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** Download Ebook Them or Us (Hater series), by David Moody

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Them or Us (Hater series), by David Moody

Them or Us (Hater series), by David Moody



Them or Us (Hater series), by David Moody

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Them or Us (Hater series), by David Moody

The pulse-pounding conclusion to the HATER trilogy!

The war that has torn the human race apart is finally nearing its end. With most towns and cities now uninhabitable, and with the country in the grip of a savage nuclear winter, both Hater and Unchanged alike struggle to survive.

Hundreds of Hater fighters have settled on the East Coast in the abandoned remains of a relatively undamaged town under the command of Hinchcliffe---who’ll stop at nothing to eradicate the last few Unchanged and consolidate his position at the top of this new world order. This fledgling society is harsh and unforgiving---your place in the ranks is decided by how long and how hard you’re prepared to fight.

Danny McCoyne is the exception to the rule. His ability to hold the Hate and to use it to hunt out the remaining Unchanged has given him a unique position in Hinchcliffe’s army of fighters. As the enemy’s numbers reduce, so the pressure on McCoyne increases, until he finds himself at the very center of a pivotal confrontation, the outcome of which will have repercussions on the future of everyone who is left alive.

  • Sales Rank: #408650 in Books
  • Published on: 2011-11-08
  • Released on: 2011-11-08
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.44" h x 1.32" w x 5.94" l, .95 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 368 pages

Review
“David Moody spins paranoia into a deliciously dark new direction.”
—Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of Patient Zero

Praise for Hater

“A head-spinning thrill ride . . . Hater will haunt you long after you read the last page.”
—Guillermo Del Toro, director of Pan’s Labyrinth and Hellboy

“Be careful with Hater. Chapter by chapter it will make its way into your soul till it finds the seed of evil that lurks within.”
—J.A. Bayona, director of The Orphanage

“Powerful and well-written.”
—S. M. Stirling, author of Dies the Fire

“David Moody’s Hater is a brutal, eerie, and hugely entertaining novel that grips you with its grim and nihilistic attitude from page one.”
—Tom Piccirilli, Bram Stoker Award--winning author

Praise for Dog Blood

“Lean, relentless, and terrifying.”
—Kirkus Reviews

“If Hater gives you nightmares, Dog Blood will rewire your brain.”
—Bookreporter.com

“Gory and relentlessly tense.”
—Publishers Weekly

“Moody is an inarguably talented author, and Dog Blood further cements his reputation as one of the best horror authors of the new decade.”
—Bloody-Disgusting.com

About the Author
David Moody is the author of Hater, Dog Blood, Autumn and Autumn: The City. He grew up in Birmingham, England, on a diet of horror movies and post-apocalyptic fiction. He started his career working at a bank, but then decided to write the kind of fiction he loved. His first novel, Straight to You, had what Moody calls “microscopic sales,” and so when he wrote Autumn, he decided to publish it online. The book became a sensation and has been downloaded by half a million readers. He started his own publishing company, Infected Books. He lives in Britain with his wife and a houseful of daughters, which may explain his preoccupation with Armageddon.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

TODAY

The two men skulked silently through the filthy streets like starving rats, skin deathly pale, eyes blinking wide, both of them looking from side to side in constant, never-ending fear of attack. They ran frantically through the collapsed ruins at the edge of the town, arms overloaded with the food they’d unexpectedly managed to scavenge, fear and adrenaline driving them on, temporarily masking their physical pain. Their bodies were wrecked: exhausted and underfed. It was the first time either of them had been out in the open in more than two weeks but, as the physically strongest members of the last remaining group of Unchanged in the area, this was something they’d had no choice but to do. Including the straggler who’d found them a few days back, there were only thirteen of them left now. Both Fisher and Winston knew that none of them would last much longer if they didn’t have food.

Fisher froze. “Up ahead. Top of the road. Two hundred metres.”

            Winston grabbed his arm and pulled him back against the wall of the nearest building. He watched the Hater in the distance. Was it alone or part of a pack? His eyes were failing and it was hard to tell anything from here, but it looked like a young boy, probably one of those feral kids like the one that had killed his dad last summer. It paused on the dotted white line in the middle of the road, sniffing at the air like a hunting animal trying to catch a scent. Winston forced himself to remain completely motionless and prayed that Fisher would do the same. Even the slightest movement or noise might give them away and that’d be it – months of constantly struggling to survive ended in a heartbeat (maybe that wouldn’t be such a bad thing, he thought). He watched the figure up ahead as it began to move again, very slowly at first, then sprinting away at speed when something in the distance caught its eye. Winston didn’t move until he was completely sure it had gone. In those unbearably long moments, he asked himself again (as he did at least once every hour) why he was even bothering to try and stay alive? Why not just give up and get it over with? A few seconds of agony and it would all be over and he could stop at last. The fear of death had always been enough to keep driving him on until now, but life was rapidly losing its appeal. Imagine the relief, he thought. No more running. No more hiding. No more crying. No more sitting in silence in the dark with the others, freezing cold, doubled-up with hunger pains, feeling himself draining away, just waiting for the inevitable . . .

            “We’re clear,” Fisher said, his voice just a whisper against the icy wind. Winston pushed himself away from the wall and ran forward again, just managing to keep his balance as he tripped down the kerb, narrowly avoiding the crumbling edge of a huge, egg-shaped crater in the road where the skeletal body of someone who had once been like him lay face down in several inches of dirty rainwater.

            Another few minutes of breathless, stop-start running and hiding, and they were almost there. Winston dropped the supplies he’d been carrying in front of the wooden fence then quickly lifted up the third panel along from the right, his fingers numb with cold. Fisher hurriedly climbed through the gap then reached back for the tins and boxes they’d collected. He stood up again and took the weight of the panel so the other man could follow him through. Winston paused to snatch up a can of fruit that Fisher had missed, and to check they hadn’t been seen. Behind them, everything appeared reassuringly silent and still. A flurry of grey, ash-like snow drifted down, each flake settling on the ground for just a fraction of a second before melting away to nothing. The remains of the town where he used to live looked as lifeless as Winston felt. The gaping doors and broken windows of battle-damaged houses offered unwanted glimpses into a world he used to belong to but which he was no longer a part of. A dead world. Their world.

            “Get a bloody move on,” Fisher said anxiously, teeth chattering. Winston pulled his head back and Fisher quickly dropped the panel down with a welcome thud, blocking his view. Between them they snatched up their food then scrambled down a steep, grassy bank towards what once used to be a permanently busy road but which was now just a desolate, wide grey scar lined with rusting wrecks.

            In their pitiful condition, the two men both struggled to control their descent down the muddy incline. Wearing dead man’s shoes two sizes too big, Fisher fell near to the bottom of the slope, dropping most of the tins and packets he’d been carrying and filling the silent world with ugly, unwanted noise. He frantically scooped everything back up again, still constantly checking his surroundings for movement, before racing after Winston who’d been too scared to stop.

            Beneath a bridge, midway along an otherwise featureless concrete wall, was a corrugated steel roller-shutter and, another couple of metres further along, a metal door. Dirty grey, and with once important warning signs now obscured by a layer of black-speckled grime, the door was well camouflaged. Several freshly smudged handprints around the handle and the edges of the frame were the only faint indications that it had recently been used. Precariously balancing his supplies with one arm, Winston hammered on the door to be let inside. Several seconds passed – several seconds too long for his liking – before it finally swung open inwards. An emaciated, skeleton-thin man armed with a nail-spiked baseball bat appeared. He frantically ushered Winston and Fisher indoors then peered down the road in either direction before shutting the door again.

            Stumbling in the sudden darkness, Fisher and Winston followed the short access corridor down towards pool of dull yellow light around the main store where the others were waiting. They kicked other people’s belongings out of the way then dumped their hoard in the middle of the room. The other survivors hiding in this dank, highways agency storage depot – those who were conscious and still sane - all looked on in disbelief. Sally Marks said what everyone else was thinking. “Where the fuck did you get all that?”

            Fisher dropped to his knees and began examining the treasure they’d found outside. He grabbed can after can, holding each of them up to the weak light from the single remaining battery powered lantern in turn, struggling to read the labels. Around him, stomachs growled with hunger and mouths began to water at the prospect of food. Corned beef, tinned vegetables, soup . . . how long had it been?

            “Where did you find it?” Sally asked again.

            “Where he said,” Winston answered, pointing at the man in the corner who’d recently arrived. Thank god he’d found them. He said he’d been following the road for days since his last hiding place had been discovered by the enemy, and he’d tried to take shelter in their hideout, not realising it was already occupied.

            “And how did you find it?” Sally asked him, unable to make out his face in the shadows.

            “I already told you,” he answered. “I saw it just before I found you lot. Couldn’t carry it all myself.”

            “Does it really matter?” Winston sighed.

            “Yes it does.”

            “Remember that corner shop by where the coach station used to be?” Fisher volunteered.

            “On Marlbrook Road?” Sally asked.

            “That’s the one.”

            “But we’ve been there before,” she said. “Christ, we’ve been there hundreds of times before.”

            “So?”

            “Well did we just walk past this stuff all those other times? Did you find a hidden store room we hadn’t found before? Open a door you hadn’t seen? Someone put this stuff there for us to find, you dumb bastards. It was one of them. It’s a trap you fucking idiots, and you walked right into it.”

            “What the hell does it matter?” Winston spat angrily, struggling with the ring pull on a can of fruit chunks, his fingers numb with cold. “No-one followed us back. We only saw one of them in all the time we were out there, and that was just a kid from a distance. If this was a trap then it didn’t work. This place is dead. Even they don’t come here anymore.”

            “He found us,” she said, pointing at the man in the corner again.

            “That was just luck,” Winston argued. “He’s like us, Sally. He found this place the same way we did.”

            Sally shook her head in despair and walked far enough away into the shadows so that no-one could see her. She leant against the wall and massaged her temples. Maybe Winston was right. She’d over-reacted, and not for the first time either. Every day the pressure of being cooped up in here was getting harder and harder to handle. A year ago, all she’d had to worry about was getting the kids to and from school and getting to work on time. Hiding in a disused highways storage depot with strangers, eating cold food from a can, shitting in a bucket in full view of the others, fearing for her safety every second of every day . . . if she’d known what her life was going to become, she’d probably have ended it when the troubles first began.

            They tried to make the food last, but more than half of it was gone within an hour, starved stomachs finally gorged after weeks of being drip-fed scraps. It didn’t matter. Eating was a distraction which helped reduce the tension in the shelter for a precious few minutes. Sally looked around at the few faces she could see in the low light. Eight-year-old Charlotte stared back at her from the corner where she always sat, surrounded by a barricade of traffic cones and bollards she’d built around herself, her face as pale as ever. The two other children sat close by, Chloe fast asleep, eleven-year-old Jake dutifully sitting beside her, drawing shapes in the dirt with a stick. On the opposite side of the room, Jean Walker and Kerry Hayes spoke together in hushed whispers about nothing of any importance. Sally had thought Kerry beautiful when she’d first met her, but her young body had been ravaged by hunger since they’d had to lock themselves away in here. Her full figure had wasted away to nothing. She looked anorexic now: all protruding bones, stretched skin and straw-like hair. In the diagonally opposite corner, Brian Greene did his best to disguise the fact that he was crying again . . .

            A packet of stale biscuits (what luxury, Sally thought to herself dejectedly) was being passed around. She took one, but stopped before she ate it, distracted suddenly by a low rumbling in the distance.

            “Did anyone hear that?”

            “Hear what?” Kerry asked, immediately concerned, yellow eyes bulging in the light.

            “Thought I heard something,” she said, already beginning to doubt herself. “Sounded like an engine.”

            “There’s nothing,” Fisher said quickly, scowling at her. “Just them moving around up there. Either that or your imagination . . .”

            He was probably right. She couldn’t hear anything now. Sally passed the packet on to the man sitting next to her – the new arrival. He’d hardly spoken since he’d got here but it was obvious he was as desperate as the rest of them: a scrawny bag of skin and bone, a haunted expression etched permanently onto his weary face. He took the biscuits from Sally, then passed them on without saying a word.

            He waited for a few minutes longer before quietly getting up and slipping further back into the shadows. He stepped over and around a couple of bodies – one sleeping, one dying – then made his way through to the part of the cramped storage depot shelter which they used as a toilet.

            Sally tried to block out the foul noise of the man pissing from a height into a metal bucket, and was relieved when it finally stopped. She waited for him to come back, but became concerned when he didn’t immediately return. The rest of the shelter was almost pitch black but she got up and felt her way along the cold, damp walls until she found him. He was lying on the ground on his back, trying to force the roller-shutter open. A chink of light spilled across the floor where he’d managed to get his fingers under the shutter. With a grunt of effort he lifted it up another six inches.

            “What the hell are you doing?” Sally asked, standing directly behind him. He didn’t answer. Didn’t even look at her. Instead he kept working, shoving his hands further under the shutter and forcing it up another couple of inches at a time. He rolled over onto his front and was about to try and slide through the gap when she grabbed the heel of his boot and pulled him back.

            “Don’t panic,” she pleaded with him, keeping her voice low so the others didn’t hear. “Please don’t do anything stupid. I know it’s hard being trapped in here but don’t-”

            He crawled back and stood up. Catching Sally off-guard, in a single sudden movement he spun around and reversed their positions, pushing her up against the wall. He covered her mouth with his left hand, barely needing to use any force, then sank a knife deep into her belly.

            “I’m sorry,” he said, keeping her mouth covered to stifle the noise. “It’s better for all of us this way. Trust me.”

            He lay Sally’s body down, waited until he was sure she was dead, then wiped his bloodied hand clean on her jacket and slid out under the roller-shutter.

            In stark contrast to the desolate silence an hour or so earlier, the road outside was now full of movement. Several battered vehicles and a group of eight armed figures had gathered a short distance from the storage depot doors. Danny McCoyne picked himself up again, brushed himself down and wearily walked over to talk to Llewellyn who marshalled the movements of the fighters from the back of a pick-up truck.

            “Had fun in there, McCoyne?”

            “They’re fucked,” he grunted. “They won’t give you any trouble.”

            “How many?”

            “Eleven of them left. Three kids. Few basic weapons. All of them are pretty weak. A couple of them are virtually dead already.”

            Llewellyn nodded then gestured for his soldiers to take up their positions. An arc of five figures armed with blades, bludgeons and the occasional gun formed around the doorway and waited. A transit van reversed back towards the roller-shutters. The driver got out and moved around to the back.

           “Wilson,” Llewellyn bellowed at him, “let them go.”

            On his command, Kevin Wilson, chief kid-wrangler, yanked the van doors open and dragged two small children out on leashes. Naked and covered with grime, they struggled to escape, one of them trying to bite through their lead. When a terrified Unchanged face appeared under the roller-shutter for a split second, the children both lunged forward and threw themselves at the gap with furious speed. It was all Wilson could do to untangle himself from the leather straps and let go before he was dragged inside with them.

           Exhausted, McCoyne leant back against Llewellyn’s pick-up and waited for the inevitable. Barely half a minute passed before the other door into the shelter flew open and a crowd of terrified Unchanged were flushed out, running straight into the arms of the waiting Haters. He looked on as fighters starved of enemy kills for too long vented all their anger and frustrations on the helpless refugees now flooding out into the open. One of them–Kerry, he’d heard her called-managed somehow to escape, weaving around two fighters who both threw themselves at her at the same time. She’d barely made it another twenty metres before they caught her. One tackled her halfway up the grassy bank, grabbing hold of her spindly legs and thrashing feet. The other thumped an axe into the small of her back, brutally severing her spine. She was already dead but they continued to fight, overcome with the euphoria of the kill and not wanting it to end, slicing and hacking at the woman until what remained of her body had been spread across an area several metres wide; a bloody swathe of violent red in the wet yellow grass.




 
Copyright © 2011 by David Moody

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Good Job. Would be glad to order from them again.
By Amazon Customer
Excellent price. Received right-away.

14 of 17 people found the following review helpful.
Disappointed
By Hostage
Mr Moody sucked me in, and I have certainly given him a good chunk of money. I'm a big fan of his Autumn series, and I was really looking forward to the conclusion of the Hater trilogy. Unfortunately, i didn't think it lived up to the expectations. Hater did a great job of creating the paranoia one would expect based on the premise. I actually liked Dog Blood even more; seeing the potential for some excellent irony and a great twisting ending. I just don't think he quite got it on this one. Danny doesn't act much like a protagonist in this one, mostly getting dragged along by whoever else is currently in the picture. The story just didn't really ever feel like it had legs; it couldn't go anywhere. It was almost as though he painted himself into a corner, and didn't know how to get the story out.

Don't get me wrong, i finished it, and it was ok. but i had such high expectations after Dog Blood.

But let's face it, if you've read the first two, you're going to read this one. i might just recommend borrowing a copy.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Better than the first two, but too little too late.
By Mike V.
The final book in the Hater trilogy picks up a little while after the events at the end of the second book. It sees Danny McCoyne falling in with another group of Haters who have set up a barely-functioning settlement. It covers his attempts to come to grips with the world that he has been left in the wake of the virtual extinction of the Unchanged.

This book is particularly well-written, though not as quick of a read as the other two as a result. Moody does a much better job of creating an environment for the characters to move through in this one than in the first two books. The book has a decidedly post-WWIII book feel to it and Moody effectively nails the pathetic existence of most inhabitants of the world.

The problem with this series has always that once the main character becomes the monster he rockets to the top of the food chain - there's no tension that made the 1st half of the first book so suspenseful because the narrator has nothing to fear. Thankfully, the third book does something to reinject some tension, though it is not the same kind of paranoia "who's a Hater and who's not?" that we saw in the first book. Nevertheless it works. Also to the books benefit is the fact that much of the self-reflection and whining that Danny does in the first two books tends to fade away as McCoyne basically just gives up. This, in a sad testament to how unlikable of a character he was previously, actually made me like him more.

The problem remains that the author still continues to sidestep how the Haters are really different from the Unchanged and why they hate them so much. Without even a basic rationale, the premise falters as the reader continually asks "Yes, but why?" In the end, I find that I don't mind as much in this one, primarily because the book comes to grips better with the fact that the characters eventually needed to realize how illogical the entire situation was and there is at least some recognition and discussion of that. Furthermore, the fact that the topic of what comes next has been voiced by several characters in the series up to this point and then basically swept under the rug is finally brought up.

Ultimately, I like this book quite a bit more than the first two, even though I originally began reading it simply out of wanting to be a completist. I suspect that I would have given this book more than 2 stars if I hadn't had to wade through all of the problems of the first two (particularly the second) to get to a more polished story. The book also tends to be a bit over long and the last 50 pages feels a bit forced as far as sudden epiphanies

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