Read Nightworld (Adversary Cycle/Repairman Jack) Online
Authors: F. Paul Wilson
WNYW-TV
Ladies and gentlemen, we are interrupting our special report from Central Park with catastrophic news from the Central Pacific. The Big Island of Hawaii is gone. Shortly after sunset, the chain of eight islands that make up our fiftieth state was shaken by a cataclysmic explosion. At that instant, all communications with Hawaii, or the Big Island as it is called, were cut off. The mystery was quickly solved.
This is how the Big Island looked. A lush volcanic island supporting four thousand square miles of paradise, including the world’s longest steadily active volcano. But now …
… as we see here in a live aerial transmission from our affiliate in Honolulu, the Big Island is no more. Hawaii’s active crater, Kilauea, along with supposedly extinct volcanoes Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea, simply blew up, taking the entire island with them. It is just dawn in the Central Pacific, but even so you can see that nothing remains of the island of Hawaii but a flaming, steaming cauldron of bubbling lava. We can only show you the site of the Big Island’s grave from the west. The plume of smoke, steam, ash, and debris that stretches far into the sky is drifting east. Meteorologists are presently calculating when the ash cloud will hit the West Coast. It is sure to affect weather around the globe.
You can’t see it now but there are reports of a giant whirlpool situated off Maui, north of where the Big Island used to be. The whirlpool is believed to be the result of a hole similar to the one in our own Central Park, opening in the ocean bottom some nineteen thousand feet below the surface. Whether this has any relationship to the Big Island disaster is still a matter of conjecture at this time.
Those flames you see now on the left of your screen are from another volcano. It’s been confirmed that Haleakala, a formerly extinct volcano just seven miles away on the island of Maui, is active again. Although most of its lava flow has been down its eastern flank, away from the heavily populated areas, we’ve been told that the lovely town of Hana is no more. It was completely submerged in an avalanche of lava during the night.
Meanwhile, in Manhattan, the situation is rapidly deteriorating.…
Glaeken stared at the TV screen in dismay, barely aware of the picture. But he was listening intently, hoping for fresh news from Maui. As a geologist came on, spouting his theory of how the hole in the channel between Hawaii and Maui had destabilized the Pacific “hot spot” that had formed the Hawaiian Islands over the ages, Glaeken hit the mute button on his remote.
Apparently the doorman had rung while he’d been intent on the TV—he saw Bill leading a familiar figure into the room.
“Jack! I see you made it through the night. Did you take care of that ‘business’ you mentioned?”
Jack nodded, a bit glumly, Glaeken thought.
“Yeah. All taken care of.”
As Bill returned to the kitchen to finish helping Nick eat breakfast, Jack dropped into a chair.
“Anything I can do?” Glaeken said.
He shook his head. “I sent some people off into the hinterlands. I’m just hoping they get where they’re going without any trouble. The city’s already starting to fall apart.”
“So I’ve heard. I understand the National Guard is on alert but that fewer than half of the Guardsmen are reporting in.”
“Not surprised. Probably want to stay home and protect their own. Who can blame them?”
“You should have had your people stay here. They’re welcome.”
“I thought about that after they left, but I think far from the city might be better for them. However, I’ve got some other friends who could use this place. Good people. You got room?”
“The building’s practically empty.”
“How come? It looks like a prime spot.”
“I’m very choosy about my neighbors. You’ve heard about Maui, I presume?”
“No. What?”
Glaeken capsulized the news reports for him.
“You think she’s still alive?”
Glaeken nodded. “There’s a good chance. She lives on the northwest slope. If she was home…” He asked the question that was uppermost in his mind. “When can you leave, Jack?”
“Tomorrow.”
“No. You must leave today. Every moment counts.”
“No way. I just checked with the engraver. The bogus necklaces won’t be ready till tomorrow morning at the earliest. And I’m not going without them. They’re my ace in the hole.”
Glaeken considered that for a moment. At the rate the situation was deteriorating, tomorrow might be too late. But he didn’t see that he had much choice. He had no way of forcing Jack to leave today.
“I promise—I’ll catch a flight out there first thing tomorrow—soon as those necklaces are ready.”
“That may not be so easy. A number of airlines have grounded all flights.”
“Why? Pilots not showing up?”
“Partly that. But a number of flights have disappeared. I should say, a
lot
of flights have disappeared. They take off but never land.”
“Swell. What’ve we got now—holes in the sky?”
“No. Leviathans in the air, snatching the planes, pulverizing them.”
“How about the Air Force?”
“According to the reports, surface-to-air and air-to-air missiles are ineffective and interceptor jets are disappearing as well.”
Jack said nothing, simply sat and stared at Glaeken with a skeptical look.
“I’ve seen them,” Bill said, leading Nick in from the kitchen. He sat him in a chair that caught the morning sun. Nick stared emptily at the wall.
“The leviathans?”
Bill nodded. “Big. Big as towns, gliding through the night.”
“At least we’ve got the days,” Jack said. “The daylight time may be shrinking, but maybe Rasalom made a mistake giving us some slack like this.”
“Not at all. The days give us time to be at our worst. A constant onslaught might drive us together, bring out the best in us. But the respite offered by the daylight gives the terrors of the night before and the anticipated terrors of the night to come a chance to work on us. It allows fear to demoralize us. Fear is the key to Rasalom’s power. Fear is the great divider. From war and racism to the mundane vices of greed and gluttony—they’re all rooted in fear. What is religion, after all, but a ritualized response to fear—fear of death, fear of the perversities of luck and happenstance that afflict every life at one time or another?” He pointed out the window. “Fear is rampant out there now. It’s dividing us, hurting us, bringing out the worst in too many of us. It will be the end of us.” He turned to Jack. “That’s why you’ve got to get to Maui and retrieve those necklaces.”
“I’ll find a way,” Jack said softly. “There’s always a way.”
Glaeken wondered even if Jack did find a way to retrieve the necklaces, then what?
Tension rolled out from his chest along his limbs. He flexed his arthritic fingers to disperse it. What indeed? Knowing the source of the metal from which they’d been fashioned, he was almost afraid to be in the same room with those necklaces. What would happen if he touched them? Or even got near? Nothing, he hoped. But he couldn’t risk it. He’d have to keep his distance when and if Jack brought them back.
Jack said, “You know, with the way things are going, I think I’m going to need some backup on the trip.”
Bill said, “I could come along if you wish.”
At first, Glaeken was startled by Bill’s offer. He glanced at the ex-priest and caught a desperate look in his eyes. Desperate for what? And then he understood. Bill felt lost, adrift, already a resident of the land to which most of humanity would soon be emigrating. Poor man. The New York City police records still listed him as a fugitive suspect in a capital crime, he had broken with his church, his family was dead, his last friend was sitting there lapsing in and out of catatonia, and Glaeken suspected that his feelings for Carol Treece ran deeper than he dared admit.
Small wonder he was feeling reckless.
Glaeken hoped Jack had the good sense not to take him up on the offer.
“Uh, nothing personal, Bill,” Jack said after a long pause, “but I’m looking for someone with maybe a little experience in hand-to-hand work.”
“If I were younger…” Glaeken said wistfully.
He remembered times when he had cursed the ages he’d spent in a body in its mid thirties. Now, with the burden of eternity off him, he had moments when he would have relished tight muscles, mobile joints, and a supple back.
“Yeah,” Jack said, smiling. “We’d have made a helluva pair, I think. But I was wondering about Ho Chi Minhzilla. Think he’d be up for it?”
“Ba? I don’t know. I doubt he’d be willing to leave Mrs. Nash unprotected, but it wouldn’t hurt to ask. I’ll call if you like.”
“Might be better I go in person. Maybe I can sway him with my magnetic charm.”
Bill laughed aloud. Jack gave him a sidelong look.
“Something funny, guy?”
Bill grinned. “I didn’t know what to make of you at first, but I think you’re all right.”
“Which says loads about your character judgment. None of it good.”
Glaeken gave Jack directions to Toad Hall and said he’d call ahead to let them know he was coming.
When he was gone, Glaeken reached for the TV remote control. Before he could resume the audio, Nick spoke.
“They won’t be enough,” he said in his monotone.
Bill squatted before him and looked into his eyes.
“What, Nick? What won’t be enough?”
“The necklaces. They won’t do the job. You’ll need more to make it work. Pieces of something else. Pieces of the rest of it.”
“What does that mean, Nick? Pieces of what?”
But he was gone again. Bill turned to Glaeken.
“Any idea what he’s talking about?”
Glaeken sat numb and cold and sick as he stared at Nick.
“Yes, I’m afraid I do.”
WFPW-FM
JO: Well, the news keeps getting worse, folks. Reports from the Midwest and the Plains States say that the nation’s cattle herds were decimated by the bugs last night. Measures are being taken now to protect them but no one knows how successful they’ll be. Our advice: Enjoy your Big Macs and Whoppers today, man, because pretty soon you won’t be able to afford them.
FREDDY: And now, continuing with our F-Rock All-Request Weekend, we’ve got Marvin Gaye asking the question that’s on everybody’s lips.