RED HOLOCAUST BY JAMES AXLER

delivered a fearsome punch to the horse’s head, knocking it to its knees. Then

she kicked and lashed it with her whip until it returned to its feet. As she

remounted, she was rewarded with cheers from her fellows.

Uchitel touched the cold hilt of his saber, remembering the good feeling of

decapitating an enemy. He wanted to capture more enemies so that he could use

the sword once more. Perhaps in the town of Ank Ridge there would be plenty of

chances.

When the wind shifted to the south he caught the bitter taste of salt on his

tongue, in addition to the ever-present sulfur from the surrounding volcanoes.

The salt meant the sea could not be far away, which meant that Ank Ridge must

also be close.

Grom, their explosives expert, reined in his horse alongside Uchitel. “That

would make a fine show for my toys,” he shouted. Grom was almost stone deaf and

shouted all the time.

Grom pointed to a large dam with towers, set across a valley to their left. It

dominated the valley where they rode, silhouetted against the amber sky, which

was splashed with streaks of vivid green lightning.

“The water will be frozen, Grom,” he called, facing him so Grom could read his

lips.

“No, Uchitel! See ahead, there is a river that flows and there is green to its

sides. Away beyond that dam you see the smoking cone of a volcano. It heats the

water so that it flows. Let me burst it and wash all away down here. It would be

a fine sight, I swear.”

“Not now, brother. Perhaps another day, but not yet. Not now!”

“WHAT IS THAT, UCHITEL?”

Evening was dragging its murky cloak across the wasteland, the yellow clouds

turning a sullen maroon. It had snowed a little during the late part of the

afternoon, dusting the trail ahead. The dam was still visible behind them. This

time it was Barkhat, with the smooth, velvet voice, who spoke; as he did so, the

puckered scar at the corner of his mouth twitched and danced.

“Where?”

“Yonder. Like a large ball.”

Uchitel strained his eyes into the gloom. He saw several squat buildings and a

large saucer-shaped object, which was cracked along one side and mounted on a

tripod. It was difficult to judge its size, but it looked to be about a hundred

feet in height. There was also a huge ball, half as high again, that seemed to

be made from a complicated pattern of interwoven triangles. Uchitel had never

seen anything like it, but it nagged at his memory. There had been something

like it in one of the old history books in Yakutsk.

“I think it was a defense against firefights.”

“What?”

Uchitel nodded, the facts trickling back into his mind. “It was called radar,

Barkhat. It was a way of seeing great distances and watching for enemies. There

were many such installations along the coasts. I have read that such buildings

stood where the Sakhalin and Kamchatka lands were. But they were—” he hesitated,

seeking the expression that he’d read —Da, they were ‘primary objectives’ for

the nukes. This one must have been missed.”

“Should we go look, Uchitel? Might there not be much gold?”

“Imbecile! Would there be gold after a hundred years? They were not places of

wealth. No. Let us ride on by.”

“Perhaps we could camp there if the buildings are safe.”

Uchitel considered it. “Perhaps, brother. Perhaps we can.”

“And watch for enemies,” added Urach, who’d come in time to hear the latter part

of the conversation.

“Our enemies are all ahead of us. We need no radar to tell us that.”

“None behind?” asked Urach.

“Nyet,” replied Uchitel, forcefully. “If there were, then they stayed back in

Russia. They will never be a threat to the Narodniki.”

ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY MILES behind the Narodniki, Major Gregori Zimyanin was

leading his group of one hundred mounted militia. They were at the foothills of

the Alaskan Range, spread well out, the horses picking their way carefully

through the torturous mountain terrain.

Aliev, the Tracker, was a little ahead of them, waving them forward. Zimyanin

had deliberately held up the crossing of the Bering Strait, hesitant at the

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