Read Night Resurrected Online

Authors: Joss Ware

Tags: #Dystopian Future, #Paranormal Romance

Night Resurrected (36 page)

David’s

expression

was

still

shocked, but now a veil of sadness

slipped over it. He shook his head.

“Abby and Mom . . . they didn’t make it.

They

survived

the

storms,

the

earthquakes—I’m sure you’ve heard

about it all. They were some of the many

who died suddenly days later, for no

apparent reason. It was quick and

painless,” he added quickly, with a

matter-of-fact air. “They didn’t suffer. It

wasn’t until two weeks later that we

figured out why some people survived

and others didn’t.” He’d probably said

these words countless times. Made the

explanation simply and smoothly, as if

he were teaching a history class talking

about the Holocaust or the Civil War, or

recounting a family story about walking

five miles to school in a snowstorm.

But Wyatt saw grief still there, and

he clenched his fingers tightly into his

palms. Rage and black fury roared

through him, tempered by a surge of

nausea. He wanted to scream and shout

and hit something . . . some
one
.

Yes, it might have been quick and

painless. But David was left alone. An

eight-year-old boy.
Alone.
In the middle

of

inconceivable

destruction

and

devastation.
The end of the fucking

worl d.
Losing his mother. His sister.

Wondering where his goddamn father

was. Wondering and wishing and

waiting and hoping
every single fucking

day
. For fifty years.

Tears burned his eyes and Wyatt had

to squeeze them closed to keep from

sobbing. How could he have failed them

so? How could he have been absent

during the most terrifying, desperate time

of his family’s lives . . . especially when

he’d been a savior for so many others?

Someone touched him—a gentle hand

on his shoulder. Wyatt looked up,

blinking, and realized he’d retreated into

the darkness of despair once again—

even in the face of what should have

been happiness. But David was there,

rubbing his shoulder, his face sober and

his eyes hopeful. And glad. There was

joy in his expression. Joy and sorrow.

Wyatt didn’t think any longer, he just

pulled

his

son—his
son!
—into an

embrace. And he let the tears leak from

his eyes, felt David’s trickle against his

cheek, and they held each other for a

long time.

When they pulled apart, clearly both

filled with infinite questions and things

to say, Wyatt realized the room was

empty. The others had left them alone,

and he was grateful for it.

“I can’t believe it,” he said, looking

at his fifty-nine-year-old son, unable to

keep from staring at him.

“You?” David said, and chuckled

with happiness. Wyatt saw Cathy there

in that moment, and he felt the pang of

grief . . . but it wasn’t as deep or sharp

as it had been. “Here I am, old and

wrinkled and worn out . . . and my father

shows up and he looks half my age.” His

laugh rang out in jubilation. “If only I

could look that good at . . . how old are

you now? Ninety-eight? It’s like a

Benjamin Button thing.”

Wyatt laughed too. The first time

he’d really laughed, really felt pure

happiness in a year. “I don’t think it’ll

happen that way for you, Davey.” Then

he sobered, took his son by the shoulders

and looked him in the eye. “I’m sorry,

David. I’m so sorry.” Grief welled up in

him again, mingling with the beautiful

happiness, making him feel as if he were

in that murky Jell-O again . . . but at the

same time, looking at a ray of sunshine

he knew he could eventually reach. “Can

you ever forgive me?”

David was shaking his head, his old

eyes filling with tears. “
No
, Dad—”

“I should never have left you and

your mother and Abby. I shouldn’t have

gone to Sedona. I should have stayed

home.” Wyatt’s throat burned, his voice

was dry and rough and he could barely

force the words out.

“No, Dad,
no
. You can’t do that to

yourself.” David was earnest and intent.

And he spoke like an adult. A
man
.

Good God, his son was a
man.
“No one

could have known. No one could have

prevented what happened. And even if

you hadn’t gone to Sedona . . . what

would you have been doing anyway?

Yes, you’d have been out there, pulling

people out of the rubble, putting out

fires, helping them . . . and you would

have died three days later anyway.”

Wyatt shook his head hard, trying to

clear it. Trying to make sense of

everything. Every un-fucking-believable

thing that was happening right now.

“What do you mean? Who knows if I

would have died? I might have been one

of the few who survive—”

David shook his head. “No. Dad.

Trust me.” He covered Wyatt’s strong,

tanned hands with his own, older, veiny,

age-spotted ones. Surreal. “The people

who survived . . . they all had something

in common. We figured it out. All of us

who lived, who didn’t suddenly expire,

had had a tetanus shot two days earlier.”

Wyatt stared at him, waiting for the

information to filter through and into his

brain. “You’re telling me that the people

who survived did so because they’d had

a tetanus shot?”

“Two

days

earlier,”

David

confirmed. “It’s true. Trust me,” he

added with a wry, sad grin. “When

you’re eight years old, you remember

shots. They’re almost as bad as—well,

no, forget it. In the grand scheme of

things, they aren’t that bad. But as it

happened, my friend Johnny Raybourn—

do you remember him?—we’d had shots

on the same day. I remember, because

we were complaining about it at school.

He survived too. We found each other at

the school, where people went after

things . . . got crazy. And from there we

got to talking to people and realized that

everyone who was still alive had just

had the shot.” He shrugged. “I can’t

explain it any more than I can explain

you being here . . . but, Dad, it’s a

miracle. And I’m sure as hell not going

to question it.”

“I know.” Wyatt closed his eyes.

Tried to push away the images of his

young, bewildered, grief-stricken and

frightened son.

“It was
fifty-one
years ago,” David

said, as if reading his mind. “It was

beyond terrifying. It was . . .

unbelievable darkness and fear and

devastation. But it was a long time ago,

Dad. I’ve accepted it and built a life—a

good life—with that in my past. And

now . . . the most miraculous thing has

happened. Something I could never have

imagined. You’re here.” His eyes filled

with tears again, but they were joyful

tears. “And I can’t wait for you to meet

your granddaughter.”

Granddaughter.
Wyatt’s heart nearly

stopped. “I have a granddaughter.” He

tried out the words, listened to them as

they seemed to float in the air between

them, and let them sink in. “I have a

granddaughter
.” He felt his lips stretch

in a smile of wonderment.

“You actually have two of them,”

David said with a grin. “And a

great-
granddaughter. But only Cat is

here.”

“Cat?” Wyatt said, looking at him.

David nodded. “Catherine Michelle.

After Mom. Of course.”

Tears gathered in his eyes and he

blinked hard, harder. “I can’t wait to

meet her.” Something warm inside him

flowered,

expanding

warmly

and

sweetly through his body. After a year of

cold and emptiness, of battling back any

possibility of
feeling
again, he was alive

again.

He’d been reborn. Twice in one day.

“You’ll meet her as soon as

possible,” David promised. Then his

expression became sober once again.

“But it seems that right now, there’s a

sort of crisis happening We’re on a

countdown.”

“Yes,” Wyatt said. Some of his joy

melted away as he remembered the far

more urgent problem of Remy and her

whereabouts. He was going to find

Vaughn and make him tell him where she

was. “Right now we’ve got a nasty

situation.”

“I’m here to help. And I should

probably tell you,” David said as they

both stood, “that I’ve known Lou and

Theo Waxnicki for years. And I’ve been

a part of their . . . network . . . for the

last three of them.”

Wyatt felt a rush of surprise tinged

with pride. “You’re part of the

Resistance?”

He nodded. “That’s why I’m here.

I’ve never actually met Sage, but I’ve

been in touch with her via the network

for years. She can vouch for me. And I

mainly know the Waxnickis through the

same interface, although I met Theo in

person a few times when he first came to

set up the network access point near

where Cat and I lived.”

“How did you get here, now?”

“I found something in Glenway that I

thought George should see, and I brought

it here. Now that I’m here, I want to help

—with whatever you’re going to do

regarding this threat about Remington

Truth. That,” he added, looking at Wyatt

steadily, “is what George and I assumed

this big meeting with Mayor Rogan was

about.”

Wyatt nodded slowly. “Yes. I want to

tell you more, but I have to get the

agreement of the others to do so.”

“Absolutely.

I

understand

completely.” His smile was one of

chagrin. “I made the mistake of

mentioning to Cat—and Yvonne, my

other daughter—that I was sort of

involved in a resistance group, trying to

explain to them why it was urgent that I

get to Envy. And now Cat wants to join

. . .” He shook his head. “She’d jump in

feet first if she could.” Then he looked

up at Wyatt and a proud smile curved his

face. “She takes after her grandfather.”

T
hirty-three hours.

Tomorrow night at ten.

Remington Truth.

Everywhere she went, Cat heard

people whispering about it. Or arguing,

with desperation and panic rising in

their taut bellows. They gathered in

groups and every pair of eyes turned to

watch whenever anyone new walked by.

She wandered, feeling lost and

impotent. She wanted to be doing

something
, but she knew no one but Dad

and Ana, and they were nowhere to be

found. She suspected they were meeting

with the others in the resistance group

. . . but she hadn’t been invited.

Remington Truth. What did that

mean? Was it
the
Remington Truth . . .

like some sort of book or document? A

canon or writ or something? Or was it an

object? A statue?

Could it be a person? Remington

Truth. A little tingle, a little
pop
in her

thoughts told her that made the most

sense. But that would be like finding a

needle in a haystack.
And if I were

Remington Truth, I’d be keeping way

out of everyone’s way.

“Come on, Jason. We’re leaving.

We’re getting out of this city!” The high-

pitched, strident voice of a woman

filtered through the constant level of

noise to Cat’s ears.

She turned to look and saw the

woman rushing along with a large pack

over her back and another slung over a

shoulder, crosswise over her chest. She

held the hand of a small boy whose legs

pumped to keep up with her determined

strides, and an older child followed.

There were others too. Groups

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