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Wall: A Post Apocalyptic/Dystopian Adventure (The Traveler Book 3)

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by Tom Abrahams




  WALL

  A Post-Apocalyptic/Dystopian Adventure

  The Traveler Series Book Three

  Tom Abrahams

  A PITON PRESS BOOK

  WALL

  The Traveler Series Book Three

  © Tom Abrahams 2016. All Rights Reserved

  Cover Design by Hristo Kovatliev

  Edited by Felicia A. Sullivan

  Proofread by Pauline Nolet

  Formatted by Stef McDaid at WriteIntoPrint.com

  This book is a work of fiction. People, places, events, and situations are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or historical events is purely coincidental. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author and publisher.

  http://tomabrahamsbooks.com

  CLICK HERE TO JOIN THE PREFERRED READERS CLUB

  WORKS BY TOM ABRAHAMS

  SPACEMAN: A POST-APOCALYPTIC/DYSTOPIAN THRILLER

  (coming November 2016)

  THE TRAVELER POST-APOCALYPTIC/DYSTOPIAN SERIES

  HOME

  CANYON

  WALL

  MATTI HARROLD POLITICAL CONSPIRACIES

  SEDITION

  INTENTION

  JACKSON QUICK ADVENTURES

  ALLEGIANCE

  ALLEGIANCE BURNED

  HIDDEN ALLEGIANCE

  PERSEID COLLAPSE: PILGRIMAGE SERIES NOVELLAS

  CROSSING

  REFUGE

  ADVENT

  Contents

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

  CHAPTER THIRTY

  CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

  CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

  CHAPTER FORTY

  CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

  CHAPTER FORTY-TWO

  CHAPTER FORTY-THREE

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

  AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER: THE NEXT BIG ADVENTURE.

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  For Don

  Ching Ching.

  “We shall draw from the heart of suffering itself the means of inspiration and survival.”

  —Winston Churchill

  CHAPTER ONE

  OCTOBER 25, 2037, 2:00 AM

  SCOURGE +5 YEARS

  PALO DURO CANYON, TEXAS

  Dragging a fresh corpse across the canyon’s floor wasn’t part of the plan. Not much that had happened in the week since he’d arrived had gone as Charlie Pierce expected, but there was a job to do.

  Regardless of the obstacles or the unforeseen circumstances, Pierce had to deliver. General Roof was relying on his surveillance for the coming assault.

  Pierce was bent over at the waist, slogging backwards on his heels as he pulled the body through brush, over rock, and across dry creek beds. He didn’t know how far he’d have to go to find the right spot to dump the man he was forced to execute. He’d know it when he found it.

  Lightning flashed in the sky above, illuminating the steep, jagged walls of the canyon. Thunder followed and reverberated as it traveled the wide valley of Palo Duro. Pierce stopped and dropped the body. He stood erect and put his hands on his hips. He was winded and, despite near freezing temperatures, was sweating through his shirt. He could feel the perspiration chill as it dripped from the nape of his neck down his back.

  Another fork of light jabbed the black sky, pulsing as the thunder cracked and rumbled before the afterglow was gone. The storm was getting closer.

  Pierce wondered if the turn in the weather was a good thing. A heavy rain would wash away the impression of the body from having pulled it through the dirt.

  He’d snapped the man’s neck during a brief struggle. The man, a sentry for the Dwellers, had asked too many questions. He’d pressed too hard about Pierce’s intentions. Although Pierce had tried to talk his way out of the predicament, it hadn’t worked.

  Pierce had found a communications bunker on the canyon’s floor. It was two miles from the Dwellers’ central encampment.

  The bunker wasn’t much more than a grotto nature had carved into the mesa walls. There were several two-way radio base stations, their orange displays casting a warm, fire-like glow on the cave’s pale walls. It was the rumble and hum of a generator that had led Pierce to the grotto. Sound traveled in the desert night, and the rumble was unmistakable from a half mile away.

  A thin, camouflaged wire serving as an antenna extension ran up the steep wall as far as Pierce had been able to see in the dark. The Dwellers’ communication system was a fortunate but critical find for the spy. If he couldn’t disable the two-way system as the attack occurred, he could at the very least relay frequencies to the Cartel so they could monitor the Dwellers’ tactical positions. The sentry had surprised him as he was checking those frequencies.

  “Hey,” the sentry had called out from beyond the bunker’s entrance, his voice echoing inside the small cave. “What are you doing? You’re not supposed to be in there.”

  “I just stumbled in here,” Pierce had lied. “I was out for a walk…”

  The sentry had stepped into the cave, aiming a penlight at Pierce’s face. It had been otherwise dark save the glowing green and blue lights on the two-way transmitters. “It’s two o’clock in the morning.”

  “Yeah.” Pierce had shrugged before making his deadly move. Now he found himself dragging a body along the canyon floor.

  The canyon was immense in size. It ran seventy miles long and, at its widest, twenty miles across. Its walls stretched skyward close to nine hundred feet from the floor. Pierce had learned in his brief stay that the Dwellers were experts at navigating and protecting it. Pierce had done everything he could to soak in as much information as possible. He’d listened to conversations, observed patterns of movement and behavior, and he’d absorbed the bizarre philosophical bent of the bellicose pacifists who gave themselves Hindi names in a freakish ritual that, to Pierce’s limited theological education, bore no resemblance to Hinduism.

  Pierce had done his job invisibly until he’d killed the sentry. He’d performed exactly as the general had instructed.

  “Be a fly on the wall,” General Roof had said the night before he put him in the Jones. “Learn as much as you can about how they work. Then, when we attack, damage whatever defensive systems you can and run.”

  They were broad orders with little assurance of survival. Pierce gladly accepted the challenge. He had no family. He’d grown tired of his monotonous and sour post-scourge exi
stence. This was an adventure with the promise of greater things to come should he succeed and live.

  Pierce blinked against another flash of lightning and shivered at the first icy drops of rain that smacked against his head and shoulders. The storm was coming.

  He was running out of time to dispose of the body in a way that made the sentry’s death look like an accident. He needed to finish the job and return to the camp before anyone knew he was missing.

  Pierce looked around at his surroundings. He couldn’t see much beyond a few feet except when the lightning flashed. He decided this spot was as good as any. The ache in his lower back made the choice as much as his brain.

  He lifted up his shirt and reached into his baggy, sweat- and dirt-stained pants. Strapped to his leg was a gift General Roof had given him. He flipped it open and pressed a series of numbers before pulling the satellite phone to his ear. It took a couple of minutes for the satellite to acquire his signal. When it did, he heard a series of warbling rings.

  The general answered with a voice more gravelly than usual. “It’s two in the morning,” he said.

  The rain was intensifying. The drops were heavier and equally as cold. Pierce wiped the water from his eyes. “I found their communications hub. They’re working with two-way radios. I’ve got the frequencies.”

  “Go ahead,” said the general. “Give them to me.”

  “Four sixty-seven point fifty-eight seventy-five,” Pierce answered. “Four sixty-two fifty-eight seventy-five. Four four six zero zero and four forty-six five.”

  “Only four frequencies?”

  “That I could tell.”

  “So they’ve got a two-mile range.”

  “I don’t know.”

  “And they’re operational?”

  Pierce squatted, resting his weight on his heels. He shielded his face from the rain and tried to cup the phone tight to his ear. The rain was making it difficult to hear. “What?”

  “They’re operational?”

  “They seem to be,” said Pierce. “They’ve got a generator charging the batteries.”

  The signal was beginning to weaken. “Are they onto you?”

  Pierce turned his back to the gusts of wind blowing through the canyon. “No.”

  “You sure?”

  “I had to kill a guy,” Pierce admitted. His body involuntarily trembled from the cold.

  “That changes things.”

  “I’ll be f-f-fine,” Pierce stammered. His jaw was beginning to ache from his chattering teeth. The temperature had dropped what felt like fifteen degrees in a few seconds. The rain was beating down, slapping Pierce’s neck and arms with a cold sting.

  The general’s voice was hollow and digitally distorted. “Hello?”

  Pierce pulled the phone from his ear and looked at the signal. It was nonexistent. He pressed a button to end the call, wiped the screen with the tail of his shirt, and stood to stuff it back into his pants.

  “Pierce?” a voice called from behind him.

  Pierce spun as thunder shuddered through his shivering body. A flash of lightning revealed a dark figure standing a few feet from him. Pierce couldn’t make out the man’s features, but he knew who it was and saw the gun in his hand.

  “What are you doing, Pierce?” Marcus Battle asked the question as if he already knew the answer.

  Pierce balled his hands into fists. He set his feet shoulder width apart and braced himself for the coming confrontation. “What do you think I’m doing?” he asked, the rain spilling into his eyes as he tried to focus on Battle’s right hand.

  “Helping the Cartel.”

  Pierce laughed. “You’re quick on the uptake,” he said. “I’ve been helping the Cartel since you chose to take me from the Jones. You’re not nearly as smart as you think you are.”

  “You were a plant.”

  “Something like that.”

  Battle waved his weapon at the body on the ground. “And you killed this Dweller here?”

  Pierce had his eyes on the gun. “Something like that.”

  “Just killed him. No reason.”

  Pierce shuddered against the cold. Rain sprayed from his lips as he spat. “Who the hell are you to judge which side is right and which is wrong? You’re a homeless vigilante. You—”

  The single shot from Battle’s nine millimeter was hidden by the throaty roar of thunder rolling through the gypsum, shale, and sandstone walls, but it traveled straight into Pierce’s open mouth and dropped him where he stood.

  “Homeless vigilante?” asked Battle. He stepped toward the pair of bodies on the flooding canyon floor and crouched down. He looked into Pierce’s eyes. “Something like that.”

  CHAPTER TWO

  OCTOBER 25, 2037, 3:00 AM

  SCOURGE +5 YEARS

  PALO DURO CANYON, TEXAS

  Battle tossed the satellite phone onto the wood-planked table in front of Juliana Paagal. It slid to the edge and came to a rest between her elbows. Paagal was leaning forward, her chin resting on the knuckles of her folded hands.

  She was a regal woman who carried herself with quiet dignity. Her ink-black short hair gave her a youthful appearance that belied her age. Her coffee-colored skin blended with the light brown sleeveless top hanging on her narrow shoulders.

  Paagal, as she’d asked Battle to call her, had welcomed the weary travelers without question. She trusted fellow Dweller Baadal’s judgment as her own.

  She and Battle were alone in her large ten-person tent. The rain was constant and deafening against the tent’s red nylon walls. There was a lone light hanging from the center pitch of the large space Paagal called her home. A bare mattress and lumpy feather pillow sat atop a futon in one corner, a threadbare wool sofa in another. An orange extension cord snaked its way across the dirt floor and provided enough electricity to power the light and a hot plate perched on one side of the table.

  “So you were right,” she said, her ice blue eyes staring unblinkingly at Battle without lowering them to look at the satellite phone. “He was a spy.”

  “I apologize for bringing him here,” said Battle. “It’s my fault.”

  Paagal shook her head and smiled. Her eyes narrowed as she spoke. “It was not your fault, Marcus. I am the one who allowed you here. The blame rests with me.”

  “He killed one of your sentries,” said Battle. “It happened inside a communications bunker a couple of miles from here. I wasn’t trailing close enough to stop him.”

  “Ahhh,” she said, lowering her arms and nodding. “That would be Sahaayak. He was a good helper. We will miss his kindness and his soul.”

  Battle nodded at the phone. “Take a look at that,” he said. “Pierce used it to call the Cartel. I’m guessing he was giving them intelligence about your two-way radio system.”

  The smile evaporated from Paagal’s face. “Where is Pierce?” she asked. “I can ask him directly what he was doing. I’d rather not make any assumptions.”

  Battle hesitated and bit the inside of his cheek. “He’s dead.”

  Paagal cupped a hand behind her ear, catching the large wooden hoop hanging from the lobe. “He’s what?”

  The slap of the rain on the nylon made it hard to carry on a conversation, especially given that Battle didn’t really want Paagal to hear him. “I killed him,” he said above the din.

  Paagal nodded. “I see.”

  “I shot him. His body is next to Saya—”

  Paagal spoke slowly, a syllable at a time. “Sa-ha-a-yak.”

  “Sahaayak,” Battle said. “They’re maybe a quarter mile from the bunker.”

  “Well—” Paagal sighed “—I’ll go ahead and make an assumption then. I’ll assume your life was in danger and you had no choice but to defend yourself. Otherwise, killing Pierce would have been a reckless and cruel act unbefitting a man who, up until now, I’ve given great respect. You’re former military. You know the value of a prisoner who has information to impart voluntarily…or involuntarily, especially given all of the e
xtra Cartel patrols we’ve spotted nearing the rim.”

  Battle pulled out a chair and sat down at the table across from Paagal. He leaned in, his forearms resting on the rough-hewn wood. “My life wasn’t in danger. I wish I could say it was self-defense. I think I lost that impulse-control mechanism a while ago.”

  Paagal leaned back in her chair and folded her long, lean arms across her chest. Her biceps flexed as she adjusted herself. “As you judged Pierce, I should not judge you,” she said with more than a hint of irony. “We all learn to function, to cope in different ways. Yours is to kill at the hint of a threat. I see a man who struggles with his own darkness. You see the light. You want to live in the light. But the dark is more comfortable for you, so you slink into its embrace at every opportunity.”

  Battle laughed. “You were a shrink before the Scourge, weren’t you?”

  Paagal nodded. A smile spread across her face. “You might consider I am still a shrink,” she said. “Being a leader requires the effective use of psychology.”

  Battle scowled. “So what now?”

  “I suppose I should ask you that question,” Paagal said. “You arrived here a week ago. You’ve recovered from your injuries. Your woman, Lola, is—”

  “She’s not my woman,” said Battle.

  Paagal’s eyebrows arched with doubt. She raised her hands in surrender. “Whatever you say. Your friend Lola is again walking without a limp. Her son seems healthy.”

  “Your point?”

  “We’ve not discussed your plans,” she said. “You are our guests for as long as you like,” her voice lilted.

  “But…?”

  “But,” she continued, “there is a war coming. You are a soldier.”

  “I was a soldier.”

  “Semantics, Mr. Battle,” she replied. “Do you plan to help us? Our common enemy is knocking at our door.”

  Battle squeezed his eyes shut and pinched the bridge of his nose. “I’ll be honest,” he said, “I need to get to the wall.”

 

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