“Andrew Turner!” shouted Marcus, but Kira shushed him.
“Quiet, I’m going to try something.”
The dust settled, and the air was still. Kira opened her medkit and pulled out the stethoscope — one of the digital models with sound amplification. She thumbed the switch, silently praying that the battery hadn’t degraded, and pressed the scope to the rubble.
Pom, pom, pom, pom…
“It’s his heartbeat,” Kira called out. “He’s right under the fallen chimney.”
“Those stones are propping up half the house,” said Marcus. “We’re not moving them.”
“As long as his heart’s beating, we are,” said Jayden. “Out of the way, Walker.” He slid down next to Kira and called for help from the others. “Yoon, get me rope, and tie the other end to one of the horses.” A moment later the soldier dropped a stiff nylon cord in between them, and Jayden huffed, reaching out to loop the rope around the rock. Kira pressed the scope to the stone again.
Pom, pom, pom.
“I can still hear the heartbeat.” She turned, looking for beams of wood. “Marcus is right, though — if we move this now, the whole first floor will come down on him. Here, brace it with this.” She pulled on a long joist, still attached to shards of wooden flooring, and Jayden shoved it into place, propping up the rubble.
“All set.” Jayden called out orders to the wagon driver. “Take her forward, Yoon! More … more … okay, the line’s taut, now just an inch at a time.”
The rope stretched tight; Kira couldn’t see the stone move, but she could hear it scraping loudly against the stone floor below. “It’s working!” she shouted.
Jayden called more orders to Yoon. “Keep going — nice and slow, that’s perfect. Now ready on the line.” The stone dislodged from its hole, and Jayden grunted as he helped shove it to the side.
Kira turned to the open hole, eyeing the makeshift support beam nervously, when a shape in the darkness stopped her cold. She hadn’t seen it before — it had been behind the stone.
It was a human leg, severed just above the knee.
“No,” she murmured. She reached forward cautiously, probing the jagged edge where the bone had broken. Crushed, she thought, feeling the damage. The chimney fell and snapped his leg right off. How can he still be alive? She pressed her scope against the next stone.
Pom, pom, pom.
“Bloody hell,” said Jayden, crouching behind her, “is that his leg?”
“It means we’re close.”
“It means he’s dead,” said Jayden. “That chimney would have pulverized him.”
“I told you I can hear his heartbeat,” Kira hissed. “Give me the rope.”
The rubble shifted, and Kira closed her mouth and eyes tightly against a hail of rocks and dust. The rafter above her groaned, and she heard shouts of alarm from the soldiers above.
“Get her out of there!” called Marcus.
“He’s right,” said Jayden. “This is coming down around us any second. One dead man isn’t worth losing a medic.”
“I’m telling you, he’s alive.”
“Get out,” Jayden snapped. “If we can’t dig him out of here, we definitely can’t dig you out.”
“This is a human life,” said Kira. “We don’t have any of those to spare right now.”
“Get out!”
Kira gritted her teeth and inched forward; Jayden swore behind her, reaching for her feet, but she kicked him away.
Pom, pom, pom.
She felt the next stone in front of her, testing for handholds, probing its stability. I think I can move this one, she thought. He’s got to be right on the other side of it, and then they’ll see. I know he’s alive.
“Hey, Mr. Turner,” she shouted, “can you hear me? I’m coming to get you — we’re not leaving you behind.” She braced herself on the basement floor, praying she didn’t dislodge anything vital, and pushed on the largest stone, feeling it rotate slightly against a stiff, off-center axis. She pushed again, straining at the weight, then shoved the stone to the side. There was another shape in the darkness, too twisted for her to recognize the outline. She thumbed the scope again, reaching forward desperately.
Dit, dit, dit, dit…
Wait, thought Kira, that’s not right, and then her fingers brushed against slick, wet flesh. She caught a piece of fabric between two fingers and pulled it closer, hearing the dit grow louder in the tiny cavern. She felt the bloody limb with both hands, refusing to believe it; she inched back toward the light and held it up, confirming it with her eyes.
“It’s his arm,” she said softly. “He’s gone.”
Jayden stared. “And the heartbeat?”
She held up the arm, the wrist glinting metallically. Dit, dit, dit. “His wristwatch.” She felt drained and lifeless. “He’s gone.”
Jayden pulled the arm away from her, steadying her with his hand. “Let’s get out of here.”
“We have to take him back,” said Kira.
“This was not an accident,” said Jayden. “Someone came through here and set this bomb — someone who knew we were coming. They’re probably still nearby.”
Kira frowned. “Why would someone blow up a weather station?”
“It was a radio,” said Gianna. “We didn’t see it all before it blew, but I know that much for certain. This was the biggest communications hub I’ve ever seen.”
“Voice,” said Kira.
Jayden’s voice was low and grim. “And after that noise, they definitely know we’re here.”
CHAPTER FIVE
Jayden gathered the survivors in the shadow of the smoking wagon. “There’s no way we’re getting home in this thing, which puts us at least two days out from civilization. Our radio’s been destroyed as well. We’re on our own.”
“We’ll have to rig a stretcher for Private Lanier,” said Marcus. “He has a compound fracture in his shin. I’ve set it as best I can, but he’s not walking anywhere.”
Kira scanned the trees and ruins around them, tensing at every movement. She’d been in the hospital once when the Voice attacked; she’d seen the wounded soldiers they brought in, moaning and screaming in pain as the triage medics wheeled them into surgery. It still shocked her to think that any human would harm another one.
“Build a stretcher,” said Jayden. “We have two horses left: Patterson and Yoon will ride ahead and send backup as soon as they can reach the Defense Grid perimeter. The rest of us follow on foot.”
“It’s nearly thirty miles,” said Yoon, “and the horses are already tired. They can’t do it in one shot.”
“They can go for at least another hour,” said Jayden. “You’ll run out of light by then anyway. Go as far as you can, then let the horses rest till first light.”
“We don’t have to go all the way back to East Meadow,” said Gianna. “There’s a farm community west of here, and several more to the east. They’re a whole lot closer than thirty miles, and Lanier can get help sooner.”
“Our map was in the side of the wagon that blew up,” said Jayden. “I’m not in the mood to just wander around the island looking for rednecks.”
“They’re not rednecks,” said Gianna. “Most of them have more education than you do—”
“Their amazing educations aren’t much good to us without a map to find them,” said Kira. Why was Gianna arguing at a time like this? “East Meadow’s our best bet — we can follow major roads the whole way.”