The Purge of Babylon Series Box Set, Vol. 3 | Books 7-9 Read online




  Contents

  The Completed Purge of Babylon Series

  Also by Sam Sisavath

  The Spears of Laconia

  About The Spears of Laconia

  Book One

  1. Frank

  2. Gaby

  3. Lara

  4. Keo

  5. Gaby

  6. Lara

  7. Gaby

  8. Keo

  9. Gaby

  10. Frank

  Book Two

  11. Gaby

  12. Keo

  13. Gaby

  14. Frank

  15. Keo

  16. Lara

  17. Gaby

  18. Keo

  19. Lara

  20. Gaby

  Book Three

  21. Keo

  22. Gaby

  23. Keo

  24. Frank

  25. Keo

  26. Gaby

  27. Keo

  28. Gaby

  29. Keo

  Epilogue

  The Horns of Avalon

  About The Horns of Avalon

  Prologue

  Book One

  1. Keo

  2. Lara

  3. Gaby

  4. Keo

  5. Gaby

  6. Keo

  7. Lara

  8. Gaby

  9. Frank

  Book Two

  10. Lara

  11. Gaby

  12. Lara

  13. Gaby

  14. Lara

  15. Gaby

  16. Lara

  17. Gaby

  18. Frank

  Book Three

  19. Keo

  20. Lara

  21. Keo

  22. Gaby

  23. Keo

  24. Lara

  25. Keo

  26. Lara

  27. Keo

  28. Gaby

  Epilogue

  The Bones of Valhalla

  About The Bones of Valhalla

  Acknowledgements

  Book One

  1. Lara

  2. Will

  3. Gaby

  4. Lara

  5. Will

  6. Lara

  7. Gaby

  8. Lara

  Book Two

  9. Keo

  10. Gaby

  11. Lara

  12. Keo

  13. Gaby

  14. Lara

  15. Gaby

  16. Keo

  17. Lara

  18. Keo

  19. Lara

  20. Gaby

  21. Keo

  22. Will

  Book Three

  23. Keo

  24. Gaby

  25. Lara

  26. Keo

  27. Gaby

  28. Keo

  29. Will

  30. Keo

  31. Will

  32. Lara

  Epilogue

  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 Spears of Laconia

  Copyright (c) 2015 Sam Sisavath

  Sometimes you have to make a stand.

  They’ve been relentlessly hounded ever since The Purge decimated the world, and every day since has been a struggle to stay one step ahead of the enemy.

  Keo has returned, claiming to have information that can turn the tide of war against the ghouls. Lara wants nothing more than to strike back, but she has other problems: Will has yet to make contact, and a team she’s sent on an important mission has gone off the radar.

  Meanwhile, Texas becomes a battlefield as a new force rises to challenge the rule of the ghouls and their human collaborators. Led by a mysterious leader, this new threat has the firepower to cripple the enemy, but their cure might be worse than the disease.

  Caught between two destructive forces, Lara, Keo, and their friends will have to make a choice—fall in line or forge their own path—before the decision is made for them.

  A year after The Purge, any chance of victory will rest on the tips of the Spears, and those fearless enough to wield them…

  Book One

  Rest Your Weary Head

  1

  Frank

  “You can’t win.”

  He ignored the voice. It had become easier with time, and like everything else about his new existence—this thing he called life after death (Re-life?)—it was about balancing acceptance with resistance, trying to hold onto the past while not neglecting the present. Because the here and now was where the danger lurked; it was also here that the answer to the future was within his grasp.

  “You must know that by now. After all you’ve seen, all you’ve learned.”

  There was something odd about the voice these last few weeks, a guarded hesitation that hadn’t been there when it first spoke to him in the early days. It wasn’t fear—no, he wouldn’t go that far—but it didn’t sound nearly as certain as it once had been, either.

  “She understood. Why did you think she came over? She opened the door, remember?”

  Yes, he remembered. Kate had opened the door, dooming them. Almost.

  Whatever happened to Kate?

  Oh, that’s right. He had killed her, that night outside the gas station. How long ago now? He couldn’t remember at the moment, but it would come to him. It always did, eventually.

  “Talk to me.”

  It was growing annoyed, the warning tone of a parent cajoling an uncooperative child while at the same time letting him know that it was losing patience. It wanted him to respond, because that was how it would track him. It had taken him a long time to learn how to erect the barrier inside his mind. But he had adapted. He always did.

  Letters. An acronym. SE…something.

  Memories came and went, sometimes garbled, other times clear as the crystal blue of her eyes, the glint of the sun against her blonde hair.

  It helped to think of her. To concentrate on the smoothness of her skin. He longed to touch her again, to press against and taste her lips...

  “Whatever it takes,” he had said, “whatever happens, you won’t have to face another night alone.”

  He’d said that to her, one of many unkept promises that haunted his nights and terrorized his days. He
’d failed her then, but he could make up for it. He could save her; save everyone.

  And all they had to do was find him.

  Mabry.

  He was the key. The beginning and the end. He was the voice in all their heads. In his head.

  Mabry was the one constant. He was the eternal. Everywhere, and nowhere.

  “I’ll find you,” Mabry said to him now inside his head. “You can’t run forever.”

  He focused on the surrounding blackness, on the things that moved and thrived within the endless folds of darkness that he wouldn’t have been able to see before. They were out there, swarms of them, clear as day—even though he had forgotten what day looked like, or the warmth of the sun against his skin.

  They had been on his trail for months now, but their pursuit had increased in intensity in just the last few weeks. It was as if Mabry knew what he was trying to do. Was that possible? Were there holes in his barrier that he hadn’t detected? Was Mabry burrowing around inside his mind this very second?

  No. He couldn’t afford this right now, because doubt was the enemy. He had to forge ahead, follow the original plan, because there was no victory without a plan…Z?

  It came from somewhere in the recesses of his mind, deep, deep down in that place where pieces of his past slumbered, waiting to be resurrected.

  Something about plans. Letters. A through Z…

  He shook the jumbled thoughts away. It would come to him later.

  Back to the present. Back to the now.

  He could smell them all the way up here, the stench of their existence carried upward by the breeze that washed across all the rooftops from the ocean beyond the city limits. He could almost taste it, the bitter salt water against the tip of his tongue, sending strange sensations (fear?) through every inch of his body.

  Their dark shapes vanished and reappeared out of office buildings, stores, and apartments. They were little more than tiny dots, like insignificant ants against the moonlit night. He had higher ground and could glimpse the entire city from up here. Safe on his perch, though he knew very well he would never be entirely safe. None of them were, so long as he was out there.

  Mabry.

  He was the key. The everything and the nothing, the beginning and the end; at once nowhere, and everywhere…

  A soft click as the man came out of the rooftop access door and moved across the gravel floor toward him. The attempt at stealth was laudable, but he might as well be dropping firecrackers with every footstep. That, and the aroma of medical ointment over old wounds was impossible to ignore.

  The rustling of a thick jacket as the man lay down on his stomach next to him and peered off the edge of the rooftop with a pair of night-vision binoculars. Mist formed in front of his partly covered face with every word, the taste of beef jerky still lingering on his lips even though the man probably couldn’t smell it.

  But he could smell it just fine, just as he could hear conversations multiple floors below or above him, or feel the rough or smooth texture of things without touching them. Everything was hyper-realized, all his senses razor sharp. They were the gifts that came with the curse, that made him more than what he was, though he would forego them all without hesitation if it meant he could be what he once was.

  “Can you see them?” the man asked. “They were supposed to have arrived by now.”

  “No,” he hissed.

  He hated having to talk, hated the noise that came out with every single word. They were just another reminder of what he was. As a result, he tried to say as little as possible, which was difficult because communication with the man was necessary.

  “Can you see that far?” the man asked.

  “No.”

  “I thought you had super everything. I guess laser beams are out of the question, huh?”

  He didn’t bother to answer that one.

  “You ever get cold?” the man asked.

  “No.”

  “I guess you wouldn’t. Being both hot and cold. How does that even work, anyway?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “You ever think about it?”

  “No.”

  It was a lie. He often thought about what the transformation had done to him, but it always ended in frustration. He knew that it did things to him at a cellular level, but the details were beyond his understanding. He was a grunt before, and he was one now. Maybe she would know. Maybe he could ask her when he finally saw her again.

  The man adjusted his position, his clothes scratching against the rooftop. “Looks like a party down there. How many?”

  “Too many.”

  “How the hell do they keep finding us?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “You?”

  “Maybe.”

  “Or us?”

  “Maybe…”

  The man pushed himself up into a sitting position, then opened a pouch along his cargo pants and took out an almost empty bag of beef jerky. He pulled out a stick and chewed (too loud) on it for a moment.

  The stink of preserved meat made his nostrils twitch and reminded him that he no longer yearned for food as he once had. There was enough blood (Mabry’s) flowing through him that he could survive for months, maybe even years. When he did thirst, it was easily satisfied with animal blood. Two cows in Louisiana, a pair of horses in Texas…

  “You thought this through?” the man said after a while. “You’re not who you once were, you know. What’s to stop the Ranger from shooting first and listening to you never?”

  “You’ll convince them.”

  “I was afraid you’d say that.” A brief pause, with only the man’s soft breathing and calm heartbeat from under his clothes to fill the void. “Did you ever wonder that maybe it’s better for her—for all of them—if they stayed away from Texas?”

  “She has to know...”

  “So you keep saying, but she’s not the woman you remember.” Another pause. “I’m just saying, this reunion might not work out the way you hope.”

  Another stick of jerky, followed by crunching and swallowing.

  He looked down at the silhouetted forms racing back and forth below. They were free to roam and explore, to search every hole for him. But, like him, they would soon have to seek shelter, because the sun would be here.

  How long had it been since he’d seen the sun? Months. It had been months, even though it felt like centuries.

  “You miss it, don’t you?” the man asked.

  “Yes.”

  “You ever tempted to just say ‘Fuck it,’ and step into the light, so to speak?”

  Tempted? Yes. It was worse in the early days, like an itch he couldn’t scratch, a siren’s call beckoning him to let it all go, to let her go. But he couldn’t. He had failed to keep his promises, but he could still save her, even if it meant prolonging this miserable existence.

  “Whatever it takes,” he had said, “whatever happens, you won’t have to face another night alone.”

  “No,” he hissed.

  “I don’t believe you,” the man said.

  “Believe what you want.”

  “Gee, thanks, I’ll do that.”

  Another click as the woman came out to join them. He had smelled her when she was still in the stairwell and heard her soft, careful footsteps from five floors down. Her heartbeat accelerated slightly under her winter clothing as she emerged into the open night, but he knew it wasn’t the cold air—it was the sight of him.

  It was why he wore the trench coat when he was around them, with the hoodie covering most of his face, only his eyes peering out from under the frayed brim. It seemed to work with the man, but then the man was an odd one. Weeks later, and the woman was still trying to get used to being around him.

  “Did they show up yet?” she whispered to the man. He didn’t know why she was whispering. Up here, the black eyes wouldn’t be able to hear them anyway.

  “Don’t know,” the man said.

  “He can’t see the ocean from here?”
<
br />   “Apparently he can’t see that far.”

  “Hunh.”

  “What I said.”

  “What about our other friends?”

  “I don’t think they’re going anywhere anytime soon, but they’re definitely tracking us.”

  “How?”

  “Haven’t figured that part out yet.”

  “Well, let me know when you do.”

  “That might take a while.”

  “Goes without saying.”

  The man snorted. “Anything going on downstairs?”