He did as she asked and the only thing in the safe was what looked to be an aluminum box with a keypad and a digital display. He hefted it out, discovering that it weighed easily eighty pounds or more. He slid it across the floor.
“What is it?”
She blinked her eyes. “It is a sub-kiloton weapon.”
“What?”
“A tactical nuclear device.”
Slaughter stepped away from it, keeping his light on it.
“Yes. Colonel Krigg planned on activating it if the Army came for him. He wanted to go out in a big way. He stole it in the early days of the Outbreak. Now you will activate it. You’ll have enough time to escape.”
“And you?”
“There’s no point in me escaping, now is there?”
She was right and he knew it. But a nuke. A fucking nuke.
“All right,” he said. “Tell me what to do.”
She told him a code and he punched it in. A digital display beeped and read: ARMED AND READY. She gave him another twenty digit code and he punched it in. A shrill alarm sounded and a plastic catch popped open on the display. There was a green button behind it.
“Arm it,” she said. “You’ll have sixty minutes. That’s it. One hour to move your people out of here.”
Sweat running down his face, Slaughter pressed the button.
The alarm shrilled again.
The display read: 59:58.
“You’d better go, Mr. Slaughter.”
Slaughter grabbed his shotgun and Gurkha knife. His palms were so sweaty he could barely hold onto them. He put the light on Katherine Isley but she was gone…no, not dead, but worse: she was moving, twisting, her mouth peeling open in something almost like a blood snarl. And her face…bulging, contorting, rippling with motion just beneath the skin. As he watched, the worms started coming out of her. From her mouth, her nose, even her eyes. Not maggots because this woman was surely not dead and decomposing. These were the red worms. The resurrection worms and she was alive with them. They started tunneling out of her face, pushing out, scarlet and slicked with fluids.
Just like the girl on that video from the compound in Wisconsin.
But Isley was living and that meant breeders were not always corpses, but living human beings.
Not that this jewel of wisdom mattered one bit, for the digital display on the nuke read: 58:43.
And counting…
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Shotgun in one hand and
Jesus. There just wasn’t time.
They had to get gone.
“APACHE!” he cried out at the very top of his lungs. “APACHE! MOTHERFUCKER, WE GOT TO MOVE! WE GOT TO GET OUT OF HERE!”
But the very quality of his voice as it echoed down that lonesome corridor told him that Apache Dan would never answer. Dread deepened in him. Where before it felt like a surgical cut at the base of his belly, now it was yawning wide and becoming a deep and hurting wound that could have swallowed him alive in a coveting and formless blackness of despair. Apache Dan and he went way back, way,
He called out the name of his brother again, but without any true force behind it. It was like there was no breath in his lungs:
He stumbled on down the corridor, unsure then if he’d been moving down it for a minute or an hour or a minute that had been
And he was not feeling that way again for no reason.