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The King of Plagues Read online
    Table of Contents
   Title Page
   Prologue
   Part One - Seven Kings
   Chapter One
   Chapter Two
   Chapter Three
   Chapter Four
   Chapter Five
   Chapter Six
   Chapter Seven
   Interlude One
   Chapter Eight
   Chapter Nine
   Interlude Two
   Chapter Ten
   Interlude Three
   Interlude Four
   Chapter Eleven
   Interlude Five
   Chapter Twelve
   Interlude Six
   Interlude Seven
   Chapter Thirteen
   Chapter Fourteen
   Interlude Eight
   Interlude Nine
   Chapter Fifteen
   Chapter Sixteen
   Interlude Ten
   Chapter Seventeen
   Interlude Eleven
   Chapter Eighteen
   Chapter Nineteen
   Part Two - Driving Force
   Chapter Twenty
   Chapter Twenty-one
   Chapter Twenty-two
   Interlude Twelve
   Chapter Twenty-three
   Interlude Thirteen
   Chapter Twenty-four
   Chapter Twenty-five
   Interlude Fourteen
   Interlude Fifteen
   Chapter Twenty-six
   Interlude Sixteen
   Interlude Seventeen
   Chapter Twenty-seven
   Chapter Twenty-eight
   Interlude Eighteen
   Chapter Twenty-nine
   Chapter Thirty
   Interlude Nineteen
   Chapter Thirty-one
   Interlude Twenty
   Chapter Thirty-two
   Interlude Twenty-one
   Chapter Thirty-three
   Interlude Twenty-two
   Chapter Thirty-four
   Interlude Twenty-three
   Chapter Thirty-five
   Interlude Twenty-four
   Interlude Twenty-five
   Chapter Thirty-six
   Part Three - Ten Plagues
   Chapter Thirty-seven
   Chapter Thirty-eight
   Interlude Twenty-six
   Chapter Thirty-nine
   Interlude Twenty-seven
   Interlude Twenty-eight
   Chapter Forty
   Interlude Twenty-nine
   Chapter Forty-one
   Interlude Thirty
   Chapter Forty-two
   Chapter Forty-three
   Interlude Thirty-one
   Chapter Forty-four
   Chapter Forty-five
   Chapter Forty-six
   Interlude Thirty-two
   Interlude Thirty-three
   Chapter Forty-seven
   Chapter Forty-eight
   Chapter Forty-nine
   Interlude Thirty-four
   Chapter Fifty
   Part Four - Conspiracy Theories
   Chapter Fifty-one
   Interlude Thirty-five
   Interlude Thirty-six
   Chapter Fifty-two
   Chapter Fifty-three
   Chapter Fifty-four
   Interlude Thirty-seven
   Chapter Fifty-five
   Chapter Fifty-six
   Interlude Thirty-eight
   Interlude Thirty-nine
   Chapter Fifty-seven
   Interlude Forty
   Chapter Fifty-eight
   Interlude Forty-one
   Chapter Fifty-nine
   Chapter Sixty
   Chapter Sixty-one
   Chapter Sixty-two
   Chapter Sixty-three
   Chapter Sixty-four
   Interlude Forty-two
   Chapter Sixty-five
   Part Five - Grief’s Best Music
   Chapter Sixty-six
   Chapter Sixty-seven
   Chapter Sixty-eight
   Chapter Sixty-nine
   Chapter Seventy
   Interlude Forty-three
   Chapter Seventy-one
   Interlude Forty-four
   Chapter Seventy-two
   Interlude Forty-five
   Chapter Seventy-three
   Chapter Seventy-four
   Interlude Forty-six
   Interlude Forty-seven
   Chapter Seventy-five
   Chapter Seventy-six
   Chapter Seventy-seven
   Chapter Seventy-eight
   Chapter Seventy-nine
   Chapter Eighty
   Chapter Eighty-one
   Chapter Eighty-two
   Chapter Eighty-three
   Chapter Eighty-four
   Chapter Eighty-five
   Chapter Eighty-six
   Chapter Eighty-seven
   Chapter Eighty-eight
   Chapter Eighty-nine
   Epilogue
   Acknowledgments
   Also by Jonathan Maberry
   Praise
   Copyright Page
   This is for the brave men and women of the U.S. Armed Forces. Politics aside, if you’re wearing the uniform in these troubled times, know that there are a lot of people who appreciate and respect what you do. Come home safe.
   And, as always, for Sara Jo.
   Prologue
   Harley Street, London
   Seven Weeks Ago
   “Unless you do exactly what you’re told,” whispered a voice, “we’ll kill your wife and daughter.”
   The words dug into Trevor Plympton’s brain like railroad spikes. He sat on the chair, wrists bound to the armrests with plastic pipe ties, ankles tied to the wheeled feet of the chair. A hood over his head let in no light. He was lost in a world of darkness and fear. And those words.
   He could barely remember what had happened. He’d taken the elevator to the basement parking garage, clicked open the locks on his Vauxhall Astra, felt a sharp burn against the back of his neck and then nothing. When he finally woke up he was already lashed to the chair. He’d cried out in alarm, tried yelling for help.
   A heavy hand belted him across the face. A savage blow, made worse by the absolute surprise of it. He couldn’t see it coming, could not even brace against it or turn away.
   Then the whispering voice.
   “W-what … ?” It was the best response he could muster. Nothing made sense; the world was a confusion of disorientation, fear, and pain.
   “Did you understand what I said?” asked the voice. A male voice. Was there an accent? It was hard to tell with the whisper.
   “Yes,” Plympton gasped.
   “Tell me what I said.”
   “T-that you’d k-kill my family—”
   A hand clamped onto Plympton’s crotch and squeezed with sudden and terrible strength. The pain was white-hot and immense. The grip was there and gone, as abrupt as the snap of a steel trap.
   “That’s incorrect,” said the voice. “Try again.”
   Plympton whimpered and then suddenly flinched, imagining another grab or blow. But there was nothing. After a handful of seconds Plympton relaxed a little.
   Which was when the hand grabbed him again. Harder this time.
   Plympton screamed.
   “Shhhh,” cautioned the whisperer. “Or next time I’ll use pliers.”
   The scream died in Plympton’s throat.
   “Now,” said the whisperer, “tell me what I said.”
   “You … said that …” Plympton wracked his brain for the exact words. “Unless … I did exactly what you said, you’d … kill my wife … and daughter.” The words were a tangle of fishing hooks in his throat. Ugly words, it was impossible that he was saying them.
   When the hand touched him again it was a gentle pat on the cheek. Even so, Plympton yelped and jumped.
   “Better.” The man smoothed the hood over Plympton’s cheek.
   “W-what do you want me to do?”
   “We’ll get to that. What concerns us in this minute is whether you will agree to do whatever I ask. It will be easy for you. It will be just another day at work.”
   “At work?”
   A million dreadful possibilities flooded Plympton’s mind.
   The whisperer said, “I’m going to remove the hood because I want to show you something. If you turn your head, your family will die. If you yell or try to escape, your family will die. Do you understand me?”
   “God,” Plympton said. Then, before the whisperer could punish him again, he said, “Yes.”
   “There won’t be a second warning.”
   “I swear.”
   The whisperer placed his hand on Plympton’s head, fingers splayed like a skullcap, and then slowly curled them into a fist around a fold of the hood. He whipped it off so violently that it tore a handful of hairs from Plympton’s scalp.
   Plympton almost screamed with the pain, but the warning was too present.
   “Open your eyes,”
   Plympton obeyed, blinking against the light. As his eyes adjusted he stared in shock and confusion.
   He was in his own apartment, tied to the chair in his own office. The desk before him was neat and tidy, as he’d left it, but the computer monitor had been turned away. No reflection, he thought with bizarre clarity.
   Plympton could not see the man, but he could feel him. And smell him. An odd combination of scents—expensive cologne, cooked meat, gasoline, and testosterone. The overall effect was of something large and powerful and wrong behind him, and with a jolt Plympton realized that he’d started to think of his captor as a thing rather than a person. A force.
   “I want you to look at some pretty pictures,” the stranger whispered.
   The man’s hand came into Plympton’s peripheral vision. Thick forearm, thick wrist, black leather glove. The man laid a photograph down on the desk. The hand vanished and returned with a second picture, and a third, and more until there were six four-by-six-inch photos on the green desk blotter. What Plympton saw in those pictures instantly separated him from the pain that still hummed in his nerve endings.
   Each picture was of a different woman or teenage girl. Three women, three girls. All nude. All dead. The unrelenting clarity of the photos revealed everything that had been done to them. Plympton’s mind rebelled against even naming the separate atrocities. To inventory such deliberate savagery was to admit that he could embrace the knowledge, that his mind could understand them, and that would be like admitting kinship to the devil himself. It would break Plympton and he knew it, so he forced his eyes not to see, his mind not to record. He prayed with every fiber of his being that these things had been done to these women after they were dead.
   Though … he knew that wasn’t true.
   The arm reappeared and tapped each photo until it was square with the others in a neat line.
   “Do you see?” the whisperer asked. “Aren’t they beautiful? My angels.”
   “God … .” It was all Plympton could force past the bile in his throat.
   “See this one?” The whisperer placed a finger on the corner of the third photo. One of the teenagers. “She was the same age as your daughter.”
   “Please!” Plympton cried. “Please don’t hurt my daughter! For the love of God, please don’t hurt my little girl … .”
   Pain exploded in Plympton’s shoulder. It was only after several gasping, inarticulate moments that he was able to understand what had just happened. The whisperer had struck Plympton on a cluster of nerves in the valley between the left trapezius and the side of his neck. It had been fast and horribly precise. The whole left side of his body seemed to catch fire and go numb at the same time.
   “Shhhh,” cautioned the whisperer. After a long moment the man patted Plympton’s shoulder. “Good. Now … I have two more pictures to show you.”
   “No,” sobbed Plympton. He closed his eyes, but then the whisperer’s lips were right there by his ear.
   “Open your eyes or I’ll cut off your eyelids, yes?”
   Plympton mumbled something, nodded.
   The whisperer placed two more four-by-six photos on the desk, arranging them in the center and above the line of six photos. A strangled cry gurgled from Plympton’s throat.
   The photos were of his wife and daughter.
   In the first photograph, his wife was wearing only a pair of sheer panties and a demi-cup bra as she leaned her hips against the sink and bent close to the mirror to apply her makeup. Her face wore the bland expression of someone who believed she was totally alone and who was completely absorbed in the minutiae of daily routine. The picture had been taken from behind so that she was seen from the backs of her knees to above her head, with the front of her from hips to hair in the mirror. Plympton’s heart sank. Laura looked as pale and beautiful now as she had when they’d first met twenty-two years ago. And he loved her with his whole heart.
   That heart threatened to tear loose from his chest as he looked at the second picture.
   His daughter, Zoë. Fifteen years old and the image of her mother, except that instead of mature elegance Zoë had a lush coltish grace. In the photo, Zoë was naked, her young body steaming with hot water as she stepped out of the shower over the rim of the tub, one hand raised to push aside a shower curtain that had a pattern of swirling stars. Plympton saw his daughter in her unguarded nakedness and it awoke in him a hot fury—an inferno of murderous rage that flooded his arms with power. His whole body tensed, but then the whisperer said, “We have someone watching them both right now. We are watching them every minute of every day. We have their cell phones tapped. We’re in their computers. We know their passwords, their travel routes, all their habits. Six times each day I have to make calls to tell my people not to kill them.”
   As fast as the rage had built in Plympton it was gone, leaving only a desolated shell of impotent anger.
   The whisperer said nothing for a whole minute, letting those words tear through the chambers of Plympton’s mind and overturn all the furniture and smash out every window. Then the whisperer reached past Plympton and slid two of the photos out of the line of six. He placed one next to the picture of Laura, the other next to the picture of Zoë. The woman in the first picture was about Laura’s age; she had the same basic coloring. The same for the photo of the girl next to Zoë’s photo. He did this without comment, but the juxtaposition was dreadful in its eloquence.
   “Now,” said the whisperer after another quiet minute, “tell me again what I told you.”
   Plympton licked his dry lips. “Unless … I do exactly what I’m told you’ll kill my wife and daughter.”
   “You believe me, yes?”
   “Yes.” Tears broke and fell, cutting acid lines down Plympton’s cheeks.
   “Will you do what I want?”
   “Yes.”
   “Anything? Will you do absolutely anything that I want?”
   “Yes.” Each time Plympton said the word he lost more of himself. All that remained now was a frayed tether of hope.
   “Good.”
   “If … if I do,” Plympton said, dredging up a splinter of nerve, “will you leave them alone? Will you leave my family alone?”
   “We will,” promised the whisperer.
   “How do I know that you’ll keep your word?”
   There was a pause, then, “Are you a man of faith, Mr. Plympton?”
   It was such a strange question, its placement and timing so disjointed, that Plympton was caught off-guard and answered by reflex.
   “Yes,” he said.
   “So am I.” The whisperer leaned close so that once more his breath was a nauseating caress on Plympton’s ear. “I swear before the Almighty Goddess that if you do what we want—and if you never talk about this with anyone—then I will not harm your wife or daughter.”
   “Don’t fuck with me,” Plympton snarled, a
nd heard the man chuckle at the sudden ferocity in his voice. “You said ‘I.’ I want your word that none of you will ever come near them. Or harm them in any way.”
   “I so swear,” said the whisperer. “And may the Goddess strike me down and curse my family to seven generations if I lie.”
   

 Flesh & Bone
Flesh & Bone The Adventure of the Greenbriar Ghost
The Adventure of the Greenbriar Ghost Whistling Past the Graveyard
Whistling Past the Graveyard Scary Out There
Scary Out There The Wolfman
The Wolfman The King of Plagues
The King of Plagues Doctor Nine
Doctor Nine Fire & Ash
Fire & Ash The Dragon Factory
The Dragon Factory Deadlands: Ghostwalkers
Deadlands: Ghostwalkers Glimpse
Glimpse Mars One
Mars One Benny Imura 03.5: Tooth & Nail
Benny Imura 03.5: Tooth & Nail Bits & Pieces
Bits & Pieces Dust & Decay
Dust & Decay Patient Zero
Patient Zero The Orphan Army
The Orphan Army Ghost Road Blues
Ghost Road Blues Vault of Shadows
Vault of Shadows Dust and Decay
Dust and Decay Rot and Ruin
Rot and Ruin Code Zero
Code Zero Kill Switch
Kill Switch Like Part of the Family
Like Part of the Family Flesh and Bone
Flesh and Bone Bad Moon Rising
Bad Moon Rising V-Wars
V-Wars Dead & Gone
Dead & Gone Fire and Ash
Fire and Ash Hellhole
Hellhole Countdown
Countdown Dogs of War
Dogs of War Pegleg and Paddy Save the World
Pegleg and Paddy Save the World Dead Mans Song
Dead Mans Song Assassin's Code
Assassin's Code Dead of Night
Dead of Night Zombie CSU
Zombie CSU Dark of Night - Flesh and Fire
Dark of Night - Flesh and Fire Aliens: Bug Hunt
Aliens: Bug Hunt Broken Lands
Broken Lands Fall of Night
Fall of Night Ink
Ink Still of Night
Still of Night Relentless
Relentless Joe Ledger 1.20 - Story to the Dragon Factory - Deep, Dark (a joe ledger novel)
Joe Ledger 1.20 - Story to the Dragon Factory - Deep, Dark (a joe ledger novel) Property Condemned (pine deep)
Property Condemned (pine deep) The Dragon Factory jl-2
The Dragon Factory jl-2 Deep Silence
Deep Silence Joe Ledger
Joe Ledger SNAFU: An Anthology of Military Horror
SNAFU: An Anthology of Military Horror Assassin's code jl-4
Assassin's code jl-4 Code Zero: A Joe Ledger Novel
Code Zero: A Joe Ledger Novel Fire & Ash bi-4
Fire & Ash bi-4 Tooth & Nail (benny imura)
Tooth & Nail (benny imura) Dead Man's Song pd-2
Dead Man's Song pd-2 Joe Ledger: Unstoppable
Joe Ledger: Unstoppable The King of Plagues jl-3
The King of Plagues jl-3 The X-Files Origins--Devil's Advocate
The X-Files Origins--Devil's Advocate Limbus, Inc., Book III
Limbus, Inc., Book III Ghost Road Blues pd-1
Ghost Road Blues pd-1 Patient Zero jl-1
Patient Zero jl-1 Death, Be Not Proud
Death, Be Not Proud Countdown: A Joe Ledger Prequel Short Story to Patient Zero (joe ledger)
Countdown: A Joe Ledger Prequel Short Story to Patient Zero (joe ledger) Aliens
Aliens Extinction Machine jl-5
Extinction Machine jl-5 Ghostwalkers
Ghostwalkers Flesh & Bone bi-3
Flesh & Bone bi-3 Joe Ledger 2.10 - Material Witness (a joe ledger novel)
Joe Ledger 2.10 - Material Witness (a joe ledger novel) Nights of the Living Dead
Nights of the Living Dead Dead & Gone (benny imura)
Dead & Gone (benny imura) SNAFU: Heroes: An Anthology of Military Horror
SNAFU: Heroes: An Anthology of Military Horror Tooth & Nail: A Rot & Ruin Story
Tooth & Nail: A Rot & Ruin Story