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Authors: Darren Shan

BOOK: Wolf Island
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It’s an enormous dark window. As I stare at it, horrified, a deformed, miserable-looking creature slithers through. It has
the general shape of a woman, but her flesh is bubbling with sores and boils. Pus and blood seep from wounds all over her
body. There’s a rancid stink. The eyes are swimming bowls of madness in a ruined face. The mouth is a jagged gash. I know
who this abomination is from Dervish’s description, but I would have recognized her anyway.

“Hello, Grubbs,” the thing that was once Juni Swan gurgles. “Have you missed me?”

There’s no time to answer. Right behind Juni, dozens of guards file in three abreast, weapons cradled to their chests. Spreading
out, they take aim. Before a stunned Shark and his team can react, an officer bellows a command and the air around us is ripped
apart by a lethal hail of bullets.

OPEN SEASON

W
ITHOUT
magic we’d have perished instantly. But magical energy streams through the window, as it always does when a passageway between
universes is opened. Tapping into that instinctively, I throw up a barrier between us and the guards. The bullets mushroom
against it and drop harmlessly to the floor. As more troops flood into the room, I strengthen the barrier and start thinking
about ways to make it a one-way shield, so that we can fire at them.

Before I can do that, Juni barks a short command. The window pulses, then snaps out of existence. The flow of magic stops,
and though a strong residue is left in the air, I now have to work off a dwindling supply. Altering the shield would take
a lot out of me. Too much.

“How long can you hold that?” Shark yells.

“A couple of minutes,” I guess.

“Pip!” he roars.

“On it,” she mutters, darting to the rear of the wall to my right. There’s a corridor on the other side that bypasses the
section of the building we came through. Shark was keeping it in reserve in case we needed an escape route.

As Meera frees Prae Athim, the guards on the other side of the shield part to allow Juni Swan and a smirking Antoine Horwitzer
to advance. They come to within a couple of inches of the barrier. Juni smiles crookedly at the shield, then at me.

“Nice work, Grubbs,” she gurgles, her voice a hoarse mockery of what it once was. “But what more can you do in the absence
of demonic energy?”

“As much as you,” I snarl.

“Possibly,” she chuckles. “But I don’t have to do anything. Not with so many finely armed humans to depend on.”

“Did you pay them much?” Shark sneers.

“Antoine recruited them on my behalf,” she says.

“Most humans have a price,” Antoine chuckles. “I’ve always been adept at calculating such sums.”

“I’ll have your head for this, Horwitzer!” Prae Athim screams, ripping the tape from her mouth and thrusting a finger at Antoine.
“You’re finished!”

“Don’t be silly,” he coos. “You can’t do anything to me. Your reign has come to its natural end. I run the Lambs now.”

“Why this way?” she snarls. “You were always power-hungry, but you’d have squeezed me out eventually. Why betray us to monstrous
fiends like this?”

“Careful,” Juni growls. “You don’t want to hurt my feelings.”

“It’s the dawn of a new age.” Antoine smiles. “Our associates can provide us with the cure for lycanthropy, but that’s only
the tip of the iceberg. I was never much interested in that side of the business. While you were wasting money on werewolves,
I was busy making it in other fields. We’re already a major force, but when we move into areas of supernatural energy, we’ll
be in a class of our own.”

“I’m ready,” Pip calls.

“Give us a minute,” Shark says, then squares up to Juni. “I never liked you. When you were Beranabus’s assistant, all you
ever did was complain. You’re weak and petty, a disgrace to the Disciples.”

Juni stares impassively at Shark. “Insult me all you like. You’ll be dead soon. We’ll see who’s laughing then.” She looks
around and spots Meera. Her smile blossoms again. “You had a lucky escape in Carcery Vale. You won’t get away this time.”

“You were in the Vale?” Meera frowns.

“Of course,” Juni says. “I was outside. I was sorely tempted to break into the cellar. I could smell the three of you and
I knew Dervish was incapacitated. But my master warned me to be wary of Bec… of the Kah-Gash.”

“So that’s what this is about,” I snarl, our suspicions — that the attacks were the work of Lord Loss and the Shadow — confirmed.
“You want the Kah-Gash.”

“Obviously,” Juni sniffs. “Did you think my master would stand by and let you wield the most powerful weapon ever known? That
he’d wait for you to learn how to use it, so you could destroy our universe?”

“But why try to kill us?” I frown. “The werewolves could have ripped Bec to pieces. Surely you need her — and me — alive.”

“Not at all,” Juni sneers. “Our new master deals in death. I’m proof of that — he released my soul and let me walk among the
living again. I’m here to harvest your spirit, just as I would have harvested Bec’s if she’d been killed. It’s simpler to
let others do our dirty work, then steal your parts of the Kah-Gash as you perish. We weren’t sure how powerful you might
be, so —” She gasps, clutches her chest, and bends over. Takes several breaths, then stands again.

“You don’t look too healthy,” I laugh wickedly.

“This body won’t last long,” she says. “A shell for my soul to inhabit. I’ll return to death soon, and return gladly. But
rest assured, your uncle’s in far worse shape. I saw him just before I came here.”

I stiffen fearfully. “You’re lying.”

“No,” she says. “He was on a pleasure cruiser, although he didn’t seem to be getting much pleasure out of it. My new master
decided to deal with Bec personally, and since Dervish and Beranabus were with her, they’re dead now, or will be soon. Just
like you when your barrier crumbles.”

I start to press her for more information, but Shark grips my arm. “We’ve learned all we need to know. Time to get out of
here.”

“But Dervish —” I cry.

“— will have to look after himself,” Shark finishes. He yells at Pip, “Now!”

There’s a small explosion. As the dust clears, Pip slips through a hole in the wall and the others push after her. I glance
at Juni. She’s smiling.

“My team will catch up with you outside,” she says. “And I’ve another surprise lined up. I’ll wait here. I don’t need to be
too close when you die.”

“Any last words for the board, Prae?” Antoine asks. She hits him with some of the foulest insults I’ve ever heard, but he
doesn’t even blink. He’s loving this. It would be easy to blame myself for not seeing through him before, but he conned us
all. Besides, there’s no time for self-blame. If we reach the helicopter before Juni’s soldiers, we might get out of here.
We’re not finished yet — if we’re fast.

“Later!” I snap at Juni, locking gazes with her, letting her see how serious I am. I mean to kill her the next time we meet,
as slowly and painfully as possible.

Juni only laughs with mad delight at the threat, then waves mockingly. “Run, run as fast as you can, but I’ll catch you, little
ginger-haired man.”

“Grubbs!” Shark shouts. He’s standing by the hole in the wall. Everyone’s gone through except him and Meera.

I hold Juni’s gaze one last second, then turn my back on the mutant and her troops, and dive for safety. As I squeeze through
the hole, I hear the sounds of dozens of feet scuffling out of the room as the soldiers set off to intercept us.

The race is on.

Running as fast as we can, Timas in the lead. He’s playing with the tiny console on his gun as he runs. He looks the least
worried of us all.

“I can’t believe you trusted that charlatan,” Prae Athim pants, glancing over her shoulder at me.

“He told us you stole the werewolves,” I growl. “Based on your previous threat to kidnap Bill-E and me, why wouldn’t we believe
him?”

“Anyway, he worked for
you,
” Meera chips in. “Why didn’t you see this coming?”

“Enough!” Shark huffs as Prae bristles. “If they catch us before we make it outside, it doesn’t matter who’s to blame — we’ll
all be crapping bullets.”

We push on in silence. I’m finding it difficult to keep up. Although I’m fit, I’m used to operating on magic. It’s been a
long time since I worked up a sweat. I’m out of practice.

I can hear Juni’s guards, their cries to one another. They’re keeping pace with us but can’t break through. We have a slight
advantage, but it’s
very
slight. And if they make it to the yard before us, or if there are more out there already…

The corridor feels much longer than it appeared on the map. I start to think we’re in a maze, doomed to wander in circles
until we run into Juni’s troops and are mowed down. I consider using magic to guide us out. But that would be a waste of energy.
I have to hold it back. Use it only when the situation is truly desperate. Which probably won’t be long.

Timas bursts through a door and sunlight streams in. Finding an extra burst of speed, we hurry through, out into the yard
where we fought with the first group of guards. It’s deserted except for James and Marian in the Farrier Harrier. As soon
as they see us, James fires the engines up to full, readying the helicopter for a swift getaway.

We race for the chopper. I picture myself clambering to safety along with everybody else. We lift off, zip out over the water,
laughing at our narrow escape, leaving Juni behind to curse and rant. But in my heart I know it won’t be that easy. And sure
enough, before we’ve taken six strides, Juni’s troops hit the scene and the gunfire starts.

Pip LeMat is ahead of everyone, having overtaken Timas, so she should have been the safest. But she’s the first to catch a
spray of bullets. She hits the ground hard and doesn’t move, blood already seeping from beneath her still form.

Shark and the others spin 180 degrees, even as Pip is falling, and open up with their own weapons. “Run!” Shark yells at Meera
and me. “Get out of here. We’ll cover you.”

I start to protest, but Meera pushes me forward. “Don’t argue!” she shouts.

“We can’t just leave them,” I cry as half of Terry’s head disappears. He remains standing a moment, then slumps forward. Leo
takes a hit to the shoulder. He roars with pain, but continues to return fire. Prae Athim grabs Terry’s gun and pitches in
with the others, screaming manically.

“You heard what Juni said,” Meera snarls. “You’re the only one who matters. If she gets her hands on you, we’re done for.”

“Like we’re not already!” I shriek.

“All the rest of us have to worry about is death,” Meera says. “From what Juni said, that’s only the start for you. If the
Shadow gets your piece of the Kah-Gash…”

I stare at her helplessly. I know she’s right, but these soldiers have become our friends. We can’t simply abandon them.

“A barrier,” I wheeze. “We can construct a shield and —”

Meera slaps me hard. “Get in that helicopter or they’ll have died for nothing.”

I stare at her numbly, then lurch forward. Bullets rip up the ground close by my feet, but I don’t flinch. My eyes are filling
with tears. I don’t want to escape if the cost is losing Shark and his team, but Meera’s right. We have no choice. The Kah-Gash
mustn’t fall into the Shadow’s hands.

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