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    Once Dead


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      Also by Richard Phillips

      The Rho Agenda: The Second Ship

      The Rho Agenda: Immune

      The Rho Agenda: Wormhole

      The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

      Text copyright © 2014 Richard Phillips

      All rights reserved.

      No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

      Published by 47North, Seattle

      www.apub.com

      ISBN-13: 9781477824108

      ISBN-10: 1477824103

      Cover design by Cyanotype Book Architects

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2014932945

      Dedicated to my wife, Carol, whose love and encouragement has made writing such a pleasure

      CONTENTS

      PROLOGUE

      CHAPTER 1

      CHAPTER 2

      CHAPTER 3

      CHAPTER 4

      CHAPTER 5

      CHAPTER 6

      CHAPTER 7

      CHAPTER 8

      CHAPTER 9

      CHAPTER 10

      CHAPTER 11

      CHAPTER 12

      CHAPTER 13

      CHAPTER 14

      CHAPTER 15

      CHAPTER 16

      CHAPTER 17

      CHAPTER 18

      CHAPTER 19

      CHAPTER 20

      CHAPTER 21

      CHAPTER 22

      CHAPTER 23

      CHAPTER 24

      CHAPTER 25

      CHAPTER 26

      CHAPTER 27

      CHAPTER 28

      CHAPTER 29

      CHAPTER 30

      CHAPTER 31

      CHAPTER 32

      CHAPTER 33

      CHAPTER 34

      CHAPTER 35

      CHAPTER 36

      CHAPTER 37

      CHAPTER 38

      CHAPTER 39

      CHAPTER 40

      CHAPTER 41

      CHAPTER 42

      CHAPTER 43

      CHAPTER 44

      CHAPTER 45

      CHAPTER 46

      CHAPTER 47

      CHAPTER 48

      CHAPTER 49

      CHAPTER 50

      CHAPTER 51

      CHAPTER 52

      CHAPTER 53

      CHAPTER 54

      CHAPTER 55

      CHAPTER 56

      CHAPTER 57

      CHAPTER 58

      CHAPTER 59

      CHAPTER 60

      CHAPTER 61

      CHAPTER 62

      CHAPTER 63

      CHAPTER 64

      CHAPTER 65

      CHAPTER 66

      CHAPTER 67

      CHAPTER 68

      CHAPTER 69

      CHAPTER 70

      CHAPTER 71

      CHAPTER 72

      CHAPTER 73

      CHAPTER 74

      CHAPTER 75

      CHAPTER 76

      CHAPTER 77

      CHAPTER 78

      CHAPTER 79

      CHAPTER 80

      CHAPTER 81

      CHAPTER 82

      CHAPTER 83

      CHAPTER 84

      CHAPTER 85

      CHAPTER 86

      CHAPTER 87

      CHAPTER 88

      CHAPTER 89

      CHAPTER 90

      CHAPTER 91

      CHAPTER 92

      CHAPTER 93

      CHAPTER 94

      CHAPTER 95

      CHAPTER 96

      CHAPTER 97

      CHAPTER 98

      CHAPTER 99

      CHAPTER 100

      CHAPTER 101

      CHAPTER 102

      CHAPTER 103

      CHAPTER 104

      CHAPTER 105

      CHAPTER 106

      CHAPTER 107

      CHAPTER 108

      CHAPTER 109

      CHAPTER 110

      CHAPTER 111

      CHAPTER 112

      CHAPTER 113

      CHAPTER 114

      CHAPTER 115

      CHAPTER 116

      CHAPTER 117

      CHAPTER 118

      CHAPTER 119

      CHAPTER 120

      CHAPTER 121

      CHAPTER 122

      CHAPTER 123

      CHAPTER 124

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      PROLOGUE

      Jack Gregory felt strong hands shove him into the moonlit alley, only dimly aware of the half-dozen men that encircled him as his focus shifted to the man that waited in the center of that ring. These self-appointed referees had brought them together here for two reasons: to watch a death match between Americans and to make sure Jack wasn’t the one who walked away. And if that was how things went down, that was fine with him. Priest Williams wouldn’t be walking away either.

      The Calcutta slums bred hard men and women. By the time children reached the age of thirteen, they’d already experienced more work and hardship than most Americans would endure in their lifetimes. The residents of this particular neighborhood bore no love for Americans in general or CIA operatives in particular. Carlton “Priest” Williams, an ex–Delta Force mercenary, fell into the first category. Jack fit the second.

      As he looked at the mercenary’s muscular torso, shimmering with sweat in the moon’s pale glow, Jack’s hatred for the man filled his veins with ice. Airborne Ranger, Green Beret, Delta Force. Priest’s mere existence screamed betrayal of all that America’s Special Forces stood for. Because of Priest, Jack’s brother’s body lay in an unmarked grave somewhere in Waziristan. Not his head, just his body. A burlap bag containing Robert’s decaying head had been left on Jack’s hotel room pillow. That delivery had propelled him into this alley, into this night.

      Priest launched himself at Jack, moving with surprising speed and agility for a man his size, but his right cross failed to land. Shifting his weight left, Jack’s side kick buckled Priest’s right leg, bringing him to his knees. Immediately Jack was behind him, his right arm encircling Priest’s throat. Struggling to prevent Jack’s left arm from completing the choke hold, Priest rolled forward, throwing Jack over his head onto the sewage-strewn ground, coming to rest straddling Jack’s body.

      As heavy blows rained down onto his face and neck, Jack grabbed Priest’s left hand, whipping his right leg up to lock beneath Priest’s chin. Levering Priest’s arm outward against the pressure of his leg, Jack felt the arm break, sending Priest’s gargling scream echoing through the alley. Shifting his weight, Jack continued to twist the broken arm, rolling the bigger man onto his side as Jack’s feet sought their fatal lock around Priest’s neck.

      The slash of twin blades across his back took Jack by surprise, sending him rolling to his feet to face his new attackers. All six men who formed the circle around the two combatants held the foot-and-a-half-long, boomerang-shaped knives called Khukuri. It was the signature weapon of the local Nepalese gang who called themselves the Ghurkaris. Blood dripped from the blades of the two men to his left.

      With a rage-filled scream, one arm dangling uselessly at his side, Priest bull-rushed him. Although Jack sidestepped this new attack, the movement brought him too close to those that encircled them and he suffered a new cut higher up on his back. As he spun away, two more slashed across his chest. The wounds weren’t deep enough to be dangerous, the bloodletting intended to weaken, not to kill. The vision of a Madrid bullfight swam through his head. Picadores.

      Priest’s left hook caught him high on the head, sending Jack staggering backward, taking another cut on his right side before he recovered. Priest followed up with a spinning side kick aimed at his head, a mistake that allowed Jack to hook Priest’s foot beneath his right ar
    m. The leg sweep that followed dropped Priest onto his broken arm.

      Lifting the leg, Jack put all his power into a kick that caught Priest in the groin. As a knife again sliced at his back, Jack released Priest and lunged sideways, catching the knife wielder by the wrist and thumb, his motion twisting the arm over and back, opening the man’s throat to the blow that crushed his windpipe. Before the knife could slip from the dying man’s fingers, Jack redirected it into a second gang member’s stomach.

      There are moments when surprise and shock are your only allies and Jack embraced this one, falling upon the other four, wielding a Khukuri in each hand. Taking another cut across his chest, he slashed the throat of the nearest gangster and spun under another thrust, his long knife removing the attacking hand at the wrist. His subsequent thrust spilled the man’s guts onto his dying friend.

      Sensing movement to his left, Jack twisted sideways, but not quite fast enough. A razor-sharp blade pierced his left side below his ribcage, just before Jack’s counter-thrust dropped the man on his face.

      The last of the Ghurkaris stepped backward, but when Jack staggered, the Ghurkari lunged to fill the opening, a look of shock widening his eyes as Jack’s right heel caught him in the throat, crushing his trachea and dropping him to the ground. The blow left the man gagging, vainly struggling to draw breath through his broken air passage. Jack watched as his battle came to a rattling, wheezing end, then returned his attention to Priest.

      But Priest was gone.

      Taking a half-dozen steps forward, Jack swept the alley with his gaze, but there was no sign of the man. A wave of frustration engulfed him, sapping the last of his strength and dropping him to his knees. Then, as the Nepali knives slipped from his bloody fingers, the ground rose up to kiss him good night.

      Sister Mary Judith limped slowly through the darkened slum that had been her home the last forty-eight years of her fading life. Her right shoe hurt her foot more than usual tonight. But her bunions weren’t likely to get better. And compared to the poor people whose souls she sought to save and whose bodies her clinic treated, she had no complaints.

      Tonight that clinic had failed a three-year-old child and the woman whose tears still dampened Sister Mary Judith’s shoulder. Malaria had taken the little girl from her mother’s arms and into God’s. Salara. Such a beautiful name. A name that had been repeatedly sobbed into her left ear as the mother wept in her old arms.

      She was so lost in the memory that she failed to notice the running man until he staggered into her, knocking Sister Mary Judith to the ground. Although pain lanced through her left hand, she did not cry out. But the cry of pain from the running man followed him into the darkness.

      Rubbing her wrist, the sister flexed her fingers. It wasn’t broken. She’d always been blessed with strong bones and, thankfully, her advancing years had failed to rob her of that blessing. Apparently, the Lord needed her bones strong so she could continue to aid these people.

      Struggling back to her feet, Sister Mary Judith glanced in the direction the man had disappeared. What had he been running from? Not really running. More of a barely controlled stagger, with one arm hanging limply at his side. Something had so terrified him that he had forced himself to flee despite injuries that would have curled a strong man into a fetal ball.

      Turning to look in the direction from which the man had come, a new thought occurred to her. He couldn’t have come that far from whoever had injured him. If it had been a gang fight, perhaps others lay injured or dying.

      Sister Mary Judith turned her steps in that direction. Despite their appallingly violent deeds, she had no fear of the gangs. She moved among them every day, an old nun who posed no threat to anyone, so unattractive that rape never crossed their minds, her clinic so undersupplied and futile that it offered nothing worth stealing. A doctor to set bones and sew up open cuts, boiled rags for bandages, boiled water for washing wounds, a few old surgical instruments, a surgical table, some basic antiseptics, some cots, and an old woman’s faith and hardworking hands. Nothing more.

      At the entrance into the alley, she smelled death before she saw it, a smell that overwhelmed this place’s underlying stench. The smell propelled the old nun forward, adding an increased urgency to her shuffling steps. Over the years her eyes had become accustomed to the darkness night brought to these backstreets and alleys, but tonight’s moonlight eliminated the need for that talent, bathing the alley in its ghostly glow. And in the midst of that pale light, seven bodies drained their life’s blood into the mud.

      Sister Mary Judith moved among them, kneeling briefly beside each victim to place a finger on the carotid artery. One man had fallen facedown several steps from the cluster of bodies, as if he had tried to pursue the one who had fled the alley. And like the fleeing man, this one was shirtless, although, in the moonlight, it seemed he wore a shirt of blood. There was so much of it that the nun gasped when she felt a faint pulse in his throat.

      Despite her advancing years, Sister Mary Judith was strong. Nevertheless, the thin layer of skin that covered the hard muscles beneath was so slick with warm blood she had difficulty turning the man onto his back. When she achieved it, her hope that she could save him withered within her soul. Like his back, his chest and arms were covered in shallow cuts. Worse, a deep wound penetrated his left side. Removing her scarf, the sister wadded it into a tight ball, pressing it as deeply into the wound as she could manage before rising to her feet and rushing back the way she had come.

      Dr. Jafar Misra’s house was less than a block away, but Sister Mary Judith felt the weight of all her years as she hurried along, holding tight to the hope that God would allow her to accomplish one good thing on this sorrow-filled evening. When she reached the narrow door, it took more than a minute for Jafar to open it to her insistent knock. It took another half-hour to help Jafar load the man onto a rickshaw and deliver him to the darkened clinic.

      By the time they had laid him on her surgery table, she could barely feel any pulse at all. She took the fact that he still lived as an indication that the Lord was not yet done with this man. If the man’s will was as strong as his jawline and lean musculature seemed to indicate, perhaps there was yet hope.

      Dr. Misra, working by lamplight, with Sister Mary Judith assisting, bathed the wounds in Betadine and sewed them closed. Then, as she tied off the last knot, as if mocking their feeble attempts to save him, their patient shuddered and passed from this world into the next.

      There was no tunnel with a beautiful light to beckon him forward. Jack Gregory hadn’t expected one. But he hadn’t expected this either.

      A pea-soup fog cloaked the street, trying its best to hide the worn paving stones beneath his feet. It was London, but this London had a distinct, nineteenth-century feel. Not in a good way either. For some reason it didn’t really surprise him. If there was a doorway to hell, Jack supposed a gloomy old London backstreet was as appropriate a setting as any.

      While his real body might be bleeding out somewhere in Calcutta, here Jack suffered from no such wounds. He stepped forward, his laced desert combat boots sending wisps of fog swirling around them. Long, cool, steady strides. A narrow alley to his left beckoned him and he didn’t fight the feeling. He hadn’t started this journey by running away and he’d be damned if he was going to end it running away from whatever awaited him.

      The fog wasn’t any thicker in the alley. The narrowness just made it feel that way. Jack didn’t look back, but he could feel the entrance dwindle behind him as he walked. To either side, an occasional door marred the walls that connected one building to the next, rusty hinges showing just how long it had been since anyone had opened them. It didn’t matter. Jack’s interest lay in the dark figure that suddenly blocked his path.

      The man’s face lay hidden in shadow, although it wasn’t clear what dim light source was casting the shadows. Still, Jack could see his lips move, could hear the gravel in his voice.

      “Are you certain you wish to walk this path?”

    &nbs
    p; Jack paused. “Didn’t think I had much choice.”

      “Not many do.”

      “I’m listening.”

      “You’ve thought about death?”

      “Figured it was just a big sleep.”

      The shadowy figure hesitated.

      “Nothing so easy.”

      “Heaven and hell, then? Enlighten me.”

      “Keep walking this path and you’ll find out. I offer you something different.”

      “Ahhh. My soul for my life, is it?”

      The laugh rumbled deep inside the other’s chest. “I’ve been around a very, very long time, but I’m not your devil.”

      “Then what are you?”

      For several seconds, silence hung in the fog between them.

      “Think of me as a coma patient, living an eternity of sensing the things going on around me, unable to experience any of them. I know what’s happening, what’s about to happen, but I feel nothing. Such immortality is its own special kind of hell. Humanity offers me release from that prison.”

      “I’m not interested in being your vessel.”

      “I have limitations. I can only send back one who lingers on death’s doorway, not someone who is beyond natural recovery. There are rules. My host must willingly accept my presence and the host remains in control of his or her own being. His nature is unchanged. I, on the other hand, get to experience the host’s emotions for the duration of the ride. I can exist in only one host at a time and, once accepted, I remain with that host until he dies.”

      Jack stared at the shadowed figure’s face. Had he seen a flicker of red in those seemingly empty eye sockets?

      “No thanks.”

      “I don’t deny that there’s a down side. As I said, I don’t change a host’s nature in any way. But what he feels excites me and some of that excitement feeds back to my host. The overall effect is that he still loves what he loves and hates what he hates, but much hotter. He’s the same person he always was, just a little bit more so. And because my intuitions also bleed over, my hosts find themselves drawn to situations that spike their adrenaline. Because of that, few of them live to a ripe old age.”

      “So you ride these people until they die, then move on to the next person.”

      “I never said anything about this being a random selection. I have certain needs, and those can’t be fulfilled by inhabiting some Siberian dirt farmer or his wife. With all my limitations, I have a very clear sense of those who stride the life and death boundary, fully immersed in humanity’s greatest and most terrible events. I always choose a host from this group.”

     


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