garden snakes.
It was the element of surprise
working in her favor when, after she
climbed several steps ahead of Wyatt,
she turned and flung the reptile into his
face. Probably not what he was
expecting.
That was more than six months ago,
and it was how she made her escape
from the people who wanted to keep her
in Envy—Elliott, Wyatt, Quent, and the
others. She hadn’t seen any of them again
until Wyatt found her under Seattle’s
truck.
Now Remy looked at her current
companion as he climbed out of the
Humvee. “Have to leave the truck here,
and hidden,” Ian said.
It was true. If they approached the
gates in a vehicle, they would be
presumed Strangers or bounty hunters.
She helped him pull the steel door of an
old garage closed behind the truck and
then they swung up their packs.
“I think,” she said as they started
toward the city, Dantès padding along at
her side, “it would have been faster, as
well as more comfortable, riding a
horse.”
Ian glanced at her. “Duly noted.”
She rolled her eyes and looked away.
The sooner she ditched him, the better.
Since Ian learned she didn’t have the
crystal any longer, he’d been quiet and
distant—more so than usual. He’d also
kept a very close watch on her. They
hadn’t talked other than necessary for the
last day and a half of travel, but to
ensure she didn’t run off in the night, he
made sure they slept close together.
Body heat notwithstanding, it actually
allowed her to rest more deeply—
knowing he was listening for danger
(zombies, wild animals, Lacey) too.
Despite being enclosed in his arms,
she had a nightmare about Seattle that
first night, likely because of her capture
by Lacey and Goldwyn. It was the first
one she’d had in months. But Remy was
able to pull herself out of it and fight
back to consciousness using some of the
techniques Selena had taught her. If
she’d wakened Ian, he gave no
indication . . . but his arms had remained
close around her.
The walls of Envy loomed above as
they approached. The enclosure was
twenty feet tall and built of remnants
from a long-gone twenty-first century
civilization: billboards, pieces of cars,
airplane hangar walls, large piles of
rubble, massive segments of buildings or
vehicles. The purpose of the barrier, or
so Remy had been told while she was in
the infirmary under Elliott Drake’s care,
was not to keep people out or in, but to
offer protection from the zombies and
other predators.
Thus, although there was a watch at
the entrance, the large gates—made from
two massive garage doors—were kept
open from sunrise to sunset. Entering and
exiting Envy wasn’t like being given
access to a medieval castle. No one was
denied, no one was retained.
But she suspected that didn’t mean
there was a lack of communication about
who was entering or exiting.
She, Dantès, and Ian walked past the
guard on duty as he waved and smiled at
them. A few yards farther inside they
found themselves in the wide, bustling
streetfront previously known as the Las
Vegas Strip. Tall buildings, structures
unfamiliar to her, rose on either side. If
it weren’t for the expanse of the street,
she might have felt boxed-in. A Statue of
Liberty stood at the base of the street as
if to welcome newcomers, just as the
original statue had done in Manhattan
more than two hundred years ago.
There were two intact buildings on
either side of the wide street, and neatly
kept flowers, trees, shrubbery, and even
streetlights paraded between them.
Except for the lack of motorized
vehicles, the area looked almost
identical to the pictures Remy had seen
of pre-Change civilization. Beyond the
two
flanking
buildings
were
the
remnants of other, smaller structures:
some maintained and others in utter
disrepair. And at the top or north end of
the street, rose the tall, metal skeletons
of buildings that didn’t survive the
Change. Beyond them and in the
perimeter of the main thoroughfare were
more ruins, the rest of the wall, and, to
the north and beyond: the Pacific Ocean.
It was months ago she’d been here
last, but Envy felt different this time.
There was an air of excitement or
expectancy in the people moving about.
“Wonder what’s going on,” she said,
looking up at Ian, who shrugged.
“Looks
like
some
sort
of
celebration,” he replied in a tone that
indicated his disinterest.
“Well, look who the fucking zombies
dragged in.”
Remy and Ian turned at the same time.
The woman standing there was lean and
athletic, with short, blue-black hair that
flung about in choppy waves around her
jaw. She was beautiful, with her
almond-shaped eyes and rich, mahogany
skin, but she also had a no-nonsense air
about her and fairly bristled with sass.
“Ian Marck,” the woman continued.
“I’d say you were a sight for my sore
damn eyes, but that’d be a fucking lie.”
“Well, well, Zoë,” Ian said, the hint
of a sneer in his voice. “You’re looking
well. I see that captivity suits you,
locked up behind these walls. Remind
me to ask Quent how he does it.”
“He acts like a fucking human instead
of a murderous asshole, that’s how,” Zoë
replied. “Maybe you ought to take
lessons.” But her sharp eyes had
transferred to Remy and then Dantès. “I
remember this big-ass guy,” she said,
crouching to pet him. “He hung out here
for a while with Wyatt. I’ll have to
introduce him to Fang. There aren’t any
other dogs big enough to play with him
without getting their asses kicked,” she
said, standing up to look at Remy again.
“That is, assuming you’re gonna fucking
stay this time.”
Remy nodded, feeling Zoë’s attention
linger on her face. The bruises had
faded, but they were still a little
yellowish, and the nasty cut by her
eyebrow was still red and swollen. She
wanted to ask about Wyatt—although
surely he wouldn’t be here yet. But from
the time she’d spent at Yellow
Mountain, she knew he had some way of
being in contact with the people here.
She needed to find out where he was.
She had to get that damned crystal back,
and she’d murder Wyatt in the process if
she had to. She’d
trusted
him, dammit.
But she had to do it without Ian
knowing.
“Yes. I . . .” She looked around,
again noticing all the activity. “What’s
going on here?”
“This shit?” Zoë looked utterly
disgusted. “Hella big-ass party, more
noise and food and people than should
ever be in one fucking place, you ask
me. Survivors Day is what they call it.
Been wasting an assload of time getting
ready for it. Fricking pig roast, ice
creams, something called—what the
hell, rhino ears or—”
“Elephant ears, luv,” said a clipped
voice. “They’re called elephant ears.
And they’re delicious.”
Remy looked up at the handsome
blond man who’d appeared from
nowhere. His hand settled proprietarily
on Zoë’s shoulder and he was looking at
Ian with unadulterated dislike. “Ian
Marck. To what do we owe the
pleasure?”
The words were polite enough. Even
his accent—which sounded like the
people in all those Harry Potter DVDs—
made it sound pleasing and almost
formal. But the expression on his face
and the inflection in his tone belied
anything related to sincerity.
“Just passing through,” Ian replied.
“Don’t get in my way, Fielding, I won’t
get in yours.”
“It’s Quent. I don’t use my father’s
name.”
“There you go—we have something
in common. I don’t use mine either.”
Without another word, or even a glance
at Remy, Ian walked off.
“Remington Truth,” said Quent,
thankfully pitching his voice low. “The
last I heard, you were with Theo and
Wyatt in Yellow Mountain. Then you
took off.”
“You traveling with that asshole?”
Zoë demanded, glaring after Ian.
“Because if you are, we’ve got some
serious talking ahead of us. Asshole
didn’t decorate your face like that, did
he?” Her lips were flat with disgust as
she looked pointedly at Remy’s face.
Glad to be extricated from Ian’s
presence—although she was by no
means confident it would be permanent
—Remy replied, “No, he didn’t. And we
met up because we happened to be
traveling in the same direction. Two is
safer than one, even with Dantès along.”
“Where’s Wyatt?” Quent asked. “He
went after you, didn’t he? He find you?”
Probably better not let on she was
ready to kill the man. Play it cool, lure
them in . . . “Yes. We got separated
during a zombie attack. I was hoping
he’d be coming here.”
“I haven’t heard from him recently.”
“I . . . was hoping to speak with the
woman named Ana.” Remy looked from
Quent to Zoë. “I understand you know
her?”
“Zoë! There you are!”
“Shit.”
Zoë’s face went pale under
her dusky skin.
Remy turned to see two women
coming toward them, purpose in their
steps. One of them looked familiar—she
had amazing red-gold curls that shined
like a flame in the bright sun. Remy
remembered her: she’d been with Wyatt
and his friends when they found her in
Redlo. Her name was Sage. Her
companion had darker, auburn hair and
clear green eyes. “Flo’s been waiting for
you for an hour!” she said.
“Oh, fuck, I’m so outta here.” Zoë
would have bolted away but Quent had
her by the arm and hauled her back. “Let
go of me, genius.” The sass was gone,
replaced by desperation. “I’ll make it
worth your while.
Really
worth it.” Her
voice and eyes had gone smoky—but
still with a hint of panic—and she fairly
melted into him. “Please?”
Quent merely chuckled, keeping a
firm hold on her arm. “It’s not going to
kill you to get a little primped up for
tonight,” he said. “You’re already
glowing,” he added, the corners of his
eyes crinkling as he patted her belly,
“but if you let Flo have her way, you’ll
be even more stunning than usual. And
then
you can make it worth my while.”
“I am
not
letting that dominatrix put
any of that face paint shit on me,” Zoë
said. “And she’s not making me wear
anything with a skirt.”
“But Zoë,” said Sage, giving Remy a
curious glance. “Your grandmother is
being celebrated tonight. You should
honor her and what she did by putting on
something special.”
“I promise, it will be painless,” said
the other woman. “Flo is a genius!”
“She’s a bloody damned sadist,”
muttered Zoë, still trying to weasel out
of Quent’s grip.
Chuckling, the second woman turned
to Remy. “Hello. I’m Jade. Elliott’s
wife. You look familiar . . .”
“Hi . . . yes, I’m Remy. Elliott . . . um
. . . helped me a few months ago. When
my leg got all cut up. Zoë brought me
here to him.”
“She’s the one who threw an assload
of snake at Wyatt,” Zoë put in. “I don’t
know which pissed him off more—when
she shot at him or threw the damn snake
in his face.” Her panic receded as her
eyes gleamed with relish. “Wish I’d
been there to see that.”
Remy felt her cheeks warm. “Yes, I
guess I did piss him off a little.”
Guess
we’re even now.
“Well, that’s not hard to do, frankly,