Death inception, p.7
Death Inception,
p.7
Not on his watch.
He observed his people leak down the ropes like oil on water and the kids begin to respond.
This would be the theatrical performance of his career and he wasn't about to blow it.
Parker leapt out of the chopper, facing off with a power that was in harmony with his own.
His feet touched down and the death sang to him for release.
Jeffrey ignored them, his eyes finding Caleb's as he worked his way between the gravestones toward the young necromancer.
*
Brandt caught up with Kyle in the hall and plucked his sleeve. Kyle turned and they exchanged a heated glance.
"I've got it," Brandt said in a low voice, showing a sliver of the white cap of the pill bottle to Kyle.
Hart nodded. "Thanks... I don't know what we'd do if..."
"I understand. It's sure a helluva different situation than when we began. Who was to know..." Brandt's revelation died on his lips at the sight of Kyle's brows jacked down like a brick over his eyes.
"Okay, cool it."
Kyle frowned harder, if possible. "I know they're listening."
Brandt ran a hand through his long hair, finally clasping it in a messy ponytail on the back of his head. "Paranoid-much, pal."
Kyle nodded. "Didn't used to be."
They walked to the outside in unspoken agreement.
Standing beneath the shade of a lone outcrop of trees they continued. "Who would know your kid would ping AFTD. Seriously?" Brandt stared at him for another heartbeat and said, "You think they're going to what? Use him?"
"Maybe," Kyle looked at him. "Remember when those government men showed up? Asking questions about Pulse?"
Brandt nodded, knowing there would be a point coming. With Hart, there always was.
"Caleb's seen them hanging around the school."
"What, before the AP Testing?"
Kyle nodded.
"Well... that makes things dicey. You know they funded the whole nut here, Kyle."
"I know and I don't much care. This is my son. He's not going to be some..." he whipped his palm around, "experiment." Kyle's eyes flashed. "If I didn't know better..." Kyle began and Brandt smirked.
"But ya do."
Kyle nodded. "Yes, I do. If I didn't know better I'd say the Prime Booster had been rigged."
"Who'd want to juice your kid with such a weird ability?"
Hart shook his head. Damned if he knew. When he could puzzle through the answer, he'd sleep better. As it was, that wasn't happening. Insomnia had become his reluctant companion.
"These will dampen him chemically," Brandt captured his eyes and held them, "but... it will not last and it might make him higher than a damn kite. Half dose him, Hart."
Kyle nodded.
AP Testing loomed large in the a.m. He felt so damn bad for Caleb. Couldn't he have had something that was easier to manipulate? Controlling the dead? Raising cadavers? It was going to be a life challenge. And right in the middle of puberty.
Kyle Hart didn't have many regrets. But in this case he wanted a Do Over.
Like yesterday.
He stuffed the pills in his pulse top carrier and made his way to the house.
Sometimes decisions were based on making the best choice amongst bad ones.
The worst part of it all was he felt that it wouldn't be the first time.
*
Parker called in Chimney after the teens scattered and he was left with a zombie that wasn't his... one that had been made from the energy and life force of one of his agents.
Jeffrey didn't know it then but he'd be in a coma for the next month.
Chimney smoked. He stood, surveying the mess of the graveyard and gave Parker a critical eye. They stood in bloated silence for several minutes and finally Smoker said, "Couldn't get the kid?"
"No," Parker said.
"What in the Sam Hill is that?" he pointed a finger at the zombie cum soldier.
Parker shrugged. He didn't know but someday, it would want Caleb. Its dead eyes found Jeffrey's and moved on without interest.
Searching, always searching.
For its real master.
A kid that wasn't fifteen for a couple of months.
Fucking splendid.
Chimney slowly grinned. "That thing out there is Hart's creature?"
"Yeah."
"Well, fuck me," Smoker said, taking a drag.
Jeffrey stared at the red ember glowing softly at the tip, wanting to smash it down his throat.
Chimney looked at him. "You know, you would do well to contain your expression. Everything shows."
"Maybe I'm not trying," Jeffrey said and Smoker barked out a laugh, flinging his butt to the ground with a practiced arc where it smoldered, waiting to cause a fire.
"Let's get started," Chimney said.
Parker nodded.
They cleaned.
When the second crew arrived with the machinery necessary to remove the rotary blade that had stabbed the graveyard and the hundred million dollar specialized stealth pulse chopper remnants, Jeffrey left with what remained of his team.
The zombie soldier followed, its eyes ceaselessly churning through the darkness with a searching intensity that unnerved everyone but Smoker.
He didn't care what dead thing scuttled around. He hadn't been hired to give a shit. He was hired to clean.
And he was hell on wheels at that.
*
They watched Caleb leave the house and Ali laid her head on Kyle's shoulder.
He stroked her hair. "I've done what I can, honey."
"I knew this was a can of worms, Kyle," she whispered into his chest.
Kyle squeezed his wife tighter. There was no explanation that would make her understand that hindsight could be wished for but never used. That sometimes the best a human being on this planet could do was have the best reactions, the best intentions.
They'd have to be satisfied that they'd given him the tools necessary to cope with this unique challenge of his nature. Because it was a part of him now. There was no reversal.
No cure.
His son was a manipulator of the dead. What that would mean, and for whom... it meant different things.
For his parents it meant safeguarding and nurturing a talent that was unknown, powerful... strange.
For the Js and his future it meant friendships that were binding and lacking in prejudice.
And for those in power it might mean exploitation.
The variables were too numerous to know them all.
But Kyle did know one thing: they would watch and wait, be prepared.
Be ready.
They watched their son's silhouette until he was a dark speck of denim on the road as he crested the hill.
Then he vanished over the other side.
CHAPTER 8
1929
Maggie took a deep and shuddering breath as she straightened the tweed lapel of Clyde's Sunday best, closing the tortoiseshell buttons of his vest over the crisp white linen shirt.
The air in her lungs grew hot and painful, hitching in her body as it had each day since his death.
She still could not believe he was gone. Maggie felt like she was floating in a sea without a current and couldn't find where she belonged. Her heart hurt. She imagined all those broken pieces floating around inside her body, the sharpness tearing at the softness of her. Her soul abused and wanting.
Needing.
The coroner and morgue attendant stood stoically by as she did her useless things. None of her ministrations would bring him back from the water that had stolen his life.
But it had been the fight that had readied him for the perfect exit. He had been too injured to be a hero.
Heroes aren't made, Maggie thought, they're natural. He couldn't not be what he was. It had been one of the things that Maggie had loved so much about Clyde.
She allowed her eyes to linger over his hands that would remain forever abused and pulled a sob back into her throat while the Funeral Director, hanging in the periphery until that moment, stepped forward, giving her shoulder an awkward pat.
Maggie wanted to hop into the coffin with Clyde.
On that morbid note she extracted his pocket watch, the dull rolled gold of it glowing softly in the subdued lighting of the mortuary.
She slipped it into the vest pocket it belonged in.
But not before reading the inscription that lay etched upon its back: Your beloved, Maggie-girl.
Maggie allowed herself to be led away, one small hand covering her mouth as tears fell like hot rain, the other clutched over a belly that had not yet swollen with child.
EPILOGUE
Clyde rose from the earth like fragrant brown water, the ripples of which fell away as he came through in a languid push of warm energy that called to him.
Sung to him.
He looked around, his mind a slow-moving pond of memories and reality colliding together in a mixture of puzzle pieces that did not fit.
A young man with strange attire and unfashionably long hair stood before him and the pieces that had errantly floated but a moment before coalesced into perfect synchronicity and he knew who this one was.
A necromancer.
He also understood what he was: dead.
Clyde's next thought was of Maggie.
He swung his head, looking about him until his eyes made sense of his surroundings. He saw the year of birth and death on a grave maker that was only ten feet away.
2025, it read.
If that were the year, his Maggie was long gone.
Sadness seeped into the fog of his brain that had not thought in... decades.
But what of the babe?
All those thoughts slipped through his mind without sticking for when the boy spoke, all intellect and will bowed before the summons of him.
Clyde could feel personality within the constraints of power. All of it running off the boy like an errant tide.
Clyde was caught like a bottle in an ocean current of which he was not master.
He was slave to this one who stood before him, not yet an adult. From the looks of him, it was some time away.
Clyde answered without thinking, the word appearing in the frontal lobe of his brain automatically for his use, "Master," he breathed out of a mouth that would not work.
The boy's eyes widened and he took a step back.
Clyde moved forward.
This is what he was now.
He desperately wished for what had been.
Or an echo thereof.
Bittersweet sadness lay hold of a soul resurrected from his place of rest.
What would wipe that stain away?
Could he live again?
Did he want to?
The man that he had been clawed to the surface and demanded recompense.
The zombie that he'd become obeyed the boy.
His objective would always be freedom.
What you wished for in life, followed a person in death.
THE END
Read on for the exciting first chapter or book four, Death Screams
Chapter 1-Death Screams
Book Four of the Death Series
by Tamara Rose Blodgett
Death Screams
Book Four of the Death Series
Copyright © 2011-2012 Tamara Rose Blodgett
http://tamararoseblodgett.blogspot.com/
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system without the prior written permission of the publisher.
This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer's imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.
All rights are reserved.
Edited by Stephanie T. Lott
For My Other Mother:
You are the other mother I received,
The day I wed your son.
And I want to thank you Mom,
For the loving things you've done.
You've given me a gracious Man,
With whom I share my life,
You are his lovely Mother,
And I am his lucky Wife.
*
You raised in love a little boy,
And then gave me the Man.
~Anonymous
I love you~
CHAPTER 1
Jade
Agony.
Defeat.
Rage.
Indecision.
Jade trembled, her clasp once loose, now a murderous quaking that she couldn't shake. Sweat began to bead on her upper lip and she rolled the fullness of it into her teeth, biting just shy of pain, to relieve her mental pressure.
Nothing worked.
The Empath teacher, Megan Tulle said, "Come on Jade, concentrate. If you don't master this exercise, you'll never hone in on anything."
Jade's brows furrowed, she was trying as hard as she could... but the emotion... the rawness of it, was a bath of filth. She just wanted to get away. She pressed, the details finally coming to her. A boy, her age... his... identity, she couldn't place him but he was familiar to her.
Finally she gave up. "I don't know who he is!" she said, exasperated.
Tulle smiled, squeezing her shoulder gently. "It'll come, you've just got to keep working on it. The negative impressions are quite difficult to manage."
Yeah, Jade thought, shuddering.
She looked around at the rest of the class and saw various degrees of expressions. It would have been funny had she not just swept through the murky swamp of someone that was deeply disturbed. Jade rubbed her hands up and down her own arms and asked Ms. Tulle where that had come from... that hoodie she'd been touching.
"Same place we always get our stuff. Lost and found." Tulle shrugged a blouse-encased shoulder, her sensible pumps tapping to the low music she played in the class. It was pretty lame, Jade thought, classical.
Jade deliberated. No, she needed to say something. "Ah... Miss Tulle?" she asked as Tulle began to sweep through the desks, checking on the other student's Clairvoyance exercises.
She turned, cocking a brow.
"He's bad, Miss Tulle, really bad."
She frowned, moving back through the rows of desks. "What do you mean? I touched the hoodie myself and knew the tone of it but didn't sense..." she shrugged.
Jade tried to articulate her unease, "It's not normal negative impressions. It's got... a touch of death."
"Death Intent?"
Jade nodded. "Yes."
"Are you sure? Because that's reportable and with you only a sophomore...?" she let the sentence trail off significantly and Jade's shoulders slumped in defeat. She wasn't sure if she wanted someone that maybe had a super-bad day, threw on a hoodie, then lost it at one of the six high schools in Kent to get nailed by the cops.
Especially Garcia and crew.
Jade's eyes dropped. She bit her lip again. She wasn't one hundred percent sure.
She met Tulle's eyes and shook her head. Tulle gave her steady eyes back. "Maybe we gave you too intense a sample this first time, Jade. We're aware that your skill set has expanded to clairvoyance and possible precog..." The "but" hung there between them and Tulle shrugged.
Jade reached out and touched Tulle, who immediately shied away. "Sorry," Jade said. How could she forget the first rule of Empath class the prior year?
Never touch another Empath.
It was sorta like flashing your boobs in public. Jade stifled a laugh.
Tulle's eyes narrowed and Jade tried to contain herself. "What's so funny?"
"Nervous tic. I really like to laugh when things get serious," Jade said, the ghost of a smile riding her full lips. That was definitely Caleb's influence, Jade knew.
It made her warm to her toes just thinking about him, distracting her dangerously from the conversation at hand. She felt a slight flush of heat on her face and hoped her dusky coloring was sufficient camouflage.
"Well, your thought process on this sample is serious, Jade," Tulle was back to serious business again, studying Jade closely. "Some of the best Empaths in the state work closely with the police. If your clairvoyance is fine-tuned enough to pick up Death Intent then I suggest you start learning the difference. Now."
With that, Tulle turned and threw the offending hoodie back in the sample tube marked: Clairvoyance Samples.
Jade sighed. It didn't matter that she might have clairvoyance in spades. She had been pegged as a level two Empath but was now showing what the committee of "they" coined as, "expanded and related abilities." Unfortunately, when she felt violence in the samples she always had the same reaction.
Fear.
She'd lived with fear until her dad was semi-permanently gone from her life and she wasn't about to start embracing it now. Screw that noise. Caleb said she was too compassionate. She just thought she was too weak. Too scared to face someone that could be the very same flavor of attacker that she'd suffered in her childhood.
No repeats, thank you very much.
Speaking of Mr. Stud, she glanced at the pulse-clock on the wall and grabbed her backpack, nothing more than a sling, really. What did they have to carry but the required water bottle and pulse-pad? Hers was a gorgeous pack with the brand name emblazoned on the front in metallic hot pink. She knew it was an extravagance, but Caleb had seen her admiring it at the mall and snatched it up for her birthday last week and she'd been totally smitten with it.












