belly was hardly more rounded than
Remy’s, and even with that curve, she
looked long and crisp and sleek. At the
same time, she appeared spectacularly
uncomfortable as Vaughn ushered her to
stand next to him.
“Mangala Kapoor was a mechanical
engineer. She was instrumental in not
only maintaining and developing some of
the mechanics that kept water running
and electricity on hand in one of the
small outlying settlements, but she also
made a point of collecting seeds and,
through years of trial and error,
propagated a variety of non-native plants
and spices. If it weren’t for Zoë’s
grandmother, we wouldn’t have access
to food like cinnamon or peanuts and
almonds any longer.”
The
applause
was
loud
and
boisterous, and Zoë made her escape
from the stage as quickly as she could.
Remy could see her complaining as she
stepped off, and she could imagine she
was griping about why she had to go up
there and stand in front of everyone for a
total of two minutes, dressed like this,
and so on. At least she wasn’t wearing
the skirt Flo had threatened her with.
When she got to the ground, Quent
snatched her up in a big bear hug that
had Remy smiling wistfully. Apparently,
even bad-tempered people had someone
to love them. Of course, that meant the
bad-tempered person had to actually
allow
themselves to be loved.
She watched as they wandered arm in
arm away from the stage and toward her
and Wyatt. When they came close
enough to see them, Remy saw the
surprise in Quent’s face. Whether it was
because they were together or simply
because of Wyatt’s unexpected presence,
she didn’t know.
“Fucking
glad
that’s
over,” Zoë
grumbled, bending over, her arm jerking
vigorously. She suddenly became about
three inches shorter and Remy chuckled
when she straightened up, holding the
white heels. “All that crapload of hassle
—
hours
of getting fussed on—for two
measly minutes. I am
never
doing that
again.”
“Oh, yes you are, luv. Especially
when our children are old enough to
understand what their great-grandmother
did for humanity. Just think . . . without
her, we’d never be able to have peanut
butter. Or cinnamon buns.”
“Bite me,” was Zoë’s reply.
Remy heard Wyatt snort behind her
and murmur something to Quent. The
other man laughed and the two spoke in
low voices, leaving Remy to marvel at
Wyatt’s altered mood. He seemed to be
in unusually good humor.
But as Vaughn read off a few more
names, Remy felt Wyatt beginning to get
restless behind her. She was just about
to see if Zoë wanted to get another glass
of mead when the mayor spoke into the
microphone.
“We have one last honoree tonight.
An unexpected pleasure, for he’s a
newcomer to Envy and traveled here just
to join us today, for the first time, on
Survivors Day. Recently arrived from
Glenway with his daughter, Cat, he
previously lived in Tyrell Valley—a
hundred fifty miles east of here and too
great of a distance to even know about
our celebration. Tonight I’d like to
introduce you to a survivor who was
only eight when the world was Changed.
Living in the remains of the city of
Denver, Colorado, David Callaghan
survived by . . .”
Remy felt Wyatt snap to attention
behind her. He made an audible sound, a
shocked, choked noise of unadulterated
disbelief. He pushed past her, suddenly
walking toward the stage.
“Bloody buggering hell,” Quent
whispered behind her.
“What the hell is up his ass?” Zoë
demanded as she and Remy turned to
look at him.
“David Callaghan . . . that’s Wyatt’s
son’s
name.”
W
yatt felt as if a bucket of cold water
had been dumped on him, and then as if
he were shoved into a burning building.
Icy cold then flaming heat. The chill of
disbelief. The rage of hope.
Everyone and everything fell away as
he slogged through a heavy, murky
world, as if he were wading through an
ocean of gray Jell-O. He couldn’t get
there fast enough, but he felt as if he
wasn’t moving either.
He got to the front just as David
Callaghan took the stage, standing next to
Vaughn. Wyatt didn’t hear anything they
said, nothing about the reason for the
honor, nothing at all. His ears were
filled with a roaring sound. Everything
around him was dark except for the light
shining on the man onstage.
He stared up at the man there, next to
Vaughn. Was it possible? Could it be
possible
? He realized he was shaking.
There were—had been—a million
David
Callaghans
in
the
world.
Hundreds or even thousands of them
near Denver in 2010. And probably
dozens or more of them had been eight in
June of that year.
He wanted to jump up there, to look
this man in the eye, to see if it was him
. . . but the longer he waited, the longer
he could hold onto the hope.
That forgotten feeling of
hope
. Of
light.
So he watched, waited, prayed. Tried
to get a good look at the man’s face from
his position on the ground. Tried to
imagine what the boy of eight would
look like now at nearly sixty. Tried to
keep himself from seeing resemblance
where there might be none.
Applause broke out just as Wyatt felt
someone move in behind him. A rush of
awareness penetrated his murky world
and when Remy touched him, he tensed,
but didn’t pull away. He didn’t even
wonder what she was doing there. He
just . . . let her, allowing himself to
appreciate it.
Then as the applause died down, as
David Callaghan waved then began to
walk offstage, a new sound filled the air.
Distant at first, then growing louder.
A
tdt-tdt-tdt-tdt
that
came
from
overhead.
Wyatt
recognized
it
immediately, but he knew he was one of
the few who would. The sense of alarm
was so strong, it washed away the shock
and hope and murkiness about the man
named David Callaghan.
This couldn’t be good.
Silence fell over Envy . . . a sudden,
arrested reaction as everyone looked
toward the sky. Beneath the moon-stoked
clouds, the large vessel came into view
like a monstrous bird. Wyatt heard the
collective gasp, the intake of breath, as
the helicopter centered over the city.
A white beam of light shot down in
the middle of the crowd, and people
stumbled back from the illumination as if
afraid it would burn them.
The air whipped up now, sending the
canvas walls of tents flapping and dust
whirling.
Yet,
aside
from
that,
everything was eerily still.
Tdt-tdt-tdt-
tdt . . .
A disembodied voice boomed from
above, carrying over the thrumming beat
of the rotors.
“Remington Truth.”
Somehow, over the noise, Wyatt
heard the gasp at his shoulder. He
reached back blindly and angled an arm
around her, shoving her behind him,
holding her there as he looked up,
shielding his eyes from the beam of light
and the clouds of dust. His mind raced
even as the voice continued.
“Turn Remington Truth over to us
and Envy will be spared.”
Wyatt tightened his arm around
Remy, holding her immobile. He could
feel her shock and trembling, the jerking
breaths she was trying to control.
Don’t
make a sound. Don’t move.
He felt her shifting, tensing against
his back, and he grabbed her arm, trying
to keep her quiet without drawing
attention to them. Surely she wasn’t
crazy enough to announce herself, to give
herself away . . .
“You have forty-eight hours to
produce Remington Truth,” declared the
clear, booming voice. “This will be your
only warning. Our conduits will arrive
tomorrow
for
the
acquisition
of
Remington Truth. And
this
is only a
precursor to what will happen if you do
not comply.”
The beam of light was suddenly
extinguished as the helo rose . . . and
then something streaked from the
mechanical bird in a glowing red arc,
flaming to the ground.
“Run!” cried Wyatt, shoving Remy to
safety as he shouted again to anyone who
would listen.
“Run!”
Now there was noise: people
shouting, screaming, moving . . . and then
the soft, dull pop of an explosion. He
looked to make sure Remy was gone,
that she’d listened to him for once. And
as he spun back there was a sudden flare
of light, the billowing red-gold of hungry
fire.
Wyatt hesitated only a moment,
turning to see that Remy was still
running. Then he ran toward the flames.
Pushing through people, he propelled
them past him as he charged toward
what had become a rolling ball of
flames. Someone shouted his name but
he didn’t stop.
Whether by accident or design, the
bomb or whatever it was had landed on
the roof of one of the tents. It took only a
moment for it to surge into a blaze, and
by the time Wyatt got there, the canvas
was a ball of fire.
“Water! Buckets! Anything you can
find!” he shouted to the crowd at large,
directing them away as he looked at the
roaring fire. The familiar smell of smoke
filled the air, stinging his eyes. The roof
sagged, pulling down its supports, and
as Wyatt watched, it collapsed into a
mountain of flames.
Coughing,
still
shouting,
Wyatt
looked for some source of water. If the
fire wasn’t extinguished, it would set the
building next to it ablaze. Fuck. It
already had.
“Water!” he cried again, knowing
Envy could only have rudimentary
firefighting tools at most. A bucket
brigade. Maybe some sort of hose . . .
He bumped into Quent, who’d
somehow appeared, and Jade, and a sea
of other familiar faces as someone
shoved a container of water at him.
Vaughn. Fence. Ana. Others he knew
from the pub. The night became a blur of
activity and grim intent. Shadows of
more people. Pots and pails of water. A
few puny hoses. The sizzle of wet on
flame. The roar of fire. The crack and
pop of new fuel for the blaze. The crash
of something collapsing.
“Holy hell! Look at that!”
A column of flame tore into the sky,
sending ash and chunks of burning timber
tumbling to the ground. Damn. Must’ve
hit one of the grease-laden barbecue
pits. The golden-orange glow threw
eerie shadows and discoloration over
the people battling the fire, the desperate
warriors gathering up anything that could
be used to subdue the flames. Blankets
and pieces of canvas beating on small
pools of fire. Pots of water.
Wyatt remained in the thick of it,
giving orders, shouting from a smoke-
etched throat, dry eyes stinging and
watering at the same time. Yet he was in
his element: he knew this. It was his
world.
Then he heard it. Somehow, above
all the roaring, shouting, crackling, his
ears tuned in and he heard it: “. . . in
there! She’s in there!”
The terrified, desperate cries shot
straight to his consciousness. A phrase
he’d heard countless times before.
“Someone help! Someone save her!”
Wyatt spun and ran toward the sound