Book Read Free

Youngblood

Page 1

by H. Peter Alesso




  Novels by H. Peter Alesso

  Youngblood © 2018

  Dark Genius © 2017

  Captain Hawkins © 2016

  THE HENRY GALLANT SAGA

  Midshipman Henry Gallant in Space © 2013

  Lieutenant Henry Gallant © 2014

  Henry Gallant and Warrior © 2015

  Commander Henry Gallant © 2016

  Youngblood

  A Post-Apocalyptic Thriller

  H. Peter Alesso

  This is a work of fiction. All characters

  and events portrayed in this book are

  fictional, and any resemblance to real

  people or incidents is purely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2018 H. Peter Alesso

  All rights reserved.

  hpeteralesso.com

  Printed in the United States of America.

  No part of this publication may be

  reproduced stored in a retrieval system,

  or transmitted, in any form or by any

  means without prior permission in

  writing from the publisher.

  VSL Publications

  Pleasanton, CA 94566

  videosoftwarelab.com

  Edition 1.00

  ISBN-13: 978-1976456xxx

  ISBN-10: 1976456xxx

  ∞

  Not with a bang but a whimper.

  The Hollow Men

  T. S. Elliot

  CONTENTS

  Chapter 1 Death’s Dream Kingdom

  Chapter 2 Forsaken

  Chapter 3 A Paisley Sky

  Chapter 4 Cursed

  Chapter 5 Jamestown

  Chapter 6 On the Trail

  Chapter 7 The Fox

  Chapter 8 Kira

  Chapter 9 Wall of Fire

  Chapter 10 Vacillating

  Chapter 11 Suspicion

  Chapter 12 Hunting

  Chapter 13 Confession

  Chapter 14 The Dark Web

  Chapter 15 Grand Opening

  Chapter 16 Quiet Is Good

  Chapter 17 Six Years Old

  Chapter 18 Yosemite

  Chapter 19 The End of Summer

  Chapter 20 Loci

  Chapter 21 Deep in the Bowels

  Chapter 22 Mansion on a Mountain

  Chapter 23 Escape

  Chapter 24 Unforgiveable

  Chapter 25 Access

  Chapter 26 Command

  Chapter 27 Blackheart

  Chapter 28 Charge

  Chapter 29 Surrender or Die

  Chapter 30 To the Death

  Chapter 31 Takeoff

  FROM THE AUTHOR

  Chapter 1

  Death’s Dream Kingdom

  Youngblood gasped, “I can’t breathe.”

  His heart pounded against hollow lungs. Fingers stretched wide and then clenched. Lungs strained to inhale the last of the thin air but drew in only an empty breath.

  The last faint echoes of whining machinery died away while the fading glow of emergency lights sputtered out.

  Where am I?

  Lying on his back in pitch black, he reached up and touched a smooth encapsulating surface without seams or latches.

  A coffin?

  Banging against the case, a raspy cry escaped, “Helppp.”

  Fingers scratched until they bleed, fists smashed until they bruised.

  “AUUGGH!”

  His face was a bulging purple mask with a protruding red tongue. Gory hands wiped away oozing goo dripping from his nose. Each passing second was a countdown toward imploding lungs.

  Coma and death were fast approaching—causing a spasm of raw cold fear—a deep primal terror like the first great scare a child experienced when his nightmare turned ‘real’ and the claws of a hideous monster squeezed his throat.

  “Air! I’ve got to have air,” he croaked.

  Punch, kick, again and again.

  CRACK!

  A small fissure created a loud hiss as air trickled into the confined space.

  Finally able to inhale, Youngblood’s chest rose and fell with each precious breath.

  The visceral threat of suffocation lessened, but the injuries continued to throb.

  He pulled out some of the needles that feathered his body.

  It’s a hibernation chamber.

  They were supposed to revive him when they found a cure.

  Did they find a cure?

  For a moment, he opened his mouth and raised his eyebrows, then . . .

  Stupid! Stupid!

  This wasn’t a normal recovery. Something went wrong.

  Why isn’t there an alarm and attendants?

  They might all be dead.

  He tried to break out of the case. The straining structure moaned as he pressed against it, but his debilitated joints and impaired muscles lacked the strength to free him.

  As he welcomed the incessant wheezing of cool air filtering into the cocoon, he waited, but no one came.

  The only sounds of activity were the sparks of electrical wires far off in the distance.

  With stiff fingers, he massaged his sore arms and legs, but all his efforts to break out of the coffin-like container failed.

  He dug his fingernails into his palms to escape the deadness that gnawed inside him. Dark destructive thoughts flooded in. The future that was supposed to augur health had turned into a nightmare of endless suffering.

  His mind stretched back to something very painful, a filament-thin memory . . .

  I was eighteen when the debilitating effects of the illness began. Father said hibernation was the only solution. I trusted him. Now I realize he just wanted to be rid of me.

  Lingering on the ghost-like image as it waxed and waned, he wished it all could have turned out differently. It was the end of hope.

  The chamber grew claustrophobic.

  I’m done.

  Closing his eyes.

  It’s over.

  He let the minutes pass, hoping the pain would end, wishing he would end . . . but neither did.

  Finally, he opened his eyes and took a deep breath. Focusing his thoughts, he pushed back against the black gloom.

  No! I won’t give up. I’m going to survive. Somehow.

  But it was undeniable, he needed immediate medical aid, or this chamber would become a coffin.

  He screamed while he yanked out the rest of the needles. He cast away the trailing tubes that had sustained his life for . . .

  How long?

  No way of telling.

  You can do this. You must.

  He pressed against the case once more. It creaked and groaned like a living thing, but it took many more tries before, at last, it broke open enough to allow him to squeeze out. Leaning over the edge, he shifted his weight to let it carry him over the side. Hitting the floor with a thump, he began to crawl. It took an hour to reach the wall a mere twenty yards away. There were other chambers along the way, but none appeared operational.

  “Is anyone there?”

  There was never a reply. In a moment of raw honesty, he understood.

  No one else escaped.

  Moving along the wall until he reached a door, he managed to stand and press a button. It slid open.

  He tried to walk, but his legs were unwilling. Leaning against the wall, he let his body slide down to the floor like a sack of sand.

  There was a dim glow of light at the end of the hall, but crawling took an interminable effort. The light was coming from a control console inside a small room. The dark surroundings offered little information about the devices inside. Exhausted, unable to go farther, he hoisted himself into a chair and listened to the rhythmic sound of blood drops smacking onto the floor like a drum beating Taps.

  As his face blanched, he trembled, became dizzy and nauseous, his tu
nnel vision narrowed, the room blackened and spun . . . and then . . . nothingness . . .

  Chapter 2

  Forsaken

  Youngblood woke in a cold sweat, his head throbbed but the room had stopped spinning. He was still sitting at the dysfunctional control panel though only a few dials remained lit. As a computer science major, he thought he should make sense of them, but they were as foreign as a Gödel puzzle.

  Damn!

  His fist smashed into the console.

  HUMMM.

  He heard the distinct sound but couldn’t pinpoint its location.

  With every sense alert, he sat waiting . . .

  “Hello? Is anyone there?”

  The cold dark concrete walls and poured concrete floor echoed his words but offered no response.

  There were a couple of doors further down the hall.

  He stood up. Simply stretching his body took all his effort. His entire body hurt, but slowly he managed to shuffle toward the doors.

  The first door was locked.

  The next one was too.

  He twisted around a corner, but a misstep caused him to fight his own momentum to forestall crashing headfirst into the unyielding wall. The impact to his shoulder knocked him back and whirled him around. Reaching out, he grasped a handle and yanked it to steady himself.

  The door opened.

  A storage closet?

  Catching his breath, he strained his eyes against the dark shadows to identify several large cardboard boxes, some burlap sacks, and a few wooden crates. The largest box was next to a cabinet with symbols he didn’t recognize. Yet, a Red Cross sign was visible on the furthest crate. He stretched his hands toward the old dirt covered wooden crate and pried open the thick heavy lid with his fingers.

  “Argh.”

  The cry of anguish was from his own mouth. He placed his suffering hands under his armpits and squeezed until the strained fingers returned to normal.

  After several minutes, he pulled the lid away and let dirt rattle down into the container. He reached inside to grab a medical package.

  Thanks.

  He used the meager emergency rations to stop the bleeding and applied analgesic wherever he could reach. The medication flowed through his veins, stifling the shock and blood loss.

  He started to relax but his parched throat cried . . . water.

  He was unable to make out the markings on the other boxes, but he opened the nearest one and groped inside for something familiar.

  No.

  Next.

  No.

  The last cardboard box . . .

  Yes. A bottle of water.

  Taking great gulps, he guzzled what seemed a treasure from an extinct world. He looked for more. There was only the one.

  He tackled another wooden crate. Inside was a flashlight, but it didn’t work. There were batteries on the bottom, but they leaked acid goop. Yet, a few seemed OK. He tried them and felt like a rich man when the flashlight lit and offer the first real peek at his surroundings.

  There was a nearby room with more defunct hibernation chambers. Another room had medical equipment for reviving patents.

  But there were no windows, anywhere.

  It’s a bunker.

  But why put hibernation chambers underground?

  Putting the puzzle aside, he dug deeper into the storage containers. There were useful items; a butane lighter, a compass, nylon line, a hatchet, a shovel, a hacksaw and lots of basic tools for repairing electrical and computer equipment.

  He found a workman’s coveralls hanging from a hook on the closet wall and a pair of large black boots.

  These will come in handy.

  He moved on and found another closet full of boxes. These were sealed with a plastic wrap, but there was no auxiliary power system visible.

  There’s got to be a communication device somewhere.

  He returned to the console and found a diagram framed on the nearby wall. It appeared to be a network of underground tunnels connecting this bunker to other bunkers annotated by an alphanumerical system. This bunker was designated HB11. Several others had similar designations, but there were also two unique identifiers, YO and SP. The HB might be for hibernation, but he had no clue what YO or SP might represent, nor could he guess how to access the network of tunnels.

  Some instruments on the console still had power. The computer system seemed functional, but there wasn’t any written material or operable viewscreen that could offer him instructions. The instruments were as complicated as a spaceship’s and when he attempted to patch into the AI system, he heard a noise.

  He held his breath.

  Is someone coming?

  A humming sound continued from a device in the next room. It was a rejuvenation machine. He had activated it with his random actions.

  I’ve got to try this.

  He climbed naked into the rejuvenation tub and opened a faucet. It filled with hot medicated elixirs. Setting the timer for two hours, he lingered while the potions treated his many superficial ailments.

  A shame this can’t cure my disease.

  He remained depressed during the rest of the treatment, but it invigorated his frail body.

  What’s next?

  He dragged his frail body about and toured the bunker, returning to the original room. The flashlight shown on fifty forsaken hibernation chambers. There was a twin room across the hall, but it too had become a graveyard.

  A tragedy. I should commemorate them . . . later.

  He considered revisiting the closets and the locked doors, but that could wait.

  He looked for more water.

  No water.

  The next decision would be critical for his survival. He wanted to use the rejuvenation machine while he restored the power and computer systems, but how long would that take? He had no food or water. Besides, even though he had been a computer whiz, this equipment was far beyond his experience.

  Questions exploded in his head like a string of fireworks.

  Should I stay here? Should I go exploring?

  Running his fingers through his long shaggy hair, he reluctantly concluded there was no choice.

  Putting on the coveralls and boots, he filled a backpack with survival items, and stuffed computer instruments and tools into his cargo pockets. Even these few items were heavy, but he was chafing to get started.

  Where are the people?

  Chapter 3

  A Paisley Sky

  “I’ve never seen a sky like this,” said Youngblood, as he climbed out of bunker’s hatch.

  He gazed at the bright sun peeking between a few windswept clouds.

  “Noon,” he mused. He let the hatch drop down and surveyed the landscape around him.

  To the east, scrub brush poked out between a few scattered pine trees. A prominent hill rose about a mile away.

  “Hmm . . . a good vantage point.”

  Birds were flying overhead, and a glimpse of motion alerted him to a nearby rodent, but there were no roads or worn paths visible.

  “There’s life, but where are the people?”

  He swung around and saw similar regions to the north and south.

  But things were far different to the west.

  Where the sky kissed the horizon, blue turned into a mosaic of red, brown, and purple swirls, and the silhouette of a city’s barebone skeleton rose in the distance like a faraway mirage.

  An acidic stench of smoke and ash invaded his nostrils forcing him to cover his mouth to suppress a spasmodic cough. A brownish yellow haze floated on the air and dark soot settled on his coveralls.

  His mouth could barely speak the words, “I can’t believe they actually did it.”

  A single tear ran down his cheek as he brushed the barren residual ash off his clothes.

  Anyway, it’s better to die in a flash . . . than suffocate.

  He licked his lips and swallowed to relieve his parched throat from the hot dry air.

  His fear . . . Where are the people?

>   Became . . . Are there people?

  Swinging the backpack over his shoulder, he faced east and started forward. A slight cooling breeze sent him on his way as he marched toward the hill. He walked only a few hundred yards before he had to stop and rest. The process repeated itself until his muscles cramped and screamed. He wiped the perspiration off his forehead with his sleeve as he passed areas of dead trees. He remained alert for a flash of color, or movement, or any sign of smoke.

  It was a grueling time-consuming struggle, but when he reached the crest of the hill, he had a clear view eastward. He gazed down upon a green valley of aspen and scrub pine bisected by a babbling river. In the distance, a jagged-reddish mountain range poked into the sky.

  There were no buildings, roads, or people—yet a faint smile darted across his lips.

  He said, “I’m going to build a fire on the riverbank before dark.”

  He was tired and hungry, and each step demanded effort from his weak and trembling legs. His sweat soaked hair hung in his face as he trod down the steep and craggy slope causing loose stones to roll ahead of him.

  “I can do this,” he repeated, time and again. Lifting his sore feet, he let his shadow point the way.

  When he reached the river, he forced his mind to concentrate on the world around him. He checked for signs of human and animal activity. Water splashed over the deeper stones that made a flue directing flow into channels that babbled away. It was cold and clear without silt or vegetation. It was all he could do to not to plunge in. He bent down and drank great gulps until finally, he sat on the shore and rested.

  Across the river, the first sounds of life stirred when a fawn leaned down to drink. A moment later, it looked up and pranced away into the brush. A muskrat skittered along the shoreline a dozen yards from him.

  There must be people.

  Upstream the river forked, and a grassy area formed an island with shallows to one side, making it easy to wade across. He splashed into the water and as he crossed, he passed a beaver mound.

  His stomach growled, and thoughts of food danced before him.

  Are there fish?

  He carved a pole from a stout branch and added a nylon line from his pack. After fashioning a hook from scrap metal, he fished until dark.

 

‹ Prev