The Fae Killers Compendium

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The Fae Killers Compendium Page 30

by Jaxon Reed


  Just as Rick had warned, Germany seemed hell-bent on war. Despite controlling a large chunk of Europe in one way or another, Hitler moved by force and deception to grab the rest. For a while, the Blitz was on. He pounded London and other parts of England with wave after wave of bombers. Britain held strong, putting up an amazing effort against extraordinary odds, especially with the help of a new invention called “radar.” It was an acronym for something, but she could not remember what. It gave a warning before each wave of bombers arrived, letting England scramble fighters to meet them in the sky.

  Every day Germany lost more airplanes than the Brits, despite their superior aircraft. Finally Hitler turned his attention elsewhere. He headed east, annexing Poland and the Baltic States. This summer he would advance toward Moscow and try to take over Russia, too, if current reports were true.

  The Texans wasted no time and moved to help Britain, immediately establishing supply lines for food, ammunition and armaments. Under something called “Lend-Lease,” the republic shipped untold numbers of guns, trucks, planes, boats and other equipment to Britain and Russia so they could effectively mount a strong defense against the Germans. The idea was to send the allies materiel now and they could pay Texas back later. By the time the Blitz ended, Texas had introduced thousands of B-24 Instigators to England, their first generation of modern bombers. Now the Texans and Brits flew daily raids into Germany, reaching Berlin and elsewhere with regularity.

  Meanwhile, the Japanese made a sneak attack against the naval base in Honolulu. But the Texans were waiting for them. Tipped off by credible intelligence from Ambassador MacGraw (who, true to his word, acted on the information Rick had provided), most of the Texan carrier group waited patiently offshore for the Japanese to make their move. Then they attacked the attackers, sinking or capturing all the Japanese ships and taking out most of their airplanes and mini-subs.

  Texas was now at war in two hemispheres simultaneously. But the republic seemed up to the challenge, with all domestic factories turned to wartime production and churning out equipment and weapons for herself and her allies.

  As for Angela, multilingual and skilled in firearms as well as hand-to-hand combat, she was given a new assignment, and found herself parachuting into Normandy one cold winter night. She was tasked with meeting the French Resistance and helping to repatriate downed allied airmen.

  The system worked fairly well, so long as they avoided the SS patrols scouring the countryside every night. The team recovered the airmen, dressed them in civilian clothes, gave them counterfeit papers, and put them on trains bound for Calais or other coastal towns. There, local members of the resistance hid them until a British ship dropped anchor offshore at night. Quietly, a fisherman would row out to the ship, transfer the airmen, and slip back into dock under the cover of darkness. The men returned to England and rejoined their units where they could continue the bombing runs on Germany.

  Angela felt happy to do her part in helping to find the men in the woods who made it down alive. Her French was passable, and the small team of men she worked with each night acted very professionally. Neither Pierre, nor Robert, not even the hopelessly romantic Luc had made one unwanted pass at her.

  Of course, she reflected, part of that may have had to do with the Nazi SS officer she killed shortly after hitting the ground.

  Evidently the officer became suspicious of the airplane flying over at a low altitude in the middle of the night by itself, and he must have caught a glimpse of her descent in the dark. He came upon the clearing she landed in while she was busy rolling up the parachute. Her plans were to bury it, leaving no sign of her arrival. But, trying to gather back together what once had fit into a relatively small backpack had proven to be no small task. He surprised her showing up in the dark while her back was turned.

  When Robert and the others found her half an hour later, they also discovered the corpse of the SS officer lying on the ground, his neck slit and blood drenching the front of his uniform. Angela looked up at them holding his ID card in one hand and several hundred Reichsmarks in the other.

  No one dared lay a hand on her in the weeks since.

  She had been fearless in helping to rescue downed airmen almost every night, sleeping in the daytime at a remote cottage deep in the woods that the team shared. On occasion, someone from a nearby town would show up with food and supplies. The airmen they rescued stayed in the cottage too, returning with the couriers when their forged papers were ready.

  It’s a good life, Angela thought. At least I’m making a difference.

  She jolted back into the present when the airman stepped on a stick and a loud crack echoed through the darkness. Pierre, standing to her right, whispered a soft oath in French. He was the shortest of the trio, and the only one accompanying her tonight. The anti-aircraft guns along the coast, not far from here, had successfully downed a handful of Instigators. From the cottage, the team spied chutes dropping from both the north and the south, so they split up. Robert and Luc headed north while she and Pierre went in the other direction.

  Angela could wait no longer. She whispered loudly into the darkness, “Airman! Identify yourself!”

  The young man froze, then crept forward, rustling the grass and leaves as he moved. He finally stepped out of the gloom and into their sight. Angela could make out a tall young man, certainly not a month over 18, she thought, with close-cropped hair. His cap must have been lost in the jump from the plane. He stood about six-two and looked for all the world like a typical all-Texan boy fresh out of high school. He was probably playing football a few months ago, she thought.

  Instinctively, Angela looked for the stripes on his shoulder and realized he was an enlisted airman. So, not an officer.

  Makes sense, considering his age, she thought. Probably a tailgunner or something.

  The B-24 had a crew of ten, after all, with more enlisted men than officers. No matter, he would be returned to his base in England if at all possible. Each airman saved and sent back helped the war effort.

  Everyone froze at the sound of a heavy switch clicking on. Klieg lights flooded the area, followed by the snicks of Mauser bolts sliding home.

  A Nazi SS officer made his way forward, the lights behind him drowning out his features until he drew closer.

  “So . . .”

  He smiled at Angela and at last she could make out his face. It was covered in scars, and she realized he must be an alumnus of one of the Teutonic fraternities practicing Mensur, a form of fencing in which two opponents faced off without helmets. Each student hacked away at the other’s head until someone was too bloody to continue.

  And they think Texans have crazy traditions, she thought. They even think Texan football is a violent sport while they hack at each other with swords.

  The officer spoke flawless English. He said, “We have set up this little reception party in the same place for several nights. So nice of you to finally join us in our little clearing.”

  Angela said, “Tut mir leid, Herr—”

  He cut her off with a raised finger and said, “Yes, yes. I’m sure you have some convincing story or other about being out here to catch frogs for the local restaurants. Of course, there are no ponds within many meters of here, and I have no time to listen to such nonsense anyway.”

  Actually, Angela thought, that indeed was going to be the story she was prepared to tell. It seemed like a good excuse to explain why they were out there in the middle of the night.

  The SS officer continued in English. He said, “No, I think you are the famous Texan agent, code-named Angel. To what does it reference? The Angel of Death?”

  He smiled at her, coldly. The smile never touched his eyes.

  Angela looked back at him with an innocent expression fixed on her face and said, “Parlez-vous français?”

  His smile grew broader. He said, “No, no, no, my dear. I distinctly heard you summon the airman in English.”

  She held his eye without fear for a solid minute.
The officer nodded, a satisfied look crossing his face.

  “I believe you are the OSS agent code-named ‘Angel.’ And, even if you are not . . . no matter.”

  He stepped back, out of the way of the soldiers behind him. He barked out a command over his shoulder.

  “Erschiessen!”

  Several things happened at once. A dozen Mauser rifles misfired, their chambers blowing open as if the muzzles were clogged.

  A bright flash of blue-green light appeared as a sudden slit in reality opened. Two people ran out of it with guns blazing.

  The soldiers went down and most of the lights were shot out in a hail of bullets.

  The shooters walked into the now reduced light, and Angela smiled at the sight of Rick dressed in a thick black turtleneck, black trousers and combat boots, with double-shoulder holsters strapped on.

  Next to him stood one of the most attractive women Angela had ever seen, with long curly black locks reaching down to the middle of her back. She was dressed the same as Rick and carried similar pistols, with identical holsters.

  The SS officer turned to look at them with a reddening face and rage in his eyes.

  He said, “Was machen—”

  BLAM!

  He crumpled to the ground, a red hole in his forehead gushing blood.

  Everybody turned to look at the woman, whose gun still smoked from the shot. She said, “I hate socialists. National Socialists are the worst.”

  Rick smiled again and said, “It’s good to see you, Angela. This is Nancy Chance. Nancy, meet Angela.”

  Nancy holstered her gun and stuck her hand out. Angela shook it. Then Angela turned back to Rick and said, “Boy, am I glad to see you.”

  Rick said, “Yeah, Cait told us you were in trouble. We got here as fast as we could.”

  “Well, I’m glad Cait is looking out for me. What have you been doing these past few months? Looks like your gunshot wounds are all healed up.”

  “For us it’s only been three days. Time works differently back home.”

  Rick looked at Pierre who stared back at him with a stunned expression on his face.

  Angela smiled and said, “Don’t worry about him. He doesn’t understand much English.”

  They all turned to look at the young airman, who gulped. He too seemed rather astonished at the turn of events.

  “Don’t mind us,” Nancy said. “Just go where they tell you and get back to England.”

  She turned to Angela and said, “In the meantime we’d like to help you kill some more Nazis. I hate ’em. Hate the language, too. What’s up with that word order in German? Their verbs suck.”

  Angela said, “Well, actually, I haven’t been killing many Nazis. We’ve been getting these guys back and trying to avoid them as much as possible.”

  Nancy nodded and said, “Yeah, I’m thinking Rick and I are going to engage in some good old-fashioned sabotage. Blow up some bridges. Maybe ambush some troops.”

  Rick said, “Nancy was killed by a fae posing as a German agent on her world back in the day. She still holds a grudge.”

  Angela said, “Oh, I see. Well, that makes sense. I’d love to talk more about it. Why don’t you two help us grab the IDs and anything else on the soldiers’ bodies, and we’ll make our way back to the cottage. If the other men beat us home they’ll have some tea on, I hope.”

  Rick and Nancy smiled, and moved to help loot the corpses.

  Epilogue

  Tiff groaned, but no sound escaped her lips. She tried to speak. She shouted at the top of her lungs, but no noise came out.

  Worse than that, she could not feel vibrations, the sensation of air flowing past her vocal cords.

  She should have felt something. As far as she knew, as far as she could tell, she was still in corporeal form. Yet, all around her was . . . nothing. A great expanse of emptiness, everywhere.

  She mentally commanded her right hand to pinch her left arm.

  Nothing.

  The command seemed to go out from her brain, as if the brain knew her hands and arms were still attached. But, nothing happened.

  She floated aimlessly. Or at least, she thought she floated. There was no up or down. Nothing to get a bearing on.

  The lack of sensation, the endless nothingness, would surely drive her insane.

  She closed her eyes again. Or at least, she made the mental command to do so. It made no difference. Nothingness stretched before her, whether her eyes were shut or open.

  Desperately, she reached out in her mind for something, anything, to replace the void around her.

  She remembered Darius Booker, and his reddening face when she first met him and said he must not date much.

  Darius, the way he looked at her at that party at Al Capone’s mansion.

  Darius throwing himself in front of her when Sleaghan sent a bolt her way, and how he was willing to die for her even though he just met her.

  Darius, and the look he gave her when she let Capone’s goons drown him in cement boots, knowing that in a short while she would see him resurrected. But he wasn’t thinking that; the look on his face was one of terror and betrayal as they threw him into the water.

  She hugged herself, or at least commanded her unfelt arms to hug her unseen self, and focused on Darius, his sweet face filling her thoughts. She remembered his scent, the way he kissed . . .

  -+-

  “It’s an excellent spell.”

  The two fae hovered in spirit form near a large glowing obelisk. The black stone monument stood alone in a field of green grass stretching to the horizon in all directions.

  The taller fae nodded, not in thanks for the compliment but in agreement.

  He said, “Indeed. I have been working on this for countless years. It’s based on sensory deprivation chambers, which always seem to gain popularity in the United States during the 1960s and 70s.”

  The shorter fae nodded, his slight essence in the physical realm reflecting a few shards of sunlight with the motion.

  He spoke cautiously out of respect for the taller fae. He said, “And what will you do when they inevitably find her, my lord?”

  The tall fae smiled, and even the bright sunlight seemed to dim a bit in that cold, cold grin.

  Behind him, slits in reality opened. First half a dozen, then three dozen, then dozens more.

  From each slit, a spectral fae in his natural form entered the world around the obelisk. Their short, translucent gray bodies filtered out the sun, casting horrible shadows on the grass.

  “When they find her,” the tall fae said, “we’ll be ready.”

  The End

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  Booked for Death

  -+-

  Booked for Death: A Fae Killers Novel

  Copyright (c) 2020 by Jaxon Reed

  Formatting and editing provided by edbok.com

  Cover art by Jacqueline Sweet

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Historical figures are used in fictional settings and dialogues, within a fictitious alternate universe. In all other respects, any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  -+-

  The Fae Killers Series

  Tiff in Time

  Ghost of a Chance

  Rick or Treat

  Booked for Death

  https://www.amazon.com/Jaxon-Reed/e/B00Q9N5TQ2/

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Ep
ilogue

  1

  In the multiverse, thousands of Earths exist in thousands of dimensions.

  In the beginning God created the very first universe, the original one, and its world is now known as O-Earth. There, the great drama between Lucifer and Jesus culminated.

  In the blink of an eye from a cosmic perspective, God created the multiverse immediately after bringing O-Earth into existence.

  In the multiverse, versions of Earth co-exist on their own timelines in their own realities. Some follow Original Earth’s blueprint closely. Others depart wildly from the first one.

  Of the alternates, some still exist with no monitors. Most are in timelines before a catastrophic flood wipes out almost all life on land, and thus not really worthy of being monitored yet.

  The Computerized Artificial Intelligence Terminal known more commonly as Cait, along with the Electronic Books computer known as Eb, discerned that of these thousands of unmonitored alternates six were promising locations for the captured fae hunter known as Tyfainne.

  Thus, all six were to be explored and monitors placed so that the computers could get a better look at those nascent worlds, and hopefully find the missing huntress.

  On one of the alternates, a thin blue-green line appeared in the air, stretching vertically near the ground in the middle of an empty, foggy field.

  It hovered motionless for a moment, then slowly widened, revealing a very large and unadorned room save for two people impatiently waiting.

  When it grew big enough, a young man stepped through wearing jeans and a t-shirt over an iron mesh undersuit. A short young woman of Asian descent carrying a bag full of weapons stepped out after him.

 

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