Page 1 of Vault of Shadows




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  To Sara Crowe and her two little faerie princesses—Lilo and Phoebe!

  And, as always, to Sara Jo.

  Acknowledgments

  Thanks to Brandon Strauss, for important (though creepy) information on insects. Thanks to David F. Kramer and Janice Gable Bashman, with whom I researched and wrote several books about the things that go bump in the night. I’ve been mining those books and our shared research for source material.

  FROM MILO’S DREAM DIARY

  Last night I dreamed that the world opened its mouth and swallowed me up.

  I really hope that it was just a dream.

  But way too many of my dreams have been coming true.

  So . . . yeah, I’m really scared.

  Part One

  MILO AND THE SURVIVORS

  Far, far away, there is a beautiful Country which no human eye has ever seen in waking hours. Under the Sunset it lies, where the distant horizon bounds the day, and where the clouds, splendid with light and colour, give a promise of the glory and beauty which encompass it. Sometimes it is given to us to see it in dreams.

  —BRAM STOKER

  Chapter 1

  Milo Silk was trying very hard not to die, but the day was not cooperating.

  It was that kind of day, in a week of days like that, and lately Milo seemed to have only those kinds of days and nothing else.

  This one was a classic.

  He ran through the thick foliage along the muddy banks of Bayou Sauvage, trying not to fall into the churning water, trying not to get eaten by alligators, and trying especially hard not to get shot by alien shocktroopers.

  He wouldn’t have bet a fried circuit board or a fused diode on his chances.

  All around him the Louisiana swamplands seemed to be filled with lurching shadows, bizarre shapes, and the clickety-click sound of insect legs. Blue pulses of phased energy burned through the air all around him. One blast was so close that it set his hair on fire and he had to slap his head to put it out. It wasn’t a big fire, but it was on his head, so it was big enough.

  The stink of burned hair chased him through the swamp.

  The hardest part, for Milo, was remembering that this was supposed to be an ambush.

  Supposed to be.

  It reminded him of an old saying his dad had said once when a bunch of things went wrong during a garage clean-out at their house: “When you’re up to your armpits in alligators, it’s easy to forget that you came here to drain the swamp.”

  Yeah. Milo hated that saying.

  Because there were alligators all over the place.

  And they wanted to kill him too.

  Chapter 2

  This is the story of what happened when everything Milo tried to do went wrong.

  Chapter 3

  And what happened after that.

  Chapter 4

  “C’mon, c’mon, c’mon,” muttered Milo as he ducked under the low arms of a dying pecan tree. He did it just in time, too, because less than a heartbeat later, another of the blue pulse blasts shot out of the dense shadows and blew the tree limb to splinters. Milo dove forward, rolled down a mossy slope, jammed his feet against the exposed roots of a bald cypress, came up running, and splashed through ankle-deep water until he reached a thick stand of slash pines. Then he squirmed into the tight cleft between two of the pines.

  And froze.

  Even though he was panting from the exertion, he forced his breath to go in and out of his mouth without noise. He tried very hard to become the bayou, to blend into it the way he’d been taught in survival classes.

  To be one with the swamp. Or, as his backwoods Cajun pod leader, Barnaby Guidry, put it, “To be dere like you ain’t dere, you.”

  To be there like you’re not there.

  Milo tried to not be there while he hid and watched the aliens come hunting.

  When he saw them, his heart nearly turned to ice. Even though he’d seen them before, fought them, killed them, the fear was always there. He knew he’d been lucky—luckier than he had any right to expect, because fully trained adult soldiers couldn’t beat the Dissosterin shocktroopers one-on-one. The alien invaders were seven feet tall and powerful, with armored insect bodies, heads like praying mantises’, bulging red eyes, quivering antennae, and six limbs. Sometimes they stood on two legs so they could fire four pulse guns simultaneously; other times they scuttled on four legs faster than greyhounds and simply ran people down. They wore nearly impenetrable body armor and carried guns, grenades, knives, and shock rods.

  As he watched, the wild sugarcane that choked the slope quivered and parted and a shocktrooper stepped cautiously out. A crystal had been implanted in the center of its chest and it pulsed a ghostly green. Every soldier, every hunter-killer, every creature belonging to the Swarm had an identical jewel, and these “lifelights” were tied to the actual life force of the Bugs and their mutant creations. Soldiers spent hours in camp working on their marksmanship, because if you blew out the lifelight, you killed a Bug.

  The alien warrior made a soft chittering sound. Milo wasn’t sure if it was talking to itself, communicating with other hunters via radio, or just making creepy noises. Whatever was going on, it skeeved him out.

  The reeds crunched under its weight as it moved slowly down the bank toward the edge of the muddy water. It bent low and peered at the clear print of a sneaker.

  Milo’s sneaker.

  Then the shocktrooper turned in a half circle, scanning the bank to follow the natural path of whoever had made the print. Those multifaceted red eyes glared right at the copse of slash pines. The long, slender trunks of the trees offered little cover except down toward the ground, where they grew together in tight bunches. The canopy of needles interlaced with the ceiling of leaves from big live oaks and cast everything in near darkness. Only the shocktrooper, standing exposed on the bank, was visible to Milo, and he was certain he was invisible to it.

  At least he hoped and prayed that he was.

  The insect warrior gripped a gleaming pistol in one hand, and its segmented fingers held it rock-steady. The glowing blue focusing crystal on the end of the barrel was like an azure eye trying to penetrate the darkness.

  Please, Milo thought, screaming the words inside his head. Please, please, please.

  He was not begging the creature to go away.

  He didn’t want the shocktrooper to go away.

  In fact, Milo needed him to be right where he was.

  No, actually, he wanted him to be about five steps to the left. Closer to the water.

  But the alien held his ground, clearly suspicious, searching for his elusive prey.

  Finally Milo decided that the creature was not going to move in the right direction and this plan was going to fail and end very badly for him. Like so many attempts before this.

  So, to save his own life, Milo Silk stepped out from between the pines, raised his slingshot, and yelled at the alien.

  “Yo! Roach-brain!”

  He fired the slingshot in the same instant the shocktrooper spun to face him. The stone hit the creature on the side of the head, bounced high, and fell into the water without having made so much as a dent in the alien. Milo wished he had something to fire that could shatter the shielding around the lifelight. No stone would do that.

  The shocktrooper instantly raised i
ts pistol and rattled off a string of clicks and buzzes that Milo figured were probably very bad words in a language he was glad he didn’t understand.

  That’s when three things happened in rapid succession.

  The shocktrooper fired its pulse pistol, and the bolt seared past Milo’s cheek and blew a six-inch burning hole through the trunk of one of the pine trees.

  Milo dove for cover behind a fallen log.

  And the thing in the water, disturbed by the noise, the movement, and the fall of Milo’s stone, lunged up, jaws wide, and attacked the shocktrooper. It burst from the surface of the bayou like something tearing its way from a nightmare into the waking world. Massive, muscular, scaled, furious.

  A bull alligator.

  Old Chompy. Fierce and murderous and evil tempered.

  Milo screamed and shimmied backward up the slope as nine hundred pounds of gator snapped his powerful jaws shut. Teeth like daggers crunched through the armor and shell as easily as Milo bit through a corn dog. And Old Chompy bit the Bug soldier clean in half.

  It was a horrible sight, and even though this had been Milo’s plan, it was gross and shocking and mind-numbing. The alien’s chittering turned into a single piercing shriek of pain, and then dwindled to a gurgle as the fourteen-foot-long reptile dragged his unworldly meal down into the muddy depths.

  Old Chompy was the undisputed terror of this part of the bayou. The ancient gator had dragged down wild pigs and even a ten-point buck unlucky enough to come to this section of the bank for a drink. Now he had claimed a fully armed and armored Dissosterin shocktrooper.

  Milo stared in horror as green blood swirled around and around in the vortex of ripples. He saw the glow of the lifelight beneath the surface, but it quickly winked out and did not reappear. Milo knew it never would.

  Old Chompy never gave back what he took.

  A ball of tension that felt like a knot of hot barbed wire burst from his lungs and he sagged to the ground.

  It was a terrible, stupid, insanely dangerous plan.

  And it had worked.

  FROM MILO’S DREAM DIARY

  I miss my mom.

  All the time.

  It’s only been four days since she took a bunch of soldiers to check on a report of some dead shocktroopers down around the Atchafalaya River. She was only supposed to be gone for a couple of days.

  But the Bugs attacked our camp the next day.

  The Huntsman and an entire hive ship just came out of the sky and . . .

  God, I can’t even write down most of what they did.

  Mom and the soldiers were long gone by then, and after the attack, we had to abandon what was left of the camp. It’s way too dangerous to go back there.

  I don’t know if Mom’s okay.

  I don’t know where she is.

  I don’t know if she thinks I’m dead.

  I don’t know.

  I don’t know.

  I don’t know.

  And I’m so scared.

  Where are you, Mom?

  Chapter 5

  The waters of the bayou gradually stilled, except for a line of bubbles that rose and popped on the surface. He didn’t know if Old Chompy could digest what he’d taken for his lunch, and Milo tried not to think about it. Here in the bayou, the big reptiles were nobody’s friends and they’d eat just about anything they could catch.

  When it was clear that no other shocktroopers were coming to investigate, Milo hurried over to the remains, wincing at the mess. The gator had taken everything from the waist up, leaving the rest behind. The lower half of the creature still twitched, the way some insects do even when their heads are gone. That was so nasty.

  But Milo gritted his teeth, held his breath, grabbed the alien warrior’s foot, and dragged the remains up the slope. Once he was on solid ground, he went to work. He had a big canvas satchel slung across his chest, and he began filling it with the weapons and equipment strapped to the hips and legs of the corpse. It was an incredible haul: two pulse pistols, a fighting knife with a twelve-inch serrated blade, six shock grenades, four incendiary grenades, signal flares, and several items Milo couldn’t immediately recognize. Any kind of tech was worth scavenging, and alien tech ten times so. The Earth Alliance scientists had recovered very little of that tech intact, because taking down a shocktrooper usually resulted in most of the body and its equipment being turned into melted slag and ash. The drop-ships and scout craft tended to blow up when shot down—something about how the coolant systems on the Dissosterin engines worked. Superb designs for flying, but awful for trying to scavenge anything useful.

  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.