Alibi Island Read online
Alibi Island
An Illuminati Novel
SLMN
Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Epilogue
Kingston Imperial
Alibi Island Copyright © 2019 by Kingston Imperial 2, LLC
Printed in the United States of America
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
All Rights Reserved, including the rights to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Kingston Imperial 2, LLC
Rights Department, 144 North 7th Street, #255 Brooklyn N.Y. 11249
First Edition:
Book and Jacket Design: PiXiLL Designs
Cataloging in Publication data is on file with the library of Congress
ISBN 9780998767499 (Trade Paperback)
Prologue
Macy’s lungs were bursting.
She crashed through the undergrowth, not caring about the thorns which lashed at her face and tugged at what was left of her clothes. Moonlight spilled silver across the wide-open fields all the way to the Enchanted Forest hugging the lower slopes of the mountain. The air was hot and sticky with a ferocious humidity, but inside she felt as cold as a grave.
Macy dared not look behind at the pursuing men. Any hesitation in her forward momentum would bring them even closer. She surmised they wouldn’t risk shooting her with their hunting rifles from this distance, even though she knew some of them were good enough shooters to do so.
If there’s one thing she knew about these men, it’s that they would want to look into her eyes when they killed her. A bullet in the brain and a merciful release was no substitute for a kill made with your own hands, where you could taste the dying person’s last breath upon your lips.
Macy also knew that she could never escape them.
Her biting Lobo Snelling’s fat hand until he squealed like the pig he was, diving through the open window of his chalet, and running like her life depended on it, was in fact the complete opposite.
Macy’s death depended on it.
She wanted to die. In dying she wanted to take away their ultimate pleasure. She was going to kill herself. Quickly. As cleanly as possible to rob them of the delight of seeing her die up close and personal.
She darted through the perimeter fence as a black patrol Humvee returned to the compound. It was precisely on time as usual. Every night. Like clockwork. She’d bitten Lobo’s hand to coincide with the automatic gate beginning to slide open and pelted toward the opening before the complacent, black uniformed guards could even raise their weapons. Lobo hit the chalet’s alarm stud almost as soon as Macy crashed to the ground and rolled away from the building. She knew she had less than fifteen seconds to reach the perimeter wall and get through the gate system before the alarm automatics kicked in and slammed it shut.
If she timed it right, she would go through as the Humvee came in, thus preventing the automatics from crashing the gate into the patrol truck.
Macy witnessed many other runners fail at this hurdle. They hid within the compound’s grounds rather than heading straight for the outside, and that was their greatest mistake. Once the gates were closed, the dogs were released, and a runner would be caught in a matter of minutes, wherever they tried to hide.
But if you could make it through the wall, you had a chance…
Not of living…but of dying well.
Outside the perimeter fence was a well-maintained area of woodland, through which residents of the compound would take long lazy walks along wood-chipped paths, picnicking and enjoying the perennial sunshine on the island. There was an ornamental lake and an eighteen-hole putting green. Macy skirted the lake and sprinted across the green, heading for the area of shrubs and low trees that constituted the land reaching all the way to the island’s central mountain, looming two thousand feet into the night sky. To the west it was all jungle. She’d never be able to run fast enough through that.
Someone, perhaps Lobo—in between beating her and fucking her—told her that this part of the island was all rainforest and jungle before the compound was built. The Owners brought in a team of Filipino workers to clear the jungle. When they finished and were taking a boat back to the mainland, Lobo and the others were granted the privilege of shooting the boat to pieces with the belly slung cannons attached to the island’s two recreational JetRanger helicopters.
A red laser light beam lanced past her into the blue-black distance. Then a second, then a third. They were just trying to frighten her in an effort to arrest her run. So Macy continued at full speed. Let them shoot her if they wanted; maybe she would bleed to death before they reached her.
The sultry humidity reminded Macy of when she was taken seven years ago. She’d been walking home from school one summer’s evening in New Orleans. She was swinging her bag, singing a snatch of a song her momma liked—a song that she sadly couldn’t recall. It would have calmed her heart if she could remember it as she ran. It was a song her momma would hum whenever Macy was ill in bed, or when she was having difficulty getting off to sleep. Her momma, a beautiful but poor woman, waited tables during the day and sang jazz for pennies in the evening. She had a voice that could charm angels. Macy had often wondered in the time she’d been on the island if she inherited her momma’s voice. She dared not try the skill out there, even if she did possess it. She wouldn’t want to be found out. Having a skill that could be exploited for the sadistic and hateful desires of the permanent residents and visitors to the island was something that was imperative to hide. Any information could be used against you for the purposes of humiliation and degradation.
Macy had seen it happen too many times over the years that she was a prisoner. Girls who had phobias for spiders, made to sleep in a room with loose tarantulas for the amusement of the guests. Those who were afraid of fire, having their arms secured in locked boxes with glass sides, and their skin roasted while they screamed and the audience laughed.
Macy kept her phobias to herself, having learned that trick very early on. The less you gave, the less they could take from you.
The sound of a helicopter rising above brought Macy’s thoughts back to the present and the reality of her situation. She estimated she was minutes away from her goal if she could maintain this pace. The helicopter would be used to track her but would not land to stop her. That was against the rules of the hunt, even an impromptu hunt like this one.
Only residents and visitors could take part in hunts; the security forces on the island were there just to provide safety from discovery or to ensure passions didn’t get out of hand and visitors didn’t start killing each other just for the fun of it. When there were so many drugs, alcohol, and absolutely no comeback, sometimes people might forget themselves. A resident would never do that; they knew how much they would lose. Visitors took a while to acclimate to the freedoms presented by t
he island.
The spotlight from the helicopter nailed Macy in a cone of the harshest white. It hurt her eyes, and she could feel the heat of it on her back. The draft of the rotors was getting nearer, so the pursuing hunters could range accurately where Macy was in relation to the far tree line.
If Macy made it to the Enchanted Forest the helicopter would no longer be able to track her, she figured, and the hunters—some in their late fifties or older—might just give up and leave the hunt to the younger residents. That would cut the number of men hunting her at least by half and increase her possibility of reaching her goal before they caught her.
Macy’s chest felt raw as tenderized steak, her arms like cold lead, and her legs like her feet had been cut off and she was running on stumps.
She planned to escape tonight because she knew that Lobo Snelling would come for her in the auction. Whenever he visited the island, he would bid for her and had been doing so for a couple of years since he’d been allowed access to the tightly controlled island paradise. He told her he liked her coffee-colored skin and her green mulatto eyes—whatever that meant, she had no idea. He probably liked the way she lay there so that he could do to her as he pleased.
Inside she might have been aching, raging, and screaming, but her deliberately floppy body and blank face gave nothing away and took nothing back. It had kept her alive this long, and she’d gotten into the habit of flying her mind away to other places, to what she remembered of her momma’s face, the kind teachers at her school, and her friends with whom she would play dolls or went lake swimming.
That made the things Lobo did to her easier to cope with, even if she was wracked with pain and tears for hours afterwards. She came to love those flights away from the island, oblivious of Lobo’s fetid breath and fat sweaty body.
“Stay where you are! Do not move.”
Macy was getting tantalizingly close to the tree line and the JetRanger pilot was using his PA system to communicate with her.
“Stand still or you will be shot.”
“No. I won’t,” she managed to say through dry mouth and ragged breath. With that she seemed to leap the last twenty meters into the trees, making her prophesy come true.
In the forest, the moonlight was off her, and the JetRanger spotlight had lost her racing form. She ran for another thirty seconds, dodging tree trunks, and kicking through layers of brown autumnal leaves.
The Enchanted Forest was a lie too, like so much of the island.
When the jungle had been cleared, Lobo told her one night—after he had stopped working up his foul sweat over her body—that they’d brought in thirty thousand European trees to build an Enchanted Forest.
Girls had been taken there, forced to wear Princess Dresses, and subjected to the foul attentions of the residents. Visitors were only allowed so far into the Enchanted Forest, with its long twisting lanes, fat, gnarly oaks, secret dells, and clearings. Lobo had told Macy that one day he would become a resident and take her there to the Enchanted Forest, and he would become both the cause and savior of her distress.
Macy could still hear the helicopter, but it was muted by the fully-leafed oaks. A stream was running along a mulchy ditch in her line of sight, moonlight dappling through the branches, giving the man-made forest an ethereal beauty. Macy crept forward, the call of the water was too much to resist. Her throat was dry and scratchy from all the running, and she had the unpleasant taste of blood in her mouth. She crawled through the warm loam and leaves, feeling her heart thumping in her ears. There hadn’t been the tell-tale crash of hunters entering this part of the forest; no flashlights beaming between the tree trunks. If it hadn’t been for the clashing rotor blades, there would have been no fear and urgency in her body. The Enchanted Forest felt like another world: one where she could rest, grow strong, and…
She pushed the thought from her mind.
There was no living to be done. There was running and there was dying.
That was it.
Macy dropped her lips to the cool running water and drank deeply, hoping it would provide her with enough strength to get through the forest and out the other side.
She had been to this part of the island just once before, when she’d been taken on a hot air balloon trip with one of the residents. Arthur Bellows had a face like a craggy map and eyes that might have been transplanted into his face from a pig. That had been the hardest trip of her life. Not because of what she had to endure from the billionaire financier, but because of the phobia she’d managed until then to hide from everyone on the island.
Keep all information inside.
She’d been terrified they’d find out her phobia when they eventually landed. But because Bellows had gotten himself so excited over her anguish and terror, he’d given himself a heart attack. He got the balloon down to twenty feet from the ground before he expired right in front of her. She hadn’t been blamed for his death. How could she when she’d been tied upside down outside of the basket?
The grip of terror from the journey stayed with her for many days, and it had taken her a great deal longer to be able to review the trip in her mind. She had to because of what she’d seen on the far side of the Enchanted Forest.
It was what she had seen while suspended from the basket that had given her the idea for tonight’s attempt to end the misery of her existence.
A way of escaping the island through death.
After Macy’s thirst was quenched, she waded through the stream and climbed up on the other side of the bank.
That’s when she heard the dogs begin to bark.
“That’s not in the rules!” she hissed to herself. Suddenly she was losing confidence in her ability to outrun the hunters. If they were using dogs to track her, she had no chance of crossing the forest. When it was only men—rich, fat, ugly men with their guts wobbling and their jowls shaking—she had a chance. A narrow one, but the dogs were another matter. They were supposed to stay in the compound.
That was the rule!
Macy was consumed with the unfairness of the use of the tracking dogs. Her whole plan had been constructed around the idea that the rules of the hunt would be followed, and now she was not going to make it to the death she so desperately wanted.
She turned her head back as she ran, the barking spurring her on ever faster.
Macy never should have turned her head, because as soon as she did, her world became a thud of hard pain and enveloping blackness.
At first Macy thought she’d miscalculated and collided with a tree.
In her headlong rush to escape the hunters and their dogs, she knew that looking back while running was not the smartest idea, even when you weren’t dashing through a moonlit forest.
She ached all over, and when she opened her eyes everything stayed black. Macy tried to sit up, but a hand pressed over her mouth and another pushed her back down on the shoulder.
“Stay quiet, don’t move.”
It was a woman’s voice. Not like one of the harsh voices of the men ordering her to undress or to contort herself into muscle tearing positions; a kind and warm woman’s voice.
“They’re still searching and we’re safe here as long as you don’t move. Do you understand?”
Macy nodded.
Suddenly she could see, as the piece of material blindfolding her eyes was removed. The room was dimly lit by dusty old strip lights. The walls were rough mud, with roots and vines twisting through them. The hand over her mouth, belonged to a woman.
The woman was old, with grandma hair, a sweet mouth and sparkling eyes. She smiled down at Macy. And put her fingers to her lips.
Macy nodded and the woman removed her hand.
Macy had no idea where she was. It felt like it was underground, perhaps beneath the Enchanted Forest.
The woman got up and went to a ragged opening in the wall covered by a dank looking curtain. She moved the material aside and peered out into the night. Macy could no longer hear the dogs or the JetRanger.
&nbs
p; “I think they’re gone,” the woman said, returning to Macy and sitting beside her. She smoothed Macy's hair back from her forehead. It was the first time in years—since perhaps New Orleans—that someone had touched her with what seemed like genuine affection. Macy felt tears welling up in her eyes.
“Where am I?”
“You’re safe.”
“Who are you?”
“I’m Rosa. And you’re…?”
“Macy.”
“Hello Macy. Welcome to my home.”
“Are we still in the forest?”
“Yes. Beneath it.”
Macy was surprised that she ran out of questions so quickly. But the underground room was warm and cozy, and even though she’d just awoken from unconsciousness she was so, so tired. A warm blanket of sleep was running up her body.
Rosa smiled, and soothed her brow again.
It felt so good to be there.
Macy had been aiming for the deep ravine she’d seen from the balloon that lay on the other side of the Enchanted Forest. She had known she would never make it off the island, so to throw herself over the edge—dashed and broken on the rocks below—was her only real hope of escape.
She’d thought for many weeks about doing it.
It was a fear she had to confront—her fear of high places that had so effectively been exposed by the balloon trip. Escaping the compound had been the least frightening aspect of her journey. The thought of standing on the edge of the ravine, looking down, and then forcing herself to jump had stopped her from escaping for so long. But another night with Lobo had convinced her that it was fear worth overcoming.