Paternus_Rise of Gods

Home > Other > Paternus_Rise of Gods > Page 43
Paternus_Rise of Gods Page 43

by Dyrk Ashton


  He didn’t consider opening the secret door to the forested slopes beyond, but dropped his pack, lit an oil lamp, and flew into a frenzy of anguish. Benches, shelves of supplies, a stone table, nothing but the lamp and stool on which it sat escaped his woeful wrath.

  Finally he collapsed amongst the wreckage. His wracking sobs became whimpers and he drifted into sleep. But it brought him no reprieve. Tortured dreams of the horrific death of Arges at the hands of Xecotcovach, The Terror Bird. The fall of Asterion. The triumphant cry of Ziz as he plunged after him. And haunting all, like an apparition of contempt, the look on Father’s face Tanuki is sure to see when he learns what has transpired.

  How long Tanuki thrashed, gnashed his teeth and wept in fitful slumber, he did not know. Then the nightmare changed, and the terror deepened.

  Something is coming.

  Shuffling, sliding, huffing and wet. A sharp crack, then the sliding. Crack, and slide.

  Sprawled face down on the rough stone floor, Tanuki opens his eyes. His sight is soft and uncertain. A stupor of sleep and bereavement, or still dreaming?

  Crack, slide.

  Paralyzed by dread, he turns his eyes upon the sheer blackness of the tunnel entrance. Burbling, rasping, crack, slide. Then the shambling horror breathes his name, the wheeze of death itself.

  “T-a-n-u-k-i...”

  Abject fear grips Tanuki’s soul, but by some inchoate volition he flops over and scoots away in panic, bumping the stool and lamp. The wavering amber flame sets the shadow edges of the doorway quaking like Tanuki’s own heart.

  Crack, slide.

  A tenebrous form nears the entrance, humped and malformed on the floor. “T-a-a-a-n-u-u-u-k-i-i-i...”

  Wake up! Certain he’s still dreaming, Tanuki chokes on bile that rises in his throat, screams in somnambulant depths of despair. WAKE UP!

  A gory limb plunges into the light and stabs the floor.

  Crack!

  Tanuki can’t believe his eyes. And this is not a dream.

  A hand, clotted in grue, each finger ending like half a cloven hoof, clutching a horn with its tip driven into the stone. With a deathly groan, Asterion, The Bull, drags himself into the room, sliding on a greasy slick of his own Firstborn blood.

  * * *

  Far above the thin skin of atmosphere that shields the earth like a blanket protects a child from unknown terrors of night, the moon keeps its eternal watch in the cold silence of space. Through cloud, rain, and fog, roof, rock, sea and stone, the moon sees. And the moon knows.

  The story continues in

  PATERNUS: WRATH OF GODS

  The Paternus Trilogy, Book 2

  Release Date: July 10, 2018

  Continue reading for a sneak preview

  Get your free “Even myths have legends” character lineup computer wallpaper and “Beserker” short story by signing up for the Paternus Books Media Newsletter.*

  SUBSCRIBE ME

  You’ll also receive news, updates and exclusive special offers - but we promise not to ebomb your inbox and your email address will never be shared, nobody likes that.

  (*free stuff subject to change)

  CHAPTER ONE

  Wake

  “He is dead.”

  “Don’t say that.”

  “He looks dead.”

  “Stop it. He’s not dead!”

  “Glupaya devochka, I am meaning ‘dead to world,’ not dead dead.”

  Zeke hears the voices, but it’s like they’re speaking from another dimension, in slow motion, through a garden hose.

  He extricates himself from the sucking black sediment of deepest sleep, relief dawning in his sluggish mind—relief to be emerging from the hellish nightmares that plagued every moment of his slumber. He struggles toward the light of consciousness, then becomes aware of movement below.

  Inky black tentacles swell from the void. One lashes out—slap, sting and burn. Another grabs his ankle and he’s dragged back into the depths, ears ringing with a whine, whir and squeak like the sound of changing channels on an old-fashioned radio. He screams, soundless, swallowed by darkness.

  * * *

  Cheap booze. Abandoned buildings. Filthy blankets, flea bites and vomit. Playing guitar with strung-out bands in shitty bars reeking of piss and sour beer. Sticking needles in his arms with shaking hands. Fever sweats and hunger. Ribs cracked by boots in a cold alley. Despair.

  * * *

  “Come on, lad. You need to wake up now. Rise and shine.”

  The dull impact of a slap on the cheek.

  He’s Zeke, he knows it, and he’s asleep, somewhere—but he’s also someone else, in another place and time.

  * * *

  A parking garage at night.

  A couple stumbles in, leaning on each other, laughing. It’s them. The man and woman from earlier nightmares. Nightmares of childhood torment and abuse.

  Stepping out in front of them. “Remember me?”

  “Unbelievable,” the man slurs. “You miss me, ya little fuck?”

  The woman laughs. “Bad Zeke! Bad!”

  The man laughs with her. “Bad Zeke back for the belt?”

  The woman guffaws. A pistol lifts to her face and fires. An explosion of brain and bone.

  The man begs. He gets a bullet in the stomach and crumples, whimpering. A knife is drawn and goes straight for the man’s groin.

  * * *

  “Zeke! Wake up!”

  Someone’s yelling, shaking him. Someone he knows.

  A dog barks.

  “Milady, perhaps you could...?”

  * * *

  Scarlet neon. Sickly green light. Washing blood from his hands in a mildewed sink. Splashing his face with rust-brown water. Scrawny arms, tracked with sores. A broken mirror. Bruised and sunken chest, tattooed and pale. Raggedly shaved head and gaunt face. Teeth stained brown between cracked lips twisted in a fiendish grin. Eyes sunken in purple hollows, staring back at him.

  Zeke’s eyes.

  * * *

  The voices argue, vaguely familiar. A woman with a Russian accent, an Englishman, and a girl.

  But not just any girl.

  * * *

  Her name clicks in Zeke’s mind at the same time his bald double in the mirror screams, “Fi!!!”

  Whine, whir and squeak...

  * * *

  Splash!

  Zeke sputters, water running from his face and hair. He blinks it from his eyes.

  He has a hard time focusing, but makes out the form of a woman standing over him, her lithe body draped in a diaphanous gown of shimmering blue. A pendant of deep metallic red hangs at her neck, and a slim golden chaplet sits atop dark hair pulled back in a tight bun. Sensuous lips quirk up at one corner and keen eyes of burnished gold glint beneath sweeping eyebrows. She bounces a canteen in her hand.

  “Like magic,” she says in a velvety voice. Zeke’s foggy brain is pierced by a vivid memory of wonder and trepidation.

  Prathamaja Nandana. The First Daughter.

  Next to her is a stocky, dour-looking woman with long, stiff black hair, streaked gray. She wears an ankle-length skirt, blouse and vest. Her overly endowed, peaked chest, propped by thick crossed arms, seems to point at him in accusation.

  Mrs. Mirskaya, Fi’s old babysitter and employer—who also happens to be Mokosh, the fabled Slavic deity of weather and protection.

  Fuck. From one nightmare to another. But this one is real.

  Mrs. Mirskaya purses her lips, which causes the sparse hair on her upper lip to poke out like little whiskers, then clucks her tongue behind prominent front teeth. “Lentyay,” she says in Russian.

  Zeke can barely hear her, doesn’t know the word means “bum,” “slacker” or “lazybones.” Given Mrs. Mirskaya’s general attitude toward him, though, he could probably guess.

  An elderly gentleman leans in to unbuckle straps from Zeke’s shoulders. Mutton chop sideburns, long braided ponytail, proud hooked nose and flinty gray eyes.

  Fi’s Uncle Edgar.
>
  “Sorry to disturb you, lad,” Edgar says. “We have a bit of a situation.” But Edgar’s voice is muffled and Zeke can’t quite make out what he’s saying. Edgar hauls him up from a flip-down seat that faces sideways, its back secured to the wall. Once he’s certain Zeke isn’t going to fall down, he hurries away.

  Zeke sways on his feet. “Wait. Situation?” He’s disoriented, his muscles stiff and sore to the bone, and his back hurts like hell. He’s also shaking, feeling thin, weak, worn out. He pumps a finger in his left ear, which still bothers him due to the clamorous cry of Tengu-Andrealphus, The Peafowl, who attacked them at Peter’s house. It doesn’t help.

  His nose registers mingled smells of plastic and tin, fuel and disinfectant, but his groggy mind can’t place them—then the floor bucks and shudders.

  Zeke catches himself on the top of the seat, shakes his head to clear his thoughts. His hearing remains weak in his bad ear, but his good ear squeaks and pops. Sound rushes in—the drone of engines and howl of wind. A relentless vibration runs through his heels up his spine. And he remembers.

  He’s on a plane.

  They’d left Peter’s estate outside Toledo on a boat, made their way up the river, then across the western end of Lake Erie to Canada. Edgar presented official-looking papers at a dock near Windsor and made a call on the dock master’s phone. A black van picked them up and drove them to a remote airfield where the plane was readied. A decommissioned Alenia C-27J Spartan troop transport. Edgar told him he’d “bought it for a song.”

  Of course Edgar owns a military plane, Zeke’s worn-out brain had mused. He is Sir Galahad. Sir Galahad should own whatever the hell he wants, right?

  Too exhausted to ask questions, Zeke had gone to the hangar restroom to wash up and put on fresh clothes from his backpack. They’d placed Fi on a fold-down cot on the plane, unconscious, ghostly pale, breathing shallow and weak, perilously close to death. Then they were off on the long trans-Atlantic flight to Norway. Going to see Freyja, of all people. The Freyja of Norse legend, Edgar had assured him.

  Unbelievable.

  Well, more of the unbelievable.

  Zeke rarely left Fi’s side during the flight, and Mrs. Mirskaya was always nearby. Peter flew most of the time, but Edgar took over once while Peter sat with Fi, holding her hand in silence.

  Zeke couldn’t sleep. He didn’t want to. For worrying about Fi, but also because every time he dozed off the nightmares of childhood torment and drug-induced misery returned. And memories of murder. Someone else’s memories.

  He must have finally succumbed, though, because here he is, having one hell of a time waking up. But how could he have let it happen with Fi in her condition? She’s been bitten by Maskim Xul, and for all Zeke or anyone knows, she’s dying. Aggravated, he shakes himself and slaps his cheeks.

  “Hey sleepyhead.”

  Zeke jumps and whips around to find Fi standing behind him—standing—clutching the taut webbing at the back of another seat to keep her balance in the turbulence. Her smile is weak and her red hair a mess, but she’s changed into clean sweatpants, tank top, light jacket and hiking shoes—and she’s awake—and alive.

  “Fi!” He grabs her and hugs her. “You didn’t die!”

  She grunts. “Nope.” She hugs him back. “Careful, though. Little sore.”

  Zeke puts space between them but keeps hold of her arms. “Oh my God.” He chokes back tears. “We didn’t know if you were going to make it. You okay?”

  “I guess. I mean, I feel like shit, and I can barely stand up.” She touches the bandaged fang-wounds hidden beneath her sweatpants, on her bottom and the back of her thigh, and winces. “My ass hurts.”

  Someone brushes past, chortling. “She got bit on the butt.”

  Zeke and Fi cringe as Dimmi flashes a toothy grin. He’s in human cloak, dark-skinned and black-eyed, wearing khaki shirt and pants, and jungle boots, as he’d first appeared in the tunnels beneath Peter’s house. He giggle-barks at his own joke.

  “Idimmu Mulla!” From near the back of the plane, Pratha’s voice comes as a warning. Her golden eyes glare, though she smiles at the same time, as if she wants him to screw up so she can rip his head off. Literally. Just like she did to the alligator-monster, Ao Guang.

  Dimmi yips and hurries on his way, carrying a crate in his hands.

  “That guy’s creepy,” says Fi.

  “That’s Idimmu Mulla. They call him The Hyaena.”

  “Dimmi, I know. I woke up a couple hours ago. Edgar and Mrs. Mirskaya filled me in on what happened after Max bit me.” She shivers at the thought.

  “So you met Pratha and Baphomet, too.”

  “Mmm. Yeah.” Fi gazes over Zeke’s shoulder, her expression a mixture of contemplation and fear. “The First Daughter, and The Goat.”

  The plane is entirely open, cabin to tail, the interior nearly eleven feet wide and over seven feet high. It’s mostly empty, with red canvas troop seats folded against the walls. In the tail section, Edgar, Baphomet and Dimmi are hurrying to pack a truck that rests on a skid.

  Like Dimmi, Baphomet is “cloaked,” as Edgar called it, taking on human form. Most likely to keep his horns from inhibiting his movement in the plane's cramped quarters. He’s dressed the same as Dimmi, but is extremely light-skinned, with short white hair and goatee—and pink eyes. Fi saw their Truefaces earlier, though, and she’s discovered, if she squints and thinks about it, she can see his Trueface now too, like a superimposed image. The backward curving horns that rise above Baphomet’s caprine face nearly reach the ceiling, yet they’re ethereal, their sharp points somehow passing through the conduits and cabling as he efficiently, almost gracefully, goes about his work with slender fingers that terminate in tiny cloven hoofs, crouching on back-bending legs with cloven feet. Dimmi works on the other side of the truck, and Fi can see his grotesque fuzzy face and big black eyes, high peaked ears and wide mouth full of jagged pointed teeth. She blinks, and they’re in human form once again.

  The truck is a military Mercedes G Wagon with dual rear axles, its roof support bars and canvas top stowed, the front windshield folded down and latched. Pratha lounges against the wall nearby, overseeing the loading of supplies—and ensuring Baphomet and Dimmi stay on their best behavior.

  “What’s going on?” Zeke asks Fi.

  “Hell if I know,” Fi replies, exasperated. “They haven’t told me much, and they keep speaking in languages I don’t understand. But I think we’re going to Norway.”

  “To find Freyja.”

  “Yeah. They call her The Mother of Cats and Dogs.”

  “Really?”

  “No, I made it up.” Fi’s condition has made her cranky, but not entirely subdued her sense of humor. “Yes, really.”

  Her snarky reply catches Zeke off guard. He stares, taking in her sparkling green eyes, and it hits him again—she’s alive. And, disheveled as she is, right now she’s the most beautiful thing he’s ever seen.

  He grins. Fi scowls, then it occurs to her too. A smile emerges, broadens to a grin of her own. They’re both alive.

  Together, they laugh. Foolish, perhaps, absurd even. But they need it.

  The shared relief subsides and Zeke wipes a tear from her cheek with his thumb. His hand stays on her face.

  Fi notices that Zeke is gaunt, pale, with black circles under his eyes, taken by an occasional tremor.

  “How about you?” she asks. “You okay? You don’t look well.”

  Zeke breathes deeply to control the shaking. “I’m okay.” Flashes of the horrid dreams stab through his mind, but he mentally swats them away. “Just cold, I think. Or maybe I’m getting a cold.”

  “Great. Just what you need, right?”

  The plane bucks again, knocking them off balance, and an odd voice rises.

  Mrs. Mirskaya stands near the far wall, face and arms raised, mumbling ancient words.

  “What’s she doing?” Zeke asks.

  Edgar hustles to them carrying two parachute packs by the str
aps in one hand and Zeke’s big blue backpack in the other. The splint on Edgar’s arm is gone, the wrist Kleron broke in the tunnels now healed. “She’s reinforcing the storm she’s summoned,” he says. There’s a snap of lightning and rumble of thunder outside. The plane lurches. Fi and Zeke grab hold of each other and squeeze their handholds tighter.

  “A storm?” Zeke says. “Is that a good idea?”

  “It will hopefully aid in our escape,” Edgar answers. He holds up the parachute packs. “Have you skydived, lad?”

  “Uh, no?” Zeke says, looking at the chute packs as if they’re severed heads of little green aliens.

  “I thought not. Put this on, then.” Edgar hands the blue pack to Zeke, who grunts and nearly drops it, because it still weighs a ton. Edgar tosses one chute pack on the floor and dons the other.

  “What do you mean, escape?” Fi asks, her voice a little shaky.

  “Escape from what?” Zeke adds, his voice a lot shaky.

  “Fighter jets, attempting to force us toward shore,” Edgar answers, indignant. “And we were over international waters! They’re acknowledging none of my clearance protocols—and my privileges are of the highest order, believe you me.” He snugs the chute pack’s straps in agitation. “Baphomet believes it’s Kleron’s doing.”

  A pall falls over Fi at the mention of Kleron. Lucifer. The Bat. Attacking the hospital with his minions, killing Billy, setting all those monsters on them at the house—including the buffalo-beast Mahisha and the screaming Tengu-Andrealphus peacock-thing. Tempting her in the tunnel hub chamber beneath Peter’s house. Almost biting Edgar’s face off, and ordering that horrible Maskim Xul to bite her.

  And Max is a spider...

  “Whose planes are they?” Zeke asks Edgar. “I didn’t know Norway had an air force. I mean, did we make it to Norway?”

  “No,” Edgar grumbles. “We’re off the northern coast of Scotland.” Now he’s really annoyed. “It’s the RAF!” He turns in a huff, but Zeke grabs his sleeve.

 

‹ Prev