves and needles were falling from the trees in a
heavy wave, the bare branches darkening, and some of the small growths
bursting into flame. The bushes began to smolder, and the grass
withered. It was as if the forest were dying before their very eyes.
There was a sharp line of the approaching destruction, green plants on
this side, withered death on the other.
"Sweet Jesus save us, it's a Kite!" Mildred fumbled twice in her
haste to kick the motorcycle into life. "That's what the bastard
Jamaisvous was talking to, a goddamn freaking Kite!"
"Silas ace plants?" Jak demanded.
"It kills everything!" the woman
shouted, and twisted the throttle to the last stop. The wheels spun
wildly in the loose leaves, spraying out debris, then contacted dirt
and the Harley roared forward, almost crashing into a tree. The cage
slammed into the trunk, ripping off bark and making J.B. drop the
subgun.
"Hey!" he cried out, nursing a wrist. There was a sharp pain inside
as if a bone had been broken.
"Fuck it!" the physician screamed, plowing through a bush. "Run, run
for your lives! And for God's sake don't look up!"
Starting their bikes, the others took off after the woman, not
exactly sure what was happening. Doc watched as the oncoming line of
destruction approached to within only a few yards of the rolling
motorcycle, when he began to twitch uncomfortably. It felt as if a
million insects were crawling over his skin, and the grip of the LeMat
started to grow warm.
"Faster, madam!" he shouted, almost throwing the blaster away. "We
have to go faster!"
Ahead of them, the forest was cool and green, the thick foliage
starkly lit by the full October moon. His left eye socket itching
madly, Ryan fought to control the Harley as he drove full tilt through
the woods, sometimes the trees so close he thought the safety cage
would jam tight between the trees. But the bark scraped loose, giving
scant inches, and the Harley roared onward.
Glancing behind, Krysty saw the crumbling forest was steadily
gaining on the bikes. "It's gaining on us!" she yelled, tears flowing
down her cheeks. It felt as if her hair were on fire, the pain almost
beyond endurance. She had a hard time thinking clearly, and more than
once the bike nearly toppled over from her clumsy driving. Silently,
she prayed to Gaia for the strength to live.
Their bikes riding side by side, the companions crashed through a
wall of thorny rosebushes, the safety cages holding most of the stems
at bay, but still their clothes snagged and trickles of blood flowed
from a dozen small cuts.
Ryan glanced into his rearview mirror. "We're not going to get
away!" he shouted grimly.
"We have to!" Mildred answered, then shrugged and dropped her heavy
med kit. "Heave the baggage! Lose everything!"
Stunned for a moment by the incredible act, Ryan resolutely reached
behind himself, grabbed a backpack and stuffed it through the warm bars
of his safety cage. When there was only one left, his speed noticeably
increased. The man hesitated for a heartbeat, then also threw away that
pack. Mildred knew her stuff, and whatever it was that was after them,
he didn't want it to reach them for the sake of a few pounds.
Dropping the subgun, J.B. watched the weapon fireball as the
crackling wave reached the blaster. The man hesitated for a tick, then
tossed away his precious accumulation of explosives and primers.
"Brace yourselves!" he shouted just as the bag thunderously
detonated, the blast toppling over the dying trees, bushes flying,
shrapnel zinging through the air in every direction.
Struggling with one arm at a time, Krysty got out of her heavy
bearskin coat and stuffed it through the cage. Dean dropped his
canteen, then the newly acquired Kalashnikov and the ammo clips. The
coat burst into flames, and the ammo exploded as the grass turned brown
underneath the items.
The brown line in the soil streaked after them, coming closer by the
second. Frantically, the companions emptied the pockets of MRE packs,
spare knives, extra ammo and everything else they could find.
"Radios!" Jak shouted, ripping the transmitter free and casting it
away.
With the motorcycles moving at top speed, the companions raced
through the forest in a nightmare of dodging trees and crashing through
bushes. Unstoppable, the death wave from the Kite swept onward, getting
closer and closer with each passing moment.
Chapter Twenty-One
Their load lightened, the companions began to pull away from the
wave of death, the crackling of the leaves slowly fading into the
distance. Soon it was gone from sight, and living green plants
surrounded them once more. The itching eased, and the metal of their
blasters started to cool. But the riders didn't slow their frantic pace
through the Tennessee woods. Soon, the trees began to thin, and the
companions broke out of the woods and onto smooth rolling grasslands
again. An hour passed in silent speed, clouds forming overhead to mask
the eternal stars and moon. Thankfully, there was no sign of the pools
and streams that had surrounded the redoubt before. The waters must
have receded over time and the land was alive again. But not for long.
"We should be safe now," Dean said hopefully. The boy held his
Browning Hi-Power and a single clip in sweaty hands, ready to lose both
should it prove necessary. He had tried unlacing his combat boots, but
it was plainly impossible to do that on a moving bike.
Shaking her head, Krysty released her hair from its confines, and
the fiery cascade flexed freely once more. "Thank Gaia that's over,"
she exhaled. "My hair was in agony!"
"Nobody stop until we reach the redoubt!" Mildred countered, still
hunched over the handlebars. "And watch the clouds! The Kite might be
skipping ahead of us, so we race straight into its beams."
Maneuvering his bike closer, Ryan shouted, "What was that?"
The open spaces allowing her to relax a notch, Mildred bit a lip and
tried to figure a way to explain what they had just faced. "In the
kitchens of the redoubts," she replied, "you've used the microwave oven
to boil water, and once we baked a potato. Same thing."
Ryan frowned as the engine of his bike sputtered, and he revved the
throttle. The Harley was dangerously low on fuel. "You called it a
Kite," he called out. "That a war satellite?"
She shrugged. "Not originally, but I guess it is now." The quivering
needle of the fuel gauge stopped moving as it reached the empty mark,
and Ryan concentrated on squeezing a few more miles out of the gas
vapors in the tank. Silas had found a microwave satellite and gotten
control with an old SETI dish. Good thing he had aced the old bastard
on sight. But if Silas was chilled, then who was operating the Kite?
The landscape began to take on a familiar shape, and Ryan began to
remember details of the last visit there, the fights, desperate
running, a bloody ambush and the endless chilling. It had been one of
their worst jumps, and the redoubt itself was as bare as a spent round.
There wasn't a can of beans, or anything useful inside just an armored
vault filled with predark works of art—bronzes statues and antique oil
paintings. Why would the Pentagon waste valuable space storing those
things away from the ravages of a nuke storm? That was just another of
the endless mysteries about the redoubts, and one he had no desire to
solve.
Just then a familiar shape rose from the ground in the glare of the
headlights. The front of the redoubt was as Ryan remembered, battered
and charred from the nuke blasts of skydark. But the armored door was
as sturdy as ever, and the companions would be safe once they got
inside.
"The redoubt!" Krysty shouted, slowing her speed.
Taking the lead, Ryan rolled his bike around the outcropping until
reaching the front of the underground base. Massive black doors stood
untarnished and immutable in a small recess, an armored keypad set into
the burnished jamb of the portal.
Braking to a halt, the companions turned off the engines and set the
kickstands. Silence greeted them, a soft wind blowing from the
direction of the distant forest.
"Thermal currents from the Kite," Mildred said to the unasked
question, as she stiffly climbed from the cage. For a second, she
looked for her med kit, then memory flared, and she grimly walked
toward the redoubt. They physician could assemble another kit over
time. More important, safety was only a few yards away.
Ryan was already standing at the door, tapping the entry code onto
the keypad when the ground underneath the man heaved and he was thrown
sprawling yards away.
Spitting curses, the companions drew their blasters as a nightmare
crawled out of the soil directly in front of the door. It was a twisted
mutie unlike anything they had ever seen before. The grotesque creature
possessed a misshapen head covered with different-sized eyes and
multiple ears. Its drooling mouth was filled with fangs, and a forked
tongue lolled over pale leathery lips. The long serpentine body was
covered with spotty fur as if it suffered from mange or rad poisoning.
However, massive muscles rolled beneath the leathery skin as the mutie
shambled closer on four powerful legs, two tiny shriveled limbs
dangling impotently from its hideous chest. Sharp claws ripped apart
the hard soil as the slavering beast started to crawl catlike toward
the companions.
"Silas!" J.B. cursed, working the bolt on his Uzi. "He knew we'd try
for the redoubt and left one of his DNA experiments for us!"
Rising to one knee, Ryan leveled the Steyr SSG-70. He was down to
only a few clips, but there was no time to waste with this mutie. They
had to get inside before the Kite returned. "Chill it!" he commanded,
triggering his longblaster.
In unison, the companions opened fire in a ragged volley, the
barrage of rounds tearing the screaming animal apart. It slumped to the
ground, bleeding from a dozen wounds.
"See any more around?" Ryan demanded, standing and chambering a
fresh round. He glanced at the ground for any suspicious movements,
then at the sky. The clouds were still thick and heavy. Good.
"Looks clear," Doc reported, studying the fields around them while
waving away the smoke from his LeMat.
Colt at the ready, Jak dropped to one knee and placed the flat of
his hand in the cold soil. "No vibrations," he reported.
"Nasty-looking bugger," J.B. stated, then stared in astonishment as
the dead mutie began to stir.
Sluggishly, the thing rose on its hind legs, the holes in its skin
closing into dainty puckered scars.
"By the Three Kennedys," Doc whispered as he switched the selector
pin on his LeMat from the .44 miniballs to the smoothbore .63 shotgun.
There was only a single load, but at such close range it should remove
the creature's head.
Hastily, Krysty thumbed fresh cartridges into her revolver as a rill
of porcupine quills extended protectively along the neck of the
snarling mutie. "Gaia protect us, it's regenerating," she said,
dropping a few rounds but reloading the blaster in record time. The
redhead closed the cylinder with a snap of her wrist and fired again
immediately. The soft-nosed bullets hit the creature in the chest and
neck with less effect this time. The wounds closed without scars after
only weeping a few drops of the weird semi-transparent green blood.
"How the hell are we going to chill something that can do that?" she
demanded, backing away.
"Don't have to chill it," Ryan yelled over his booming rifle. "Just
have to get past!"
Furiously working the bolt on his Steyr, Ryan pumped two rounds from
the longblaster directly into the beast, stalling for Doc until he was
ready. The long 7.62 mm cartridges each took out an eye, which started
to regrow. J.B. added a burst from the Uzi, concentrating on the chest.
Greenish blood spurted with every hit, the wounds closing faster as if
the mutie were accelerating the healing process.
Stepping closer, Doc ducked under a lashing tail and fired the LeMat
at point-blank range. The massive black-powder weapon vomited flame and
smoke from the wide muzzle, the shotgun round slamming the beast
backward against the door of the redoubt. But as the companions
watched, the growling mutie rose again. The gaping hole in its chest,
leaking a greenish ichor, began to close and the bleeding stopped.
Dodging to the left, then darting to the right, the mutie came ever
closer, a forked tongue running hungrily along its mottled jaws.
"Dark night!" J.B. snarled, releasing the Uzi and swinging the
S&W shotgun into play. Only four shells remained, and the Armorer
knew he had to make every one count.
Working the pump, he fired two shells at the creature, the spray of
flechettes tearing its head apart. But the bleeding pieces of flesh
slid together again, and a pair of scorpion tails arched from its
mottled back, the barbed tips glistening with moisture.
"Poison!" Mildred warned, targeting its face with her ZKR pistol.
Several of its eyes exploded from her soft lead rounds, and the hissing
mutie started directly toward her, the other orbs extending on pale
stalks.
Suddenly, clear moonlight flooded the battle scene.
"The Kite!" Krysty yelled, her flexing hair already coiling
protectively.
"Go for its head!" Ryan shouted, moving forward and firing with each
step. The companions aimed and unleashed a ragged volley, the beast
screaming in agony, the barrage of lead and steel tearing apart its
writhing form. But their weapons achieved only the same meager results.
The roar of an engine shook the night, and Jak raced away from the
redoubt on one of the stolen Harleys. The noise of the engine caught
the mutie by surprise, and it arched its back as if about to leap upon
the cowardly runaway. But the humans understood, and maintained their
useless blasterfire to hold the beast in place, as Jak turned the bike
and charged forward, gunning the big engine to top speed.
The engine coughed and died mere feet away from the snarling
creature, but continued rolling. The safety cage slammed into the
mutie, crushing it against the nuke-proof door of the redoubt with a
sickening crunch. Howling in pain, the bleeding creature clawed at the
metalwork, struggling wildly.
"Not dead? Try this!" Jak yelled, and fired his Colt Python directly
into its exposed brain, pink goo splattering onto the door and rocks.
Convulsing, the mutie jabbed the barbed tip of its scorpion tail
through the openings of the cage. Struggling to undo the lock of the
cage, Jak dropped his empty blaster and slashed at the creature with a
knife. It shook the wreckage in unbridled rage, and, incredibly, began
to shove the motorcycle off its trapped form.
"Cover fire!" J.B. shouted, emptying the shotgun as more pink brains
blew out of its smashed skull.
Only a second behind, Doc lunged forward, skewering the beast
through the chest, then twisting his sword, so the blade opened wide
the wound. Emerald blood poured from the gash, quickly slowing to a
trickle. A tail lashed at the old man, and he nimbly ducked out of the
way, slicing off the barbed tip.
A crackling sound could be heard from the distant line of trees,
withered leaves raining to the ground by the thousands.
Climbing on the wreckage, Krysty and Mildred emptied their blasters
at the creature, as Dean got Jak loose. They hastily retreated, and
seconds later Ryan crashed into the beast with another bike. A wash of
greenish blood vomited out the mutie's mouth, and Ryan fired his
handblaster at the beast. Ichor pouring from a dozen wounds, the mutie
spit sticky phlegm at the one-eyed man and demonically tried to rise
again.
Grinding gears, Ryan rolled the bike backward a few yards, then hit
the throttle and slammed into the creature again, driving the safety
cage of the first bike into its body, dicing the mutie into pieces.
Legs and claws wiggling, it began to reform once more, but it was
pinned helplessly to the wreckage.
"Stay close!" Ryan ordered, wriggling past the bikes and managing to
reach the keypad. It was covered with greenish blood, so he wiped the
alphanumeric pad clean with a bare hand and tapped in the entry code.
Avoiding the claws and whipping tail of the mutie, which were
stretching for them, the itching humans waited impatiently as the
massive doors cycled open, the brown grass sweeping closer by the
second.
"In!" Ryan commanded, and squeezed through the widening crack. As
the last person rushed through, the one-eyed man keyed the sequence
that would close the door.
Cutting away from the mouth of the access tunnel, just as a safety
precaution, J.B. paused as he looked over the garage of the underground
base. It seemed cleaner than he remembered from their last visit, and
there were tools on the walls. Dimly, he recalled the place had been
completely stripped, but they had been in so many redoubts it was easy
to get them confused occasionally.
"By gad, I hate Tennessee," Doc spit, bolstering his nearly spent
LeMat. "There are always traps of some kind at this accursed redoubt!"
"Check your ammo," Ryan said, checking his own blasters. The Steyr
was out, the SIG-Sauer down to six rounds.
"Out," J.B. snapped. "Haven't got a thing left."
Scowling, Dean dropped his clip and slapped it back in the butt of
his blaster. "Four rounds."
"One round," Mildred stated, patting her pockets. She had six speed
loaders for her target pistol, but none of them held a single bullet.
Just the casings she used for combat reloading.
"Same here," Krysty said, closing her revolver, then added, "You
want to drop that now, or are you keeping it as a souvenir?"
Jak stared at her, confused, then saw a ropy length of forked tongue
clenched tight in his grip. In disgust, he threw it away and wiped his
fingers clean on his pants. The teenager started to speak when alarms
cut loose all over the base, bells clanging, and Klaxons howling in
deafening volume.
"Fireblast! There must be leakage through the armor somewhere!" Ryan
cursed, looking about quickly. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary, but
then microwaves were invisible. "Head for the mat-trans chamber!"
Bypassing the bank of elevators, the companions raced down the
stairs. With each level they passed, the itchy sensation of the
microwaves lessened a little bit. Getting off at the fourth landing,
they raced down a long corridor lined with doors and slammed aside the
wooden door at the far end. Charging into the control room, the
companions slowed for a moment in spite of the horrible sensation on
their skin. The bodies of the dead from years before were gone, the
bullet holes in the consoles patched, the computers humming softly with
their lights twinkling. The spent brass covering the floor was gone,
and the walls looked freshly painted. Everything was clean and seemed
in proper working condition.
"Silas has been here." Krysty frowned, forcing herself not to cringe
from the growing misery of her living hair.
"Touch nothing!" J.B. warned, going to the door that led to the
mat-trans unit. He ran fingertips along the jamb and lintel before
opening the heavy portal.
"Clear," he reported. "Let's go!"
Rushing into the chamber, Ryan saw that the arma-glass walls had
also been painted, the deep purple identifying this as Tennessee now
painted over with a deep military green. However, the paint was peeling
from the armaglass. But the disguise might fool a casual observer.
"Hiding his location," Dean said, scratching at his forearms. "Smart
son of a bitch."
"Dead son of a bitch," Mildred corrected, then paused before
stepping onto the platform. "Damn. Think he might have jimmied the
controls?"
"Only one way to find out," Ryan said, and, pulling out an empty
clip for the Steyr, he tossed it the chamber.
The companions closed the door and waited in mounting pain, then
hastily opened it again. The metal-and-clear-plastic clip lay in plain
sight on the cold floor on the chamber. Nothing had happened.
"He did something, or the microwave is affecting it," J.B. said
woodenly, the alarms screaming in the background.
Touching her quivering hair, Krysty winced slightly. "It doesn't
hurt as badly here in the mat-trans unit," she said. "Mebbe we can
ride out the attack. The blues can't keep the Kite focused on us
forever."
"Yes, they can," Mildred replied coldly. "And this is only buying us
time. We're still being chilled, just slower than outside."
"What do?" Jak asked, rubbing his itchy face.
"It seems that we are to die today," Doc said, bowing his head in
finality. "Microwaves are seeping in, and the mat-trans unit is
deactivated. What other course do we have?"
"Fuck that We're trapped, not aced," Ryan spit, rubbing a fist in
the palm of his hand. "Mebbe…"
"What?" Krysty barked impatiently, her hands tucked under her arms,
to keep from clawing her skin off.
His empty socket feeling as if it were filled with hungry ants, Ryan
scowled. "There's a fission reactor in the basement. The extra
shielding might help protect us."
Tossing away his hat, J.B. wiped the hot sweat from his face.
"Mebbe," he panted in agreement. "B-but for how long?"
"Till we starve to death, or they fucking turn it off!" Ryan
growled, a red fury growing inside the man. "And then we'll go back and
smash that bastard machine just like we did Silas."
"A chance for life is all I ask," Doc said weakly. "Lead on, my dear
Ryan."
Turning for the door, Ryan braced himself for the pain waiting
outside the chamber. Then, closing his good eye tight, the man charged
into the control room, blindly stumbling through the maze of the
redoubt for the faint hope of survival deep within the radioactive
bowels of the military base.
Epilogue
Alone in the laboratory, Major Sheffield sat the computer desk and
carefully turned on predark machine. It cycled through the boot
programs in a few seconds, and the screen lit with a picture of a
hundred tiny icons. Reaching into his shirt pocket, the sec man pulled
out a CD-ROM, wiped some blood off the disk, then inserted it into the
little tray as he saw Silas do once. The device pulled the drawer back
inside, made soft noises, then cleared into a picture of Silas.
"Hello, Major," the whitecoat said without a smile. "If you are
listening to this, then I am dead, most likely from my own hand to stop
the nightmares. If so, now you are charged with the all-important task
of purifying North America, and the saving of the human race from the
growing threat of the muties."
"Think again, norm," the major said softly, his two hearts beating
hard. "And now it's Baron Sheffield."
The laser-disk ghost of Silas Jamaisvous went on undisturbed, "…and
thus the redoubts were originally conceived during World War II as
haven against the crude nukes of the time. However, upon creation of
the mat-trans unit, several interesting possibilities became evident
and the Pentagon decided to implement a particularly bold plan called
Overproject Whisper…"
The voice went on for hours, and Sheffield stayed through the night,
drinking in the most amazing story he had ever heard, all the more so
because he knew it to be completely true.
Almost unnoticed in the background, the computer that controlled the
Kite blinked steadily as the orbiter poured gigawatts of raw power onto
an insignificant patch of grasslands in the hills of Tennessee.
When the disk eventually finished, Sheffield turned the machine off
and walked to the barred window to watch the sun rise over the craggy
mountains of the valley.
"My mountains," he whispered, and slowly began to smile. "My valley,
my continent!"
There was a crackle from the intercom. "Sir?" a voice asked in
concern. "I heard a shout. Is everything all right, Major?"
"Everything is fine," the mutie replied. "And the next time you call
me 'Major,' I'll rip out your guts and feed them to the dogs!"
"S-sir?"
"I am Baron Sheffield!" he roared. Then he added softly, "The new
ruler of North America."