Read Savage Prophet: A Yancy Lazarus Novel (Episode 4) Online
Authors: James A. Hunter
Tags: #s Adventure Fiction, #Fantasy Action and Adventure, #Dark Fantasy, #Paranormal and Urban Fantasy, #Thrillers and Suspense Supernatural Witches and Wizards, #Mystery Supernatural Witches and Wizards, #Mage, #Warlock, #Bigfoot, #Men&apos
Small victories, am I right?
I thrust out both hands, palms up, and, with a howl, called up dual beams of flame, each as thick as my thigh. The conjured fire, hot as a blowtorch, carved through the crowds of undead, igniting clothing, melting skin like wax, and blackening the bones peeking through from beneath. I zigzagged the lances back and forth, drenching the first few rows of slowly marching monsters in a hungry heat that ravaged them mercilessly. Some faltered under the brutal assault, the blaze roasting their decrepit bodies until they could no longer stand, could no longer move or advance or function.
But it wasn’t good enough. Not even close. The clumsy bastards were both too resilient and too numerous—an asstastic combo for me.
For every body that collapsed, too damaged to continue the fight, two more took its place, stumbling forward, crawling over their fallen brothers and sisters, pressing in closer and closer. For the time being, the spiked defensive barrier was keeping them more or less at bay, but every second a few more slipped through, maneuvering past the deadly bedrock javelins, scrambling at the wall, all too eager to get rotten hands on me. What I had going for me was a stopgap measure at best.
With a grunt and a heave of will I reached my senses deep into the ground, then with a jerk of my hands, I ripped up a stone that weighed as much as a small car from the bedrock of the street below. It came away with a grumbling
groan
of shifting earth. A hole bloomed in the roadway, swallowing a handful of dead, recalling them to the earth where they belonged as the huge, jagged boulder floated in the air, hovering like a massive stone drone. The army of dead was unimpressed. They merely changed course, flowing around the sizeable hole in the earth, then continued their plodding march, never a worry about the giant rock loitering above their heads.
Time to fix that.
I brought the rock crashing down with a
thud
and a
squish—
pieces of several hapless, undead goons splattered out in all directions like a water balloon hitting the pavement. Without a pause, the stone rose again, ten feet into the air, before careening down, obliterating two more zombies, ensuring they wouldn’t be getting up. Over and over the rock lifted and descended, squishing, crushing, smashing—I was like some morbid, booger-nosed kid stomping ants underfoot.
The rock, despite its lack of finesse, grace, or pizazz, was a helluva weapon against the horde. Any zombie unfortunate enough to be splattered by the boulder-of-untimely-demise didn’t get back up. Didn’t even try. They were as down for the count as it came—which was only natural since you would need a shovel to scoop up what was left of them.
Pro tip for you: a big, heavy rock definitely makes for a great zombie slaying weapon.
Unfortunately, it was also one helluva metaphysical workout. The Vis, as awesome as it is, doesn’t come without a cost, and earth constructs are always exhausting, because physics
do
matter. Flame, for example, is pretty easy to work with because friction and heat are always plentiful in nature and take relatively minor
personal
energy to utilize. For shit’s sake, any Rube can start a fire with a long stick, some knowhow, and a pile of kindling or dryer lint. And once that sputtering flame is going, all you need is fuel to consume and a steady supply of oxygen to keep ’er going.
Earth isn’t so easy.
The rock was heavy as a school bus full of sumo wrestlers, and moving that much raw mass around had a proportionally greater cost than working with flame. There were tricks to make it easier—manipulating magnetic fields, say, or toying around with gravity—but mostly working with stone was just a lot of heavy, backbreaking effort, and I couldn’t possibly squish enough zombies to make a difference, not in the long run.
Between burning and squishing, I’d eliminated maybe a fifth of Beauvoir’s forces. What I needed was something big. But anything big enough to kill the remaining seventy or eighty zombies would take just about everything I had left … a big gamble.
The real question was
not
whether I’d take the risk—you never win big unless you go big, that’s what I say—but
which
construct I’d be willing to wager my life on.
A small volcano might kill these sons of bitches, but not without wreaking total hell on the buildings and houses around us, which were likely filled with unlucky bystanders just trying to keep their heads down and firmly attached to their shoulders. I couldn’t kill a bunch of innocent Rubes, not if I wanted to live with myself. So, I needed something big and destructive, but focused. Narrow. And I needed it quick—
The zombies were pushing in on every front and quickly enveloping and overwhelming my scant defensive wall.
I glanced back, thinking retreat might be the best possible option at this point. Maybe I could climb onto Pierre-Francois’s roof and continue the war from there—blast the zombies into fetid meat sauce as they streamed over the wall and into the courtyard. Use the courtyard as a choke point and a killing field—
Then, my shifting gaze landed on the mounds of bones and I had an idea.
A risky idea, a gamble for sure, but better than standing around twiddling my thumbs.
I conjured up a gale of hurricane force wind, turning this new construct not on the assembled zombies, but on the hundreds of skulls filling Pierre-Francois’s courtyard. In a heartbeat the yellowed bones rattled and rose, lifting up into the air, hovering above me like a cloud. A thousand skulls stared down on the approaching horde with empty eye sockets. Then, with a grimace, I conjured flame—maybe more flame than I’d ever summoned before—and suddenly each and every skull had a glowing, flickering ball of heat burning within like a personal inferno.
The yellow-orange firelight, stained with wispy purple, turned those empty eye sockets into a thousand haunting candles.
It was a spectacularly beautiful sight in its way, like peering at the birth of a universe or staring into the heart of an exploding sun. Even the mass of brainless zombies paused momentarily to watch, as though the brilliant light reached down into whatever part of their human mind remained. Reminding them of a different, better time. When sunlight warmed living flesh, maybe. Or when they embraced a loved one in the calm of the night, stars the only onlookers.
Even the drumming ceased.
Those skulls hung for a spell longer before they began to spin in huge looping arcs, whirling and twirling around in a rush of wind: a howling cyclonic vortex spinning above me. Wind reached down and whipped at me from every side, pinning my clothes against my limbs and chest, pulling the breath from my lungs. As the death-tornado picked up speed and momentum, the flaming skulls flared ever brighter, the noxious purple light growing, swelling. It was the fresh oxygen rushing in through one eye socket and out through the other, creating hundreds of miniature furnaces fed by the laws of physics instead of by my waning power.
Sweat broke out across my brow, my arms and legs began to wobble, and my lips curled from the strain of holding the enormous, ungainly construct in place. The working wasn’t especially difficult, at least in theory—it was a simple construct of fire, air, and will—but the magnitude of the flows was daunting; holding the whirling force in place was like trying to push a Mack truck uphill. A steep hill. A mountain, really. In the snow. With the brakes on.
Thank God I didn’t need to hold it for much longer.
I pumped more energy into the ginormous working, supercharging the bastard with every ounce of strength I had until my head felt like imploding. And still, I pumped in more. More and more until I couldn’t restrain the working, which had become a miniature force of nature—a wild, bloodthirsty tiger, held in check by a fraying piece of yarn.
With a shout, I threw my hands out toward the heavens, and the whirlwind of flame and bone rocketed downward, hundreds of skulls launched into the midst of the zombie army—though, sadly, falling short of the Voodoo Daddy’s truck. The blackened skulls collided into meaty, shambling bodies and exploded on impact, each one burping out a huge swell of rolling flame, which set cloth on fire and charbroiled skin. But each skull was more than just a vessel for flame:
The explosions not only spewed out blazing heat, they also shattered the army of skulls, spraying a hail of sharpened, fire-hardened bone fragments out in every direction like a frag grenade.
Waves of bone-shrapnel cut through knees and tore through fleshy faces. Zombies fell by the score, their bodies devastated by the colossal blast. The creatures were torn apart, and pieces of body flew and flopped through the night, raining down gore-confetti.
As all that amassed energy rushed out, I was left cold and hollow, my legs trembling beneath me, and I suddenly found myself light-headed and reeling on the tabletop. I tottered, swaying this way then that like a tree assailed by a hurricane, groping at the wall in front of me for support. For a time, I just stood there, shaky arms holding me upright as I stared out at the carnage. The sheer, impossible destruction.
That’d been one helluva doozy, and I didn’t have much in the tank, but thankfully, almost unbelievably, it seemed like I might’ve actual
won
with that last Hail Mary pass.
The Voodoo Daddy was still alive—I could see him scowling from the back of his pickup truck, surrounded by his child soldiers—and further out, near the truck, a few zombies still milled about. The vast majority of the horde, though, was down for the count. Bodies, and pieces of bodies, lay everywhere, scattered around like fallen leaves after a fierce storm. They didn’t move, didn’t twitch, showed no signs of the twisted power that had called them from the grave and animated them to crude life.
“You have grown strong,” the Voodoo Daddy called out, his voice carrying easily over the unnatural stillness blanketing our little piece of Cité Soleil. “A most impressive display”—with a theatrical flourish, he waved toward the piles of dead—“but you be mistaken to think the dead die so easy as dat.” He shook his head, a grin stretching out his skeleton face paint into a ghostly grimace. “No. They don’t perish so easy as you think.” He snapped his fingers, and I felt a familiar cold rush of power flow from him. A dark, perverted
un
life, which snaked out and seeped into the unmoving forms sprawled in the street.
The drums resumed their pounding rhythm, though far more subdued than they’d been before.
I just watched, dumbstruck, as nausea, born from exhaustion and overexertion, rampaged through me. No way could he call those things back, not after what I’d done to ’em. Even the undead had limits, right?
But my stomach twisted as I felt that dark power stir something in the cold butchered corpses splayed out before me like cuts of meat at the butcher’s counter.
Holy shit, I could
feel
that energy pulsing inside the mass of undead, could feel it like the slow, steady throb of a bass guitar,
bum-bum-bum-bum
, each throbbing pulse sending a surge of renewed energy and purpose into nerve-dead limbs, animating the corpses with superficial life. A thin ghost of purple power, like a tether, drifting from each zombie back to Pa Beauvoir. The shitheel Bokor burned with the light of a tiny purple sun.
With what little power I had left in me, I reached my senses outward and felt those long lines of power binding the zombies to the Bokor, enslaving them to his will.
This had to be the energy Pierre-Francois had mentioned back in his shop.
Avizo.
Feeling it up close and personal, it took me all of a second to identify the slick energy at work, the power of Voodoo, the power of the necromancer and the black-hearted Bokor. And I knew it.
Nox, shitloads of it.
For the barest moment, I almost thought I could dip myself into those strands of purple light, could pry the strings away, sever them from Beauvoir’s control. Then, as quickly as the sensation had come, it was gone. The steady bass guitar thrum vanished, taking the purple radiance with it, leaving darkness behind, a darkness broken only by the moon above and the flickering firelight of the burning bodies below.
For a long beat things were still, but then the brutalized zombie army began to twitch and rustle, arms and legs moving in herky-jerky fashion as the dead slowly picked themselves up from the ground.
TWENTY:
Haitian Standoff
It didn’t happen all at once, understand, but rather in a slow, sporadic wave. But, and this is key, it
did
happen. Not all the zombies gained their feet—some didn’t have feet to gain, not after my handiwork—but half of them did. ’Cause that’s what I needed, thirty or forty more zombies, and my gas gauge reading “E.”
“Come now, Yancy Lazarus, we both know you aren’t gonna walk away from here. You’re spent—I can see it from here. And even if you kill all these”—Beauvoir gestured toward his considerable force—“there be plenty more dead in Haiti for me to summon. Always more dead.”