As for what God thought of him, Xavier didn’t know. If killing Brother Peter and assuring his own damnation had been the price for saving the people he had come to love, then so be it. There was a measure of solace in that acceptance, he found, and he even began to pray again. He held a mass for those they had lost, and during a Christmas service he asked, on behalf of all of them, for safety, health and peace. Maybe God listened. Xavier hoped He did.
• • •
A
ngie West walked down the passageway so loaded with weapons and ammunition that Xavier couldn’t fit beside her and had to walk behind. The priest carried a Mossberg slung over one shoulder, and although this part of the ship was fully lit and had been declared safe, he was watchful.
“You have the Hydras?” Xavier asked.
“I do,” Angie replied. “One for me, one for him, and two spares.” Chief Liebs had introduced them to the handheld Hydra radios used on the aircraft carrier, powerful enough to penetrate the many steel walls, and if in the open, capable of miles of range. Everyone aboard carried them now. Angie wouldn’t be able to communicate with the ship once she got where she was going, but at least she could keep in touch with her pilot if they became separated.
“You know I’ll go with you,” Xavier said. “I really think I should.”
She stopped at the foot of a stairwell and turned. “We’ve talked about this. Your place is here.” She kissed him on his scarred brown cheek, where the claw marks of a zombie’s nails were slowly turning from pink to white. “Walk me out.”
They climbed to the flight deck, where Vladimir already had the Black Hawk spooling up. Xavier went with a heavy heart, trying to be happy for her, praying that she would find her family alive. During her convalescence, Angie had told him about Vladimir’s promise to take her to look for them. The priest believed it was what had helped her to heal so quickly, and now that time had arrived.
Angie wore Leah’s blue teething ring on a chain around her neck.
“Chico’s not far,” she said as they stepped up into the breeze. “We might be there and back before you even miss us.”
“I already miss you,” said Xavier.
Angie smiled. “I promised Sophia I’d take care of Vlad.”
“Take care of you,” Xavier said. He took the woman in his massive arms and held her. “I’ll pray for you until you come back,” he said into her ear. He was unashamed of the tears that blew away in the wind.
The chopper was out on the bow, and they walked there together. Vladimir had installed a new pair of M240 door guns, one on each side, and had prepared the Black Hawk with extra fuel in the form of two drop tanks. As they approached, Angie saw Skye loading gear in through the side door. She was dressed in black fatigues and boots, wore a loaded ammo vest, and was armed with an M4, a pistol, and a machete. Her head was freshly shaved.
“We don’t have all day, lady,” said Skye, climbing in after the gear.
Angie gave Xavier a sharp look, and the priest laughed. “You don’t think
I
was going to tell her she couldn’t go, do you?” he said.
Angie shook her head and climbed in. Before she moved up to the empty co-pilot’s seat she pointed at Skye’s eye patch. “You
do
look like a pirate.”
“And the horse you rode in on,” said Skye.
“Are we at last ready?” Vladimir asked as Angie buckled in and put on a headset. When she nodded, he said, “Good. Do not touch the controls. I have no wish to die because you have seen this done on television and think you understand aeronautics.”
Angie smiled and jerked her thumb in the air.
Vladimir was preparing to lift off when a lone figure came jogging across the deck, armed and wearing a backpack. The Russian held off on the stick as the figure spoke briefly with Xavier, then climbed into the back.
Vlad sighed. “Now are we ready? Or shall we burn more fuel as we sit on this deck?”
Angie gave him the thumbs-up again, and the Black Hawk left the
Nimitz
, rising and banking to the northeast.
“Groundhog-Seven is airborne,” Vlad said into the mic, using the bored tone of all aviators. He received an acknowledgment from the ship.
Back in the troop compartment, Skye sat with one boot propped on the hard plastic case of the Barrett fifty-caliber and looked at the late arrival. “Are you lost?” she asked.
Carney grinned. “Nope. I’m right where I want to be.”
• • •
F
ather Xavier stood on the deck and watched the helicopter until it was out of sight, then turned and headed back to the superstructure. As he walked, a video-assisted scope tracked his movement from a position across the bay. A man with unfriendly eyes and murder on his mind watched the screen. “See you soon,” he murmured.
It was January 11.
The biggest earthquake in recorded history was two days away.
Read on for an exciting excerpt from the next book in the Omega Days series
Drifters
Coming January 2015 from Berkley Books!
January 11—Outskirts of Chico
In life she had been Sharon Douglas-Frye, thirty-three years old and a mother of two. A music scholarship took her to the University of Illinois, where she met Joseph, a grad student with plans for starting a heavy equipment dealership in California. Marriage, house, kids, book club, and Pilates all followed.
Then she had been bitten while sitting at an outside table of a sidewalk café by a little boy wearing an Angry Birds shirt, a wild little thing with no mommy in sight. Not even a real bite, really, more of a nip, which she cleaned and bandaged at home. Joseph was away on business, no need to worry him.
Sharon died of a fever in the master bedroom of her lovely Chico home.
And then she came back. And ate her children—parts of them, at least.
She ate Joe too, when he got home from his trip. The kids helped her with Daddy. Since that day, Sharon had seen none of them, and wouldn’t have recognized them anyway.
Now, five months later, Sharon Douglas-Frye shuffled barefoot through a January hay field of brittle stubble, her feet black and torn, the meat worn off several toes. She wore the tatters of a floral print nightgown that drooped off one shoulder, exposing an emaciated body with flattened breasts, jutting ribs, and skin the color of old wax. Her face was drawn and tight, decaying jaw muscles visible through holes in her flesh, teeth clicking incessantly. Her eyes were a cloudy blue shot through with black blood vessels.
The hay crackled beneath her feet and her arms flopped as she walked, following the sound of crows. That sound always meant food, either what the crow was eating or the crow itself, if it wasn’t fast enough. The birds were usually too quick and clever to permit Sharon to catch them, however.
A few others of her kind slumped through the field around her. Sharon paid them no mind.
It was cool, the barest of breezes making her knotted hair rustle about her shoulders. She trudged directly through the skeletal remains of a cow, the bones gnawed clean, catching and ripping her nightgown on a thick, upward-curving rib. As she moved past, her left hand banged against the rib, and Sharon didn’t notice when both her engagement and wedding rings at last rattled off her bony finger and dropped into the hay stubble.
The crows called, and Sharon kept moving.
To her right, a man who had once sold used cars moved through the field with jerking steps, still wearing the remains of a shirt and tie. His skin was a mottled olive streaked with black, now split and hanging about him in loose, sour ribbons. Strands of a comb-over fluttered about a face so torn it revealed bone, and the car salesman was bent forward and to the side by a pair of fractured vertebrae, grinding against each other with every step.
The three coyotes that had been trailing the salesman for the past hour finally decided he posed no threat. They darted in and took him down at the knees, and the salesman groaned and flapped his arms as they devoured him.
Sharon didn’t notice the coyotes. She heard crows.
A sharp, twisted piece of metal severed two toes on Sharon’s left foot as she walked through the hay field. She stumbled, then got tangled in a swirl of burned electrical wiring. That made her fall down, and she crawled toward the sound of the crows for almost an hour before she managed to free herself of the wiring and could stand once more.
There were a lot of sharp things in this field, bent shapes and pieces of metal blackened by fire, scattered over a hundred yards. The hay stubble was brittle and ashy where it had been burned, snapping under her feet, and she could still smell the smoke from the fire. That usually meant food too. She fell again, this time tripping over a long, slender length of melted polymer, constructed in a honeycomb pattern. Sharon rose once more, walked on, and at last reached the place with the crows.
Half a dozen of the glossy black birds were perched on the fuselage of the Black Hawk helicopter, which lay on its side in the field. The tail boom was gone along with both turbines, and only the troop compartment and shattered cockpit remained, all of it scorched.
The crows shrieked in annoyance as Sharon stumbled to where the cockpit windscreen had been, a few melted fragments clinging to the edges of the frame. The body of a tall man was still strapped in the pilot’s seat, slumped against his belts, his blackened skin picked away to reveal dripping, red meat. His flight helmet and head had been caved in when the cockpit hit the ground nose-first, and so he was not moving.
Sharon moaned and reached inside, tugging at an arm, trying to bring it to her mouth, snapping her teeth. It didn’t quite reach, and so she started to whine, pulling herself up through the frame and into the cockpit, tearing her own flesh on jagged aluminum and sharp Plexiglas. Her feet left the ground as she wriggled through, at last stuffing the fingers of the pilot’s dead hand into her mouth. Sharon chewed and grunted, and the crows watched.
• • •
O
rlando Worthy was a biter.
The Chico police had long ago nicknamed him Orlando the Impaler. He had drifted into the northern California city at age twenty-six after receiving parole on a seven-year stretch for armed robbery (he slashed a female store detective’s face with a fish-cleaning knife on a sidewalk in front of a discount store) and had remained in Chico for the next twenty-two years.
In those two-plus decades, Orlando had bitten nineteen people during meth transactions, bar fights, domestic disturbances, and just because. He bit another nine police officers and seventeen store detectives over the course of fifty-three arrests for petty theft. He bit a cocker spaniel when it barked at him in Bidwell Park. As payment for the biting, he had been hit with nightsticks, pepper spray, Tasers, a beanbag round from a nonlethal police shotgun, two kitchen knives, a tire iron, and countless punches and kicks.
By the time he turned forty-eight—the summer of the plague—Orlando already looked like a zombie, the meth wasting his body and aging his features. He was so distorted by the drug that a twenty-year montage of his booking photos had become one of the highest-viewed online features at Faces of Meth, a dramatic progression of decline that he bragged was his second claim to fame.
His first claim to fame was boosting. Orlando Worthy had been a professional shoplifter for his entire life. Not professional in the sense that he was too good to get caught—he had been caught plenty of times and his face was known by every cop, retailer, and security guard in Butte County—but that he did it for a living and was skilled in using the tools of the trade.
His bony hands could snap off security tags faster than an electronic detacher. When he couldn’t break the tags, he used wire cutters or stuffed the goods inside foil-lined bags to defeat the electronic pedestals at the front doors. If a garment was affixed with ink tags, he would just put it in the freezer overnight and snap them off harmlessly in the morning. For the big, cabled Alpha tags, the screamers, he would go in with a large drink from 7-Eleven, dip the sensor until it shorted out, and then clip it off with his cutters. Retailers called this drowning tags. A flat-head screwdriver could get him into locked electronics and jewelry cases, and threats of violence and biting stopped most store owners and at least two-thirds of store detectives from trying to apprehend him.
Some weren’t intimidated, and Orlando had taken his share of beatings.
Orlando Worthy stole whatever he could sell, and that was most everything. There were always buyers for Polo shirts, fragrances, Timberland boots, and Under Armour. Anything Apple was a hot commodity, as well as electronic games and learning toys. Shrimp, condoms, batteries, leather jackets, women’s shoes, Lego, pocketbooks—everything had a market. He would steal powdered baby formula by the case and sell it to drug dealers who used it as a safe way to cut heroin, or to welfare moms who paid him twenty cents on the dollar. If a woman walked away from her purse at a grocery store, it was his. If someone left their car unlocked near him, they would return to find their GPS and any spare change missing.
Orlando liked to think of himself as the Prince of Thieves. He didn’t understand the literary reference to the nickname the Impaler, and no one bothered to explain it to him.
In August of last year, Orlando scooted out of a store with seven pairs of snowy-white Nikes, aluminum foil wrapped tightly around the sensors to prevent the pedestals from sounding. He ducked behind the store, on high alert for signs of pursuit, relaxing only when he realized no one was coming. He was shaking, not just from the adrenaline; the pipe was calling. Not just calling, but singing.
A beefy kid in his twenties emerged from behind a Dumpster, a store detective Orlando knew well, and who knew the meth addict just as well.
“Oh, shit,” Orlando said, bracing himself as the kid galloped in and tackled him. As they hit the pavement together, Orlando growled and bit the kid’s arm.
The kid bit him back and damn near tore his right ear off.
Orlando shrieked and hammered at the store detective with his fists, squirming beneath his bulk and slipping free. The kid snarled, glassy-eyed with Orlando’s blood smeared across his face, and the meth addict ran. He didn’t care about Nikes anymore. The look on the kid’s face held the promise of death beside a stinking Dumpster.
He made it seven blocks, stumbling along a sidewalk with both hands pressed to the dangling flap that had been his ear, blood streaking his neck and dampening his clothes. A police cruiser slid to the curb and the young officer inside immediately recognized Orlando. He leaped out of the cruiser and slammed Orlando to the ground, cuffing him. If Orlando Worthy was running and bleeding, he surmised, then he had been up to some illegal shit and that was probable cause enough. The young officer didn’t want to hear Orlando’s protests of innocence, cared nothing for the meth head’s claims about a cannibalistic store detective. He took him to Enloe Medical Center.
The center folded within twelve hours.
When Orlando turned, he had a pressure bandage with heavy gauze wound around his head and was handcuffed to a bed rail in the emergency room. He tugged and rattled the cuff for five months before decay finally tightened his flesh enough to pull his hand free.
There was nothing left to eat in the hospital, so he wandered out.
Eventually he heard crows, understood that it meant meat, and made his way to the sound. When he reached the debris of the wrecked Black Hawk, he saw that another of his kind was already dangling out the cockpit as it fed. Orlando Worthy crawled up and in beside her, moaning as he pushed her over a bit so he could also reach the meal in the flight suit.
Sharon didn’t appear to mind the company.
• • •
T
hey had both been dispatchers for Chico Emergency Services, Patty Phuong and Patty MacLaren. The first Patty was petite to the point of being childlike, the second a solid woman with red hair and a booming personality. Cops, firemen, and paramedics, without exception, called them Rice Patty and Patty Wagon. Neither woman took offense, and they even had coffee cups at their workstations bearing the nicknames.
Friends both on and off the clock, the two women no longer knew one another as they shuffled across the winter hay field, walking together by chance alone. Their uniforms hung in tatters and the flesh beneath was a speckled gray and maroon. Rice Patty had lost an eye and most of the flesh on one side of her face. Big Patty Wagon was missing her left arm at the shoulder, and her meaty body was peppered with blackened buckshot patterns.
The women began moaning as they neared the Black Hawk, spotting the figures already feeding there. Then their attention was drawn to the right as a pair of indignant crows, working at something on the ground, took flight in a flurry of black feathers. Rice Patty and Patty Wagon lurched over to see what the birds had been eating.
It was the lower torso of a woman, hips and legs only, with burned fatigues tucked into combat boots. The crash had pitched this bloody mass thirty feet away from the helicopter. The two Patties dropped to all fours and began to feed, side by side.
• • •
A
long the length of Mulberry Street in Chico, drifters wandered with arms dangling at their sides, shuffling through blown trash, dropped luggage, and abandoned cars. They moved beneath darkened traffic signals and past houses and businesses with broken windows and kicked-in doors. Spray-painted signs—messages to family members about whether someone was alive and where they had gone—marred walls and pavement. A drifter locked in the backseat of a patrol car pressed its rotting face against the glass and pounded a fist with a steady rhythm. Black, crispy shapes moved through the skeletal remains of a burned movie theater, and things dressed in the baggy clothes and knit caps of hipsters walked stiffly along the paths of Chico State University.
Coyotes loped through the quiet streets. Sometimes they fed, sometimes they were fed upon.
A single rifle shot echoed through the bare limbs of winter trees, and a V of honking Canada geese passed high overhead. The wind blew newspapers and foam cups down boulevards of stopped vehicles and whistled through the space left between a pair of municipal trucks parked nose-to-nose in an attempt to block a street. Drifters wearing summer clothes shuffled around the ends of the trucks and kept going with no particular destination in mind.
Along Vallombrosa Avenue, where it ran alongside Bidwell Park, crows perched on the wooden crosspieces of the tall, heavy crucifixes planted there, picking at the flesh of still-moving corpses lashed and nailed to the wood in a line that stretched for three blocks. Occasionally a crow would get careless and a head would snap over, teeth crunching down on bone and feathers. For the most part, the birds were clever enough to stay clear of the bite.
The wind ruffled the clothing and hair of the crucified, carrying their moans away.