Fall of Hades (9 page)

Read Fall of Hades Online

Authors: Richard Paul Evans

PRIME MONKEY

The procession marched in front of the cage. Saluni was quietly huddled in one corner. He already looked more animal than human. He was pale and ill and had lost enough weight that his ribs seemed to stretch his skin. He was covered with filth and fleas and blood, as he bore dozens of bite marks. He had been attacked by the monkeys, fighting for the alpha position of the cage. The prime minister appeared to have lost. Where he once led a nation, he was now subject to the cage's largest monkey.

Saluni watched the procession with dull, lifeless eyes, and Quentin quickly turned away from him. Quentin had once mocked the prime minister for his misfortune. Now Quentin could hear the echo of his cruelty returning to him.

As he passed, the tongueless leader let out a loud screech, and Quentin jumped. The pitiful, anguished cry filled him with terror. How long until he too was reduced to an animal?

The guard passed the marble column to a second cage, where a crowd of Tuvaluan natives was gathered. Baskets filled with rotted fruit and vegetables sat on the ground in front of them. It was a smaller crowd than Quentin expected, less than a hundred natives, and he thought they looked nearly as miserable as him. Many of them even looked away from the procession, as if they were embarrassed for him. Quentin had imagined that there would be a larger crowd, eager for revenge. But even those gathered didn't look as if they wanted to be there. It occurred to him that they'd been brought against their will.

The guards walked Quentin in front of the second cage and paused briefly for him to view it. The cage was filled with capuchin monkeys, who watched the parading humans with curiosity as they swung around on tree branches, whistling and screeching with excitement.

The cage stunk from the monkeys' droppings, which covered the cage floor. Quentin realized that he had been so worried about the cage itself that he had neglected to consider its occupants. He wondered, for the first time, if the monkeys would attack him.

The guards marched Quentin around to a large platform on the side of the cage. Quentin recognized the platform as the same one he had stood on as Hatch pronounced him king of the Hatch Islands. It was not a coincidence that the same platform was being used, and Hatch would have been pleased that the irony was not lost on Quentin.

There was a door on the side of the cage with a handwritten sign:

QUENTIN THE TRAITOR KING OF THE MONKEYS

An especially large guard stood next to the cage door, with a chain draped over his shoulder and a heavy padlock in his hand. One of the guards unlocked Quentin's cuffs and took them off.

Then the large guard opened the cage door. “Welcome to your new kingdom,” he said solemnly, reciting the words he'd been assigned. “Rule it well.”

Quentin looked warily at the monkeys who were already gathering near the door. He wished that he had Torstyn's or even Tara's powers. An EMP would do nothing to monkeys. For the first time ever he wished that he were Michael Vey.

“Go,” the guard said.

In the lunacy of the moment, Quentin's mind drifted to something he had studied back at the academy: Dante's
Inferno
, Canto III.

Through me you pass into the city of woe:

Through me you pass into eternal pain:

Through me among the people lost for aye.

. . .

All hope abandon, ye who enter here.

“All hope abandon,” Quentin mumbled to himself, unable to make himself go any farther.

“Step inside, or I'll throw you inside,” the guard said gruffly.

Quentin took a deep breath, then walked up to the cage door opening and stepped inside, his bare feet squishing in the monkeys' feces.

“Your new
kingdom
,” the guard said again, this time laughing. He shut the door behind Quentin, wrapped the chain around the bars of the gate, and then locked it, slipping the key into his pocket. “By the admiral-general's orders, though sick or dying, you will never set foot outside of this cage again.”

The pronouncement sent chills through Quentin's body.

The guards, still in formation, stepped down from the platform, and the Zone Captain picked up a megaphone from the side of the cage. “Citizens of Hatch Islands. Before you is a traitor to your country. Show him your displeasure.”

The natives showed no displeasure nor interest whatsoever, but just stood there staring.

The Zone Captain lowered the megaphone and shook his head. “Idiots.” He turned to his side. “Squad Captain. Show them the fruit.”

The Squad Captain approached the people. “There's fruit here.”

Still no one moved.

The Zone Captain growled, “Show the people what they're supposed to do with the fruit.”

“Yes, sir.” The Squad Captain walked over to one of the baskets and picked up an overripe tomato. Speaking slowly, he said, “You throw the fruit at the traitor. Like this.” He turned and lobbed the tomato at Quentin, though he missed by at least twelve feet and hit a large, silver-haired capuchin monkey that screeched, then jumped to the opposite side of the cage, climbing the bars to the top.

The Zone Captain shook his head again. “Maybe we should get someone with a better aim.”

“Sorry, sir.” The Squad Captain picked up a rotten guava and walked up next to the cage and threw it, hitting Quentin on the calf. Then he walked back to the group, who still showed no interest.

“Now
you
pick up the fruit and throw it.”

One of the older men stepped forward and lifted a papaya. He looked around, then took a bite of it.

“No!” the Squad Captain shouted. “Don't eat it! Throw it!”

The man looked at him curiously as he took another bite.

“They're mocking you,” the Zone Captain said. He grabbed a machine gun from one of the guards and fired it just a few feet above the crowd's heads. Everyone fell to the ground. “Next time,” he shouted, “I will aim lower! Now throw.”

The frightened natives immediately began picking the fruit from the baskets and throwing it at Quentin, who cowered at the back of the cage, covering his face with his arms. Still, only a few pieces of fruit hit their mark. Quentin couldn't understand why they weren't trying harder to hit him.
After how he'd treated them, why would they show him mercy?
Their lack of resentment was completely foreign to him.

After the baskets were empty, the Zone Captain angrily dismissed the crowd, which quickly vanished. All of the guards, except the one assigned to the cage, marched back to their posts. The ceremony was over. Only Admiral-General Hatch, who was watching the ceremony on a security screen in his office, and the monkeys found the event amusing.

Christmas Ranch

I
t was a little after noon when Gervaso knocked on the door to Chairman Simon's office in the resistance's main ranch house.

“Who is it?”

“Gervaso. I need to talk to you.”

“Come in,” the chairman said.

Gervaso stepped into the small wood-paneled office.

The chairman looked up at him from his desk. “How are the kids?”

“Bored. Anxious. Exactly how they should be.” Gervaso laid a piece of paper on the chairman's desk. It was a printed copy of a newspaper ad that had been cut out. “I think you should see this.”

VEY ELECTRIC

Your Full-Service Electrical Experts

• Emergency Installations

• Lighting Designs

• Generator Systems

• Electric Water Heaters

• New House Wiring

• Switches and Fixtures

• Outlets and Circuit Breakers

• Surge Protectors

Serving the greater Meridian, Idaho, area for fifteen years.

Call 886-555-6423 ext.1

The chairman looked up. “Where did you get this?”

“Gabino, our mechanic up in Idaho, came across it in the
Idaho Statesman
. I had him e-mail it over.”

The chairman looked back over the ad, then up again. “Is it a relative of Michael's?”

Gervaso shook his head. “There aren't any other Veys in Idaho. In fact, there's no such company as Vey Electric anywhere in the US.”

“Then what is this?”

“It was the name ‘Vey' that caught Gabino's eye, but there's something even more peculiar about this. Look at the phone number. The whole state of Idaho's area code is 208. This is an 886 number. I looked it up. Eight-eight-six is the country code for Taiwan.”

“Taiwan?”

“I think someone might be trying to get in touch with us. But it's not just anyone. It's someone who knows that Michael Vey is electric, and that makes it a very short list.” A more serious look crossed Gervaso's face. “And then I found the hidden message.”

The chairman looked back down at the ad for a moment, then looked back up again. “I don't see it.”

“Read the first letter of each line.”

He looked back down, reading each letter aloud. “E.L.G.E.N. S.O.S.” He looked up with wide eyes. “It's a call for help.”

“I think it's Welch. He's trying to reach us.”

“Or it could be a trap.”

“It could be, but the Elgen aren't usually that subtle. They don't have to be. I think whoever did this only wanted the right eyes to find it.”

“Have you tried the number?”

“Not yet. I wanted to make sure that you were on board and ready to send a team to bring Welch back.”

The chairman thought a moment, then said, “There's a good chance the Elgen have found this as well.”

“That is a risk. Still, it's one I think we should take.”

The chairman took a deep breath, then said, “Call the number.”

*  *  *

Gervaso walked a hundred yards up the hill behind the main house to the water tower. He climbed the ladder to the top to make the call. The ringing had a far away, tinny sound.

“Vey Electric.”

The voice answering was low and coarse. Gervaso thought it was a strange thing to hear the voice of his enemy.

“I found your message,” Gervaso said.

“Whom am I speaking with?”

“A friend of Michael's. I presume you are Welch.”

There was a brief pause; then the voice said, “We cannot speak long. I need your help getting out of Taiwan.”

“Why would we help you?” Gervaso asked.

“Don't play this game. We both know I have information you need to bring down Hatch.”

“How do we know we can trust you?”

“Just go online. You can see for yourself that Hatch has put a million-dollar bounty on my head. That's not something he can fake.”

“We'll send a team to get you out of the country. Where are you?”

“Obviously I can't say that over the phone. Create an e-mail address, and I will send you information. I'll give you more information after you arrive on the island. I need to be careful for both of us.”

“Understood.”

“I'm going to give you another phone number. Do not lose it. It's the only number where you will be able to reach me. Do you have something to write with?”

“Yes. Go ahead.”

Welch gave him the number, then asked, “Is this number one I can reach you at later?”

“Yes. This is my personal number.”

“I'll be in touch tomorrow.”

“I'll wait to hear from you. Good-bye.”

Welch hung up. Gervaso put the phone back into his pocket, then looked out over the sprawling ranch. The wind blew softly, and the tapping sound of a woodpecker echoed in the distance like a telegraph. Everything was so peaceful.
Not for long
, he thought.
Not for long.

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