The 1000 Souls (Book 1): Apocalypse Revolution

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The 1000 Souls (Book 1): Apocalypse Revolution Page 33

by Michael Andre McPherson


  He was not afraid to go home.

  Acknowledgements

  Margaret Docker and Melanie Fogel, who patiently taught me the finer points of writing; Mark Alliksaar, a technical instructor and cliché checker; Mark Downie, who guided the storyline; Rebecca M. Senese, beta reader extraordinaire; all of The Fledglings Writers Group, for years of work; Matt A. Baker, a careful editor; Michael Custode, for great artwork on the original cover of The Book of Bertrand; Pectopah Productions Inc. for the financial backing and most of all Susan Docker, for insisting that we move ahead.

  Most importantly, a thank you to you for reading this book. I wrote a book that I enjoyed to read and it makes me happy that you were engaged enough to make it to the end. I hope you enjoyed it too. I would love to hear from you. Visit me at my blog: Beyond the Slush Pile or send me an email at [email protected]. Next time you are on Amazon, click the "Like" button for my book or if I have moved you to prose, leave a review. Thanks - the 1000 live on!

  BUT WAIT! THERE'S MORE!

  Generation Apocalypse: Sneak Peak

  (The 1000 Souls: Book Two - Release Date: July, 2012)

  Prologue

  He had just turned 10 when the world fell apart. At first it was fun because some of the teachers stopped showing up at school. The principal, tall and angry, kept stuffing all the students into the gym to watch movies, promising each day that the next would be normal. Instead, fewer and fewer of Tevy's friends came to school, and one day neither did the principal.

  In the evenings his parents spoke in anxious whispers, careful to ensure he didn't overhear, but one word often leaked out: rippers. He heard their neighbor, old Mr. Costa, say to his dad that there were rumors of murders happening all over Chicago, but for some reason it was never on the news. "They don't want us to know," he said, pointing south, in the general direction of city hall, with his cane.

  One morning his parents didn't go to work and they kept him home, letting him play Call of Duty when the power was up. That had been the other big change: the power failing, the lights going dark, sometimes for hours on end.

  He had helped his dad board up the ground floor windows.

  "Is there a hurricane coming?" he'd asked, passing his dad another screw.

  "Not the windy kind," his father had replied.

  Nights became very scary. Sometimes he heard screams and running feet on the sidewalk outside, and one night Mr. Costa's house had burned down with all kinds of people standing on his lawn but none helping. Tevy's mother had pulled him from the window and covered his eyes. He had wanted to scream because he was afraid, but his mother had whispered in his ear.

  "Don't let them hear you. We have to pretend we're not here, baby. Please don't cry. We must be silent."

  Silence. He had learned that lesson well.

  The next night the world did end. The rippers came for them.

  The shouting frightened him beyond all reason, and he hugged his mother with all his strength. They were calling rude things with foul language and promising to hurt them all if they didn't come out. He wanted to obey their commands, believing their lies, but his father had known better.

  "Stay in the closet," he whispered as he shoved Tevy back amongst the shoes and the coats. "It's like hide-and-seek but you mustn't lose. Do you understand me?"

  The intensity of his father's actions, the fear in his eyes, the pleading of his words warned Tevy not to argue. He had always known that his parents loved him, but from that day forward he understood that loving parents lay down their lives for their children. Like his parents.

  The last time he saw them alive his mother was loading a revolver and his father was holding a hunting rifle. His mother blew him a hurried kiss. The closet door closed. Then came the shouting and breaking glass, and a whoosh accompanied by a wave of hot air and the stench of gasoline. Guns fired and his mother screamed curses at someone, language he had never before heard her use.

  He wanted to leave the closet but he remembered his father's last words. He wanted to scream but he remembered his mother telling him how silence could save his life. He clamped his hand over his mouth and wept, but he didn't scream. He didn't make a sound.

  But the dull roar of a fire, the choking smoke, would soon kill him. He had to leave the closet. Suddenly there was a lot more gunfire and a lot more screaming, but not from his parents. Then his mother spoke her last words.

  "My son!" she shouted. "In the closet! Please--" Her voice choked off wetly. It wasn't a normal sound.

  The closet door yanked open, letting in a billowing cloud of gray that stung his eyes and made him choke. A strange man on hands and knees reached for him. Had there been a halo around his head?

  "Come on!" He grabbed Tevy's arm and yanked him from the closet. "I'm here to save you."

  Tevy climbed onto the man's back as directed and hung on around his neck as the house cracked and groaned from the flames. They spilled out onto the front porch and the man stood, scooping Tevy into his arms and running from the house. It was the first time Tevy had seen dead bodies--real dead bodies--not like his grandfather in the coffin at the funeral home. These bodies had chunks of their skulls missing or bloody holes in their chests. They were skewed at strange angles and had nightmare inducing expressions on their faces.

  "We've got to get him to St. Mike's," said a woman with a machine gun. "What about his parents?"

  The man, his savior, shook his head.

  The woman turned in fury to shoot one of the corpses on the lawn.

  Tevy understood. The world as he knew it had ended forever. But he remembered to be silent, so he bit his tongue as he wept and buried his face in man's shoulder, breathing in the stink of a sweating saint.

  *

  She had worried about homesickness when she showed up at Atherley College, but by the second week she was more concerned about where she could buy a gun. Her roommate, Ashley, had gone missing, and there was talk of a serial killer hunting around the campus. The police said they shouldn't worry, that Ashley had probably just succumbed to the strain of college and headed down south to live on the streets of Toronto or maybe even Chicago.

  Neither Kayla nor the other girls in their student residence believed that for a second, and they all found it disconcerting that the police were downplaying Ashley's disappearance.

  "Frigging cops have no clue," Rachel said. She was in her third year and a lot older than Kayla, who wouldn't turn eighteen until December. "Last time a girl was assaulted was in my first year, and they practically locked us all down for a month until they caught the asshole. This time they tell us to go about our business as usual? I got this."

  She showed them all the Taser her dad had sent. "Get some protection girls, and I'm not talking about condoms."

  But Kayla's parents were committed pacifists even though Sioux Lookout, the little town where they lived, made a lot of money from tourist hunting and fishing. The town was so far north that the only way to go farther was by plane, and she already missed the sound of those little aircraft taking off early every morning to fly campers up to the high lakes. She considered dropping out and going home, but her mom suggested she stay at the college.

  "Something's going on in town," she said on the phone. "There've been a lot of house fires. Your father and I are thinking of taking Kevin and heading down to a hotel in Thunder Bay for a few days."

  That frightened Kayla. Why would they take her little brother and abandon the family home just when an arsonist was loose in town? What about their teaching jobs? The news reports didn't mention the problems in Sioux Lookout, but they didn't mention Ashley's disappearance either.

  Kayla found Rachel in the common area reading a textbook, her dark hair tied back in a tight ponytail.

  "I need to buy a gun," said Kayla.

  Rachel looked up from the book and her expression showed approval rather than surprise. "That's pretty much impossible to do legally now." She slapped the book closed.

  "I don't care
about legally. It's my body and no one's gonna take me without a fight."

  "My dad knows a guy." Rachel stood and stretched. In another time--a month ago--Kayla might have thought Rachel needed to lose a few pounds, but that seemed so irrelevant and petty now. "Dad's decided I need an upgrade from the Taser. He's getting me a Glock. If you want I can get you one too."

  Kayla did want, but her weekly allowance from Mom and Dad hadn't been deposited into her bank account yet. "How much?"

  Rachel smiled. "Don't worry. You can pay in installments. We're doing it for a few other girls too. Dad says we need to be our own police force here, watch out for each other."

  And they did. No one went anywhere without an armed partner, but it turned out this serial killer wasn't just interested in women. Boys started to disappear, and even a few professors. The college president responded by going on a rant about absenteeism. By mid-October rumors began to circulate about a cult of serial killers. Some guy down in Chicago was all over the Internet, talking about rippers--blood drinkers. He said you couldn't believe what you see on the news, and Kayla fervently agreed. Her parents had found Thunder Bay just as dangerous as Sioux Lookout.

  "It seems like a house burns down every night," said her mother in a quick phone call. "We've decided we're better off at home, and things seemed to have quieted down since the band council took over policing from the O.P.P."

  When Kayla's physics professor didn't turn up one day, she decided to go home. Teaching assistants now taught half of her classes anyway. They seemed as lost as everyone else as to why the campus was in a state of crisis unnoticed by the administration.

  But she was too late.

  She managed to hitch a ride in a rusting Jeep Cherokee that took her all the way to Sioux Lookout. The driver was young, Ojibwa, and cute. He told her his name was Ted, but she was pretty sure that was just the name he used with non-First Nations.

  He was twenty and chatty, his jeans snug fitting and his muscles lean. He'd been out west working on the oil sands projects, but things had gotten weird and his grandmother had asked him to come home.

  "The farmers," he said about his journey thus far. "They're burning the fields out in the Prairies instead of harvesting--some kind of protest the newspapers say. Don't know much but it seems stupid to me."

  He continued to say, "don't know much," several times during the two-hour ride, but Kayla began to believe he knew quite a bit, and she was really glad he was there when they pulled up in front of the burnt shell of her childhood home.

  He let her cry for a while on the front lawn, his hand on her shoulder a comfort, her knees getting wet in the fresh snow as she let the tension of the last few weeks pour out. She was detached, almost watching herself cry. She couldn't stop.

  "Sorry," he said finally. "You should come to the rez with me. Gran said I had to be there before sunset. She said that was really important."

  Kayla considered saying it was okay, that she just wanted to be a here a bit longer, that she'd stay at the Sunset Motel, but she was angry. Someone was going to pay for this, and she had to be alive to deliver that punishment.

  She went with him to the little bungalow in the woods, and his grandmother had clucked and shouted at him and reached high to cuff his head, but she reluctantly let Kayla stay the night on the ratty couch.

  The next morning Kayla helped Gran with the dishes while Ted went off to a band council meeting. If Gran spoke English she didn't use it with Kayla. Ted came back with a grim expression.

  "We got to go. Most are going."

  "Where?"

  "Most are heading up north, flying to the high lakes, away from...people."

  Had he been going to say white people? He looked embarrassed, guilty.

  "I can't go there."

  He nodded his agreement. A long chat broke out in Ojibwa between Gran and Ted. It rose to shouting, but never aggressive, just both trying to be heard over the other, both used to talking this way.

  "I can take you back to the college," he said finally. A four hour round trip for him.

  "I can't ask you to do that. If I could just get a ride into town I'll get the bus tomorrow." Every Monday morning a bus headed down to Atherley with people who spent the week working there or at the pulp mill in Dryden.

  "There won't be a bus." He turned and began zipping up her pack for her.

  "Well I'll hitch a ride then. Don't worry, I can take care of myself."

  But she didn't feel that way. Had her parents gone back to Thunder Bay? She'd checked her phone about a hundred times during the night. Calling her mother, texting her little brother, but there had been no replies. In her heart she knew there was only one reason that little brat hadn't texted her back with some amusing or snarky message, or a least an excited 140 characters about the house fire. He had always loved trying to fit his sentences into exactly 140 characters.

  "It's not safe to hitch a ride." Ted opened the door, letting cold air into the little house. "There are people in the day who work for them--for the rippers."

  And Kayla knew the world had changed forever. They were talking about them, the serial killers that slashed throats and drank blood, the ones that guy in Chicago, Bertrand Allan, kept talking about in his YouTube broadcasts.

  "Thanks. I don't know how I can thank you."

  They rode in silence back to the college, the trees frosted with fresh snow, the road unplowed. Ted's Jeep had four-wheel drive, but he rarely used it because it sucked too much gas. "A lotta gas stations closed. It's hard to come by."

  She tried to give him every bit of cash in her wallet even though he had refused and even seemed insulted.

  "You'll need gas," she said. "Please, you probably saved my life."

  He took it in the end just to get her to stop.

  "It's probably worthless paper anyway."

  He sped away, clearly anxious to get back to his grandmother before sunset.

  Kayla found the dorm in a panic, girls crying and packing.

  "What's going on?" she said to Rachel, who wasn't crying but was stuffing a pack with clothing.

  "We're getting the hell out of here." Rachel suddenly stopped and looked up. "Hey, I thought you'd gone home."

  Kayla didn't want to appear weak, but it was too much. She shook her head and bit her lip, unable to speak but successfully fighting back the tears--until Rachel swept her up in a hug.

  "Oh, baby. It's okay. It's okay," Rachel said over and over as Kayla wept. "We've got a place to go, a safe place."

  "Where." Kayla pushed back from the hug and wiped her cheeks.

  "It's a new student residence about a mile from here, but it's built like a fort. I don't know why but everybody already calls it The Keep. The contractor who built it is sending a bus over for anyone who wants to join him--and they've got a lot of guns."

  "Good." Kayla pulled out her Glock and looked at it for a moment, sensing the new life that was before her. "I'd like an upgrade to a machine gun."

  *

  Want to know when it is available for sale? Email at me at [email protected] and I'll send you a notice when it is ready.

  *

  Can't wait for Book Two or Book Three of the 1000 Souls? Jump ahead and read: Vampire Road: Book Four of The 1000 Souls, available on Amazon Kindle.

  Table of Contents

  Unknown Text

  One- The Change

  Two - News

  Three - Day Shift

  Four - Murder

  Five - No News of Murder

  Six - Skulking

  Seven - Haunting

  Eight - Night Shift

  Nine - Goth Knights

  Ten - Guns and Hacking

  Eleven - The Last Warning from Thomas Nolan

  Twelve - Battle of St. Michael's

  Thirteen - End of Days

  >Fourteen - Feeding Frenzy

  Fifteen - The End of an Era

  Sixteen - Gathering Disciples

  Seventeen - A Fugitive

&nbs
p; Eighteen - Word at McDonalds

  Nineteen - The Sanctuary of St. Michael's

  Twenty - Right Now

  Twenty-One - Interrogation

  Twenty-Two- The World Falls Apart

  Twenty-Three - Massacre of St. Mike's

  Twenty-Four - The Hero

  Twenty-Five - A Night at the Bomb Shelter

  Twenty-Six - Mr. Anti-Christ

  Twenty-Seven - The Heretic

  Twenty-Eight - The Apocalypse Scenario

  Twenty-Nine - The Army of Bertrand

  Thirty - The Circle of Twelve

  Thirty-One - The Horror of the Mountain

  Thirty-Two - The Battle of the Mountain

  Thirty-Three - The Monster

  Thirty-Four - The Saint

  Thirty-Five - Barry's Tower

  Acknowledgements

  Generation Apocalypse: Sneak Peak

 

 

 


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