one, trying to claw his way in.
“Remy,” he shouted over the loud
cries of the zombies, “open as many
alcohol pads as you can and stuff ’em
inside the whiskey bottle. And get me a
soft piece of cloth.”
One more. They had one more bomb,
maybe, and then he was fresh out of
ideas.
In the midst of the chaotically rocking
truck and the increasingly frenzied cries
of the zombies, someone yanked on
Wyatt’s arm. He spun from the window
to see Remy doubled over, hand at her
waist.
A faint orange glow burned through
and
behind
her
cupped
hands,
illuminating her shirt.
Christ.
Not again.
He dropped the waning torch on the
seat. The cab jolted hard and he crashed
into her as he stumbled to her side, but
by the time he got there, amazingly, she
had the crystal in her hands. He didn’t
waste time commenting how she’d
removed it or congratulating her for
having done so; he simply took it when
she shoved it at him. The stone was hot,
no doubt about it, and glowing like a
fire, but he held onto it. He couldn’t take
the time to look at it closely, but he saw
that it was no longer enclosed in its
cocoon of metal wiring. She must have
taken his advice.
Remy looked up at him, her eyes
wide and a little crazy, and said, “Let’s
show it to them. Maybe it’ll stop them.”
Wyatt shook his head. “No, it’s what
they’ve come for. It’ll just make ’em
crazier.” He handed her back the stone.
The glow had eased slightly, but it was
still hot.
“But didn’t Theo and Selena say the
crystals embedded in their brains are
orange? Maybe there’s a connection,”
she argued as Marck shouted from the
front, “I can’t hold them off! Do you
have another bomb?”
“Here,” Remy said, swooping down
to the floor, rising, then jamming the
whiskey bottle into Wyatt’s gut. “I put in
as many alcohol pads as I could. But if it
doesn’t work . . . what are we going to
do?”
Their eyes met and for a moment
everything around him stopped. Wyatt’s
chest felt tight. He caught himself just
before he reached for her, his hand
falling back to his side.
I won’t let anything happen to you.
He thought the words, told her with his
eyes. Then he turned away, his heart
pounding furiously, his insides in
turmoil. What
were
they going to do?
He hustled to the front, snatching up
the torch, which had gone out. Only a
few sparks were left clinging to the
denim, and the truck was rocking
violently again.
“How long till dawn?” he shouted to
Marck, trying to light the damn bomb as
he was being jolted from side to side.
“Remy, I need fire!”
“Too long,” Marck shouted back.
“Two hours.”
Remy was there, her arm jerking
sharply. Then a flare illuminated the
darkness and he snatched it from her as
the cab rose up on two side wheels,
sending
everything
falling.
Remy
grabbed him as they tumbled to one side
and he lost his grip on the bottle and the
small light as they all crashed to the
ground.
The truck hung there, suspended, for
a long, long time, but once he recovered
from the surprise, Marck moved fast,
and Wyatt right with him. They bolted
up, climbing over to the uppermost side
of the truck, and the propulsion of their
weight and movement brought it
slamming back to the ground, still
upright. The force jarred everyone, and
Dantès was freaking out in the back,
whining and barking and scrabbling at
the floor.
“That was fucking close,” Marck
said.
“I’ve got to show it to them,” Remy
said, grabbing at Wyatt’s arm as he
scrabbled for the whiskey bottle.
“Where’s that damn bomb?” Ian
shouted from the front.
“No fucking way,” Wyatt snarled at
her. “Don’t show it to them. We don’t
know what it’ll do.” He found the bottle
and grabbed it triumphantly, saying,
“Where’s the light?”
She had it for him seconds later, her
drawn, frightened face illuminated by the
golden light. Grabbing her arm, he
yanked her close to his face. “Don’t
show it to them. Don’t show it to anyone.
It’s all we’ve got, Remy.” He took the
light and turned away.
He didn’t have an answer. He
couldn’t promise her anything.
He just had to find a way out of here.
Wyatt lit the bomb, looking out at the
swarm of zombies. Even if this bastard
worked—which would be a miracle—it
wouldn’t do anything more than the
others. Hold ’em off for a minute and
then they’d be back.
At the right time, he flipped the bomb
just out the window and it exploded as it
fell into the soup of zombies. Glass
shattered and a brief surge of flames
roared. The zombies cried out, their
ruuuuuthhhhhhs
rumbling into high
surprised groans, and staggered back.
“That’s it,” he told Marck. “That’s
all we got. They’re gonna push us over.
What’s the plan? Think we can fight our
way through them when they do?”
“Gonna have to,” Ian said, his face as
grim as Wyatt felt.
The reprieve from the bomb ended,
and the zombies recovered sooner than
he hoped. And he was flat out of ideas.
Remy brushed past, bumping against
him as she pushed her way into the front
of the truck. He caught sight of a soft
glow just before she reached the
window, but it was too late.
She was already showing them the
crystal.
Holding
it
firmly,
the
illumination dancing over her face like a
candle flame, she lifted it well out of
reach of the suddenly undulating,
desperate crowd of zombies. Her face
was a study in concentration and hope,
along with despair.
“What the
hell
,” Marck whispered,
staring at her. “Where did you—”
“Remy, no!” Wyatt went to drag her
away from the window, but the zombies
had already seen the gem, held high
above them. Stunned, he released her.
The crystal the monsters sought was
alive, glowing orange. And when they
saw it burning above them, the zombies
had gone silent.
R
emy held the crystal aloft, relief and
apprehension rushing through her. The
night was silent, the zombies were still.
Wyatt stood behind her, tension and fury
and wonder emanating from him. And
Ian . . . he must be feeling the same.
Then, as if by some silent signal, it
all changed.
The zombies surged back into
motion, crying and shoving each other in
renewed desperation. They were more
frenzied than before, if that was
possible, and now she could see the fury
and need in their orange eyes. The truck
rocked again, more violently now, for
all of the monsters had crowded to the
side where the crystal was.
“Son of a bitch,” Wyatt said from
between his teeth, his voice in her ear as
he pulled her away from the window. He
fairly shoved her into the rear of the
truck.
Remy’s short-lived relief evaporated
and now she could do nothing but stare
down at the glowing crystal. She held it
by one of its metal pieces, which kept it
from burning her fingers too badly.
“I’ll just give it to them,” she said,
suddenly very tired. “They can have it,
Wyatt. It’s not worth our lives, whatever
it is.”
“No,” he said, looming over her in
the darkness. It was just the two of them
back there; Ian was effectively blocked
into the front by Wyatt’s solid figure.
Remy could see him trying to fight off
the grasping hands behind Wyatt. “We’ll
find a way. You can’t give it up. Not
now.” He took her shoulders. “Ian didn’t
know?” He could hardly believe it.
She shook her head. “No.”
The truck shuddered violently and
rose again. It crashed to the ground
moments later, but the message was
clear.
“But it’s not worth dying for.” Remy
tried to push past him, but he grabbed
her arm. “We don’t even know what it
is.”
“It’s definitely something. They know
it. Look at them!”
“If I throw it at them, maybe they’ll
chase it and we can escape,” she said,
pushing against his solid chest as the
truck lurched again.
“Getting a little rough up here!” Ian
shouted. “What the hell are you doing?”
“How far do you think you could
throw it?” Remy asked, looking up at
Wyatt.
“Not far en— Wait.” He stilled, and
she could see his mind working. “If we
had a decoy . . .”
She caught on immediately. “Yes!
But how? We could light a stick and
throw that . . . ?”
“No, that wouldn’t work,” he said
impatiently. “But maybe this would.” He
shoved past her as the truck tipped
again, and fumbled in the precious
plastic box.
“What are those?” she asked, looking
at the slender greenish sticks he brought
out.
But he ignored her, speaking rapidly.
“We need something plastic or glass.
Clear, and find my orange shir— No,
wait
. Find that small medicine bottle in
the first aid kit. The golden glass one.
Yes, that’ll be perfect. Then we won’t
need my—just empty it out, pour out
whatever’s in it. Quick, Remy.”
Wyatt moved to the front of the truck.
“Going to try something,” he said to Ian
as Remy scrabbled around, trying to find
the bottle that met his description. “You
know how to make a slingshot?”
There was a loud screeching noise as
one of the mirrors was torn off the truck.
“The fucking door’s gonna be next,”
said Ian, tearing a piece of cloth off his
shirt. “I can do a sling. Don’t have any
rubber.”
It took her forever, but at last Remy
found the small glass bottle. Its label
said merthiolate and it had some bright
red liquid in it. She dumped it out into a
wad of blankets, smelling the pungent
scent of the medicine.
The zombies surged and Remy felt
the door rattling as they pulled on it, then
shoved at the truck. It was like being on
a boat at rough sea, rocking and dipping
constantly.
Wyatt had taken the slender green
things and snapped one in half. “Damn,”
he muttered. He took a second one and
broke it too.
“What are you trying to do?” Remy
asked.
“These are glow-stick flares,” he
said shortly. “They’re supposed to glow
when you break them. They’re not
working. They must’ve gotten wet or are
too old.”
There were only three more left.
“Got your sling,” Ian said. “What’s
the plan?”
“There may not be any plan,” Wyatt
snapped, picking up a third flare. He
looked at it, closed his eyes as he jolted
from another lunge at the truck, and then
broke it. This time there was a faint
greenish
light,
but
it
went
out
immediately.
Remy’s palms were damp and she
was aware of the heavy, hot crystal in
her pocket. She’d wrapped it in thick
cloth to keep it from burning her, but she
feared she was going to have to bring it
back out again. She wasn’t about to
sacrifice their lives for the sake of a
stone. It just wasn’t worth it.
Another stick snapped, and this time
the glow stayed.
Yesss.
Satisfaction and
determination shone in Wyatt’s face as
he held out his hand. “Give me the
bottle.”
She handed it to him and he did
something she couldn’t see, taking part
of the flare and shoving it inside the