HL 04-The Final Hour

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Authors: Andrew Klavan

Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Adventure and Adventurers, #Juvenile Fiction, #ebook, #General, #book, #Fugitives From Justice, #Terrorism, #Fiction, #Amnesia

BOOK: HL 04-The Final Hour
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THE FINAL HOUR

T
HE
L
AST
H
OMELANDERS
N
OVEL

 

ANDREW KLAVAN

 

© 2011 by Andrew Klavan

All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.

Thomas Nelson, Inc., titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fundraising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail [email protected].

Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible (public domain).

Publisher’s Note: This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. All characters are fictional, and any similarity to people living or dead is purely coincidental.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

 

Klavan, Andrew.

The final hour : the last Homelanders novel / Andrew Klavan.

p. cm. — (The Homelanders series ; 4)

Summary: Time is short, but eighteen-year-old Charlie West has one last chance to stop the Homelanders from attacking when he finally gets back enough of his memory to realize when the terrorists are going to strike next.

ISBN 978-1-59554-715-6 (hardcover)

[1. Fugitives from justice—Fiction. 2. Amnesia—Fiction. 3. Terrorism—Fiction.
4. Adventure and adventurers—Fiction.] I. Title.

PZ7.K67823Fin 2011

[Fic]—dc22

2011003582

 

Printed in the United States of America

 

11 12 13 14 15 16 QGF 6 5 4 3 2 1

 

THIS BOOK IS FOR CONOR HUDNUT.

 

Contents

 

Part I

 

Chapter One: Abingdon

Chapter Two: The Yard King

Chapter Three: Into the Past

Chapter Four: Broadside

Chapter Five: The White Room

Chapter Six: Advent

Chapter Seven: Desperate Measures

Chapter Eight: The Great Death

Chapter Nine: The Infirmary

Chapter Ten: The Warden

Chapter Eleven: One and a Half Steps

Chapter Twelve: Blade

Part II

 

Chapter Thirteen: Mike

Chapter Fourteen: Merry Christmas

Chapter Fifteen: Dunbar Again

Chapter Sixteen: Breakout

Chapter Seventeen: Thunderstorm

Chapter Eighteen: Run Down

Part III

 

Chapter Nineteen: Flashes

Chapter Twenty: A Very Bad Dream

Chapter Twenty-One: The Final Piece

Chapter Twenty-two: Night Flight

Chapter Twenty-three: Reunion

Chapter Twenty-four: To Say Good-bye

Chapter Twenty-five: One Last Memory

Part IV

 

Chapter Twenty-six: All There Is

Chapter Twenty-seven: Dead in the Air

Chapter Twenty-eight: Dogfight

Chapter Twenty-nine: Crash

Chapter Thirty: Escape

Chapter Thirty-One: Into the Darkness

Chapter Thirty-two: Beneath the City

Chapter Thirty-three: Gunfight

Chapter Thirty-four: Alone

Chapter Thirty-five: On the Ladder

Chapter Thirty-six: The End

Epilogue

 

Reading Group Guide

 

PART I

 

CHAPTER ONE
Abingdon

 

Most people have to die to get to hell. I took a shortcut.

I was in Abingdon State Prison. Locked away for a murder I didn’t commit. Waiting for the men who were coming to kill me. With nowhere to run.

It was the worst thing that had ever happened to me.

I’d been there for two weeks. Two weeks of smothering boredom and strangling fear. When I was locked in my cell, the minutes seemed to lie like dead men, to decay like dead men—so slowly you could barely tell it was happening. When I was out in the exercise yard or in the cafeteria or in the showers, there was just the fear, the waiting. Waiting for the killers to make good their threat, the words one of them had whispered in my ear as I stood in the dinner line one night:

You’re already dead, West. You just don’t know it yet
.

Alone in my cell, I stared at the tan wall. I felt a black despair surrounding me, closing in on me. I did everything I could to fight it. I did push-ups. I read my Bible. I prayed. The prayer gave me some comfort, some relief.

But then the buzzer would sound, loud and startling. The cell door would slide open. A guard would shout from the end of the tier:

“Yard time!”

Then the waiting and the fear would begin again.

Where was Detective Rose?
I wondered desperately. I hadn’t seen him since he’d arrested me, since he’d rescued me from the terrorist cell called the Homelanders and led me away in handcuffs. Rose was the one official who knew who I was. He knew I’d been planted in the Homelanders by Waterman and his agents. He knew I’d let myself be framed for the murder of my friend Alex Hauser so the Homelanders would believe I was bitter and could be recruited. Rose was one of Waterman’s agents too—at least, I thought he was. I told myself he must be working behind the scenes to clear my name, to win my release. I told myself he would come for me. Any day now. Any day.

But the killers came for me first.

I was in the exercise yard. It was a large square of dying grass and broken asphalt. It was surrounded by a fence topped with barbed wire. The fence was surrounded by a high concrete wall. At the corners of the wall there were guard towers. In the towers there were men with rifles, watching our every move.

Here, below, on the grass and asphalt, the prisoners moved in their gray uniforms. Some were in shirtsleeves, but most wore gray overcoats and black woolen watch caps to ward off the snow-flecked cold. Each coat or shirt had a white strip with the prisoner’s number on it sewn over the left breast. Each had the prisoner’s name stenciled over the right breast. Other than that, they were all gray.

The men’s faces, on the other hand, were black and white and brown. Their eyes were hard and watchful. There was rage and meanness and fear etched into the tight lines of their cheeks and foreheads. They gathered around the benches and free weights on one corner of the asphalt or played basketball on the half-court, or played catch on the grass or just walked and talked or just sat and stared.

Guards moved among them, men in blue shirts and black pants. They carried no weapons, just heavy walkie-talkies hooked to their belts. The guards watched the prisoners, but the prisoners didn’t watch the guards. The prisoners watched one another. And some of them, I knew, were watching me, waiting for their chance to attack.

I was on one of the weight benches. I was doing presses with a light bar, not trying to bulk up or anything, just trying to keep the flexibility and speed I used in my karate training. The men all around me were going for the big-muscle stuff, lifting hundreds of pounds. They worked in grim silence. Whenever I dared to steal a glance at one of them, they looked like pretty nasty pieces of work. White guys with shaved heads and thick arms and chests. They had Nazi swastikas tattooed on their biceps and on their foreheads. A couple of them had Christian crosses tattooed on them too. How they thought those two symbols could ever go together—a symbol of hatred and a symbol of love—I didn’t know. I’ll tell you what else: I wasn’t about to ask. They didn’t look like the types of guys who would enjoy a good theological conversation. They looked more like the types of guys who would enjoy punching me repeatedly in the face until I lost consciousness or died. That sounded like it would be more fun for them than for me, so I kept my mouth shut.

When I finished my workout, I moved away from them. I wandered to the edge of the crumbling basketball court, glancing this way and that to make sure no one was coming after me. I stood by the court and watched the game, feeling the cold air dry the workout sweat on my cheeks and neck.

The game was three against three. They were good players. Rough, fast, with accurate shots from anywhere near the key. They swirled back and forth in front of me in a shouting gray cloud of motion. They elbowed one another in the face, and jostled one another shoulder to chest as they fought for position under the board.

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