He raced back to the outside fence and was about to start climbing when he noticed movement to the left.
A woman with dark brown skin stepped from the shadows, a rifle in her hands.
As soon as the others saw her, they stopped in their tracks, a few raising their hands in surrender.
“Drop your weapons!” the woman said.
“We’re not armed,” Ben told her.
“We heard gunshots,” she said.
He couldn’t help but flick a gaze at the two dead doctors. When the woman looked, too, he said, “We didn’t do it. Someone else shot them. I don’t know who.”
The woman sidestepped over to the bodies. She poked a foot against Dr. Lawrence but didn’t bother with Dr. Rivera. When she seemed satisfied, she lowered her weapon.
“You’re the prisoners?” she asked.
“Um, yeah, I guess we are,” Ben said. “Who are you?”
“Let’s just say I’m not with them,” she said, nodding toward the bodies. “Any of you know how to shoot?”
No one moved.
She picked up the pistols the doctors had been using. “Anyone?”
Still no response.
She tossed one pistol to Ben, and the other to Jilly. “You’ll figure it out. Now come on. Let’s get you out of here.”
She led them behind the left-field bleachers and showed them how to help each other over the fence.
“There are more people still in the detention area,” Ben said. “And another inside somewhere. We can’t leave them here.”
The woman thought for a moment. “It’s Ben, isn’t it?”
He was surprised, but didn’t think he had time to ask how she knew. “Yeah.”
“Good to meet you, Ben. I’m Nyla. Show me where these others are.”
Teams B and C each reported successful entry into the stadium. All three teams made their way into the interior and headed toward the home-plate end of the structure.
Here and there they encountered sporadic gunfire, but most of the shooters appeared to have very little idea about what they were doing and were subdued with little effort.
“Gabriel?” Anton Helms’s voice said over the radio as the teams did a final sweep.
“Go for Gabriel.”
“Something here you need to see.”
“Where are you?”
Following Helms’s directions, Gabriel made his way to a set of rooms that appeared to have been converted into a medical facility. Helms and two others were standing by a windowed door.
“So?” Gabriel said.
“Over here.”
Gabriel walked over and looked through the window. A girl who couldn’t have been much more than eighteen was standing a few feet inside, staring back with fear in her eyes.
“Please, let me out,” she said, her voice coming out of an intercom on the wall. “Please.”
Gabriel glanced at Helms. “What’s going on?”
Helms shrugged. “We just found her like this. Said they stuck her in here earlier today after giving her an inoculation.”
“Double inoculation,” the girl corrected.
“Right, double. Apparently they told her she had to wait twenty-four hours to make sure it took.”
“Uh, and why would that be?” Gabriel asked.
Helms turned off the intercom and motioned for Gabriel to follow him. About ten feet over was a set of valves mounted on the wall, with one set of hoses leading to the door of the room the man was in, and another set leading to several metal tanks.
He touched the first. “This one’s on and hooked up to a couple of tanks marked O2.” He skipped the two middle ones and pointed at the fourth. “This one? Well, come here.”
He traced the hose back to a single tank. On the outside was stenciled KV-27a.
Gabriel gaped. They’d all heard the code before. It was Project Eden’s designation for the Sage Flu virus.
“They’re pumping virus into her room?” he asked.
“Pumped,” Helms corrected him. He easily picked up the tank with two fingers under the valve. “It’s empty.”
Gabriel shot a look back at the room. “Why?”
“You got me.”
They walked back over.
“Can you at least tell me what’s going on?” the girl pleaded.
“You’re going to be okay,” Gabriel said, hoping that was true. “The people who were running this place are no longer in charge.”
Her eyes widened. “Oh, God. We were right, weren’t we?”
“Right about what?”
“Some of the others and I were starting to think the doctors and guards weren’t who they claimed to be. And that they didn’t really plan on helping us.”
“No, ma’am, they didn’t.”
“Are you the UN?”
“The UN died with everyone else.”
“Then who are you?”
“We’re the ones who are going to figure out how to keep you alive.”
Pax and Martina heard the sound of running steps just inside the stadium, and then voices. A few seconds later something pounded against the fence and a head poked over the top.
“Jilly?” Martina said.
The girl looked down. “Martina?” She turned so she could glance back on the other side. “Martina’s here!”
Jilly swung over the top and dropped down. She hugged Martina so tight it hurt, but neither seemed to care.
“Oh, my God. Oh, my God,” Jilly said. “You came for us!”
Four more came over, including a man Martina didn’t know, but the others were from her old softball team. She and Valerie even hugged, whatever problems between them forgotten for now or maybe forever.
When the last person dropped down, Martina stared expectantly at the top of the wall. “Where’s Ben? I saw him. He’s with you, isn’t he?” She moved up to the fence and yelled, “Ben!”
“He went back to the enclosure with that woman,” Jilly said.
“What woman?”
“The one with the gun. I thought she was with you.”
“Nyla?”
Jilly shrugged. “I guess.”
“Why would he go back?”
“There were others locked up with us,” Jilly said. “And Ruby…they took her somewhere early today.”
“All right,” Pax said. “We’re not safe here. I want you all to head across the parking lot to those trees over there and wait. Martina can show you where.”
“I am not going anywhere,” Martina told him.
He frowned but said, “Okay. The rest of you go. We’ll be there as soon as we can.”
“If Martina’s staying, we’re staying,” Jilly said.
“Definitely,” Valerie agreed.
“You’ve got to be kidding me,” Pax said. “Did you hear those gunshots?”
“We saw two people killed in front of us,” Jilly said. “So, yeah, we heard them. And we’re staying.”
It was another four minutes before they heard people arriving on the other side again.
“Stand back!” Nyla yelled.
Everyone moved away from the fence.
A rifle blasted and the fence shuddered. There was the rattle of a chain, and then a gate a few feet away swung open.
The rest of the survivors swarmed out.
And at the very end came Nyla and Ben.
Martina rushed forward and threw her arms around him. At first he didn’t seem to realize who she was. He pushed her back enough so he could take a look, and then his breath caught in his throat.
Their kiss was infused with relief and joy and longing.
It didn’t matter what happened now.
She had found him.
January 8th
World Population
701,217,009