Number of the Beast (Paladin Cycle, Book One) Read online




  Number of the Beast

  Paladin Cycle

  Book One

  Number of the Beast

  © 2014 Max Redford, Lita Stone – Smashwords Edition

  All rights reserved.

  Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  A BRIEF FOREWORD ABOUT THE PALADIN CYCLE

  In the summer of 2011, my then fiancé and aspiring romance writer Lita Stone and I began weaving a tale of modern fantasy with a strong theme of romance. Embracing the classic “Love Conquers All” theme we gave birth to the characters Shane Baker, Amy Rae Winters, and the Geminus aka “the Beast”.

  Within that first summer we also crafted a vast mythos involving multiverses and cosmic beings and alternate histories, along with an ensemble cast comprised of both everyday folk and supernatural beings inspired by the Zodiac. Throughout the initial drafting of this first book NUMBER OF THE BEAST—we aimed to capture the atmosphere, tone and drama found in such things as True Blood and Friday Night Lights, coupled with a healthy dose of the literature that Lita and I enjoy reading—from fantasy erotic-romance to Lovecraftian mythos and Edward Lee’s graphic horror.

  And so all readers should be warned that the Dark Fantasy series you are about to embark upon extends the borders of multiple genres and is very much intended for a mature audience who are not sensitive to adult language, sexual content and graphic horror.

  If these things offend you then proceed with caution.

  Because we are starving artists, we are giving book one of this series away with the confidence that after reading these 90,000 words you will join us in the subsequent adventures of the Paladin Cycle.

  DEDICATIONS

  I thank all the G1ers and Sharp Edgers who supported our endeavor and efforts throughout the last few years, especially Don, Simion, Pinkie, Allison and Alexis. And my sincerest apologies for being an ornery jackass.

  And to my dear old friend Kahz who reminded me several times over the years that it was all a waste of time.

  Max Redford

  Hey, it’s me, God. See them there crates in the back of my pickup? Full of guns and computers they are. See that there settlement on the distant horizon? That twelve-foot rock wall surrounds a secret compound. It’s where I’m delivering these here supplies.

  Why is God delivering guns and computers to some holy cloister in the middle of the New Mexico desert you ask?

  Because there amongst the mud brick buildings resides one of our heroes, Atticus. He’s been training for all of his seventeen years to be a mighty champion to oppose the evil hordes that constantly threaten this particular Earth.

  Why am I telling you this story? Why should you care? Well, I’m glad you asked.

  You see I have a message so listen closely. Ready?

  Three things will stand the test of time—faith, hope and love—and the greatest of these is...that’s right! Love.

  You’re rolling your eyes.

  That’s just fine ‘cause I’m used to it. Lots of folks get leery when God starts talking to them directly. The ones who don’t get fidgety are the ones who talk to me on a regular basis.

  But hey, I’m not one to judge.

  Or maybe I am.

  But whether you believe in me or not is irrelevant to this particular story. This story is not about me, but if you care to read more about me then you know where to look, right?

  That’s precisely what I thought.

  But you didn’t pick up this book—or download it to your fancy e-Reader to get preached to by someone driving a pickup, so let us get on with the good stuff.

  You’re about to meet a lot of interesting folks. Some from Texas and some from alternate places along the space-time continuum and from far off exotic worlds that I don’t travel to very often. You could say those places are God-forsaken.

  Some of you more discerning readers may be asking that age old question: If I really am God then why ain’t I doing anything more than hauling weapons and computers to these holy warriors?

  Well, I’m sure you’ve heard the debate about free-will and all that.

  All I can do other than supply them with some useful tools is offer words of encouragement to my good boy Atticus and his future allies.

  Speaking of allies, let’s talk Shane Baker. You see he’s another important soldier in the coming war. He just hasn’t figured it out yet.

  Come now, watch and see how they fair.

  Godspeed!

  Chapter One

  Chihuahuan Desert - May 20th

  The best of the best of the best. A legend at the mere age of seventeen. A master swordsman and marksman and the fastest runner in the compound. Though Atticus’ arcane techniques were lacking he could hold his own against any skilled mage. But who needed magic when you possess physical prowess that a tiger would envy?

  Yes, he was the best of the best of the best.

  Yet they still put him on guard duty at the front gate, standing with his spear in hand. A crummy spear!

  All the years he’d guarded this front gate he couldn’t recall a single moment where any nefarious intruder had stormed across the desert sands of New Mexico in a mad dash to invade the compound.

  But there he stood guarding it with his life. Him and his trusty spear with the staff carved from hickory and a granite stone sharpened to a semi-lethal bluntness.

  He straightened the green bandana around his head. Kneeling on one knee, Atticus tied the cord on his knee-high moccasin boot. He jumped to his feet and raised his spear. Like it was a mighty sword, he swung. His long red hair fluttered as he sliced his spear through the air, decapitating his invisible foe.

  If any of those nefarious cosmic monsters did decide to rush the gates he prayed the bars would hold long enough for him to beat the miscreants to death with his dastardly spear. Though he’d probably be better off cracking the shaft so he could stab them with the pointy end of the stick. Paladins were, after all, taught to utilize any means necessary to defeat evil. And pointy sticks made for superb devil-slaying weapons.

  Perhaps the Elders were teaching him a lesson in humility by giving him three consecutive nights of gate duty. But for gibbering goblins’ sake! He was one of the prophesied warriors! Did he need humility? What purpose did it serve a warrior meant to slay an unearthly Beast?

  Clanking and thudding sounded from old Mueller's barn a hundred yards inside the gate. More thudding. A shadow danced in the window of the barn's loft. The fiery desert sun forced him to shield his eyes to get a clearer look.

  When Atticus saw the rainwater blue tunic hanging on a nail outside the barn his cheeks puffed and his loins tingled.

  Just yesterday morning Venora and he had skipped off to Red Bluff Canyon a couple miles south of the compound for some Horny Toad Popping. Atticus had recently finished crafting his newest slingshot, fastening the sling from carefully cured baby lamb hide and carving the Y from fossilized desert wood.

  Venora had followed him outside the gates wearing that long blue tunic with a fashionable headdress. Soon as they stepped foot into the canyon that tunic and that headdress found their way onto the sand. />
  He had seen Venora in her under garments before, yet each and every time it reminded him of why the Order was so strict on women's attire. If all the women chose to stroll around in their undergarments, then none of the warriors would get anything done ever again. Thank the Almighty she had the sense to use discretion and only disrobe inside the canyon where none could see. And sometimes within the confines of old cobweb-infested barns.

  He swore she wore her makeshift undergarments—homemade from nothing more than thin strips of leather covering her bosom and nether regions—on their outings so to get the advantage. As if his natural lack of focus and her natural feminine wiles weren’t enough of a disadvantage.

  One thing about Nora that both attracted and repelled him was her undeniable need for victory over any endeavor she undertook. And that included Horny Toad Popping. She had knocked five fat toads into the sand before Atticus felled his first.

  But he wasn't going to complain because he quite enjoyed his vantage point, purposefully positioning himself behind Venora. When she took a steadying stance to aim her shots, it was impossible to miss her taut muscles clenching. Her buttocks hardened like beautifully carved stone. The sweat on her legs glistened like oil on well-polished steel.

  More clamoring came from the barn's loft.

  Atticus summoned his fellow guardsman over. “Peter! Come at once.”

  Peter jumped from his tower and hurried toward Atticus. “Sir?”

  “I need you to guard the gate alone for a short time while I investigate a situation.”

  “What situation do you speak of, Sir Atticus?”

  “A matter of a most sensitive nature.”

  From the corner of his eye, Atticus spotted a red pickup speeding toward them, its rear tires spitting the sand of the Chihuahuan desert in its wake.

  Atticus groaned. Venora would have to wait.

  The vehicle rolled to a stop at the wrought iron gate. The driver, a middle-aged man with a gray bowler hat rolled down the window. Plumes of sweet smoke billowed from within. A strange music vibrated from the vehicle’s speakers; a mix of bass, drums with an accented singer sounding strangely like Cadet Jamal.

  “Just God again. Bringing more school supplies.” Atticus gripped his spear, bracing it against his chest, and stepped next to the car. “It’s only Gawd. Lower your weapons.” He signaled the sentinels in the stone watch towers on either side of the gate as well.

  Peter pushed Atticus aside and leaned in Gawd’s driver’s window. “Pop the trunk.”

  “But he’s just a senile old delivery man,” Atticus said. “We swat gnats more harmful than him.”

  “Protocols state that we must review all incoming persons and their cargo before entry through the gates. And it is not as though we have any other pressing matters to attend to.”

  Atticus stared longingly at the barn.

  Peter opened the back door. Several wooden boxes with Apple logos were stacked on the back seat. Leaning in, he pried one of the boxes open to confirm they were laptops.

  “You can trust in God. I won’t lead you astray.”

  Peter closed the door. He walked to the rear of the vehicle and lifted the trunk. Three crates filled the compartment.

  Atticus came up beside him. He grinned at the 9mm, .357, 5.56 and shotgun ammunition.

  With a wave of his arm, Peter flagged the second guard. “All clear. Open the gate.”

  “Righteous,” said the driver as he drove forward.

  Atticus wiped his hands on his olive tunic. He couldn’t wait to try out the new FN SCAR-L. No one knew where that strange guy got all the supplies, but he always brought the best provisions. Never used or broken, only the top of the line tech that the compound didn’t have the resources to craft themselves.

  More rattling came from the barn. Atticus grinned. As Gawd’s car rounded the corner to the warehouse, Atticus clapped Peter on the shoulder. “I’ll be seeing to that serious matter now.”

  Chapter Two

  Buckeye, Texas—May 20th

  Amy’d only been to Sherry’s house a few hundred times...this year. So her four cylinder Escort should be able to find it on its own. But somehow she missed the driveway. She swung a U-turn on FM 2025 and turned down Sherry’s long windy drive. Weeping willows lined both sides. Drooping branches swept across Amy’s car as if to say hello.

  In front of the trailer, Sherry reclined in a red and beige lawn chair. Pink floral pajama pants and a white tank hung loose on her emaciated body. Her dark, long hair clashed with her pale skin and sunken cheeks. She bounced Jennie, her two-year-old, on one knee. The toddler giggled while grasping at a broken piece of plaid webbing that had separated from the plastic frame of the chair.

  As Amy traversed the lumpy yard, Sherry waved, a joint between her fingers.

  From the back of the trailer, five Rottweiler’s rounded the corner. Barking, foaming at the mouth, Rusty, Dusty, Busty, Mutton and Puff-daddy surrounded Amy. She patted each one on the head before pushing her way through, careful to avoid the craters the dogs had dug into the dirt, dirt that probably once hosted a lush, green lawn.

  “How goes the potty training?” Amy asked.

  Sherry rolled her eyes. “Sucks.”

  “She’s only two. Give it time.”

  Sherry shrugged. “You’re looking better.”

  “Ten days. Ten whole days.” No more night terrors. No more sleepless nights. No more zombie medications.

  No more tears.

  Sherry put her joint out on the plastic arm of the chair. “Then why are you here?”

  “I got to be sure.”

  Sherry scooped up her daughter and headed toward the trailer. The screen door squeaked in protest and Amy followed her inside. Sherry buckled Jennie into a high chair. With her daughter entertained by a handful of Cheerios scattered on the tray, Sherry sat in one of the metal folding chairs surrounding the table.

  Amy sat across from her and offered her hand, palm up. The sticky table-top nearly glued her arm down.

  Cold, slender fingers grasped Amy’s wrist. The fingers of other hand traced along Amy’s palm. Slowly. Meticulously. Amy remained motionless, holding her breath, and prayed that Sherry would find no bad vibes in her reading.

  But the slow frown curling Sherry’s lips caused Amy’s heart to sink. Sherry’s brows lowered and a look of bewilderment seized her face. With a gasp, she let go of Amy, snatching her hand away. She cradled it against her chest as if she’d been burned. “Go!”

  “Goodness! Is it that bad?”

  “Leave and don’t ever come here again.”

  “I don’t understand.” But Amy stood.

  Sherry plucked her daughter from the highchair. She stepped backward, toward the living room. “I said leave.”

  Amy dug into her purse for her wallet.

  “Keep your twenty bucks,” Sherry screamed, “and get the hell out!”

  When Amy refused to leave Sherry’s trailer without an explanation, Sherry had spilled all. She called ‘It’ demonic and extremely powerful. ‘It’ had given Amy the night terrors that fateful week only ten days ago and ‘It’ was not gone.

  Amy stood at her kitchen sink, refilled her glass with water and guzzled it empty.

  The ‘It’ that had given her the night terrors for seven straight days, the night terrors that she thought had ended ten days ago, the night terrors that had made her violently ill to her stomach, the night terrors that stole sleep from her night after night after night, for seven darn days.

  The visions had disturbed her rest in vague segments: a pair of panthers tore flesh from some helpless creature. A giant scorpion poisoned thousands of faceless children with its lethal stinger. A demon-witch, who kept men chained to a cave wall, cast spells, bringing chaos and destruction. Tornados several miles wide accompanied by a catastrophic earthquake crumbled the Earth like a rotten pecan. Fire consumed ancient woodlands. Ice, thick as the trunk of a century-old elm, buried the earth’s deserts.

  At least
Shane, her live-in boyfriend of four years, had been home and not hundreds of miles away on the rig in Pecos.

  First night of the nightmares Amy had woken four times, bawling and crying into her pillow. Shane had dragged her from the bed and cooked her favorite, homemade mac ‘n’ cheese. In the early hours of the morning they had finished eating and she was beginning to feel calmer. Shane teased about screwing the nightmares from her pretty head.

  And that was exactly what he’d done.

  Amy smiled at the memory. Her face flushed, but this time not from the Texas heat.

  She leaned over the sink and dribbled water on the back of her head.

  Maybe everybody in town was right about Sherry. She was a fake and a liar. After all, it had been ten whole days since the nightmares and she didn’t feel any presence around her, dark or otherwise. Sherry just wanted Amy’s money.

  But Sherry had refused Amy’s twenty spot.

  Damn.

  Amy shook her long, blond strands and straightened. She scooped her wet hair and draped it down her back. Flipping around, she lifted her chin and glanced at the refrigerator. Stuck to the center of the door was a picture of her and Shane at Galveston beach.

  Shane wasn’t due home for days but maybe he could come home early. Amy pushed off the sink. She took a step toward her purse hanging on the back of the chair. She’d call and explain what happened at Sherry’s. He’d have to understand.

  That’s when she saw the rodent. Right smack dab in the middle of her tiled kitchen floor.

  Dead.

  Bloody.

  Headless.

  Freya! That darn cat.

  Hands on her cheeks, she closed her eyes. Sherry was right. A very dark energy had latched onto her. Bad things were happening. No wonder Sherry wanted her to leave so badly, so quickly.

  Amy was no good to be around. She was a menace. This poor rodent gruesomely, senselessly murdered. Oh this wretched spirit. Why wouldn’t it leave her alone?

  What was the ‘It’ that was haunting her? And what had she done to deserve it?

  She snatched the spray bottle from under the sink. Two parts water, one part lemon juice. One big fat onion marinating at the bottom. Dashing down her hall, she sprayed the walls, around the bathroom door, bedroom door, linen closet and the wood floors.