RED HOLOCAUST BY JAMES AXLER

tells me that the Keeper never knew about the gateway. Said that Special Ops MT

ran them. I asked him what that meant and he didn’t have any idea at all. The

man is simply a gibbering parrot with no brain of his own.”

“So we have a choice—stay here in Alaska, try and find transport back to

Deathlands or risk the gateway again.”

“Man gives birth astride a grave, Mr. Cawdor. What choice is that?”

Doc turned on his heel and quickly walked out, heading back toward their

quarters. Ryan watched him, then decided that some food might be a good idea. He

knew that eventually he had to get outside, away from the concrete walls and

strip lights or risk losing part of his own sanity.

“YUMMY, YUMMY, it’s the best for your tummy.”

Finnegan threw the empty package on the table. The pizza it had contained was

already cooking in one of the gray microwaves along the kitchen wall.

“Momma Maria says it’s the best America makes,” he continued, examining the

bright wrapping, on which a stout, beaming, garishly made-up elderly woman held

a skillet with a huge pizza on it while a brace of wide-eyed bambinos looked on

hungrily.

Hunaker was waiting for her double beanburger to finish. “Free for

fiber-fighters—Double discount vouchers at your local grocery,” it said on the

package, and in much smaller print, “Subject to availability. Offer closes June

1, 2001.”

“By the time their offer closed, the whole world had closed as well,” Hunaker

observed.

All of them had taken advantage of the unbelievable range of clothes and

supplies to dress and equip themselves better. But most of them had also kept

some of their old gear. Doc kept his hat, frock coat and battered boots, but

gave up his faded cream shirt for a new one in faded denim. Ryan kept his long

coat, but took some new thermals, dark gray breeches, a brown shirt and a new

pair of combat boots with high lacings to replace the old pair with a bite from

a rabid mongrel on the right toe.

Finnegan and Hennings each picked similar outfits: high-necked jumpers in dark

blue, with matching pants and black combat boots with steel toe caps. Okie kept

her coveralls, choosing a sweater in light green for over the top. She also took

a pair of low-heeled tan leather riding boots with the name Tony Lama inside.

Hunaker picked an exotic blouse in black satin with a pattern of leaves in green

that matched her hair, gray cord trousers and gray ankle boots.

J.B. changed only his pants, which had been torn in a fight in the Darks. He

searched the echoing hangar of the clothes store until he found a pair as nearly

identical as possible.

Krysty found a new pair of coveralls, in her usual khaki. One problem they had

was that clothes in unsealed or inadequately sealed boxes tended to fray and

fall apart within hours of being worn. A pair of black leather trousers that

Hennings had donned began to disintegrate almost instantly, resembling midnight

lace within minutes after the air attacked them.

Krysty’s one indulgence was in footwear. Lori went with her, tottering on her

absurd high-heeled, thigh-length boots, the silver spurs jingling behind her.

She took Krysty by the arm and led her to a section labeled Fashion & Working

Boots—Top Names.

There they found row upon row of large white cardboard boxes arranged by size

and by maker: Tex Robin, Dave Little, Henry Leopold, Larry Mahan and, the one

she liked best, J. E. Turnipseede.

Miming her enthusiasm, Lori pulled down box after box, ripping out the contents

of each to reveal a cascade of dazzling colors, and patterns and leathers. Lori

rummaged through the piles, looking for one she thought Krysty might like. Her

first choice had a heel nearly as high as her own boots, and Krysty waved them

away, smiling and trying to make the mute girl understand that she would fall

over in them.

“Those,” she said, pointing to a pair in dark blue leather that had silver

falcons with spread wings on the front. The tips of the pointed toes, finished

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