Children of the Cull

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Children of the Cull Page 12

by Cavan Scott

She hesitated, weighing up whether to get me to take it out or do it herself. She went for the former, and I did as I was told, bringing out an old battered mobile phone, which I dutifully offered her, looking her full in the eye all the time. She glanced down at the phone, and I struck.

  Dropping the phone, I swept my hand into the wrist of her gun arm. She fired, doing permanent damage to my eardrum, but the bullet ended up in the plasterwork, not me. There was no time for finesse. I shoulder barged her, sending us both crashing to the floor. Scrabbling for her gun arm with my left hand, I found her throat with my right. She kicked and thrashed, but I was too heavy, pinning her arm down, crushing the breath from her. She gasped, her eyes wide, her struggles diminishing by the second.

  I took no pleasure from this. I’d liked her, too.

  Perhaps that’s what made me sloppy.

  The knife went into my thigh, almost to the hilt. I cried out, releasing my pressure on her neck, enough for her to pull the blade free and find another home between my ribs.

  She heaved against me and I rolled onto my back, the knife still sticking out of my side. Brennan scrambled to her feet, bringing her gun down to bear.

  My hand went to my pocket as I cursed myself for being a stupid old man, and a shot rang out.

  Brennan’s body toppled forward to land beside me.

  My head swimming, I looked up to see Jasmine standing at the bottom of the stairs, a briefcase in one hand and my P99 in the other.

  IT WAS ALL a bit of a blur after that. I remember Jasmine falling to her knees beside me, checking my injuries. I screamed at her not to remove the knife. It was plugging the wound. If she pulled it out, there was no telling what damage it would do.

  And then I think I was sick.

  Some reunion.

  After that there were only snatches of memory. Jasmine getting me to my feet, yelling at me not to die. My arm was around her shoulders, and we were stumbling through sliding doors.

  A lift. You weren’t supposed to use lifts in emergencies.

  This was an emergency. wasn’t it?

  Sirens.

  Gunfire.

  More doors.

  Darkness.

  When I awoke, I was on a bed. I tried to move, but thick leather straps cut into my arms and legs. There were restraints over my chest as well. What was happening?

  I struggled, and a shadow fell over me, blocking out the harsh lights in the ceiling above.

  A face coming into focus.

  Her face.

  Of sorts.

  Her skin wasn’t as smooth as I remembered, her cheeks more pronounced, eyes sunken. Her beautiful hair had been cropped short, turned prematurely grey.

  I wasn’t exactly an oil painting myself.

  “Jasmine?”

  “Shhh,” she said, stroking the side of my face. “You need to rest.”

  I looked around, taking in the drip beside the bed, tubes snaking down from the plastic pouch to the shunt in my arm.

  “You’re going to be okay. The knife’s out. It was a clean cut.”

  “You patched me up?”

  She smiled. “Just like new.”

  “And you’re really here? I’m not dead?”

  A laugh now, but again, not like I remembered; nowhere near as hearty, like she hadn’t used it for a long time. “You’re not dead. You’re safe. We’re in the bunker. No one can get in here.”

  I tried to move again, testing the restraints. I burned where the knife had gone in, despite the painkillers. Jasmine placed a gentle hand on my chest. “Stay still. You’ll open the stitches.”

  She increased the dose down the line, my head swimming as the drugs flooded my system.

  “Can you let me out of these?”

  She was stroking my hair now, long fingers against my scalp.

  “Soon, darling. They’re for your own safety. I didn’t want to, but she was right.”

  “Who was?”

  Jasmine walked away over to a metal work bench, her back to me. “Olive, my assistant.”

  I looked around the room. The walls were whitewashed breeze-blocks, a heavy metal door, slightly ajar across from my bed. There was little in the way of furniture. The workbench, and a lighting array. A chair sat to the side, my jacket thrown over the back and the remaining remote grenades on the seat.

  There was no one else here.

  Jasmine was examining a security monitor, like those in the hub, flicking through camera feeds.

  “We were lucky Ruth didn’t get down here first.”

  “Who’s Ruth?”

  If Jasmine heard the question, she didn’t answer. “Most of the others are dead, but I can’t find Ruth. It doesn’t matter. They can’t get in.”

  She carried on clicking, the picture shifting on the display. I couldn’t quite make out what I was seeing; an endless cavalcade of rooms and corridors, some empty, some with bodies.

  I wondered if anyone had found Brennan yet.

  Jasmine leant over and flicked a switch on the monitor. The screen went dead.

  “Yes, I know!” Jasmine spat, her tone suddenly harsh.

  “Jas?”

  She laughed, turning to me. “Allison used to call me that.”

  “You’re scaring me, sweetheart. Let me out of these things.”

  “You always were a terrible patient.” She returned to the table top, a briefcase open in front of her. I watched her produce a small bottle, drawing some of the clear liquid it contained into a syringe.

  “What’s that?”

  She turned, and her eyes gleamed, but not like before. They were cold, shallow—and quite, quite mad.

  “It’s the cure,” she said, grinning as she walked towards me. “And our future.”

  The cure. My mind went back to the girl in the ward, the doctor. No one had forced Jasmine to do this. My Jasmine. She’d done it herself.

  I struggled against my bonds. “Jasmine, whatever that stuff is, I don’t want it.”

  “You don’t understand. We’ve been performing experiments here.”

  “I’ve seen your experiments.”

  “But you haven’t seen the results; you don’t know what this will do. No more disease. No more suffering. Do you understand? When we take this, we’ll have nothing else to fear. Just the two of us, together. Like it was supposed to be.”

  Then she looked up, her lips drawing back, angry.

  “You don’t have to be here!” she barked.

  I looked where she was glaring. There was no one there.

  She stroked my hair again, the syringe in her other hand. “Don’t listen to her. She’s just scared. But there’s no need to be. Not now.”

  “Don’t listen to who? Jasmine, who are you talking to?”

  She stared at me as though I was delirious. “Olive. You’ll get used to her. She’s always banging on about something, yadda, yadda, yadda, day or night.” She gave a peal of laughter. There was nothing infectious about it now. It made my skin crawl. “I just can’t seem to get shot of the stupid bitch.”

  There was a thud from outside the room, like someone banging against metal. Jasmine returned to the monitor, re-activating the screen. A young girl in pyjamas was slamming an open palm against a vault door. She was bald, her clothes covered in what could only be blood.

  “And there she is. It’s about time.”

  I struggled to remember the name Jasmine had mentioned. “Ruth?”

  Jasmine was transfixed on the screen, lost in her thoughts. “Such a shame, but we don’t need her anymore.”

  Her head snapped around, glaring into empty space again. “Well, you go out there, then.” She turned her attention back to me. “Don’t worry. Ruth can’t get in. No one can. And once we’ve done this, we’ll set the charges, bring the place down around her ears. The Cabal won’t be pleased, but when they see you, see what I’ve achieved...”

  She flinched. Shutting her eyes, her head cocked to the side, as if she was waiting for someone to stop talking... or to leave.

/>   Finally, she sighed, her eyes opening again. “Thank God for that.” She leant close, conspiratorially. “Don’t worry, we’ll get rid of her, too. I need her to help set the charges for now.” She rolled her eyes. “Just my luck she’s the only one who knows the demolition codes, but as soon as we’re out of here, we need never see her again.”

  “Olive?”

  She nodded, smiling.

  I understood.

  Jasmine flicked the syringe, clearing the bubbles in the liquid before slipping the needle into the shunt in my arm.

  “Now, I’m not going to lie, this is going to hurt. That’s why we strapped you down. It’ll be worth it, though. Besides, you know me. I’d scream the place down if I got a paper cut. If I can get through this, anyone can, especially you.”

  “You’ve taken the cure?”

  “I couldn’t exactly test it on anyone else, could I? I wanted to tell Allison, but Olive wouldn’t let me.”

  “You told Olive.”

  “She said that they’d take the glory. This had to be my discovery.” A shadow crossed her face. “To make amends.”

  “For what? Jasmine, what do you need to make amends for?”

  She came to me, this new twisted version of my beloved Jasmine.

  “Gently now,” she cooed, applying pressure to the syringe.

  It felt as if someone was pouring lava into my veins. I had experienced pain, but never like this. I couldn’t move, every muscle in my body knotting at once. I tried to scream, but my jaws were locked together so tight I thought my teeth were going to crack.

  And all the time, Jasmine whispered in my ear, telling me that it was going to be all right, that I had found her. We would be safe.

  She knew it was true. Olive had told her.

  Eventually, the pain subsiding, releasing my muscles, letting my body relax. I choked, tasting blood in my mouth. My head was spinning, my brain feeling like it was expanding, pressing against my skull, wanting to break free.

  I could hear Jasmine a million miles away, although the words didn’t make sense. It didn’t even sound like her voice anymore. Not the voice I remembered, not the woman I remembered. This wasn’t right. It wasn’t how it was supposed to be.

  The leather strap sliced into my forearm as I struggled to slip my hand into my pocket. My fingers curled around the transmitter, flicking the safety-guard up with my thumbnail, feeling the button beneath.

  My vision was starting to clear, Jasmine’s face coming into focus. For a moment she looked the way she was, before the Cull, before it all, but then reality rushed back.

  She was speaking to me, but I couldn’t hear the words. I thought she said my name.

  Don’t you give up now, soldier!

  Sir, no sir, etc.

  I pressed down on the detonator.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  UK number-one bestselling author Cavan Scott is currently trying to work on everything he loved when he was ten. He has written for Star Wars, Doctor Who, Warhammer 40,000, Judge Dredd, Blake’s 7, Highlander, Danger Mouse, the Beano and Vikings. His new Sherlock Holmes novel, The Patchwork Devil, is out now from Titan Books, with a sequel in the works. He lives in Bristol with his wife, daughters and an inflatable Dalek called Desmond.

  AFTER THE WORLD DIED, THE LEGEND WAS REBORN.

  When civilisation shuddered and died, Robert Stokes lost everything, including his wife and his son. The ex-cop retreated into the woods near Nottingham, to live off the land and wait to join his family. As the world descended into a new Dark Age, he turned his back on it all.

  The foreign mercenary and arms dealer De Falaise sees England is ripe for conquest. He works his way up the country, forging an army and pillaging as he goes. When De Falaise arrives at Nottingham and sets up his new dominion, Robert is drawn reluctantly into the resistance. From Sherwood he leads the fight and takes on the mantle of the world’s greatest folk hero.

  The Hooded Man and his allies will become a symbol of freedom, a shining light in the horror of a blighted world, but he can never rest: De Falaise is only the first of his kind.

  This omnibus collects the novels Arrowhead, Broken Arrow and Arrowland, with a new introduction by editor Jonathan Oliver. The ebook edition also exclusively collects the stories ‘The Servitor,’ ‘Perfect Presents,’ and ‘Signs and Portents.’

  www.abaddonbooks.com

  ‘AFTER THE WORLD DIED, WE ALL SORT OF DRIFTED BACK TO SCHOOL. AFTER ALL, WHERE ELSE WAS THERE TO GO?’

  Lee Keegan’s fifteen. If most of the population of the world hadn’t just died choking on their own blood, he might be worrying about acne, body odour and girls. As it is, he and the young Matron of his boarding school, Jane Crowther, have to try and protect their charges from cannibalistic gangs, religious fanatics, a bullying prefect experimenting with crucifixion, and even the might of the US Army.

  Welcome to St. Mark’s School for Boys and Girls...

  School’s Out Forever collects School’s Out, Operation Motherland and Children’s Crusade, with the short story The Man Who Would Not Be King, an introduction by the editor, interviews, and new, previously unpublished material.

  ‘Youthful idealism conflicts with jaded experience, and the characters are frequently forced to balance ruthless effi ciency with utopian optimism... A lot of provocative discussion sneaks in under the cover of machine gun fire.’

  Pornokitsch on Kitschie Award Finalist Children’s Crusade

  www.abaddonbooks.com

  WHEN THE WORLD ENDED...

  The Cull swept the world in the early years of the twenty-first century, killing billions and ending civilisation. Only a fortunate few, blessed with the right blood type, were spared. In the chaos of the Afterblight, scientists, priests—even armed robbers—may become leaders, or heroes. Three incredible writers, including the bestselling author of the Shadows of the Apt series Adrian Tchaikovsky, lead us into the apocalypse.

  In Malcolm Cross’s Orbital Decay, the team in the International Space Station watch helplessly as the world is all but wiped out. Exiled from Earth by his blood-type, astronaut Alvin Burrows must solve the mystery of the “Pandora” experiment, even as someone on the station takes to murdering the crew one by one...

  In C. B. Harvey’s Dead Kelly, fugitive and convict “Dead” Kelly McGuire returns from hiding out in the Bush to the lawless city of Melbourne. McGuire has three jobs to do: to be revenged on his old gangmates, to confront some uncomfortable truths about his past, and—ultimately—to discover his own terrible destiny...

  In Adrian Tchaikovsky’s The Bloody Deluge, Katy Lewkowitz and her friend and old tutor Dr. Emil Weber, fleeing the depredations of the so-called New Teutonic Order, take refuge among the strangely anachronistic survivors at the monastery of Jasna Góra in Western Poland. A battle of faith ensues, that could decide the future of humankind...

  www.abaddonbooks.com

 

 

 


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