The Last Soldier

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by Hawkins, Rich




  THE LAST SOLDIER

  Rich Hawkins lives in Salisbury, England, with his wife and daughter. He has several short stories published in various anthologies. ‘The Last Soldier’ is the final book in his ‘Plague’ Trilogy. The Last Plague was nominated for a British Fantasy Award in 2015.

  THE LAST SOLDIER

  RICH HAWKINS

  Copyright © 2015 Rich Hawkins

  This Edition Published 2016 by Crowded

  Quarantine Publications

  The moral right of the author has been asserted

  All characters in this publication are fictitious

  and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead,

  is purely coincidental.

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced,

  stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any

  form or by any means without the prior

  permission in writing of the publisher, nor be

  otherwise circulated in any form of binding or

  cover other than that in which it is published

  and without a similar condition including this

  condition being imposed on the subsequent purchase.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book

  is available from the British Library

  ISBN: 978-0-9932070-0-6

  Crowded Quarantine Publications

  34 Cheviot Road

  Wolverhampton

  West Midlands

  WV2 2HD

  For Sara, Willow, and Molly.

  PART ONE

  THE PLAGUE ISLES

  PROLOGUE

  The fleet of refugee boats left the beach behind and speared through the water towards the grey hulks of the waiting battleships. Florence looked back for Frank and Ralph, but there were only the swarms of infected on the beach, mired and thrashing among the remains of dead refugees. And when the immense guns of the Royal Navy opened fire she covered her ears and screamed, because she knew her dear Frank was gone.

  *

  A refugee camp on the shore of a Norwegian fjord. Canvas tents and makeshift shelters made of wood and sheets of metal. Widows and orphans, grief and desperation. Silent men smoked their last cigarettes, and rows of people waited in line for bowls of soup served by pale young men with shaved heads.

  Beyond the shore, the HMS Bulwark dwelled on the dark water. The snow-capped mountains high above the camp were grand and beautiful and reduced Florence to silent awe. The air was cold and she pulled her coat and the blanket tighter around her shoulders. Joel and Anya comforted her when she cried, and she cried many times during those early days. They drank soup from their bowls, but were still hungry. Always hungry. Second helpings were forbidden and no amount of pleading swayed the solemn-faced soldiers.

  They were traumatised, displaced people sheltering from the terror of a new world. The horror of the plague in their memories. Survivors’ guilt gnawed at their hearts. Minds numbed and broken. Withered faces. Exhaustion and despair. Some of them gathered on the shore to grieve together, while others prayed and sang hymns. Others screamed at the sky and said the names of loved ones left behind.

  *

  Latrines were dug out of the ground. The pages of books were ripped out to use as toilet paper. The smell of piss soaked into the ground. It rained most days and when it didn’t rain it snowed, and no one ever smiled because it would be obscene and there was already enough misery to be shared amongst the broken people.

  The medical station was always busy. Florence thought often of her parents and Frank. She tried to cry no more because she didn’t want Joel and Anya to see, but even when she hid her face with her hands they knew and they went to her, and Anya held her and whispered folk songs from Poland.

  And in the sky, the Plague Gods wailed mournfully.

  *

  Joel and Anya were married by an army captain in a simple ceremony just after the first Christmas at the camp, gathered on the shore as snow fell on the dark water in the silvery gleam of the moon. Joel had already thrown his crucifix necklace away and told Florence to never believe the lies of pious men.

  *

  The weather grew colder. The rations were reduced to measly handfuls. One cup of water a day. Sickness in the camp. Nightmares every night. The winter killed many, and by the end of it the population of the camp had dwindled to a third of its original number. People died in their tents while others simply followed the winding trails into the mountains and never returned.

  Joel found Anya dead by the shore one night. The place where they’d been married. He held her body and cried, cursed God and spat when he said His name. Florence stood away from them and felt such despair that she fell to her knees, put her hands to her face and started sobbing.

  The HMS Bulwark left the fjord and took the soldiers away.

  A few days later, after he’d buried his wife, Joel opened his wrists with a straight razor at the water’s edge. Florence dragged his body to Anya’s grave and it took her all of a day and most of a night to dig a hole for him. And when she was finished she slumped on the ground and passed out, and only woke when someone screamed from the far end of the camp.

  The screams never lasted long.

  She mourned Joel and Anya, as she did the others. Her parents. Frank, Ralph and Magnus. She mourned for the infected too. And afterwards she only left her tent to scavenge supplies from the scraps the soldiers had left behind.

  At least now she had extra blankets.

  CHAPTER ONE

  Florence sat in the back of the rowboat and trailed her hand in the cold, dark water. She wondered of the beasts lurking below the calm surface of the sea: squid and whales, weird fish with bulging eyes and gaping mouths; half-blind things and pale arachnids hunting in deep fathoms and oblivion black. Abyssal trenches no man had ever seen.

  The mist was all about them, obscuring the shore they approached. Florence lifted her hand from the water and dried it on her ill-fitting coat then pulled her woollen hat down over the tops of her ears. She hugged her rucksack tight to her body, and when the rowboat swayed she tried to dispel the image of something with a giant mouth hurtling upwards towards the underside of the boat.

  Morse sat at the bow, facing the shore, the rifle held across his body. He turned back to Florence and nodded. She returned the gesture because that was all she could think to do. She noticed the trembling of her legs beneath her. The fluttering in her heart only faded when she took shallow gulps of air.

  Between them, Henrik worked the oars, boots braced against the uprights, his breath like mist in the cold air and his forehead damp with sweat. He said nothing, and the only sounds were of the oars slicing the water and scraping against the rowlocks on either side.

  The shore appeared out of the mist. A grey beach and spikes of seagrass beyond. Henrik stopped rowing and turned to Morse. “I go no further.”

  Morse hefted his pack and hooked it over one shoulder. Florence glanced down at the water and shivered. Morse caught her looking.

  “It’s the shallows, Florence. Henrik wouldn’t drop us too far off shore. He’s not a complete arsehole, you know.”

  The Norwegian snorted. “Lucky I come this far, Morse. I get nothing for this but wet fucking feet and sore arms. English bastard.”

  There was a low splash as Morse jumped into the water. His face tightened at the cold as he looked at Florence. “I’ll carry you. Hurry up.”

  “I’m not scared of the water.” She stood and tottered, raising her arms for balance. Henrik offered no assistance and just watched without expression. Morse lifted her from the boat, and when he lowered her into the water it reached her knees. Her heartbeat spiked at the shocking cold. Water sprayed on her face; she spat and wiped he
r mouth. All she wanted was to get out of the water, even if the monsters waited for them on the shore.

  Morse nodded at Henrik. “Tell your captain we’re even now. And give him my regards.”

  Henrik scratched his grey beard then took the oar handles in his hands. “I will.”

  “Thank you, Henrik. Now row back to your ship before the infected bite your stupid fucking arse.”

  Henrik began rowing away, back towards the trawler waiting in the mist. Within seconds he had disappeared.

  Morse took hold of Florence’s arm and pulled her through the shallows and onto the beach. When she stumbled and fell, Morse helped her back up and brushed sand from her clothes.

  “Welcome to Scotland,” he said.

  CHAPTER TWO

  They kept low to the ground as they moved from the damp beach to a crumbling stone wall beyond the banks of seagrass. Thick mist surrounded them. They crouched. Florence gasped for breath, shaking inside her clothes. Morse slung the strap of the rifle around his neck and watched the mist move. Then he pulled the compass and map from one pocket of his tactical vest.

  “Where are we?” Florence said, keeping close to the wall. She glanced about, fretting with the straps of her rucksack. Her feet were soaking wet.

  Morse studied the map. “I think we’re a mile or two south of Eyemouth. If we were dropped in the right place, of course.”

  A slow drizzle began to fall, so Florence pulled her hood up and turned her face from the sky. “Is that good?”

  “It’s neither good nor bad. This was as far as the ship could take us from Norway. We were lucky they took us this far. It’s up to you now, Florence.”

  “I knew you were going to say that.”

  “This was your idea.”

  “I know.”

  “You ready for this?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Okay. Let’s go.”

  *

  They walked through a weed-ridden car park where someone had arranged the bones of a small animal on the cracked tarmac, and then onto a road flanked by scrubland and wire fences, some of which had collapsed during the two years since the outbreak. Morse scanned the toiling mist with his rifle and moved alongside Florence so that she was within an arm’s reach. He glanced at the girl and had a sudden feeling he was a fool for following her back to Britain. But there was nothing else to be done. Even the last outpost at Esjberg was under constant attack. He saw a future where humans were reduced to the remnants of feral tribes, hiding from the infected in dark holes and isolated hovels, the population past the point of no return for the species. And how many people were left alive? Probably not enough to start again. Perhaps it was time to accept the inevitable: the extinction of humans from the world.

  Florence stared at the sky as she walked. Morse wondered what she saw. She was not an ordinary girl. She had a gift.

  “Is this the right way?” Morse asked.

  “Don’t you trust me?”

  He wiped his mouth. “I’m not sure I trust the thing inside your head.”

  She turned and her large eyes regarded him from within rings of bruised skin. She looked tired and pitiable, wrapped up and shuddering underneath her clothes.

  “Sorry,” Morse said. “I shouldn’t have said that.”

  She faced down the road. “It’s okay. I don’t trust it either.”

  *

  They halted at a crossroads and Morse checked his watch. “We’ve got a few hours before it gets dark. We’ll have to find somewhere to stay for the night.”

  Something shrieked out in the mist. They froze. There were other sounds – mewling, wet clicking, and crying – as though a herd of animals were bogged down in treacherous marshland and couldn’t escape. Morse raised the rifle. Florence stood close to him and trembled.

  *

  The sleet fell faster and thicker as they walked, and Morse had to shield his eyes with one hand while he tried to keep watch over the road and the surrounding fields. The spiked trees were knotted black growths sprouting from the soil.

  Florence walked with her head bowed and arms folded. Such a slight form inside her oversized coat. Twin plumes of misted breath drifted from her nose. She muttered something Morse couldn’t quite hear.

  There were more sounds in the mist. The hair stood up on the back of Morse’s neck and his guts churned and reared. He looked to his right and thought he saw movement far across the field, but it was only there for a second, and he didn’t look for long because the sleet on his shoulders was pushing him down, wearing him down. The wind pulled at his body and tested his strength. He felt tired, old and worn out. Perhaps he had already lived too long in a world where untold numbers were dead. A man in his previous line of work was lucky to reach fifty, and he was a few years beyond that and still taking breath.

  He started at a sound that might have been a crow cawing from a treetop. He raised the rifle and licked water from his lips. Breathed in deep and held it until his lungs tightened. The mist muffled sounds then amplified them when it cleared for a moment to reveal old farmland being slowly retaken by nature. Fields changing to meadows of sickly-looking vegetation. Everything gone-to-seed, desolate and withered in the winter. There were no animals to be seen, and he wondered if the infected had wiped out the wildlife once the human survivors had dwindled.

  Morse stopped. It was difficult to see beyond ten yards. The wet road was cracked and swollen where tree roots had spread under the tarmac. Weeds were sprouting through the fractures.

  “We should find somewhere to shelter.”

  Florence halted beside him. “How far have we walked?”

  “Maybe a mile or two.”

  “Is that all?”

  “Afraid so.”

  “Feels like more.”

  “Always does.”

  *

  The low, blunt shape of a car appeared out of the mist, skewed across the road and blocking their path. Morse kept Florence behind him as he moved towards the vehicle with the rifle pressed to his shoulder. Then he halted and let out a slow breath that blended with the mist. When he noticed it was a Vauxhall Vectra, he snorted as he recalled he used to own one in the long ago.

  Flat tyres cracked and worn, sagging and airless. Rusted metal and flaking paint. There was a dirty handprint smeared across one of the windows. The bonnet was open and leaves and bits of straw and grass covered the exposed parts of the engine. Faint smell of oil when he lowered his head closer to the bonnet. He looked through a window and lowered the rifle.

  “Is it okay?” Florence said from back down the road. She held her gloved hands together and glanced around.

  Morse signalled her over.

  She came over and stood beside him, scrutinizing the jumble of browned human bones in the front passenger footwell. Her eyes lingered on a stained jawbone.

  “I wonder who it was,” she said.

  “It doesn’t matter. None of it matters. You know that, Florence.”

  *

  Half a mile further on, Florence stopped in the road and turned her head to the right like she was tracking something unseen through the mist. She stared for a long while, and Morse followed her gaze, but saw nothing and the mist remained undisturbed.

  As they walked onwards, Morse scanned the area behind them then faced down the road again and made sure Florence didn’t get too far ahead.

  *

  They found a dead man by the side of the road. The right side of his body was covered in blackened cysts and drooping cilia, and the skin of his right arm was peeled back to reveal a fleshy proboscis all red and slack. Its tip was needle-like. Flaps of putrefying skin covered bulging tumours. Busy teeth had been at his face and his eyes were gone. A pale, withered thing, nothing more than carrion for the scavengers, stinking of sickly sweet rot.

  Morse frowned. “Christ.”

  Florence stepped towards the body, but Morse laid a hand on her shoulder and held her back. “Leave it alone.”

  The girl stared at the man. “
Who was he?”

  “It doesn’t matter now.”

  “It matters to me.”

  Morse withdrew his hand. “Come on. Let’s find somewhere to wait out the weather.”

  “I’m sorry,” Florence said as they stepped away. And it was only when they walked down the road and she looked back that Morse realised she was talking to the dead man.

  CHAPTER THREE

  The sleet turned to rain and they crouched against a tree trunk, huddled together and keeping watch like lost soldiers of a defeated army. They stayed there for a while. The branches were bare and offered little shelter from the downpour. Florence recited a nursery rhyme as she looked out at the land. She was very pale and her bloodshot eyes never stayed on one place for long.

  Morse leant on his rifle, blowing into his hands. His boots sunk into the dirt beneath the wet layer of leaves, bark scrapings and pine needles. Florence startled him when she pointed suddenly in the direction she’d been looking.

  “There’s a house over there.”

  Morse wiped his eyes. “Where?”

  “I just saw it. Only a glimpse, but I definitely saw it.”

  Morse stared out to where she pointed, but it was impossible to see through the mist and rain that conspired against them. “How far away?”

  “Not far, I think.”

  “You’re sure?”

  She regarded him with the tired eyes of someone much older. “Would you rather stay here?”

 

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