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The Purge of Babylon Series Box Set, Vol. 2 | Books 4-6
The Purge of Babylon Series Box Set, Vol. 2 | Books 4-6 Read online
Contents
The Completed Purge of Babylon Series
Also by Sam Sisavath
The Fires of Atlantis
About The Fires of Atlantis
Prelude
Book One
1. Keo
2. Lara
3. Gaby
4. Will
5. Gaby
6. Keo
7. Gaby
8. Lara
9. Will
10. Gaby
11. Keo
12. Gaby
13. Will
14. Gaby
15. Will
Book Two
16. Keo
17. Will
18. Lara
19. Will
20. Keo
21. Will
22. Gaby
23. Will
24. Lara
25. Gaby
Book Three
26. Keo
27. Will
28. Gaby
29. Lara
30. Will
31. Keo
32. Gaby
33. Will
34. Gaby
Epilogue
The Ashes of Pompeii
About The Ashes of Pompeii
Prelude
Book One
1. Keo
2. Lara
3. Will
4. Gaby
5. Lara
6. Will
7. Keo
8. Gaby
9. Will
10. Gaby
11. Will
Book Two
12. Lara
13. Keo
14. Gaby
15. Josh
16. Lara
17. Gaby
18. Keo
19. Josh
20. Lara
Book Three
21. Will
22. Gaby
23. Keo
24. Will
25. Lara
26. Will
27. Keo
28. Gaby
Epilogue
The Isles of Elysium
About The Isles of Elysium
Book One
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Book Two
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Book Three
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
The Completed Purge of Babylon Series
The Purge of Babylon: A Novel of Survival
The Gates of Byzantium
The Stones of Angkor
The Walls of Lemuria Collection (Keo Prequel)
The Fires of Atlantis
The Ashes of Pompeii
The Isles of Elysium
The Spears of Laconia
The Horns of Avalon
The Bones of Valhalla
Mason’s War (A Purge of Babylon Story)
Also by Sam Sisavath
The Road to Babylon Post-Apocalyptic Series
Glory Box
Bombtrack
Rooster
Devil’s Haircut
Black
The Distance
Hollow
Daybreak
The Ranch
100 Deep
The After The Purge: Vendetta Trilogy
Requiem
Tokens
Remains
The After The Purge: AKA John Smith Series
Mist City
Run or Fight
Shoot Last
The Allie Krycek Vigilante Series
Hunter/Prey
Saint/Sinner
Finders/Keepers
Savior/Corruptor
The Red Sky Conspiracy Series
Most Wanted
The Devil You Know
The Fall Man Post-Apocalyptic Series
The Break
Homefront
Firebase
About The Fires of Atlantis
Copyright (c) 2014 by Sam Sisavath
Separated, but not out of the fight.
Gaby has been captured by a familiar figure from her past. Some might take captivity lying down, but they aren’t Gaby.
Will and Danny are close on Gaby’s trail, but their rescue mission is detoured in a city under siege by a very dangerous new breed of ghouls. The reunited ex-Army Rangers will face their toughest fight yet if they want to get out alive.
Back on Song Island, Lara prepares for an impending attack. She receives unexpected assistance from a man named Keo, an ex-mercenary with his own agenda.
Meanwhile, the survivors’ radio broadcast has elicited surprising responses from around the globe. It might be the start of a resistance against the ghoul domination…if Lara can keep everyone alive long enough.
Where The Purge begins, the Gates hold, and the Stones crumble, the Fires will burn…
Prelude
“To any survivors out there, if you’re hearing this, you are not alone. There are things you need to know about our enemy—these creatures of the night, these ghouls. They are not invincible, and they have weaknesses other than sunlight. One: you can kill them with silver. Stab them, shoot them, or cut them with any silver weapon, and they will die. Two: they will not cross bodies of water. An island, a boat—get to anything that can separate you from land. Three: some ultraviolet light has proven effective, but flashlights and lightbulbs with UV don’t seem to have any effect. We don’t know why, so use this information with caution. If you’re hearing this message, you are not alone. Stay strong, stay smart, and adapt. We owe it to those we’ve lost to keep fighting, to never give up. Good luck.”
Book One
S.E.R.E.
1
Keo
The scar tingled whenever it got cold. And it was cold at night, even in October in south Louisiana. If he thought about something else—like Gillian, or better yet, Gillian in a bikini walking along a stretch of beach waiting for him—it was easy to forget that someone had very recently tried to carve his face like a jack-o’-lantern. The scar was a reminder of three months of running and fighting.
Remember when you didn’t give a damn about anyone but yourself?
You’re really getting soft, pal.
The earbud in his right ear clicked, interrupting the silence he had been enjoying for the last hour while waiting for darkness to fall. A voice said, “You’re putting your life in the hands of some girl you don’t know from Adam. If that doesn’t make you the dumbest man still alive, it’s gotta be pretty close.”
“You know what they say about lives,” Keo whispered into the throat mic. “The only thing certain is death and taxes. And since good ol’ Uncle Sam isn’t around anymore to collect the latter, where does that leave us?”
“You and us up a creek, San Diego.”
“So what else is new?”
“Leave the man alone with his death wish, Shorty,” a second voice said.
“We should be on Song Island right now, Zach,” Shorty said. “Wasn’t that the point of coming down here in the first place
? But instead, we’re stealing people’s silver and turning them into bullets. What a big ol’ waste of time.”
“Song Island’s not going anywhere,” Zachary said. “It’ll be there when we get there. Besides, if the lady on the radio’s right, this could change everything. We might actually be able to kill these things. What did she call them?”
“Ghouls,” Keo said.
“Sounds about right.”
“We could have at least tried this closer to the water,” Shorty said. “Safer.”
“Since when did you start playing it safe?” Keo asked.
Shorty snorted. “We should have stayed on the boat. Wait for one of them to get close to the pier and test this theory out. Coming out here is stupid, Zach.”
“We tried that last night,” Keo said.
“This is too risky…” Shorty insisted.
“Life’s a risk, especially now,” Zachary said.
Keo couldn’t help but smile to himself. Shorty called him crazy, but he wasn’t the one who had voluntarily spent his nights in the ground wearing a ghillie suit while the bloodsuckers were running around—sometimes on top of them. He had been calling them creatures, monsters, and bloodsuckers, but the woman on the radio referred to them as ghouls. He guessed it was as good a name as any.
The woman on the radio also told him silver would kill these things.
I guess we’ll find out tonight…
He focused on the creature in the center of his weapon’s optic. It had been a good nine seconds since he acquired his target and laid the red dot directly over something that used to be a forehead. It was pruned, like someone’s asshole. He shouldn’t have been able to see the creature from this distance, but there was a full moon out tonight and he had a good perch.
“You guys could have stayed on the boat,” Keo whispered. “You didn’t actually have to come out here with me. I could have done this myself.”
“Someone had to watch your ass,” Zachary said in his right ear. “You’re used to working alone, kid, but we’re not.”
“Your funeral.”
“What a nice thing to say,” Shorty said. “I should have stayed at the park. You know what’s the best thing about sleeping on a boat? Not being surrounded by a few thousand ghouls.”
“A few thousand?” You’re being overly generous there, Shorty. There’s got to be a few tens of thousands of the bloodsuckers out tonight…
“Well?” Zachary said.
“Well, what?” Keo whispered back.
“The one you got in your crosshairs right now. I assume it’s the same one I’m looking at. You going to shoot it or not?”
“Why so anxious? The two of you don’t even believe it’ll work.”
“Can you blame us?” Shorty said. “Silver bullets? Come on. That’s crazy.”
“Right. Silver bullets is crazy,” Keo said. “Because all of this is perfectly sane.”
Zachary chuckled. “He’s got you there, Shorty.”
Shorty wasn’t buying it. “I’m just saying. Why would silver bullets work when good ol’-fashioned lead don’t?”
“The lady on the radio says it works,” Keo said.
“You don’t even know who she is.”
“She sounded pretty sure of it. And she got the rest of it right. Sunlight, bodies of water… We know for a fact those work, too.”
“All right, all right,” Zachary said impatiently. “So get it over with and let’s see once and for all. I’m freezing my ass off out here, and Shorty’s all pruned up so much I might not be able to tell the difference between him and those ghouls pretty soon.”
“Just don’t accidentally shoot me in the ass,” Shorty said.
“No promises.”
“Relax,” Keo said. “You’re hiding inside the building while I’m up here on the rooftop. The only one who should be worried right now is me.”
“Don’t miss,” Shorty said. “As I recall, you’re not much of a long-distance shooter.”
“This isn’t much of a shot.”
“You hope.”
He tuned out the two men, along with the soft wind blowing through his hair and across the rooftop, scattering loose gravel around him.
Nice and slow. Breathe.
Keo tightened his forefinger against the trigger of the MP5SD. The long barrel of the submachine gun was steady against the brick edge in front of him. From his vantage point, he had a clear look at everything for a good block and a half. There were, at the moment, a handful of the creatures moving from building to building, but he didn’t have any illusions that that was the full extent of their numbers.
Where you find one, you find a hundred…or a thousand…
The one he was staring at stood underneath a streetlight. He imagined a pool of white circling the thing’s head, but of course there was no such thing. The city was pitch black at night, and had been for the last few days ever since he and Allie’s two boys arrived.
Nice and slow.
The creature was forty meters farther down the street. It wasn’t a terribly difficult shot. Your average Boot Camp graduate could have made it standing on his head with an M4 rifle. But he didn’t have a carbine. The MP5SD was a close-quarter combat weapon and was not designed for long-distance shooting.
Still, it was only forty meters. Even an up-close-and-personal shooter like him could probably make this shot.
Probably.
Breathe. Nice and slow.
Just breathe…
He squeezed the trigger and the 9mm round was away, the soft pfft! sound of the gunshot echoing slightly in the darkness, most of it muffled by the highly effective stainless steel suppressor connected to the end of the gun barrel. The noise made by the bullet casing as it ejected, then flicked through the air, before clinking on the rooftop was almost louder than the shot itself.
He watched through the scope as the creature jerked its head back and slumped to the sidewalk in a pile.
Holy shit.
“Holy shit,” Zachary repeated in his right ear.
“Sonofabitch,” Shorty said, sounding slightly breathless.
Keo pulled the submachine gun back just in case the moonlight decided to give away his position on the rooftop. Below him, the creatures were converging on the dead one, their black-skinned and gaunt forms more silhouetted shadows than actual figures. What were they thinking now? Shock? Fear? Confusion? Did they even still think at all?
“So, was it worth it coming out here tonight?” Keo whispered into the throat mic.
“Yeah, yeah,” Zachary said. “Stop gloating and get back down here before they spot you.”
Keo grinned, got up, and moved across the rooftop, keeping his profile as low as possible by bending at the waist. He snatched up his pack along the way, very aware of the crunch-crunch of his boots against the loose gravel floor. He slung the MP5SD as he reached the stairwell door and pulled it open, careful not to make a sound—or more than necessary, anyway, since it was impossible to be completely silent these days—and slipped inside.
He flicked on a small LED flashlight to navigate his way down the enclosed room, the only noise the soft tap-tap of his boots against concrete. He fought against the instinct to turn and flee when faced with darkened corners. Not too much, though; that instinct was what had kept him alive all these months, and it didn’t pay to water it down.
He flicked off the flashlight and entered the fifth floor through another door.
Zachary and Shorty were exactly where Keo had last seen them—still crouched at the window on the far side, peering through night-vision binoculars at the streets below. Zachary’s beaten and well-used Browning BAR rifle rested against the windowsill, while Shorty’s Winchester rifle was on the floor within easy reach. Both men wore jeans and black shirts, far removed from their ghillie suits and Robertson Park.
Chilly air filtered in through some of the broken windows up and down the floor, including the one in front of Zachary and Shorty. The office building was nestled in the hear
t of downtown Lake Dulcet, and in the daylight, it looked hauntingly abandoned like all the rest around it. The place didn’t look any better at night, but it was one of the few large structures that hadn’t revealed any signs of ghoul occupancy. It also had everything he needed, including a tall enough perch with an easy view of the area and a place to shoot from that couldn’t be traced back. Or at least, he hoped not.
“Silver bullets. Now I’ve seen everything,” Zachary said, looking over his shoulder at Keo. He was in his forties, with a thick patch of beard and a face, like Keo’s and Shorty’s, that hadn’t seen a decent soap or shower in weeks. “Maybe we should call you Tonto from now on.”