RED HOLOCAUST BY JAMES AXLER

trigger. The band had discovered a cache of them in a concrete bunker seven

months before, and Uchitel had insisted that every member take one. Before that

they’d had a variety of Stechkins, TT-33s, Radoms and Walther PPKs. Uchitel saw

the value of them all carrying the same handgun, though each still carried his

own favorite rifle or machine pistol or carbine.

The boy’s eyes opened wider and he began to snivel. Some of the villagers had

guns, but the weapons were old and battered, mended with baling wire. He’d never

seen anything like this glittering, polished pistol. The slim man tossed it

upward so that the dim sun was reflected in the silver stars on each side of the

crosshatched butt.

Several of the horsemen drew their guns, laughing as the lad fell to his knees.

The front of his breeches was now marked with urine; he’d completely lost

control.

Out in the open, among the low scrub of the tundra, the cracks of the handguns

sounded surprisingly flat and unmenacing. The first bullet hit the kneeling boy

through the right shoulder, knocking him over. Blood gushed from his ragged

clothes, staining the snow. A second shot tore through his left thigh, exiting

and taking with it a chunk of muscle the size of a man’s fist. Blood poured from

this gaping wound and the boy screamed, a thin and feeble sound in the

wind-washed wasteland.

“He is still poor, Uchitel,” yelled Krisa, the Rat, a tiny man with eyes as red

as glowing coals. Krisa took careful aim, steadying his right hand with his

left, then squeezed the trigger twice.

The first bullet tore into the boy’s chest, snapping ribs, exploding the lungs

into tatters of torn tissue, sending bright arterial crimson spurting from the

gaping mouth. The boy’s yelping ceased, and he made a desperate attempt to

escape. But the wound in his leg unbalanced him and he fell.

By falling, he put the diminutive Kris off his aim. He had intended to shoot the

dying boy again through the center of the chest. But the 9 mm round smashed into

the lad’s face, breaking his lower jaw and tearing it away on the left so that

it hung, hideously lopsided, the row of jagged and broken teeth spilling out

with the impact. Continuing, the lead sliced through the boy’s tongue and the

roof of his mouth, digging deep into the dark caverns of his brain.

The boy kicked in the snow like a rabbit with a broken spine. Watching, the

horsemen cheered and laughed; a couple of them made wagers on how long the poor

rabbit would last. After fifteen or twenty seconds the corpse lay still, looking

oddly shrunken, its blood staining the snow.

Uchitel stood in the stirrups, waved a gloved fist and shouted above the eternal

wind, “He is poor no more, my brothers and sisters. Let us go now to his filthy

hamlet of Ozhbarchik and help them all to escape from poverty.”

As he heeled his black stallion forward, he heard the group laughing. Uchitel

smiled, relishing their happiness. In a harsh world, it was good to give

pleasure.

The boy’s corpse soon stopped bleeding and the wind began to cover it with snow.

But not enough to hide it from the scavengers who came creeping from secret

places to rend the flesh from the bone.

UCHITEL KNEW that somewhere far to the west of them was a range of mountains,

including several volcanoes, and beyond that the ruins of what had been a fine

city that he had once visited. Called Yakutsk, it was near the left bank of the

Lena River and had been home to over one hundred thousand people.

Intercontinental ballistic missile bases near it had sealed its fate in 2001,

and the Americans had used “clean” missiles against it, which slaughtered human

beings but left buildings more or less intact. But the change in the climate

over the next four generations had made a ruins of the city. Uchitel had been

there three times, once when he was only fourteen, then twice in his twenties.

There he had found old books and had taught himself the skills that allowed him

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