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Authors: David Wellington

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The Monster Island Trilogy

Monster
Island

Monster
Nation

Monster
Planet

The Laura Caxton Vampire Novels

13 Bullets

99 Coffins:
A Historical Vampire Tale

Vampire
Zero: A Gruesome Vampire Tale

23 Hours: A
Vengeful Vampire Tale

32 Fangs: A
Vampire Tale

The Frostbite Werewolf Novels

Frostbite:
A Werewolf Tale

Overwinter:
A Werewolf Tale

AS DAVID CHANDLER
The Ancient Blades Trilogy

Den of
Thieves

A Thief in
The Night

Honor Among
Thieves

A Sample
from Plague Zone

 

If you enjoyed this digital edition of
Rivals
, look for the digital edition of
Plague
Zone
by David Wellington, in stores now.

 

Plague Zone
Chapter 1.

Tim gave the
Portland Plague Zone a wide berth. What he was looking for wasn’t there.

He’d been
walking so long his feet had stopped hurting, or rather that the pain didn’t
occur to him much anymore. It was just there, a companion to the grittiness he
felt on his skin and the dryness of his lips. He walked on the margin of
Interstate Five, between the edge of the road and the guardrail, staying out of
the road as much as possible so he didn’t have to spend all his time watching
out for speeding vehicles. That had been a problem farther south. There
wasn’t much traffic anymore, just the occasional military convoy thundering
past, the soldiers waving to him out of their hatches, not even bothering to
slow down to ask him who he was or where he was headed. Anyone traveling north
had to be either crazy or authorized. The sick people the soldiers were
looking for didn’t walk in straight lines, as a rule.

He kicked old
picked-over suitcases out of his way. Avoided stepping on the trucker
bombs—old drink bottles, bright plastic full of yellow urine. Nobody on
this road wanted to stop even to relieve themselves. The weeds he trampled on
were softer than the asphalt of the highway, so that was something.

According to
the mile markers he was halfway to Olympia when he saw the bus coming. The
road was on a slight incline, heading up over a hill so gently graded he was
barely aware of the added exertion of walking uphill. The bus was coming
directly toward him. It was moving fast, he thought, but it was hard to tell
when he could only see it straight on. The rectangular sign above its
windshield that should have listed its destination was blank.

It was coming
right for him.

Tim had time
to blink and to reach up and start to adjust the brim of his straw hat. Then
his body took over, his reflexes, and he sprinted out into the road, across two
lanes. Fast enough to avoid being smeared. The bus didn’t veer off, didn’t
turn to track him. It plowed across the yellow dashed line, jumped as it left
the road surface. There was a long, high-pitched squealing roar as it rubbed
up against the guardrail. He heard a much lower roar as one of its tires
exploded.

Time was
breathing hard, shaking. The fear had come back, a fear he’d thought he was
done with. The bus ground to a stop fifty feet behind him, rocked on its
suspension. For a second everything stopped moving.

Then the doors
at the front burst open and screaming people spilled out on the asphalt,
grabbing at each other, shrieking, the men and the women with wide eyes, the
kids looking terrified. They flowed out like blood from a wound, moving
cautiously away from the bus as if they didn’t want to get too far away but
just far enough. The driver came out last, a fat man in a blue shirt, and he
waved at Tim with both arms, summoning him. Tim loped over, unsure what had
happened, unsure what was going to be asked of him. He tried to talk but his
voice was rusty after so many weeks alone, his throat too dry from the road.
“Everybody okay?” he managed to creak out.

“Inside. In
the back—one of them—” the driver stuttered.

“He just had a
cold, it was the sniffles,” a woman in a rumpled business suit insisted. “Just
a cold!”

Tim sensed
what he was being asked to do, even if no one could seem to articulate it. He
scratched at his stubble-coated chin and then climbed the steps into the bus.
At first he was just happy to be inside, in the shade. The bus was air
conditioned against the summer heat and it was some kind of mercy to be cool
again. His eyes, long adjusted to the glare of sunlight on a pale road, could
make out very little of the bus’s interior.

From far ahead
of him, down the serried aisle, he heard a thump. Tim squinted until he could
make out the rows of seats upholstered in green and red and orange. He could
see piles of hand luggage tumbled out of overhead compartments, a tidal spill
of food wrappers and newspapers lining the floor. At the far end of the bus
stood a narrow plastic door that was rattling, someone pounding on it from
behind.

“Crap,” Tim
choked out. He dug his arm out of one strap of his pack. Started pulling at
zippers. He’d never done this before. If the driver had given him specific
instructions he would have refused, turned away and kept walking. Let the
passengers deal with it as best they could.

No, he
thought. He wouldn’t have done that. Even this late in the game he was still
incapable of turning his back on people in need. But why him? What made them
think he was the man for this job?

The narrow
door crumpled on one side, pushed hard by someone who didn’t have the
brainpower to work the simple lock. With one last heave it broke free and
swung out hard, then bounced back. A pale hand grabbed its edge, forced it
open again.

The man who
staggered out of the bus lavatory wore an oxford cloth shirt with half its
buttons undone. The cuffs of the sleeves hung loose as if he’d been trying to
escape from his clothes when the change finally came. His head was almost
bereft of hair, just a few clumps left sticking up at random angles like
obscene horns. His skin was the color of rancid cream and a thin sheet of
black drool leaked from his lower lip. His eyes were completely empty.

He wouldn’t
have much brain left, Tim knew. The Russian Flu attacked your cerebral cortex
first, drilling holes through your gray matter, turning it into a sponge so it
could hold more germs. It irritated whatever was left, the medulla, making you
clumsy, the amygdalas, putting you in a permanent state of fight-or-flight.
The speech centers, the parietal lobe, the parts of the brain that let you read
a good book or enjoy a fine wine, shut down altogether.

On stiff legs
the man came toward Tim, moving as fast as he could, stumbling over the seats,
getting tangled up in the garbage on the floor.

There was
plenty of time for Tim to reach into his pack and take out his 22A. The pistol
stank of oil, as it had ever since Tim had bought it from a pawnshop in San
Francisco. Back when there had still been a San Francisco.

The sick man
took another step, raised his arms with his fingers curled like claws.

Tim took the
safety off, took a stance, aimed. Squeezed the trigger. The bullet went in
through one side of the sick man’s forehead. The next one went through his
eye. He fell down like he was going to take a very sudden nap.

It took a
third one to put him completely out of his misery. The .22 caliber long rifle
bullets in the gun were meant for target shooting or at best shooting small
game. In the end, with enough shots, it didn’t matter.

 

Want to read more? Look for
the digital edition of
Plague Zone
at
your favorite ebook store.

 

 

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