The Purge of Babylon (Book 4): The Fires of Atlantis

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by Sam Sisavath


  Those same shoes squeaked as they moved past her and a thick male voice said, “Damn, you saw that, Harrison? Bam! She never had a chance.”

  “You idiot, get her weapons,” another voice snapped.

  “Oh, right,” the first one said.

  Gaby felt herself being turned over onto her back and rough, meaty hands pawing at the M4 and pulling it away. The same pair of hands groped her web belt and drew the Glock.

  She was starting to get some semblance of feeling back in her arms and legs. She could move her fingers, which was a good sign. So she wasn’t paralyzed after all. Right? God, she hoped so. She could only think of a few worse things these days, and being paralyzed was one of them.

  “Did you kill her?” the second voice asked.

  “Nah, I don’t think so,” the first one said.

  “You don’t think so?”

  “She looks alive to me.”

  She was on her back, but Gaby couldn’t see much of anything. These people seemed to be able to move around in the darkness just fine, though. She wasn’t sure how that was possible. At least, not until a figure crouched next to her and leaned over. She looked up at a pair of round and green lights staring down at her.

  Night-vision goggles.

  “She’s still alive,” the man behind the goggles said. “She might wish she wasn’t pretty soon, though.”

  More movement around her. There were at least four pairs of feet in the hallway now. Where did they all come from? And more importantly, how the hell did that kid get behind them in the first place?

  So many questions. Pointless, stupid questions, because none of it mattered. Not to her. Not now.

  It was a trap. A big, stupid, elaborate trap.

  Milly. The kid in the hallway. The door that can’t be opened.

  And you fell for it like the big, stupid girl that you are.

  Will would be so disappointed in you right now. So, so disappointed…

  She struggled to keep her eyes open. The pain had become unbearable, and it was easier to lay still and absorb it, let it sweep over her entire body and think about how stupid she had been, how clueless, as she stumbled into their elaborate little trap.

  Stupid. So stupid.

  She found it easier to ignore all the voices around her. Ignore all the footsteps moving back and forth. Ignore the rough hands grabbing her and pulling her up from the floor as if she were a rag doll without any feelings.

  There was the boy—the same one that had lured her down this path—as he played with her M4 rifle as if it were a toy. He looked up as they dragged her away, and she couldn’t tell if that was innocence on his face or just a kid beaming with pride at a job well done.

  *

  SHE WOKE UP lying on her side. Her bones ached and she wasn’t sure if she could still move her legs, but when she tried extending them, they seemed fine. She couldn’t pry them apart, though, because they were pressed together at the ankles by a rope. Her head throbbed and opening her eyes to blinding LED lights didn’t help.

  She was inside some kind of basement. She could tell that much even while looking at it from the floor at an angle. The floor was cold and uncomfortable but that didn’t stop her from feeling the sweat along her face, neck, and arms anyway. Someone had removed the camo jacket she took off Mac, and her web belt was gone.

  And she was unarmed again.

  Dammit.

  A small figure was crouched in front of her. A girl, maybe fifteen, though it was hard to tell her age with the long, dirty-blonde hair covering half of her face, reminding Gaby of the boy from the hallway.

  They use the kids. The bastards use the kids.

  That immediately got her thinking of Milly. Where was she now? Was she fine? Safe? In danger? Given her own situation, Gaby thought it was probably too much to think that the girl was fine…somewhere out there.

  The girl in front of her now was wearing cargo pants and sneakers and had a rifle lying across her lap. She recognized the weapon from the movies. Westerns with cowboys and Indians. Winchester? Was that what those were called? You cranked the lever to load a new round after you fired. Give her a carbine with a thirty-round magazine any day.

  The kid had bright blue eyes that reminded Gaby of Lara. She was short, barely five feet, and there was a seriousness about the way she eyeballed Gaby that convinced her the girl meant business. Or, at least, she was putting on a hell of a game face.

  She couldn’t tell how large the room was because there was only one portable LED lamp in the entire place. It dangled from a hook along the ceiling, casting an ethereal halo around her, the girl, and…blood.

  Why is there blood?

  There was coughing next to her. Gaby pulled herself up from the floor and sat on her butt. It was difficult with the thick rope binding her hands, pulled so tight that it dug into her wrists. She looked to her right.

  Peter was leaning back against the wall, his own hands bound behind his back. His face was red and purple and some other color Gaby didn’t have a name for. His cheeks were puffy, his right eye swollen, and he peered back at her through fresh bruises that covered every inch of his face. His lips were cut and fresh blood clung to his sweat-stained shirt, and Peter didn’t look as if he was breathing at all. There was surprisingly very little blood on the floor, which told her whatever had happened to Peter hadn’t been inside here. He had been taken outside, then brought back…after.

  “Peter, God, what happened?”

  He shook his head, as if he wanted to talk but couldn’t. His mouth quivered, and although she had only known him for a few hours (has it only been half a day?), she felt something shattering at the pitiful sight of him. He looked in so much pain and his entire body seemed sapped of energy.

  This wasn’t the man who had rescued her this morning.

  This man was…broken.

  “Who did this to you?” she asked.

  All he could manage was to shake his head. Barely.

  She turned to the girl, still crouched in front of them, staring with those blue eyes. “Who did this to my friend?”

  The girl stared blankly back at her.

  “Can you talk?”

  Nothing.

  “My name’s Gaby. What’s yours?”

  She saw something—a flicker—and was hopeful…for a brief second. Then it was gone in a flash.

  Instead of replying, the girl stood up and took a step back, then another. She didn’t look frightened, but there was a clear need to disengage herself.

  She knows what’s been happening. She knows what’s going to happen. She’s probably seen it before.

  The trap. The boy in the hallway.

  They’ve done this before…

  The girl vanished into the part of the basement that was enshrouded in darkness, which happened to be most of it. There was a rustling of clothes as the girl settled back down. Then there was just silence.

  “Gaby…” Peter whispered.

  She looked over at him. Just saying her name seemed to have taken everything he had. “Peter, don’t say anything. Just rest.”

  “Dangerous…”

  “I know, Peter, I know.”

  He nodded—or tried to—and closed his eyes. He rested his head against the brick wall and seemed to drift off.

  She looked around her again, taking in the room with a new eye, but didn’t see anything remotely useful the second time around. Concrete floor, walls, and ceiling. Some kind of bomb shelter, maybe. Or just a really sturdy basement. She could imagine people in here surviving through The Purge and the months after. The door would probably be somewhere on the other side. And the only thing between her and it was a teenage girl with a rifle…

  Her ears perked up at the sound of loud, grinding metal moving against concrete. Something opening. A door.

  Then, footsteps approaching. Boots. Heavy combat boots.

  A figure emerged out of the wall of shadows like some ghostly vision. But it wasn’t a supernatural creature. It was just a man. He
was large, in his early thirties, with short red hair and stubble that made him look older. He wore cargo pants and a sweat-stained T-shirt and had a Glock in a hip holster.

  The man stopped in front of her and seemed to evaluate Peter for a moment. “I’m sorry about that,” he said finally. “The boys got a little carried away.” He looked at her. “My name’s Harrison.”

  His voice sounded familiar.

  The man in the night-vision goggles.

  She remembered the bigger man, the one who had tackled her in the hallway, calling someone “Harrison.”

  “What did you do to Peter?” she asked.

  “We had to be sure,” Harrison said.

  “Be sure of what?”

  “What you were doing here.”

  “We’re just passing through.”

  He nodded. “Yeah, that’s what he said, too. I believe him. But we had to be sure you weren’t dangerous, that’s all.”

  “So you beat him half to death?” The anger rose inside her, surprising even herself. “While he’s tied up? That takes a real man.”

  She expected indignation from Harrison, but instead he just shrugged indifferently. “You’re not the first ones to come through here. And, like I said, there couldn’t be any doubts. We had to be absolutely one hundred percent sure.”

  “So do you still have any doubts?”

  “Not anymore.”

  “Then why are we still tied up?”

  “We’re sure there’s just the three of you and you’re passing through, but that’s it.” He went into a crouch and stared at her with dull brown eyes. “It’s a dangerous world out there. The types of people who survive these days aren’t to be trusted. You’d do the same in our shoes.”

  “Is that how you justify it?”

  “I don’t need to justify it. My people depend on me. Three strangers who I’ve never seen in my life aren’t going to change what’s worked for us for the last year.” He stood up. “I’m sorry about your friend.”

  Bullshit.

  “You can believe it or not,” Harrison said, as if reading her thoughts—or maybe he just saw the look on her face. “It doesn’t matter to me. Tomorrow we’ll debate about what to do with you two—whether to cut you loose and send you on your way…or not. That’s more than most people will do for you these days, so count your lucky stars. For now, sit tight.”

  “And the girl? Milly? What about her?”

  “She’s being taken care of.”

  “That’s not what I asked you.”

  “She’s staying,” he said matter-of-factly.

  “Did she tell you she wanted to stay?”

  “No. But she’s young, and she’ll get over it.” He looked behind him at the shadows—at the girl, who neither one of them could see at the moment but Gaby knew was still back there, watching and listening intently. “They all do, eventually. Kids are useful.”

  The boy in the hallway…

  “What about him?” Gaby said, nodding at Peter. His eyes were still closed and it didn’t look as if he had moved or made a noise—or even breathed—at all during her conversation with Harrison. “He needs medical attention.”

  “Like I said, it’s a tough world out there,” Harrison said, with all the sympathy of a lion feeding on fresh prey. “You gotta be strong to make it these days. It’s up to him if he’s walking out of here with you…or if you’re going by yourself.”

  “You heartless fuck.”

  He snorted. “You should thank me. I could have found plenty of uses for you, too, but we’re not that far gone yet.” He leaned toward her and let his eyes bore into her soul. “But I can always change my mind later.”

  She didn’t say anything. She also didn’t look away. If he was trying to scare her, it wasn’t going to work. At least, she hoped it wasn’t working…

  He stood back up. “Sit tight,” he said with something that looked like a crooked grin before turning and leaving without another word.

  She listened to the sounds of his heavy footsteps fading, doing her very best to control her rage. She wanted to leap up and lunge after him, bound wrists and ankles be damned, but that would have been stupid. He wasn’t just bigger than her, she was also bound and hurt, and it wouldn’t have taken much for him to beat her back down.

  And she couldn’t afford that right now. Beaten and bruised was okay, but she had seen what Harrison was capable of—saw it on Peter’s face and God only knew what was happening under his clothes. If she wanted to save Peter, to save herself and Milly, too, she couldn’t let that happen to her.

  No, she had to bide her time, and that meant sitting still and listening to the same grinding metal moving on the other side of the room. Then the door slamming shut.

  Finally, she allowed herself to breathe, to let all the anger flow away.

  Stay alive. Nothing matters if you can’t stay alive right now.

  Gaby looked over at Peter again and felt a sickening knot in her gut. He looked even more awful than a few seconds ago, the discoloration around his face seemingly changing color at least a dozen times. The flesh around his right eye was now the size of a giant fist.

  He’s going to die. Tonight. Tomorrow morning. But he’s going to die.

  I’m sorry, Peter.

  She sat back against the wall and closed her eyes and tried to think.

  Options. What were her options?

  Limited. But Will always told her there were options, some that were obvious, but most that were hidden. She just had to find them.

  So what were her options right now?

  She had to think.

  Think!

  Then it came to her.

  The girl.

  Gaby tried to find the small figure in the darkness, focusing in on where she last heard the girl moving around, the soft rustling of clothes.

  “Hey,” Gaby said.

  There was no answer.

  “Have you ever heard of Beaufont Lake?”

  Still nothing.

  “There’s an island on it. Song Island. It’s safe. There’s even a hotel—”

  The girl stepped out of the blackness with her head cocked slightly to one side. She had moved so quickly that Gaby was momentarily taken by surprise. There was a fleck of interest in the girl’s eyes. “You said an island?”

  “Yes,” Gaby said. Be careful. Don’t spook her. “Song Island. Have you ever heard of it?”

  “No.” She glanced behind her, as if trying to decide how to proceed. Maybe she was afraid of Harrison finding out she was even talking to the prisoner.

  Easy does it. You have her attention now. Don’t lose it…

  “It’s safe there,” Gaby said. “There’s a hotel. Electricity. Hot showers. Frozen food. And ice. When was the last time you had ice?”

  The girl didn’t answer.

  “I can take you there,” Gaby said.

  The girl looked over at Peter, then back at her. “It’s near here?”

  “It’s not far. A day’s drive. Maybe a couple of days on foot.”

  The girl looked back into the shadows behind her a second time. With her hair out of her face, she was a lot younger than Gaby had first thought. Thirteen, maybe, like Milly.

  “I know you don’t want to be here,” Gaby said. “I know you’re just staying because you don’t have a choice.”

  The blue eyes seemed to confirm everything Gaby had just said. Or was she reading the kid all wrong?

  God, please don’t let me screw this up.

  “You can come with us,” Gaby said. “With Peter and me. And Milly, too. Did you see Milly? She’s about your age.”

  “They took her,” the girl said.

  “We can get her back and leave here, and you can come with us.”

  “To the island?”

  “Yes, to the island.”

  Gaby did her best to control her rising excitement. She could almost imagine the girl’s brain working, absorbing the information. But she had to tread lightly. The girl was taking a risk. S
he knew that much. Harrison had left her here because there was no way Gaby or Peter could escape in their condition. Certainly Peter had no more fight left in him, and it was hard for her to do anything when she couldn’t even walk.

  Even so, it bothered her that he had just left a little girl behind to watch them. Were the adults all busy somewhere with something else? Maybe there were guards on the other side of that door Harrison had gone through twice now. Maybe—

  Concentrate on the girl! She’s your opening! Seize it!

  “What’s your name?” Gaby asked.

  “Claire,” the girl said.

  “I can take you with me, Claire. You’ll be safe on the island.”

  “Because the bloodsuckers can’t go there,” Claire said.

  “Yes,” Gaby said. “How did you know—”

  Claire whirled around and disappeared into the shadows.

  “Wait, Claire,” Gaby said, but the girl was gone. She wanted to shout but was afraid of making too much noise in case there were guards outside the basement door.

  She sighed and leaned back against the wall, crestfallen. All her hopes of escaping with Peter and Milly died inside her and all she could do was look at Peter, asleep—or somewhere between asleep and dead—next to her.

  I’m sorry, Peter. I’m not good at saving people. Nate could have told you that.

  And Matt.

  And Josh…

  There was the quick patter of footsteps just before Claire reappeared out of the darkness. The rifle was slung over her back, looking absurdly big against her slight frame. There was something else, too: Claire was clutching a small black microcassette voice recorder.

  Gaby opened her mouth to ask what was happening when Claire shushed her by holding up her hand. The girl crouched in front of her and pressed the play button on the recorder and held it out as a familiar voice came through the tiny speaker:

  “To any survivors out there, if you’re hearing this, you are not alone. There are things you need to know about our enemy—these creatures of the night, these ghouls. They are not invincible, and they have weaknesses other than sunlight—”

  Lara! It was Lara’s voice!

  “—One: you can kill them with silver. Stab them, shoot them, or cut them with any silver weapon, and they will die. Two: they will not cross bodies of water. An island, a boat—get to anything that can separate you from land. Three: some ultraviolet light has proven effective, but flashlights and lightbulbs with UV don’t seem to have any effect. We don’t know why, so use this information with caution. If you’re hearing this message, you are not alone. Stay strong, stay smart, and adapt. We owe it to those we’ve lost to keep fighting, to never give up. Good luck.”

 

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