CHAPTER 7
Karina pulled Emily off the bear-dog and
into her arms.
“Stay close,” Lucas barked as he turned and ran
back up the path. She followed him, trying not to stumble. They
pounded over the bridge they’d crossed on the way in.
“What’s happening, Mommy?”
“I don’t know, baby. Hold on tight.”
Emily was so heavy. Karina never remembered her
being that heavy. It was like all of the strength had somehow gone
out of her arms.
They cleared the garden and burst into the open
space between the two spires, Lucas ahead and she, out of breath, a
few dozen yards behind. A group of people stood by the spires,
where the road out of the settlement rolled down the hill. A
familiar face looked at her with merciless sky eyes. Arthur.
Daniel’s golden mane swung into view. He grinned at her, a deranged
wild grin that had too much mirth. On the periphery a few yards
away, Henry stood with his eyes closed, tense, his face raised to
the sky. A young girl, barely a teenager, stood next to him in an
identical pose. To the right an older, dark-skinned woman and
another man, tall and gaunt, imitated them.
“Good of you to join us,” Arthur said.
Lucas walked up to stand next to him.
A huge sound came from the distance, deep, booming,
as if someone was playing a foghorn like a trumpet.
The girl at Henry’s side inhaled sharply and
dropped to her knees, breathing in ragged, painful gasps. Henry’s
eyes snapped open. He thrust his hand out and clenched it into a
fist. “Oh no, you don’t.”
A desperate scream of pure pain came from the
distance.
Henry smiled. His face glowed with vicious joy, so
shocking that Karina took a step back. He stared into the distance.
“Not as fun to pick on someone your own size?”
The scream kept ringing higher and higher, pausing
for the mere fraction of a second that it took the agonized being
that was making it to gulp some air.
Behind Henry the fallen girl opened her eyes and
rose to her feet. The older couple awakened from their
trance.
Henry twisted his fist and jerked it, as if ripping
something in half.
The scream died.
“Thank you,” the girl said.
“It’s all right. Next time remember to cloak.”
Henry turned to Arthur. “They have two hundred civs, fifty pigs,
two heavy field artillery batteries, six squads of twenty-five men
each, and seven Mind Benders. Minus one.”
He’d killed an enemy Mind Bender, Karina realized.
Kind, shy Henry crushed him, but not before he made him
suffer.
“Too many,” someone muttered.
“It’s overkill,” Daniel said.
“There is at least one Demon, too,” Henry
said.
Lucas laughed, a bitter, self-assured
chuckle.
They had a Demon like Lucas. Lucas would fight it.
She saw it in his face. She didn’t want him to die.
Something climbed over the crest of the distant
hill, spilling onto the prairie. Karina squinted. What in the world
. . .
Arthur’s face remained serene. “Begin immediate
full base evacuation.”
A dark-haired woman on Karina’s left held out
binoculars to her. “Here. Looks like I won’t need them.”
“Thank you.” Karina lowered Emily to the ground and
took the binoculars. “Stay with me, baby.”
The woman turned and ran, back toward the garden. A
moment later the alarm sounded again, but this time in two short
bursts.
People peeled off from the group and headed back,
deeper into the base. Now was her chance. If she could slip away
and go through the gate, she could get away. Nobody would find her
in the confusion . . .
“Lady Karina,” Arthur’s voice rang out.
She snapped back to look at him.
The gaze of his blue eyes bore into her. “Stay
close. We must hold until the evacuation is complete. Lucas may
have need of your services.”
His voice was soft but his eyes left her no
doubt—he knew what she was thinking and escape was futile.
Arthur turned and looked out to the plain. She
looked, too, raising the binoculars to her eyes. The mountains
swung into view, suddenly clear. She tilted the binoculars lower .
. .
People came walking over the hill. To the right a
middle-aged man in filthy khakis and a ripped shirt with thin blue
stripes climbed over a rock. Next to him two dark-skinned men in
jeans helped a third limp forward. On the left a woman in business
clothes walked on, stumbling. The binoculars captured her face. Her
features, caked with grime and dust, twisted into an expression of
abject terror.
Karina inhaled sharply. A red-haired teenage girl
followed the woman. Her ruffled black skirt hung limply around her
skinny legs in torn stockings. She shuddered as she walked and
Karina realized she was sobbing.
Karina jerked the binoculars down. “There are
people out there!”
“They are captives,” Lucas said. “People the
Ordinators snatched up here and there, the missing. The pigs are
running them at the net. It’s designed to stop high-impact
projectiles, but if enough body mass hits it at once, it will
overload and collapse.”
The memory of the bird shocked by that red glow
flashed before her. “They will die!”
“That’s the idea,” Daniel said. “They’re trying to
break through before we have a chance to detonate the
network.”
“Can’t they just use a tank or a vehicle?”
“The net would fry it,” Lucas said grimly. “Biomass
is the best way to go.”
The people on the right broke into a run. Karina
raised the binoculars.
A creature bounded over the hill. Huge and brown,
it looked like a seven-foot-tall boar moving too fast on
surprisingly long and skinny legs. The pig paused. Its long
crocodilian jaws gaped open, flashing fangs as large as her
fingers, wider, wider, until the pig’s entire head seemed to split
in half. A hoarse roar burst forth. The daeodon.
The people in front of the creature scattered like
minnows, sprinting across the rough ground toward the net in a
ragged herd, a blond man in a once white tank top leading the run.
The daeodon roared again and gave chase.
On the left, a second pig crested the hill, sending
another group of prisoners into flight. An older man in a torn
flannel shirt stumbled and fell, splaying in the dirt. The pig bore
down on him. The long jaws dipped down. A shriek rang out,
vibrating with the sheer terror of a man who knew his life was
ending, and vanished, cut off in midnote.
On the right, the blond man ran headfirst into the
net and jerked, caught by a deep carmine glow. His body convulsed,
his legs and arms flailing, as if he were being shocked by a live
wire. The man directly behind him tried to slow down, but his
momentum carried him right into the red glow and he shook, caught
in a similar seizure.
Karina whipped to Lucas. “Can’t you do something?
Anything? They’re dying!”
“We can give them a quick death once they break
through,” Lucas said.
“But . . .”
“Lucas is correct,” Arthur said. “We will spare
them the pain.”
The air around Arthur shimmered. People backed
away. He bowed his head and stood very still.
On the prairie, the prisoners tried to swerve away
from the red glow, but the pigs drove them forward. One by one the
bodies crashed into the net. Karina turned Emily around. “Don’t
look, baby.”
“What are they doing?”
Lie, she told herself. Lie. But the
words spilled out on their own. “They are dying, Emily.”
“Why?”
“Because the bad guys are killing them.”
“Are the bad guys going to get us?”
“No, little one,” Henry said. “Arthur and Lucas
will kill them.”
The red glow bent forward under the weight of many
bodies, and still more people were coming across the prairie,
herded by the daeodons like sheep. Arthur didn’t move. His eyes
stared into the distance, somewhere far away.
“How long till the detonation?” Lucas asked.
Henry closed his eyes and opened them. “Three
minutes.”
Lucas rolled his head right, then left, cracking
his neck.
With a bright flash the net collapsed under the
weight of the bodies. People fell into the gap, tumbling over each
other, convulsing on the ground. The four huge pigs who’d herded
them to the net galloped into the gap, trampling the bodies beneath
their hooves. The daeodons charged up the slope.
Lucas grunted. His skin seemed to peel off his
bones in thick slabs. Bloody mist filled the air. Karina stared,
unable to look away. Bones bent, ligaments twisted, and the beast
burst forth. It was bigger than she remembered. In her memory, he
had morphed into a dark, featureless shadow, but here, in the light
of day, she saw every bulge of terrifying muscle, every fang, every
sickle claw, every hair in the black crest of his mane.
Fear washed over her, setting every nerve on
fire.
The beast turned his head. Lucas’s green eyes
looked at her from a horrid face.
Don’t flinch, she told herself. He was about
to fight for them. He could die in the next few moments. She didn’t
want him to go into it thinking she was disgusted by what he was.
Whatever Lucas’s faults were, he was about to put himself between
the pigs and her daughter. He deserved better than the blind fear
the two women in the garden showed him.
She met his gaze. They looked at each other.
“Good luck,” she said.
The daeodons roared, pounding up the slope.
The beast who was Lucas nodded to her, leaped down,
and smashed into the first pig. His claws sliced across the
daeodon’s neck and it went down. Lucas swerved away from the gaping
jaws, leaped onto the second daeodon, and thrust his claws through
the brown hide and wrenched a bloody shard of its spine out.
The third pig halted, unsure. The fourth veered
left, around the carnage, and charged up the hill, digging into the
hard dirt with its hooves.
Karina clenched Emily closer. Her instinct told her
to run, but around her nobody moved.
Twenty yards. Fifteen. Ten.
Daniel stepped forward and clenched his fist. With
a dry crunch, the bones of the pigs’ front legs snapped. White bone
sliced through the muscles and skin. The pig squealed, crashed on
its side, and rolled down the hill. Lucas rose from the body of the
third pig, leaped over the fallen daeodon as it tumbled down, and
smashed its skull with one brutal punch.
“Are we in a story, Mommy?”
Karina looked down into Emily’s big brown eyes.
I wish we were. I wish we were dreaming. She reached deep
inside herself, through the fear and anxiety and disbelief, and
when she spoke, her voice was calm and confident. “It will be okay,
baby. We will be just fine.”
More daeodons spilled from the prairie, dashing
toward the base; so many, she couldn’t even count. A huge beast led
the charge. He looked just like Lucas, except for the reddish fur.
The red beast sprinted, widening the distance between himself and
the mass of daeodons, moving in powerful leaps that devoured the
prairie.
Lucas backed two steps up the slope and planted his
giant feet.
The beast thundered at them, hurtling like a
cannonball. It jumped and sailed over the mass of writhing human
bodies.
Lucas leaped. The two monsters collided in midair
and Karina realized that Lucas was visibly smaller. They rolled
down the hill, snarling and tearing at each other like two massive
feral cats.
The larger beast raked Lucas’s side. Blood wet the
dirt in a hot spray.
Karina spun to Daniel. “Help him!”
“I can’t,” he growled. “I need a clear
target.”
The beasts brawled and snapped, biting and ripping
in a tornado of claws and teeth.
The alarm blared again, this time a single long
note followed by a short beep. Daniel whirled to an older woman
standing next to him. She was short and plump, with an elaborate
knot of tiny braids on her head. Her gray pantsuit was pristine,
her makeup flawless. She looked like a secretary or a receptionist
for an upscale business firm.
“Rip it,” Daniel said. “Now.”
The woman pulled a knife out of her pantsuit,
jerked the sleeve back, and slashed a gash across her skin. Blood
welled. The pain must’ve been excruciating, because she bent nearly
double, cradling her arm.
At the bottom of the hill, the larger beast hurled
Lucas aside. He flew, flipped in the air, and landed on all fours.
Blood streamed from his flanks. The two creatures squared off and
collided again.
The woman straightened. A pale green glow burst
from her stomach, twisting into thin strands of light. The strands
snapped out, flared, and split the empty air in half. A seven-foot
circle appeared, filled with darkness.
So that’s what the dimensional rip looks
like.
Arthur raised his head.
The ground shook under his feet. Tiny rocks bounced
up and down. The vibration pounded the bottoms of Karina’s
shoes.
“Lucas! End it!” Daniel screamed. “End it
now!”
The reddish beast leaped, striking with an enormous
paw, claws out like daggers. Lucas spun, rolling to the side,
inhumanely fast. The large beast landed in the dirt. The moment his
paws touched the ground, Lucas vaulted onto his back. Huge teeth
flashed and he clamped onto the rival beast’s neck. The creature
screamed, kicking and trying to roll. Two beasts plunged
down.
Karina held her breath.
The black beast rose, slowly.
She exhaled.
Lucas pondered the body of his fallen opponent as
if he wasn’t sure where he was or what he was doing there. Behind
him, the captives, caught between him and the sea of pigs,
scrambled to their feet.
The vibration below the surface increased, hitting
Karina’s feet like the blow of an underground hammer. Tiny red
sparks flickered around Arthur.
“Hurry,” Henry whispered next to her. His gaze was
fixed on Lucas, his voice an insistent low whisper, almost a
command. “Hurry.”
Lucas jerked. His head snapped up. He saw them and
bounded up the hill.
The sparks around Arthur danced faster. Arthur’s
feet left the ground. He rose three feet into the air, his body
tense, looking down at the prairie stretching before him.
Oh, God.
The beast reached the apex of the hill, crashed
down in a sickening revolt of flesh, and rose again, as Lucas,
bloody and shaking. He shuddered on his feet, careened, and Karina
caught him. For a moment his entire weight rested on her. She
looked into his eyes and saw pain. And then Daniel pulled him off
her and dragged him forward to the rip.
In the distance the foghorn blared frantically. The
daeodons closed in. Karina swept Emily into her arms.
Henry wrapped his arm around her. “We must go. You
don’t want to see this.”
They hurried to the rent. She looked back over her
shoulder, as if pulled by some invisible force. The sparks darting
around Arthur’s shoulders paused. For a fraction of a breath they
hung motionless, then blinked, then sparked into brilliant light.
Red radiance burst from Arthur’s shoulders in twin streams, boiling
with flashes of white and orange, unfurling into two enormous wings
knitted of lightning.
“Come on.” Henry pulled her toward the rip. It
loomed before them, lightless and frightening, a hole in reality
itself.
The red lightning flashed. The front row of
captives fell to their knees. Fire spilled from their eyes and
mouths, as if they were being incinerated from the inside out.
Their faces turned to ash. The second row followed and on and on
and on . . . Jets of flames spurted from the ground. The whole hill
quaked as if caught in the grip of a powerful earthquake.
Oh, dear God. So that’s what a Wither does . .
.
“Now!” Henry barked.
Karina took a deep breath, cradled Emily, and
stepped into the darkness.
It was like being underwater. As if she
were walking through a flooded tunnel of crystal-clear liquid
filled with sunlight. Her body was very light, almost weightless.
It lasted a lifetime or a single moment—Karina couldn’t tell—and
then she stepped onto beige carpet.
For a second she was afraid to move, afraid to do
anything, and then she remembered to breathe. The air tasted
sweet.
Emily looked at her, blinking.
“Are you okay?” Karina whispered, her voice
strained.
Emily stirred. “I know!”
“Know what, Emily?”
“Mom, I know, I know! I am the Courageous Princess.
Like in the comic book.”
Karina exhaled and hugged her. For some reason, she
wanted to cry.
They stood in a foyer. There were people around
her, both men and women. In front of her a glass wall guarded a
conference room, a long black table with matching chairs; and
beyond that a floor-to-ceiling window offered a view of an evening
city from above, lit up with electric lights. They had to be on the
twentieth floor.
They had gotten away.
In her mind the bodies still burned, vomiting fire
and ashes. What the hell was Arthur? What were all of them?
“We shouldn’t be here,” Henry said next to her, his
voice vibrating with alarm. “This is wrong.”
A woman behind her snarled. “The fucking Ripper
dropped us into the wrong base.”
A soft thud made her turn. Lucas crashed onto the
carpet and Daniel tried to pick him up. Lucas’s eyes were closed.
He looked so pale, his skin had gained an almost greenish
tint.
She set Emily down and knelt by him, sliding her
hand on his forehead. His skin was cold, almost clammy. Blood clung
to his rib cage and a big purple bruise stained the right side of
his stomach. He looked like he was dying. The heavy metallic scent
rolled off him, so thick she almost choked. He wasn’t just hungry
for her blood. He was starving for it and he hurt.
“What’s wrong?”
“Too much venom,” Daniel spat out. “He shouldn’t
have phased into the attack variant so soon after the last
fight.”
Arthur stepped onto the carpet out of thin air. “He
will be fine.”
A grimace skewed Daniel’s face, stretching his
scar. He looked like a rabid dog. “We should’ve evacuated
yesterday. You overwork him. You know he needs at least two weeks
between phasings, but you counted on him to save your ass anyway,
because you knew he would do it. Look at him. Look at him, Arthur.
He’s dying from the venom.”
Arthur glanced at the skyline. “Not now, Daniel.
Where is the Ripper?”
“You are a fucking asshole!”
Henry closed his eyes and opened them. “She isn’t
in the building.”
“Daniel, stop your hysterics and search the
building . . .”
“Fuck you!”
“Will the two of you shut up?” Lucas said. His eyes
were still closed. A shudder gripped him. He arched his back, his
heels digging into the carpet, his arms rigid, his massive body
straining against the pain.
Idiots. Karina wrapped her arms around Lucas,
trying to hold him down, but it was like trying to hold down a
bull. “We need something for his mouth. He’s grinding his
teeth.”
“Vault, now,” Arthur snapped. “Pick him up.”
People swarmed Lucas, brushing her away. He lashed
out, convulsing, throwing a man aside like a rag doll. They pulled
Lucas up and dragged him down the hall.
Arthur bent down, grasped her by the elbow, and
pulled her to her feet. “Come with us.”
“My daughter . . .”
Arthur’s fingers clenched her arm like a vise. He
pulled her down the hallway, after the clump of people trying to
move the convulsing Lucas forward.
Emily ran after her. “Mommy!”
Karina jerked. “Let go of me! You’re scaring
her!”
“Do you want your daughter to live?” Arthur
asked.
“Yes!” Bastard.
“Then do as you’re told.”
They were almost to the end of the tunnel.
Something swung open with a heavy metallic sound. Karina caught a
glimpse of a huge vault door standing ajar. The people carrying
Lucas ducked into the round opening and parted, and Karina saw a
room beyond the door. It lay empty and the light of the white
fluorescent lamps reflected off the metal floor and walls.
They would put her into the vault with him. Lucas
hurt so badly, he was convulsing. He required her blood and he’d
rip her to pieces to get it. If she crossed that threshold, she
would die.
“Mommy!”
She dug her heels in. “Emily!”
Henry picked Emily up. “It’s okay, little
one.”
“You agreed to the contract,” Arthur said. “Time to
honor it. Get in there and do whatever you have to do to keep him
alive.”
If she didn’t go in, they would throw her in. She
heard it in Arthur’s voice.
Karina jerked her arm out of his hand. “Take care
of my baby, Henry.”
“I will,” he promised.
Karina took a deep breath and walked inside.
“No sudden movements,” Henry called out.
The door behind her clanged shut.