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    Kill Switch

    Page 52
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      I almost smiled, but the stitches in my mouth turned it into a wince. “You took Bolton alive, right? What have you done with him?”

      Church tucked the charter away, patted my leg, and left without answering.

      Junie came in and crawled onto my bed and we held each other.

      3.

      Dr. William Hu was in intensive care for two weeks. We all came to visit him. Once I got out of the hospital, Junie and I were there every day. Aunt Sallie flew out from Brooklyn. So did Bug. So did a lot of people. The bullet had done a lot of damage. They operated on him three times and he survived each procedure. He woke up on the fifteenth day and saw that I was sitting beside his bed. He looked at me. I looked at him. He licked his lips and I gave him some water out of a bendy straw.

      “The … children…?” he asked, his voice as thin as a whisper. “The lights?”

      “The lights stayed on,” I said. “We kept the monster in the box.”

      Hu smiled and closed his eyes.

      The machines around him started screaming.

      The doctors and nurses came running; they pushed me out of the way. There was a lot of yelling. I stood in the hallway watching them fight to keep him alive. They fought every bit as hard as I’d fought Santoro. As Toys and Junie had fought. As Church and Violin had fought. As Harry had fought.

      They fought and fought.

      But you can’t win every battle.

      No, you can’t.

      Goddamn it, you can’t. I stood there, numb and empty, and for a moment I thought I heard Hu’s voice. I turned and caught a fleeting glimpse of him going through the fire door. He cut a look over his shoulder and gave me a sarcastic smirk. When I blinked the fire door was shut.

      I leaned slowly against the wall.

      Slid down.

      Sat there while they switched off the machines one by one.

      4.

      Everyone came to the funeral.

      Even the president.

      Church met him at the entrance to the chapel and would not move. I joined him. So did Top and Bunny, Toys, Junie, Aunt Sallie. All of us. Even Harry Bolt and Violin joined the blockade.

      The president stood on the steps, surrounded by his Secret Service entourage and all of his people. Mr. Church did not say a single word. He didn’t have to.

      After five long minutes the president shook his head and turned away. His motorcade drove away with all of the usual lights and sirens.

      5.

      Deconstructing it all will take time.

      If I thought it would be the trial of the century, I was wrong. None of the true facts ever got out. Harcourt Bolton, Senior, went away somewhere. Not sure where. The public thinks he’s dead. The Closers are all dead. The dream team from the Playroom are in a secure psychiatric facility. Harry Bolt had gone around the room smashing the sleeping capsules, and apparently that caused a short resulting in traumatic brain damage to each of the dreamwalkers. They’re still alive but they’re vegetables. God only knows what we can or should do to them. The guards at that facility and everyone on the staff have to wear those damn aluminum foil hats just in case. Maybe it will ultimately prove too costly to keep them. Too costly in too many ways. Personally? I’m sorry I wasn’t awake enough down in Bolton’s basement to put a bullet in each one of them. Would have simplified things. Might even have made me feel better, or achieve a sense of justice. Or something.

      Those are not thoughts I share with Junie. Or even Rudy, who’s recovering from knee replacement and nose reconstruction. He says that he forgives me, but I haven’t managed yet to forgive myself. Nor has Circe forgiven me yet. Fair enough.

      And as far as Prospero Bell? The official story is still that he died after he and his friend, Leviticus King, set fire to their school. No need to amend that story with troublesome facts. We know what happened. That’s enough.

      For me, I can’t ever look at the world the same way. Sure, I know that the monsters I saw weren’t part of my world. But on the way to that world I saw things about this world that hurt me. Things that eat at me. I saw the end of the world. I saw what I would become as things fell apart. Or maybe might become. Which means what, exactly? Am I doomed to live out that future? Will some old Cold War bioweapon turn everything into a wasteland picked over by the hungry dead? Is that my reward for all these years of fighting? Is the future a fixed point that we travel to with the certainty of a bullet drilling a hot hole through the air toward a stationary target?

      God, I hope not.

      Mr. Church says he doesn’t believe in prophecy. He says it’s been wrong too many times. He says that nearly all of the prophets have been wrong. What do they call it in fiction? Unreliable narrators.

      But I saw it. This isn’t a Ouija board. This was me standing ankle deep in blood. If that is what’s coming, can I stop it? Change it? Save it? If so, how? Do I stay on the clock and stay in the fight so that I’m poised and ready? How soon before that would drive me absolutely out of what’s left of my mind? Or do I throw the universe a curve and lay down my arms, turn my back, walk off? In that dark future I was still a soldier. What happens to the future if I stop being that? Will it change destiny or insure it?

      Those are impossible questions to answer.

      Time, as they say, will tell. But forewarned is forearmed. We know about the Lucifer 113 pathogen. Church is looking into it. He’s going to see what he can do to stop it from ever being released. Maybe I can help. Maybe I can go find the people involved and put bullets in their heads. As a public service, you understand.

      Which opens another door of speculation. What if that was a fantasy of a damaged mind under great stress? I had a head injury, after all. It’s entirely possible, even likely, that this was nothing more than a trauma-born hallucination. How does that give me license to go kill people?

      You see the problem?

      The Kill Switch may be gone, but I believe there is still a darkness coming. The question is how to hold a light to keep it from becoming absolute.

      So where does that leave the world? This world, I mean. The world of now.

      That’s a damn good question. In my darkest hours I wondered how many times we could be knocked down and still manage to get back onto our feet. There’s that old saying from the Japanese martial arts that’s a favorite of Mr. Church. Nanakorobi yaoki. Fall seven times, get up eight. It’s a great philosophy, but after a while it’s harder to make it work. The knees don’t want to flex, the back is too sore, the heart is heavy. What if you manage it one more time and they hit you again and drive you back down? And again? And again?

      The Modern Man in my soul wants to stay down, to hide, to burrow into the sand so that no one else takes another swing. The Cop wants to figure it out, to lie low until he’s sure there are no more punches coming. Both effects are the same; whether fear or caution, the sad fact is that the bad guys have put you down on the deck and maybe this is the last time.

      But the Killer in my soul—the Warrior, whatever it is I call him or he wants to be called—he sees it differently. He’s too primitive to give up. He operates on the level of immediate need. It’s live or die. It’s fight or die. It’s kill or be killed.

      6.

      On a sunny Southern California day twenty-eight days after the God Machine fired, I came into the office to find Sam Imura there, walking carefully, looking pale and thin. The others drifted in and we went up to the deck to watch the ocean. I’d brought with me a whole sack full of sandwiches. There’s a guy named Jake Witkowski who has a food truck near the Pier and he invented a sandwich for me. Rudy says that these things are more dangerous than anything we face when we roll out as a team. The “Joe Ledger Special” is a homemade bacon cheddar brat, sliced open and topped with a steak patty with grilled pepper and onions, piled high with a homemade cheese sauce, homemade whiskey BBQ sauce, and crushed Fritos. Anytime I feel one of my arteries opening, I have Jake make me one of these. Food for the soul.

      We all sat on the deck and ate them. Me and what was left of my team,
    my family. Ghost, too. It was a farewell dinner in a lot of ways. Brian and Montana were gone. Dr. Hu was gone. At least half of the DMS field agents had been adversely impacted by the Dreamwalking intrusions. A lot of them were dead. A lot of them had quit or asked for transfers to desk jobs. The whole DMS had collapsed down almost to the size it was when I first joined. We were a broken machine, and even with our new charter, none of us felt up to the task of fixing it. Maybe it would never be fixed. Maybe this was the end of us.

      Echo Team was falling apart around me. Lydia had submitted her letter of resignation from the DMS and had accepted the job of head of security for FreeTech. And Sam…? He said that he wanted to go back to California for a while and spend time with his family while he healed. When I asked if he was going to come back to Echo Team, he said, “We’ll see.” Which I took to mean, “No.”

      Things were coming to an end.

      Or … maybe it was like chess. The pieces are removed from the board one by one but you still have to play the game with what you have left. I had Top and Bunny.

      I hoped.

      As I munched my sandwich I looked at some photos Harry Bolt had sent me from his cell phone. The kind of pictures tourists ask passersby to take. Harry seated at a table at a sidewalk café in Paris. Short, dumpy, silly, and ineffectual Harry Bolt. World’s worst spy. Son of a madman who nearly ruined the whole country. Seated at a table with a gorgeous brunette with dark eyes, a mysterious smile, and an outrageous hat. I showed the photo to the guys.

      “Well, kiss my ass,” said Top.

      Bunny looked at it, and shook his head. “No. That doesn’t fit inside my head.”

      “Why not?” asked Sam. “Kid’s richer than God. He’s going to be a chick magnet.”

      “But him and Violin?” asked Bunny, shaking his head. “Seriously?”

      No one could believe it. We all had a beer to shake it off. One beer didn’t do the whole job, so we had another. And another.

      Which is where Church found us.

      He came and stood there, looking down at us, at what we were eating, at the rows of empty beer bottles, and then out to sea. Finally he took a thick stack of folded papers from the inner pocket of his suit coat and handed them to me. First-class plane tickets. Hotel and car rentals. My name was on the top one, then Junie, and then everyone. A hotel in Hawaii, right on the beach. The flight was for ten thirty tomorrow morning. We all looked at the tickets and then up at him, attentive as schoolchildren.

      “The world will have to turn without you for a couple of weeks,” he said, then he turned and walked away. I caught up with him at the door.

      “Whoa, wait a minute,” I said. “Look, Boss, I appreciate the gestures, but we can’t go off the clock now, we’re just getting back on our feet and—”

      Church said, “When was the last time you took a vacation, Captain? You live at the beach but you don’t act like it. When is the last time you went swimming when it didn’t involve having a boat shot out from under you? When is the last time you took a day off when it didn’t involve a hospital stay? When is the last time you went fishing, played tennis, rode a bicycle, slept in a hammock, hiked in the mountains, played catch with your dog, spent unstructured time with the woman you love?”

      I opened my mouth to reply but I had nothing to say.

      “The war will still be here,” Church said quietly.

      “But—”

      “If I need you,” he said with a faint smile, “I’ll call.”

      7.

      We were on the beach in Hanalei Bay on Kauai’s north shore.

      Junie was wearing a string bikini that tested the limits of public decency. I was very okay with that. Twenty feet away Bunny was sprawled on a chaise lounge in a Speedo that I was less okay with. They don’t call them banana hammocks for nothing. Lydia was seated nearby, smearing her legs with oil. Top was in a chaise lounge, snoring quietly, a peach-colored fedora covering his face.

      That was how it was and how it had been for day after gorgeous uncomplicated day. Dangerous drinks with little paper umbrellas. Lotion glistening on sun-dark skin. Tourist hats pulled low over dark sunglasses. To passersby we must have looked strange. Not one of us, not even Junie, was unmarked by the weapons of war. Knives and bullets, teeth and claws. People gave us strange looks and moved on. At least for the first few days. As our tans deepened and we became familiar faces there were more smiles directed our way. Fewer frowns. Parents didn’t pull their kids to another part of the beach.

      We baked. We ate. We drank.

      We relaxed, I think.

      In the depths of the dark tropical nights, as the fragrant flowers perfumed the air, Junie and I made love. Sweet and slow and gentle. Afterward, sweaty and spent, I lay in her arms and listened to the world be the world. No gunfire, no screams.

      On days like this one, though, as we all lay sprawled on chairs and towels, it seemed to me that we had crossed a line, reached a place, achieved a state. Relaxation isn’t really the right word. Peace, maybe. Or a calm before the next storm.

      Church said that the war would still be there. He said that if he needed us he’d call.

      My cell phone sat on the table beside my chair, day after day, and didn’t ring.

      It did not ring.

      Until it did.

      Visit KENSINGTONBOOKS.COM for more information on the

      Pine Deep Horror Novels.

      ALSO BY JONATHAN MABERRY

      NOVELS

      Ghostwalkers: A Deadlands Novel

      Predator One

      Fall of Night

      Code Zero

      Extinction Machine

      Assassin’s Code

      King of Plagues

      The Dragon Factory

      Patient Zero

      Dead of Night

      The Wolfman

      Bits & Pieces

      Fire & Ash

      Flesh & Bone

      Dust & Decay

      Rot & Ruin

      Bad Moon Rising

      Dead Man’s Song

      Ghost Road Blues

      ANTHOLOGIES

      V-Wars

      V-Wars: Blood and Fire

      V-Wars: Night Terrors

      X-Files: Trust No One

      X-Files: The Truth Is Out There

      Scary Out There

      Out of Tune

      Out of Tune Vol 2

      NONFICTION

      Wanted Undead or Alive

      They Bite

      Zombie CSU

      The Cryptopedia

      Vampire Universe

      Vampire Slayer’s Field Guide to the Undead (as Shane MacDougall)

      Ultimate Jujutsu

      Ultimate Sparring

      The Martial Arts Student Logbook

      Judo and You

      GRAPHIC NOVELS

      Bad Blood

      Rot & Ruin: Warrior Smart

      V-Wars: The Crimson Queen

      V-Wars: All of Us Monsters

      Marvel Universe vs. Wolverine

      Marvel Universe vs. The Punisher

      Marvel Universe vs. The Avengers

      Captain America: Hail Hydra

      Klaws of the Panther

      Punisher: Naked Kills

      Wolverine: Flies to a Spider

      Doomwar

      Black Panther: Power

      Marvel Zombies Return

      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      Jonathan Maberry is a New York Times bestselling author, five-time Bram Stoker Award winner, anthology editor, and comic book writer. He writes horror, thrillers, mystery, fantasy, science fiction, and suspense for adults and teens. Several of Jonathan’s novels are in development for movies or TV including V-Wars, Extinction Machine, Rot & Ruin, and Dead of Night. He also writes comics for Marvel, IDW, and Dark Horse. His V-Wars books have been developed as a board game. He is a popular featured expert on History Channel shows like Zombies: A Living History and True Monsters. He lives in Del Mar, California, with his wife, Sara Jo, and their dog, Rosie.

      www.jonathanmaberry.com. Or sign up for email updates here.

     
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      St. Martin’s Press ebook.

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      CONTENTS

      Title Page

      Copyright Notice

      Dedication

      Acknowledgments

      Prologue

      Part One: The God Machine

      Chapter One

      Chapter Two

      Interlude One

      Chapter Three

      Interlude Two

      Chapter Four

      Chapter Five

      Chapter Six

      Interlude Three

      Chapter Seven

      Chapter Eight

      Chapter Nine

      Chapter Ten

      Chapter Eleven

      Interlude Four

      Chapter Twelve

      Chapter Thirteen

      Chapter Fourteen

      Interlude Five

      Chapter Fifteen

      Chapter Sixteen

      Chapter Seventeen

      Chapter Eighteen

      Interlude Six

      Chapter Nineteen

      Interlude Seven

      Chapter Twenty

      Interlude Eight

      Chapter Twenty-One

      Chapter Twenty-Two

      Part Two: Fathers and Sons

      Chapter Twenty-Three

      Chapter Twenty-Four

      Interlude Nine

      Chapter Twenty-Five

      Interlude Ten

      Chapter Twenty-Six

      Interlude Eleven

      Chapter Twenty-Seven

      Interlude Twelve

      Chapter Twenty-Eight

      Interlude Thirteen

      Chapter Twenty-Nine

      Chapter Thirty

      Chapter Thirty-One

      Interlude Fourteen

      Chapter Thirty-Two

      Interlude Fifteen

     


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