Legion (An Apocalyptic Horror Novel) (Hell on Earth Book 2) (23 page)

They were about to rush back into the fray when something blasted down Oxford Street. Windows either side of the road that were not already broken now shattered into a million pieces. The demons stopped their attack and stared upwards. Mass and Vamps exchanged glances and realised that something was behind them. The blasting roar had come from further down the road.

“Should you go first or should I?” asked Vamps.

Mass swallowed. “I’ll go.”

“Okay.”

Slowly, Mass turned around to face the other way. Once he had, his eyes almost popped out of his head. “Fuck me.”

Vamps swallowed and turned around too. His eyes went even wider than his friend’s. “I was hoping I’d imagined that thing.”

The giant stared down at them both, a huge monster glaring at a pair of ants.

Hernandez

T
he shot echoed
off the deck, but the sound it made as it struck Danza was muted. Nothing more than a soft
thud
. The look on Danza’s face was also muted—in fact, he seemed more confused than anything else.

Then the Lieutenant fell to one knee. A rosette of blood bloomed in the centre of his chest. His breaths wheezed, like air escaping from a tyre.

Hernandez clenched his jaw and made sure Danza looked at him as he spoke. Dusk cast a shadow across his face—or maybe it was the man’s light fading. “You forget yourself, Lieutenant.”

Danza opened his mouth, but instead of words, only blood spilled out. The man fell onto his belly and died like a fish. Hernandez let his weapon rest by his side, but spun to address his crew. “You all forget yourselves! When Commander Johnson fell, the Augusta became mine. I will not tolerate mutiny—not when the world itself is at stake. I seek only to aid my country. As Navy men and women, you all vowed to do the same. So I ask you, what exactly is the problem? Why heed the words of a weasel like the one who lies dead at my feet?”

Silence. Nobody dared answer the question.

Hernandez re-holstered his weapon and allowed his anger to subside. “Good, then I expect you all to follow orders from now on. Without exception.” He turned to Cuervo, who smiled nervously yet affectionately. “Lieutenant Cuervo is my second-in-command. You will all obey her as you obey me.”

“She’s just an Ensign,” someone muttered.

Hernandez scanned the crowd. “Right now, she is the only one I trust to carry out my orders. Dismissed.”

Hernandez turned on his heel to leave, but before he did, he motioned for Cuervo to follow him. She followed along without complaint, but there was something about the way she glanced at him that suggested she feared him. That was good.

As they walked in silence, it occurred to Hernandez that he didn’t know where he was heading. Then it came to him, and he knew exactly where to go.

Johnson’s cabin was his now, more spacious than any other on board. The man’s things lay everywhere, and Hernandez was quick to hide away the former commander’s family pictures in a drawer.

“Would you like me to store all of Commander Johnson’s things for you?”

Hernandez looked at Cuervo and smiled. “You are a senior officer now, Lieutenant. You don’t tidy up. Have someone else do it later. I just wanted to come here and take a look for now.”

She looked at him and smiled, then downwards like she was suddenly embarrassed.

“What is it, Cuervo? You can speak freely.”

“I thought what you did was brave. Dealing with Danza the way you did. I can’t believe he was about to stage a mutiny at a time like this.”

“You don’t mind that I killed him?”

She shook her head. “I don’t think the rules apply anymore. I didn’t enjoy it, but I think it had to happen. Only the strong will survive now.”

He took a step towards her. “Or those who align themselves with such.”

She looked at the metre of carpet between them then back up at him. She opened her mouth to speak, but he cut her off with a kiss—a kiss unlike any he had ever given before. It was powerful and confident.
He
was powerful and confident.

He was the commander of this ship.

There was no hesitation as he ripped off Cuervo’s shirt. He wanted her, and she was his.

And for the next two hours, they made Commander Johnson’s bed their own.

* * *

T
he knock
at the Captain’s door woke Hernandez’s body first, his mind second. He quickly filled with anger. Cuervo was naked beside him and radiated the most heavenly warmth, and the feel of her bare feet rubbing against his shin was enough to renew his erection.

The unannounced visitor at the door better have a good reason for disturbing him.

“Wait there!” Hernandez grunted and put on his uniform. Cuervo did the same, which was a shrewd move. Hernandez did not care whether his men knew he was screwing the Lieutenant, but Cuervo would already have a hard time trying to gain their respect. No reason to give the crew ammunition for their slurs.

Before Hernandez got his shoes on, the door burst open, and Outerbridge stepped through. Other men stood with him.

“What is the meaning of this?” Hernandez demanded. He marched up to the ship’s disgraced sniper and raised his fist in the man’s face.

Outerbridge head-butted him ferociously.

Cuervo yelped.

Hernandez staggered backwards. He righted himself on the bed, hands falling upon dampened sheets, and then tried to face his attacker. But tears filled his eyes and blood clogged his sinuses. He could see nothing but his own pain.

Outerbridge had struck him.
The wretched slug. How dare he? How dare—

Hernandez was grabbed by both arms and yanked across the room, any argument he was about to present abruptly halted by an elbow across the jaw. They dragged him through the corridors while a dozen men and women jeered.
What the hell is going on?

They took him out on deck and threw him unceremoniously to the ground. He made it back up to his knees before something froze him stiff. “D-Danza?”

Danza looked like death, sweaty and pale in the moonlight that had risen overhead since Hernandez had last been outside. The crew had placed him into a wheelchair, and the ship’s doctor stood beside him. When he spoke, he sounded winded, and in pain. “When you shoot a man, Hernandez, you should try to avoid the breast bone. It’s the best piece of armour a man has.” He moved his trembling hand over the centre of his chest and winced. “I might just get to live. Which is more than I can say for you.”

Hernandez snarled. “You have no right.”

“As you had no right to play executioner. You are not fit for command, Hernandez, or to even have a place aboard this ship. We are proud men and women of the US Navy, and your presence shames us. You are a self-serving coward. And a murderer.”

“I am no such thing. You live!”

Danza laughed even though it pained him. “Did you shoot Johnson the way you shot me?”

“Johnson was a fool who didn’t know when to run.”

“He was a brave man worthy of command. You are a coward worthy only of death.”

Hernandez wanted to keel over and vomit, but he would not give his rival the satisfaction. “Then get it over with.”

Danza nodded. He reached gingerly to his side and pulled out his service pistol. When he pointed it at Hernandez he frowned. “If any person on this ship objects to the execution of
former
officer Hernandez, please say so now. I do not intend to run this ship as an unquestioned king.”

Nobody spoke up in Hernandez’s defence.

“Cowards,” Hernandez snarled at them. “I am your commander!”

Danza lowered his pistol and placed it down across his knees. He seemed to think for a moment. “On second thought, it takes far greater virtue to release one’s enemy than to kill him. I will not stain the Augusta with any more blood, and truthfully, you do not deserve to die upon its decks. Outerbridge, I think we should put this piece of sludge in a lifeboat and let the sea take him. Maybe it will give him some time to think about his many mistakes.”

Outerbridge laughed. He reached down and grabbed Hernandez around the collar and yanked him off his knees.

“You can’t do this,” Hernandez cried. “It’s illegal! This is my ship!”

“I’ll tell you what,” said Danza. “Apologise to me, right here and now, and I’ll let you live out the rest of your days in the brig.”

“What?”

“I said apologise.”

Hernandez clenched his fists. “I apologise for nothing.” He swung a punch at Outerbridge, and the sniper fell, but another crewman took his place, and Hernandez was beaten back down to his knees.

“Very well,” said Danza. “Take him.”

Outerbridge got up and grabbed Hernandez by the collar again, this time even more roughly. Someone stamped on the former officer’s ankle, making him remember he was barefooted. It added to his humiliation in some way. Outerbridge forced his arm behind his back and manhandled him into one of the ship’s lifeboats. Before he could try to climb out, the man punched him hard in the face, assuring his nose was broken.

Hernandez sobbed, but stopped himself. He turned the outpouring into a growl. “I will kill you all.”

Outerbridge sniggered. “No, you won’t. Better you turn your mind to fishing. Maybe then you’ll make it through the week. Oh, and one other thing, take your whore with you.”

“No, please. No.”

Cuervo appeared at the edge of the boat and then was thrown head over heels to join Hernandez. Her head cracked loudly as it struck one of the bolts fastening the bench to the floor. Her cries stopped and transformed into meek sobs. Instinctively, Hernandez reached out and touched her. An entire crew, and she was the only one on his side. Now she had been pulled down with him.

Danza did not appear, probably too weak to leave his wheelchair, but his voice came over the railings clear enough. “I wish you luck, Hernandez. You always wanted to be commander of your own ship. I have given you your wish. May we never meet again.”

The winch started up, and the lifeboat lowered towards the water.

Soon the Atlantic would take him.

Rick Bastion

R
ick and Daniel
followed along undetected for more than an hour. Dawn now nibbled at the horizon, and the prospect of daylight changed things significantly. It was one thing creeping around behind a column of demons in the dark, but in daylight?

“We need to fall back further,” said Daniel weakly. The Fallen Angel was growing increasingly short of breath. His injuries were not healing, and he needed to rest. If they stopped, though, the demons would move on and disappear. Keith, Maddy, and Diane might be gone forever—if they were even amongst the poor huddled masses being moved along like cattle.

“We can’t fall back anymore,” said Rick. “We’ll lose sight of them.”

Even now, the demons were several hundred yards ahead. The motorway stretched on in a straight line for miles, which aided visibility, but the sheer amount of stalled traffic made it hard to pursue. The easiest thing to follow was the noise—the moans and cries of the captives a beacon for Rick and Daniel to lock onto.

Daniel slinked through a gap between a lorry and a caravan. “Once the sun is fully up, it will only take one of those demons to take a look back over his shoulder to spot us.”

“We’ll keep low, move behind cars. I have to know if Maddy and the others are with them. I can’t leave them.”

“In the case of your brother, that might be the exact thing you should do.”

“You know, for a former angel you’re not very Christian.”

“Jesus was before my time.”

Rick stopped for a second. “But he did exist?”

“There are lots of things in this universe that existed and exist. Reality stretches further than your eyes see.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean that what is happening here is just a drop in the ocean. Even God is tiny in the grand scheme of things. He’s a soldier, like everyone else.”

“A soldier? Daniel, what are you talking about?”

“Never mind. It would be hard for you to understand.”

Rick blinked a few times. He was tired, and his eyes were getting fuzzy. How much longer could he keep going along the motorway? Safety lay to the south not north. Should he turn back?

Could he?

No.

“We have to keep going, Daniel. I—”

“Shh. Something’s happening up ahead.”

Rick squinted. “What?”

“Look! There’s a gate further down.”

Rick’s stomach filled with lead as he spotted the shimmering lens on the horizon. It was about a mile down the road, tiny at this range but bright enough to light up the dim grey of dawn around it.

“Is this bad?” he asked Daniel.

“It’s what I suspected.”

Rick looked at him and waited for something more.

Daniel shook his head. “It’s a prison break.”

“What do you mean?”

“Let’s get up in those hills ahead. We need to get a good look at things before we decide what to do.”

“So there
is
something we can do?”

“That’s the good thing about being human, isn’t it? There’s always
something
you can do. Even if it’s stupid.”

They climbed the barrier at the edge of the motorway and clambered through the ditch. They pushed through the hedges, and once in the nearby fields, stayed hidden from sight of the motorway. Rick could only just see the fringes of glimmering light through the trees, but they hurried through the long grass until they were right in line with it.

Daniel and Rick peered through the bushes.

Demons amassed outside the twenty-foot gate, and seeing one up close made Rick’s skin tighten. It was like standing next to a hungry lion—something in his body tingled at being so close to something so dangerous.

The legion of demons arrived and gathered around the gate, shoving their chained captives to the ground.

“How many of these gates are there?” Rick asked Daniel in a whispered tone.

“Six-hundred and sixty-six.”

“Six-six-six. Like the number of the beast?”

“No, like the number of seals God placed upon the earth to keep it safe. One seal for each adversary.”

Rick was struggling to understand. “What adversaries? I thought Lucifer was God’s adversary.”

Daniel chuckled quietly. “Lucifer is a naughty child. The six hundred and sixty six Adversaries are something else entirely. They are equal to God—cut from the same celestial cloth. Each of them yearns for power, and that power exists within life. The life that fills each plant, every moth, and billions of human beings on every single plane of existence. The more worlds conquered by the Adversaries, the stronger they get, and the weaker God becomes.”

“I don’t understand any of what you just said.”

“How could you, Rick? God sacrificed his power to bind his kin. God was the strongest of the Adversaries—the six hundred and sixty seventh—and all the others envied and resented him. A fight brewed, one that threatened the very fabric of existence, so God used his vast power to castrate the Adversaries, himself included. God rendered their powers inert, preventing their ability to act upon the earths. In doing so, God left you all to fend for yourselves. That is why the prayers of men go unanswered.”

“He did it to protect us?”

“To protect everything. This was even before the time of Angels.”

“So what’s happening now? Who opened the gates?”

“The Black Ram.”

Rick laughed. “Are you winding me up? This sounds like a bad novel.”

Daniel shrugged. “I suppose it does. The Black Ram is a man—just a man—but he has existed almost since the beginning of time. He has learned to move between the worlds and has assembled a secret society known as the Black Strand. It is they who have put into motion the destruction, not only of this planet, but of many. Each world that falls weakens God, for his power is derived from us. Inside the heart of every man and animal is His essence. When you kill a man, you kill part of God. To kill billions would weaken Him substantially. He is at war; without an army.”

“What about the angels?”

“Ineffectual. The seals prevent them from acting upon the earth also.”

“But the seals on this world are broken. The Fallen Angels are here, so why not the good angels?”

Using the word ‘good’ to describe the other angels but not Daniel appeared to hurt him. He closed his eyes for a moment. “I don’t know why Heaven’s angels are not here. I can only imagine it’s because they have their hands full. This is not God’s only battle.”

Rick was going to ask more questions, but the sound of screaming cut him off. He peered through the bushes and saw that the demons were grabbing people off the ground and shoving them towards the gate. A woman screeched like a bomb siren as a demon slit open her wrists.

“They’re using them as vessels,” said Daniel. “The very worst souls in Hell are relieved of physical form and doomed to burn in the darkest, most painful pits of the Abyss. Matter cannot exist in the Abyss—only pain and torment. These wicked souls could not pass through the gates like the others, for they lacked the freedom to move.”

“They had no bodies,” said Rick, hating the fact that he understood.

Daniel nodded. “The only way to bring them here is to give them bodies—vessels. Draining them of blood weakens them and reduces the amount of iron in their bodies.”

A bolt of lightning shot from the gate and hit the screaming woman. When she turned around, her eyes were smouldering black stones. A crooked grin distorted her face.

“The worst men and women in history,” said Daniel. “Coming home.”

The possessed woman grabbed a small boy from the floor and shoved him, screaming, towards the gate. She opened his throat with her teeth. The gate began to vibrate and shimmer.

“Leave him alone,” someone shouted.

Rick moved his head to see past a bunch of branches and saw a woman leap up and run to help the boy. 

It was Maddy.

Daniel grabbed Rick. “Wait.”

“We can’t. She’s in danger.”

A burnt man leapt in front of Maddy and backhanded her across the face. She fell to the ground, clutching her cheek. Another bolt of lightning shot from the gate and hit the boy. A few seconds later he threw his arms around the woman who had bit him and hugged her. “Mummy.”

Rick glanced at Daniel. “Who the hell are they?”

“Carmilla and Edward Stokes.”

“Who?”

“Carmilla was a doctor who lived near White Chapel. Her twelve year old son wanted to be a surgeon. Carmilla wanted to teach him.”

“White Chapel? You mean he…
they
were Jack the Ripper?”

Daniel nodded. “Yes. Carmilla used to hire prostitutes, explaining that she wanted to make her son a man. She would sedate them with tainted sherry, and then little Edward would get to work.”

A demon dragged Maddy and threw her down in her place in line. A man and a woman took hold of her and cradled her as she moaned. Keith and Diane.

Rick felt his stomach trying to escape through his throat. The sight of Maddy’s tears made him feel worthless. “We have to go help them.”

“We try now,” said Daniel, “we die now.”

“You don’t know that.”

Daniel sighed. “Rick, of all the things you’ve learned about me, surely the one thing you’ve realised is that I know more than you do. I’m telling you, we go out there and we won’t get to walk away.”

Rick grabbed a branch and clutched it tightly, thorns digging into his palm. He used the pain to help him concentrate. “There’re enough people down there to overthrow the demons. We have to fight. The longer we wait, the more people who will get possessed.”

“If we do this, I won’t be able to help you anymore.”

Rick stared at Daniel, trying to work out what he was saying. “Why?”

“Just decide if you really want to do this.”

“I’m sure. Maddy, Diane, and my brother are down there. I won’t sit by and watch them get possessed.”

Daniel nodded. He looked sad. “Okay then.”

The Fallen Angel burst through the hedges and leapt down into the ditch at the side of the motorway. The demons saw him and attacked at once. Daniel waved an arm like he was swatting a fly, and a force unseen hit the incoming demons like a wave of hot air. Their flesh turned to ash. Skin flew from their bones. Withered skeletons collapsed to the ground.

Rick broke from the hedges and clambered into the ditch to help. He was unarmed, so he moved away from battle and towards the captives. When Keith and the others saw him, they looked gobsmacked. “Rick,” said his brother. “You came to rescue us?”

Rick looked at Maddy as he spoke. “Of course I did. Now get up and help.”

The captives were restrained with rope, not chains, so they were able to shove their binds off easily. Some ran immediately, but most were too shocked to make a decision. The gate towered over them all.

“Get up and fight,” Rick bellowed at them. “Fight now or die as cowards. You are not animals. Do not let these monsters treat you like you are.”

Perhaps it was Rick’s anger that caused the captives to rise, but rise they did—two thirds of them. None held weapons, but each threw themselves at the enemy like barbarians, beating with fists and clawing with fingernails. Many fell quickly, but most caught the burnt men by surprise.

Rick grabbed a demon and tossed it into the central reservation. He stamped its skull against the safety barrier until there was nothing left. Meanwhile, Daniel cut a swath through the enemy camp, waving his arm and searing demon flesh from bone. The invisible heat waves turned the grass brown at the edges of the road and cracked the windscreen of an overturned Jeep. No demon could get within two metres of the Fallen Angel. He was a force of nature.

But he was growing weaker by the second.

Rick went to help, but heat blazed around Daniel. It was impossible to get close. More demons fell within the Fallen Angel’s cocoon of heat, like lambs in a nuclear blast. Daniel’s expression was grim. Sweat swamped his face. His arms trembled. He slumped to his knees and the heat disappeared.

The demons recovered.

Rick moved in front of the gate and cried out. “Everyone, fight!”

There were now only a fraction of the demons remaining, Daniel having dismantled half himself. The captives were so inspired by the sudden victory that they fell upon the demons three to one. They ripped the burnt men limb from limb.

Adrenaline surged through Rick, and he spun around to fight the first demon that came near. He found a little boy standing before him. The little boy now possessed by Edward Stokes. 

With a snarl, the black-eyed child lunged. Rick was off balance and stumbled to the ground when Edward struck him. He found himself on his back with the young boy tearing at his face like a wolverine. He tried to defend himself, but could not protect his face and fight at the same time.

“I’ll slice you into pieces, you whore,” Edward screamed. He opened a wound on Rick’s forehead and dug into it with his fingernails. Rick bellowed in agony.

“Get off him, you little brat!” Maddy grabbed Edward’s hair and yanked him backwards. The little boy kicked and screamed.

Rick scrambled to his feet, but didn’t know what to do. Edward might be a demon, but he was inhabiting the body of an innocent child. Was there a way to save him? An exorcism?

Maddy struggled to hold onto the thrashing monster. “Rick, help!”

“What do I do?”

“Just do…
something.

Rick was rooted to the spot. As much as he knew the boy before him was a demon now, he could not get past the fact it had once been a little boy. “I-I can’t.”

The fearful look on Maddy’s face hurt Rick, and left him unprepared when someone shoved him aside. “For fuck sake, Rick,” said Keith. “Can’t you do anything?”

Keith moved in front of Edward as the boy slipped free of Maddy’s grasp. He clutched a tyre iron, and he brought it down on the demon’s skull before it had chance to evade. One blow was enough. Edward fell to the floor dead—his tiny skull shattered.

Rick’s jaw dropped as he looked at his brother, but Keith seemed only angry about what he had been forced to do. Between them, Maddy stood with a face full of conflict. It was something that needed to be done, but to do so with so little hesitation...

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