Nothing Left to Lose: A Novel (John Cleaver Series #6)

Nothing Left to Lose: A Novel (John Cleaver Series #6)

by Dan Wells
Nothing Left to Lose: A Novel (John Cleaver Series #6)

Nothing Left to Lose: A Novel (John Cleaver Series #6)

by Dan Wells

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Overview

Hi. My name is John Cleaver, and I hunt monsters. I used to do it alone, and then for a while I did it with a team of government specialists, and then the monsters found us and killed almost everyone, and now I hunt them alone again.

This is my story.



In this thrilling installment in the John Wayne Cleaver series, Dan Wells brings his beloved antihero into a final confrontation with the Withered. Nothing Left to Lose is a conclusion that is both completely compelling and completely unexpected.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780765380715
Publisher: Tor Publishing Group
Publication date: 06/06/2017
Series: John Cleaver , #6
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 189,360
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.10(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

DAN WELLS lives in North Salt Lake, Utah, with his wife, Dawn, and their five children. He is author of the acclaimed John Wayne Cleaver series, The Hollow City, and the popular Partials Sequence of young adult books.

Read an Excerpt

Nothing Left To Lose


By Dan Wells

Tom Doherty Associates

Copyright © 2017 Dan Wells
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7653-8071-5


CHAPTER 1

There are only so many ways to get a good look at a dead body.

You can always just make your own, of course, which is what most people do. It's quick, it's cheap, and you can do it with things you have lying around your own home: a hammer, a kitchen knife, a relative who won't shut up, and bam. Your very own corpse. As DIY projects go, murder is easier and more common than painting your living room, though — to be fair — significantly harder to hide. And it has other downsides as well: first, it's murder. So there's that. Second, and more pertinent to my own situation, it's only really helpful if the dead body you want to see is one you have ready access to while it's still alive. With the really good bodies, this is rarely the case. Let's say you want to examine a specific corpse, like, oh, I don't know, an old lady who died of mysterious causes in a small town in Arizona. Just to pull an example out of the air. Then it gets much harder.

If you need to look at a specific body, it helps to be an actual cop or, better yet, an agent of the FBI. You could mock up some quick excuse as to why this particular dead body was a key part of your investigation, go in, flash a badge, done. It might even be true, which would be a nice side benefit but isn't really necessary. If you weren't actually in law enforcement but you knew enough about it, you could waltz in with a fake badge and try to accomplish the same thing. But if you were also, for example, eighteen years old, convincing the local law enforcement to believe you would be easier said than done. The same goes for a teenager pretending to be a coroner, pretending to be a forensic examiner, and pretending to be a reporter. I've used the "I'm researching something for the school paper" line a couple of times, and it works well enough, but only when the something you're researching isn't a decaying human being.

That leaves three main options: first, if you can get there quick enough, you can try to trick the coroner into believing that you're the new driver for the local mortuary, assigned to pick up the body and deliver it to the embalmer. You'd need some fake paperwork but, honestly, not as much as you might think. And since "driver" is an entry-level position, your age isn't going to matter. And if you grew up in a mortuary and assisted in the family business since you were ten and knew the whole industry backward and forward — again, just to pull an example out of the air — you could do it pretty easily. But only if you got there in time.

Let's say you didn't, because you were two states away and travel solely by hitchhiking (or, honestly, whatever reason — you just can't get there in time, is the important part). In that case, you move on to the second option, which requires more or less the same skills: break in to the mortuary after hours and show yourself around. I say "more or less the same skills" because you never know how good the mortuary's security system is going to be, and you're a teenage mortician, not a cat burglar. In a small town, or even a biggish city, if the funeral home is old enough, you might be able to make it work because they don't always have the funds to update their equipment. It's kind of an industry problem.

But let's say they did update their equipment — no cameras, but an alarm with a motion sensor — and that you definitely don't want to get caught breaking into a funeral home. I mean, I guess nobody would want to get caught breaking into anything, but let's say for this example that you really, really don't want it. Let's even go so far as to say that the law enforcement agencies we mentioned earlier, which our totally hypothetical teenage mortuary expert was briefly tempted to impersonate, are, in fact, actively searching for him. So anything illegal is out of the question. That leaves us with only one option: we have to wait until the mortuary opens its doors, pulls the corpse out of the back room, and invites anyone who wants to see it to just come in and look at it. Which is never going to happen, right?

Wrong. It's called a viewing, and it happens every day. They don't let you really get in there and poke around, but it's better than nothing. And Kathy Schrenk, a little old lady who died under mysterious circumstances in the Arizona town of Lewisville, had a viewing today. And a teenage mortician with an FBI background stood outside hoping his suit didn't look too filthy.

Hi. My name is John Cleaver, and my life sounds kind of weird when I describe it like this.

I'll describe it another way, but it's not going to sound any more normal: I hunt monsters. I used to do it alone, and then for a while I did it with a team of government specialists, and then the monsters found us and killed almost everyone, and now I hunt them alone again. The monsters are called Withered, or sometimes Cursed, or sometimes Blessed if you catch one in a good mood, but that's pretty rare these days. They're old, and tired, and clinging to life more out of stubbornness than anything else. They used to be human, but they gave up some intrinsic part of themselves — their memory, or their emotions, or their identity; it's different for each of them — and now they aren't human anymore. One of them told me that they were more than human, and less, all at the same time. They've spent ten thousand years with incredible powers, ruling the world as kings and gods, but now they just grit their teeth and survive.

The mysterious nature of Kathy Schrenk's death is classic tabloid news: she drowned far away from water, her body soaked while everything around her was dry as a bone. Weird, but not automatically supernatural; Miss Marple could probably knock this one out on her lunch break. Nine times out of ten — nine thousand times out of nine thousand and one — it's just a plain old human — jealous, or angry, or greedy, or bored. We're horrible people, when it comes right down to it. Hardly worth saving at all.

But what else am I going to do? Stop?

I stared at the mortuary a little longer: Ottessen Brothers Funeral Home. I picked a piece of lint off my sleeve. Smoothed my hair. Picked another piece of lint. It was now or never.

This is what I'd been doing for months now, ever since the team had died and I'd sent Brooke home and I'd gone out on my own, hunting the Withered with no backup and no guides and no intel. I looked for anomalies, and I followed them up. Most of them didn't pan out, and I simply moved on.

I went inside.

My hypothetical situation from earlier, about growing up in a mortuary, wasn't hypothetical. You probably guessed that. My parents were both morticians, and we lived in a little apartment upstairs from the chapel. I started helping with funerals when I was ten, and with the actual embalming a few years later. Stepping into Ottessen Brothers was like stepping into my past. The tastefully understated decorations, at least a decade behind the times; the little half-moon table with a signing book and a faux-fancy pen. The unsettled mix of sophistication and generic religion, and a drinking fountain by the wall. I touched the wallpaper — elegant but rugged, designed to withstand bustling crowds and untrained pallbearers — and thought about my home. I hadn't seen it in almost three years, though I'd glimpsed it now and then on the news. My sister and my aunt ran the mortuary now, but who knew how long that was going to last. They couldn't run it on their own. My father wouldn't help, and my mother ... well, she wasn't around to help either, was she?

Her corpse had been so damaged that I couldn't embalm her. It was the one thing we'd shared, and even that was taken away.

The crowd in the Schrenk viewing was sparse, mostly other old ladies not long from a viewing of their own. A handful of old men. Someone had placed a table by the door with an arrangement of photos and memorabilia, and while there were plenty of group shots, Schrenk was all alone in the portraits. Never married, never had kids. Some photos included what looked like her twin sister. One of the photos showed Schrenk standing in front of the mortuary itself, her arm around a thick-waisted woman somewhere in her fifties. An odd place for a photo — maybe another friend's funeral? But no, neither of them wore go-to-a-funeral kind of clothes. Employees, then? The rest of the table was covered with various little yarn hats and scarves, so I assumed Schrenk was a knitter.

I moved past the table and into the viewing room itself: the coffin on the far wall, flanked by flags, with various chairs and sofas scattered around the edges of the room, most of them full of old women having hushed conversations. One corner held a refreshments table with an assortment of crumbly cookies.

"I think she looks terrible," said an old lady by the food, "whispering" to a small cluster of concerned women. I couldn't tell if she was pretending to whisper but wanted to be heard, or if she legitimately didn't know how to regulate her own volume. "I've never seen a body look less lifelike in my life."

I walked slowly past them toward the coffin, trying to look like I belonged.

"Hello," said a man, stepping forward and offering his hand. I shook it. "Are you a friend of Kathy's?" He looked about sixty, maybe sixty-five.

"Acquaintance," I said quickly, spooling out my prepackaged lie. "She was friends with my grandmother, but she couldn't make it today so she wanted me to pay our respects."

"Wonderful!" he said. "What was your grandmother's name?"

"Julia." I didn't know any Julias, but it was as good a name as any.

"I think I heard Kathy mention her," said the man, though I couldn't tell if I'd stumbled onto an accidentally accurate name or if he was just being polite. "And what was your name, young man?"

"Robert," I said, hoping it was generic enough that he would forget it if anyone asked. I tried to never use the same name twice, thanks to the whole FBI thing. I looked at him a moment: a well-worn suit, too high on the ankles; a plain white shirt already fraying at the creases in the cuffs and collar. This was a man who wore these clothes a lot, and I made an educated guess: "Do you work for the mortuary?"

"I do," he said, and offered his hand again. "Harold Ottessen, I'm the driver."

"The driver?" There goes my bit about drivers being young. "I assume your brother is the mortician, then?"

"He was," said Harold. "But I'm afraid he passed away about twenty years ago."

"I'm sorry to hear that."

"These things happen," he said. "We'd know, in our family. Margo runs things now; she's around here somewhere."

I nodded, already bored of the small talk. "It was very nice to meet you, Harold. I'm going to pay my respects."

He nodded and offered his hand to shake a third time, but before I could extricate myself, another old lady walked up with a stern look.

"It's completely disgraceful," she said. "Can't you do anything about it?"

"I've told you," said Harold, "this is just how they look sometimes."

"But it's your job," said the woman. "Why are we even here if you can't do your job?"

I was desperate to see the body by now, wondering what kind of horror everyone was complaining about, so I left Harold to fend for himself and walked to the coffin. There was another woman standing beside it, though she was much younger — barely older than me, maybe nineteen or twenty, and dark-skinned. Mexican, maybe? She screwed her face into an unhappy scowl but hid it when she saw me out of the corner of her eye.

The body was, after all the anxious hype, pretty normal. Kathy had been thin in her photos and looked thin now, with curly gray hair and a pale, gaunt face. I'd been expecting some visible injuries, something I could tie directly to a Withered attack — maybe a giant bite taken out of her face. Or, failing that, some kind of problem with the embalming itself, like maybe they'd set the features poorly and now she had sunken eyelids or hollow cheeks or something. Something to justify the mortified attitude from all of her friends. What I saw was far simpler, and so surprising I said it out loud.

"They did her makeup wrong."

"Excuse me?" asked the girl next to me.

"Sorry," I said. "It just took me by surprise, is all."

"You're a dick," she said.

"Excuse me?"

She smirked. "It just took me by surprise, is all. Isn't that what we're doing, narrating our lives out loud? Let me keep going: We're standing by my dead friend. Some random douchebag is mocking her makeup, of all things."

"I'm sorry," I said, "I'll shut up now."

"Oh good, we're still doing it. I'll stop talking, too, and then I'll stand here waiting for you to leave."

This was going great. "Just ... give me a minute." I tried to ignore the young woman and looked at the body again. Part of a mortician's job — arguably half of it, after the actual embalming — was to make the dead person's body look as close as possible to what it looked like when they were alive. Poor Ms. Schrenk looked wrong, in ways a person off the street probably couldn't put a finger on but which all worked together to make her seem off. Profoundly corpselike, instead of resting in peace. It was disconcerting, but a trained eye could see that they'd actually only missed a couple of key things.

First of all, the foundation looked good. Dead bodies don't have blood in their skin, so they look much lighter than they did in life, but the mortuary's makeup artist had used a dark foundation under a lighter one to add some color back into her face. The other major problem was the eyes, which tended to have dark circles around them, like black-eye bruises. But the makeup artist had hidden those as well. And that was hard to do right, which is why it was so confusing that whoever had done Kathy Schrenk's makeup had missed a much simpler detail: shading. We're so used to seeing people vertical, that when we see them lying flat, especially in the weird light of a viewing room, their facial features look all wrong. They don't have the right shading, in subtle places like the nostrils and the lips. A trained mortuary makeup artist should have caught that, but nobody had.

The woman next to me spoke again. "Are you from Cottwell's?"

"Cottwell's?"

"Yes, genius, Cottwell's. 'Lewisville's oldest funeral home,' or whatever garbage tagline they're using these days. You're not a spy or anything?"

"I'm not from Lewisville," I said. "But I am from a mortuary, kind of. I apologize again for being rude about your friend." I paused then, thinking for a moment. Why would she be so bothered by Cottwell's, or think they were sending a spy? I could only think of one reason. "Do you work here, at this mortuary?"

She narrowed her eyes. "How do you know that if you're not a spy?"

"Why would one mortuary spy on another one?"

"I don't know, what did they tell you when they hired you?"

"They didn't. ... Look, I'm sorry I was rude, okay? I insulted your friend who passed away, and I also apparently insulted your friend who works as the makeup artist — oh crap."

She flashed a smug smile, watching the realization hit me. "Yup."

"It's you, isn't it? You're the makeup artist."

"Fill-in makeup artist," she said. "Normally I'm just an embalmer. It's kind of funny to watch how slowly you figure all this out."

"I bet it is," I said. I needed more information and this woman was my only lead so far, so antagonistic or not, I tried to draw out the conversation. "So, who's the permanent makeup artist?"

"Don't worry; you'll get this one too."

I closed my eyes as yet another piece of the puzzle fell into place. "It's Kathy Schrenk."

"Amazing."

"That's why a twenty-year-old is friends with an old lady," I said. "You're coworkers. And that's why the makeup is wrong, because the only person who knows how to do it is dead, and none of you wanted to ask the Cottwell's makeup person for help."

"Does that make us sound petty?" she asked. "Because I want to make sure we sound petty."

"I'm not a spy from a rival mortuary," I said, "as thrilling as that BBC miniseries would be." I looked around the room quickly — no one was looking at the body but us. "But I am a mortician, and I can help you fix this." I looked at the young woman again. She had bronze skin — not super dark, but dark enough. "Do you have some makeup handy?"

She raised her eyebrow. "You want to mess with her makeup right here?"

"It'll take me sixty seconds at the most," I said. "Close your eyes."

"Hell no."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Nothing Left To Lose by Dan Wells. Copyright © 2017 Dan Wells. Excerpted by permission of Tom Doherty Associates.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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