liked it that way; it kept him close to the
work, reminded him why he did it. “We
all can’t wait for you to get your tight ass
out of here. You need some time off.”
“That’s the truth.” Wyatt grinned,
feeling about as happy as he’d felt the
day he and Cathy got married. The only
other times he’d felt so full of himself,
so beyond happy, was on the days his
children were born. And the day he
stepped off the plane, Stateside, after his
last tour in Iraq.
He loved his children, his wife, and
his life—but there was nothing like
being able to just be with his friends and
have no responsibility but to enjoy
himself. Every so often a guy needed a
getaway.
He gulped down a big glass of milk
and looked at Cheech. “Just so long as
Cath doesn’t hear how bad it was
tonight, okay? Tell everyone to keep it
under the hood.” He knew how close
he’d come to biting it tonight. But it was
best to keep that stuff to himself. His
wife didn’t need anything else to fuss
over. She understood why he did what
he did, but she didn’t like the long hours
and the danger that came with it.
“You got it, brother.” Cheech
nodded.
T
he next day, Wyatt kissed his wife
Catherine goodbye. He bear-hugged his
eight-year-old son David and smooched
his ten-year-old daughter Abby. Then he
got on a plane and flew to Sedona.
May 2061
Somewhere in the former State of
Nevada
“W
hat are you doing here?”
Wyatt looked at Remington Truth,
who was pointing her gun at him, and
thought, Christ, sweetheart, I’ve been
asking myself that for a damn year.
If I’d never gotten on that damned
plane to Sedona . . .
Instead of answering, he walked over
to the fire she’d built for her overnight
camp in the woods. She wouldn’t shoot
him. Not yet anyway.
Not that she hadn’t already tried.
“How the hell did you find me?”
Remy asked, lowering the gun. Even in
the dim light, he could see the fury in her
eyes.
“Dantès
showed
up
early
yesterday, so I know you didn’t follow
him.”
He hadn’t expected a particularly
warm welcome. After all, it was almost
butting up to midnight. He was surprised
she wasn’t sleeping, and even more
surprised she was camping out in the
open like this. Damn good thing he’d
decided to track her down and make sure
wherever she was going, she got there in
one piece.
But Dantès was glad to see him.
Wyatt crouched by the fire as Remy’s
large dog, a German shepherd/wolf mix,
greeted him with soft, ecstatic whines
and crazy licking kisses.
“Hey there, bud,” he said, shoving
his hands into the thick, warm fur around
the dog’s neck and massaging. The dog
was so enthusiastic, there was a danger
he’d knock Wyatt into the fire, so he
shifted from his haunches onto his ass.
“Glad to see you again too.” It was true.
Dantès was one of the few things that
made his new life somewhat bearable.
He glanced over at Remy, then
around the small encampment. “You’re a
sitting duck for zombies here—or worse.
I thought you’d know better than to be
outside and on the ground at night.”
Remy shot eye-daggers at him. She
had the most incredible blue-violet eyes,
but right now he imagined they were
black with ire. He couldn’t see for
certain in the dark.
“It was only a temporary stop. I’ve
gotten pretty damn good at avoiding
getting myself killed, in case you haven’t
noticed. Besides, Dantès will smell or
hear any threat long before it gets close
enough to me. Although,” she said,
jabbing the fire with a violent stick, “he
didn’t see fit to warn me about you.”
Wyatt held back on the obvious
comment. Instead, he unhooked the pack
he was wearing and let it flop to the
ground behind him. “Did you eat yet? I
—”
“I don’t want you here; I’m certainly
not going to feed you,” she informed
him. “I don’t know why you followed
me.”
He stretched out one long leg as he
untied the boot on the other. “I have
food. I was offering it to you,” he said
mildly, pulling off his shoe.
Ahhh
. He
wiggled his toes, then went on to yank
off the other boot and sock.
At first he’d been on and off
horseback while tracking her from the
small settlement she’d left nearly a week
ago. But when Dantès took off after
finding his mistress’s scent yesterday
afternoon, Wyatt set the wild mustang
free so he could better follow the trail
on foot. He suspected once Dantès was
with Remy, she wouldn’t allow her dog
to go back and bring Wyatt to her, so
he’d moved as quickly and expediently
as he could before the trail went cold.
It had taken him a little more than
twenty-eight hours to catch up to her,
even though he could tell she’d
increased her pace. He had to give her
credit: she moved along at a good clip,
leaving only hints of her trail.
“What are you doing here, Wyatt?”
she asked again. This time her voice
wasn’t as strident. It was weary.
It’s complicated.
And even that was an understatement.
Fifty-one years ago he’d boarded that
goddamn plane from Denver to Arizona.
He’d met up with his buddies Elliott and
Quent for what the latter called an
extreme camping trip, exploring some
mountain caves in Sedona.
While they were deep in the caves
with their guides Fence and Lenny, all
hell
broke
loose.
Some
major
earthquakes caused falling rubble and
cave-ins, released poison gases, and
knocked them all out . . . or something.
When they woke up again and stumbled
out of the cave, they discovered that the
inconceivable had happened.
The earth had been changed. Most of
civilization was destroyed—people,
buildings, infrastructure.
And it was
fifty years in the future.
The year twenty-fucking-
sixty
.
And he—none of them—had aged a
bit. They looked exactly the same.
But they’d lost everything.
Wyatt reached for Dantès, who’d
settled halfway between his two human
companions. Scratching near the dog’s
tail, he tried not to remember how
devastating
and
paralyzing
the
realization had been. And still was. It
was a year since he’d walked out of that
cave, grateful and jubilant to be alive
. . . only to find himself in something
worse than hell.
He, Elliott, Quent, and the two others
who were in the cave had been trying to
accept this changed world ever since
then . . . a world populated by dangerous
crystal-wearing
immortal
Strangers,
zombies,
and
lacking
anything
resembling infrastructure. This new
environment was a strange mixture of
simple, almost third-world settlements
in overgrown buildings and empty towns
combined with glimpses of twenty-first
century America. Cell phones and the
Internet didn’t exist anymore, but there
were lights and washing machines
running on solar or wind power,
carefully maintained televisions, and
disc players for whatever DVDs
survived—or had been scavenged—
along with random books, clothing, and
even furnishings that lasted fifty years
for a variety of reasons. It was a strange
juxtaposition, almost like the Old West
meshed with a world filled with
superhero pop culture and synthetic
fabric.
Wyatt and Remy had been crossing
paths for months—she wearing her
distrust of him and everyone else on her
figurative sleeve by being secretive and
running away whenever she could. But
this time he’d followed her, because he
knew she was in danger—from the
zombies as well as the Strangers. They’d
been searching for someone named
Remington
Truth
ever
since
the
devastating events of the Change.
So far, he didn’t think the Strangers
knew that the woman sitting in front of
him
was
the
granddaughter—and
namesake—of the deceased Remington
Truth. But when and if they did, they’d
be after her just as desperately.
“Do you have a destination in mind,
or are you just running away again?”
Wyatt asked.
“It’s none of—” To his surprise, she
stopped. Clamped her lips shut and
looked at him through the fire. “I have a
destination,” she said after a minute.
“Good. I like to have my missions
closed-ended.”
“I’m not your mission, Wyatt.”
He shrugged. “Dantès is. I can’t
believe you left him behind.”
With me.
The dog was her most prized possession
. . . except for the thumbnail-sized
crystal she wore beneath her shirt. His
gaze couldn’t help but drop to her
midriff, mostly obscured by the flames
dancing between them.
She looked away, and might have
intended to respond. But whatever she’d
have said was cut short as Dantès’s ears
snapped up and he froze, completely at
attention.
They both stilled, listening while
looking into the darkness along with the
canine. Dantès gave a low growl and got
to his feet. And then Wyatt heard it. The
low moans, rumbling in the distance.
Ruuu-uuuuthhhhh. Ruuuuthhhhh.
Zombies.
Searching for Remington Truth.
He didn’t need to say a thing; Remy
was already up, kicking dirt onto the
small fire. He jammed his sockless feet
back into his boots and snatched up his
pack. She grabbed the one next to her,
shoving her gun into the waistband of her
jeans as he said, “Let’s go.”
He pointed north as she started to
head east, but he was faster and grabbed
her by the arm. “This way,” he said, and
propelled her toward the forest. “From
the shadows, looks like there’s high
ground in the distance.”
Damned if she refrained from
arguing, setting off at a good pace
instead with Dantès at her side. If they
got to the base of the hill before the
zombies found them, they could climb up
the other side, leaving the clumsy
creatures behind them. Zombies—or
gangas, as they were also called—
couldn’t climb stairs or anything steep.
But despite their awkward movements
the bastards covered ground quickly,
especially when they smelled human
flesh. They were strong. And they were
violent.
Remy moved along rapidly and with
more confidence than Wyatt expected,
being in the dark and in an unfamiliar
place.
Maybe
Dantès
helped.
Nevertheless, he stayed close behind
her, pausing occasionally to look back
and listen, then easily catching up.
They were hiking through a junglelike
forest, but threaded through it were
remnants of the world Wyatt had left
behind. Cracked and overgrown slabs of
concrete that once could have been
parking lots, building foundations, or
even roads. They passed rusted-out cars,
often sprouting the eerie shapes of trees
or bushes growing through the windows.
By the dearth of buildings, he figured
they were on an old two-lane highway in
the middle of nowhere. Fifty years ago
this had probably all been desert. But
since the Change, the climate and
environment had been altered, turning
Nevada into a tropical jungle. He
wouldn’t have believed it if he weren’t
living it.