“Rachel?” DeVontay called from the darkness just outside the cockpit.
“Get in here,” she said.
“No. We need to figure out what they want. I’m going in the woods.”
“Damn you, don’t even think about it.” Rachel said it more loudly than she’d meant to, and she wondered if the Zapheads were listening. Did they have any comprehension of language, or was it just noise to them, an instinctive signal to close in and kill?
Stephen stiffened in fear beside her. “What’s happening?”
Rachel didn’t have time to conjure a suitable lie. “Something’s out there, but we’re safe in here.”
“Right, Little Man,” DeVontay said with false cheer. “Just like in your comic books. Back in a few.”
Rachel patted Stephen. “Wait here.” Then she scrambled across the cockpit into the moist air of night. Under the surreal swirls of the tainted atmosphere, DeVontay crossed the clearing, picking his way among the strewn wreckage. She called to him and hurried to catch up.
“You can’t leave that boy alone,” he said to her. “Get back in there.”
“Who made you boss?”
“This ain’t no time to go all femi-Nazi on me.” His good eye sparked with anger, while his glass eye reflected the green aurora, round and strange, a moon in an alien planet’s sky. “I’m going in. If they follow me, take the boy and get out of here.”
“And if they don’t follow you?”
“Then we’re all dead anyways.”
He started to turn but she grabbed his sleeve. “What if we get separated?”
“Then I’ll see you at Milepost 291.”
DeVontay took a step but she didn’t release him. Instead, she pulled herself into him. She meant to kiss his cheek but he turned, and their lips met. He was six inches taller, but they seemed to fit. His lips were full and warm and, even in the chaos and fear that pulsed through her veins, a different kind of excitement ignited.
Yet the kiss was also steadying, an eye in the hurricane, the sane center of a twirling universe gone mad. In the heavy silence of the autumn night, the contact was electric.
Zap.
After several skipped heartbeats, DeVontay pulled away. He smiled. “People’s looking.”
Rachel touched her mouth, embarrassed. There were no glittering eyes in the forest, no strange fireflies. Just the natural world.
“I…I’m sorry.”
“Then I hope you stay sorry. I’ll be back.”
He jogged toward the forest, rifle held before him, its barrel glinting with the faint light. Rachel scanned the trees once more, then looked at the forlorn shattered cockpit that gleamed like a monstrous egg under an alien sky. Stephen’s pale face appeared in the opening, and she wondered how much he’d seen.
She hurried back to him. “Come on, we have to pack.”
“Where’s DeVontay going?”
“Looking for a better camping place.”
“In the dark?”
The boy was smart. And intelligence was a critical survival trait. Rachel didn’t know what the future held, but Stephen was part of it. Her desire to protect him was maybe nothing more than vanity. He was tough, or he wouldn’t have made it this far.
“He’s trying to get the Zapheads to follow him.”
“So we can get away?”
“Yeah. So get packed. Hurry.”
Rachel shoved some cans of food into her backpack, making sure she had water, the lighter, the map, and the hatchet. She checked a side pouch to make sure the two clips of ammo were there. The pistol was useless at long range, and despite DeVontay’s patient teaching, she still wasn’t much of a shot. But in close quarters, the gun would be better than the hatchet, especially if several Zapheads attacked at once.
But she hoped it wouldn’t come to that. Not that she put much stock in “hope” these days.
“Got everything?” she asked, as Stephen pulled on his tennis shoes.
“I don’t got nothing,” he said. He was even starting to talk like DeVontay.
By the time they were crouched at the edge of the wreckage, sporting their jackets and backpacks—Stephen wearing his frayed Carolina Panthers cap—the first gleam of dawn touched the eastern sky with pink and orange, muting the aurora. Mist hung between the trees, hiding anything that might have moved among them. The water on the dying leaves made the autumnal canopy sparkle like a king’s ransom of gold and rubies.
“Are we going to wait for DeVontay?” Stephen asked.
“He wants us to go on.”
They’d heard no shots or cries of alarm, which probably meant that DeVontay had not yet encountered the Zapheads. But they could be following him, as he’d planned. Rachel couldn’t begin to guess the motives of the mutants—after all, why hadn’t they attacked in the night, when the three of them were surrounded?
“The highway’s over there,” Rachel said, pointed to the northwest where U.S. 321 wound inexorably up into the mountains. She then realized that DeVontay no longer had a map. Even if he escaped, he might never find his way to the Blue Ridge Parkway.
She couldn’t help one more little white lie. “DeVontay will meet up with us there once he’s sure the Zapheads are gone.”
“Won’t he get lost in the woods?”
“Nah. He’s pretty smart for a city boy.”
“Do you like him?”
“Sure. He helped save our lives.”
“Is that why you kissed him?” Stephen’s face was so earnest that Rachel almost grinned.
“Don’t worry,” she said. “I didn’t get any cooties.”
“Are you guys going to get married?”
“I don’t see any churches around here, do you?”
Stephen shook his head. “Just woods. And dead people.”
Rachel glanced at the crumpled body of the plane where many had lost their lives. Their horror had been brief—a few minutes from loss of power at 20,000 feet until devastating impact with the ground. While Stephen’s horror continued, a minute at a time, an uncertain day at a time, lost in the ashes of what civilization had once been.
She took his hand. “Come on. DeVontay’s waiting.”
They walked into the mist, Rachel carrying the pistol in one hand, the other gripping Stephen’s. She felt like an intruder in the forest. This place belonged to the beasts again.
Her kind didn’t belong here.
Her kind had its day under the sun, and now the new kind held sway.
But until she was gone, this world would have to make room for her. She demanded it. She’d abdicated God’s will, and now all she had left was self-will.
It would do.
She squeezed the pistol’s grip more tightly, savoring its potency.
Yes, it would do.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
“Tracks,” Franklin said.
He pointed off the forest trail where a thin stream trickled between moss-covered gray boulders. The black mud was pocked with footprints, a few of them holding water.
Jorge knelt and studied them. “Some are wearing boots or shoes and others are barefoot.”
“Give that man an Eagle Scout badge.” Franklin snapped a twig from a birch tree and chewed on the tip until it was frayed. Then he began brushing his teeth with it, savoring the minty flavor.
They were on the western side of the compound, half a mile below the ridge. Franklin had scouted the entire mountain several times during the construction of Wheelerville, mostly to ensure no fellow squatters or preppers were setting up camps nearby. Since the highway access was limited, it was a long hike into the depths of the national forest. Hippies sometimes spent weeks in the wilderness, especially in summer and autumn, but the steep, rocky terrain inhibited most of them. Those who had toughed it out never ventured up to the peak.