Crater Lake. JAMES AXLER

Crater Lake

JAMES AXLER

Crater Lake

JAMES AXLER

Chapter One

JAK LAUREN’S EYES, pale pink, snapped open.

A fearsome stab of pain jerked through his narrow skull, making him moan and close his eyes again. His fingers curled, nails digging into the palms of his hands. As he moved, leaning against the thick glass walls of the chamber, the tiny shards of razored steel sewn into his clothes sparkled brightly.

“Was blind, but now I see.” Why did the words of the old hymn come floating back into his mind at that moment?

He cautiously opened his eyes again, screwing them up against the bright light. There was a pattern of raised disks of polished metal that glowed faintly, the image fading even as he looked at it. The smoked glass walls were deep crimson. That wasn’t right. They’d been blue. Blue. He held on to that fact. His head felt awful. Worse than the timeit had been his tenth birthing day just over four years backwhen his father had been burrowing. Digging into the cellars of some of the derelict houses on the edges of West Lowellton, near Lafayette, in what had once been Louisiana, his father had found a bottle of something called Southern Comforta ribbed bottle of clear glass with a golden cap. He’d given it to Jak. The warm liquor had tasted of peaches and summer, and it had burned his throat. He’d drunk nearly the whole bottle and then been monstrously sick.

But that hadn’t been anything compared to this awful swirling feeling. It was as if someone had sucked his brain from the caverned chambers of his skull, leaving only an echoing hollow, or pumped his brain like a pink-gray slurry through the twisted copper tubes of a moonshiner’s still, then spat the results back into his skull again.

“How’re you doing, Whitey?”

Jak leaned over and groaned. He felt like throwing up. His long hair, purest white, trailed like plumes of lace over his shoulders. He drew in deep breaths, fighting for control. He did not want to show any sign of weakness in front of his six new friends.

“Not friends,” he whispered to himself. Friends would betray you. Or they could be used to try to make you turn traitor. “Companions” was better.

“What’s that?”

He didn’t realize he’d spoken out loud.

“Cold,” he said, seeing the fog of his breath. Back home in Louisiana he’d never seen that. Never seen snow or felt the bite of frost. He hadn’t really believed that this gateway place would actually work and transmit them somewhere else.

“Yeah. Just sit back and relax. It’s a shit feeling, but it’ll pass.”

“First time’s the worst, Jak.” That was a woman’s voice.

He risked opening his eyes again, keeping his head perfectly still. The armored glass felt cool against his skin. The others were strewn around the room in varying stages of recovery from the mat-trans jump.

Jak’s eyes first focused on the girl called Lori. At six feet she topped him by at least nine inches. Her long blond hair tumbled over her shoulders and across the bright red satin blouse that clung to the soft swell of her breasts. The boy’s eyes were caught by the nipples, roused by the bitter cold in the gateway, peaking under the thin material. Her long thighs shone beneath the short maroon suede skirt. Jak knew that Lori was only a couple of years older than he was. He’d admired how she bore herself in combat situations, despite wearing the most absurd boots he’d ever seen. They were made of crimson leather, well over her knees, and had incredibly high heels. He had watched with disbelief when she’d run like a gazelle in those boots. Now she moved uneasily, the tiny silver spurs on each heel ringing like bells. At her belt she wore a pearl-handled .22-caliber Walther PPK pistol.

Next to her, one arm protectively around the girl’s shoulders, was the oldest of the party, Dr. Theophilus Tanner. He looked around seventy, with grizzled hair and a graying stubble on his cadaverous jaw. He was tall and skinny and wore cracked knee boots splattered with Louisiana swamp mud. The pale blue denim shirt and stained frock coat that he wore seemed like relics, something out of an old, old picture book from well before the Big War. A kerchief with a blue swallow’s-eye design protruded from the top pocket of his coat, and a battered stovepipe hat was beside him on the floor.

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