
Title: Green Death
Author: Madeleine Ribbon
Publisher: Self-Published
Release Date: November 2nd
Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 100,000 words
Genre: Romance, Science Fiction, Dystopian/post apocalyptic

Synopsis
As poisonmaster to the Oligarch, Tryg Sant knows a lot of things others shouldnât. But when he discovers his familyâs darkest secret, his brother tries to kill him.
When Trygâs lover pushes him out of a helicopter and into the poison-filled Exclusion Zone, Tryg finds himself trapped in a dangerous new world, entirely different from the one he expects. Now, Tryg has to learn to survive nearly-feral humans and his own disintegrating mind. Luckily, heâs found an ally in Riot, one of the victims of the Green DeathâŠ
Excerpt
Everything felt muffled. My injuries, my emotions, my thoughts, the sounds from outside. The heavy, rhythmic, mechanical thumps from somewhere above me were so loud they radiated through my chest. My mind barely registered the noise, even if my sternum didâmaybe because there was something strapped over my head, digging into the top of my skull and trapping warm, sweaty air over my ears.
All I cared about, in the moment, was that I wasnât being hit.
The ground shifted under me, tilting just slightly, shooting my equilibrium all to hell. The only things that kept me from toppling over were a wall on my left, propping me upright, and straps across my shoulders and chest and hips. They dug into my bruises with a steady, fuzzy, ache.
I tried to tug at the straps, hoping to release the pressure, but my arm didnât work right.
I should have hurt a lot more. I was pretty damned sure I ought to be screaming from just trying to move my arm, but all I felt was thick haze and a low heat over almost every inch of my skin.
âTryg, wake up.â The headpiece I wore transmitted the words directly into my ears, but even with the amplification, I could barely hear it over the whump whump whump coming from overhead.
I opened my eyes. Well, my left eye, since the right lid didnât seem to work.
I tried looking around, but my neck didnât want to move either. So far, the only thing responding to me was a single eyelid.
Someone had given me somethingâa drug or a poison of some sort. That was the only reason I wasnât writhing on the ground, screaming. I could feel my injuries, the places my brother had cracked bones or ripped into my skin with his obnoxiously large ring, but only a little. Like a wad of cloth had been shoved somewhere between the injuries and my brain, so the signals from my nerves couldnât make it through at full strength.
I tried to focus, tried to direct my wandering mind to the list of substances Vodayn had requested from me over the last ten years Iâd run the laboratory.
Nothing. Probably just strong painkillers, unless he had outside sources for a new poison.
Outside sources. My blood ran cold. Is that what Arris had been talking about, when I overheard them a few days ago? This pricked at my pride. For a moment, it didnât matter that my brother had starved and kicked the shit out of me and was sending me to my death. I was angry at him for going elsewhere for poisons when I could make him almost anything he wanted, a hundred times better and far more discreetly than anyone else.
But Iâm not his poison master anymore. The thought came crashing down around me, heavy on my shoulders. I slumped forward, though the straps kept me from folding in half.
And then realization struck me, harder than any of my brotherâs blows had.
Heâd always planned on getting rid of me. Even before Iâd found the damning documents. If he was looking elsewhere for poisons, heâd been looking for a replacement. Thatâd been what Arrisâs comment to him had been about.
âCome on, Tryg. I hate that I have to do this job, but itâs a damned good thing for you. Anyone else would have just pushed you out by now. I want you to be functional.â
Arris. My whole body started to shake. Arris was here. Heâd save me. Heâd make sure I was okay. He cared about me, as much as anyone ever had. More than anyone, since Dad died.
I finally managed to twist my neck a few inches. Arrisâs scarred, tanned face slowly resolved before me, headset obscuring his short black hair.
He was frowning just a little. It was the most emotion Iâd seen on him, outside of sex.
âThere we go. Welcome back.â He leaned forward and brushed his thumb over my cheek. Searing fire ran though my face. I hissed and tried to jerk back, but most of my body still didnât want to obey my directives.
âYou⊠Why?â
My words slurred. Apparently my lips worked fine, though my tongue was taking its sweet time catching up. I hoped the drug didnât wear off too soon. I wasnât prepared to face the damage done to my body. Not until I knew what in the dark depths of hell Arris was planning.
Arris watched me with soft eyes. He never had soft eyes. Passionate while we were fucking? Yes. Inquisitive? Rarely. Ice cold when in his official capacity? Always. But never soft.
âThis is occurring because Vodayn demanded that you die. Telling him what you found was a stupid move. The stupidest. Heâs been increasingly paranoid over the last year. Surely you havenât missed that, as smart as you are?â
âPaaaâŠnoy?â My half-numb tongue fumbled over the word. I shook my head. I hadnât had time to notice anything.
For the last year, Vodaynâs requests of me had gone down, yes, but when he did give me a project, he had been making obscure and incredibly difficult demands Iâd worked hard to fulfill. A substance that, once ingested, made hair change color permanently, with no other effect. One that made the victim cry irrationally for days. One that mimicked a heart attackâs symptoms perfectly. Iâd succeeded in crafting them all, though the crying draught lasted for only thirty-six hours.
Iâd been proud of my success. Iâd managed everything he asked.
Arris hummed a little. âVery paranoid. You always were a bit too focused when you were working.â
âHowâdjou know?â
The lines between his brows grew deeper. âKnow what?â
âWhat I told him.â Words were slowly becoming easier to pronounce.
âBecause I was there when he received your report. I only got a glimpse of it while he read it, but I know what it means. We suspected that the Sants had been behind the poisoning ever since it happened. Thereâs a reason I was stationed in the household, and my father before me. I was supposed to find proof. And you hand-delivered it to him.â
The words Arris spoke now did not match up with what Iâd known of him over the last few years. My heart seemed to think that now was a great time to start thundering as fast as it would go. âWhoâs we?â
âThe resistance.â Here, Arris smiled, and the deepest scar, the one that ran over his cheek, pulled and wrinkled in a dozen places.
Heâd been my brotherâs right-hand man and main assassin for almost three years, and never once had I seen him smile. It scared me more than anything else. I wonder if all his victims got to see this horrible, wonderful expression.
Because thatâs what I would be. His victim. He was letting me see another side to him, now, and that meant I was a dead man.
And then the meaning of his statement filtered into my mind. The resistance. Thatâd been wiped out with the bombing, hadnât it? Or tainted with the poison, at least, and driven crazy?
âThe resistance survives? Truly?â
He nodded. âWe have been trying to find justice for almost a hundred years. The exclusion zone is still the center of it. Most of us had family there, when it was poisoned. My great-grandfatherâs entire family got walled inside, except for him. Heâd been at a friendâs for a sleepover during the bombing.â
âIâm sorry,â I said. âDid any of them⊠survive?â
âA few, for a while.â He looked away from me, and then his face tightened, the smile vanishing. âWeâre almost there. Youâre getting dropped in. I pushed for this, instead of using the Black Daydream on you until you were crazy enough to cut your own throat. Vodayn wanted you to die in agony, and I argued this would be the most effective and ironic way. He came around to my line of thinking eventually.â
âWhere? Dropped in where?â
He reached past me and tapped on the surface to my right.
I turned my head, my neck still protesting the motion. I suspected that without the painkillers Iâd been given, the movement would hurt a lot more.
A window. And beyond it, the sky. Clouds. We were high. Iâd never been so high. I never had permission to leave the Sant compound, much less go somewhere that required air transport.
Then again, if all air transport was like this strange, rusted, rickety, noisy vehicle, I doubted Iâd missed much.
Arris leaned forward. âYouâre wearing a parachute. Do you think you can pull the ripcord yourself once youâre out?â
My heart clenched. I tried to flex my hand, and then lift it. All I managed was a finger-twitch. âI donât think so.â
âThe drug?â
âYeah. What is it?â
âJust a mid-level painkiller from Professor Maritaâs lab.â
âOh.â Maritaâthere was that name again. Professional jealousy twisted through me. âThanks.â
âIâll pull your ripcord for you when you jump, if youâre not up to it now. Weâll be so low nobody will notice the parachute, thanks to the poison.â
âTheâoh green-damned hell, the poison.â Arrisâs statements finally sank into me. Heâd asked my brother to dump me into the exclusion zone. And my brother had agreed, even before heâd started to beat me senseless.
âHere. Hang on to the handles if you can.â He lifted my arms up, his grip gentle, and hooked my hands over smooth, cool plastic. âThis will steer you once youâre in the air, if you can find the strength. Pull which way you want to go. Try and land in a flat place, but close to the taller buildings. You wonât be able to get out of the exclusion zone and go back to regular life, but youâll have a good chance to survive down there if the right people find you. Iâve already put out an alert. I can only hope you make it, Tryg. I donât want you to die. Youâve been the closest thing to a friend I had in that mansion. Please believe that.â
Arris looked so damned serious, giving me my death sentence with such care. I knew I wouldnât last. I wasnât a fighterânot without my poisons, anyway.
âDonât pull the chute,â I said, holding his gaze. âLet me fall. Itâs kinder.â
Arris shook his head. âI canât, even if I agreed with you. You have to live. Youâre our best hope now. I didnât want to do this to you, but itâs the only way for Vodayn to leave you in peace.â
A blast of static filled the compartment, and Arris scowled and leaned back. He tilted his head. Whatever he listened to, it didnât repeat in my headset. I tried moving my neck again, and this time I was able to turn maybe an inch farther to the right. More glass and sky.
The transport vehicle had to be well over three hundred years old, if it still had glass windows and rotors that made this much noise. The Eastrend military forces had used these to monitor the huge political protests, way back before the Green Death happened. Theyâd been passed on to other government agencies, like the one that monitored the poison levels here. Nobody would think this air transport looked out of place. At least not until I got pushed out of it. And Arris seemed to have already thought of that.
I pressed against the window and looked down. The only thing below us was a foggy haze, the green color lurid against the gray of the surrounding city. It was the hue present on some of the creatures in the Menagerie, almost acid-bright.
We were over the exclusion zone. A dozen small drones in a variety of styles hung just over the fog, film crews focusing on the action down below. There had to be another riot, if so many drones were out here. I hated watching the news on the nights they focused on Greenies fighting, but the rest of Eastrend seemed to love eagerly watching the violence, treated like war footage from somewhere unreachable.
All around the green air, a tall wallâbleak and gray and three city blocks thick at its narrowest pointârose a hundred feet higher than the fog, trapping the Green Death into what had once been a hotbed of political resistance. The place where Arrisâs family had once lived.
I looked away. Seeing the exclusion zoneâreally seeing it, not just on a documentary or the newsâmade me want to scream. My great-grandfather had singlehandedly caused it. All the pain and agony, all the rage, all the violenceâheâd created the chemical that caused it. And I might have, in another life, been able to create a way to neutralize it.
Not anymore.
âI truly am sorry, Tryg. Youâve been the only reason I still have my sanity, working for Vodayn.â Arris tilted his head, gaze sharpening, and then turned to the window next to me. âThe fighting has died down. The drones are moving out. Three minutes and we start moving too.â
âWonât the drones catch me getting pushed in?â I stared up at Arris. My lower lip wobbled in an embarrassing fashion, and I dropped my gaze. I was twenty. I didnât need to cry. Especially not in front of him.
âThe drones will be over the wall by then. Any remaining behind will already have their cameras off or pointed away. The fightâs over. They have their news clips for the day. If Vodayn tells them not to talk about it, they wonât. But if an unregulated source does draw attention to your drop-in, the story is that youâre a researcher sacrificing yourself for data on the Green Death and what itâs doing to the environment. It wouldnât be the first time an idiot has gone in willingly and canât get permission to go through the wall. Researchers never get permission.â
âOh.â I shuddered. Vodayn was probably the reason for the research block. The darkness of our family secrets bled into so many other peopleâs lives.
Arris frowned, and then he dug something out of his belt. He held up a small, black handgun, the kind that shot little bursts of plasmaâthe same weapon heâd dug into my back days ago, when arresting me in the lab.
âItâs fully charged, but the safety is on. Redâs dead.â He flicked the little lever back and forth, showing me a red dot beneath it. âOnly use it if you absolutely have to. The sound will call all the wild ones to you if you donât watch out.â
âWild?â
âTheyâre the most violent Greenies. They have no tattoos on their faces,â he said. âIâm tucking the gun in your back pocket. I really do want you to survive. I know you havenât fired one often, but youâre smart. Youâll figure it out. Iâll do my best to check in on you when the Oligarch isnât watching my every move again, okay?â
He kissed me, bruising, no more than a clash of teeth and lips.
That, more than anything, broke me. Weâd never been kissers. I didnât mind the denial, despite desperately wanting to feel what a kiss was like, mostly because Iâd never imagined him being the kissing type. And now, when my banishment and potential execution was so near? Now he gave me what I wanted for so damned long.
When he pulled away, his face was a blank slate, and the chill in his gaze reappeared.
I repressed the urge to scream, to grab at him, to beg to stay in the transport. He might have been my lover, but right now, he was my brotherâs top assassin.
These well-wishes and the gun would be the best Iâd get from him.
âItâs timeâ he said as he shoved the gun into the back pocket of the torn, filthy protective work pants I still wore. âThere. Brace yourself.â Arris hunched over and fiddled with the metal panel below my window. He grabbed the straps across my chest, and then a great whooshing noise filled the cabin, and the thumping of the rotors above us increased to an alarming volume. Air buffeted my face, ice cold against my cheeks.
And there was no longer any glass between me and the Green Death.
Arris shifted my weight until I sat just on the edge of the seat, tilting out into the nothingness around the transport. The haze hung just below us, the cloudy surface broken in a few dozen places by narrow metal tubes.
âLive, Tryg. Fight for it.â His words rang loud in my ear. Then he yanked my headset off. The noise beat at my eardrums, nearly pounding me senseless.
He shoved, and I was flying.
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Meet the Author
Madeleine began writing professionally in 2012. She loves stories with hints of paranormal, fantasy, or sci-fi in them. When she isnât writing or working the day job, she homebrews beer, attempts to cook, and plays video games. She loves going to Renaissance faires, anime conventions, or beer festivals on the weekends.
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