The Anathema (45 page)

Read The Anathema Online

Authors: Zachary Rawlins

BOOK: The Anathema
4.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

There was a brief, intense pounding on the door, a pause, and then part of the lock fell off and the door flew open.

“Alex! Emily! Look, I hate to do this to you, but I need both of you to get somewhere safe and oh my fucking God,” Katya said, horrified, taking one faltering step back. “What the hell is going on here?”

“Please shut up,” Emily said, glaring at her. The water swelled up around Katya, briefly, appearing to swallow her, a splashing column of water in the shape of a girl, and then it collapsed to the ground again. Katya made a strange, frantic motion with her arms, clutching at her neck, and then she fell down, sideways, and started to kick out her legs.

“Why is she doing that?” Alex said, pulling at his feet, which seemed to be attached to the soaked hardwood floors, up to his ankles in icy-cold water. “Why is she making those noises?”

“Because she is drowning,” Emily said callously. “Like they did to me. The Anathema. It was weeks ago, before we left on break. I was frightened for days beforehand. Did you even notice? They came and they took me to a place that looked like a temple built out of stone, like the Academy but all translucent blues and greens. There were pools there, deep enough that you couldn’t touch the bottom once they covered it over. It was dark and cold and I held my breath as long as I could. They said the water was full of nanites, but I didn’t know for sure until I after took that first, deep breath. Then everything changed. I am not who I used to be, Alex.”

“Why would you let them do that to you?” Alex asked, bewildered and horrified. “Why didn’t you ask for help? I would have helped you!”

“You had a hundred chances to help me, and you never did. Now I don’t need anyone’s help, ever again. And if you try your protocol on me, Alex Warner,” she warned sternly, “that water you feel all over your skin will freeze. You’d kill yourself, trying to kill me.”

“Emily,” Alex said, “I’m really sorry. I wouldn’t do anything to hurt you.”

The needle impaled her head, only one end visible, poking out of her hair on one side, a bit above her ear, like an ornament. Alex howled and grabbed for her body as she fell.

“I sure would,” Katya croaked, coughing as she stumbled across the room and grabbed Alex’s shoulder. “God that hurt. I wasn’t sure whether I could port the water out of my lungs or not. Alex, we have to go, she’s not…”

Alex was holding an armful of water that was leaking back to the floor. He ignored Katya pulling at his arm and stared at it as it melted away. It all seemed so unreasonable. He thought of Emily sitting next to him in class, her flowery handwriting, the worried look she got every time he did something stupid, and he simply couldn’t reconcile it.

“No,” Emily said, out of a slowly rising column of water that only vaguely looked like her. “She most certainly is not.”

“Alex,” Katya commanded, pulling him to his feet. “Run.”

 

* * *

 

The Weir lunged, spittle flying, and Mikhail Bashmet ducked the attack easily, not even paying it much attention as he whipped the hatchet in his left around, removing the top part of the Weir’s head, along with a bunch of indeterminate matter that hit the trunk of the tree behind him with a wet, plopping noise. He barely heard it, moving forward, leaving behind the dead Weir, hunting whatever it was the pack was dying to protect.

All around him, operatives of the Black Sun moved through the pine trees and the great tufts of ferns, killing Weir and Ghouls with silent precision. The air crackled with discharged protocols, and with the potential energy of more, held in reserve for the right moment. The shadows were thick beneath the trees that fought and clawed for every inch of sunlight, but for those with the right eyes, the forest was lit from within for miles around, the last stand of Taos Cartel. A few members had gone to ground in Washington, along the Canadian border, out on a small ranch not far from the Snake River. When Mikhail’s extermination team arrived, Weir had come boiling out of the primitive structures of the camp like insects, allowing the occupants to flee to the woods. After mopping up the beasts, Mikhail and his team had followed. It had galled him, requesting that another team be ported in to supplement his own in this operation, but now that they had come so far, he was glad of the extra men.

“Where are they?”

Mikhail called out to Don Tran, his tracker and remote viewer. He looked up from the corpse in front of him and pointed, toward a distant hill crowned with trees, where Mikhail thought that he could see movement.

Leaves broke and crackled beneath his boots. He moved fast now that he had the trace, the thread of fright and desperation that marked the trail of those that had fled before his team. It wound through the brush and the undergrowth, over the ridge and partway down the valley. They were still bridging a narrow stream when he finally caught up to them. He steadied himself on the uneven surface of the rocky slope, aiming the .40 pistol he had clutched in both hands. A woman, the one trailing behind, cried out and fell, and then was swallowed up by the swollen water as her companions plunged onward, Mikhail pursuing. The creek slowed him down a little. He caught the man near the top of the next ridge, the hatchet burying itself right in the center of his back. The man fell, cursing him, and for a brief moment, their eyes met.

And then he said the word, and Mikhail’s brain, reacting in primeval horror, relayed it to every neighboring mind before tearing itself apart in revulsion.

 

* * *

 

The meeting stretched on, through the afternoon, much too long for North’s taste. It was George Muir from the Raleigh Cartel, again, as usual, protesting his family’s shrinking interest in the covert Iranian opium trade that had been their traditional area of expertise. He had already wrung whatever consolations he was going to receive from the Hegemony for this perceived breach of territory, and he knew it, but he was offended and frightened by his family’s failing fortunes. He expressed this by making long, aggrieved speeches at the meetings they were still obligated to invite him to.

North had heard it all before, so he had tuned out shortly after the blowhard had begun talking, his eyes drifting out to the window to the blue sky and the rolling hills outside of Dublin, where they were doing this quarter’s financials. That put him in the position to see it first.

“Something is wrong,” he said firmly, cutting off Muir in midsentence, while the whole room turning to face him.

“What do you mean?” Tuttle asked suspiciously, squinting at him through the rolls of fat that surrounded his eyes. “You do not have the floor at the moment, Lord North.”

“You fools,” North sneered, gesturing at the window while he walked purposefully for the exit. “See for yourselves.”

At first it was only one person, a man, running along the road that connected the retreat buildings to the main security gate. He wasn’t wearing the normal uniform of the security forces, but the snipers stationed on the roof took care of him, so that didn’t seem too ominous. The men in the room, largely older, largely fat, had already begun to nudge each other and exchange whispered speculation on whether the younger North had finally lost it, the same way the elder had done so many years before, when another man came around the same curve, running as if his life depended on it. Followed by another. Then several more. The snipers felled the first few, but soon there was a whole crowd, a small army of strange people rushing the building, heedless of who the security staff shot.

And when they one of them got close enough, they said the word.

 

* * *

 

Eerie hesitated at the entrance to the old Physical Education building, currently unoccupied and slated for revamping next year.

“Alex?”

She said his name softly, probably too softly for anyone inside the ragged old building to hear her.

She debated a moment longer, then ducked underneath the caution tape and opened the front door, which had been left unlocked and partially ajar. Eerie stepped into the half-lit room, one side flooded with yellow light from the streetlight outside, the other shrouded in the shadows of the interior of the building. The whole place smelled powerfully of dust and mildew.

“Alex?” Eerie asked again, hopefully.

“Not exactly,” Steve admitted, stepping in the front door behind her and shoving her unceremoniously aside, while Charles closed the door firmly behind them. “I guess you’ll have to make do with us.”

Eerie caught herself on the arm of a chair covered by a paint-smeared drop cloth in time to avoid hitting the stripped wooden flooring. Her knitting basket went clattering to the floor and overturned, spilling yarn and darning needles.

“What?” Eerie looked from one sweating, leering boy’s face to the other. “But, the email said…”

“I know,” Steve said, moving forward, reaching for her with one massive hand, while Eerie shrank away. “What can I say? I am as surprised as you are. I always figured Emily for too good to talk to the likes of me, but I guess we both misjudged her, right? Anyway, I’ve wanted to settle things with your piece-of-shit boyfriend for a long time now, for my teeth. He ain’t here, so I guess that makes you the next best thing, right?”

“Maybe better…” Charles suggested evilly, his face flushed and ugly as he advanced on her.

Eerie backed up until she bumped up against one of the walls, sending a cloud of dust puffing up around her, like a halo in the late afternoon sun.

“What do you mean?” Eerie asked quietly, her fingers knotting in the fabric of her oversized sweatshirt.

Charles laughed his nasty little laugh, and Steve ambled forward, with a smug, self-satisfied grin on his face as he reached out again through the dust and the strange golden motes that filled the air, his hand clenched tight around her arm.

“Oh, you don’t get it?” Steve asked, his voice rich with mock sympathy, his face red and swollen. “I got the strangest email this morning. It turns out that Emily wants you gone in the worst way, and she’s willing to give us all sort of things, including a free ride into the Hegemony, if we take care of it for her. We were sent here to make you disappear, retard. And no one will care if we take our time about it.”

 

* * *

 

“Alistair?” Vladimir said, clearly stunned. “Why are you here?”

The old man’s laboratory was a mess as always. The two long tables were both covered with components and machinery, pipes and coils of wire, the remnants and wreckage of a dozen experiments, failed, functioning, and ongoing. Alistair picked up a length of steel pipe that looked about right on his way over, still a little groggy from the apport in.

“The boss sent me,” Alistair said jovially. “There was something I had to take care of here.”

Alistair looked up at the cells that hung across the second level. The traumatized witch that Alice had brought home was the only current occupant. Alistair winked at her, her eyes widened in terror, and she shrank back into the corner, as far away as her cell would allow.

“That’s odd,” Vladimir said, frowning. “I was sure Gaul told me that he had sent you out on assignment a few days ago.”

“Oh, now I understand the confusion. You see,” Alistair confessed, rolling the pipe around the palm of his hand, “I don’t work for him anymore.”

Vladimir spun to face him as he advanced, gripping the table top next to him for support, water leaking out of the corners of his wrinkled, weepy eyes. Around him, a circle flickered to life, a frenetic ring of unintelligible words burning faint orange.

“Alistair, you can’t be serious.”

“I can,” Alistair said, swinging the pipe at the his wrinkled head and connecting with the side of the skull. Vladimir toppled without making a sound, the orange ring around him disappearing as he hit the floor. “You never gave me enough credit, Vlad. None of you did. For such ambitious men, you could be very short-sided when it came to your protégés.”

Other books

Future Lovecraft by Boulanger, Anthony, Moreno-Garcia, Silvia, Stiles, Paula R.
Retromancer by Robert Rankin
His to Taste by Winlock, Jacqueline
The Marriage Mart by Teresa DesJardien
Faded Dreams by Eileen Haworth
The Charmer by Autumn Dawn
Crow's Inn Tragedy by Annie Haynes
Switched, Bothered and Bewildered by Suzanne Macpherson