âAll this â this insanity, the terror and the hellish creatures everywhere â itâs all because of a book, a kidsâ book, called Dancing Jax. It was written back in 1936 by⦠I donât know what youâd call him there, but Iâd say âoccultistâ. Do you know what that is? But he was and is much more than that: Austerly Fellows â the most dangerous and evil man to have ever lived â and heâs still very much alive. The book wasnât published until late last year, by a man who Austerly Fellows has completely taken over. The guy was just some layabout chancer who broke into the wrong place and that was the end of him. He goes by the name of the Ismus now, after the main character in the story, and the world hangs on his every word.
âSo many people have died, so many lives torn apart, so many more are suffering right now, but what really scares me, what keeps me wide awake, well into the night, is not the fear of him and his foul creatures finding me: itâs wondering what heâs got planned. What next? This isnât it â this wonât be enough. Austerly Fellows is working to a plan, something even more terrible than what weâve already seen. No, I have no idea what it is. How could I?
âLook, Iâm nothing, a nobody â this isnât political. That â all that â is history now; it doesnât exist any more. Iâm just a maths teacher from a tiny place in England called Felixstowe, and Iâm tired and desperate. Why else would I be here, begging for your help? Youâve got to believe me, Dancing Jax is coming â and not even you can shut it out. Youâve been cut off from the rest of the world for a long time, but that wonât help you now. Nothing can stop it! Nothing⦠except just maybe⦠one of those kids back in the UK. He just might be the answer to our prayers and thatâs why you have to help. Itâs the only hope we have.â
The video message ended and the TV screen went blank. The Marshals turned to the figure in black seated between them.
âDo what he asks,â their Supreme Leader said quietly. âInstigate the rescue â immediately.â
ACROSS LONDON, COLUMNS of dark, oily smoke rose high in the still air. There were always fires now: cars, homes, people. There was always something to burn. The mirrored towers of Canary Wharf flashed with the apricot light of an evening in late summer. Although many of those windows were now shattered or smeared with the filthy trails of bloated creatures that crawled down at night, there were enough panes left for the setting sun to dazzle and flare in.
The Thames was high. Its surface was unmarred by river traffic, but fouled by scum, creeping weeds and long waving chains of jelly-like spawn. The water moved thickly around half-submerged wrecks of lorries and buses. They had been torn from the bridges by things that made their nests in the shadowy arches beneath, where great clusters of leathery eggs hung in webbed nets.
A teenage couple strolled along the deserted South Bank, heedless of the ruined city, eyes only for each other and the occupant of the buggy pushed by the boy. It was one of those overdesigned three-wheelers that looked like it should be roving the surface of Mars. But garlands of fluffy pink feathers had been twined about the handles to soften and personalise it and a foil Garfield balloon bobbed above.
Lee Charles smiled down at the infant secured safely in the seat. A knitted hat, shaped like a cupcake, with pink woolly icing and a glittery cherry on top, sat lightly on her small sleeping head. The biggest grin in the world lit up Leeâs face whenever he looked at her. She was the most precious and beautiful baby he had ever seen. He lived for her smiles, and her innocence lapped around her like a flame. He would surrender his life to keep it burning. By his side, arm linked through his, the girl called Charm rested her chin on his shoulder.
âAww,â she said. âWhat is you like? What a softy. Some gangsta you is.â
Lee planted a chuckling kiss on her lips.
âYou twoâs my gang now, Sweets,â he told her, his nose pressing against hers.
The girl kissed him back then glanced across the river at the once grand buildings, now derelict and unsafe.
âWere it worth it though?â she murmured. âI mean⦠all that. All what went on. Were it worth what you did?â
Lee pushed his fingers through her long hair and guided her lovely face back to him.