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Ashes Ashes: The Complete Series
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Ashes, Ashes
The Complete Six Book Series
Karyn Langhorne Folan
Previously published as The Doomsday Kids
The promise
Ashes, ashes
Was previously published as
LIAM’S PROMISE
THE DOOMSDAY KIDS
By
Karyn Langhorne Folan
K Squared Books
Previously published as: The Doomsday Kids Book 1
Copyright © 2014 by Karyn Langhorne Folan
Book Formatting by Savannah Frierson (www.sjfbooks.com)
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. Inquiries should be addressed to [email protected]
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents, organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Published in the United States of America by K Squared Books.
Created with Vellum
Last Call
She couldn’t have picked a worse time.
I was in Mr. Murphy’s class. He’d probably been teaching 10th grade English since God was a boy, but he still liked to dodder between the rows of desks, peering down over us, hoping to catch someone doing something they weren’t supposed to be doing. Like texting or playing games on their smart phones. Just my luck, he was at the back of my row, shuffling toward me at geezer-warp speed when my phone buzzed in my pocket.
“Mom, Work.”
I almost didn’t answer, but just before it rolled to voicemail, I pressed the button.
“Mom…” I slumped down in my seat, hiding the phone in my shoulder. “It’s not a good time—”
“I don’t care,” Mom snapped. “Listen to me, Liam. Get out of there. Right now—”
“But Mom—”
“Just get up and leave. Get Lilly and get to the Mountain Place, as fast as you can—”
The Mountain Place? Mom hated that place. “Waste of money,” she muttered every time Dad mentioned it. “Preparing for disasters while the house we live in falls apart…” But now she was telling me to take Lilly and go to the cabin almost two hundred miles away?
Something was wrong. Something worse than the rift between her and Dad that had sent him away. Almost every night I heard her talking to him on the phone when she thought Lilly and I were asleep, sometimes arguing with him and sometimes…well, pleading I guess would be the right word. It was weird, hearing her beg. She had been a Staff Sergeant in the Army before I was born, and these days she was a civilian employee at the Pentagon with a security clearance so super-secret she never talked about her job at all.
My mom wasn’t the panicking kind.
A chill slid down my spine, shivering me into action. I grabbed my backpack off the floor and stood up.
“I can’t explain, Liam.” Her voice dropped to a whisper. “But this is not a drill. The senior people here are headed for the bunkers. They’ve only done that once before—and it was for real that day, too.”
“What about you, Mom? We’ll wait for you at home—”
“No. There’s not a second to lose. Don’t worry about me. And Liam,” she paused for a deep, choking breath and I realized she was crying—my tough, no nonsense mother who I’d seen kill a snake with a pair of hedge trimmers and drain pus from Dad’s legs right after the amputations—was sobbing over the phone. “Y-you know how much I love you, don’t you? You’re the best son any mother could have hoped for. Now get Lilly. Promise me you’ll go now. Promise me you’ll get to the Mountain Place as fast as you can before they make the announcement to the public. You might have an hour’s head start. Maybe less. Tell Lilly how much I love her. And when you get to the Place, tell your father that I was wrong. Tell him that I—”
Mr. Murphy snatched the phone out of my hand before she could finish.
“Harper, we covered this the first day. No cell phones in my class—”
“Give me that back!” I grabbed his scrawny, spotted wrist and wrestled the phone out of his hand. He’s taller than me, but like I said, he’s an old man—at least 50-something. I’m not “cut” like that dude in those silly Twilight movies, but I chop wood, drag deer and seem to always have some heavy pack of something on my back, so I’m strong even when I’m not angry.
“How dare you, Harper,” Murphy seethed, grabbing my t-shirt with his face the color of ham and his eyes popping out of his saggy face. “You are not exempt from the rules in this—”
I shoved him away from me. His back thumped against the wall and his thick-soled shoes made a squishy wet fart noise as they slipped out from under him. He sank to the floor, his limbs flopping over themselves like a sad stuffed animal in the Goodwill dollar bin.
“Uh oh, Apocalyptoid is at it again,” Rod Wasserman snickered, shaking his slick black hair out of his eyes. Wasserman was to me what Khan was to James T. Kirk in the Star Trek series: a nemesis with all the powers that I lacked—popularity, a quick wit and a seemingly endless supply of cash. Six weeks into the school year and we already had all kinds of history…none of it good.
“You—you—will be expelled for that, Harper—” Murphy sputtered, scrambling up from the floor. “You have been a disruptive influence from the first moment you set foot in this school—”
He was right, of course, but right then, it didn’t matter. I pressed my phone back against my ear.
“Mom? Mom?” I listened for evidence that she was still there, waiting to finish her sentence. But the connection was broken and she was gone.
Get Lilly and get to the Mountain Place. Now before they make the announcement to the public…
Whatever was happening was bad. Big and bad. 9/11/01 bad. I was too young to remember it, but I understood the impact of that day. If it hadn’t been for 9/11/01, Dad would probably still have two legs.
Get Lilly and get to the Mountain Place. Promise me…
School security would be after me in minutes—faster if Mr. Richter was involved—but instead of running straight for the nearest exit, I dashed down the hallways, once so strange to me, but now as familiar as the corridors of my own house. I had made exactly two friends since coming to John F. Kennedy High—and both of them were in Mrs. Standish’s fifth period class. One of them was Mrs. Standish herself…and the other was the kind of girl that I’d probably been homeschooled for all those years to avoid. Now that I knew Amaranth Jones, though, there was no way I was leaving without her.
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Amaranth’s Welcome
Hers was the only face that stood out to me on the first day of school.
I hadn’t gone to a real school in more than five years—since I was in 5th grade. That was when Lilly was supposed to go to kindergarten. When Mom enrolled her, she and Dad had a huge fight. The next day Dad took over both our educations—and Mom moved into the guest bedroom.
After five years of school at the kitchen table, I had no idea what to expect from “regular school.” High school was what I’d seen on TV and in movies: sharply-divided and easily identifiable cliques of jocks and nerds, or glee club geeks and popular girls. But I quickly discovered that, in reality, high school was a sea of blue jeans and t-shirts, piercings and dyed hair, new smart phones and old backpacks.
And Amaranth.
And me.
I was standing there, talking to Nester Bartlett,
the one kid my age I still knew from BDCH—before Dad came home—but only because the Bartlett’s lived right next door to us. Nester used to invite me over to play video games or to a toss a ball around—but that hadn’t happened in a long time. Not since my dad invited Nester’s stepdad on a deer hunt. Shortly after that, Nester’s stepdad told him we were “survivalist nutcases” and not to hang out with me anymore.
So I was surprised when Nester waved me over, grinning like we were buddies. “My man!” Nester’s Afro waved like the white fluffy stuff on a dandelion at the end of summer. “I was sure your Pop would pull the plug at the last minute. I bet he’s salty this morning!”
“Salty?”
“Pissed off,” Nester laughed. “I’m gonna like having you around. I’m far from the coolest dude in school, but next to you, I’m like, Prom King or something.”
“Yeah,” I agreed. “I guess so.”
“Well,” Nester leaned toward me. “I didn’t want to ask before—‘cause I wasn’t sure you were actually going to make it, but since you’re here, you think I could get a ride to school with you in the mornings? My stepdad’s new job with the law firm has some crazy hours. And Mom…” He didn’t finish the sentence. Nester’s mom was a pediatrician at Children’s Hospital and spent so much time with other people’s sick kids she rarely saw her own. “I got a bus pass but—” He looked a little embarrassed. “Well, you know how it is on the county bus. You’re the only kid our age I know who drives to school so I figured—”
“Sure. No problem.” My ancient Honda was parked behind the football field with a gold JFK Student parking tag hanging from the rearview mirror. It needed a paint job but the engine was rebuilt and it ran like new. I’d gotten my driver’s license last summer in West Virginia under a special provision that allowed farm kids to start driving at 14. Nester and I were the same age—fifteen—but under Maryland law, he had almost a full year to wait.
“Are you sure, man?” Nester scrunched his glasses up his nose and braced himself like he was expecting some payback for how he’d kneecapped me after the deer hunt. He didn’t know I was too happy to have someone to talk to go there.
“Yeah, sure,” I said, smiling. “It’s cool. I gotta come here anyway, right?”
Nester grinned, offering me his knuckles in salute. It took me a second before I understood, but eventually, I thumped my fist against his.
“All right,” Nester said, nodding. “Cool, then.”
He looked at me like he was waiting for me to say something, but I couldn’t think of anything that wouldn’t make me sound like an ignoramus. I wished I’d seen a recent movie, or owned a video game—or even that I played a sport—just to have something to offer. But the only thoughts that were in my mind were about how my father had gotten us all up at 3am for a morning drill, timing how quickly we could get our gear and be ready to “bug-out” for safer territory in an emergency. He’d even wanted us to drive with him to the Mountain Place and back—a five hour round trip.
“They have school, David!” Mom snapped.
“So? Emergencies don’t limit themselves to weekends, Sandy! I got the bus idling outside. They’ll be back in time—”
“The Bus!” Mom rolled her eyes. “This is just ridiculous—”
And then they started arguing and finally, Dad left without us. Mom sent Lilly and me back to our rooms, telling us to “Go back to sleep!” But at the breakfast table, the worn-down, sleepless look on her face told me she hadn’t slept any better than I had.
I couldn’t say any of that to Nester, standing there on my very first day of public school in five years—not when I knew what Nester and his family thought of homeschooled kids in the first place—so I started looking around me.
JFK was like most of the schools in this part of Maryland: a suburban mix of races, religions and ethnicities bound together by the federal government and technology jobs scattered around Washington, DC like rings around a bull’s eye. Black kids and white kids, Chinese kids and African kids, Hispanic kids and Indian kids, for all their differences, all looked kind of the same—reasonably prosperous, reasonably well-educated, reasonably well-indulged.
Two men in dark purple shirts with the word “Security” emblazoned on their backs supervised us as we enjoyed the last of our freedom. One of them—a tall brown-skinned man with white teeth and an easy smile—moved among us, giving out high fives, hugs and jokes. He acted like more like the mayor of JFK than its police force and I could tell the kids liked him by the way they yelled, “Mr. Gary! Mr. Gary!” I wasn’t sure if that was his first name or his last, but he was hailed like a friend. The other guy, a stocky man white man with his thick lips angled down like a bulldog’s muzzle, stood in the street with his arms crossed on his barrel chest, glowering at us like a wary prison guard. He must have felt my stare because he looked right at me. I turned my head quickly, feeling like I’d done something wrong.
That’s when I saw her: a really pale girl with ratty shoulder length red hair and wide-open green eyes. She wore a dirty-looking blue hoodie over a grungy tank top that was probably white back when Bush was president and a pair of dark skinny legged jeans. She caught my attention because she was standing alone and completely still in the center of the noise and activity—and also because, even with the messy hair and the dirty looking clothes, she was the prettiest girl I’d ever seen.
I didn’t think she was looking at me—I even turned to see who was standing behind me—but I was wrong. She was staring at me, measuring me with an intensity that made me feel like a circus freak. I half expected her to pull out her phone and take a picture of me for her Instagram feed or whatever website she used to keep her many friends abreast of the passing seconds of her experience. But she didn’t.
“Who’s that? Really skinny girl. Red hair.”
“Oh,” Nester said dismissively. “That’s Amaranth Jones. She showed up a few years ago. Lives at one of the group homes for kids without parents.” He shrugged. “Stay away from her, man. She’s—”
A massive engine roared over his words. For a second I thought Rolling Thunder—the thousands of motorcycles that converge on Washington, DC on Memorial Day—had pulled into our high school parking lot months ahead of schedule. But there were no motorcycles.
An old bus, painted in the browns and greens of woodland camouflage, turned into the circular drive that was only supposed to be used by school busses. The yellow ones. But this bus hadn’t been used for transporting students for decades. The seats had been taken out and the windows tinted so you could only partly make out what was inside. There was a cow catcher—a long angled scooper, like on a snow plow—jury-rigged to its grill. But the biggest change was under the hood: the engine had been modified for speed and sound.
Of course, no one else knew all of that. All they could see was a dusty green bus with blacked-out windows parking right in front of the school.
Please don’t get out, I prayed. Please, please, please…
But the bus’s bi-fold doors creaked open with a pneumatic sucking sound and Dad emerged wearing his drab green flak jacket atop a pair of loose black cargo shorts. Something stuck out of the top pocket; the glass neck and shoulders of a bottle of whisky. Below the shorts, his metal calves gleamed, reflecting the morning sun.
I held myself still. In my old jeans and hoodie, maybe I would blend into the sea of faces, and he wouldn’t see me.
But no. The kids parted between us like Dad had Moses’ staff and they were the waters of the Red Sea.
“See?” Dad spread his arms wide and blew a hot breath of liquor in my face. “I told ya I could make it up to the mountain and back before your damn school started,” he said triumphantly. “Have a little faith in me, Liam.” His strong features rearranged themselves and he laid a heavy hand on my shoulder, bracing himself a little. “You all just need to have a little faith,” he repeated, his voice dropping to a whisper.
Everyone was staring. Nester edged away from me like I was con
tagious. Even over the bus’s grumbling engine I could hear the snickers and whispers. It felt like the end of everything I had hoped for out of high school before I’d even walked through the front doors.
“Sir!” The security bulldog muscled his way through the kids like they were standing between him and his Purina dog chow. “Sir, you can’t park your…uh, vehicle…there. School buses only—”
“It is a school bus. Or was.” Dad smiled like he’d amused himself.
Bulldog didn’t share Dad’s sense of humor. He was close enough now that I could read his name—“Mr. Richter”—stitched in yellow script on the upper left quadrant of his purple polo shirt.
“You can’t park that thing there!” Richter snarled. His thick fingers moved to the radio on his hip. “Now are you going to move it, or do I need to call the cops—”
Without another word, Dad pivoted—not quite military sharp, but not bad for a man maneuvering on artificial legs—and hoisted himself back onto the bus. He drove off, the bus’s engine rumbling like a giant race car, just as the bell rang.
“All right, people! Summer’s over!” Mr. Gary opened his arms like a shepherd, embracing us with his deep, booming voice. “Get to your homerooms and get some knowledge in those brains—”
I turned to Nester. “So who is your homeroom—?”
“I’m gonna go on ahead, man,” he said quickly, not meeting my eyes.
“Oh. Well, I guess I’ll see you after. My car is parked—”
“On second thought, never mind. The county bus isn’t so bad.” Nester was already trudging up the stairs, trying to put as much distance between us as possible. “I—I’ll see you around, Liam.”
The only kid I knew disappeared into the sea of strangers. Other kids pressed past me with laughter in their eyes. I knew I should follow them into the building, but I couldn’t make my feet move. I nearly gave up right then. I nearly went home. I nearly considered the whole “public school experiment” abandoned—when, out of nowhere, someone pushed me so hard I nearly fell into the street. A folded piece of paper landed in the center of my palm before the person dashed past me toward the parking lot.