Scorpion Shards ss-1

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Scorpion Shards ss-1 Page 14

by Нил Шустерман


  Realization slowly dawned in Tory’s eyes.

  “What?”

  But the only answer was a blast louder than thunder that shook the world and sent pulverized concrete dust flying into their faces.

  Seven floors below, the foundations of the old Dakins warehouse blew apart, and the building began its freefall journey to the earth.

  ***

  The Chinese Tongs that had built the impossible maze of tunnels beneath Boise were long dead, and the opium dens those tunnels once connected were gone and forgot­ten. Now, more than a hundred years later, Dillon and Deanna traveled those lost passages. Dillon should have found the pattern of the twisting, intersecting tunnels easy to figure out, but as he raced wildly to reach Deanna, he found himself lost. He had never been lost before, but what had happened in that old warehouse had thrown him for such a loop, he wasn’t thinking straight.

  They were here.

  The Others.

  Somehow they had found him, and he was convinced that they were here to kill him.

  At last, down the long dim underground corridor, Dil­lon saw Deanna, just as the blast went off somewhere above their heads. The explosion was so loud, it sent pain shooting through his ears, and the rumble that followed rattled his teeth. He fell into a puddle of stagnant muck, while behind him concrete dust shot through the tunnel like steam through a pipe.

  Then, through the dust blasting into his face, Dillon saw and heard hideous things. Sinewy gray tentacles reaching for him through the dust cloud—blue flaming hands around his neck, sharp claws digging into his chest, fangs, and eyes—so many angry eyes!

  It must be my imagination, he thought in a panic. It can’t be real, yet even so, he felt a tentacle wrap itself around his ankle and dig in. Dillon clawed at the ground to get away, he gripped a stone in the wall, but something stung his hand.

  Choking from the concrete dust filling his lungs, Dillon could swear he felt hot breath on his face and heard a sound in his mind louder than the collapsing building.

  Knocking.

  Many hands knocking on a door—a furious horde de­manding to be let in. Anything! thought Dillon. Anything to stop that horrible knocking in his brain. He opened his mind as easily as opening a door, and the creatures were gone, leaving only the blinding dust in his eyes.

  As the dust around him began to settle, Deanna ap­peared in front of him.

  “Dillon! What’s happening?” she asked desperately.

  Dillon coughed out another lungful of dust. And forced himself not to think about the monster-hallucination. In­stead he let himself feel the wrecking-hunger feed on the collapse of the Dakins building. But that was only a first course.

  “Listen,” said Dillon. “Listen, it’s wonderful!” The re­lief filling him soon grew into joy, and then ecstacy.

  The first building had come down far above them, but the roaring had not stopped. From the right came another rumble, just as loud as the first, and then another, further away, and then another until they couldn’t tell where one ended and the next began.

  Deanna sank to the ground, shivering as if it were the end of the world. “It’s like a war out there,” said Deanna.

  Dillon beamed a smile far too wide. “Oh, it’s much better than that!”

  His dim flashlight went out, but that was all right. Dil­lon didn’t want Deanna looking at him right now, be­cause something was beginning to happen to him. He was beginning to change; he could feel it all over.

  Dillon closed his eyes, imagining the beast he had learned to ride so well . . . only now when he tried to picture it, he saw a whole team of beasts instead: a wave of dark horses teamed together by a single yoke carrying him along at a breakneck pace.

  There in the dark, his flat stomach began to slowly swell, and his many freckles began to bulge into a swarm of angry zits.

  ***

  In the dim light of this awful morning, the foreman of the demolition crew could do nothing but watch as his well-orchestrated detonation became a nightmare of unparal­leled proportions.

  It should not have happened. The way the explosives had been set, the building should have come straight down . . . but it didn’t. Instead, the entire building keeled over backward and landed on Jefferson Place—an office building across the street that had been evacuated as a precaution. The old office building shifted violently on its foundation, and keeled over to the left. . . .

  . . . Where stood the Hoff Building—a city landmark.

  No one had thought it necessary to evacuate that one.

  The Hoff Building took the blow, and for a moment it looked as if it was only going to lose its eastern face. But then it, too, began a slow topple to the left, its domed tower crashing into the Old Boise Post Office.

  Dominoes, thought the foreman. They’re going down like dominoes. It was impossible; it would take a pattern of in­credible coincidences for each building to hit the one be­side it with just the right force to bring it down as well . . . but the evidence was here before their eyes.

  Debris struck the Capitol building, which seemed to be all right . . . until the pillars holding up its heavy dome buckled and the dome crashed down and disappeared into the building, hitting bottom with such force that all the windows shattered.

  And it was over.

  Seven buildings had been demolished.

  Beside the foreman, his explosives expert just stood there, rocking back and forth, and happily whistling “Twist and Shout.” Another crew member was scream­ing at the top of his lungs.

  They’re insane! thought the foreman. They’ve completely lost their minds. And finally, the combination of everything around him was exactly enough to make the foreman snap as well. As he felt his own mind slipping down a well of eternal madness, he realized that the destruction he had just witnessed was somehow not over yet. In fact, it was just beginning. In a moment he started laughing hys­terically. And he never stopped.

  ***

  Michael Lipranski now understood death. It was blind, cold and dusty. It was filled with a loud ringing in one’s ears that didn’t go away. Death was oppressive and choking.

  These were the thoughts Michael was left with after having died. There were, of course, many questions to come, but the one question that was foremost in his mind was this: Why, if he was dead, did he still feel like cough­ing?

  Michael let out a roaring hacking cough and cleared concrete dust from his lungs. He opened his eyes. They stung, but he forced them open anyway. Around him were three other ghosts . . . or at least they looked like ghosts. They all began to stir, and as they sat up, a heavy layer of white dust fell from them.

  “What happened?” asked Winston.

  And as they looked around, the answer became clear. They were still on the seventh floor . . . or at least what was left of it. Just a corner really. The rest of the building was gone. So were quite a few others around it. It looked as if downtown Boise had been hit by a small nuclear bomb.

  “He did this,” said Winston.

  “He, who?”

  “The Other One . . . the fifth one. I told you I saw him!”

  “He saved our lives?” asked Tory.

  “I don’t think he meant to,” said Winston.

  They looked out at the devastation once more. Lourdes, her death-wish forgotten, stood and walked to the jagged edge where the seventh floor gave way to open air. The rest of the building had shorn away and had turned to rubble. If they had been anywhere else on that floor, they would have been part of that rubble . . . but they weren’t anywhere else, they were right here . . . and Lourdes began to wonder idly what sort of intuition had made her collapse in the north corner rather than the south corner, or was luck so incredibly dumb that it didn’t even know an easy target?

  Tory looked stunned. “I guess it takes more than a few thousand pounds of explosives to get rid of us.”

  “Lourdes, you’re standing!” Michael approached Lourdes at the jagged edge of the concrete floor. Indeed, she had found t
he strength to lift her weight again . . . or was there less weight to lift? “Is it my imagination . . . or do you have one less chin?”

  The others came closer. The change was almost imper­ceptible . . . but the others were able to notice.

  Tory looked at her hand and flexed her fingers. Her skin was still as awful as before, but the swelling that had come to her joints was fading. Tears came to her eyes, and the salty tears didn’t even sting, for her sores were slowly beginning to close.

  They looked at each other, afraid to say what they now knew, for fear that speaking it would somehow jinx it. Fi­nally Tory dared to utter the words.

  “They’re gone. . . .” she whispered. It took a few mo­ments for it to finally hit home. Then, in the midst of the devastation Tory’s voice rang out from the top floor of the ruined Dakins building, a clear note of joy in the midst of sorrow.

  “We’re free!”

  ***

  The jagged broken wall provided them with a treach­erous path down to the rubble below.

  There was chaos around the scene, but not the chaos one might expect. People screaming, crying, wandering like zombies—it was as if the shock wave of this event had driven everyone around it completely insane.

  Winston looked around him and fumed. The red­headed boy had created this wave of destruction. The physical wasn’t enough for him—he had to destroy the minds of the survivors. It made Winston furious . . . furi­ous at himself for having seen him and not trying to stop him! Not even the knowledge that his own parasite was gone could calm his fury.

  Winston approached a policeman sitting on a fire hy­drant. He was staring into the barrel of his own gun with a blank expression. When he saw Winston, he turned to him, pleading.

  “Am I in trouble?” asked the officer. “Am I gonna get a whooping?”

  Winston reached out and gingerly pulled the revolver out of his hands. The officer buried his head in his hands and cried.

  “How did he do this?” asked Winston, as they stum­bled their way through the nightmare of insanity.

  “How?” said Tory. “How many thousands of people could you have paralyzed if you wanted to? How many plague epidemics could I have started? The only differ­ence between him and us,” she said, “is that we didn’t want to.”

  About three blocks away from the wreckage, sanity seemed intact. People gawked and chattered and paced, but not with the same mindless chaos that surrounded the site of destruction.

  As they left the insanity circle, it was Lourdes who took a moment to look back. In the midst of the rubble, the only thing left standing was the seven-story sliver that had been the corner of the Dakins storage building.

  “Clutch player?” Michael suggested with a grin.

  “Maybe,” said Lourdes. “I was thinking that it looks like a tower. A tower that was struck by lightning.”

  As the sound of approaching sirens filled the air, Tory turned to the others. “I don’t think those things died,” she told them. “I mean if we’re alive, then they’re probably alive, too. I think they bailed because they thought they were going to get blown up. The explosion scared them out. . . but that doesn’t mean they’re gone for good.”

  Tory touched her face, to make certain that the pain there was still slipping away. “We still may have to fight those things,” she said. “But maybe when the six of us are together—"

  “When the six of us are together,” said Winston, feel­ing the weight of the revolver in his pocket, “I’m gonna send that red-headed son of a bitch where he belongs.”

  12. Shroud Of Darkness

  At the edge of the wreckage, a man with no mind stumbled away from his Range Rover. It was just one of many cars left idling in the middle of the road. Deanna and Dillon used it as their ticket out of Boise, and in a moment they were careening wildly northwest.

  Deanna, who had never been behind the wheel of a car before, gripped the wheel and taught herself to drive at ninety miles an hour on the straightaway of I-84.

  “How many people died?” she demanded. She would not turn her eyes from the road, but through the corner of her eye she could see Dillon sitting beside her. He seemed completely absorbed in his map, pretending not to hear her.

  “How many?” she demanded again.

  “I don’t know,” said Dillon. “I can’t tell things that ex­acdy. Anyway, what’s done is done,” he said and spoke no more of it.

  Things were changing far too quickly for Deanna to keep up. What had begun for both of them as a cleansing journey filled with the hope of redemption had become nothing more than a mad rampage with no end in sight. It made her want to get out and run . . . if only she could bear the fear of being on her own. Stepping out of that car and leaving Dillon would have been like stepping out of an airlock into space. She needed him, and she hated that.

  She glanced at Dillon as he pored over the AAA map. He tossed it behind him and pulled another from the glove compartment.

  “I won’t keep running like this,” said Deanna.

  “We’re not running, we’re going somewhere,” he fi­nally admitted.

  “Where?”

  “I don’t know yet...” he snapped; then said a bit more gently, “I’ll tell you as soon as I know, I promise.”

  “We were wrong,” said Deanna. “We should find The Others—"

  “The Others are dead,” he said.

  Deanna knew this was a lie. It was the first outright lie he had ever told her.

  The road ahead of them was straight and clear, and Deanna dared to take a long look at Dillon. He had changed since she had first seen him in that hospital room. There he had been a tormented but courageous boy who had whisked her from her hospital bed. He had been a valiant, if somewhat disturbed, knight in shining armor. But now his courage had turned rancid. There was no armor, just an aura of darkness flowing around him like a black shroud—as if his body could no longer contain the blackness it held.

  It was more than that, though—his body was changing as well. Had he gained weight? Yes, his slender figure had begun to bloat. She could see it in his face and hands—in his fingers, beginning to turn round and porcine. His skin, too, had changed. It began to take on an oily redness marked with whiteheads that were appearing one after another. He’s beginning to look on the outside what he’s becoming on the inside, Deanna thought, and shivered.

  “Damn it!” said Dillon, hurling the map behind him. “I need more maps! These don’t tell me what I need to know!” He took a deep breath to calm himself, then rubbed his eyes and said, “There’s a town—when we get to the Columbia River—a good-sized population.”

  “Why does the population matter?” Deanna couldn’t hide the apprehension in her voice.

  “Because it means they’ll have a decent library,” Dil­lon answered. “And a decent library will have a decent almanac, and an atlas. A world atlas.”

  “And?”

  Dillon rolled his eyes impatiently as if it were obvious, “And when I see what I have to see, I’ll know where we have to go.”

  She heard him take another deep, relaxing breath, then he gently put his hand on her neck. It felt clammy and uncomfortable. She could feel that aura of darkness and how revolting it felt.

  “It’s okay,” he told her. “Everything’s gonna be great.”

  This too was a lie, but she knew that Dillon believed this one.

  “When we get where we’re going,” Deanna asked, “is this all going to be over? Will it end?”

  Dillon nodded. “Yes,” he said. “Once we get there . . . everything will end.”

  ***

  Burton, Oregon. Population 3,255. In the center of town, a harvest festival sent bluegrass music wafting to­wards Main Street, where all was quiet. The library was empty today, except for Dillon and Deanna.

  Dillon piled the large wooden reference table with vol­ume after volume of atlases and almanacs. The librarian was delighted to see a young man so involved in his stud­ies. Deanna, as curious as she was
unsettled, helped him pull down heavy volumes describing the people and places of the world. First he stared at the maps—the way roads connected and wound from city to city, state to state, nation to nation. Then he looked at numbers—end­less lists of numbers, graphs and charts. Populations—demographics; people grouped in whatever ways the re­searchers could find to group them; by race or religion; by economics; by profession; by politics; by every imaginable variable.

  “What are you looking for?” Deanna asked. But Dillon was so engrossed in his numbers he didn’t even hear her. He was like a computer, taking in thousands of digits, and processing them through some inner program.

  Then, one by one Dillon closed the books. The atlas of Europe, of Asia. The books on Australia and South Amer­ica. The studies of Africa, the American Almanac . . . until he was left with the map of the northwestern United States. He stared at the map, drawing his eyes further and further northwest, his finger following the tiny capillaries of country roads until he stopped. Dillon’s master equa­tion had finally spit out an answer.

  “There.”

  His finger landed in the southwest corner of Washing­ton state. “This is where we have to go.”

  “What will we find there?” asked Deanna.

  “Someone.”

  “Someone we know?”

  Dillon shook his head. “Someone we will know. Some­one important.”

  They left, not bothering to shelve the books.

  ***

  Their course out of town took them right past the har­vest festival. They had no intention of stopping, but the Rover needed gas. The gas station was right across the road from the festival, where most everyone in Burton was spending this fine day.

  Dillon, who was driving now, got out to pump, while Deanna scrounged around the messy car, finding dollar bills and loose change to pay for the gas. It was when she looked out of the window at Dillon that she knew some­thing was wrong. The old-fashioned mechanical pump clanged out gallons and racked up dollars, but Dillon wasn’t watching that. Instead, he was looking at the pump just ahead of them, where a tattooed, beer-bellied man stood pumping up his rundown Trans-Am. His equally unattractive wife stood beside him.

 

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