Somehow John remembered his duty. “Leave it, Weathers,” he said. “It’s good to have you back. But you’re part of a team, now. Just chill with us. We’ll sort things out.”
Smiling, Weathers shook his head. “That’s a big no-can-do, Mr. Establishment Man. It’s time to deal out some
He vanished.
“How does he
A Simba infantry squad came down the dune. Their tall, turbaned Sikh officer shouted for medics. Dark hands propped John to a sitting position and held a canteen to his torn lips. Simone got up and went to stand next to Buford.
Away across the dunes, white light flashed against the sky like distant lightning. A black smoke stalk sprang up in response. A moment later, a rumble reached John’s ears. Another flare lit the sky. “I got me a bad feelin’ about this,” Buford says. “Never seen a feller look so crazy.”
Snowblind crossed her arms and leaned against him. “What he said,” she said.
Tom burned through energy like a drunk playboy’s bankroll in a Monte Carlo casino. But all he had to do was land and breathe for a few minutes. Then he was good to go again.
It was as if killing these running-dog colonial lackeys
He leapt into the sky, seeking more lives to take. A mile ahead he saw a sizable village. As he approached, climbing for a clearer look, he saw fleeing Nigerian armor had locked the narrow streets up tight.
He smiled like the Angel of Death. And swept downward like a scythe.
Noisily Simone barfed over the side of the Land Rover.
Around them smoldered the ruins of a murdered town. The stench was as thick as the flies. The flies were thick as monsoon rain.
“There must be hundreds dead here,” John Fortune said. He wasn’t feeling so good himself.
The Lama floated by the car. “One thousand,” he said.
A reserve Simba column had routed the Nigerians raiding the base camp where the Lama’s body had sat in lotus while his spirit did its astral scout thing. Without Butcher Dagon to back them they didn’t put up much fight. Another Wolf and some intact Brazilian peacekeepers had been found. They drove the Lama up with Brave Hawk flying top cover to pick up their comrades.
The team followed Tom Weathers’s wake of massacre. To his crowning horror.
Simone had quit puking. Now she sobbed. “How could he
“His power,” John Fortune said. He shook his head. “It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen. Like nothing I could’ve
“I didn’t mean that,” the young woman said. “I meant, how could he do so horrible a thing? It’s worse than what happened in that village. A hundred times worse.”
John could only shake his head some more. He had no words. In the seat behind him Buford muttered under his breath. John could only make out the words “terrible bad.”
“Why the long faces, children?”
They all looked up. The taunting voice came from ahead and above.
Tom Weathers hung thirty feet in the air. He descended slowly to stand before them with hands on jeans-clad hips.
Anger boiled up inside John. “What the
“I told you. Dealing out revolutionary justice.”
“But these poor villagers,” Simone said. “You killed them. You killed
He shrugged. “They were collaborators anyway. They had it coming.”
John almost released Sekhmet again. But he was held together by duct tape as it was. And more than for himself, he feared that if he let the Destroyer out now, she’d prove no more discriminating than Tom Weathers had. “You’re a war criminal, Weathers,” he said. “That’s the only way to say it.”
“What? When colonialists bomb or shell neighborhoods full of indigenous people you call it ‘collateral damage.’ What makes this worse?”
“Just because others do it doesn’t make it right,” Simone said.
“I cannot
“This wasn’t revolution,” Simone told her fallen idol. There was no heat in her voice. No life at all. Verbal flatline. “It was murder.”
Weathers sneered. “You can’t make an omelet without breaking eggs.”
Buford gripped John’s arm. “It’s all over here, Mr. Fortune,” he said. “This is a bad place. Let’s go home.”
“Yeah,” John said. “It is over. We’re not part of this.”
“Yeah!” Tom flared at them with wild hateful laughter. “Your work here is done, right? And I did it for you. Now you want to run on home. Run, then.
“You’re all fucking fascists. Just like the rest of them.”
Standing amid the devastation he had created, the Radical watched them drive away. His chest pumped like bellows. His stomach was a surging chaos of nausea. He had spent himself unimaginably. Soon his body would pay the price.