RED HOLOCAUST BY JAMES AXLER

answer. “Yeah.”

“You are hungered?”

“Yeah.” Finnegan got the answer in first.

“Come forward. Leave your weapons of destruction. You will not need them while

under the protection of the Keeper.”

“Can’t wait to meet him,” muttered Hunaker, standing and stretching like a big

cat.

Hennings went to retrieve the radio, but the voice from the loudspeaker snapped,

“No! Leave that. There is no need to communicate with the chill beyond these

walls. None.”

“Can hardly reach War Wag One, anyway. Range is only ’bout fifteen miles. Could

be way farther off than that.” Hennings put the radio back with the blasters and

grenades.

Ryan led them through the circular corridor, past several doors in the roof. The

smell of cooked food became stronger. Intermittently they passed beneath a tiny,

silent vid camera.

“This goddamn place goes on forever,” moaned Okie, kicking a wall. Sparks flew

from the steel tips of her combat boots.

“Doc? You got any ideas where we might be?” asked Ryan.

Since they’d emerged from the gateway, the old man had been strangely quiet,

stalking along, the antiquated hat perched on top of the bony skull. The

business of the trap and the creaking voice with its orders hardly seemed to

have bothered him at all. Now he started at Ryan’s question.

“What was that, my dear Mr. Cawdor? I fear that my thoughts were elsewhere.”

“Any idea where we are?”

“In a redoubt, sir.”

“We fuckin’ know that,” sighed Hunaker.

“It is a place of some size, unless I miss my guess. My memory is clouded— After

a jump, I have always been a touch… there were so many.”

“How many?”

“Many stockpiles and also many redoubts. Indeed, in places of the blessed land

where it was thought attacks might be concentrated, I recall they built some

redoubts that were also stockpiles. Perhaps this is such a place.”

They’d been walking, by Ryan’s calculation, for nearly fifteen minutes, covering

more than a mile at their brisk pace.

When they reached a steel barrier, blocking their progress, they stood and

stared at it. Finally Ryan stepped forward and looked into the nearest camera,

“I am becoming tired of this. We are all hungry and thirsty and in need of rest.

We come in peace. We have laid down our weapons, yet still you treat us like an

invadin’ enemy.”

Even as he spoke, he realized that he had unconsciously slipped into the same

form of address as the person behind the screens.

“The Keeper has never seen the like,” came the reply, crackling and wheezing.

Either the sound reproduction was poor or a decrepit old man was talking. Or

both.

“Then let us see this Keeper. Let us talk to him. We are few. This redoubt must

hold hundreds of armed men.”

A burst of laughter spluttered from the loudspeaker, followed by silence.

J.B. moved closer to Ryan, and whispered, “Could use the plasex and run for that

gateway.”

“Yeah. Get the fuck out of this fireblasted place. Let’s…”

He was interrupted by the door ahead of them beginning to slide slowly upward,

revealing the legs, then bodies, then heads of three people standing facing

them.

“I’ll eat my bastard blaster,” whispered Okie, shaking her black hair in

disbelief.

Two women and a man were spread across the corridor, two paces apart, each

holding a gun. Ryan sized them up, trying to hide his bewilderment. He’d

expected to see the cream of the redoubt’s guards: a squad of uniformed sec men,

helmeted and masked, each with a gleaming laser rifle or sonic stunner.

The man at the center of the trio stood a scant five feet tall, Ryan guessed. He

was dressed in a bizarre assortment of rags and tawdry finery: a jacket that

bore sparkling sequins, leather breeches that were hacked off raggedly above the

scrawny knees, and a woman’s high-heeled boot on the right foot and a stained

shoe of blue canvas on the left. Numerous medals on scraps of iridescent

ribbons, jingled from his left breast. A bandolier that crossed his chest

contained an extraordinary range of ammunition. Even at a snatched glance Ryan

could make out six or seven different calibers.

It was tough to estimate his age. He was so stooped and bent that he might have

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