RED HOLOCAUST BY JAMES AXLER

into tatters and rags, and a great fountain of blood sprayed out from him. He

landed flat on his back, his knife flying high in the bright morning air. The

shot had hit him in the center of the chest, pulping ribs, driving the razored

splinters of bone into his heart and lungs, killing him instantly.

Some of his blood splashed onto the broken wall behind him. Ryan looked up at

the tortured figure of the Christ on the cross. Its midnight sheen was now

dappled with fresh crimson that ran down the anguished face, the thighs, the

ankle stumps.

“Got the ace on the fuckin’ line with that one, Doc,” said Okie, grinning

appreciatively.

The old man bolstered the smoking pistol and turned away without saying a word.

Henn was almost gray with exposure, and it took a great blazing fire and much

effort to bring some life back into his limbs. The shooting had awakened

Finnegan, who came lurching outside just after Doc iced the leader of the

crazies. Wiping the sleep from his bleary eyes, he asked, “What the fuck is

goin’ on?”

Henn eventually recovered, though there were numerous scratches and bites on his

body, particularly around his thighs and the lower part of his belly. And his

penis was scabbed and bloody from what looked like severe friction burns on it.

As soon as he was coherent and dressed, Ryan ordered everyone back to the

buggies, ready to move.

Doc had walked off on his own and returned only now, when he heard the roar of

the engines. He looked pale. Ryan took him to one side.

“Yon feelin’…you know, Doc? You did what you had to. That bastard would have

opened you from…?”

“Thorax to pubis, Ryan. Yes, I know, but killing does not come easy to me.”

“It’s a craft you have to learn, Doc. Just like any other.”

“Then I confess I will do my best. Ah…”

“What?”

“While walking there alone with my contemplations, I recalled something I had

forgotten. I mentioned the word crater brought back memories. I have now managed

to remember it.”

“Go on.”

“Chron-jumps.”

“What the…?”

Doc looked around to make sure the others were not within hearing distance. “The

gateways. You know they’re mat-trans ports. You get in and instantly you’re

carried somewhere else.”

“Yeah. Look, I’m fuckin’ freezin’ to the bone out here, Doc. Can’t we…?”

“It won’t take much longer, sir. I said that there had been some dreadful

accidents. I didn’t tell you because I couldn’t remember it, but the gateways

have also been used for other experiments. Chron-jumps. Time travel. It does

work.”

“Never. Come on, Doc. You know you get confused sometimes.”

“Most of the time, my dear Mr. Cawdor. But here is a moment of crystal clarity.

I know that time travel is a reality—I know better than any living soul, believe

me. But they tried other times. Once, and once only it nearly worked.”

Either Doc Tanner had completely lost all his creds, or he was telling the

truth. Ryan shook his head, resisting the temptation to slap himself to see if

he was dreaming all this.

“It is passing strange how I can fail to know even my right hand from my left

and still recall some fragments of the past in such clarity. It was the sixth

day of August in the year 1930. Seventy-one years before Armageddon. A man of

great distinction got into a cab in what was called Manhattan, in old New York.

He waved to a friend and disappeared forever.”

“What’s this got to do with talkin’ about volcanoes and craters?”

“Wait. The men who ran the Gateway and the Cerberus projects were evil. Oh, such

wickedness and misery! My dear, dear Emily! They were trawling and they picked

up this man. I was there when he came through, or when what was left of him came

through.”

Ryan had enough sense not to interrupt Doc to ask who Emily was. That might have

been enough to throw his memory off the subject forever.

“It nearly, so nearly proved a success. A justice of the supreme court. It would

have… I can still see what came.”

Leave a Reply