Read Web of Fire Bind-up Online
Authors: Steve Voake
The first dog unclamped its teeth and dropped to the ground as Sam fell against the compartment door, clutching at the agonising wound on his shoulder. The dog grinned and stared at him, licking its bloodstained lips.
âMmmm!' it breathed in a low, husky voice. âOh, mmmm!'
The other dogs began to encircle him now, a low growling in their throats. One of them began to sniff and
lick at his ankle, but a warning bark from Sam's attacker made it retreat again.
The first dog looked at Sam. âBoy scared?' it asked.
Sam pressed back against the carriage door and gritted his teeth. âGet away from me!' he hissed.
The dog-child stared at him for a moment, then drew back its lips in a grotesque smile. âWe bite you now,' it said. It nodded and ground its teeth together. âWe hurt you lots.'
Sam watched in horror as the creature moved towards him again, its eyes glazed over with the madness of bloodlust. He knew that there was no one here to help him now. No one to save him but himself. And so, as the snarling animal launched itself at him with a howl of fury, he ducked neatly sideways and it flew past his shoulder, smashing headfirst into the broken window.
There was a loud squeal and then all hell broke loose. The animal fell shrieking backwards and to Sam's amazement the other creatures leapt upon it with demented howls, tearing at its flesh with their razor-sharp teeth. They seemed to sense the injured animal's sudden weakness and the smell of blood sparked them off into a feeding frenzy. For a brief moment, Sam was forgotten. Sensing his opportunity, he turned and ran for his life.
His breath came in desperate gasps as he tried to put some distance between himself and his attackers. His whole body ached but he knew he had to keep going; he
wouldn't have the strength to fight them off if he were cornered a second time.
He looked around for any possible hiding places and then a terrible realisation began to dawn on him as he saw what he should have known all along. The train, although incredibly long, was not of infinite length. Ahead of him was a solid steel wall.
There was nowhere else to run.
Reaching the end of the carriage, he fell gasping against the cold metal wall and slid down into a sitting position, facing back the way he had come. He felt utterly wretched. The dark shapes were gathering again, advancing towards him. But this time they were in no hurry: they knew they had him trapped.
Suddenly there was a jolt and the train began to slow down.
Sam quickly leapt to his feet and peered out into the darkness. With a squeal of brakes the train emerged from a tunnel into a vast underground station. Waiting on the platform was a group of men dressed in black uniforms. They looked official, like police or soldiers.
Turning quickly, Sam saw that the creatures were getting closer and he realised his only hope was to try to attract the group's attention. The train shuddered to a halt as he hammered desperately against the glass with his fists.
âHelp me!' he shouted. âSomebody help me! Please!'
One of the men looked up and pointed in his direction. Instantly the whole group came sprinting across
the platform towards his carriage. Sam glanced back up the corridor and saw the snarling mass bearing down upon him.
âHurry up!' he screamed. âThey're going to kill me!'
The man who had first noticed him pulled something from his pocket and pointed it at the side of the train. With a soft hiss, a panel slid open in front of Sam and he leapt onto the platform just as the creatures clattered to a halt where he had been standing. He fell to the ground with a cry and waited for the attack. But it never came.
Raising his head from the dusty platform, he saw that the revolting dog-creatures were huddled together at the entrance to the carriage, staring and snarling at him.
Sam shivered and the pain throbbed in his shoulder wound. He was cold, frightened and exhausted and he was caked from head to toe in mud. When would this nightmare be over?
âStand up, you piece of filth,' said the man. âLet me look at you.' He was tall, and powerfully built, and spoke with a cold, authoritative manner. On his head he wore a shiny black peaked cap and Sam could see dark, close-cropped hair beneath the rim.
Sam got slowly to his feet and looked up at him.
The man reached out and grabbed his face, pulling Sam towards him in an iron grip. Sam's cheeks were crushed inwards and he smelt the sweat and leather of the black glove.
âI don't think it's him,' he said at last. âBut treat him as a high-priority suspect until we can be sure.'
One of the other soldiers twisted Sam's arms up behind his back and pushed him roughly across the platform towards a flight of stairs.
âGet off me!' Sam shouted as he was dragged up the steps. âThere's been a terrible mistake!'
He tried to struggle free, but the hands that held him were too strong. His cries echoed around the station, rising up through the cold, still air to the high vaulted roof above and gradually becoming fainter as he was dragged away.
The man watched them go and then turned to the creatures waiting in the doorway of the train.
âGo and find out what's happening on the marshes. Report back to me as soon as you know anything. Oh, and one more thing.' He raised a warning finger. âThere will be no second chances. Understand?'
He signalled towards the front of the train and the creatures whimpered and nodded, moving back into the shadows of the carriage. The doors hissed shut and the train began to move slowly out of the station into the darkness of the tunnel.
The man adjusted his cap, turned on his heel and strode purposefully towards the stairs.
The station was empty now.
A cold wind began to blow from the mouth of the tunnel, ruffling the torn edges of a poster which had been pasted to a board on the wall. At the top of the poster, the word âWANTED' was printed in capital letters.
Beneath it was a photograph of Sam.
Several hundred miles away, in an airbase not far from the great city of Vahlzi, Commander Firebrand stood beneath the main control tower and watched an aircraft climb high into the violet blue of an early morning sky. He watched until it became a speck above the distant horizon and then faded to nothing.
He took a cigar from his top pocket and lit it, the end glowing deep red as the first rays of sunlight began to show above the mountains.
Firebrand's brilliant leadership of the air squadrons during the war had successfully driven Odoursin's armies out of Vahlzi. The President had rewarded Firebrand by giving him overall command of Vahlzian forces and things had remained relatively peaceful in the years since then. But Firebrand knew that although the war between Vahlzi and Vermia had officially ended a decade ago, the uneasy truce between the two states couldn't last for very much longer.
All the evidence pointed to the fact that Vermia was developing some terrible new weapon to use against the people of Earth. The President of Vahlzi had informed Firebrand at a recent briefing that as soon as there was enough proof, he would give his permission to launch a pre-emptive strike against Vermia. But until that time, Firebrand would have to make sure that any missions against Vermian forces were carried out in secret.
There was, however, another more pressing issue.
It seemed almost certain now that Vermian forces had somehow managed to kidnap the boy and bring him back into this world. If the intelligence was correct and Hekken's mob really had got hold of him, then Firebrand would have to move fast. And to his mind there was no one better than Skipper for such a dangerous assignment.
There had been a lot of talk about her age and lack of experience, but she had already shown that she had the skill of pilots twice her age. More than that: she had a gift, something that no amount of training could provide.
She was a natural flier.
He thought back to the spring afternoon three years ago when she had first arrived at the airbase.
He had been up in the control tower co-ordinating a sortie of twelve aircraft over the marshes and had just cleared the last group to land when he happened to look out through the window.
Standing outside the fence that surrounded the compound he saw a small, blonde-haired girl. She was staring up at him through the gaps in the wire, not waving or moving.
Just standing there, all alone, with the breeze in her hair and a hundred miles of wasteland behind her.
Firebrand had watched her for a minute or two and then made a call to security.
âWe have a visitor,' he said to the duty officer, hearing him tap hesitantly on the open door before entering the room. He gestured towards the window. âDown there.'
The duty officer looked down at the tiny figure and nodded. âYes, sir, I know. She arrived late last night. Said she wanted to see you.'
Firebrand raised an eyebrow. âTo see me?'
âYes, sir. She said that she wanted to speak to whoever was in charge.'
âHmm. And what did you tell her?'
âI told her that this was a top-security base and that she wasn't going to be seeing anyone, sir.'
âI see. And what did she say to that?'
The duty officer began to look distinctly uncomfortable. âWell, sir, she said⦠she said in that case she would just wait right there until such time as you saw fit to see her, sir.'
âDid she indeed?'
Firebrand turned back to the window once more and the duty officer allowed himself a surreptitious glance at his superior's face. As usual, the square jaw was set firm
and the serious brown eyes gave little clue as to the thoughts that lay behind them, indicating only the strength and determination that had brought their owner to such a position of power. Anyone less familiar with the Commander's fearsome reputation might have been forgiven at that moment for thinking that they saw the faintest hint of a smile cross his lips.
But of course they would have been mistaken, and the duty officer knew better than to think such a thing.
âDo we know where she's from?'
âHard to say, sir. Looking at her clothes, you'd have to guess she's from one of the tree tribes in the eastern forests, but the colouring's all wrong.'
Firebrand looked down at the small girl, who remained standing quite still, staring up through the fence at the control tower. She wore the thick, roughly woven natural fibres of green and brown that were common to the forest people. But the pale skin and blonde hair marked her out as someone from the lowlands, an area which had been laid to waste by Odoursin's retreating army a decade before. Even at this distance, he was struck by the blueness of her eyes.
âYou'd better send her up,' he said.
âBut, sir,' the duty officer protested, âshe could be a security threat.'
Firebrand looked disdainfully back at him. âSergeant,' he said, âI hope you aren't suggesting that I am unable to defend myself against a small girl.'
She'd stood there with her hands on her hips, staring him straight in the eye and acting for all the world as though she owned the place.
âYou need me,' she told him in a small, clear voice. âYou don't know it yet, but I can help you. Just train me, give me a chance. Whatever it takes, I'll do it. I'm going to be the best pilot you ever had.'
Ridiculous though it was, there was something about her that touched him in ways that he couldn't define. It was like catching sight of something through the rain, a glimpse of sunlight on a faraway mountain top.
When he had asked why she had come, why she wanted this so badly, her answer had been equally surprising. âBecause,' she replied simply, âI've got nothing to lose.'
And now, only a few years later, that same strength of spirit had left him no choice but to reluctantly agree to this dangerous mission. As she'd pointed out, they both knew she was the best, and if anyone could pull this thing off then it was her. He couldn't argue with that.
But what Firebrand hadn't realised, what he hadn't seen right up until the very second that he watched her aircraft disappear over the horizon, was that you never really know how much something means to you until you have to let it go.
The cell was dark, dingy and damp. The only light filtered through a small window set into the wall about six feet up. Three iron bars blocked the opening and through the gaps between them Sam could see that the morning sky was dull and overcast.
He flicked a small stone at the rusty steel door and was rewarded with a metallic clang as the stone struck and bounced off.
âHe shoots, he scores,' Sam said quietly into the darkness. Picking up a stale crust that had been thrown into his cell, he pulled off a patch of fluffy green mould and then hungrily swallowed the rest of the bread before draining the last drops of water from a chipped, enamel mug.
The wall felt cold and damp against his back and he stood up, stretched and began to pace around the small, square cell. Trying to sleep on the freezing stone floor had left him tired and sore all over. Blood from his
shoulder wound had seeped into the grey prison uniform they had given him and the muscle around the bite was purple and swollen. It felt raw and tender, as though someone had stuck a knife into him. Sam rubbed his wrists and felt the dull ache that remained after having them wrenched up behind his back.