Kirov Saga: Armageddon (Kirov Series)

BOOK: Kirov Saga: Armageddon (Kirov Series)
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Kirov
Saga:

Armageddon

Book
VIII in the Kirov Series

 

By

 

John
Schettler

 

 

 

 

A
publication of:
The Writing Shop Press

Kirov Saga:
Armageddon
,
Copyright©2013, John A. Schettler

 

Discover
other titles by John Schettler:

The
Kirov Saga:
(Military
Fiction)

Kirov
-
Kirov Series - Volume
I
Cauldron Of Fire -
Kirov Series - Volume II

Pacific
Storm -
Kirov Series
- Volume III

Men Of
War -
Kirov Series -
Volume IV
Nine Days Falling -
Kirov Series - Volume V

Fallen
Angels -
Kirov Series
- Volume VI

Devil’s
Garden -
Kirov Series
- Volume VII

Armageddon
– Kirov Series – Volume VIII

 

Award
Winning Science Fiction:

Meridian
-
Meridian Series - Volume I
Nexus Point
- Meridian Series - Volume II
Touchstone
- Meridian Series - Volume III

Anvil of
Fate
- Meridian
Series - Volume IV
Golem 7
- Meridian Series - Volume V
Classic Science Fiction:
Wild Zone
- Dharman Series - Volume I
Mother Heart
- Dharman Series - Volume II
Historical Fiction:
Taklamakan
- Silk Road Series - Volume I
Khan Tengri
- Silk Road Series - Volume II

Dream
Reaper
– Mythic
Horror Mystery

 

Mailto:
[email protected]

http://www.writingshop.ws
~ http://www.dharma6.com

 

 

 

Kirov
Saga:

Armageddon

 

 

By

 

John
Schettler

 

 

 

“My
friends, tonight we bring you something entirely different. Something special.
The poets will rest, the sonnets will be silent, and what words of love there
are will not be spoken. Tonight, my friends, and I can hear you out there,
sitting alone, like me, in your chairs, your beds, driving down an empty street
with no one but me to listen to your weeping; tonight, I'm going to bring you
Armageddon.”


Charles Grant

 

 

 

 

 

Kirov
Saga:

Armageddon

By

John
Schettler

 

Prologue

Part I –
The Plan
Part II –
Discovery

Part III –
Ultimatum
Part IV –
Preludes

Part V –
The
Matador

Part VI –
Gathering Storm

Part VII –
Shadow Dance
Part VIII –
Edge Of Perdition
Part IX –
Trials

Part X –
Armageddon

Part XI –
The Devil’s Horn

                             
Part XII –
Tomorrow Is Yesterday

                             
Afterword

 

Prologue

 

Curiosity
is a powerful urge, and one that has led many men to their doom
in ages past. For Mironov, it was a lure he could not ignore, and his mind was
always haunted by the strange man he had encountered at the Ilanskiy railway
inn, and the odd words he had whispered to him. Was the man working for the
Tsar’s dread secret police, the Okhrana, he wondered? Was he sent to find and
follow me after my release from prison, so that they could find yet another
reason to arrest me?

The more he thought about it, the more he began to feel something
was very strange about that brief encounter at the inn. The day itself was one
he could never forget. A terrible light had flashed in the early morning, there
came a loud roar in the distance, an awful tearing sound as if the sky itself
had been ripped open and something came burning through, a wild, scintillating
light in the heavens, brighter than the sun. A violent wind was blowing
outside, sending a hail of debris flying as the dining room windows shattered.

Mironov jumped at the sound, covering his head and face. There
were frightened shouts outside, and they heard the sound of thunder or distant
artillery firing. Rushing out they looked to see what appeared to be a second
sunrise that morning. The entire horizon to the northeast was aglow with red
fire, as if the taiga was burning in a massive forest fire. Everyone stared in
awe, pointing at the spectacle…and then the stranger came.

Mironov had not seen him in the village before, and assumed he was
a recent arrival, a traveler seeking lodging at the inn. The man seemed
confused when he had first met him, disoriented, as if he did not know where he
was, but Mironov thought it might only be the shock and amazement of the
spectacle glowing on the horizon that had the whole town in an uproar. They
went back to the dining hall, intent on finishing breakfast in spite of the
strange event, and that brief encounter with the stranger had been more than
enough to plant that first seed of curiosity.

He seemed oddly dressed, and Mironov remembered the threatening
insignia that decorated his jacket and the pistol in the man’s side holster.
That was enough to add a kernel of suspicion to his curiosity about this man,
for the Okhrana were everywhere, and might appear in any guise one could imagine.

“Military?” He had asked, and the man told him he had come from
Vladivostok en route to the Caspian. He called himself Fedorov, and claimed he
was a soldier traveling to a new post. In time they returned to the hotel
dining room and, when the stranger followed them back, Mironov’s curiosity and
suspicion prompted him to engage the man. He remembered being very blunt with
him.

“Tell me you are not a security man working for the Okhrana and I
will be happy to share my breakfast table with you,” he said. “Then again if
you
are
Okhrana, I must tell you I have done nothing inappropriate. I
was given a full release, and I mean only to travel to Irkutsk to visit
friends. You need have no further worries about me.” He looked at the stranger,
waiting. “Well? Which is it?”

“Have no fear,” the man said. “I have no business with you...”

Yet that had not been enough to quell the suspicion. When the
stranger excused himself Mironov watched as he took the back stairway to the
upper floor, presumably to his quarters there. He got up and went to the front
desk to inquire about the man, but with the village still unsettled by the
strange event underway, the innkeeper was gone. So Mironov took a peek at the
register, and his suspicion ticked up yet another notch when he could see no
recent entry, or any guest listed by the name Fedorov.

Now there was an edge of fear on his suspicion, so he went back
through the dining hall to rejoin his comrades, only to find they had gone back
outside to look at the fire in the sky. So Mironov decided to see what more he
could learn about the stranger, though he knew he was taking a chance at being
apprehended again. He crept slowly up the narrow back stairway after the man,
his heart pounding and an inner voice berating him for being so foolish. The
Okhrana will find you easily enough, he chided himself. Now here you are
skulking about and courting their attention! Yet his curiosity seemed all too
compelling. He had to know who this man really was.

Sure enough, his worst fears were realized when he reached the top
of those stairs. He felt the hard grip of a steely hand on his shoulder,
turning to see another soldier had immediately fallen upon him.

“I’ve done nothing. Let me go!” He protested, but he was soon
shoved down the hall and into a room where, sure enough, he saw the man who had
called himself Fedorov with yet another soldier, a stocky, rock-like man that
looked very threatening.

“So you are with the Okhrana after all,” Mironov said sullenly as
soon as he saw Fedorov there. “I knew there was something odd about you. What
have I done? You have no right to detain me!”

The man gave him a wide eyed look, as if he had suddenly come to
some inner conclusion about him, but then he began asking those odd questions.

“Listen to me, Mironov,” he began. “What is the date?”

“The date?”

“What is the month and year?”

It was just as he feared. The questions… They always started that
way. Who are you? Where have you come from? Where are you going? What business
do you have there? But this was an odd one—the date? Mironov spoke, somewhat
indignant.

“So you mean to interrogate me, is that it?”

“No, no, please. Simply tell me the date.”

It was some kind of test, he thought, to see if his story would
hold together. So he humored the man with an answer. “The 30th of June. I arrived
late last night. You think I’m a dim witted fool, eh? I knew you were Okhrana
the moment I set eyes on you. I have done nothing! I have said nothing, nothing
at all!” His eyes were fiery as he spoke, indignant, combative.

The man looked at him as though he had seen a ghost.

“My god,” he said in a low voice. “My god, what has happened?
Mironov…You came up the back stairs just now?”

“I saw you go that way, and yes, I followed you to see what I
could find out about you. It seems I have learned too much, eh? But that is no
reason to arrest me again. A man has the right to see to his own safety,
particularly after what just happened out there.” He turned thinking to point
to the awful red glow in the sky outside, and then he, suddenly noticed the
darkness, the silence, the quiet night beyond the window lit by a silvery
gibbous moon. Now it was Mironov’s turn to stare dumfounded at the window.

“What’s happening here? Where’s the day gone?” He was suddenly as
confused as the stranger had seemed when he first encountered him. How could it
be night? Was it that explosion? Had the red fire on the horizon blackened the
sky with smoke? But no! The
moon
… The moon was up, and all was quiet and
still, hushed in the midnight darkness. Then the strangers questioned him yet
again, asking his name, and they knew exactly who he was.

Now he was certain they were Okhrana, and he resigned himself to
the realization that he would most likely be arrested here again, and taken
back to prison. Yet he was suddenly surprised when the man named Fedorov seemed
ready to release him.

“You mean I am free to go?”

“Yes, just follow me.” Fedorov reassured him.

Mironov looked at the other soldiers, frowning, then followed
Fedorov out the door to the upper landing of the back stairway.

“This way, Mironov. Quickly!” The stranger seemed very insistent,
an urgency about his movements. There came a rumble of thunder again, and now
Mironov concluded that he had been correct, the darkness must be from the smoke
of that fire. Perhaps the moon was still up, and only revealed when the smoke
obscured the sun, he thought. He went to Fedorov’s side, looking him in the eye
as though he were staring into the face of fate itself.

“You must go by the way you came,” said Fedorov. “Go quickly now,
while you see that light.” The man gestured to the amber glow from below. “And
Mironov—never come up this stairway again. Understand? Get as far away from
here as you can.”

The stranger had an anguished look on his face, as if he had
something more he needed to say, a tormented expression that held Mironov
fixated for a time, their eyes and souls locked together in some bizarre twist
of time and fate. Yet the man seemed to hesitate, uncertain of himself.

What was this strange look of fear and trepidation in the man’s eyes,
thought Mironov. Just as I turned to go down the stairs, the stranger reached
out, taking hold of my arm to delay me. He leaned forward, close to my ear and
whispered something, his eyes vast and serious, his face like that of a man who
was seeing a phantom from another world. The words blurted out, an urgent
whisper:
‘Do not go to St. Petersburg in 1934! Beware Stalin! Beware the
month of December! Go with God. Go and live, Mironov. Live!’

That was how he remembered it. The man finished, then released Mironov’s
arm. He recalled standing there, uncertain, confused for a moment. Then the
urgency of the moment compelled him to move, and he stepped quickly down the
narrow stairs.

What was he saying about 1934, a year so far away in the future?
Who was this Stalin he spoke of? Why should I be wary in December? What did he
mean that I should not go to St. Petersburg? He was speaking as though…as
though he saw some distant future in the world that had not yet come to pass,
some far off doom, for his tone of voice clearly carried the edge of warning.

Mironov reached the bottom of the steps, bemused to find the morning
seemed clear and bright again, and still tinted with the red glow of that
strange fiery sky. He sat in the dining hall, thinking about all that had just
happened. Then he took the man’s advice, deciding he would get himself as far
away from this place as possible, heading east to Irkutsk where he had
relatives. Yet always the memory of that man’s face, and his strange warning,
remained with him.

He eventually made up his mind to travel west again, to Baku where
the oil workers had been roused to strike against their corporate masters. The
incipient fires of the revolution were burning there, the embers stirred by
several nefarious organizers rousting about in the region, fomenting trouble
and advocating against the wealthy oil barons.

They wanted their damn oil, he thought, and they would do anything
to line their pockets with the gold it would bring, and the power. So Mironov
decided he would go to Baku as well, and join the revolutionary movement there,
but along the way he stopped again at that same railway inn at Ilanskiy, the
very place he had met the stranger that day.

Curiosity…that was what drove him that day. His curiosity
surrounded that back stairway like a shroud. He was down in the dining room
again when he heard the odd rumble, saw the strange glow in the back stairwell,
triggering the memory of that strange event he had witnessed. What was happening?
Was there a fire upstairs? He remembered getting up, walking quickly to the
stairs to climb them again…and his life was never the same after that, for the
world he soon found himself in was not the same either!

He emerged on the second floor, but the inn seemed worn down now,
a stark and cold place, with none of the inviting warmth it had offered. He looked
about, briefly, then went down the main stairway, to look for the innkeeper.
The old grey haired man was gone, yet his portrait was hanging behind the main
desk and a young serving woman was tending to the inn instead. What was going
on here? He would soon find out more than he ever wished to know.

He went to the window and peered outside to a horrific world where
he saw hundreds of people being herded into train cars pointed east. The rail
yard seemed infested with the security apparatus of the Okhrana, dark coated
men with black Ushankas. They spoke to the people in harsh tones, and some used
their rifle butts to beat them if they did not move quickly enough. The scene
was so shocking that he withdrew quickly, his eyes finding the serving girl by
the desk.

“What has happened?” he asked, shaken by what he had seen.

“What do you mean?”

“The Okhrana…Why are they taking everyone? And the soldiers?

“The war, the work camps, what else?” The woman shook her head.
“Comrade Stalin is fighting the Germans with one hand, and his own people with
the other. The war will be the end of us. Stalin’s dirty war on life itself.
This will be the third train heading east to the camps this week. What… don’t
tell me you have escaped from one of those train cars. You cannot hide here! If
they find you I will be punished as well!” She looked around, as if she feared
the hard men outside would storm in at any moment and take her away with the
others.

“Comrade Stalin?” That was the same name the stranger had
whispered to him.
Beware Stalin!

“What war do you speak of? The revolution? Has it finally
happened?”

“What? Don’t be daft. You’ve read the papers. The Germans have
reached the Volga! They are after Stalingrad now, and driving on Baku.” There
was a newspaper on the counter and she shoved it his way. He took it, his eyes scanning
the headlines. It was called
‘Vpered Za Stalina! Forward for Stalin!
And
a drawing showed soldiers standing proudly with bayoneted rifles.

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