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Authors: Jonathan Maberry

BOOK: Vault of Shadows
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Milo Silk was a scavenger. That's what he'd been trained to do, every day of his life. Well, ever since the aliens came in their vast hive ships and conquered the Earth. Milo had been six years old when the invasion began. Now he was eleven, and even kids in the EA had to earn their place. Everyone had to work together to help the human resistance survive, to preserve life and connection and cooperation so that there could be some hope of winning back the planet. Scavengers like Milo, like his friends Lizzie and Shark and Barnaby, scoured the forests and ruined towns for anything that could be useful. To people who were both desperate and resourceful, nearly everything had value, from broken laptops to car batteries to circuit boards of crashed planes.

A nearly complete set of weapons and equipment from a shocktrooper was worth ten times Milo's weight in gold. He finished shoving the pieces of tech into his satchel, missing nothing. Then he slung the satchel
over his shoulder and set off for camp. On the way, he passed a burned and twisted bit of wreckage that had been dropped into the forest yesterday morning. Milo and his friends had watched under cover of camouflage tarps as the debris fell. He knew what they were and why the aliens had sent them raining down into the woods.

He'd passed this piece on the outbound part of his trip this morning, but seeing it again gave him the same feeling of sickening fear. The object was the charred remains of a food cart. The other objects were cars, trucks, parts of a tank, and various chunks of military vehicles that had once made up the caravan in Milo's camp. This cart and those other machines had been where Milo, Shark, Lizabeth, Barnaby, and all the others, including Milo's mom, had lived, worked, fought. And died. When the hive ship had attacked the camp, these vehicles were blown up by pulse-rifle blasts or torn apart by hunter-killers. Until yesterday, Milo hadn't given a thought to the destroyed machines, caring only about the living, the dead, the wounded, and the missing people. However, the Bugs had gone back to the site of that attack and collected the junk. A message had then been painted on each piece, the same message, splashed in bright red on the soot-stained metal.

I WANT WHAT YOU STOLE

Milo didn't think the Bugs could understand human languages. Not that it mattered, because he was absolutely
positive that he knew whose hand had written these five words over and over again.

The Huntsman.

Once a human being. A murderer hiding behind the uniform of a soldier. A merciless and malicious serial killer who believed that by taking lives he would become more powerful than any ordinary human, that he would become a god of darkness.

That was bad enough. More than bad enough. Then the Swarm took him. They had been looking for a human whose inner darkness was so powerful that it would give them the edge needed to break free of their own technological stagnation. They craved his evil, his dark imagination, and they had used their own twisted science to transform the killer into something half human and half Dissosterin. A hybrid that belonged to neither species. A monster that was far more powerful, far darker, than even the hive queens could predict. His evil and his madness had flowed into the hive mind and corrupted it, turned it from the cold hunger of a swarm of insects into a shared malevolence. They had built a slave but created a conqueror.

The Huntsman had led the attack on Milo's camp, destroying it and killing most of the people Milo knew. A few survivors had been taken as slaves and as organic raw material for the hive ship to make more shocktroopers. It had been the worst day of Milo's life. His mom and most of the best soldiers had been out on patrol and had
escaped the slaughter, but Milo had been forced to flee the destroyed camp, and now he couldn't find her.

And the Huntsman was looking for Milo. Not merely to complete the task of exterminating an Earth Alliance group, but to recover two objects the monster held precious. One—a glittering black jewel called the Heart of Darkness—rightfully belonged to the Nightsiders and was now in the possession of the young werewolf girl, Evangelyne Winter. The other rightfully belonged to the alien Swarm from the far reaches of space. It was a small crystal egg, and in it was stored the DNA of the Swarm. The aliens traveled across the vast gulfs of interstellar space in colony ships that were millions of years old. During the thousands of years of travel from one planet to another, the aliens died off, only to be reborn from new eggs laid by the undying queens. The information stored in the crystal egg not only allowed the queens to produce countless new soldiers, workers, and drones, but it contained knowledge and skills, which meant that each new Bug hatched fully trained and ready to serve the Swarm.

With the Heart of Darkness, the Huntsman could gain the secrets of magic, which would make him invincible. But if he failed to recover the crystal egg, the Swarm would very likely turn on him. To become the conqueror he dreamed of being, he had to prove himself worthy to his current masters.

The egg was not a simple piece of alien tech. Milo believed that on some level, it was alive.
Alive.
And
when he and his new friends took it from the hive ship, the egg had seemed, to Milo, to call out to the Swarm, begging—or perhaps commanding—the Bugs to rescue it and bring it home. He hoped that he had simply been paranoid and that the egg had not actually been sending a homing signal. So far no Bug legions had appeared, and the Huntsman seemed unable to find him. For now.

Milo knew that couldn't last. The Witch of the World had given him a dire warning about the lengths to which the Huntsman would go.

He will burn the fields of the earth and topple mountains to find you and get back what you stole.

Milo could feel the Huntsman's hatred. It was like the smell of acid in the air. It was like an ache in his bones. It was a ball of sick dread in his stomach. He lingered for a moment and stared at the words.

I WANT WHAT YOU STOLE

Milo walked up to the burned food cart and spat on the red letters.

Or at least, that had been his intention. Unfortunately, his mouth was so dry with terror that he had no spit at all. The best he could manage was a weak sound, a pretend spit that had no real force or power behind it.

Embarrassed, and feeling small and powerless, Milo turned away and looked into the woods toward where his new camp lay. It was well hidden, but he did not believe it was any safer than the one he'd lived in a few days ago. This was an invaded and mostly conquered
world. There was no such thing as safety anymore.

Not until and unless the Swarm and the Huntsman could be defeated.

The crystal egg seemed to burn like a cinder in Milo's pocket.

He touched it through the cloth of his jeans. Felt it pulse. Or maybe twitch. Like something alive trying to flinch away from his touch.

Milo took a steadying breath and melted back into the woods.

Chapter 6

H
e had gotten less than a hundred yards when he found something very strange in a small clearing. It was a group of mushrooms growing in a near-perfect circle. Milo stopped and crouched down at the edge of it. Like everyone else in his pod, he knew a lot about what grew wild in the woods. What was safe and what wasn't. Most of the mushroom species here in Louisiana were safe to eat, though there were a few he knew to stay away from. These, however, were a species he'd never seen before. At a glance, they looked like either straw mushrooms or Caesar's mushrooms, but he was sure they weren't either of those edible kinds. The caps were pale yellow and about six inches across, and the stipes—or stems—were flecked with gray scales. There were at least sixty of the mushrooms, and when he bent close to examine them, he realized that the circle they made really was perfect. It was only the occasional tuft of grass that made the ring appear warped. This bothered Milo, because nature has its own ways of being perfect—the flight of a hummingbird, the color of bougainvillea, the warm sun of a spring afternoon—but exact geometrical shapes are rare.
Perfectly straight lines and perfect circles were unusual. And yet this didn't seem like the sort of thing the Bugs would ever do.

However, Milo had come this way not three hours ago and hadn't seen this grouping of fungi. Surely mushrooms this large couldn't have sprung up by themselves in just a few hours. That was impossible.

Which meant what? Milo wasn't sure. Was this something belonging to the Swarm? Was this something tied to the Nightsiders?

He didn't know, but as he wondered about it he suddenly felt very strange, and without meaning to, he dropped slowly to his knees just outside the ring. The air around him seemed to change, become less humid, and the heat leached away, replaced by a deep cold. When Milo exhaled, his breath plumed with steam. He jerked back. Then stopped. Bent forward . . . and breathed out again. It wasn't just that he could see his breath—he could see it only as the exhaled air crossed the arc of the toadstool circle.

Milo's heart began to flutter, and he knew for sure that this phenomenon was tied to the world of shadows and monsters. It was almost the same effect he'd felt when he had discovered a damaged pyramid of stones in the swamps not too many miles from this spot. There had been a perfect ring of icy air around the pyramid, and Milo had later learned it was a shrine that was sacred to the Nightsiders. And it was from that ruined monument
that the evil and terrifying Huntsman had stolen the Heart of Darkness—the jewel that was crucial to the survival of Evangelyne and her friends. And maybe crucial to the survival of everyone on Earth.

There had been no ring of mushrooms there, though, and there was no pyramid here. All he could see inside the circle was grass and mud and . . .

As Milo watched, he could feel something changing. Inside and out. His eyes began to drift shut, as if he were sliding toward the edge of sleep. He wanted to fight it, knew he should fight it, but all at once he had no will to try to stay awake. And yet he did not topple forward into sleep. Instead he wavered there on his knees, swaying as if to the rhythm of a distant piece of strange music. The air inside the circle seemed to shimmer like a mirage. His eyelids fluttered, but he couldn't tell if they were open or closed.

And then . . . then . . .

Something moved inside the circle. Tiny figures no bigger than crickets, but human in shape. Almost human. They were dressed like soldiers from some ancient painting of war. Each warrior was dressed in clothes similar to those Milo had seen in books about the Middle Ages. Shining armor and long doublets with strange creatures embroidered on them: fire-breathing dragons, griffins, unicorns, basilisks, sea serpents, and mermaids. Each soldier had a miniature sword hanging from a leather belt, and a helmet of polished silver. There were female
soldiers as well as male, dressed in the same armor and carrying the same swords. The soldiers were not really people, though. Small as they were, Milo could see that their skin was a pale green, almost the color of grass on the first morning of spring. A few of them had tapered helmets that did not hide their ears, and Milo saw that these ears rose to sharp points.

As they danced, the little soldiers sang a song in voices that were so heavy with a foreign accent that it was hard for Milo to understand them. He bent close, his nose almost touching the shimmering air at the edge of the toadstool ring, and listened to the song raised by their tiny voices:

He wha tills the faeries' green

Nae luck again shall hae;

And he wha spills the faeries' ring

Betide him want and wae.

For weirdless days and weary nights

Are his till his deein' day.

But he wha gaes by the faerie ring,

Nae dule nor pine shall see,

And he wha cleans the faerie ring

An easy death shall dee.

Milo couldn't easily follow what the creatures were singing, but as he listened, he found himself drifting ever closer toward the edge of sleep.

And toward the shimmering circle.

The creatures laughed and beckoned to him as they
broke their own circle and whirled, some dancing together, others doing jigs by themselves. A few stood and clapped to keep time, and though Milo heard the music of strange pipes and drums, he could see no instruments.

Milo felt his lips move and he heard himself whisper two words that he was absolutely certain he did not know and had never heard before.

“Aes Sídhe.”

They came out almost as a sigh, sounding to his ears like “ays sheeth-uh,” though somehow Milo knew this wasn't how they were spelled. He was too dreamy and faint to wonder how he knew that.

The dancing figures laughed aloud at the sound of the words. Their dances became faster and faster, and Milo was getting dizzy trying to follow their movements.

“Come to the
Sídhe,
Milo. . . . Come play with us. . . .”

“I . . . I . . . ,” he began, but he had no idea what he wanted to say. Or whether he could say anything at all. The world swam around him, and it seemed as if the only real and stable point in the universe was inside that ring. Milo felt seasick and woozy.

“Come with us,”
cried the tiny dancing figures.
“Come play with us. Come be safe with us.”

Milo began to lift his hand, to reach out, to reach
through.
As his fingertips brushed the outside of the shimmering wall, a shock went through him. It was like touching electricity. Milo snatched his hand back.

Except he didn't.

He wanted to. He willed his hand to pull back.

But instead it kept reaching forward. Touching the wall of shimmering air was like touching flowing water. It was more solid than empty air, but not something he could grab. The ground seemed to tilt under him, to make him lean forward so that his fingers pushed through the outer surface.

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