Earthfall: Retribution

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Earthfall: Retribution Page 19

by Mark Walden


  ‘I still don’t know how I feel, to be honest,’ Sam said. ‘I mean, I believe what he told me, that my family weren’t just some sort of elaborate cover to mask his true identity, but that doesn’t change the fact that he spent years lying to all of us.’

  ‘In his defence, he didn’t really have a choice,’ Stirling said. ‘Shirt up, please.’

  ‘I suppose,’ Sam said, lifting up his T-shirt as Stirling pressed the cold metal of the stethoscope to his chest. ‘God only knows what I’m going to tell my mum and my sister, if we ever find them.’

  ‘When,’ Stirling said, ‘not if. And if you want my opinion you shouldn’t tell them anything when that time comes. Sometimes secrets are best kept.’

  ‘You should know,’ Sam said with a crooked smile.

  ‘I have kept my share in my time,’ Stirling said. ‘Well, as far as I can tell, you’re perfectly healthy. The only thing that’s unusual is your arm, but you knew that.’

  Sam held his arm up in front of him and it morphed from its golden form to looking like a perfectly normal flesh-and-blood arm.

  ‘Little trick my dad taught me,’ Sam said. ‘Helps cut down on the weird factor.’

  ‘Your injury is nothing to be ashamed of,’ Stirling said, ‘and neither is your heritage. I believe that at the moment of his death your father transferred something to you. I can’t be sure what it was, but I knew Daniel better than most and I know that he rarely did anything without a good reason.’

  ‘You mean Suran,’ Sam said, raising an eyebrow.

  ‘Suran, Daniel Shaw, Andrew Riley, truly, what does it matter?’

  ‘I suppose,’ Sam said. ‘Think I’ll just go with Dad.’

  ‘Very wise,’ Stirling said with a smile.

  ‘What have you done with Talon’s men?’ Sam asked. They had found Talon’s human soldiers unconscious on board the Mothership after their commander’s death. They had proven just as impossible to awaken as any of the rest of the planet’s sleeping population.

  ‘I had them moved to the Sleeper dormitory,’ Stirling replied. ‘I don’t believe we have anything to fear from them now that Talon is dead. Their implants are still active, but without him issuing any commands I suspect that they are now no different to any other Sleeper. Don’t worry, I shall be keeping a close eye on them.’

  ‘Good,’ Sam replied. ‘If you don’t need me any more, I’m going to go and sleep for a week.’

  ‘I may have some further tests to carry out,’ Stirling said, ‘but they can wait for now.’

  ‘Thanks,’ Sam said, grabbing his jacket and walking out of the lab, heading across the darkened compound to the dormitory block.

  ‘Hey, you,’ a voice said from somewhere behind him. He turned and saw Mag sitting on top of the fallen Grendel that still lay in the middle of the compound.

  ‘You decided if you’re staying or not yet?’ Sam asked as she leapt down on to the ground and walked towards him.

  ‘Depends,’ Mag said. ‘Do you want me to?’

  ‘Of course I do,’ Sam said. ‘We all do.’

  ‘Think I still make some of the others a little nervous,’ Mag said with a wry smile.

  ‘You worry too much,’ Sam said. ‘Besides which, we don’t know how safe it is up in Scotland any more. The Vore are still up there and they’re still spreading. Stirling has some ideas about how we can slow them down, but you would be better off here.’

  ‘Don’t worry,’ Mag said, walking alongside him towards the dormitory block. ‘I’m not going anywhere. This place is even starting to feel a bit like home.’

  ‘Funny, isn’t it?’ Sam said. ‘But I know exactly what you mean.’

  ‘I’m going to go and get something to eat,’ Mag said as they approached the entrance to the block. ‘You coming?’

  ‘Nah, I’m just going to bed. I’ve not been sleeping brilliantly since . . . well . . . since everything,’ Sam said.

  ‘Fair enough,’ Mag replied. ‘I’ll see you in the morning. Jay’s said he’s going to teach me how to shoot properly.’

  ‘Sounds good,’ Sam said with a tired smile. ‘See you later.’

  He walked inside and made his way to his room. He was just about to step inside when Nat came round the corner at the far end of the corridor.

  ‘Hey! Sam! Hold on a sec,’ she shouted, jogging towards him. ‘I’ve got something for you.’

  She reached into her pocket and handed him a sealed envelope.

  ‘Adam went and got it,’ she said as he took the envelope. ‘He was going to give it to you on your birthday, but, well, I figured you might want it now. You look like you could use a little cheering up.’

  ‘We all could,’ Sam said with a sigh. He tore open the envelope and pulled out the photograph inside. It was a picture of him with his mum, dad and sister, that had once sat on the sideboard in the living room of their old house.

  ‘You remember when he was asking everyone their old addresses and making jokes about what we must all have been like before the invasion . . . well, he might have had an ulterior motive.’

  ‘Thanks,’ Sam said, looking at the photo with a sad smile. ‘Really, this means a lot.’

  ‘You OK?’ Nat asked, seeing the haunted look in his eyes.

  ‘No,’ Sam replied, ‘but I will be.’

  Nat gave him a quick hug and then walked away as Sam stepped into his room. He locked the door behind him and went over to the old battered mirror that hung on the wall. He slid the photo of his family under the edge of the frame, just beneath the Polaroid photo of him, Jay and Rachel standing in front of the Grendel that had once patrolled the compound outside. All three of them were pulling stupid faces at the camera and laughing. He let out a long sigh and stared at his tired-looking face in the mirror. A moment later his face began to shift subtly, his skin growing paler as glowing blue lines spread from the corners of his eyes back over the crested ridges of his skull.

  ‘That’s going to take some getting used to,’ he said, looking at the half-human, half-Illuminate face that stared back at him. He had lied to Stirling earlier; the truth was that he’d been concealing his true appearance since the final battle with Talon. He told himself that it was because he didn’t want anyone to worry about him, but the reality was that he didn’t want to tell them. He had no idea what change Suran had caused in him in his dying moments and now there was no one alive who could give him any real answers.

  ‘What did you do to me, Dad?’ Sam said, reaching out and touching the photo of a grinning Andrew Riley. ‘What did you do?’

  The Voidborn stood, its head bowed in front of the black cloud that swirled endlessly in front of it.

  ‘Were the Illuminate destroyed?’ a voice from within the cloud said.

  ‘Yes, my master,’ the Voidborn replied. ‘Though the child of the Illuminate still lives.’

  ‘For now,’ the voice said.

  ‘Do you wish us to attack the captured vessels?’ the Voidborn asked.

  ‘No, that pleasure shall be mine,’ the voice replied. ‘Have the rest of our forces prepare for my arrival.’

  ‘Is there any message you would like me to pass on to them, my master?’

  ‘Only that the final hour is at hand,’ the voice replied. ‘My journey nears its end. Their Primarch comes.’

  By Mark Walden

  Earthfall

  In the H.I.V.E. series

  Higher Institute of Villainous Education

  Overlord Protocol

  Escape Velocity

  Dreadnought

  Rogue

  Zero Hour

  Aftershock

  Deadlock

  Bloomsbury Publishing, London, New Delhi, New York and Sydney

  First published in Great Britain in August 2014 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  50 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DP

  This electronic edition published in August 2014 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

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trademark of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  Copyright © Mark Walden 2014

  The moral right of the author has been asserted

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  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  eISBN 978 1 4088 2850 2

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