The bike struck something and exploded in mid-air.
“Noooo!” Dana screamed.
The fire and burning fragments spread far and wide as if he’d struck something solid, and beyond the extremes of the flames, sparking blue lines flicked into and out of existence. Straight lines, perfectly vertical and horizontal like a grid.
Curt didn’t make a sound, and Holden hoped that he was already dead as he fell. Because he was on fire. His clothing was splashed with fuel, his hair singed away, his face aflame, and he twisted slowly as he plummeted into the ravine like a living flare, lighting the cliff walls all the way down. And all the way, those severe blue lines flickered in and faded out all around him.
“Oh God, oh God…” Dana chanted, and when Holden grabbed her arm her muscles were hard as steel, fists clenches so tight that he felt a dribble of blood issue from beneath her fingers.
“He hit something!” Holden gasped. “There’s nothing! What’d he
The flames had fallen away now, going down with the remnants of the bike and his dead, still-burning friend. But between them and the other side of the ravine, something stood guard.
“Puppeteers…” Dana said softly. He’d never heard her sounding like this before. Tender, yes, and shy, and scared and terrified. But her voice now was tinged with defeat.
“Did you see it?” Holden asked. “What’d he hit?”
But she was looking at something far more distant than either of them could see.
“Marty was right. God.”
“Get in the van!” Holden said urgently. There was just the two of them now, and if those zombies could
“Marty was right…”
“Dana, get in the fucking Rambler! We can talk about this later, but right now we have to get away from here. They’ll be attracted by the…”
But he would not be defeated. Curt would have snorted even at the
He grabbed Dana’s hand and pulled her toward the van. She was slow-he was almost dragging her-and he wanted to shout and rage at her to not give up,
Holden jumped into the driver’s seat and Dana sat beside him. She was deliberate, almost calm. All the fear had dropped from her face. And she’d been talking about… puppeteers?
He gunned the engine and swung the Rambler around, away from the tunnel and back the way they’d come. Perhaps he’d pick out one of those fucking zombies in the headlamps and be able to run the thing over. Then reverse. Then run it over again.
“You’re going back,” she said.
“I’m going through,” he said. “We’ll just drive. There’s gotta be another road, another way out of here.” “It won’t work,” she said. “Something will happen. A bridge will collapse, a road will wash away. We’ll fall into a sinkhole.”
“Then we’ll leave the roads altogether!” he said, unreasonably angry at her sudden sense of defeat. “Dana, we’ll drive as far as we can into the forest, go on foot from there-”
Dana shook her head.
“You’re missing the point.”
“I am?” He hated her fatalism; he was trying to help them here. And he had never seen that in her before.
She looked. She even smiled a little, but it was one of the saddest smiles he’d ever seen. “This isn’t your fault,” he said.
She laughed softly but it did nothing to lift the sadness.
“I know. It’s the puppeteers.”