trail of blood you’ve left behind?”
Marck’s jaw shifted. “My real
question relates to you. Elliott was with
Quent in the caves, and I expect you
were too. Which makes you about fifty
years older than me.”
“That’s one hell of an assumption,”
Wyatt replied.
“It’s not an assumption. It’s a fact.”
“What does it matter to you?”
“I like to know who I’m dealing
with.”
Wyatt smiled, allowing every bit of
unpleasantness he felt to show in the curl
of his lips. “And why would I do
anything to give you an advantage?” He
tilted his head to listen. “The zombies
are coming closer. I’m finished with
this. Stay or go, your choice.” He turned
on his heel and walked unhurriedly to
the truck.
“What’s your gift, Wyatt? What
power did you gain in the caves?”
Marck’s question followed him,
snagging Wyatt in his smooth climb up
into the truck. But he recovered
immediately and kept going, yet with
more force and jerkiness in his
movements than before.
Holy shit. How could Ian Marck
know about that? How each of the men
who’d been trapped in the caves for fifty
years had acquired a special superhuman
ability?
It was inexplicable but true. Elliott
had discovered the unnatural ability to
heal with his hands. Quent could read an
object’s history merely by touching it.
Fence and Simon, the other two men
who’d been trapped with them, also had
superhuman abilities.
All of them, with the exception of
Wyatt, had noticed a special alteration in
their bodies. He wasn’t certain whether
he simply hadn’t discovered his yet or
whether he didn’t have one. He didn’t
really give a shit, figured it would be
just one more thing to have to deal with
in this new horror of a world. He’d seen
Quent and Elliott, and especially Fence,
try to learn how to handle these changes
and their powerful abilities, and it
hadn’t been pretty. It had been downright
dangerous and frightening in many ways.
It wasn’t bad enough that they had
been thrust into this world—losing
everything they’d loved—but to deal
with extranormal abilities? That just
made things worse.
Still
unpleasantly
surprised
by
Marck’s question, and irritated by the
interrogation overall, Wyatt stumbled
into the dim interior of the truck. There
was a small light in the back. Remy was
up, reading or doing something. Good
God, she’d probably have questions and
demand answers and generally work
hard to piss him off. If she asked him
why he kissed her—
He almost turned around to go back
out, but decided he would give neither
her nor Marck the satisfaction. He’d
faced down gun- and bomb-toting
terrorists in the Middle East, days and
nights without rest, and blazing fires that
went on for days. He sure as hell could
handle a woman.
And damned if his eyes didn’t go
right to her as he came into the back. She
was watching him and the entrance
behind him expectantly. No longer
wearing that skintight tank top, she’d
changed into something more modest—a
loose dark shirt. But there was enough
light to see the elegant curve of her neck
and shoulder, precisely the place he’d
buried his face only a few minutes ago.
Her soft dark hair was tousled and free
of its braid, falling in shadowy waves
against her fair skin. And those damn
blue eyes.
Guilt, guilt, guilt. He thrust it away,
turning it into anger and impatience.
“What the hell did you expect?” he
drawled. “Blood? Broken bones?”
Her expression remained cool. “I
heard the zombies.”
“They’re
coming
closer,”
said
Marck, his voice coming from the front
of the truck. “Might make sense to keep
watch tonight. They’re on a tear. I’ll take
the first watch. Sit in the front seat here.”
Wyatt grunted his assent, then
crawled back into the darkest corner he
could find. “I’ll spell you. Wake me at
two.”
“I’ll take the next shift,” Remy said
firmly. But no one responded, and Wyatt
knew Marck wouldn’t be waking her up.
He settled in and closed off his mind.
Sometime during college, he’d picked up
the valuable habit of forcing himself to
go to sleep instantly, regardless of what
else was going on around him and in his
head. Most of the time, it worked.
It must have worked tonight, too,
despite the whirlwind of thoughts that
plagued him, for Wyatt suddenly came
awake, feeling movement.
Earthquake?
His first thought was instantly
banished as he noticed the rhythm. The
truck was rocking from side to side. But
he was already on his feet, banging his
head on the ceiling as he scrambled over
a slower-moving Remy on his way to the
front. The cries and groans of the
zombies were loud, and even from
inside he could smell the stench.
“Why didn’t you wake me?” Wyatt
demanded, shoving into the front of the
truck next to Marck. The violent rocking
jolted him into the other man, but he
stayed on his feet. He heard Remy
shouting something behind him but
ignored her. Dantès was barking
frantically, leaping around, trying to get
out. “Quiet, Dantès!” he commanded.
“Sit.”
“Goddammit, I was trying to keep
them from tearing the door off,” Marck
snapped. “What the hell took you so long
to get here?”
Wyatt bit back a retort as he looked
out. Zombies everywhere. Christ. Thirty
of them, maybe more. He didn’t think
he’d ever seen so many in one place.
They could easily tip the truck over if
they all figured out how to work
together. Or got mad enough.
Remy pushed her way between them.
“Oh my God,” she whispered as another
violent jolt sent her falling into Marck.
“They found me.”
Wyatt couldn’t help but glance at
their new companion. He showed up
tonight and all of a sudden a whole band
of
frenzied
gangas
appeared.
Coincidence?
His jaw tightened as the truck tipped
sharply, then slammed back upright.
He’d deal with Marck later. Right now
they had to get out of this mess.
“Get me a torch,” he shouted. “At
least we can try and hold some of them
—” The truck jolted again, cutting him
off, but by the time he’d righted himself,
Remy was there with a rolled up piece
of cloth that was trying to burn on one
end. A pair of
jeans
? Christ, wasn’t
there anything else? Denim burned like
shit.
Marck was doing something under
the steering well of the truck, and Wyatt
realized he was trying to see if there was
a way to get it started. “Not gonna
work,” he shouted, brandishing the torch
out the glassless window. “Gas tank’s
bone dry.”
There was a curse and then Marck’s
face reappeared. “Trying to see if I can
get some wires to spark,” he said, then
disappeared back under.
Wyatt shook his head, wondering
what the hell sparking wires would do to
help. The only way he knew of to kill a
zombie was to smash his brains. Not a
pleasant task, nor an efficient one.
Remy shrieked when the truck jolted
violently, and this time it nearly went
over.
Sonofabitch. Wyatt lunged back to the
window and hung out of it, waving the
soft, sagging torch at the monsters. It did
little to deter them; they merely moved to
Marck’s side of the truck and began to
push at it.
The
group
was
surprisingly
coordinated; zombies didn’t usually
comprehend teamwork. Especially when
there was a potential meal involved.
Wyatt shoved that thought away.
According to Marck’s information, he
and Remy would be safe—if one could
call being abducted by zombies safe—
while Ian Marck would be the one in
danger. And Dantès.
The poor dog was whining and
shoving his head against Wyatt’s arm,
and then Remy, and then back again. He
was just as frightened as the rest of them.
The truck was rocking harder. It was
going to go over any time now, and there
didn’t seem to be anything—
“Remy. You have that bottle of
alcohol? Grab it. And the alcohol pads
in the first aid kit. And the empty
whiskey bottle.” Damn. He knew he
should have saved some of the
Jameson’s. “And whatever books and
paper you can find.”
She gave a little cry as the truck
tipped again, sending her to the floor,
hard, but she leapt up and dashed back
into the darkness, taking Dantès with her.
Marck emerged from beneath the
steering well just as the glass on the
driver’s side window shattered. A thick
zombie hand, gray and putrid with
rotting flesh, reached in blindly, just
missing Ian’s arm.
“Hurry!” Wyatt shouted, smashing at
the hands of zombies as they tried to pull
themselves up, using the empty window
ledge. He still waved the torch, but it
wasn’t burning very well at all.
Remy was back, shoving the small
bottle of alcohol into his hands. He’d
grabbed a piece of something soft from
the floor and now he shoved it into the
bottle, leaving a little tail hanging out.
One small fucking bomb, and maybe a
second one if he got lucky. A few
burning books. That was the most he
could hope for.
The truck rocked again, and he
realized the zombies were now pushing
from both sides—which was actually a
blessing. They weren’t coordinating,
they were fighting against each other.
Good. If they could just hold them off till
dawn,
when
the
zombies
would
leave . . .
He lit the tail dangling from the small
bottle and waited for the cloth to burn
down as low as he could . . . He didn’t
want to wait too long, but—
“Duck!” he shouted, and flipped it
out the window just as it exploded.
Glass shattered against the metal of the
truck door and a few shards even flew
inside.
Fuck.
That was too damn close.
The small bottle bomb had frightened
the zombies enough that they backed
away, but the reprieve didn’t last long.
“Got any other ideas?” Still holding
the smoldering denim torch, Wyatt
called to Marck, who was doing pretty
much the same thing he was on the
opposite side of the cab: keeping the
door closed and using whatever was at
hand to fight them away.
“I’m thinking!” Marck shouted back,
beating at a zombie head with something
he’d found on the bottom of the truck.
“Isn’t there any other way out of this
thing?”
“No,” Wyatt responded over the roar.
“No back door. No rear entrance.” He
crumpled up the page of a book Remy
tossed on the seat behind him, then lit the
ball. When it flared into flames, he
tossed it out the window, then followed
with a second one out Marck’s window.
The burning missiles had effective but
short-lived effects on the zombies: they
caused them to spread out, and one or
two might catch his clothes on fire, but
once they staggered away, screaming
gutturally, the others swarmed back to
the truck.
He threw the last book—damn, it
was the Jack Reacher thriller he’d just
salvaged—and then something was
thrust into his hand. A metal pan.
Excellent. Still holding the makeshift
torch, he swung out the window and
caught one of the monsters in the head
with the pan. The skull crunched and he
fell away, only to be replaced by another