End Days Series Box Set [Books 1-4]
Page 72
It was pitch-black inside, but some light came in from the hallway, letting her make out chairs lined up in rows.
“Sit your asses down. We’ll take care of you in a few minutes.”
Faith guided Bob to one of the chairs in the middle of the rows.
“Sit,” she whispered.
“Is it as dark as it seems, or is my vision going to shit with all this swelling?”
“It isn’t your eyes. They have us in conference room number five.”
She had trouble figuring out who else filed into the room after her, but she got the sense it was her entire leadership team. No one was allowed to speak, and her focus was on Bob for the moment, so she lost track of numbers.
When the door closed, it left them all in absolute darkness.
“It was nice knowing you,” a man said dryly from behind Faith.
“This isn’t a murder scene,” a woman replied.
“Everyone, this is Faith. I’m sure there’s an explanation for all this. Please remain calm.” She closed her eyes, expecting a hidden guard to whack her for talking.
The man behind her continued, “Faith? Your boy Bob is probably out there now giving them the keys to the kingdom. Telling them what he did to fuck us all over with his side project. Now he’s going to get us all killed for messing it up.”
“I know for a fact that’s not true,” Faith replied.
“How can you possibly know that?” the man in the darkness replied. She recognized him as part of the computer team. That made him one of Bob’s employees.
“Because of this guy.” She tapped Bob on the shoulder.
Ten seconds went by, and Bob still hadn’t replied.
After another ten, she realized she might have been wrong after all.
Australia, 2am
Zandre’s truck skidded up to the front of Destiny’s flat.
“Come on! Get in!” he shouted.
She ran and hopped in the passenger-side door. “I’m so glad you made it, Z.”
He put the truck into gear and sped out of the parking lot. “You should have gone without me. I’ll never forgive myself if you gave up your chance to go to America to wait for me.”
Animals squealed in the back compartment of the large truck as they took turns at high speed.
“You brought them?” Her original plan was for Zandre and her to make the case that they needed the boat to sail some of the animal specimens to anxious zoos in North America, but that plan turned out to be overkill. The management of the Sydney Harbor Foundation had decided to go to America anyway, without the animals, once they learned about SNAKE.
“I know you said we wouldn’t need them, but I wanted to have them as insurance. By the time we get to the boat, we might need some bargaining power to get aboard.”
She scoffed. “The boat was my idea. They’ll let me on.”
He was unimpressed. “Just like they left you in the forest fire? Dez, these are not the good people you thought they were. This is life and death now, and they’ll do anything—anything—to keep themselves alive. You should remember that and do the same. Your first act should have been leaving me behind, although I’m glad you didn’t.”
He steered the truck onto the roadway. Because it was two in the morning, there weren’t many cars out, which was part of how he had made it from Canberra to Sydney in record time.
“All we have to do is make it to the Majestic,” she said slowly, as if she were thinking about the gravity of each word. “If we don’t make it, then so be it. I couldn’t have spent the rest of my life knowing I left you behind when I could have waited and brought you with me.”
She had other friends she could have called. Lots of old boyfriends. A few close girlfriends.
However, despite his enthusiasm for culling the herd, Zandre was a fellow animal-lover. That earned him a special place in her heart.
She’d spent some time over the last few hours texting people she knew, trying to get them to go to America, but none of them believed her. Not one.
Zandre, however, had dropped everything and driven like hell to be with her. She told herself it was because he wanted to save the animals, too, but deep down, she wondered about his real motive.
She leaned to her left as Zandre took another corner. Some animals roared in the back.
“What did you bring?” She pointed to the enclosure on the back of the small box truck.
“Two Tasmanian Tigers and one Duck of Doom. I also brought the body of another animal—something I’ve never seen before. I figured the boat people would be impressed.”
“Let’s hope so,” she said dryly.
The road ahead would take them along the coast of the inner harbor, but the lighted highway ended abruptly half a kilometer ahead.
“What the fuck?” she said while looking at the blackness.
The ambient light of the city provided enough illumination to see the beach wrap around the harbor. The houses and roadways along the shore were gone, however. The city just stopped, like someone had taken scissors and sliced it away. It was the same thing that happened on the other side of the harbor, where the Sydney Opera House had once stood.
Was the Majestic still out there?
Zandre stopped the truck at the edge of the highway.
“What do we do?” he asked.
“Drive that way. We have fuck-all chance if we turn around. The boat has to be at the end of that beach.” She pointed into the darkness.
He put it into gear but turned to her for a second. “Thanks for waiting for me. I won’t forget this.”
“Thanks for always being there for me over the years. I could always count on you, just like my dad said.” Zandre wasn’t as old as her late father, but he was close. Her dad was a big reason she got into the business of saving animals, and Zandre was the family friend who helped her get started after her father passed. Saving his life was the least she could do to pay him back.
“No worries, mate. Right now, buckle up. We’re going off-road.”
She hated being the passenger, but Zandre had lived his whole life out in the bush. There was no one better suited to get them across this mini-wilderness right now.
In the back, the Duck of Doom squawked one loud call.
It was almost like it sensed the danger ahead.
Nebraska
The aircraft carrier slumped on the muddy field next to the highway like a beached whale. It leaned to the right, so most of the landing deck was visible. It also had two nasty holes on the right side near the front.
Buck and Connie walked over to a small group of travelers who had gathered next to the highway. Mac stretched the leash as far as it would go, seeming anxious to see and smell new humans.
“What are they doing?” Connie whispered.
“I think they’re praying,” he replied.
Buck was right. As they walked up, one of the men wrapped up a prayer and said Amen. The others repeated the word.
The group broke up, but Buck caught one of the men.
“Hey, what’s happening here?”
The guy stopped, seemingly happy to talk. “A miracle! This ship appeared out of nowhere a few minutes ago, along with a lot of sea water. God is sending us a sign.”
“A sign for what?” Connie asked in a friendly way.
“I don’t know Bible verses like those folks do, but that man quoted scripture, saying that when the Book of Revelation is upon us, we will be rejoined with our loved ones. This ship came back as part of that. Soon, people will return. We’ll all live happily ever after…”
The older gentleman rubbed his gray stubble while looking at the ship. “I sure as hell can’t wait. This is the USS Wasp, which sunk in World War II. My dad was also killed in that war. It means he’s soon to come back!”
Buck tried not to frown. There was nothing about a rusty aircraft carrier sitting in a Nebraska pasture that screamed, “Relatives are coming back from the dead!”
But then he looked at Connie, suddenly
reminded of her origin.
She had come back.
Five
Sidney, NE
Buck and Connie walked fifty yards toward the USS Wasp. Mac ran free. They both decided there was little danger for the excitable pup, and they stuck to a small rise in the muddy field to stay out of the worst of the quagmire.
He thought about the old man’s words the whole way. His silence made Connie notice he wasn’t cutting jokes or opening his yap at all. Even his interactions with Mac were half-hearted.
“Care to share?” she said, nudging him.
“What were you doing before you came to my time?” he asked nonchalantly.
That made her stop. A cool breeze blew against his back as he halted, too. It was as if the giant ship was colder than the rest of the field.
“Why do you ask?” she inquired skeptically.
“No reason,” he said in a not-very-convincing way.
She stuck her hands on her hips just above the fancy belt holding up her jeans.
“Fine,” he said with exasperation, before laughing briefly. “You’ve got mad interrogation skills. You sure you weren’t in the service? FBI, maybe?”
“No delaying,” she said in a friendly but determined way.
Buck pointed his thumb over his shoulder at the road. “That guy said he was waiting for his relatives to show up, like this was some kind of Bible story. I was going to write it off as the ravings of a lunatic, except then I thought you might have died back in your time and then came here.”
He rubbed his neck. “So, were you in any danger back then?”
She shook her head. “I’m not dead, Buck. I told you when we met. I was coming back from a writer’s conference. I stayed in that dumpy motel overnight in 2003. When I woke up, I heard you and the manager arguing in 2020.”
“Thank God,” he said, relieved.
“I can’t believe you’d listen to some random guy you met in a field.” She took a step closer. “Besides, if I were dead, I’d be in Yellowstone or hiking in Grand Canyon. I wouldn’t be in some shitty field in Nebraska with a World War II battleship—”
“Carrier,” he corrected.
She took another step.
“Carrier. Whatever. Listen, the only thing you have to worry about is getting to your son. Stuff like this,” she pointed to the Wasp, “only serves as distractions. The Bible folks don’t have all the answers. Nor do the scientists. Nor does anyone. All we can count on is each other to get us through this.”
She was close enough to put her arms around Buck’s neck.
“So, now I have a question for you,” she said, smiling up at him.
“Shoot.” He grabbed her waist out of instinct.
“Are you ever going to kiss me? We’ve spent two nights together, and I tempted you with that shower towel. We snuggled in the cold last night—”
“It’s a hundred degrees outside,” he shot back.
“It’s ten in your sleeper,” she retorted playfully.
He was going to argue some more, but she put a finger over his lips for a moment. “I didn’t come here to be a distraction, Buck. As I said, we have to find your son.”
He chuckled and pulled her up against his body. “Oh, you’ve been a huge distraction. I’m usually a man of action, but this time I’ve been torn by a little voice in my head saying you are going to disappear the second I make a move. You know what I mean? I don’t want that to happen.”
“So, if we kissed, this ship, the weird weather, and rogue biker gangs would go away?”
Buck gazed at her smiling face. “Of course, I could stand to lose that crap, but I couldn’t handle losing you with them.”
Her ocean-blue eyes melted.
They leaned in the last few inches and kissed with fiery passion on the muddy field. Time seemed to bleed away as Buck enjoyed being with the woman who’d been instrumental in helping him stay on track toward Garth. Now that he finally had her to himself, he was going to savor it.
Seconds after they locked lips, Mac became restless and nudged his leg. Buck tried to gently push him away, just for a few more seconds, but Connie seemed to notice the commotion, and they both came up for air.
“The dog. He’s, uh…”
She pecked him on the lips. “He needs you.”
After an instant of admiring her, he finally looked at Mac. The Golden faced the Peterbilt back on the highway and whined a warning as if he believed Buck had left the iron on.
“Well, shit. There goes the neighborhood.”
He and Connie separated just enough they could both look at the interstate.
Cars peeled out from where they’d pulled over. People who lingered near the shoulder to take pictures of the ship now ran for their cars. Some of the vehicles slowing down to park suddenly accelerated away.
“What the fuck is their problem?” Buck turned around to look at the ship, halfway expecting it to be rolling toward him, but it appeared exactly as it did a minute earlier.
“We should go find out,” Connie said with sadness. “I’m sure it isn’t good.”
She pulled him toward the Peterbilt, but he planted his feet.
“What is it?” she probed.
“Before we get back to reality, I just want to say that even if you disappear in five minutes, kissing you was worth the risk of making you vanish back to your own time. We make a great team. Thanks for sticking with me.”
She stood on her toes and kissed him briefly on the lips. “That goes double for me. But I should warn you: If I do go back to 2003, I’m going to bide my time and come looking for you in 2020.”
“I’ll watch for you!” He laughed.
He and Connie walked together.
“Come here, Mac,” she called to the Golden. After hopping a big mud puddle, he ran over and allowed her to secure the leash again.
“I think he listens to you better than he does me,” he said, pointing at the little rascal.
“Of course, he does. He knows you’re with me.”
“You mean he knows you’re with me,” he joked.
“Oh, that’s how it’s gonna be?” She pretended to be hurt.
They walked quickly back to the roadway. Most of the spectators were already in their cars, but a few people, including his friends in the convoy, stood in a small group.
When they got close, Eve ran over to them.
“Guys! Big news. There have been nuclear explosions in Nevada and New Mexico!”
“Where in New Mexico?” Connie asked immediately. That was where she was from.
The young recruiter looked flustered. “That’s all I know. It literally happened a few minutes ago. That’s why everyone took off.”
He and Connie joined hands.
“There could be more,” he said dryly.
They all ran for their trucks.
Louisville, KY
Garth hurriedly walked Lydia where he wanted to go.
“Come on. We have to keep moving,” he said under his breath so as not to scare the other shoppers. Lots of people had heard the woman scream, but he figured if he walked calmly away from where she had yelled the news, the rest of the mall would be unaware.
“They bombed Las Vegas!” a man shouted as he ran deeper into the mall. Numerous people came out of stores after the guy went by.
“Dammit,” Garth said quietly. It appeared he was the only person who didn’t want to spread the panic.
“What is going on?” Lydia asked. “Why is everyone frightened? Even you?”
That made him take a deep breath. “I’m not scared. It’s that I’m trying to think of what I should be doing before I do it. Dad would want me to keep my head, even when everyone else is losing theirs. It’s kind of his thing.”
“So there is reason to be scared?”
“I don’t know,” he replied. “If the woman was right and there was a nuclear bomb, it would be a million times worse than a little radiation falling from the sky. On the other hand, from what I learned at school and from
my dad, there isn’t much you can do to prepare for a bomb if it’s going to hit you.”
He and Lydia trotted through the mall, on the lookout for the familiar logo of his cell phone company. However, running with her made him realize he wasn’t ready to burn up in a nuclear inferno. Not just because he didn’t want to die, either. He liked hanging out with her.
“Shouldn’t we leave?” she asked.
That would be the sensible play—get in the taxi and get as far away from Louisville as possible. Yet, he didn’t want to run when he was so close to getting his dad’s number. If there was something big coming down on the cities, he might never have another chance to contact him.
“We will. We just have to find—” He saw the distinctive orange banner in a small annex near a side door. “There!”
He grabbed her hand and pulled her toward it at a fast jog.
“It’s here!” he said excitedly as he neared the kiosk.
Two scruffy-looking young men trotted by, carrying a long flat-panel television box between them. They watched him intently as if they were worried he was going to try to stop them, but his only response was to use his arm to hold back Lydia so she didn’t run into them.
One of the guys nodded what might have been a thank you, and he repeated it back to him. They might have been stealing, but at least they were polite about it.
A distant pop sound reminded him of gunfire.
“This is what I’ve been looking for.” A table and chair stood alone in the middle of the walkway. It was designed to force visitors to see the logo of the cell phone company and encourage them to sign up. An ancient personal computer system sat below the table, hidden from view by the vinyl banner tied between two legs. “But there is no one here.”
Lydia searched all around. “How is this table going to help you contact your dad? There isn’t even one of your telephones here.”
“It will take me too long to explain.”
A woman’s shriek from several stores down made him wince in sympathy. Whatever was happening out there, he had to hurry.
“So, what are you going to do?”
He bent down and hit the power button for the computer.