more, then quieted.
Remy bolted into a seated position
and looked over. Her crystal, still faintly
glowing inside its cocoon of silver, sat
on the ground next to her.
Fifty miles away, Texas
Settlement of Glenway
C
at Callaghan slipped from bed and
automatically grabbed the fireplace
poker she kept leaning against the wall.
Weapon in hand, just in case, she
padded out of the bedroom to the front
window. She hadn’t slept, and it was
probably just as well. She’d only have
nightmares if she did.
In the distance she could hear the
mournful, spine-tingling moans:
Ruuu-
uuuthhhh ruuuthhhh.
It wasn’t an unusual sound; she’d
lived her entire twenty-five years
hearing it many nights. Not every night,
no. And not always this nearby. But
often.
Just like the howling of wolves or
crying of wildcats, the sound portended
danger. Everyone stayed in at night,
blockaded in homes that were fenced in
or raised off the ground.
Now she could see an occasional
orange glow—the eyes of the zombies—
flickering in the darkness. Until six
months ago she’d never seen anything
more than that glitter of orange starlight,
close to the ground, jolting through the
darkness with each labored step of the
monsters.
Until six months ago she’d never
even seen what they actually looked like
—the horrible manifestation of decaying
human. The memory flared in her mind
before she could stop it: the empty,
orange eyes, haunted behind the glow.
The sagging, green-gray flesh, the shine
of white bone beneath. The putrid smell
of death. The sickening feel of skin and
bone giving way beneath the thrust of her
fireplace poker. A quiet sob caught her
by surprise and she pressed her palms
hard into her eyes, as if to erase the
images. But they were indelible.
Oh, God, Rick.
Cat drew in a deep breath then let it
out slowly. Squeezed her eyes closed to
hold back the tears. Tightened her grip
on the poker.
Rick, I’m so sorry.
The soft scuff of a bare foot on wood
turned her attention from the window.
“Are you all right, honey?”
She couldn’t manage a smile. But she
kept her voice steady. “Not really, Dad,
but I will be. Eventually.”
Surely he noticed the poker in her
hand, but he said nothing. Instead, he
came to stand next to her at the window,
wrapping his arm around her shoulders,
hugging her close. She closed her eyes
and allowed her head to rest against him.
Dad was a rock. Thank God she had
him.
Thank God he’d taken her away from
the memories. It was impossible to walk
by every day and see the very place Rick
had died, to have to put on a strong face
in front of everyone else in their small
village. To know that if she’d been a
few moments earlier, if she’d been fast
enough, brave enough, things might have
been different.
Her new home, Glenway, was a nice
enough little settlement, and her sister
Yvonne and her husband Pete had been
welcoming. And when Yvonne’s friend
Ana and her father had decided to stay in
Envy, they’d offered Dad the use of their
home. It seemed fitting: a father and
daughter had lived here, and now
another father and daughter would take
their place.
“No one should have to go through
what you did,” her dad said now. “I’m
sorry, Catie. I wish I had been there.”
She shook her head against him,
closing her eyes against the tears that
welled there. “I’m glad you weren’t. It
was awful, Dad.” She swallowed hard,
forcing the bile back down to her
stomach. “Poor Rick.”
Her voice caught and Dad hugged her
tight. “He seemed like a good man,” he
said. “Too young. What a terrible way to
have his life cut short.”
Cat sniffled, the tears coming faster
now. Rick had been a good man. She’d
only known him for a month, but they’d
had a connection.
Sometimes you just
know
, he said to her when she made an
offhand joke about it. His eyes had been
serious, and her insides fluttered at the
expression there. Maybe he’d been right
. . . but where did that leave her now?
Dad handed her a handkerchief and
she wiped her nose and eyes, drawing
away so she didn’t dribble on him.
“Thanks,” she said, wadding up the cloth
in her hand.
Ruuuuuuuuthhhhhh . . .
Her father shifted, his attention
focusing on the dark world outside. “Do
their moans sound different to you?
Maybe I’m getting hard of hearing in my
old age, but . . .”
Cat’s breath caught. She’d been
thinking the same thing. “Yes. They do
sound different. I noticed it, too, and
Yvonne said the same thing. In the last
week it’s . . . changed. More urgent, it
seems. Maybe that’s why I couldn’t
sleep.” She forced herself to chuckle,
but it came out sounding more like a
strangled sob.
“Aw, honey,” Dad said, and hugged
her. Pressing a kiss on the top of her
head, he stroked her hair. “If I could take
the memory, the experience, away from
you, I would.”
Cat pulled away and looked up at
him. “You’ve got your own horrors and
memories.”
He smiled, but it was sad. “That’s
why it wouldn’t be so difficult to take on
yours too. You were fresh and innocent.
And now . . .”
“It’s part of the world, Dad. I’m not a
fragile flower. I’ll get over it.” In light
of everything Dad had been through,
watching her boyfriend being attacked
by a zombie was only the tip of the
iceberg.
“Did you love him?” he asked after a
long minute.
Cat drew in a deep breath and closed
her eyes. She wondered if he’d been
waiting six months to ask her that. “I
don’t know. I might have. Maybe.
Probably.”
They stood there for a moment, father
and daughter, staring into darkness,
listening as the eerie, moaning sounds
filled the night.
“I think I’ll try and sleep now,” Cat
said, squeezing her dad around the
waist, then pulling away. “Good night.”
He turned to follow her out of the
room, then she heard him stop. “That’s
strange.”
Cat turned and saw that he was
looking toward the doorway that led to
George’s workroom. A faint orange
glow filtered through the crack at the
bottom.
He started toward it, and she
instinctively grabbed his arm. “Dad,”
she said.
“It’s all right.” He gently but firmly
pulled away.
Cat followed him, poker in hand. She
hadn’t been into George’s workroom
except briefly, on the first day they’d
arrived in Glenway. She knew he was a
sort of chemist or scientist, and that he’d
been growing penicillin for medical
purposes, supplying it to a man who was
a real doctor, over in Envy. But since
she hadn’t been in there since, and as far
as she knew Dad hadn’t either, neither of
them could have left a light on.
He reached for the door and she
realized she was bracing herself,
holding her breath.
But when the door opened at his
push, wafting gently into the workroom,
all was silent and still. Whatever she’d
been expecting didn’t come to pass.
Dad, spry and quick for his age, held
her back so he could lead the way into
the workroom. Cat was right on his
heels, poker ready to lash out at the first
sign of any movement or danger.
The orange glow was hardly more
than that, even now that they were in the
room. Dad headed for it and Cat looked
over his shoulder to see a small pile of
dirt and stones, apparently forgotten on
the floor. But some of them were no
ordinary rocks.
They seemed to be alive with an
orange glow, flaming from deep inside.
W
yatt sat in the dark rig, waiting.
Dantès had recovered from frenzied
canine panic over his mistress and her
damned burning crystal. He lay next to
Wyatt, snoring and then twitching as he
chased some imaginary rodent. The dog
was bleeding again from the deepest of
his wounds, likely from trying to leap
from the truck window to get to his
distressed mistress.
Whatever the fuck was wrong with
the woman? Hadn’t she learned her
lesson the last time the damned stone
tried to fry her? She’d probably have a
scar from the burn. Hell, she could
already have one from the last time this
happened, come to think of it. It wasn’t
as if he was looking at her damned belly.
Hell no.
Guilt stabbed at him.
His head pounded and he let it clunk
audibly back against the wall, closing
his eyes. Sleek and pale in the
moonlight, that soft, warm skin. Delicate
and tender. Probably fried to a crisp
now.
Wyatt squeezed his eyes tighter. Not
something he wanted to think about.
Nope.
They didn’t have any burn ointment to
put on it. Bummer for her.
It was a long time before he heard the
creak of her coming in. The rig jolted as
she pulled herself up, and then he heard
another creak as the door closed.
Dantès lifted his head, immediately
awake, and his tail thumped against the
floor, but he didn’t get up. Wyatt thought
he heard Remy mutter something that
sounded suspiciously like “traitor.”
He watched her as she made her way
carefully in the darkness, obviously
assuming he was asleep. Which he
wished he were. Or anywhere else but
here. Or dead.
Preferably dead.
Desolation washed over him, dull
and
gray.
Goddammit.
It
wasn’t
supposed to happen this way. He always
expected he’d check out early. He knew
he’d die young, in his prime. He’d be the
one to go. Not his goddamn family.
Not when he put his ass on the line,
day after day in Iraq, and then on the fire
squad.
Not them.
Him.
Oh, God, why? Why not me? Why
the hell did You do this to me?
“Wyatt?”
He must have made a noise or
something, dammit. Now she knew he
was awake. Now she was going to want
to talk.
“Find somewhere else to put that
damned stone,” he snapped, then
dropped his head back against the wall
again.
She didn’t respond, but he could hear
her picking her way around in the truck.
The air stirred as she came closer. He
felt Dantès shift and move when she
knelt to pet him, then heard the soft
sounds of her scratching behind his
triangular ears. Wyatt’s eyes remained
stubbornly closed, and he realized he
could smell her too. She was that close.
Not the scent of singed or burned flesh—
God knew he’d smelled that enough in
his life. But the soft, woman essence that
clung to a female: unique and yet
familiar.
“You gave it back.” Her voice was
low and husky. And closer than he
realized.
He made a sound of disgust, eyes still
shut, head still tipped back. “I’m not a
damned thief.”
“Thank you.”
If he hoped that was the end of it, he
was wrong. He heard her settle on the
floor, Dantès between them, and just as
he was about to slip back into his bleak,
dark thoughts, she said, “My grandfather
gave me the crystal. When he was on his
deathbed.”
Wyatt’s eyes snapped open, but
otherwise he didn’t move.
“He told me to protect it with my life.
That it was the key, and that someday I’d
know what to do with it. Unfortunately,
he didn’t see fit to give me any further