Mythical (Stone Soldiers #1)

Home > Fantasy > Mythical (Stone Soldiers #1) > Page 16
Mythical (Stone Soldiers #1) Page 16

by C.E. Martin


  “This is where you work?” Josie asked.

  “This is where I live.”

  At the end of the long tunnel, a tunnel Josie was sure had passed out from underneath the black office building, they stopped at one of the blast doors.

  Kenslir held his hand up to a control panel beside the door. He pressed his hand against a glass panel. Light flared as a scanner read his palm print.

  “Welcome back, Colonel,” a strange, computerized voice announced. It sounded male. Calm, almost soothing, despite its obvious machine inflection.

  The heavy door popped open a few inches, then slowly began to cycle open, swinging out on hidden hydraulics. Kenslir led Josie through the door.

  Beyond the door, there was a vast chamber, nearly three stories high and over a hundred feet across. It was roughly circular in shape, with concrete and steel walls, and observation booths high above the main floor. Medical equipment, cabinets, and tables were in abundance.

  In the middle of the chamber, there was a large pool of water.

  Nearly fifty feet across, the pool was glass-still, and surrounded by dull stone. A sort of bridge-like structure crossed the pool. On the bridge were four stainless steel tables, similar to what an operating room might have. Machinery hung over the four tables.

  At least a dozen technicians were at work at stations around the room. They were all female, and wore labcoats, with holstered pistols on web-belts around their waists, under their lab coats. They all wore hipwader boots, held up by suspenders like bib overalls.

  One of the technicians approached Kenslir and Josie. She had short blonde hair, was middle aged and a little on the heavy side. She had a stern look on her face.

  “Colonel, I must object to-” the woman began to say.

  “Doctor,” Kenslir replied. “You can object, or you can keep your job.”

  Kenslir stepped out of the way and gently moved Josie over as well. The two guards in the hallway rolled Jimmy’s bodybag in on the gurney. They took it over to the pool, where there was a table and steps leading down into the still water.

  “The Pentagon hasn't-” the doctor started to protest.

  “The Pentagon?” Kenslir asked. “Who’s in charge of this facility again?”

  The doctor’s eyes looked down, away from Kenslir’s. “You are, sir.”

  “Then let’s do this.”

  The guards had positioned the gurney with Jimmy’s body bag next to the water’s edge. They unzipped the body bag and pulled it down, exposing Jimmy’s body.

  Josie gasped at the sight of Jimmy. His face was now slack, pale. The blood on his shirt had dried and she could see the gaping chest wound. Tears welled up in her eyes.

  The doctor nodded to an assistant and walked over to Jimmy’s body. The guards stepped back, turning and saluting the Colonel as they exited the chamber. The huge blast door slowly cycled shut behind them.

  “What is this place?” Josie asked.

  “Well, I could tell you...”

  “But you’d have to kill me?” Josie said, wiping the tears off her cheeks.

  “I was thinking of offering you a job,” Kenslir said, turning back to watch the doctor and her assistant.

  They were struggling to lift Jimmy’s body off the table. The doctor held him under the arms, while the assistant held his feet. They carefully carried Jimmy down the steps and into the water.

  “A job?” Josie said, surprised. “I'm a teenager! I just graduated high school. What could I do?”

  “How about if I throw in a scholarship...” Kenslir was still watching the doctor. “Of course, you'd have to take your classes over the internet. Here.”

  “Are you serious?” Josie asked.

  The doctor and her assistant had lowered Jimmy’s body into the water. He was laid out on some kind of metal grating floor about a foot under the surface.

  Kenslir pointed back to the pool of water. Josie turned her head. The water was moving around, by the doctor’s feet. In a splash of water, Jimmy suddenly sat up, gasping for air.

  “Jimmy!” Josie said, astonished.

  Jimmy was bewildered. He gasped for breath as he looked around. His skin looked healthy, alive, no longer the pallor of the dead. The doctor and her assistant helped him to his feet.

  Josie looked back to Mark, amazed. He nodded for her to go over to Jimmy.

  Josie ran to Jimmy. She could see that his chest was healed. She stepped down into the water, and hugged Jimmy.

  “Where am I?” Jimmy asked. He leaned back from Josie, looking around the vast chamber, at the lab coated techs and Kenslir.

  “What is this place?”

  Josie was crying, tears of joy rolling down her cheeks. She grabbed Jimmy by the ears and kissed him.

  “I thought you were dead,” Josie said between kisses.

  “Me too,” Jimmy said. He didn’t even feel embarrassed by Josie kissing all over him while the techs and Kenslir watched. Jimmy didn’t know which was better- being alive or Josie kissing him.

  Kenslir walked over toward the pool. He stopped several feet from the edge of the water.

  “Don’t leave the pool, Jimmy,” Kenslir said.

  Jimmy was still stunned by the kisses. He just looked blankly at Kenslir.

  Josie turned around, grinning broadly. She held onto one of Jimmy’s hands tightly.

  “Why?” Josie asked.

  “It's what's keeping him alive.”

  Josie looked around, at the stern faces of the doctor and her assistant. Down at the water she and Jimmy were standing in. It was just a pool of water. Clear water. So clear, Josie could see down into it. It was maybe fifty feet deep. Stone walls lined the sides of the vast pool. The bottom was covered in fine sediment.

  “I don’t understand,” Josie said. She was getting that cold chill up her back again. “He’s not dead anymore.”

  “I’m very sorry,” Mark said. “But, technically, he still is.”

  Kenslir turned toward the doctor’s assistant and gestured at a small steel box on the nearby table. It had a handle on the top, and one side appeared to be hinged, like a door. It was large enough to hold a basketball.

  The technician stepped out of the water and walked over to the table.

  “Whaddya mean?” Jimmy asked. He was confused. Very confused. He felt very much alive.

  “That shapeshifter ripped your heart out Jimmy,” Kenslir said.

  The assistant carried the steel box over to him. The Colonel was careful to hold it only by the corners, and the handle.

  Josie looked down at Jimmy’s chest. She ran her hand over his skin. There was not the faintest mark or scar.

  Josie and Jimmy looked to Kenslir with utter confusion.

  “The Fountain has only temporarily brought you back,” Kenslir said.

  “Temporarily?” Jimmy and Josie said in unison. Josie gripped Jimmy’s hand tighter.

  “I'm sorry, Jimmy. We can't fix you right now. But we might be able to later.”

  “Fix me?” Jimmy asked, confused. “What’re you talking about?”

  “Josie, let go of his hand,” Kenslir said.

  The doctor stepped in and put her hands lightly on Josie’s shoulders.

  Josie looked at Mark, holding the steel box in front of him. She looked at Jimmy, confused. She looked at the doctor, who nodded slowly to her.

  Josie released Jimmy’s hand reluctantly.

  “What? What’s wrong with him?” Josie asked.

  “This won’t hurt, Jimmy,” Kenslir said. He held the box’s handle with his right hand, like a lantern. He reached his left hand up to the hinged face of the box. “You’ll feel cold. Then it’ll be like going to sleep.”

  “Wait!” Josie said, stepping in front of Jimmy. “There’s nothing wrong with him! He’s healed!”

  Kenslir frowned. “The water is cursed. After midnight it’ll take away from Jimmy twice what it’s given him.”

  Jimmy and Josie were utt
erly confused. It made no sense. If the water gave him life, what could it take away from him twice? He only had one life.

  Josie had a sudden revelation. “Fountain? The Fountain of Youth?”

  “That’s what some people used to call it,” Kenslir said. “Turns out, that’s not entirely accurate.”

  The doctor gently touched Josie’s shoulders again and walked her over a step, away from Jimmy.

  “Jimmy, this is only temporary,” Kenslir said, opening the steel box.

  Jimmy and Josie looked inside the box. They couldn’t help themselves. The doctor closed her eyes and looked away, repulsed by what she saw.

  Jimmy’s skin began to turn gray. His hair grayed, even his eyes. His smooth skin became rough, pitted. His body stiffened and his breathing stopped. Jimmy was petrified- turned to gray stone.

  Josie looked at Jimmy then at her own hands, which remained normal. She couldn’t understand. She looked back at the box.

  In the steel box there was a head. It too was made of gray stone. The head was vaguely human, but instead of smooth skin had scales, like a snake. Instead of hair, long tendrils, also of stone, hung from its scalp. One eye was missing. The remaining eye was not stone, but flesh. It gave off a weird, yellow glow.

  Kenslir closed the box.

  Josie looked back at Jimmy, a frozen figure of stone. She ran her hands over his stone body. Even his clothes had been petrified.

  Kenslir handed the steel box containing the head of Medusa back to the doctor’s assistant. The assistant hurried away with the box, taking it through a door on the other side of the chamber.

  “What did you do?” Josie demanded.

  “This way the Fountain’s curse can’t kill him,” Kenslir said. He held out a hand to help Josie out of the water.

  “I don’t-“ Josie started to say. “Why wasn’t I-?” She ignored Kenslir’s hand.

  “Medusa’s eye only works on men.”

  “Why?” Josie demanded. She felt tears welling up in her eyes again. She had gotten Jimmy back, now he was a statue.

  “We have to wait for the next full moon,” Kenslir said. “Then we’ll see if Jimmy’s ready to enlist.”

  THANK YOU FOR READING!

  If you liked the story, please consider leaving a review at your e-tailer, or at an online website like Goodreads.com!

  Comments and questions always welcome!

  Visit www.StoneSoldiers.info for more info on the series.

  THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES…

  BROTHERS IN STONE

  A second prehistoric shapeshifter is loose in the modern world, joining his resurrected brother in ripping out and consuming the hearts of victims to steal their power, their memories and their form. Colonel Mark Kenslir came back from the dead to defeat one shapeshifter. Can he hope to defeat two, or will he need help from an FBI psychic?

  Available now in digital and print editions!

  BLOOD AND STONE

  The last shapeshifter has survived. After a quick stop at Alcatraz to dine on the hearts of the supernatural and paranormal criminals imprisoned there, the shapeshifter flees to the Yucatan, where it poses as the Mayan blood god Kukulcan in a bid to gather followers and sacrifices. Colonel Kenslir and Detachment 1039 must rush to the aid of America’s southern ally and topple the false god before he becomes too powerful. But they’ll need help from an unlikely source: Dr. Laura Olson, vampire, and the sole survivor of the Alcatraz attack. And also a woman the Colonel imprisoned nearly forty years ago.

  Available now in digital and print editions!

  SHADES OF WAR

  Someone is raising the spirits of the dead from American battlefields- forming a dark army to attack the living. Detachment 1039 must find a way to stop the spectral forces marching on Washington and their shadowy leader, before the country is plunged into chaos.

  Available now!

  COMING SOON

  (August 2013)

  BLACK KNIGHT DOWN

  1Orbiting the earth for millennia, a strange, black construct hangs silently in space, its purpose and creators unknown. Governments of the world have feared the implications of the construct and have kept its existence a secret.

  When the artificial satellite, code-named Black Knight, comes crashing to down to Earth, the Stone Soldiers must spring into action to keep those responsible from unleashing the horrors it contains.

  BEFORE THE SHAPESHIFTERS,

  THE STONE SOLDIERS DEFENDED AMERICA…

 

 

  Introducing a new series of Prequel Short Stories, revealing the creation and first missions of the Stone Soldiers.

  STONE SOLDIER

  STONE SOLDIERS: CATCHING FIRE

  STONE SOLDIERS: CITY OF BONES

  STONE SOLDIERS: SEA OF MONSTERS (July 2013)

 


‹ Prev