The 1000 Souls (Book 2): Generation Apocalypse (37 page)

Read The 1000 Souls (Book 2): Generation Apocalypse Online

Authors: Michael Andre McPherson

Tags: #Action Adventure

BOOK: The 1000 Souls (Book 2): Generation Apocalypse
5.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Vlad’s stinking blood. Holy fuck. It’s you.”

“Quick. With me you’ll be safer. I’ve learned a lot of quiet ways to kill rippers over the years. We have to hurry to catch up. You’ll need to find a way into Vlad’s tower.”

The guy was a ripper for sure, Bertrand Allan or not, and he would be able to kill him in a second if Elliot let his gun down, of that he was certain. The safe thing to do would be to put a bunch of lead through him right now. But that would be noisy, even with all the other shooting going on up near the river, and that would bring all kinds of hell after Elliot, and that would mean Tevy’s certain death.

Elliot liked to gamble. A ripper at his side could be totally cool, especially Bertrand Allan. Was he really the same soul as Tevy?

“Okay. Let’s go kill some rippers.”

As Allan turned in the light of the flare, Elliot caught a grim smile.

“Yes, let’s.”

Together, they hurried through the city, Elliot leading the way. Two shadows, one young and alive and dangerous, the other dead and very dangerous.

Twenty-Eight - Vlad Who Bleeds

It had been a food court. Tevy found that oddly appropriate. He recognized some of the brand names: McDonald’s, KFC, Tokyo Sushi, and dozens more, all in a circle around plastic tables and chairs bolted to the floor. Some of them had been removed at one end to make room for a long table and maps—a pilfered boardroom table. The maps could have been Bobs’, and it struck Tevy that Vlad brooded over them the same way Bobs brooded over her toy soldiers. They were trying to see into each other’s heads—a game of chess between two people who had never met.

Tevy’s Winchester, with its holster and his Glock, held down a corner of one of the maps. The place was lit with very dim electric lights, and for the first time in his life, it occurred to Tevy that rippers didn’t need much light, their eyes always adjusted for dark. That should have been obvious, but as Helen liked to say, he wasn’t always the sharpest arrow in the quiver—not about stuff like that. She blamed it on his low protein diet during the famine years.

The stink of blood assaulted Tevy’s nostrils, and he wondered in a detached way if the rippers even noticed it anymore. Bodies hung upside all through the food court, most of them right in front of the restaurant counters, perhaps some sick ripper joke. Those that weren’t dead had only minutes to live, and rippers lined up as if waiting to withdraw cash from an ATM. Tevy remembered lining up with his mother and the sense of impatience yet the certainty that everyone would get what they came for. In this case, blood. A ripper at the front of each line directed the next recipient to the appropriate victim.

Another part of the food court was given over to donors, people who lay on cots as if at the Red Cross, waiting patiently for their pint of blood to drain so that they could leave. Other rippers lined up there. Tevy wondered about the hierarchy: why did some rippers get the live victims, and why did others have to settle for a donation of blood that wasn’t coming straight from the source but via plastic tubes and bags?

It wasn’t that Tevy wasn’t afraid. He was secured spread-eagle to a wooden wheel, and they spun him a few times right away just so that he could see how it worked, and the nausea resulted in the explosive loss of his last meal. But now they’d left him, turned only slightly to one side from vertical, and this respite had given him a chance to come to terms with his death. He knew it was going to hurt. All he could hope for was that he could find a way to enrage Vlad so that he might kill him by accident.

But Vlad was busy. Tall and blonde, his locks flowing down over his shoulders, his clothes black but modern, a dark shirt and studded leather jacket. Black jeans. Black boots. Excellent clothing for stalking in the night.

Tevy passed the time by replaying his night with Kayla. It gave him great comfort that he had been with her, that she loved him.

A ripper coughed and choked wetly. Tevy looked up, surprised that rippers could cough, and several laughed.

“Take it easy there, kid,” said one to the cougher. “It’s cold, but if you prove yourself, you’ll get the real thing one day. Just don’t try to choke it all back at once.”

Tevy looked over at the cougher. That cough had been a call for attention. Tevy’s attention. Radu stood by one of the cots, a pint bag of blood in his hands. He stared at Tevy but his expression was impassive. What was he trying to tell him? That he was here? That Tevy wasn’t alone? That his death wouldn’t go unrecorded? Or had Radu converted and embraced his new life as a ripper?

The coughing also caught Vlad’s attention.

“Come.” He waved a gloved hand at Radu, who put down the pint and hurried over to kneel. “Get up.” He grabbed Radu’s elbow and turned him to face Tevy. “Is he from St. John’s?”

Radu shook his head. “He was sent up with the plea for help. He’s one of her runners.”

“But he led troops tonight.”

Vlad sat in a large office chair, a sumptuous leather creation from an office upstairs, no doubt, and anachronistic in the food court.

“You, Sneak, what’s your name.”

“Tevy Wexler.”

“Never heard of you.”

“It’s a big world.”

“What is that bitch thinking, sending you to take that bridge?”

Tevy would have shrugged, but the ropes bound him too tightly. “She doesn’t tell me much, but I think she’s coming after you. She needs the bridges to get at you.”

“This is what bothers me. She doesn’t have nearly enough troops to cut through this city. It would be a bloodbath. Yet still she fights for these bridges. Why?” He tapped his fingers on the table. The drumming stopped and he turned to an assistant. “Send a patrol south.”

“South, sir?”

“You heard me. I want a report back in less than an hour, or someone’s going to die with their eyes looking at their body from a great distance.”

“You.” This was to Radu. “Does she have other armies I should know about?”

Radu shrugged. “I never met her. I had just got here before I was turned...evolved.”

Vlad stood and approached Tevy, who drew a deep breath. This was going to be the hard part. If he could just die quickly and get it over with, maybe he wouldn’t shame himself by weeping or begging.

“She’s better than you,” Tevy said. “She’ll beat you.”

“We took a prisoner yesterday, one of the Ericsians. He says you’re the same soul as Allan. I find that amusing. I killed Allan, but, of course, you know that.”

“I’ve met him. He’s not dead.”

The room had been quiet before but now it was deathly quiet. Every ripper turning from their feast to pay close attention to Tevy.

Vlad returned to his chair and sat. “You met an imposter. I tore him limb from limb and gorged on his blood.”

“He killed Vlad the Scourge with a grenade and propane explosion. You’re the imposter. But Vlad made Bertrand into a ripper before the end. He lives to hunt other rippers.”

“The Demon,” someone whispered.

“You met an imposter.”

But Tevy could tell he had upset this ripper.

Vlad got himself under control. “I need to know all you know about the makeup of Bobs’ armies. She’s added St. John’s and the Ericsians to her usual levies. Who else can come to her aid?”

“I don’t know. I don’t get invited to high level meetings.” But he did know. Had the nukes gone off yet? Did Vlad know?

“You, come here.” He waved Radu over to his side. “Kneel.” Radu obeyed, kneeling beside the chair like a pet dog. Vlad drew a knife and placed it on his own wrist, slitting it quickly and pushing it to Radu’s mouth. “Drink.”

Radu drank, at first tentatively, then eagerly. Vlad pulled his wrist away and pushed Radu to the floor. He held up the bloody wrist for Tevy to see.

“I was Vlad the Scourge. Now I am Vlad Who Bleeds.”

Radu had a seizure on the floor for a few moments before it subsided to a tremble of ecstasy. Vlad ignored him and addressed Tevy. “Would you like to know that pleasure? I can give it to you. It is better from me than any other ripper in the world. Rippers who drink my blood are immortal, can never be killed.”

“I’d sooner eat shit.”

“Then you will definitely get some of my blood, you little asshole.”

Now Tevy’s fear returned. Torture and death were bad enough, but becoming like Bertrand Allan was definitely a fate worse than death.

“I’ll kill myself the first chance I get.” But then he would go to hell, wouldn’t he? But if he was a ripper he would already be dead, right? So it wouldn’t be a sin.

Vlad leaned forward in his chair, one hand clamped over the cut wrist. “Why do humans like you resist converting? It’s always been a puzzle to me. Life is so much better when you’re evolved.”

“Murdering humans.”

Vlad pointed at the donators. “In California we don’t have to force donations. People give willingly and murders are minimal. It’s the new world order.”

“I’m old world. I’ll never change.”

“Oh, you will.”

Vlad stood and checked his wrist but it had healed. He drew his knife from the sheath at his belt. “I abhor torture. I have people here who would make you say anything to stop the pain. That’s the problem with torture. You can make people say anything, true or false. I prefer conversion.”

“Please don’t,” Tevy said, the panic rising as Vlad approached. “There’s nothing I could tell you that’s going to make any difference.”

“It takes longer I admit, but my blood is so potent with the parasites that your change will be very fast. It might be painful, but not too much. The ecstasy will more than compensate.”

“I still won’t tell you anything.”

Vlad stopped in front of him. “No, not today. But tomorrow, when the hunger takes you, you’ll tell me anything in exchange for a pint of blood. I won’t be so gauche to offer you a living donation.”

Running feet caught Vlad’s attention, and a ripper rushed into the room, several others behind him, all looking wide-eyed and panicked. “Sir, we can’t raise L.A. or New York, and I was talking to Washington, and they said there was a nuclear flash from the direction of New York, and now Washington won’t respond.”

“What the fuck?” Vlad turned on Tevy. “What has that crazy bitch done?”

“Nuked your new world order.” Tevy turned his head away as if that would help him avoid a blow. His heart beat like it would burst out of his chest. Would it hurt, the death that he was sure was now coming?

“Oh, she’s brilliant. What a ripper she’d make.” Vlad returned to his chair and slumped down to stare at his map. “Malmstrom. We just about had them beaten down. I should have guessed that she’d get them under her sway.” He looked up at Tevy. “So, that’s what you would have told me tomorrow. Is that all?” Suddenly, he stood, an unnatural movement, as if gravity didn’t apply the same way to him. “I think I have little time. We’ll have to go with the old fashion torture. Get Tony in here. I have a job for him.”

Tevy began to pray, starting with Hail Marys. Would he shame himself?

“Don’t worry,” said Vlad. “Before you die, I’ll make you a ripper and the parasites will fix the damage.”

“NO!” screamed Tevy. “I’ll never be a ripper. You can’t force me to feed. I’ll starve myself, I’ll kill myself if I get the chance. It won’t be a sin, because I’ll be dead anyway. My body means nothing. Nothing. You can kill my body, but my soul will carry on!”

“You’re an Ericsian?”

Tevy thought about Elliot and Kayla, about the three of them being the trinity. It felt so right. They were meant to be together. And Kayla was like Joyce, even though they didn’t look anything alike. And Elliot was so like Jeff, even though one was tall and blond, the other short and red-haired, and their backgrounds, their lives couldn’t be more different.

“Yes. I’m an Ericsian. I’m the Dormant Hero, just like Bertrand Allan.”

“Bertrand Allan is dead.”

A scream from a dark recess disturbed the food court, and Vlad turned in anger. “Stop your feeding, all of you.”

But there was another scream, and a bloodied body slid across the floor to stop at Vlad’s feet—a ripper’s body.

A man stepped out from the gloom and stopped under a bare light bulb, blood around his mouth but his clothes still clean.

Bertrand Allan.

“Who the hell are you?” asked Vlad. He seemed too shocked for rage.

“I thought you would recognize me, since you tore me limb from limb.”

A panicked voice came from the corner. “It’s Bertrand Allan, the Demon. I saw his YouTube videos. It’s him. It’s really him. My God.”

Vlad looked prepared to argue, but Tevy spoke up first. “It’s him and he’s come for you.”

“Shoot him.” Vlad gave the order quietly, pointing at Allan.

A gunman hidden in the dark recess of the food court did open fire, but not at Allan. The first bullet hit Vlad, causing him to spin and drop.

“I think he’s wearing Kevlar,” shouted Tevy to the invisible sniper.

Gunfire, the muzzle flashes blinding, erupted from every corner of the room. In the freeze frames, Tevy saw Vlad get hit twice more as he sprinted from the court.

Bullets struck the wheel around Tevy, but Allan threw himself in front, jerking from at least one bullet hit. Rippers ran after Vlad, desperate to escape the sniper, who now started shooting at any ripper in the room. This gave Allan a chance to turn and slash the bindings on Tevy’s ankles and wrists.

He slumped like a rag doll, his pins-and-needles arms and legs not responding to commands. Allan tossed him over his shoulder and shouted through the mayhem, “This way!”

The rippers now fled in all directions, expecting an army in their midst. Instead, Elliot ran through the food court, his M16 firing single shots here and there to keep everyone running. Allan led past the table, scooping up Tevy’s shotgun as they ran. The three of them rushed into a dark room that stank of mold and wet. There were two doors to the entrance, indicating it was once a public toilet. There was no light.

“Tevy,” whispered Elliot. Outside, rippers shouted instructions and gunfire bursts sought an enemy that now hid. “You okay, dude?”

“I’m not shot. I think Allan is though.”

“I’ll be fine, or no better. It’s being repaired as we speak.”

Other books

Papa Hemingway by A. E. Hotchner
2 by James Phelan
Deep Dark by Laura Griffin
Highland Heat by Jennifer Haymore
Everything I Don't Remember by Jonas Hassen Khemiri
El otoño del patriarca by Gabriel García Márquez
Ashes of Twilight by Tayler, Kassy