Extinction: An Apocalyptic Horror Novel (Hell on Earth Book 3)

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Extinction: An Apocalyptic Horror Novel (Hell on Earth Book 3) Page 22

by Iain Rob Wright


  “Yeah,” said Vamps. “Where all the people at?”

  “Back at the old naval base,” came Wickstaff. “I came from there when I saw you folks entering the city. It’s good you’re still alive, Rick, because we have one more problem for you to deal with.”

  THIRTY MINUTES LATER, the survivors from the van were being triaged. A few soldiers had lived through the battle at the gate, but far too few. Vamps was glad to see the two children were still okay. Though, after being possessed, neither seemed to have any memory of it. What concerned them most was that both their fathers were wounded, shot by the same man. A man nobody could identify. He had just appeared out of nowhere and started shooting people. Richard had taken a bullet shielding Guy from a second blast. Corporal Martin had seen the whole thing and had been the one to put the stranger down.

  Now both men laid out on the ground while a pair of medics saw to them. The brunette Vamps met outside the Port Authority building was a medic, too—apparently—and she lent a hand too. Alice and Dillon rested on their knees, holding their hands out to their respective fathers.

  Richard was awake. A medic had attached an IV of morphine, which meant he was drowsy, but he gazed at his boy and repeated over and over that everything would be alright. The medic concluded the bullet had struck his collarbone and gone through his shoulder tissue. Barring infection, Richard should recover.

  Guy, on the other hand, had taken a shot right to the stomach. The round was still buried somewhere in his intestines. Vamps overheard the medics appraising Wickstaff of his condition, and it hadn't sounded good. “Best I can do is wake him up,” one medic had said. “I’m not a surgeon, and neither are Chris and Samantha. We can’t dig the bullet out of him, and it’s probably blocking something important, considering where it is. He’s already lost too much blood, and I think he’s getting septic.”

  Wickstaff sighed and looked over at the little girl bent over her daddy. “Wake him up. Let him see his daughter. I owe him that.”

  Vamps took Mass by the arm and moved him away from the scene. When Mass saw Vamps was about to break down in tears, he pulled him into a hug. It was something he never would have done back in the old days.

  “It’s okay, man. It's okay.”

  “It’s not okay, man. I can’t take any more death. It’s the kids. When I look at those two kids, I think about how many millions are lost. How many of them died in terror, or starved to death waiting for mummy to wake up. I can’t get it out of my head, Mass. It's like ants in my mind. What do I do?”

  Mass rubbed his back. “You go on living. We keep fighting so that tomorrow’s children live. Those two kids are the reason we stay strong. They're alive because of something we were a part of.”

  “I wish I hadn't failed Max.”

  “I wish we hadn't failed him, as well. But it's done. Let's do better tomorrow.”

  Guy was suddenly awake. Vamps heard him moan and cry out, “Alice!” He blinked several times when his daughter leant over and smiled at him as if he struggled to believe what he was seeing. “A-Alice?”

  “Yes, daddy. It’s me.”

  “You found me?”

  “I got tired of waiting for you to come.” She kissed his forehead. “You promised me we’d see each other again, and that I would be okay. You were right. It’s safe here.”

  Vamps wondered if she truly believed that.

  Guy was smiling dozily. “You look just like your mother. Getting so... grown… up.”

  “Daddy. Daddy, please stay awake.”

  But Guy couldn’t. He closed his eyes and didn’t open them again. The only thing he left behind was the smile on his face.

  Alice slumped over his dead body and wept. After a few moments, Dillon left his own father to cradle her in his arms. They were siblings now—brother and sister in a new world—like Mass and Vamps were now brothers in more than just street terms. Family wasn't about blood anymore—or maybe it was more about blood than ever.

  The blood of battle.

  The reason everyone gathered in the ruined naval base was because the biggest gate of all still towered into the sky there. Nothing was coming through, but that could change at any moment. A thousand soldiers encircled it, ready to rip apart anything that dared step foot on the parade square. Vamps dreaded, all over again, that they had only won a single battle, and that the war would rage on. That was why he held his sword at the ready—the gift given him by a strange Irish man in an abandoned Pizza Hut.

  Life had gotten screwed up somewhere along the line.

  “Can you close it?” Wickstaff asked Rick.

  Rick shook his head. “My power is gone. It'll be awhile before I can close gates—maybe weeks.”

  “We don’t have that time. The enemy scattered after we beat them, but we can’t stop them from regrouping if we have to worry about this thing in our midst. Can you at least try?”

  Rick raised both arms towards the massive gate, but ended up looking like a confused mime. He let his arms drop with a sigh. “I’m sorry. Daniel’s powers took weeks to grow inside me. They withdrew when I got healed by the blast.”

  “There is one way to close it,” said Aymun. “One we are all aware of. I shall pass into the gate as I did the one in Syria. I lived through Hell and returned. What lies beyond this gate does not scare me.”

  “I sensed something before I left,” said Rick. “This gate is the largest of them all. It leads somewhere far worse than wherever the gate in Syria did. I wouldn’t recommend anyone steps through.”

  “Yet, this thing must be done,” said Aymun, “and I would be honoured if the burden was mine.”

  “I’ll go with you,” said Rick.

  “No way,” said Maddy.

  Wickstaff agreed. “We need you here, Rick.”

  Rick spoke sternly, all his vitality returned. “For all we know, General, I could do more good on the other side of this gate, behind enemy lines. I’m dying anyway, so I can only help you for so long. If I still have my powers on the other side, maybe I can stop whatever caused all this in the first place.”

  “I agree,” said Vamps. “But you’ll need more help than just Aymun. You need a badass from the streets. Maybe a guy with a flaming sword.”

  Mass was already shaking his head. “I don’t want to go inside that thing, man. That’s crazy.”

  Vamps turned to his brother—the little boy he had grown up with, now a man. They had fought for survival their entire lives in some form or fashion. They never imagined escaping Brixton, but things had changed.

  They had changed.

  Vamps most of all.

  “Not us, just me, brother. I’m going. The things I’ve seen and done… I have to leave it all behind me. I need to do some real good to make it right. No more kids dying, right?” Mass nodded sadly. “You got things here, Mass, so let me take care of business on the other side. The hero today was you. You killed the angel when it was about to stomp me. It’s not me who got us this far, Mass, it was you. Stay here, and be a hero for these people. But I’m not a hero, I’m a killer. The best place for someone like me is amongst the enemy—somewhere I don’t have to worry about losing people I’m trying to protect.”

  “Vamps, please don’t…”

  “This feels like what I’m supposed to do, man.”

  “Are you gents really serious about this?” Wickstaff asked, looking at Vamps, Aymun, and Rick.

  All three men nodded.

  “Then say your goodbyes. It needs doing sooner rather than later.”

  “I’m ready now,” said Vamps, swinging his sword like he had been practising his whole life.

  Rick looked at Maddy and swallowed, tears in both their eyes. “If I wait,” he said. “I'll lose my nerve. I’m ready now.”

  “I too am ready to move and make,” said Aymun, confusing even himself with his words.

  Vamps moved away from Mass, not sure if he was strong enough to stay the course if his friend tried to talk him out of it. The two of them nodded a
t each other and said their last goodbyes silently.

  Rick took longer, holding Maddy and Diane in his arms and exchanging words for what seemed like an eternity.

  Aymun stood beside the gate peacefully, hands clasped at his front, waiting to leave.

  Ten minutes passed, and they were finally ready. They discussed taking weapons, but decided that restocking ammunition in Hell might be troublesome.

  Vamps tried not to think as he looked at the flickering lens of the gate. Hell! Shit, am I really about to leap, willingly, into Hell?

  Hell yes! Can't be any scarier than Brixton.

  Wickstaff stood in front of them as they lined up in front of the gate. “You will have to pass through at the exact same moment because the gate will explode as soon as someone passes inside. We will take cover, if you don’t mind?”

  “Of course not,” said Rick. “Good luck to you, General.”

  “And you, gentlemen. If humanity survives, your sacrifice will be the foundation upon which our future is written. You are martyrs and heroes both, and I will ensure you are never forgotten.”

  “Make sure they mention how handsome I am,” said Vamps. He flashed his gold fangs. “And don’t leave out the teeth.”

  Wickstaff nodded.

  Then everyone in the parade square departed to take cover. With such a large gate, they headed out a long, long way. The three martyrs were left standing utterly alone in front of the gate.

  “You ready for this?” asked Rick.

  “I’m shit scared,” said Vamps, realising he had regained the ability to fear. He looked up at the shimmering gate and imagined the horrors waiting to meet him. “I’m ready though.”

  “I have done this before,” said Aymun. “Is okay. We hold hands now.”

  Rick and Vamps looked at each other and exchanged frowns. Vamps shrugged. A little human contact wouldn't go amiss.

  “Why not, I suppose. Might keep us together as we pass through.”

  “Okay,” said Rick, shuffling up in front of the gate while the others joined him. “After three, okay? One… two… three!”

  The three men linked hands, took a breath, and stepped forward.

  36

  MASS

  “Let ‘em have it, lads!” Mass threw a grenade far enough to impress an Olympic shot putter, and it landed right amongst a horde of demons besieging a small zoo where some survivors had taken refuge. One of Wickstaff’s helicopter scouts had spotted their SOS sign from the air two days ago. The survivors had used red paint atop the glass roof of the zoo’s atrium. Now Mass was here to rescue them—just in time by the looks of things.

  He lifted his radio and asked for a favour. “Tosco, I need the ground to shake. Can you help a brother out?”

  Tosco chuckled on the other end of the line. “For you, anything. Hold onto something, Mass.”

  Mass ordered his lads down, and they took cover. Moments later, Commander Tosco rained fire from his fleet ten miles away on the coast. Two-hundred demons turned to ash in an instant. They still hadn’t learned not to huddle together, and since all the angels in the UK had gone, they had only gotten stupider.

  Once Tosco had tilted the odds in their favour, Mass led the final assault. His soldiers had no military experience, but they were all survivors. Taken from the civilians of Portsmouth, Mass selected most of the remaining youth. Now, kids who had been thugs, criminals, students, slackers, or anything else in their past lives, were fearsome warriors, respected and relied upon.

  They had survived Hell. What else was left to fear?

  Mass pulled a machete from a sheath and held it in his left hand while he fired a black-market Uzi with his right. His body armour split at the seams as it tried clinging to his massive body, but it was only there as a last resort. With his blade and machine pistol, nothing was getting near him. He was a war machine.

  His lads charged alongside him, each of them with a machete and pistol of their own. They liked to get in close, shoulder to shoulder, where they could cleave the enemy apart like a line of Roman legionaries. It had been remarkably effective against the demons, which knew no tactic but to throw themselves at their prey. Some were smart enough to grab weapons, but as ammo became scarcer, it was a rare problem. Weeks now, since a full-sized horde had posed a threat. Wickstaff’s forces were picking the enemy off in groups; killing stragglers just like the demons had once done to them. The victory at Portsmouth had changed everything.

  Mankind was the hunter again.

  The last remnants of the demon horde staggered in a frenzy, but they did not surrender. It seemed like something they were incapable of. Not that Mass would show mercy if they did throw their arms up. He jabbed his machete in front of him and disembowelled a primate.

  Within minutes, the battle was over and two-hundred demons lay dead. Of his thirty-six men, Mass had lost not a single one.

  Shit was getting too easy.

  “Target secured,” Mass said into his radio. “No casualties.”

  “Roger that,” came Maddy on the other end. “Good work, Mass. I'll let Wickstaff know.”

  Mass sheathed his machete and holstered his Uzi. He placed his hands up as he approached the fence around the zoo. It wouldn’t be the first time survivors had shot at him out of fear.

  A woman in her late thirties stood on the other side of the wire mesh. Her eyes were wide with fear, but the corners of her mouth lifted hopefully. “Are… are you friendly?”

  “Of course we are. We’re all in this together. How you people doing?”

  The woman huffed. “Starving. Sick. You know, not bad.”

  Mass tutted. “That sucks. How ‘bout you come with us. We have food and medicine, and about thirty thousand people all armed and ready to kick demon arse.”

  The woman frowned. “Come on!”

  Mass reached into his pocket, making the woman flinch, but when he pulled out a roll of paper, she relaxed again. He pushed it through the fence, and the woman took it and unrolled it. Her eyes went wide.

  The package Mass had given her was the same handwritten note from Wickstaff he gave all the survivors he found. It read:

  DEAR FRIEND.

  RIGHT NOW, you may be in the presence of men and women you do not know. That must be frightening. Your suffering these last months has been endless and awful, but I promise you, it is ending. Humanity is fighting back, and it is winning. We have slaughtered the angels and closed dozens of gates. Great sacrifices are required in the days ahead, but the choices you make are now your own. I beg you to join us at Portsmouth, the new cradle of civilisation. There, we are rebuilding. We need teachers and carers for our children, soldiers for our cause, and experts in all fields. If you would like to help humanity thrive once again, please trust whoever gave you this note and come join us. If not, I have enclosed directions and a map to our nearest outposts. Once again, I promise you your suffering is at an end. The enemy is on the run. We have beaten our extinction and tomorrow is arriving.

  YOUR FAITHFUL SERVANT,

  GENERAL AMANDA WICKSTAFF.

  THE WOMAN inside the zoo shook her head as if she couldn’t believe it. She looked at Mass, and then at the army of lads standing in a line behind him. “This is real? Portsmouth is real?”

  Mass nodded.

  “Okay, so… who are you?”

  “We,” said Mass, waving a hand at his lads, “is the Urban Vampires.”

  The lads grinned, exposing the gold fangs that each of them had.

  Mass smiled too, his own gold teeth glinting in the sunlight.

  37

  GENERAL WICKSTAFF

  Wickstaff was stressed, as she had been every second for the last three months. Still she waited for that beautiful moment of silence when she could take an undisturbed breath.

  Maddy approached with a satellite phone. “Chancellor Capri on the line for you, Ma’am.”

  “Oh, how splendid!” The German leader was not Wickstaff's favourite person, but he was too important to ignore. She did he
r best to work with the various groups they'd made contact with, but she feared the old power mongering of the past would return.

  Putting on her happy face, she took the phone from Maddy and spoke into it.

  “Chancellor Capri, how good to hear from you. Things fare well on the Continent still?”

  “We have things much in hand. I hear you are faring well also, ja?”

  “We’ve got the buggers on the run. What can I help you with, Chancellor?”

  “I’ve been getting some concerning reports.”

  “Such as?”

  “General Wickstaff, are you in possession of nuclear warheads?”

  Wickstaff looked at Maddy. To those in her council, it was no secret Portsmouth possessed eight nuclear warheads housed on their German sub. It wasn’t something she shared with anyone else though, but it was hardly surprising that the German submariners had relayed the information to their homeland.

  “Where would you get that idea, Chancellor?”

  “We have brought our Intelligence systems back on line. The tracking unit for one of our nuclear submarines is firing off the coast of Portsmouth. I have tried many times to raise the submarine’s crew via radio, but they refuse all calls. Did you dispose of them and take possession of the vessel yourself? If so, that sub is the property of the Sovereign nation of Germany, and it must be returned.”

  Maddy tutted. Wickstaff waved at her to keep quiet. “Chancellor, I assure you the crew on that submarine are the original German men and women it belonged to. That they haven't answered your calls is the decision of Commander Klein. I was unaware you'd tried to get in touch.” She let a grin escape. Sounded like the German submariners were happy right where they were. Their loyalty would not go unrewarded.

  “Nonetheless, General. That sub must be returned.”

  “I’m afraid not, Chancellor. You see, the idea of possession, or even sovereignty, is a concept of no import to me. That submarine is part of my naval fleet—the biggest fleet in the world, I would wager—and it will remain so. The crew are not German, they are men and women of Portsmouth, and they will remain where they wish. You will not make demands of them or me, and we shall make none of you. I think that would be best, don't you?”

 

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