Fade

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Authors: Chad West

BOOK: Fade
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FADE

 

Chad West

 

 

 

Copyright © 2016 Chad West

All rights reserved.

 

 

 

CONTENTS

 

 

Acknowledgments

Chapter One: Earths

Chapter Two: Normal

Chapter Three: Home

Chapter Four: Watched

Chapter Five: Taken

Chapter Six: Preparations

Chapter Seven: Reunion

Chapter Eight: Golem

Chapter Nine: Shelter

Chapter Ten: Propositions

Chapter Eleven: Changes

Chapter Twelve: Wanting

Chapter Thirteen: Omega

Chapter Fourteen: Consequences

Chapter Fifteen: Lost

Chapter Sixteen: Journey

Chapter Seventeen: Rags

Chapter Eighteen: Blood

Chapter Ninteen: Guardian
Chapter Twenty: Round One

Chapter Twenty-One: Resurrection

Chapter Twenty-Two: Redemption

About the Author

 

All rights reserved. Except for the use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means is forbidden without the express permission of the author.

 

 

This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, and settings are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual events, names, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

Chris B., for long lunches in your car, and plenty of cigarettes smoked listening to me prattle on about my idea for this story, and helping shape it in its infancy. Jenni, for reading an earlier draft and giving me encouragement I needed. And everyone whose hands this manuscript went through, especially Lauren, for your last minute edits.

 

ONE

J
onas stood on the grounds of the abandoned college they had made their base, an old gymnasium at his back (maybe the most important gymnasium in the world). Smoke stung his eyes, but the distant, burning buildings gave the gift of light: a hellish, undulating sheen that made the dark campus look as though it were breathing. Jonas squinted to take advantage of that frail light, hoping to see
her
before he saw them; hoping the soldiers would hold back the Fade just a little longer. He cradled a radio in both hands, rubbing it absently with his thumbs, willing his wife's voice to sound through it.

They called him a hero because he could once collapse walls with a thought, calm crowds without a word; Jonas had used those abilities to enforce the law. But there were men attached to those faraway sounds of battle, many with lesser abilities than he’d once had, and they were throwing themselves at the Fade like cordwood into flame. They were the brave. Handing their lives to these aliens so that a handful of people they barely knew might have a chance at a new life. They were the heroes.

Now, all he could do was watch, knowing the people these brave men were dying for might already be dead. That his greatest contribution to the war against these invaders since having his powers torn from his head was falling apart as he stood by. It was probably psychosomatic—that's what his doctors told him—but, at times like these, the scar on his head seemed to burn.

The Fade, who had brought all this death, had also brought knowledge. After centuries of watching the skies, they had one day opened, and the Fade marched out. For several years, they butchered their way through thousands of cities. But there were worlds other than this; there were Earths other than this—a multiverse of parallel worlds, just out of reach. Even the Fade didn't know this. But Jonas had discovered it because of them. Under other circumstances, it might have been the most important scientific discovery of the new century. But, in their war with these implausibly mighty giants, these amoral bastards, that knowledge had been reduced to little more than fodder for an escape plan to get the innocent out of harm’s way. An escape plan that the Fade were very close to obliterating.

The dorms had been destroyed in the first few minutes of the attack less than an hour before. Their light burned brightest, crying failure. There was no way of knowing if Iris had been able to use her abilities to transport them out. Jonas glanced at the silent radio, then back to the dim horizon. He’d sent his wife and four others to find out, and to retrieve any survivors. There had been so many children. He felt as though he could see all their faces now. Crying, and bleeding.

There was no more waiting. He pulled the radio to his mouth, tried to call Elizabeth, but all he got was that strange, familiar squeal that told him the Fade were blocking their transmissions. His heart seemed to rise into his throat, and he dropped the radio. It split in two on the sidewalk with a plastic chuckle. Jonas looked over his shoulder, to the gym where Elizabeth was supposed to gather the survivors, but it was too dark to see inside. He tensed to run that way.

“Jonas!” an oversized man yelled. When Jonas turned, dozens of the dark aliens were coming into view over the horizon. Flashes of blue from the powered armor they wore streaked the night as they approached. Blood painted the left side of the man’s face as he flew toward Jonas, pointing back, his hands crackling with power. “They’ve broke the line, Jonas! Tell Elizabeth not to bring the civilians here; they’re not safe anymore!”

Jonas started to tell him the Fade had blocked communication, but the man turned, setting his eyes on the advancing horde, and raised those hands, releasing a loud gust of energy. Dozens of the Fade warriors became charred remains. (Few people were powerful enough to breach the protection that armor provided. It was probably the only reason this man had survived to warn him, Jonas thought.) The front of the Admissions Building across the street also disintegrated with that blast, crumbling in on itself. The flagpole that had stood in front of it lay on the ground, the flag black and still. The streets boiled in places. Still, dozens more Fade filled in the gaps, trampling the remains of the others.

There was no more time. Jonas turned, running to where Elizabeth and the others would be, picturing them just out of sight in the dark (if they weren't, it was over). The rest of the campus burned behind him. His plan had been the answer for thousands who’d been promised escape from the war. Whether Elizabeth was inside or not, he knew she did not have thousands with her. The Fade had crushed what might have been humanity's final hope of survival in less than an hour.

The Fade had long abandoned this area of the country after laying waste to its inhabitants at the beginning of the war. So, it made it a perfect staging ground for Project Omega, which some saw as a final desperate act of a people who had given up. Jonas saw it as a way to save thousands of lives in a unique way before laying down their final hand in the war. Their final
and most important
hand, because if their last play failed, the human race was doomed. If that happened, his plan would assure that at least
some
of them survived. That would serve as a type of victory. But somehow the Fade had found out.

Jonas did not know how that happened, and he tried to stop thinking about what they had lost as he bolted inside. Entering through the back door at the same time was his wife. He found he could breathe again as he moved toward her. The door closed behind them as he reached her, a handful of women and children trailing her. He stopped. “Iris? Is she coming with more?” His voice cracked. He knew the answer.

Jonas’ wife, a thin woman with a matted mop of blond hair sticking to her face, shook her head. Jonas deflated, accepting that this was it. He raised a numb arm toward a door marked
stairs
at the rear of the room and they moved. A pale redhead stumbled, almost dropping her little girl. “Angela,” she said, pulling the girl so tight against her chest Jonas thought she might call out in protest. But the child burrowed even closer. Jonas fell back a little to help her along, noticing the deep cherry patch on the lower back of her shirt.

“Don’t worry. We’re almost there,” he said.

The room smelled of a locker room. The sound of battle above surrounded them in horrible echoes. Fluorescent lights flickered and buzzed. The building shook at a muffled boom and another of the women screeched, causing her child to do the same.

Jonas moved them into what had been a storage room. An emergency transport took up one entire wall. It looked a mess—a large pad lying on the floor, wires shooting out like wild hairs. He would’ve almost been afraid to trust it if he hadn't put it together himself. It wouldn’t take them across the universe, but it would get them to a machine that could—ending part one of Project Omega.

They all stepped onto the pad; a curved door closed them in. “Code B-7423-Jonas." A beep followed and he continued: "Omega Site.” Jonas huffed at the machine, staring hard at the redhead who was bent over, her teeth clenched. “Give me Angela,” he said.

She shook her head and pressed her face against the child’s.

A pale blue light burst into the small pod, and the door slid open again. In that instant, they had traveled miles. “Just a few more minutes,” Jonas said, and the redhead looked up, blew a damp strand out of her face and nodded.

As they stepped out, Jonas latched onto a dark-haired woman’s arm. His eyes went to the pale redhead, then to her again. “Danna, she needs some of your blood to heal her wound.
Quick.
I’m going to disable the transport so they can’t follow us.”

Jonas watched as the women and children made their way down the bright white of the hall to the one room on that floor. Then he yanked the cover from the control panel beside the transporter, some of the drywall crumbling away with it. It was one of the many helpful pieces of equipment they’d managed to put together from technology they’d stolen from the Fade over the years. It was the best they could manufacture during wartime, but not near as powerful as the machines that brought the Fade to Earth. But they’d managed to put their hands on one of those as well, and it sat right below them—the centerpiece of Project Omega.

The plan had seemed foolproof. They wouldn’t just escape to some other world where Aern and his army of Fade could follow. They would go to a parallel Earth and, if things went according to plan, the Fade wouldn’t even know
how
to follow. They had hoped thousands of civilians would be saved by the move. But all they had succeeded in doing, it seemed, was putting the civilians in one, convenient location for the Fade to slaughter. Not to mention the hundreds who had sacrificed their lives to make this failure possible. But even before the Fade had ruined their plan he had not been able to force himself to believe that this other Earth would make them safe. If the last three years of war had taught him anything, it was that nowhere was safe.

***

For some reason, Kyle Garner slipped into his thoughts as Jonas worked. Kyle had been the first of his unit to fall before the invading forces. They hadn’t known the Fade were so strong. Kyle had just wanted to stop the massacre of innocent lives. The rest of them had been pushed back, but Kyle dove into the crowd of alien beings. What must have been fifty of those bastards lay dead in his wake, but then they’d pulled him apart. None of those who had fought beside him had ever seen Kyle with as much as a bloodied nose after the worst of fights. So, to see that horror was, for many, to lose hope. It was that day, that moment, that Jonas himself realized, watching the masses of alien warriors still pour through that blue rift rising from the horizon, that Kyle Garner would be a rule, not an exception.

He started to replace the cover, his work done, then dropped it with a sigh. The world he lived in wasn’t a place for order anymore. Chaos was the sovereign ruler now. Weren't they about to go ahead with a plan which had become the child of chaos? Was he foolish to go through with it for so few? Were his detractors right that he was so convicted they had lost that saving a precious few felt like the only remaining victory? Whoever was right here he was. This was all he had and no amount of philosophizing would change that.

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