- Home
- Thomas E. Sniegoski
The Fallen 3
The Fallen 3 Read online
THE
FALLEN
3
ALSO BY
THOMAS E. SNIEGOSKI
THE FALLEN 1
THE FALLEN AND LEVIATHAN
THE FALLEN 2
AERIE AND RECKONING
This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
SIMON PULSE
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
First Simon Pulse paperback edition September 2011
Copyright © 2011 by Thomas E. Sniegoski
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
SIMON PULSE and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event. For more information or to book an event contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at www.simonspeakers.com.
Designed by Mike Rosamilia
The text of this book was set in Adobe Garamond.
Manufactured in the United States of America
2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Sniegoski, Tom.
End of days / Thomas E. Sniegoski.
p. cm. — (The fallen ; 3)
Summary: Half angel and half human, Aaron commands the Fallen in their quest to protect humanity, drawing confidence from the girl he loves as he struggles to make peace with his legacy as Lucifer’s son.
ISBN 978-1-4424-2349-7 (pbk)
[1. Angels—Fiction. 2. Good and evil—Fiction. 3. Love—Fiction.
4. Supernatural—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.S68033En 2011
[Fic]—dc23
2011016979
ISBN 978-1-4424-2350-3 (eBook)
For John and Chandra Febonio—Congratulations. September 10, 2011
Thanks to my wife, LeeAnne, for without her love and hard work, this book would never have been completed. And thanks to Kirby for reminding me that it has been a very long time since there’s been a puppy in this house.
Thanks are also due to Christopher Golden, Annette Pollert, Liesa Abrams, James Mignogna, Dave Kraus, Mom and Dad Sniegoski, Mom and Dad Fogg, Pete Donaldson, Pam Daley, Timothy Cole, and the Evolution Revolution down at Cole’s Comics in Lynn.
And a very extra-special set of thanks to Erek Vaehne and Bella Pilyavskaya for helping me get this one just right.
Contents
Prologue
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
Epilogue
PROLOGUE
SIX MONTHS AGO
Leonard Michaels had secretly hoped it would never come to this.
He stood, perfectly still, in the kitchen of the Florida house where he had lived for the last twenty or so years. Though his kind did not sleep, per se, he had been roused from a meditative state by the most disturbing of sensations.
His leader was dead.
Verchiel was no more.
He understood what this meant. After all this waiting, it was time for him to act.
Opening the refrigerator, Leonard removed a pitcher of water and poured himself a glass. His hand trembled as he brought the drink to his desert-dry mouth, and gulped the contents down.
Verchiel’s death forced him to remember what he truly was, what he hadn’t been for so very, very long. It had been so easy to lose himself in the masquerade of pretending to be what he wasn’t.
Pretending to be human.
He wasn’t really Leonard Michaels, retired housepainter, but something far more wondrous … far more dangerous.
He was Geburah, an angel of the heavenly host Powers, and Verchiel had been their master and commander. It was he who defined their purpose upon the earth. As angels of the Powers, they had one simple objective: keep the world of man clean of evil. If it would offend He who was the Creator of all—the Lord God Almighty—then they were to destroy it.
And the Powers performed this chore with the utmost efficiency, until an evil threatened not only earth but the Shining City of Heaven itself.
He poured himself another glass of water, recalling the monstrous threat.
Nephilim.
The evil had been spawned by those who had fallen during the Great War between the armies of Lucifer Morning-star and the legions of Heaven. Those who had fled the Great War escaped to the world of man, and had mingled with the females of the species, creating children—monsters—the likes of which the Almighty could never have possibly loved.
Nephilim.
They grew to be Verchiel’s obsession, and thusly the Powers’.
The Nephilim were a terrible plague upon the world, but the Powers met the challenge with venomous fervor, and the half-breed monsters were hunted down and exterminated one by one.
But their numbers were many.
The recollection of their screams and cries for mercy echoed through Geburah’s thoughts. He recalled the savagery of the Powers’ acts in the name of Heaven. There had been no other way. Their purpose had been to cleanse the world of evil, and the Nephilim had been the foulest of them all.
“Leonard?” asked a woman’s voice from the darkness.
For a moment Geburah had forgotten his humanity.
His wife stood in the doorway.
“Are you all right?” the old woman asked him, her eyes squinting in the harsh kitchen light.
“I’m fine,” he said, lying to the woman who had been his companion for a very long time.
He wasn’t all right.… Nothing would be right again.
Now that Verchiel was dead.
“Bad dreams?” his wife asked, coming to put her arms around him. Before the death of his leader, he would have met this sign of affection with great warmth, reveling in the love it exhibited, but now …
“Yes, Lillian,” he said with little emotion, placing his empty glass on the granite countertop. “Bad dreams.” He kissed her lightly, sending her back to bed and telling her he would join her soon.
That, too, was a lie. For with Verchiel gone, it was time for his mission to begin.
The Nephilim were a cunning foe, some able to survive the Powers’ attempts at extermination. There had even been rumors of an angelic prophecy that a Nephilim had been chosen by the Creator Himself as some sort of savior to bring forgiveness to those that had fallen during the war with the Morningstar, and allow them to return to Heaven.
The idea was blasphemous to them—some sort of Nephilim trick—and it made the Powers hate the accursed half-breeds all the more.
Verchiel had known that his, and his followers’, most holy mission would be fraught with peril and the potential for defeat, and he could not bear the thought of failure. If
he and his Powers were to somehow meet with death, their purpose thwarted, there would be another way to achieve victory.
Geburah was a part of that alternative plan, along with five others who’d been carefully selected by Verchiel himself.
That meeting came flooding back to him, what he and the others had agreed upon if Verchiel and the remaining Powers were to meet their end.
And it filled him with fear.
Geburah considered running, going into his room, pulling his wife from their bed, and disappearing into the night, hiding from what he was to do now that Verchiel had failed.
But the thought was fleeting, dissipating like smoke in the wind as he whipped his head around, realizing that he was no longer alone in the kitchen.
The tall figure stood by the door, having silently come in from the night outside. It took him a moment, but Geburah recognized him as one of his own.
The angel had come for him.
“Hello, Suria,” Geburah greeted him. “Can I get you anything … a drink of water perhaps?”
Suria stared at him strangely, with a slight tilt of his head.
“I require nothing,” the angel said flatly.
Geburah nodded, turning his gaze toward the hallway, imagining his wife asleep in their bedroom upstairs.
He wanted so much to be back there, to feel her warmth as he held her in his arms, to feel her humanity.
“Verchiel is dead,” Suria stated.
Geburah looked away from the kitchen entrance, the pull of the bedroom already beginning to fade as the mask that he wore started to slip as duty called.
“Yes,” he said. “I felt it as well.”
Suria stared at him, eyes black and cold.
“We now have a mission to perform,” the angel spoke.
Geburah was well aware of what he needed to do but found himself fighting it, struggling with the identity he’d kept hidden away these years past.
“Can I be honest with you, Suria?” Geburah said with a nervous smile. “I’d hoped—prayed, actually—that I’d never be called to duty—that I could continue to live like this.”
He looked around the kitchen, the memories of the years with Lillian cascading through his thoughts.
“Like a human?” Suria asked, his response tinged with disgust.
Angels believed themselves so superior, so above humanity. Geburah had no idea where Suria … where the others of their kind had been, as they waited … how they passed the time. Was he the only one of them to live amongst humanity? To pretend to be human?
“Like a human,” Geburah repeated with a sigh, knowing there was little choice for him. He had a duty to perform.
He owed it to Verchiel … to this world … and to Heaven itself.
“Foolish, isn’t it?” Geburah asked.
Suria continued to stare at Geburah, but his gaze had become harder … cautious. Geburah knew that if Suria believed their mission was about to be somehow compromised—that he wasn’t about to take control of their mission—Suria wouldn’t hesitate to strike him down, and assume command.
Again there was the foolish thought of escape, but then he saw, with more acuity than mere human eyes, movement outside the open kitchen window. Through the curtains fluttering in the warm, nighttime breeze, he saw that the others of his band had arrived and were waiting outside.
Waiting for the one who would now lead them.
“Are you … well, Geburah?” Suria prodded.
“I’m fine,” Geburah answered with a sigh, then released his angelic nature.
The truth of what he was … what he had always been … charged forward like a wild beast, and Geburah gasped as the divine power of Heaven flooded through him after so very long.
Leonard Michaels no longer stood in the kitchen of the Florida home. Leonard Michaels no longer existed. In fact, he had never truly existed at all.
In his place stood an angel—a soldier—the new leader of the heavenly host Powers.
Geburah spread his wings, reveling in the sensation. Sparks of divine fire leaped from the tips of his feathers, igniting the structure around him, but he did not care, for that part of him existed no longer. Burned away to reveal the true nature that had lain dormant within.
“Leonard?” a scared voice cried out over the shriek of fire alarms from someplace nearby. “Leonard, what’s going on?”
Geburah looked toward the doorway, the entrance to the kitchen now engulfed with orange fire, a pang of something vaguely familiar pulling at him, gnawing at him from inside, but it soon passed.
He turned his attention back to Suria.
“It’s nothing,” Geburah said as the fire hungrily spread. He calmly walked through the burning kitchen to the back door, and to the angelic soldiers that waited for him outside.
“Nothing at all.”
The last vestiges of the humanity that he had built burned at his back.
TWO MONTHS AGO
If only they could see what I’ve seen with these old, dead eyes, Tobias Foster mused in response to a child’s curious question to her mother as to what was wrong with the old man on the corner’s eyes as they passed him on the busy Baltimore street.
He was going to answer the little girl, tell her that there was nothing wrong with the two milky orbs resting inside his skull, that he just saw things a little bit differently than most folks. Where mostly everybody saw the here and now, he saw glimpses of the future, and he’d just seen something that both distracted and disturbed him.
The brass horn in his grasp grew warm, reading Tobias’s change in mood. The instrument started to pulse, as if it were alive.
“That’s all right,” he whispered softly as he held the horn closer, feeling its heat through his clothes.
“Hey, old man, play us something.”
Tobias turned his head to fix his blind eyes upon the person standing on the street before him.
“What would you like to hear?” he asked, knowing that a song was probably the best thing for the horn at the moment.
“I don’t know,” the man said, the smell of alcohol wafting off his breath. “Play something nice.”
The horn needed a soothing song now. Something to calm it down.
Tobias brought the horn up, nearly scorching his lips on the mouthpiece, and began to blow. The horn fought at first, resisting his attempt to coax music from it, but it soon relented and the sweet sounds of something bluesy that he’d thought up on the fly drifted from the horn.
That’s it, the old man thought as he played, feeling the metal grow colder in his grasp. Even after all these years with the instrument, he still forgot how reactive it was.
The horn’s previous holder had told him as much all those years ago when giving him the instrument; you’d think Tobias would’ve known not to let his emotions get the better of him, but what he had just seen … it was enough to ruin any man’s day.
He heard the sound of change clinking against the other donations that had been tossed onto the bandanna he’d set out in front of him.
“Thank you kindly,” he said as he took the horn from his lips, sensing the drunken man who wanted to hear something nice heading on his way satisfied.
The horn was copasetic again, forcing him to think about the vision he had seen moments ago without the emotional reaction.
Since he took the horn into his possession, Tobias’s ability to see had been taken away, but it was replaced with something he believed to be of greater value. Tobias had been given the gift of precognition, particularly as it pertained to him, and the safety of the horn.
The safety of the world, really.
And what he had just glimpsed from behind his cataract-covered eyes would soon endanger all those things.
The old man sighed as he bent down, feeling around to retrieve the change and the few bills that passersby had given to him as he played.
It isn’t bad enough that the Powers nearly released Hell on earth in their attempt to wipe out the Nephilim, he thought as he sh
oved the money and handkerchief deep inside his pants pocket. Now they’re at it again. And are hell-bent on dragging me into their latest folly.
That’s what he had seen in a disturbing flash: angels of the Powers host hunting for him. They were in the city, following the instrument’s scent. Tobias had always been a wanderer, even before assuming responsibility for the instrument. Since taking on the horn, he’d just had a lot more time to do it.
The instrument had prolonged his life.
He really didn’t remember how long he’d been on this planet. When anyone asked how old he was, he simply replied, “Very.” He had seen a lot during his wandering: kings had fallen, wars had been fought, and slaves had been given their freedom. He was sure he’d witnessed many other important events, but, at the moment, he couldn’t recall them.
Tobias had other, far more disturbing things on his mind.
The Powers were coming for him … for the horn, and he was afraid he wasn’t strong enough to fight them.
Why can’t they just leave it be? the old man thought as he shuffled past the busy National Aquarium, a chilling wind blowing off the harbor, foreshadowing cold times to come.
That was the problem with angels, they were so damn stubborn, always thinking they were right. Just because they were one of the first creatures created by God, they thought their opinions had greater value than everybody else’s.
As much as he hated to admit it, Tobias knew it was time his wandering ended, but first he had to find someone very special.
Someone who didn’t mind not dying for a very long time, and who was strong enough to take on the responsibility of the horn, and all that came with it.
CHAPTER ONE
The cold milk made Aaron’s teeth ache as he spooned cereal into his mouth, careful not to dribble anything onto the front of his shirt.