—and, presumably, the rest of the world.
Practically a city, although from what
Cat knew, it was nowhere near the size
or extent of pre-Change cities like New
York or Los Angeles, or even Denver. It
sounded like a foreign land to her.
The place had been called Envy for
so long many people had forgotten it
actually began on the site of Las Vegas,
originally being named New Vegas, or
N.V.
Regardless, Cat had no desire to go
to a big, busy, crowded place like that.
Even though she heard there were actual
restaurants there, where you were
served food at a table like in the old
days, and it offered a variety of
tradesmen making clothing and even a
few places to barter for or buy rebuilt
appliances, she didn’t want to go. She
liked
it
in
Glenway.
She
was
comfortable in the small peninsular
town, protected from the zombies by a
deep trench on two sides and the ocean
on two more. She felt safe here. Safe,
and able to heal.
But Dad seemed excited about the
trip. It was almost as if he were looking
for an excuse to go—after all, why
would they need to make a three-day
journey to deliver some stones? Even if
they had glowed in the dark?
“You don’t have to go with me,
Catie,” he said, stirring honey into his
tea. “In fact, it might be better if you
didn’t. Yvonne can always use your help
with Tanya, and don’t think I haven’t
noticed Benjamin Mandova spending a
lot of time talking with you.” He smiled,
the corners of his eyes crinkling deeply.
“Maybe he’d get up the nerve to do
something else if your papa wasn’t
around glowering at him.”
“If you think I’m letting you go by
yourself, you’re nuts,” Cat said flatly.
“But I don’t understand why you think
it’s so important.”
He shrugged. “Call it instinct. I’ve
been around long enough that I’ve
learned to listen to it. Stones don’t just
glow. And the fact that the zombies have
become more erratic lately, and they
have glowing orange eyes that look a lot
like those stones . . . I think George
needs to know.”
Cat got up, mug in hand, and went
over to the sink. She pumped water into
the basin with rough movements and was
just turning back to Dad when the front
door opened.
“Grandpa!” A whirlwind of energy
burst into the room, hurling herself into
his arms. She had springy dark hair and
happy brown eyes.
Yvonne—Tanya’s mother and Cat’s
sister—followed her daughter. She
looked fondly at her father and daughter,
who were smooching, hugging, and
tickling each other. “Good morning.
Sorry for the interruption, but since
you’ve moved here, Tanya seems to
think your house is just an extension of
ours. Usually I can keep her contained
until after nine, but this morning she got
away from me.”
“We’re always glad to see you!” Cat
said with real warmth. Moving here was
the best decision she and Dad had made.
Which was why she felt such an inkling
of mistrust about this proposed trip to
Envy. She was afraid it would change
everything again.
“What’s going on?” Yvonne looked
from Cat to their father, obviously
sensing the underlying disagreement.
“Last night when the zombies were
out, we noticed a glow coming from
George’s laboratory,” Dad said. “It was
orange, and when we investigated—we
were careful! Sheesh,” he interjected
when Yvonne drew in a sharp breath of
alarm. “Anyway, we found the glow
coming
from
some
stones.
Like
crystals.”
“Dad thinks we should take them all
the way to Envy for George to look at,”
Cat said, not trying to hide her dislike of
the idea.
Yvonne pursed her lips. “Tanny,
honey, can you run home and make sure I
turned off the . . . uh . . . water. In the
sink? And while you’re there, why don’t
you get your new doll to show
Grandpa?”
Cat didn’t say anything until Tanya
was gone, but she watched her sister
with calculating eyes. Once the door
closed behind the little girl, she said,
“What’s going on?”
Yvonne shrugged. “Tanya likes to
talk. I didn’t want her to be spreading
this around, but . . . Dad. I think you’re
right. You should take them to Envy.”
She hesitated, smoothing her hand over
the battered kitchen table as if to sweep
away a bit of crumbs. “You know Ana
and I were very good friends. Although
we were close, she was a little secretive
about
some
things.
About
her
background. So I don’t really know what
the situation was, but . . . one time, by
accident, I saw her bare torso. Like, the
side of her belly and rib cage. And she
had crystals embedded in it.”
“Crystals?” Dad sat straight up, his
dark eyes sharp. “Like the Strangers?”
“No, no. She definitely wasn’t a
Stranger—these were different. And they
were in the wrong place on her body; not
up by the collarbone.” Yvonne shook her
head, pinching her lip between two
fingers. “I always sensed she was
different, that there was something she
wasn’t telling me. Not in a bad way, Cat.
I’d trust Ana with my life. It was like she
was . . . hiding from someone. Or
something.”
“I still don’t see why that has
anything to do with the glowing crystals
we found,” Cat said stubbornly.
“I’m not sure either, but if they were
found in George’s workroom, and his
daughter has crystals in her skin . . . I
doubt it’s a coincidence.” Dad drummed
his fingers on the table.
“But . . . what if George and Ana are
. . .” Cat allowed her voice to trail off as
she struggled for the right words. “. . .
not to be trusted? I mean . . . crystals?
When I think of crystals, I think of the
Strangers. And I can’t say it makes me
very comfortable knowing your friend
Ana wears crystals.” She glanced at
Yvonne, who frowned back at her.
Dad sighed and settled back in his
chair, then ran a hand through his
thinning gray hair. He looked from one
daughter to the other, then sighed again.
“All right. Girls”—he still always
called them girls, even though they were
both
in
their
twenties—“there’s
something I need to tell you.”
Oh shit.
Cat didn’t like the sound of
that, nor his arrested expression.
“What?” Yvonne demanded, her face
and voice as tense as Cat felt. “I
knew
there was something going on with you,
Dad. I knew it.”
Cat resisted the urge to roll her eyes.
She’d
been the one living with Dad for
the last six years—since Yvonne got
married. As if her sister had any clue
what was going on with their dad.
But apparently she herself didn’t
either.
“You have to keep it a secret. It’s
imperative. My life—and that of others
—depends on it. Can you do that?”
Her heart pounding, Cat nodded. “Of
course, Dad. I’d never do anything to
endanger you.” She exchanged glances
with Yvonne and saw the same
apprehension and confusion in her
sister’s face.
“I’m . . . uh . . . involved in a group,”
he said, obviously choosing his words
carefully. “A secret group that’s trying to
. . . well, hell, how do I explain this? A
group that’s banded together to build up
a resistance to the Strangers. We’re in
the process of building a rudimentary
communication
network
using
computers.”
“Computers?” Cat breathed. “Like
the old Internet?” A tingle of excitement
blipped through her.
Dad nodded. “It’s real spotty, but one
of the locations is now here in Glenway.
Thanks to me.” He held up a hand when
his daughters would have peppered him
with questions. “I can’t give you more
details right now. I
can’t
,” he added
sharply. “The fewer people who know,
the safer we all are. But I can tell you
this much: Ana and George can be
trusted. I know this for a fact. They’re
part of the group. And so that,” he said,
spearing Cat with his eyes, “is why I
have to bring those crystals to Envy.
They mean something. I don’t know
what, but I think someone there can help.
They need to know about them. Things
are happening.”
Cat became aware of her heart
pounding in her chest and a queasy
feeling roiling her belly. A secret group.
A resistance.
All at once little things began to fall
into place in her mind: hushed voices,
her father leaving their house at odd
times. The cloth-wrapped packages he
occasionally brought home. He’d always
claimed it was part of his job as a
medic, which made sense. But now those
details took on new meaning.
He’d always tried to help people
when they needed help, using whatever
medical training he’d been able to get
over the years from other people and
from books; there was no formal place
to learn medical practice like in the days
o f
Grey’s Anatomy
or
ER
. But she’d
never thought of her father as a person
who bucked the system, who caused
ripples. She thought of him as a
peacemaker, a healer.
He’d
always
been
just
Dad:
comforting, supportive, and strong.
Funny. Stern. A terrible cook.
“Wow,” she breathed, looking at him
with new eyes.
“So,” he said, looking back at her,
“I’m going to Envy. If you want to come,
I’d like it. And they’re having a big
celebration sometime this week—I’m
not sure which day, but it would give us
a little bit of a cover for going.
Survivors Day, it’s called.”
“Remembering and celebrating all
the people who survived the Change,”
Yvonne added helpfully. As if Cat
couldn’t have figured that out for herself.
Dad winked. “It might be fun, you
know. I’ve always wanted to go. But,
Catie, if you feel more comfortable
staying here with Yvonne, I completely
understand. I’ll find someone else who
wants to travel with me. I won’t go
alone. Brady Luck looks like he’s old
enough to have been a survivor.” His
eyes still glinted with humor.
Cat was shaking her head hardly
before she realized her decision. “No,
Dad, I’ll go with you. I’d like to find out
more about this resistance group.”
His smile wavered, then turned
affectionate. “Ah, yes. I was afraid
you’d say that.”
W
yatt looked down at the orange
crystal.
It was about the circumference of a
nickel, roughly spherical in shape and
rough around the edges. Certainly not
something that had been polished and
prepared for a jewelry setting.
Could it really be the Mother crystal?
The source of power for the Atlanteans?
Something this small and irregular?
Regardless, it affected the zombies. It
seemed to call them. And it was
important to the Strangers. Therefore he
had to do whatever it took to keep it safe
and out of their hands.
He shifted, looking down from his
perch high in a massive tree with
widespread limbs. The zombies were
long gone, having disappeared once
dawn began to color the sky. But Wyatt
had taken no chances, so late last night
he climbed high onto a sturdy branch,
tying himself in place so he could sleep
safely.
It also gave him a good vantage
point, this high off the ground.
Now he rose, standing on the branch.