Read Year One Online

Authors: Nora Roberts

Year One (30 page)

BOOK: Year One
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When at the flip of the switches they flashed on, Chuck pumped a fist in the air. Manning just pressed his fingers to his eyes. Then he dropped his hands, looked at Max. “At the end of your first day on the job, I'll be buying the beer.”

He turned and met Wanda's grin with one of his own. “Okay, team, let's get the lights on.”

*   *   *

In the parking lot of the mall, cars lay on their sides, or on their roofs like turtles on smashed shells.

Crows, vultures, rats pecked and gnawed on carcasses of dogs, cats, deer. And what had once been human. The air reeked with the stench of decay and garbage.

Jonah drove past the remains hanging from a noose. A cardboard sign still draped around the neck.

UNCANNY BITCH BACK TO HELL

As he circled the lot, he saw no signs of life other than the gorged birds and well-fed rats. At some point, he thought, they'd send a crew of volunteers to burn or bury the dead, clean up the garbage, dispose of the piles of feces.

He pulled up at the front entrance, in front of shattered glass doors, and wondered what made some portions of the human race so foul.

He got out as Poe pulled in beside him.

“They're long gone.” Kim got out, standing with her face like stone. “The bodies have to be at least two or three weeks old.”

“Could come back,” Poe said.

“Why? It's a big, empty world. Plenty of other places to desecrate and destroy. I wish we hadn't come.”

When her voice cracked, Poe put an arm around her. She stiffened her shoulders. “But we did. We should get whatever we can.”

“The dead deserve better.”

Jonah nodded at Aaron. “We'll give them better. We'll come back as soon as we can, and give them better.”

He thought of the body hanging. They'd cut it down before they left. They could do that much now, then come back for burial or burning.

“First we have to look after the living.”

*   *   *

Lana took Fred's advice and transplanted some herbs in pots. Setting them in the sun near the kitchen door gave her a happy moment. She knew seeing them, smelling them, harvesting them would give her many more.

She'd gardened for the first time in her life. Helping hoe and weed rows of carrots and beans, being taught how to stake tomatoes. She'd seen hillocks of potatoes, the trailing vines of squash and pumpkin, eggplants. The growing stalks of corn.

And she'd heard children playing while she worked.

Best of all, after a thorough inspection of what she determined would be a community kitchen, she had plans.

She opted to work on them while sitting on the front porch with a glass of sun tea. Absently, she laid a hand where the baby kicked, then looked up when she saw Arlys.

“I heard you've been busy.”

“I had a wonderful day. Do you have a minute? I've got sun tea.”

“Sounds good.”

“I'll get you a glass.”

Even more wonderful, Lana thought as she went inside, to have a visitor, to just be able to sit and talk without worrying about what danger might lurk on the next mile of road.

“No ice, but I chilled it.” Lana wiggled her fingers as she offered Arlys the glass.

“Thanks. Wish list?” She tapped a finger on Lana's legal pad.

“A couple of them. The community kitchen project. Do you know Dave Daily?”

“Sure. Big guy, big laugh.”

“He was a short-order cook and he's all in on the project. And we've got a couple of people who have experience in dressing game. I'd love a smokehouse—ham, bacon, and so on. I actually found a book in the library on how that works.”

Impressed, interested, Arlys studied Lana over the rim of her glass. “You have been busy. I spent some time with Lloyd, working on the agenda for the public meeting.”

“You're worried about it.”

“There are bound to be objections, people who don't like being told what they can do, what they can't. But we need it, and we need it before something happens, and we don't have a solid structure to deal with it. I did an editorial bulletin on tolerance versus bigotry, on acceptance versus outdated fears. It didn't hit the mark with everyone.”

“I worked at the gardens this morning. Almost everyone's friendly and helpful. But a couple of people kept their distance. From Fred, too. How anyone can look at Fred and see anything but light and joy is beyond me.”

“She was my first personal experience with the magickal. Maybe that's why it's been easier for me than for some. For some, their first experience was with the frightening, the deadly. The Dark Uncanny. It's harder to convince them to accept that those who have abilities beyond ours aren't built to harm.”

No, Lana thought, not all magicks were of the light.

“Max's brother. His own brother. He turned. He and the woman he was with. I think she was always dark, and she turned him. They killed one of our group. A harmless man—a boy really. Would have tried to kill all of us, especially…” She pressed a hand to her belly.
“Max had to make a choice, and he chose light. He chose what was right even though it meant destroying his own brother. He loved Eric, but he chose light.”

“It must have been horrible for him.”

“It was, and still is. I've never seen power like that. Huge and black.” It still haunted Lana's dreams. “They were giddy with it, drunk on it.”

“Fred and I saw it in the tunnels, getting out of New York.” Thinking of the …
thing
flying through the tunnels, she nodded at the words. “Huge and black.”

“Then you know. It's not hard to see why anyone who faced that has fear.”

Lana turned her head, then rose as she saw the pickup. “That's Eddie and Flynn.”

Arlys stood beside her. “Someone's with them.”

When he spotted them, Flynn pulled up in front of the house.

These are good people
, he told Starr.

I don't know them
.

You never will if you sit in the truck.

She got out reluctantly as the women came down. Lupa and Joe leaped out.

“This is Starr. She doesn't want to be touched.”

A ragged shirt, torn jeans over a bone-thin frame, Lana noted. Hair tangled and matted. Suspicious eyes.

“I'm Lana. This is Arlys.”

Starr hunched her shoulders as others wandered closer or stopped to stare.

“I only got here yesterday,” Lana continued. “I know it's a little scary at first, but—”

“I'm not scared, and I don't have to stay.”

Fred jogged up, rhinestone-studded pink sunglasses perched on top of her bouncy red curls. “I saw the truck come back. Hey, hi!”

“This is Fred.” Arlys laid a hand on Fred's arm, warning her back. “Starr doesn't want to be touched.”

“Oh.” Fred's face went to instant sympathy. “It feels weird, right, everybody looking at you and wondering? But this is a good place. Maybe you want to come with me—Arlys and I live right down there. You could come inside, clean up a little.”

“I don't have to stay.”

“Well, even if you leave, you could have some clean clothes and maybe something to eat first. Then you can decide.” Fred stepped back, gestured. “Come on.”

Starr took a step forward, then another. Then followed Fred down the sidewalk.

“Full of light,” Lana acknowledged.

“Glad she's off our hands.” Eddie rolled his eyes. “I don't think she'd stick that knife of hers in my ribs, right, but it made for a nervous ride back, man. Jittery ride.”

“She won't hurt Fred. She's afraid, and she's wounded.” Flynn tapped his heart.

“She took a swipe at you, but yeah, you're right. We found her about fifteen miles north. Flynn says she's like him.”

“She's afraid of that, too. We saw a party of Raiders, headed south. They didn't see us. We found no one but Starr. Some dead, but no living. We brought some supplies, but we felt we should bring her back. We can go out again tomorrow.”

“I don't know if that's…” Lana trailed off, then gestured. Beside the door of a house across the street, a light flickered on.

“Hot damn! And I'm talking hot food, hot showers, and hot
damn!
” Eddie slung an arm around Flynn's shoulders. “Dude! Let there be some frigging light.”

*   *   *

In the kitchen of the house she shared with Arlys, Fred set out a snack bag of potato chips and a can of Coke she chilled.

“You should probably have something healthy, but this is quick, and what I'd want. I'm a faerie,” she said easily as she got a bag of chips for herself. “But you're like Flynn, right? I've gotten pretty good at guessing.”

Starr eyed the chips suspiciously. And longingly. “I don't know what I am.”

“Oh, that's okay. I was totally freaked when I first got these.” She brought her wings out, fluttered them while she munched on chips. “People wanted to hurt me, too, and Arlys. But we found more people, good people. Now we're here.”

Helpfully, Fred opened Starr's chips, popped the tab on her Coke.

Warily, Starr reached in, took a single chip. After a tiny, testing bite, she stuffed it into her mouth, grabbed more.

And began to weep fat, silent tears as she ate.

“I'm not going to touch you.” In sympathy, Fred's eyes filled, spilled over. “But you could imagine I'm giving you a hug. I'm sorry for whatever happened to you. I wish bad things didn't happen.”

“It's all bad.”

“No, it's really not. But it can feel like it.”

“It killed my father, my little brother, the bad. The Doom.”

“I'm hugging you again. Your mom?”


They
killed her. The ones that hunt us.”

The shiver jumped up Fred's spine. “Raiders.”

Starr shook her head. “Not them. Others. We tried to run, but they caught us. They raped us, again and again. And laughed. We're Uncanny, and they can do what they want to us.”

Fred's wings drooped, receded. “I'm going to sit down with you. I won't touch you, but I need to sit down.”

“And they hurt us.” The words tumbled out of Starr, bitter and barbed. “Kept hurting us. My mother said—inside my head, she
told me to run, and go into the tree. To stay until it was safe. Not to come out, no matter what.”

Starr swiped at her face, smearing dirt with tears. “My mother screamed and fought and tried to run—away from me so they left me to hurt her. And in my head she screamed,
RUN!
So I ran and ran. When I heard them coming after me, I went into the tree. I heard her screaming, but I didn't come out. I didn't come out until they went away.

“They killed her. They hung her from a tree.”

“Oh, Starr, I'm so sorry. It's not enough, but I'm so sorry. Your mom loved you. She wanted you to be safe.”

“They killed her because I ran away.”

“No.” Fred got up, dug up a paper napkin, tore it in two to share. “They'd have killed both of you, and she knew it. She loved you and made sure they didn't kill you.”

“I didn't have a knife then, so I couldn't climb the tree and cut her down. But I found one, and I went back. I tried to find them so I could kill them. But I couldn't find them.”

“I think your mom was as brave and loving as any mom ever. I think she'd be glad you're here with us now. You could live here with me and Arlys if you want. We have room.”

When Starr just shook her head, Fred tried to think of the best solution. “Maybe, at least for now, you'd rather have your own place. We have apartments. You could have one. You'd be with us, but on your own, too. I can show you one, and get you some clothes and supplies. You could, you know, clean up, get some real food, maybe rest for a while.”

“I can leave whenever I want.”

“Sure, but I hope you won't want to. New Hope's a good place to…” She trailed off, glanced up at the ceiling light. “Are you doing that?”

“I'm not doing anything.”

“The light's on. If you didn't … Holy cow, I think they got the power back.” Fred swiped her tears away, smiled. “I think that makes you our lucky Starr. The day you come, we get the power back on.”

*   *   *

When Max and his crew rolled into town, cheers greeted them. People rushed out to flock around the truck.

Max saw Lana laughing, running toward him.

Caught her when she jumped into his arms.

“You did it.”

“I gave them the spark. They did the rest.”

She pressed her lips to his ear. “We're going to take a hot shower. Together.”

“Best prize in the box.”

Someone thumped him on the back; someone else pushed a beer into his hand.

Eddie whipped out his harmonica. A woman sat on the curb with a banjo. When Jonah drove in, people danced in the street.

“Power's on.” Jonah said it like a prayer. “They got the power on. Go on, Aaron, find Bryar, and give her a whirl. We'll get this unloaded later.”

“I will.” Aaron opened the door, glanced back. “Don't carry it with you.”

Jonah turned the ambulance into the school lot. Got out, turned to Poe and Kim. “Go on and celebrate. We'll have plenty of volunteers to help unload in a bit.”

He shot them a smile that faded the minute they joined the crowd. He couldn't take the crowd, not even to go through them to get to his house and close himself in. So he went in the side entrance of the school. He sat down behind the desk, dropped his head in his hands.

He didn't hear the door open again, or the voices. He was too
far away in his mind. He heard nothing but his own tortured thoughts until Rachel touched his arm.

“I couldn't find you. Poe said he saw you come in here. So we…”

“We'll step out.” Max took Lana's hand.

BOOK: Year One
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