Outbreak

Read Outbreak Online

Authors: Tarah Benner

Contents

 

Other Works

Beginning

Copyright

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Dedication

one - Harper

two - Celdon

three - Eli

four - Harper

five - Eli

six - Harper

seven - Eli

eight - Harper

nine - Eli

ten - Sawyer

eleven - Sawyer

twelve - Eli

thirteen - Harper

fourteen - Eli

fifteen - Celdon

sixteen - Harper

seventeen - Harper

eighteen - Eli

nineteen - Celdon

twenty - Eli

twenty-one - Harper

twenty-two - Eli

twenty-three - Harper

twenty-four - Eli

twenty-five - Harper

twenty-six - Harper

twenty-seven - Celdon

twenty-eight - Harper

twenty-nine - Harper

Author's Note

Also by Tarah Benner

 

The Defectors

Enemy Inside

The Last Uprising

Recon

Exposure

 

 

 

Outbreak

  Book Three of The Fringe

Amazon Edition

 

This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, please visit Amazon and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author. No alteration of content is permitted.

 

This book is a work of fiction, and any similarities to any person, living or dead, are coincidental and not intentional. 

 

 

 

 

Copyright 2015 Tarah Benner

 

 

 

 

 

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To my most enthusiastic readers who love Harper and Eli as much as I do. 

I couldn’t do it without you.

 

 

 

 

 

one

Harper

 

Everything seems louder when you’re the last human alive. Your footsteps echo in the empty spaces, and your whispers linger too long. Your breathing is heavier, but it seems insignificant as it disappears into the air around you.

They’re all dead
, I think as we shuffle through the empty commissary in compound 119.
Dead.

The jarring
snap!
of something metal makes me jump, and I wheel around just in time to see Celdon pry open the control panel and flip several oversized switches.

An electric hum fills the deserted atrium, and neon lights flicker on at all the booths around us. 

Apart from the lack of people, the commissary looks just like ours back home. The shelves are stocked with anything you could possibly want or need: shoes, lamps, lingerie, computer monitors, children’s toys, handheld vacuum cleaners. It even smells the same: a mix of expensive cologne, synthetic coffee, and fruit-flavored lip gloss.

A loud blast of music from a booth on my right nearly makes my heart give out, and an overenthusiastic male voice starts to play through a hidden speaker.

Are you tired of waiting for results in the gym? Are you ready to kick-start your weight-loss journey?

The image of an overtanned male model appears on one of the enormous ad screens and flashes a smoldering grin. 

Suddenly his voice is interrupted by upbeat club music as another ad starts to play two booths over. A peppy female voice joins the din:
All the latest club looks at an affordable price . . . tops, bottoms, accessories . . . you name it!

Two more ads start, the canned voices melding into an indistinguishable racket as they bounce off the high ceiling. I throw Celdon a sharp look.

“Sorry,” he groans, examining the control panel and toggling a few switches. The lights flicker off and back on again. When he finds the correct switch, the ads stop abruptly, and I see spots in my vision as the bright screens shut off. I let out a breath to calm my racing heart.

Celdon and I have walked every level of the compound from Recon up, trying to find someone with a heartbeat to tell us what happened. The supply train departed for our home compound hours ago, leaving us stranded until the next supply run — assuming there
will
be
another supply run.

My insides are a tangled knot of dread and disgust. Even though 119’s deceased are contained to the dead level, I can still taste the decay of thousands of corpses in the back of my throat. 

I don’t think I’ll ever be able to banish that horrible sight from my mind: thousands and thousands of people — all dead. And we never even heard a whisper of the tragedy back home. 

The Operations workers sent to loot supplies from 119
must
be part of Constance. If the board knew, they must have helped cover it up to avoid a panic.

How long did they plan to keep this up?
I wonder.
Until supplies ran dry? Until Bid Day?

Bid Day. That sends a fresh wave of horror crashing over me. The new recruits who didn’t accept their original bids would have been sent here.

“Do you think this was happening last Bid Day?” I ask aloud.

“Huh?”

“The other recruits — the ones who left 112 . . . Do you think the board would have sent them here if they knew what was happening?”

Celdon snorts as he rifles through a rack of clothing at the next booth over. “I wouldn’t put anything past them.” He picks up a banana-yellow tank top with the words “Let’s Bang” written across the chest. “Wanna stock up while we’re here?”

I shoot him a dirty look.

“What? Fire sale. Everything must go.”

“What is wrong with you?”

“Well . . .” Celdon shrugs, looking around the empty commissary. “No one here is going to buy anything.”

I just stare at him for several seconds, and — before I can stop it — a choked laugh bursts out of my throat. It sounds much too loud in the empty space, and as soon as I hear it, it makes me think of all the people who will never laugh or joke again. 

My fit of hilarity triggers something else inside me, and I feel it morphing into a sob. 

Celdon’s smile disappears when he sees the change in my expression, and he drops the tank top guiltily and crosses to where I’m standing.

“Hey . . . hey . . . it’s okay,” he murmurs, draping his long, skinny arms around me.

Loud, ugly sobs roll through me, and we sink down together onto the dirty tile in an awkward embrace.

I’m angry at myself for losing it, but I can’t stop crying. Everything is hitting me all at once: Our only hope of escaping Constance is gone, we’re trapped here for at least another day — maybe longer — and no one at our compound has any clue that one of the largest human settlements in the country has been completely wiped out.

A few hours ago, I was devastated that Eli lied about joining us at 119, but now I’m grateful because it means he doesn’t have to confront this horrible reality. Eli would handle it better than I am, but he’s faced so much tragedy already. He deserves to be spared this.

“Do you wanna . . .
talk
about it?” Celdon asks. He never really knows what to do when a girl starts crying on him, but he tries.

“N-no.”

“Okay, good. Me neither.”

We sit in silence for several minutes. I’m desperately trying to pull myself together, and Celdon falls into a strange rocking motion that makes me feel a little sick.

“What if we’re stuck here?” I whisper.

He lets out a heavy sigh, and I feel his narrow chest puff out and deflate abruptly. “Well, I guess . . . free T-shirts for life, huh?”

“I’m serious!”

“So am I!” A dark laugh rumbles through him. “I don’t know. There’s probably enough emergency rations to last us a lifetime. And as long as the solar grid holds out, we’ll probably be good on power.”

“You’re thinking of
staying
here?”

“Well, it isn’t ideal. But we might not have a choice.”

I shudder. “We can’t stay here.”

“Yeah, I guess you’re right. I’m sure they’ll be back. They won’t stop until they’ve picked the carcass clean.”

“That’s a little harsh.”

“No, it’s not. That’s exactly what they’re doing . . . opportunistic bastards.”

“How long do you think they’re going to keep pretending everything’s fine over here?”

Celdon snorts. “Probably as long as they’ve been pretending that the drifters don’t exist.”

I take a deep breath and wipe my nose with the back of my sleeve.

“Let’s keep moving,” I sigh. “We can at least figure out what killed them all.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Celdon is purposely trying to keep his voice light, but I can sense his relief. We’re both exhausted, and every level we explore without finding another living soul just adds to our despair. Going straight to the source fills me with anxiety, but it also gives me a sense of control.

Celdon hops to his feet and pulls me into a standing position. Now that I’ve been sitting for a while, my legs feel a little wobbly from all the walking we’ve been doing. But I take one last gulp of cologne-laced air and force my feet to move.

It’s stale and damp inside the stairwell. I know it isn’t possible for the stench of decomposing bodies to travel this far, but being in the dark enclosed space intensifies my memory of that odor. As long as I live, I’ll never be able to forget the smell of all those dead people.

On the next landing, we hit a small puddle of cloudy water, and Celdon swears as the grime stains his loafers. 

“If we stay here, I’m going to have to read up on plumbing. This is fucking disgusting.”

“Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that,” I murmur. I can’t imagine Celdon trying his hand at compound maintenance. I’ve never even seen him hang a picture. If the two of us have to keep this place running on our own, we’re screwed.

I still want to investigate all the tier-two sections and confirm that there aren’t any survivors left, but right now, finding out what killed everyone seems like a more pressing priority.

We keep climbing until we reach the medical ward, and I steel myself for the possibility that whatever killed them could kill us, too.

There could have been a massive radiation leak. Or maybe the groundwater got contaminated. After Owen’s warning to stay away from 119, there’s a small part of me that wonders if one of the drifter gangs had something to do with it, but there’s no sign of an explosion or forced entry — not exactly the drifters’ MO. 

The deserted medical ward is still just as creepy as it was when we first arrived, but this time my feet lead me confidently around the long line of gurneys pushed against the tunnel wall. 

Celdon stays near the front desk to try to boot up one of the computers. If we can gain access to 119’s network, we can view the news feeds and possibly hack into the compound’s medical records. Then we should be able to discover what killed everyone.

As he works, I check the patient rooms for any lingering evidence of what transpired. Unfortunately, the medical ward staff didn’t leave us much to go on.

All the beds have been stripped of their linens, and the waste receptacles inside the patient rooms are empty. There are no medications lying around — no nurses’ interfaces conveniently loaded with patient notes.

After a few minutes, I find one supply closet that hasn’t been looted yet and feel a surge of relief. If there are things in here we could use back home, there’s a strong chance our Operations workers will return for another load of supplies.

I flip on my interface and focus the beam of blue light on the shelf just above my head. Most of the medication bins are fully stocked, but there’s one that’s completely empty.

A tag on the bin reads “Bartrizol,” and I wish Sawyer were here so she could tell me what it’s used for. Whatever it was, it doesn’t seem to have worked. But if we knew what it was intended to treat, we would know what killed everyone.

“Bingo!”

Celdon’s echoing voice jerks me out of my thoughts, and I fly out of the closet to find him.

He’s still behind the front desk, swiveling from side to side on the tall stool. When he sees me, a wicked grin spreads across his face, and his eyes flash with pride.

“Are you in?”

He claps his hands loudly and flexes his slender fingers. “Oh, I’m in. Their security ain’t for shit.”

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