Moira froze. ‘You dare mention
Holly stood and went to the back of Secondary, where she’d dropped two toolkits before checking over the computer systems. She picked one of them up. The Internet had drawn her in, compelled by the need to know, but now she felt was chilled by a fear of something closer.
‘Jonah’s already gone,’ Moira said.
‘What do you mean?’ Holly spun around to confront her. The woman was standing closer, frowning uncertainly as if she regretted what she’d said. She held both hands behind her back. Holly stared, but Moira gave nothing away.
‘What have you done?’ Holly asked, advancing on her. Moira backed up against the desk. The screens on the wall behind her showed a silent, unkempt Coldbrook, and Holly had a brief but startling thought:
‘Holly, I need you to sit down.’ Moira nodded at one of the chairs, then brought her left hand around from behind her back. She held a rough-handled knife.
‘What?’ Holly asked. ‘Are you
‘Not a threat.’ The other woman brought her right hand around, holding a tight coil of thin, strong twine. ‘Sit down, Holly. Please. It’s only for a while, just to ensure you don’t try to-’
Holly snatched at the twine. Moira pulled it away, and while doing so she lifted the knife in her other hand, its gleaming point catching the light from the viewing screens.
‘Please don’t fight!’ Moira said, uncertainty in her voice for the first time.
Holly lowered the tool bag slightly, swinging it by the handle and bringing it around swiftly towards Moira’s head while stepping to the left and reaching for the twine again. Moira leaned back but the bag struck her across the left cheek with a metallic
She gasped and dropped the heavy bag. It struck her right foot, and for a moment that pain was dominant. Then she felt a warm flush across her hip, and the chill wash of real agony. And blood.
Part Three
Death is nothing to us, since when we are, death has not come, and when death has come, we are not.
Thursday
1
Jonah’s head thrummed and the world swayed: someone was doing something to him, and he thought,
Jonah wondered whether the Inquisitor had ever left. That first time had been before the plague came through, and perhaps Jonah was back there now, waking from a nightmare of the End of Days and succumbing to whatever had struck him down in his sleep. The dreams had been realistic — a culmination of his secret fears and concerns over what they were doing down in Coldbrook.
But it was not the Inquisitor kneeling above him. Drake was sweating as he manipulated something on Jonah’s chest. Behind him were the casting-field generators, the network of suspended pipes glowing and sparking slightly.
He drew a deep breath and the pain seared through him.
‘I’m almost done,’ Drake said. He knew that Jonah was awake, but he hadn’t even glanced at his face. ‘Keep still, or you’ll kill us all.’
‘Almost done. . what?’ Jonah breathed. But Drake ignored him.
Jonah closed his eyes again and tried to remember: the heat and humidity of the generator room; Drake’s insistence that something had to be done, something had to stop the Inquisitors’ crusade.
And then the man’s sad expression as he’d shot him in the chest.
‘What have you done?’ he said.
‘I’ve made a trade,’ Drake said. He sighed and leaned back from where Jonah lay on the floor. He was looking him in the eye at last.
‘A trade?’ Jonah asked.
‘I’m sorry, Jonah. I’ve taken hope from you and given it to everyone else.’
‘And how have you done that?’
‘Don’t you know yet? Haven’t you worked out the only way?’ Drake was sweating, tense.
‘You’ve turned me into a weapon,’ Jonah said, beginning to understand.
‘I’ve been waiting for someone like you for years, Jonah! A final hope. I believe the Inquisitor will take you back to its own Earth to initiate you into its ways.’
Jonah touched his chest. ‘And when I’m there, I release the plague that you’ve implanted in me.’
‘You’ve seen it flitting in and out, ghostlike. I think what they do is part casting, part breach, but they travel with impunity and without fear of infection. To beat them, we have to get past that. Take the fight to their world.’
‘It won’t know what you’re doing?’
‘It’s not all-seeing, Jonah. Not everywhere all the time,’
‘You don’t know any of this for sure.’
Drake shrugged. ‘Isn’t all science a matter of best guess?’
‘No,’ Jonah said. ‘But. . that doesn’t mean you’re wrong.’ He tried to sit up, but Drake laid a strong hand on his chest.
‘Not yet,’ Drake said, hesitant. ‘So. . you’ll go? You’ll help?’
‘Have you left me with any choice?’ Jonah asked. He felt a sickening weight in his stomach, and was surprised to discover it was the fear of death. He’d never thought he would be afraid, not after seeing Wendy die, witnessing her grace and dignity. But now there was so much still undone.
‘No choice.’
‘You’ve made me a prophet of blood and fear.’
‘It’s what