Read Ashes of the Fall Online

Authors: Nicholas Erik

Ashes of the Fall (22 page)

“To understand,” Marshwood yells over the noise, “you must experience what he has built.”

At first I think I’m pinned to the ground because something fell on me. But then I realize that Marshwood’s knees are grinding into my back, right where Adriana shivved me.

“Get off,” I say, trying to throw a punch backwards.

I glance at Hector, who is hiding in his little underwater shanty, his beady eyes staring back at me. He looks panicked. He isn’t ready to die. If he hated Marshwood before, he hates him even more now.

Another blast buffets the side of the building. Dust trickles down from the rafters.

I feel something at the back of my neck. “What are you doing?”

“Giving you a map to the answers,” he says. “It might sting.”

Then a man covered in his own vomit and piss and sweat and whiskey slides two wires into the base of my skull and I feel a slight surge of electricity as something is uploaded into my mind.

“You’re not jacking
into my skull.” I flop around, but years of surviving on his own have made Marshwood sinewy strong. He holds steady as gunfire rakes the sides of the building.

“It’s a piece of HIVE,” he says. “Not the whole thing. That requires HoloBand 6. Just enough of a demo so that you
know
.”

“Get the fuck away from me.”

When he finally lets go, I immediately tear at the wires. Despite their thinness, they refuse to break. They lead back to Hector’s tank, the computer within.

“What did you do?” I say, watching the computer inside flash blue, then red. “What are you doing to me?” It’s half-growl, half-fear. Now, no matter what Marshwood does, it doesn’t matter. The demonstration will commence, regardless of my feelings. “You’re insane.”

I stumble through the doorway, the wires trailing behind. A blast of light sears through my head, sending me to the ground. Marshwood doesn’t follow. Outside, I hear guns and missiles unloading against his adopted residence.

I feel the wires loosen from my neck, and for a moment I think everything’s normal. I pull them out and shake my head, trying to regain my sense of equilibrium. Then blocky computer text begins to filter across my vision—literal source code, running before my eyes. I blink and the numbers remain.

They continue to stream endlessly by, before a splash screen pops up with the word HIVE finally spelled out. HoloBand Interactive Virtual Existence. A little note at the bottom indicates that this is version 0.2—an alpha build.

The screen dissolves away and I recoil at the scene in front of me. The faded carpet is a brilliant red and feels soft and warm beneath my fingertips. The lights all function, casting a friendly glow. Marshwood’s whiskey stench is replaced by perfume.

“What the—”

But then the hallway behind me explodes and the program crashes. A shower of orange flames and old concrete erupt from Marshwood’s room. The pleasant scene disappears, exploding in a sea of static overlaid with a critical error message.

I catch something in the numbers. They don’t look random or like the type of output a machine would spit out. They look like a message—like coordinates. I take a hunk of charred wood—it’s the best I can do—and scribble them on the wall.

Then HIVE disappears with a copyright notice indicating that it’s the Circle’s intellectual property. No permanent upload or changes. Just a test.

A story.

“Marshwood?”

I crawl back towards the door, but my path is blocked by a large chunk of the ruined ceiling. For a minute, in my daze, I’m almost sad. Ready to say a prayer for the dead and all that crap. But then I remember what he did to me as my synapses fire and my fingers involuntarily open, bones seemingly about to burst from my skin. It sends me to the ground.

The sensation only lasts a second. Then I’m back in control. Guess Matt hadn’t worked out all the bugs in this version yet. A swirl of hot smoke rises with me, like the exhaust from a particularly nasty dragon who I’ve angered by entering his lair.

I stare at the coordinates, wishing I had Jana’s eidetic memory. The old building begins to shake, reminding that I don’t have time for wishes. I need a plan. But nothing comes—my months out in the wastes have dulled those skills.

The wall warps and buckles before my eyes. For a moment I think it’s a glitch—some sort of hallucinatory side effect of HIVE. But then I watch as a massive hole opens in the floor ahead, a diamond drillbit punching through the faded carpeting.

Blackstone must’ve brought the big guns out against Marshwood tonight. Why he had to do it during the half hour I spent here escapes me. I do take solace in the fact that my death will be quick. Just like Marshwood’s.

The drillbit recedes, leaving a gaping chasm in the hallway. At the far end, I can see the marble landing, the beginning of the stairs. The only way down that I know.

A minor chirp sounds in my ear and a string of diagnostic numbers flashes across my vision, then fades. They’re the same ones as before. I guess I won’t have to do anything with the coordinates besides follow them.

On the floors below, I hear the drillbit revving up again.

I take a deep breath, stare at the newly formed abyss, and leap over it, eating shit on the other side. Another missile flies through the hole and hits the ceiling, showering me with white plaster and probably a bunch of asbestos. My chest tightens a little when I breathe.

I drag myself towards the landing, but immediately duck back into the half-destroyed hall.

An army of drones patrols the lobby. They’ve ripped off the entire façade of the building, affording me a decent view of the skyscraper lined street. A scout drone, about the size of a fist, is headed up the stairs. Frantic, I check my surroundings. The nearest door sits next to a thirty-foot hole.

I press myself against the wall and close my eyes, trying to make myself small. I hear buzzing and open one eye. The drone stares directly at me. I wince, expecting a burst of gunfire to scrub me out of existence. But that doesn’t happen.

Instead, it drops a tube of burn medication and a printed note. Then it zips off, and I hear the entire robot army mobilize. Three minutes later, aside from the groan of sagging concrete and the crackle of flames, I’m left in complete silence.

Feeling courageous, I step out onto the soot-stained marble landing and look at the lobby.

I reach down to pick the salve up, applying it to my elbows. The explosion from the office just barely singed me, but it’s a nice gesture. Then I take a look at the note.

Meet me at my residence. We have a lot to talk about.

Blackstone

I walk down the stairs, rubbing my head, trying to figure out what to do next. Outside the ruined building, floating down through the wreckage on a parachute, is a gleaming dirt bike. No note, but the gist of the message is pretty clear.

I kick it into gear and ride off.

I keep to the backstreets,
avoiding any confrontations with the denizens of the Otherlands. Even in the shadows, I hear my name shouted—torchlit mobs prowling through storefronts and skyscrapers in search of their reward. I wonder how they’re going to split the million credit bounty when they hit the jackpot. Last man standing is my best guess.

With my jacket collar around my ears and my face streaked in soot, it’s easy to blend in. The dirt bike draws a little attention, but I’m moving quick enough over the broken concrete that it doesn’t matter.

Within half an hour, I’m in front of Nathaniel Blackstone’s gated residence. Tall, wrought iron bars surround the property. Inside is a colonial-style mansion, two stories with a sprawling multi-acre footprint. The grass is even green on the lawn.

“Not bad for being punished,” I say, killing the engine as I approach. A motion sensing light flickers on, forcing me to squint. The sounds of the city have disappeared. For the past half mile, the streets have been abandoned, the skyscraper jungle thinning. There’s nothing within Blackstone’s gates for at least five hundred yards besides a winding driveway.

I figure everyone learned to keep out of here the same way they did the Black Hole. Drones.

A voice crackles over the intercom. “State your business.”

“You know who I am.”

“Sir, if you don’t—”

“If you were gonna shoot me, I’d be dead already. Tell the director I’m here.”

There’s a long pause, the butler or head of security clearly flustered by my lack of respect.

“Sir, I’m going to need to scan you to confirm—”

“If you don’t cut the shit, I’m walking outta here,” I say. “I’ll go straight to the pitchfork mob.”

Another voice comes in over the speaker. It’s Blackstone’s. “Forgive my head of security, he’s a little bit cautious. There have been threats.”

“How terrible for you.”

“Come in,” he says. “I’ll meet you on the steps.”

“Not good enough to come inside?”

“I’ll explain on the steps,” he says. The gate rattles as it opens. I walk the bike up the driveway. Inside the property’s limits, the asphalt is smooth and new. Maybe this was what the city was like before everything fell apart. Probably not, though—there have always been haves and have nots.

I nudge the kickstand with my foot and prop the bike up next to a heavily armored auto-cruiser. Then I walk up the steps, towards the massive double doors. They shimmer in the soft light as one side opens and Nathaniel Blackstone slips out.

“Come,” he says in a whisper, pointing to the center of the grass. “Over here.”

“If it’s all the same to you—”

“Tanner,” he says when he gets closer, whispering the name in my ear. “He’s listening.”

I nod, understanding the situation now. We walk in silence to the center of the lawn, about thirty yards from the house.

Blackstone strokes his long gray beard, his radiant blue eyes staring off beyond the gates. I don’t say anything—he asked me here, so I’ll just wait for him to make the first move. I’m still unsure about whether or not I can trust him. Actually, that’s not true. I know I can’t trust him.

The only question, then, is whether he can deliver what’s necessary.

“You saw the broadcast,” he finally says, “on the way to your meeting with Mr. Marshwood?”

“Tanner’s tightening things up,” I say with a small nod. I don’t mention that a heads-up on my most-wanted status would have been appreciated. My mouth’s gotten me into the middle of this tangle, farther than it should have.

“Tanner has grown suspicious of my activities.”

“Took him long enough,” I say. “I was suspicious of you from the start.”

“I don’t blame you for running in the Lost Plains,” Blackstone says a mirthless laugh. “Hell, I expected it.”

“Terms are terms,” I say. I arch my back slightly, and the still-healing knife wound stings slightly.

“That’s good you don’t hold grudges,” Blackstone says, agreeing with my assessment. “It wasn’t personal. Your presence is integral to our success.”

“I think you can find other errand boys,” I say. “You finally demolished Marshwood’s residence.”

His face darkens and he looks at the ground. “Not something I take pride in.”

“You need a replacement for all the star pupils you lost? A new protégé?”

Blackstone cracks a smile, the skin crinkling around his eyes. “Forgive me for being blunt, Mr. Stokes, but your skills are not in the same hemisphere as the children I found for the program.”

This is one thing, at least, I can believe.

“I’m sure you have your doubts about me,” Blackstone says. “Andrew was always…forthright with his opinions.”

“You could say that,” I say, remembering Hector, the shark named after his
papa
for some unknown past slight.

“But you understand, the way things are going, that this only ends one way.” Blackstone takes a deep breath and sighs. “Factional war.”

Tanner, by buckling down in the Eastern Stronghold and leaving the rest of the NAC to the whims of fate, has essentially guaranteed such a scenario. I suppose he hopes that the remaining three factions will be so fractured that they won’t be able to mount a coordinated attack powerful enough to punch through the Circle’s front lines.

“Your brother always wanted to help people,” Blackstone says. “Improve their lives.”

“I’m not sure HIVE is the way to do that.” I still don’t know the full story, but the more I learn, the more I get the feeling that it needs to be kept under wraps.

“Peace is better than war, no matter what the cost,” Blackstone says. I wait for him to mention a line about freedom and the price of security. But it doesn’t come—it’s only inferred. Peace seems like an illusion. Even if I throw in behind Blackstone, Chancellor Tanner is holed up in the middle of New Manhattan in his ivory tower. There will still be war, just with two sides instead of five.

Then I remember that Olivia Redmond is still in the city—along with any other members of the Gifted Minds Program still loyal to Blackstone.

“So do the terms still stand,” I say. A drone flits over the fence, patrolling the sky for threats. “I give you HIVE, you save the world from crumbling?”

“Yes,” Blackstone says. “The Western Stronghold, the Lost Plains, the Otherlands, they cannot simply be allowed to wither and die, their people persecuted for trying to survive. The NAC must include all of them, not just a pocket of influence sucking up all the resources for its own uses.”

“And what do you need from me?”

“HIVE is, and always has been the key,” Blackstone says. “I presume Mr. Marshwood explained some of the details to you?”

“In so many words, yeah,” I say, recalling the stunning demo.

“Then you understand that it will provide respite for many who otherwise would not receive help,” Blackstone says. There’s a long lull where I don’t say anything in response, because I’m not really buying his response. “If you help us disseminate it to the people, you’ll be known as a hero.”

“I don’t think I can be a hero,” I say. Both for personal and practical reasons.

“Yes, I suppose that ship has sailed,” Blackstone says. “But you are the only one who can trace your brother’s breadcrumbs.”

“You seem to be doing all right on your own,” I say. “Finding out about his Matt’s trip to the Rems. Marshwood.”

Blackstone raises his eyebrow. Not sure what to make of it, but he changes the subject. “It would have made for a nice story.”

“What would have?”

“You, a hero. A brother’s love, triumphing over time and space and insurmountable odds over injustice. A man willing to accept great sacrifice.”

The words register in the back of my brain. They’re from Matt’s letter. I guess Blackstone read it before handing it over. I weigh my next words carefully before speaking. Once I throw in with Blackstone, there will be no return. But there are also no viable alternatives. Marshwood’s warnings were sobering, and perhaps Blackstone’s methods of advancement are suspect.

That would be an understatement—the Gifted Minds Program was terrible.

But, whether I like it or not, the NAC is entering into a tailspin, and Tanner’s at the center of it. A full-scale war won’t benefit anyone. Not many can live like the Rems, riding bikes and rusted out cars across the scorched plains. I don’t know what happened to them, but something in their constitution allows them to find a semblance of happiness in that nomadic, empty existence.

For most, however, that would be a fate worse than death. And if the sides dig in, we’re going to end up with a nation that looks like the scorched wreckage of the Black Hole. Compromise is never easy, but the rest of Atlanta is a paradise in comparison to the devastation wreaked on that section of the city.

And that was a quarrel between only two men. If HIVE will allow a bloodless coup, a transition to a government that’s
slightly
willing to accept the factions—and Blackstone has worked with this new AoF outfit in the past—then that’s a better alternative. I also already know that Blackstone has the firepower to go to war.

It feels a little bit like a shotgun wedding, but sometimes you only have one play.

“I don’t mean to rush you,” he says, clearly growing impatient, “but I need to know whether you’ll deliver.”

“One thing,” I say.

“What is it?”

“Are you sorry?”

“Excuse me,” he says, turning to face me with those brilliant blue eyes. “For what?”

“For taking children from their parents,” I say. “Brothers from siblings, friends from their communities.”

His mouth opens slightly, stunned at my forwardness. Then he says, “It depends on the day.”

That’s not the answer I’m looking for. “So you’re not sorry.”

“At the top, one must often make compromises to integrity and rules for the sake of actual progress,” Blackstone says. His blue eyes shine fiercely. “To save lives, sometimes a little of our humanity must die.”

“How much?”

“Less than what Tanner is offering.”

I wait a beat and then say, “Okay,” and reach out my hand. It’s not about the deal you want. Sometimes it’s about the only deal you can get.

Blackstone grips my palm, and then he says, “I have some things that will help you,” before disappearing back into his residence.

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