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Fire & Ash bi-4

Page 29

by Jonathan Maberry


  He’d planned for it.

  Brother Peter was too good to be defeated in such a duel. Maybe Tom, at the top of his game, might have done it. Maybe a younger and faster Joe Ledger might have. But no one in that hallway — not Nix or Lilah, not Grimm, not Chong, or Colonel Reid even if she had more bullets — none of them could ever beat Brother Peter.

  Benny knew that Brother Peter would parry his attack because Peter was expecting the attack. Benny knew the reaper would stab him, because Peter was too good not to. So Benny attacked and was parried, and he was stabbed. And he was ready for all that. His first move was a big, fast kirioroshi, a downward cut. His raised arms gave Brother Peter something to block but also kept the killer’s knives away from his own throat.

  In the last half of that one second…

  As the blade chunked into his back, Benny pivoted in place. A sloppy move filled with agony, but perfect in its selection. It used the force of the stabbing knife to power the turn as Benny swung his sword between himself and Brother Peter. A yoko-giri, a tight lateral cut that cleaved the air between them.

  Except that there was not enough distance for the sword to pass unhindered.

  Brother Peter was too close.

  Too close to avoid that blade.

  Too close to escape the moment and all its red truths.

  The sword drew a line through both of the reaper’s biceps, and through the flat plates of the man’s pectoral muscles, and grated along the bones in his chest, grooving the sternum so deeply that it collapsed inward. Brother Peter coughed as those jagged bones did awful work inside his body.

  The kami katana flew from Benny’s hands as he staggered past the point of impact. He managed a single reflexive step before the pain drove him down to his knees. He fell against Colonel Reid, who — like everyone else — stared in abject horror at what had just happened.

  The second came and went, and in its wake there was wreckage that would last forever.

  Brother Peter stood for a moment longer. The stern, unlined face of the man who had never smiled now wore its first smile. A bemused smile, as he looked down at his chest and saw the red mouth that stretched all the way across his body. He dropped to his knees with such force that the sound of bone on concrete was like gunshots.

  Benny turned and looked at him. They were only three feet apart, both of them on their knees.

  “You — you haven’t won,” said Brother Peter in a voice that was wet and trembling.

  There was a sound — the sharp, harsh, metallic sound of someone working the bolt of a machine gun — and Benny saw Joe Ledger, still bleeding, his face gray with pain, leaning against the far wall. His weapon was in his hands, barrel pointed at the remaining reapers.

  “Yes, we have,” said Benny, and his voice was firmer than he thought it would be. He expected to speak in a dying whisper, but the lights in his head were not going out. Not yet. “We have a cure now. We win.”

  The reaper sneered at him, blood dribbling from between his lips. “Take your… cure… see if it will save… anyone…”

  His words were torn apart by a fit of coughing that sent him crashing to the stones. He fell over and stared at Benny with glazing eyes, but his lips still moved. Despite the agony in his own body, Benny crawled to him and bent to listen.

  “Your sins… are already… paid for…,” wheezed Brother Peter. “Even now… Saint John and our… army… are closing in on your… home.”

  “Home? What are you talking about?”

  Brother Peter was fading quickly, the lights burning out in his eyes. “Mountainside will burn.”

  With that smile still on his lips, the reaper sagged back and seemed to settle against the cold stone. Benny wanted to grab him, to shake life back into him, to force him to live another moment longer so he could make sense of what he’d just said.

  Mountainside will burn.

  It was insane, impossible. How could the reapers know about Mountainside? Then he thought of the slip of paper he’d found that showed how many reapers were already in California. Two armies… one of forty-five hundred and another with over nineteen thousand of the killers. Already in California.

  And they knew the name of Benny’s hometown.

  They knew about Mountainside.

  God…

  How could his town defend itself? And with what? A tiny town watch and some fence guards? A frail chain-link fence?

  Against an army of twenty-four thousand killers?

  Suddenly Benny felt himself falling over.

  He felt hands catching him. Women hovered over him.

  Dr. McReady.

  Colonel Reid.

  They were both speaking at once, shouting, calling his name, yelling at each other.

  Then the sound of gunfire drowned it all out.

  Benny saw reapers trying to fight their way to Brother Peter; saw them suddenly jerk to a stop and dance like marionettes on the strings of a madman, their twitches and jumps purposeless. As they fell, their bodies riddled with bullet holes, Benny saw Lilah and Chong facing each other, both of them crouching like animals.

  He bared his teeth at her.

  She bared hers at him.

  Chong attacked, pouncing like a panther; but the Lost Girl moved into the attack, slapping his head to one side, wrapping a muscular brown arm around his throat, bearing him to the ground, wrestling him, pinning him, screaming and screaming a single word that Benny fought to understand.

  “Pills! PILLS!”

  Nix stood there, torn between rushing to her and rushing to Benny.

  Benny managed to raise one arm and made a pushing gesture toward Lilah.

  She needs you, he wanted to say. Chong needs you. Help them.

  Grimm stood by Joe Ledger, who had collapsed into a limp sprawl.

  Benny tried to say something that would make sense of this moment.

  He needed to tell Joe and Nix and Lilah about what Brother Peter had whispered to him.

  Mountainside will burn.

  But when he opened his mouth, all he could do was scream.

  Then a hand of darkness wrapped its cold fingers around him and closed them into a fist.

  PART FOUR

  INVICTUS

  Out of the night that covers me,

  Black as the Pit from pole to pole,

  I thank whatever gods may be

  For my unconquerable soul.

  In the fell clutch of circumstance

  I have not winced nor cried aloud.

  Under the bludgeonings of chance

  My head is bloody, but unbowed.

  — WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY, “INVICTUS”

  CHAPTER 86

  A voice said, “Yo, monkey-banger… you going to sleep forever?”

  Benny’s first reaction was surprise. In his dreams he was dead, killed by Brother Peter or eaten by zoms. Or gored by a white rhino. Or shot by Preacher Jack.

  But dead in any case.

  His second reaction was confusion. Not at being alive, but at who was talking to him.

  That wasn’t the right voice. It wasn’t Joe, and it wasn’t any of the girls. It wasn’t even Brother Albert.

  Whose voice was that? It sounded like…

  He carefully, tentatively opened one eye.

  He was in a hospital bed. Metal tubing for the frame, stiff white sheets, the pervasive smell of antiseptic with other, nastier smells buried beneath it. Electric lights in the ceiling.

  There was a chair beside his bed and a figure sitting in it. Thin, angular, and impossible.

  “Ch-Chong?” stammered Benny.

  “What’s left of him,” said his friend. Louis Chong looked like a stick-figure version of himself. He was wrapped in a blanket, cradling a cup of steaming tea between his palms. His skin was a dreadful shade of gray-green. His hair was freshly washed and combed back from his face. “Welcome back from the land of the dead.”

  “How?” pleaded Benny. “How are you — I mean—”

  “You guys saved me,” s
aid Chong.

  Benny had to reach deep into the shadows that clung to his memories. He had only a vague idea where he was — the infirmary at Sanctuary — and an even vaguer idea of how he got there. The most recent memories that were sharp and clear involved the hidden bioweapons lab built into the baked rocks of Zabriskie Point. He remembered Dr. McReady, the mutagen… and Archangel.

  “The… pills?” he asked tentatively.

  “The pills,” Chong said, nodding. “Nix and Lilah told me how you found Dr. McReady and brought her back here.”

  Benny lay on his side, and his body did not seem to want to move. He raised his head and looked around. Most of the staff were sleeping in their beds, but a few ragged-looking nurses were working to clean them up. One was helping a newly recovered soldier to his feet. No one screamed or thrashed.

  “Archangel really works,” said Benny. “God…”

  “It was weird,” said Chong slowly. “I could feel the stuff in the pills working right away, but it was like someone was throwing buckets of water on a brush fire in my head. Every second was another bucket. How long before I stopped wanting to do crazy things to people — like fricking eat them? Hours, man. And even longer before I could actually say that to Lilah so she’d untie me. But that was all last night.”

  “Last night? What time is it—?”

  “Past six in the morning now. Best I can tell, you’ve been out of it since around ten last night. So about eight hours.” He sighed. “Been a long night, man.”

  “Do you… do you remember what happened after Riot brought you here?” Benny paused. “Do you remember being… um… sick?”

  A shadow passed across Chong’s face. “I remember all of it. Every last minute. Getting shot with an arrow… the ride here on Riot’s quad. The changes. God… the hunger. I even remember you coming to visit me in my cell.” He touched his temple. “It’s all up here for me any time I want to look at it.”

  He spoke in the ironic, amused tone he always used, but it was clear that demons had taken up residence in the house of his memories, and Benny wondered if they could ever be exorcised.

  “Hey, man,” he said, “we found the cure, right? Let’s focus on that…. ” His voice trailed off as pain flickered behind Chong’s eyes. “What is it?”

  “Benny… about that. Those pills… they’re not really a cure. They’re a treatment. I’m still sick. If I take the pills I’ll still be me, more or less. But if I stop, I go back to being that thing you saw in the cage. That’s how it’s going to be. Unless they come up with a real cure, something that gets this out of my system forever, I’ll always have to take medicine. And… I’ll always have to be really careful. This is contagious, y’know?”

  Benny swallowed a lump the size of a fist. “And… Lilah?”

  “She knows. We have to be really, really careful. We can touch and all, and we can kiss. But for anything else… Jeez, Benny, this is crazy. I love her, man,” said Chong, wiping at his eyes. “I love her more than anything, but I don’t want to make her sick.”

  “I know…”

  “No,” said Chong, “you don’t. I told her that she should stay away from me. She shouldn’t ever touch me; she shouldn’t ever get close to me. Dr. McReady told her the same thing….”

  “What did Lilah say?”

  Chong gave a short, rueful laugh. “She threatened to punch Dr. McReady’s teeth down her throat and told me to stop being a stupid town boy. She said that if I ever tried to go away from her again, she’d break my legs. She’s very romantic, that girl. Sweet as a kitten… if a kitten was a Siberian tiger with mood issues.”

  Benny grinned. “Yeah, but for some inexplicable reason she loves you.”

  “That only proves how crazy she is.”

  Benny looked around. “Hey — where’s Nix?”

  “Nix was here until like a minute before you woke up. I think she went to the bathroom. They have actual bathrooms here. No squatting behind bushes and wiping your butt with poison ivy.”

  “That’s not exactly what we did.”

  “Felt like it.”

  “And where’s Lilah?”

  “Ah,” he said, his smile fading. “The doctors wanted to give her something called an MRI. No idea what that is, but they said that she might have a skull fracture.” He shook his head. “I can’t have anything happen to her, Benny. Nothing.”

  Benny reached out to try and give him a reassuring pat on the arm, but then winced as pain shot through his back.

  “Owwww! What the hell?”

  Chong nodded. “Yeah, they said the painkillers would be wearing off pretty soon.”

  “Painkillers…? For what?”

  “Aww, it’s so cute that you thought of me first before remembering that you had a big ol’ sword fight with a psycho killer. That little twinge you’re feeling is a knife wound, genius. They said that the anesthetic might make you a little slow. Not that this is a new mental state for you.”

  “Bite me,” said Benny through gritted teeth.

  “No thanks,” said Chong. “From now on I’m going to explore that whole vegan thing.”

  “This… hurts. How bad is it? What happened?”

  “Basically you got stabbed in the wrong place,” Chong said, and he told Benny enough so that the door of memories opened up. The fight with Brother Peter replayed in Benny’s mind with painful clarity.

  “How am I not dead?”

  “Because fortune favors the stupid,” said Chong. “The knife hit your ribs at the wrong angle. Didn’t puncture anything important enough to kill you. More like a scratch.”

  “Could have freaking fooled me. If I’m only scratched, why did I pass out?”

  “Because you’re a girlie-man?”

  “Really, seriously, bite me.”

  “They said it was blood loss, shock, and something about nerve compression. They put in a crapload of stitches. They said that you’ll be able to get out of bed today, though only for a couple of minutes at a time. The armor you were wearing kept the knife from going in too deep. And they examined Brother Peter’s knife. There was no infectious matter on it. Not like on the arrow I got shot with.”

  “That’s something.”

  “I can’t believe you agreed to a duel with a guy who makes Charlie Pink-eye look like a punk.”

  “It wasn’t a duel. I had a plan.”

  “A plan to get stabbed?”

  “Yes,” Benny said, and he explained what he’d done. “It was like sacrificing a queen to get a checkmate.”

  Chong stared at him. “That hovers somewhere between the bravest thing I ever heard of and the stupidest. It’s probably both.”

  “Probably,” agreed Benny.

  Chong shook his head. “As for the rest, I got bits and pieces of everything else. That guy Joe is here somewhere too. Is he the same Joe Ledger from the Zombie Cards?”

  “Yes. Is he all right?”

  “He caught a break too. They operated on him and were able to save his life. Lots of damage, though. Dr. McReady said it’ll be months before he can fight again.”

  “Oh, man…”

  “Point is, Benny, we’re both alive, and so are Nix and Lilah.” Chong paused. “After what happened, after things started to go bad in the forest out there… I thought this was it, you know? I thought we were all dead. It seemed like the logical end to all of this. I mean, who were we? Four kids who had no business leaving home. Okay, so maybe Lilah’s different, but after Tom died, we should have gone back to Mountainside.”

  And that fast the cobwebs in Benny’s head blew away.

  “Mountainside!” he cried. “Oh my God!”

  CHAPTER 87

  They formed a circle around Joe Ledger’s bed. Benny in a wheel-chair, Chong and Lilah holding hands, Nix standing next to Benny. Dr. McReady and Colonel Reid were there too.

  The ranger was awake and in great pain. His color was bad, and sweat beaded his forehead. Dr. McReady was angry with him because he refused to take any pain med
s.

  “I need to think,” he growled, “and I can’t do that pumped full of morphine.”

  “Pain increases stress and—”

  “Oh, stick a sock in it, Monica,” he fired back. “I’ve had a lot worse than—”

  “I know, I know, Joe, I’ve heard all the stories. You’ve been shot, stabbed, run over, and mauled by wild animals. I’m very impressed with your level of testosterone, but the simple fact remains that those injuries happened to a much younger man and—”

  “Like I said, stick a sock in it.”

  Grimm — no longer wearing his armor — lay beside the bed and gave a hearty whuff.

  Joe turned his red-rimmed, bleary eyes to Benny. “Go on, kid… what did you want to tell us?”

  Benny repeated what Brother Peter had said with his dying breath.

  Mountainside will burn.

  “We have to get home,” finished Benny.

  “We can’t,” said Colonel Reid. “We’ve secured this facility, but topside it’s still a war zone. All my soldiers are either dead or in the infirmary, and there are half a million infected out there. More, now that they’ve probably killed all the people in the hangars. God knows how many reapers.”

  “And all the monks,” said Nix. She wore a fresh bandage over the cut from Brother Peter.

  Chong said, “What about Riot and that little girl, Eve?”

  No one wanted to meet his eyes.

  “They were up there,” said Benny. “We… didn’t see them when we landed.”

  The implications of that hung in the air.

  “You’re saying they’re dead?” asked Chong.

  “There are places to hide,” said Joe weakly. “And Riot knows every one of them.”

  “Maybe,” said Reid, “but that doesn’t change anything. We don’t have the manpower to take the compound back from the dead, and we can’t call for help. The reapers trashed the communications center. And we’re running on the backup generator because they destroyed the main power plant.”

  “We can’t be stuck down here,” said Benny, banging his fist on the metal tubing of Joe’s bed. “Our town—”

  “Your town might as well be on the far side of the moon,” said Colonel Reid. “Those balloons were filled with the mutagen. It’s a red powder, sticks to everything. Until the mutagen weakens the infected through decomposition, we’re trapped. I just hope the generator lasts long enough for that to happen.”

 

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