RED HOLOCAUST BY JAMES AXLER

to lead the guerrillas.

He knew how the land had changed. Lakes had appeared and drained. Mountains had

sunk and valleys risen. And in many places there were new smoldering volcanoes.

He sniffed the heavy, ugly smell of sulfur that hung in the air. The wind

carried the pale yellow tint of the chemical, fouling the high Arctic, making

breathing extremely unpleasant.

Angrily he tugged his thick scarf over his mouth and pulled down his fur cap so

that only his amber eyes faced the gusting snow. The boy couldn’t have been more

than a few minutes walk from his home, he judged; these groveling mutant curs in

the wilderness never went farther than a mile from their houses. Rarely did you

hear of anyone journeying any distance. There might be a merchant, but to catch

one alone was as rare as a day without ice. They traveled in armed convoys and

there would be little to bring them this far from anything resembling

civilization.

In a tavern a hundred miles southwest, a merchant had whispered disturbing news

to Uchitel— news that the man had tried at first to sell.

“How much for word of a hunt?” he’d asked, his greasy head to one side, his

little eyes blinking with greed.

Uchitel had asked him why he should pay for such news.

“Because of who is the hunter and who is the hunted.” was the reply.

Sitting on his horse, waiting while the stragglers in the band crossed the

trackless terrain, Uchitel smiled beneath his scarf at the memory of the plump

merchant. To prompt the little man, the tall chieftan had taken his left hand in

both of his.

Squeezing.

Squeezing until the merchant whimpered and sweat burst from his temples.

Squeezing until blood came around the sides of the purpling fingernails and the

man wept to his mother’s grave for Uchitel to stop.

Squeezing until his own knuckles grew white with the effort. And the trader told

his tale in a stammering rush of tears.

And still squeezing until every finger bone was cracked and splintered, one

against the other. Then pushing the crippled man to the floor among the straw

and spilled wine and vomit.

“Much farther, Uchitel?” asked Urach, the Doctor, reining his pony alongside

Uchitel’s. Urach was the only other man in the party who could read and write.

But his nickname—it should have been Surgeon—came from his skill with knives.

“No,” Uchitel replied, annoyed at having his reverie interrupted. The fat little

trader had given him news of a hunt. News that Uchitel had found most unwelcome.

Though the sun appeared intermittently, most of the day was bleak, with flurries

of snow reducing visibility. It was bad, but they had all seen much worse.

Occasionally a freak tornado came screaming from the north. The wind would be so

strong that it would lift a man and his horse together and send them crashing to

their death a mile away. Uchitel recalled being in a township to the south when

such a storm arose. The buildings, tethered to bedrock with cables of spun

metal, held safe. But one of the group, having drunk too much wine, was caught

out in the open. The wind destroyed him, splinters of razored ice flaying the

clothes from his flesh, then the flesh from his bones.

To the left, Uchitel spotted movement, white against white. He reached for the

Kalashnikov AKM .62 mm, then saw that the bear was moving away from them in a

lumbering, unhurried gait. It could be on its own, or it could be one of a large

pack of bears whose tracks they’d spotted a day earlier.

Zmeya saw the first of the little houses, which were so flat in the snow that

they were almost invisible. “There,” he said, pointing ahead and a little to the

left.

Uchitel grinned wolfishly. Night wasn’t far off. It would be good to have

somewhere to shelter against the lethal drop in temperature. Already he could

feel the extra bite in the wind. He lowered the scarf from his nose and mouth,

his breath pluming out around him like a bridal veil. Within seconds there was

the familiar feeling of his nostril hair freezing, the moisture becoming ice.

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