Authors: Scott Sigler
Tags: #Fiction, #Neurobehavioral disorders, #Electronic Books, #American Horror Fiction, #Horror, #Fiction - Horror, #Science Fiction, #Horror - General, #Thrillers, #Horror fiction, #Parasites, #Murderers
disease
dead, all of itcrawlers, dandelion seeds, triangles and hatchlings. She wanted to kill every last bit of it, in as painful a way as possible. Watching those things break apart on the screen filled her soul with a dark satisfaction.
She wondered if this was what Perry felt when he killed an infected host.
Hey Margaret, Dan called. Did you do something to the samples?
Yeah, Margaret said without looking away from the sheer beauty of a dead crawler. I gave them a nice latrunculin bath and killed them.
No, not that one, Dan said. I mean
all
of them.
She stepped back and took in the whole screen. In all twenty-five side-by-side samples, nothing moved. Theyd successfully killed many of the crawlers, but until a few seconds ago over half the boxes had still shown activity. Now, no movement at all.
Gitsh, Margaret said, check this monitor. Is it frozen or something?
Gitsh looked at the screen, then moved to the computer that fed the images. As he checked it, Margarets eyes slid over the twenty-five test pairs. Each had a word across the top. Words in red indicated no effect on the crawlers. Words in green showed successful kills.
Chlorine killed them, and in far lower concentrations than the Margo-Mobiles decontamination mist. In fact, basic bleach killed them instantly.
That was great for sterilization but didnt do much for a living victim. Antibiotics, unfortunately, had no effect, and Sanchezs immune system completely ignored the things.
Reducing the temperature did nothingfreezing them might work, but that would also kill the host. Heat at two hundred degrees Fahrenheit or higher killed them, but that wasnt a solution either, as those temperatures would also kill the host. Heat did, however, provide another way to decontaminate any area exposed to the dandelion-seed spores.
The picture is live, Gitsh said. To punctuate the point, he changed the screen from twenty-five small squares to one big square containing a nerve crawler. He slid a needle into the sample. Up on the screen, she saw the needle magnified thousands of times. It looked like a giant sword poking into a hydra.
Huh, Margaret said. Its like they just shut off.
They quit, Dan said. They have seen the new Mightily Pissed-Off Margaret, and they threw in the towel.
Suddenly, Clarences voice crackled in her earpiece, anxious and rushed. Margo! Murray found the satellite! They just launched an attack, and they think they got it.
Oh my, Margaret said. So thats why Murray had been in such a hurry.
When? Like two minutes ago?
Yeah, exactly.
The samples, they shut down, Margaret said. Even at the smallest level, they must have been controlled by the thing. Is there any effect on Sanchez?
Hes out cold, Clarence said. He was babbling incoherently, then started getting groggy and just dropped off. Hes snoring.
Margaret didnt know what to think. The crawlers sudden shutdown, Sanchez falling asleep, both things coinciding with the satellites destruction. Could it all be over?
No. It wasnt all over. She knew that.
Dan, how much latrunculin do we have?
Plenty, if its just Sanchez, Dan said. If we need more, the supplier could medevac it right to us.
Lets see if it works first. Start an IV drip of latrunculin on Officer Sanchez. Im not going to get caught with my pants down. These things might reactivate at any second.
But latrunculin is toxic as hell, Dan said. We give Sanchez too much, he could lose the ability to breath, his heart could stop. Shouldnt we wait to see if these things are really dead?
No. Well watch Sanchez carefully, but get him on it right now.
But Margaret, he
Thats a fucking
order,
Dan, Margaret said. Now start the goddamn drip.
Dan looked at her for a second, then snapped a smart salute and walked out of the autopsy room.
Were his little feelings hurt? Margaret didnt care. She finally had a potential weapon, and she was going to use it.
MOVEMENT
Margaret sat down at the computer desk, utterly relieved to finally be out of the hazmat suit shed worn for fifteen hours straight. She typed commands to call up the new Sanchez samples.
What was that
smell
? Had someone left food in here? She looked under the desktop, then under the chair before she realized what it was.
The smell was
her.
Damn, she needed a shower something fierce. Nothing she could do about that now, though.
She looked at the readout. The latrunculin was workingSanchezs crawler counts had fallen. The chemicals side effects were taking their toll, but he wasnt in any serious danger. Not yet. She called up a feed from one of the latest samples. It showed three crawlers, still motionless, just as they had been since Murrays people shot down the satellite. As she watched, one of the crawlers slowly dissolved into little bits, courtesy of the latrunculin.
The second crawler started to disintegrate. Margaret had never seen anything so beautiful in her entire life.
And then . . .
. . . then the last crawler twitched.
She stared, wondering if shed imagined it, hoping she had. It twitched again, kept twitching. It reached out, looking for something to grab. A dendrite arm locked onto the surrounding muscle tissue and
pulled.
The crawler was crawling again.
The intercom buzzed.
Margaret, you there? Dans voice, urgent.
Im here.
Somethings up, he said. Im looking at the side-by-side samples. Everything that wasnt already dead is moving again. They just woke up,
all
of them.
THE REBOOT
So many thoughts. So many voices. No organization. No
cohesion
. Did she know what that word meant? Yes, she did.
Chelsea blinked and opened her eyes. Slivers of early-morning light poured through cracks in the roof and the boarded-up windows. She felt sleepy. She felt sad.
Her special friend was gone.
She needed Chaunceys wisdom, needed to know what God wanted her to do. She sensed the minds of the soldiers, the hatchlings, the converted. They were all very still. Random thoughts . . . they were dreaming. No one there to tie them all together.
Thats what Chauncey had provided. Hed made them
one
.
A sneaking suspicion grew in her mind. What if
she
could connect everyone? She could replace Chauncey.
He had been God, but he was gone.
Now
Chelsea
was God.
She sensed all the soldiers, Mommy, Mr. Burkle, the Postman, General Ogden . . . she sensed the two hatchlings back in Gaylord . . . and she sensed one more voice, a new voice, very faint, very
weak,
but also very close.
The two hatchlings in Gaylord remained prisoners.
Prisoners of the boogeyman.
Chauncey had told her to leave the boogeyman alone. Chauncey had
blocked
her, but Chauncey wasnt around anymore.
And besides, no one could tell Chelsea what to do. She wasnt afraid of the boogeyman. God shouldnt be afraid of anyone.
Could she block the boogeyman, like Chauncey had done? Maybe, but it would take time to learn how, to experiment. If she couldnt block him fast enough, the boogeyman would come for her.
Unless she got to him first.
She summoned General Ogden. It was time to put the pieces in place for his contingency plan, just in case the boogeyman escaped.
PERRY HEARS AGAIN
Im going to kill you.
It started as a mental tickle, or maybe a ringing. Something faint. At first he wished it away. He just wanted to sleep.
You will scream . . . and scream . . .
The ringing grew louder. He heard a voice but couldnt register it. What he
could
register was a serious hangover. Holy God, did his head hurt.
. . . and scream.
Perry sat up and tried to rub the sleep from his eyes. The movement produced a metallic sound. The bed felt wobbly. Both hands held his head as he looked around. He wasnt in a bed. He was on an autopsy trolley in the examination room. Someones idea of humor? Well, yeah, that
was
kind of funny.
The mental tickle grew. With a sinking sensation, he recognized the feeling.
Chelsea.
Are you afraid?
Shed grown stronger. His breath came in short gasps. He
was
afraid.
Im gonna get you, boogeyman. Maybe Ill make you shoot yourself . . .
Fuck. Fuck-fuck-fuck.
Perrys hand shot to his waist, to the holster. The .45 was there. His hand gripped the cool handle. He didnt draw it, just held it.
Soon, boogeyman . . .
He hadnt experienced her this clearly before. The intensity shocked him. It felt as if her every little emotion was the most important thing that could possibly happen. And yet behind the intensity lay a curious blankness, the feeling that she wasnt good, or evil.
Chelsea didnt know what good and evil were.
She would do whatever she wanted, without remorse, without conscience.
Soooooon . . .
Perry had to find her. Find her and help her.
He jumped off the trolley and ran to find Dew.
CRAVING MCDONALDS
Private Alan Roark parked the Hummer on the shoulder of North Chrysler Drive. He hopped out. So did Private Peter Braat, who carried the map. They both walked to the back bumper and looked at the massive overpass.
Fuck, Peter said. Thats a lot of road.
Alan nodded. It was a lot of road.
To their right, three lanes of I-75 heading north, then just past it three more lanes heading south. Those six lanes slid under the overpass of another six-lane highway, this one M-102, also known as Eight Mile Road. The sound of tires whizzing over wet pavement combined with hundreds of passing engines to create an almost riverlike, tranquil babble.
Thats a lot of lanes, Peter said.
Alan nodded again. Yep. Sure is.
He turned and looked into the back of the Humvee. Hed already counted what was back there five times, but God was in the details, so he counted again.
Seems like a long ways off for a perimeter, Peter said. Were ten miles away from the gate. How are we gonna hold a perimeter ten miles out with just two fucking platoons, you know what I mean?
The general knows what hes doing, Alan said. So does Chelsea. Theyre bringing in the other two platoons from Gaylord, so well have that. Besides, the bigger the area we control, the harder it is for them to find Chelsea.
Peter nodded. Makes sense, I guess. Still, I wish we got to do the airport thing.
Willis and Hunt got that one.
I know, Peter said. I hate those guys. We should have got that gig. Lets just hope we make it back to watch the angels come through. That will be such a glorious moment.
Truly, Alan said. But if we dont see it, Im sure its all part of the plan.
Peter nodded, slowly and solemnly. Okay, so weve seen these roads. Where is our spot?
Alan pointed up to Eight Mile. Well just drive up there and get to work.
Easy peasy, Peter said.
Alan nodded. Easy peasy bo-beasy. Lets go. Well just drive around and see if we get the call. You hungry?
I could go for some McDonalds, Peter said. I have the biggest craving for it lately. That, and I cant stop jonesing for ice cream on a stick.
You too? Man, thats weird. I never liked ice cream before, but now I wanna fucking
bathe
in that shit. Lets eat.
They got back in the Hummer. Alan waited for traffic to clear, pulled onto the road and headed north, looking for the golden arches.
GO SOUTH, YOUNG MAN
Take some lumpy shit from horses, the smelly kind thats peppered with half-digested hay. Mix that with gravel. The jagged kind. Now cover it all in kerosene and light it on fire.
Thats what it felt like inside Dew Phillipss skull. Hed slept on the floor of the computer room, right after Baum and Milner convinced him it would be funny to put a passed-out Perry Dawsey on the autopsy trolley.
Well, that
was
kind of funny.
A headache like that and a hyperactive Perry Dawsey jabbering a mile a minute? A match made in hell.
Perry, you gotta talk slower, Dew said. Seriously, my head.
Yeah, mine too, Perry said.
Theres a difference. You and Baum and Milner, youre all young. Im old enough to know what will happen if I drink that much, which means Im old enough to know better.
You seemed to be down with it last night.
Dew nodded and instantly regretted doing so. Last night I was awash in the glory of victory. And now that its morning, my head feels like ass, and youre telling me that victory was no victory at all?
Shes talking to me, Perry said. She says shes gonna kill me.
Where is she?
Perry shrugged. South.
How far south?
I dont know, Perry said. Could be Ohio, could be Indiana, fucking Kentucky for all I can nail it down.
So how do we find her?
Like before, I guess, Perry said. We start driving south till I feel it getting stronger, then we go in that direction. The signal is fucked up, though. I feel something
moving
south, something big, and something even stronger beyond that. We should start driving right now.
Dew thought that over. It would work, it had before, but how long would it take?
I dont know if we have that much time, he said. Now that the jamming is gone, now that you feel something, you can focus on the hatchlings. Maybe well find out exactly where this thing is.
Perry thought for a second, then nodded. Its worth a shot.
So will you go in there and talk to them again?
Perry took a deep breath, then let it out long and slow. I dont want to. Shes so
strong,
Dew. She might be stronger coming through the hatchlings, I really dont know.
You didnt answer the question, Dew said. Will you or will you not go talk to them again? Ill be right there with you.
Thats what Im afraid of, Perry said.
Dew smiled. Well do it just like the shooting range, okay? Ill have a gun at your back. You get silly, Ill put you out of your misery.
Perry chewed his lip for a second. Okay. Ill do it. But Dew, you better not be lying about shooting me in the back. If I have to die, I have to die, but . . . I couldnt handle it if I hurt you.
Hard to believe this was the same kid who had butchered a family only eight days ago. But people couldnt change that much in that short of a time. This version of Perry had always been there, waiting for a reason to come out.
Pride swelled in Dews chestonce again Perry Dawsey was going to stand face-to-face with his nightmare.
MOMMY IS A BIG BABY
Chelsea Jewell sat at the Winnebagos back end, in the couch that faced the front. Her small body made the couch look like a giant throne. She had a little blood in her hair. A hatchling sat on her lap. Shed named it Fluffy. Chelsea slowly petted Fluffy, feeling the nice texture of his stiff, triangular body. Fluffys eyes stayed mostly closed, and when they opened, they opened only a little bit.
Chelsea wanted to stay calm, but General Ogden was making her so angry.
Chelsea, the general said, we should just leave him alone.
She said nothing. He stood there, waiting for her to speak. The plastic on the Winnebagos floor was torn in places, kicked aside in others. Covered with tacky blood, it still crinkled under General Ogdens feet. Little bloody tentacle tracks lined the walls and the burnt-orange fabric on the seats and couches.
I want the boogeyman dead.
Cant you block him? Like Chauncey did?
Im trying, but its hard. I dont know how yet. He could come for me before I figure it out.
The gate will be done in about three hours, he said. We dont have to show our hand. Even with the rest of the men driving down from Gaylord, we have too few soldiers for a real fight.
She just stared at him. What did he know, anyway? He was just the general. Chelsea was in charge. If she said they had enough soldiers, they had enough soldiers, and that was that.
What about the other soldiers back home? The ones you left to deal with Whiskey Company?
Thats just eighteen men, Chelsea, Ogden said. They have to go up against a hundred twenty men and do enough damage to take Whiskey Company out of the picture.
Well, if you have eighteen, then
A voice called from outside the Winnebago, stopping Chelsea in midsentence.
The strange, deep new voice of Mommy.
Chelsea! May I
please
talk to you?
Mommy used her mouth, not her thoughts, which meant she was upset, confused.
Chelsea sighed. She would have to get up and walk outside. Mommy was already having trouble fitting through the Winnebagos door. Chelsea lifted Fluffy and set him down on the couch.
You
stay,
Fluffy. Stay!
She didnt have to speak out loud to Fluffy, but it was more fun. Thats how you talked to puppies, in the special voice so they knew you loved them.
Come with me, General.
Chelsea walked out of the Winnebagos side door and into the buildings cold winter air. Ogden followed her. They both looked at Mommy.
Mommy seemed sad.
Hello, Mommy.
Chelsea, honey, Mommy said. Somethings wrong. Wrong with me. Maybe with my crawlers?
Chelsea shook her head. No, Mommy. Nothing is wrong.
Mommy started to cry a little. She was such a baby.
But . . .
look
at me, she said. It hurts. Im not pretty anymore. It hurts so
bad.
Pain brings you closer to God, Mommy. Dont you want to be closer to me?
Mommy nodded. Of course, but baby, just look at Mommy for a second. If this keeps going, Mommy is going to . . . to . . .
Youll serve God, Mommy, Chelsea said. Youll see, it will be so cool. Bye-bye now, Mommy. Bye-bye.
Mommy turned, slowly, and walked away.
Chelsea turned to stare up at General Ogden. You dont know anything, she said. Youre just a general. Im the boss of you. I
want
you to kill the boogeyman.
I want it!
But Chelsea . . . most of our men are already on their way here.
Then take some of the eighteen you left back home and send them to kill the boogeyman. And tell them to rescue my hatchlings, toowe cant make those anymore.
But Chelsea, that will leave only nine men for the sneak attack on Whiskey Company. Thats just not enough.