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Karen Payton Holt

~ author of 'Fire & Ice' vampire series – an epic ride into darkness.

Karen Payton Holt

Category Archives: Science Fiction

Cyhyraeth’s Promise.

14 Sunday Sep 2014

Posted by Karen Payton Holt in Horror, Science Fiction, Short Stories

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

dark fantasy, Horror, writers carnival

Okay, this week’s Team Challenge was ‘Faeries in Space’ in a maximum of 1500 words. Yes, you did read that correctly… I’m still thinking ‘WHAT’? Anyhow, I took huge liberties with my Welsh heritage and mixed my myths, but here it is. Word Count : 1,447

Cyhyraeth folded the black fabric of her cape around her, and bones protruded from her silhouette like knotted wood covered in tar. Shifting her shoulders hurt where the gnarled stumps of what once supported magnificent wings still ached. “You severed feather and muscle with Arthur’s sword, Auralis.” The yellowed pegs of her teeth gleamed like ivory. “I have kept my promise. This Captain Coraniaid is the last of your descendants.”

Druid Mother Gwiddonod could not return the rainbowed quiver of lustrous feathers to her, but the vision she burned into Cyhyraeth’s anguished brain homed in on Auralis’ blood-line like a magnet to steel. None had escaped in the two thousand years of her hunt. Now, in the year 2303, mankind’s hunger for conquering other worlds had given rise to effortless space flight. The mist-like particles of Cyhyraeth’s spirit drifted through the fleet of moored vessels, finally thickening to imitate flesh and bone when she stood upon the star-craft with ‘VANQUISH’ etched into her hull. The end of her quest was in sight.

Cyhyraeth melted into the deepest shadow of the cargo hold. A layer of ice formed on the steel canisters as the ship warped out of Earth’s atmosphere. Cyhyraeth was accustomed to weightlessness. The filaments of her bones glowed, and, like wisps of ash dance above a bonfire, she drifted slowly from the deck, her cloak billowing in an oil-black cloud. The dry parchment of her skin radiated a golden glow as she closed her eyes and centered her powers on the orb of fire raging in her chest.

The fiery illumination lifted the pitch black of the cargo hold to a vista of shimmering orange light. Opening her eyes, Cyhyraeth scanned the rows of steel crates, locating the few which appeared white-hot where the flicker of her life force reflected back at her. The cowled hood floated away from her skull, and thin lifeless hair clustered over her head in a tangle of silvered strands.

The three crates she stared at vibrated gently. The grey hue of the polished steel faded until the walls of each container resembled glacial ice. Fireflies danced inside their confines, each one a delicate faerie framed by wings which created a haze of movement at their backs.

“There you are, my Ysbrydnos.” Cyhyraeth’s eyes glowed with anticipation. “My kindred souls, soon we will be one.”

As the spaceship hit maximum propulsion, even without seeing them, Cyhyraeth felt the gravitational pull of the stars dragging through space, the streaks of light painting colored stripes across her vision.

“Captain, to the Bridge, entering Docking Station Seta jurisdiction in three minutes and twelve seconds,” an emotionless voice intoned, the sound echoing around the cargo hold.

Docking station? A blaze of white light flooded from Cyhyraeth’s grinning mouth. You no longer have three minutes, Coraniaid. Whipping her body around, the black garb becoming a black tornado, the walls, deck, and bulkhead doors rattled as though a demon’s anger tore at their fibers. The whole ship shuddered and a blood red strobe of an emergency light burst into life. The laser-like beam whipped around the space, staining the walls in crimson rays. The blaring klaxon pulsed in the air, punctuated by the bored automated declaration. “Containment breech in cargo hold D4. All hands to general quarters.

” Cyhyraeth came to rest, the golden orb inside her flaring into a halo of light. Beneath the black cowl, the flesh on her wizened features flushed with rose-tinted blush, and her lead filled gaze gleamed with splinters of sapphire. Her smile illuminated pretty to beauteous.

The pounding of boots on metal walkways rang through the bulkhead partitions. The cargo compartment door hissed as the pressure in the hold equalized before the hatch swung open. Six uniformed men entered, each one armed with a plasma rifle raised to shoulder height, the lens of a retina synchronized data processor covering one eye.

The final soldier through the door tapped on his cochlea communicator and said, “Terminate alarm system in cargo hold D4.” The sudden silence stunned the humans. The red light ceased rotating and spotlights mimicking natural sunlight flooded the room.

A movement behind a steel crate caught Captain Coraniaid’s eye. The plasma rifle hummed as he lifted the barrel and primed the chamber. “Raise your hands and step forward slowly.”

Cyhyraeth took three graceful steps into the light, her silken cloak clinging to a body of enticing curves, her high breasts barely contained beneath the scooped neckline of a shimmering silver gown.

Coraniaid swallowed loudly.

Cyhyraeth drifted forward, the six men parting to make way, as though the force of her presence drove them back.

Staring into the electric blue glint of her sapphire eyes, Coraniaid muttered, “Do not come any closer. Halt.”

The shimmering silver fabric coated her skin like paint as Cyhyraeth paused mid-step. “As my Lord wishes.” Her attention dropped to the captain’s waist and she froze. “My Lord, your sword… it bears the mark of Arthur Pendragon.”

Coraniaid’s hand instinctively reached down to fold around the hilt. “How do you know of my ancestors. Who are you?”

“I am a maiden searching for you, My Lord.”

Falling back a step, Coraniaid called out, “Myrddin.”

A soldier whose dark gaze smoldered with the burden many hundreds of years experience moved to stand beside Coraniaid.

“Myrddin, look into her soul.”

“Ah, Merlin, we meet again,” Cyhyraeth said, shaking her head.

Myrddin extended a clawed hand, drawing a bolt of lightning from Cyhyraeth’s exhilarated gaze. “You know my ancient name.” His throat began to rattle as though his mouth filled with gravel.

Cyhyraeth’s burst of laughter cascaded like shattered glass. The three metal crates lined up along the wall creaked, a rushing sound inside them becoming louder until the group of soldiers looked along the row, their weapons cocked and trailing the path of their eyes.

The fluttering, beating noise grew louder.

For a moment, as Myrddin dropped suddenly to his knees, Cyhyraeth’s eyes dimmed with sadness. “Gwiddonod has spoken. This new world does not need my faerie kin. Their spirits grow dim, fading, the further from our Mother Earth you take them.”

Coraniaid nodded, casting a troubled glance down at Myrddin’s hunched figure, his cramped features bone white. “Then, I will release them.”

Cyhyraeth grinned, taking a step closer to the captain. Her hand settled on his chest.

Myrddin choked, reaching out and gripping the fabric of Coraniaid’s pants. His voice grated in his dry throat. “No, don’t let her touch…”

Cyhyraeth’s soft body radiated an enticing glow as she pressed her it to Coraniaid and kissed him. A blast of white light filled his mouth, his cheeks glowing fiery red as the blood capillaries in his face collapsed and bled into his skin. Crimson billowed into the whites of his eyes, gradually staining them ruby red. His throat shriveled as Cyhyraeth’s cold breath stiffened the tissue, laying ice down into his chest.

As she sucked the life force from him, the hacked stumps of her wings twitched, the fabric of her cloak tore and ebony wings, glistening with blue-edged feathers reared up behind her, casting a chilling shadow as they spread to their eight foot span.

The steel panels of the three crates buckled and fractured, releasing the rainbow colored cloud of Cyhyraeth’s faerie kin.

Releasing her grip, letting Coraniaid’s cold body drop to the deck, Cyhyraeth’s rose gracefully into the air. The klaxon shrieked once more, and the red light bathed her ghoulish smile. She punched her way through the metal skin of the cargo hold, through the hull and was swallowed by the diamond littered expanse of deep-space.

The glittering dust cloud of her faerie kin followed swiftly in her wake.

The soldiers pressed oxygen masks to their panicked faces and dragged Myrddin, and Coraniaid’s dead body, through the door and into the air-lock. The last soldier through slammed his gloved hand on the button which sealed the inner door.

Resting for only a moment, Myrddin struggled to his feet.

“What do we do now?” the stocky sergeant asked.

“We wait until she has gone.” Turning on his heel, Myrddin’s footsteps echoed on the steel floor plates lining the vessel’s corridors. Descending in an elevator which dropped so fast it slammed his stomach up into his diaphragm, he was striding out of the elevator before the doors had fully disengaged.

Pressing his palm to a bio scanner, Myrddin entered a room lined with opaque white pods. One pod glowed, with the shadowed mass at its centre indicating it was occupied. Stopping beside it Myrddin swept a hand over the glass panel on the top, clearing away the condensed moisture, and peered inside. Cloning his master had seemed like a journey into madness, but now, he was glad he had agreed.

“Coraniaid, you were right. She came for you. Sleep now, until we reach the Vespasian Star System. Then you should be safe.”

My Best Friend, Mort.

30 Saturday Aug 2014

Posted by Karen Payton Holt in Horror, Science Fiction, Short Stories

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Sci Fi, short story, Writer's Carnival Team

*ADULT CONTENT – SOME STRONG LANGUAGE*

The beacon of the Cardiff bio-dome reminded Barker of a mirage. After sustaining a forced-march for three hours straight, he felt no closer. The dome towered over him, but, like the end of a rainbow, the shimmering surface at ground level never seemed within reach. It’s huge. His ‘home dome’ of London was 200 miles to the southeast. Each gel-like structure glistened with the pearly sheen of a soap bubble. Varying the air pressure inside the bio-habitats maintained surface tension, although, on some days, the profile had a snub-nosed pointed appearance caused by the lower air pressure at higher altitudes.

Looks like I’m going to have to crash at the neighbors. Let’s hope they don’t shoot first. Barker laughed. ‘Crash’ being the operative word.

Ten miles south, the ditched Harrier’s landing gear remained buried in a dune, although the sand covered landscape outside the domes consisted more of rubble and pebbles of eroded glass than anything else. When the engines lost power, the plane’s vertical landing manouver had resembled a stone falling from the sky, the craft lurching sideways on impact.

The force of hitting the ground bruised Barker’s flesh, but, pushing through the pain, he gritted his teeth and kept walking. He set the bio-med setting to cool, but the aviator’s jumpsuit still clung to his perspiration soaked skin. The weight of the army duffle bag grated along his spine with each stride. The emergency medical supplies inside it were the reason for the mission. But the destination, outpost ‘Sega’, would have to wait. Barker hoped Lieutenant Crowe remained stable. Bacteria mutated faster than a man could spit in the constant warmth of Earth’s post meteor-strike atmosphere.

Arctic tundra took 300 years to heat up, but now they faced the dilemma of slow heat ascendance. Inside the city domes, humans were protected. Barker tapped the cuff-console secured to his forearm, rotating through the viewing options build into his helmet’s visor. His hair stank of sweat, overwhelming, even to his own nose, but losing the helmet was a no go. The retina scan fed information directly to his brain, cutting his reaction time by eight milliseconds. The difference between life and death.

With dusk falling, running out of time, Barker jogged along the bottom of a deep trench where railway tracks once ran; the salvaging of the metal tracks and wooden sleepers formed part of the first wave of missions scavenging for resources.

The escarpments rising steeply at either side could be a blessing or a curse. Nothing could see him, but he couldn’t see them either. Walking with his chin raised, Barker’s neck ached as he kept the crest of the dunes in view in case a carajaw scuttled over the rise. Nightfall made little difference to temperature outside the dome. The infrared lens Barker favored focused his attention on black spots — cold.

The electric blue tint of the carajaw carapaces glowed in daylight, but in darkness, their cold blood was all Barker could rely on. If you can call the yellow jello, blood. Digging into his pocket, his fingers closed around Mort, his grenade. Other Marines thought the nickname came from ‘morte’, the French word meaning dead. Or ‘mort.’, for immortality. In fact, it was named after Mortimer Mouse. Walt Disney sold out and called him Mickey, but Barker was on Mort’s side. You don’t change a winning M.O.

When landmines or Claymors were not readily available a grenade enabled Barker to blast his way out of more tight spots than he could shake a stick at. Mort was his last resort. Okay, I’m not gonna survive a carajaw encounter, but I’ll take the bastard with me. The fire service’ metal ‘jaws of life’ had nothing on the carajaw bite. Barker had seen one slice clean through a fellow Marine’s thigh bone. Mort had kept him company ever since. I’m not going out like that.

Reassured his ‘friend’ was where he needed him to be, Barker withdrew his hand, leaving Mort in this pocket. He flipped the safety on his rifle to off and scanned the banks on either side as he continued forward. The rifle had ammunition locked and loaded. Target practice was one thing, but firing an armor piercing round into the mouth of a moving carajaw required Barker to have nerves of steel.

Taking a compass reading, Barker left the trench, dropped to his belly and looked out over the crag-strewn landscape. The close proximity of the thick black line across the sand, where the shell of the dome disappeared underneath the ground, caught Barker by surprise. The abrupt switch from churned sand to fine glittering silt which had been leveled like icing on a cake proved it was not a mirage. I’m here.

Tamping down the surge of relief, Barker tapped the navigation setting on his cuff-console and picked up the beacon signal of the Cardiff dome. His display revealed that the bio portal into the dome was four clicks west. Nearly there.

As he turned to move, sweat erupted on Barker’s face. A chittering sound filled his earpiece. The light outside the dome was failing fast and precious little help came from the glow inside as it dissipated between the inner and outer skin. Shit, I can’t see a damn thing. A hiss of panic shunted his thoughts aside when the sand beneath his feet shifted, his boots quickly submerging in a collapsing crater. A mass rose up from beneath the undulating landscape some thirty yards away. Flicking through his viewing options, his retina display picked up the colossal black shape. Wet sand fell away and the glacier smooth finish of a carajaw shell gleamed. How many legs they had was a topic of constant debate. All Barker knew, was that once they were moving, the appendages were a blur and the creatures, about the size of a saloon car, moved fast.

Barker dropped to his knee, hefting his weapon up to his shoulder. He blocked out the shudder of fear and released his breath slowly. The cluster of wet black eyes gleaming in the blue tinted shadow beneath the upper-shell turned in his direction. The chittering sound that haunted him crawled inside his head as the mandibles vibrated open.

Okay, you can do this. Three sets of pincer-like jaws opened and closed on a rotating synchronised movement, yellow saliva pooling in the sand as the carajaw appeared to grin. Don’t be stupid, they can’t grin. In the split second of the third blade of bone shunting out, and before the first snapped in again, the chittering scream vibrated through Barker’s chest and he pulled the trigger.

The ear piercing crack accompanied a splinter of shattered mandible thudding into his helmet visor. He rocked back on his heels and when he focused again, the scowl beneath the electric blue shell was rushing in fast. Damn, I missed.

Turning to run, instinct jerked muscles into action even though he was already a dead man.

Razor-edged bones-like jaws snagged on his suit, the serrated mandibles hooking into the duffle bag. He hit the release mechanism in the centre of his chest and the webbing straps were torn from his shoulders. He catapulted forward, hitting the ground hard. The air left his lungs in a whoosh. His visor steamed up and he waited for the searing pain of the slicing blades to bite. Instead, a sudden blast flattened his jumpsuit to his back, and thick yellow fluid splattered his body. Endless seconds passed as globules of wet flesh made craters in the sand around him before he started to believe.

Rolling onto his back, Barker opened his eyes. Staring up into a sky where pink smears of dusk streaked across his vision, he took a deep breath, wincing as his ribs shifted and pain spiked inside his chest. That was close. Lifting his head, he looked straight into a chasm of what was once the carajaw’s face. The blue shell remained intact, but wisps of smoke billowed from holes where appendages had once protruded.

Sitting up, Barker scanned the jaundice-yellow lumps of tissue peppered around him. Grabbng his rifle, he rolled to his knees and put down a hand. He froze as a vibration stuttered up his arm. Shit, there’s more. Rising to a crouch, he drove his body forward into the gaping carcass. The pressure of liquified flesh made him gag. His bio-screen flashed red inside his helmet and a calm voice spoke. “Captain Barker, your heart rate is 178bpm. Turn your console to rescue mixture and breathe slowly.”

Damn. I would if I could. In the dark ash-grey space, he couldn’t feel his cuff-console through the viscous swamp of innards. He closed his eyes, and concentrated on the breathing thing.

Tapping and a chattering sound vibrated through the shell. How many are out there? He decided it was best not to know. The cocoon was sickeningly warm, and he surrendered to the urge to zone out.

When his eyes opened again, the sludge clinging to his body was cold. Shit, how long have I been in here. “Mother, bio scan.”

The automated voice in his ear said, “Vitals are good. Two broken ribs. Minor contusions.” The list was shorter than Barker expected. Swallowing down the bile burning in his throat, he wriggled backwards until his thighs grated over the lip of the carajaw’s shell. When he felt sand beneath his knees, he eased back into a crouched position. After clearing the egg-yolk colored slime from his visor, he did the same to his cuff-console and then clicked through the vision settings.

Turning slowly, he studied the immediate area, before sagging against the shell of the dead carajaw. Okay, I’m alright for now.

Pushing to his feet, he took Mort out of his pocket. Settling his thumb through the looped metal of the pin, he drew comfort from the familiar feeling of the deeply scored casing. He broke into an efficient run, and by the time he arrived at the bio-gate, his lungs were burning.

The Marines manning the bio-portal inside the dome jerked to attention. Barker flicked a switch on his cuff and hit ‘transmit’, and the Marine inside the dome studied a monitor until his narrowed eyed expression gave way to a smile.

“Captain. You’re a surprise, Sir,” crackled through Barker’s earpiece.

Barker nodded. “It’s a bit lively out here, permission to enter?”

His image, reflected in the gel-like wall, disappeared as the bio-portal opened. Stepping forward into the area between the two skins, the stillness of being cocooned between the two layers brought welcome relief as the portal behind him closed. The square marked on the ground indicated the confines of his cell.

“Activating decontamination,” the Marine’s voice erupted in his earpiece.

The fine sand beneath his boots shifted as ‘scuttlebugs’ poured out from between the grains. The bio-engineered insects were parasites, genetically programed to devour every particle of matter on Barker’s bio-suit. The thought of consuming the sludge-like innards of the carajaw made Barker’s gut churn.

As he closed his eyes, a tingling sensation shot them open again. His skin burned. Hundreds of scuttlebugs invaded the confines of his suit through a tear in the fabric. Barker realized he’d been contaminated when his skin began to bleed. The slick plasma feeling as the scuttlebugs stripped away the epidermis filled his chest with panic. The hot ash of searing pain clouded his brain. As he began to scream, he held Mort to his chest.

The Marine inside the dome jerked to attention.

“Do not pull that pin, Captain. We’re recalling the bugs. We’ll get you into quarantine.”

The words made no sense to Barker. He pulled the pin. As his helmet filled with blood, his body folded to his knees.

The explosion ripped through the dome. A blood-red bone fragment shattered a Marine’s cheekbone as the bio-portal failed. The sand beyond undulated like a storm at sea, glimmering with electric blue light. The harsh shriek of chittering mandibles filled the air.

Electric Blue Dreams.

07 Monday Jul 2014

Posted by Karen Payton Holt in Horror, Science Fiction, Short Stories

≈ Leave a comment

This week’s Writer’s Carnival Team challenge : SOLE SURVIVOR. You’re a sole survivor of a plane crash and are stranded on a desert island, or so you thought. Write this using no less than 500 words.

*WARNING: Four instances of profanity*

Breaking through the membrane of the dome caused the aircraft to jolt. A little like a needle pushing its way through jello, the moment when the fuselage cleared the skin of the biosphere habitat enclosing the city of London always caused a catapult effect.

My head remained slammed back into my headrest until the plane hit Mach One and the acceleration eased. Ink blots crowded my vision when the blood rushed to the back of my brain and training exercises kicked in as I took deep cleansing breaths. Staring straight ahead, the glossy lacquered finish of Ed’s helmet in the front seat came back into focus. The clipped voice in my ear sounded crystal clear.

“Jack, verify our coordinates to Outpost Delta. Call sign ‘Phoenix’.”

Fighting against the unrelenting G-force, I forced my chin down, reading the data from the cuff wrapped around my wrist. My fingers felt like they’d been inflated by a bicycle pump as I mis-keyed the verification code. The onboard computer beeped.

“Jack? Coordinates man, get your shit together.”

Swearing softly, I got it on the second attempt.

The thin membrane of my gloves gave my skin a metallic sheen as I tapped the six digit coordinate reference into the console and hit ‘transmit’. Got it.

“Roger, that, Ed…”

My teeth snapped shut, narrowly avoiding taking a lump out of my tongue, as the craft lurched. The undulating sands of the desert below rushed up into view.

“Pull up: pull up: pull up…”

The reasonable tone of the automated voice was strangely calming. That’s it, you don’t have to die, just ‘pull up’. Easy.

Instinctively, I followed the command, gripping the joystick and pulling back. The descent slowed, but our calm companion was unimpressed.

“Pull up: pull up: pull up…”

“Hold tight, Jack.” Ed’s equally calm voice crackled in my ear. Never had the gulf between us been clearer. My third supply delivery mission to Outpost Delta was outshone by his eighty third expedition. At least I was in safe hands.

The plane bucked as Ed switched to vertical thrusters and engaged air brakes. The din of rattling metal subsided as our speed dropped. The craft was dropping too, falling like a stone being pelted toward the ground.

“Ed, what’s going on?” My cuff-console showed ‘code red’ status on both port side engines. My helmet hissed as I activated the thermoseal and switched to in-suit oxygen supply. If the fuel tanks ruptured on impact, I’d need the oxygen boost to react quickly.

The desert dunes rushed up in a blur of wet beige. The plane’s nose flared at the last moment, dumping the rear end down hard into the rubble strewn desert. Even with the landing gear engaged, the shock absorbers sent a jolt up my spine.

Ed sat still as a corpse and panic clawed through my chest until I heard his snort of relief.

“What the fuck, Ed?”

“Engine two and four cut out on us. The air reading said borderline for debris, but it must still be dirty from last night’s rainstorm.”

Tapping the settings on the cuff-console, I shifted through the helmet viewing modes. Thirty times magnification showed grains of sand floating in the air like boulders in zero gravity.

The metal fuselage vibrated as Ed ran the vortex-clean programme, dust pluming around the craft at the sudden blast of whining fans. I scanned the terrain, anxiously looking for tell-tale signs of electric blue carapaces, and the ten seconds wait for the cycle to complete felt like a lifetime.

“See anything?”

I shook my head, and then realized that was useless. “Nothing. C’mon, get us the Hell out of here, Ed.” The only life forms out here in the desert stemmed from mutated reptile and insect DNA. Three hundred years after the meteor strike the temperatures on Earth were stable and on the climb at last. The impact caused the predicted ‘Ice Age Scenario’ and warm blooded life forms had only survived if they made it inside the domes.

Ed fired up the engines. I sat listened to the engine note sliding up through the octaves, the sandstorm erupting around us becoming thicker with each passing second.

“Green to go, on my mark, three, two, one.” Ed’s calm voice spoke into my earpiece.

I grimaced as, pulling on the joystick, my head compressed into my shoulders when vertical lift shot us upward like an elevator in a shaft. My stomach contents rammed up into my diaphragm as Ed switched to cruise mode and the plane surged forward.

I studied the craft calibration readings. The amber alerts were to be expected. Green would be better. The light on the right rear landing-gear hatch clicked to red and a prickle of unease trickled through me.

“Hey, Ed…”

The splintering sound made me flinch. The blue sky above disappeared behind a shroud of glittering cracks, the canopy overhead shattering like ice smashed by a hammer. A gasp burned in my lungs at the same moment as the plane pitched forward. I looked past Ed’s juddering helmet at dark grey sea where harsh sunlight cast a carpet of diamonds.

“Ed,” I shouted.

All I picked up in my earpiece was gargling breaths. Something spattered my visor and I knew it was blood. Pushing hard on my joystick, knowing both control rods needed to move together to make a vertical landing, I banked left, and at least swapped the seascape for land. I took deep slow breaths as the oxygen rich mixture in my helmet made me light headed.

Reaching down between my legs, grappling beneath my seat, my fingers closed over the thick metal D ring. Yanking hard, the metal studs around the canopy made a gunshot crack of explosives discharging, and my backside burned as the ejector seat compressed my flesh, driving me up into the gusting wind.

The sensation of free falling made me feel sick. I couldn’t focus on anything to stop the scenery whipping around. A red hot poker of pain rammed up into the base of my skull and my world went black.

In what felt like nano-seconds later, I opened my eyes and stared into an orange sky. Did Ed make it? The data skidding across my retina bio-screen said my vital signs were within normal range. The sting in my elbow crease lined up with the analgesic shot the data recorded as delivered. My body rocked gently inside the cushioned embrace of the suit’s impact inflated compartments. I pulled the plug from the valve on my hip, groaning as the suit deflated and knotted clumps of wet sand pressed into my shoulder blades.

Where’s Ed? One tap on my console replaced the orange filter of my visor with the glare of sunlight. Black smoke billowed in the air and the black-suited shape of Ed’s crumpled body lay about twenty feet away. I grunted as I rolled over, freezing as an electric blue light pierced the ash grey fringes of the smoke clouds. The chittering sound of grating mandibles crackled in my ears.

“Shit…” That red light came back to haunt me like a taunting demonic eye. The fucker must have hitched a ride. Flattening down on my belly, I commando crawled across the wet ground into the shadow thrown by outcrops of jagged rock.

Rolling over, I shuffled my shoulders in the soft wet sand, burrowing in deeper scooping the cold slush over my body. Body heat was my enemy. The added weight of my suit made it easier to sink lower into the silt until I was almost submerged. My helmet sighed as I hit the pressure seal and the sludge of wet sand covered my visor.

Even beneath the ground I heard the sickening sound of grating bone. I blocked out the image of Ed. My retina screen glowed in the dark with the electric blue of optimised scotopic response. Ironic. Radioactivity residues give these suckers the same blue glow that our eyes can’t miss, and yet, still they come out of nowhere. I stopped thinking and listened.

Nothing. And then the sand erupted around me and there was nothing but slicing pain.

‘Fire and Ice’ vampire series of five novels.

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Recent Comments

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