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Authors: Joshua Guess

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BOOK: The Fall: Victim Zero
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He'd eaten thirty feet away from piles of bodies enough times. A little piss wasn't anything to write home about.

Ben talked. Laura and Kate stood to the side taking notes as Kell stared at the boy without looking away once, slowly eating his sandwich. Every time Kell took a bite, Ben's words faltered.

Eating his sandwich, calm and collected and outwardly relaxed, Kell listened as Ben told them everything. By the end Kell was smiling. Partially because the volume and quality of the information was far more than they needed.

Also because it was pretty good sandwich.

The fire crackled and popped as the three of them sat in front of the warm hearth discussing the options before them. Ben was in the basement still, sleeping as best he could while tied to one of the posts supporting the house. Laura stayed with him for more than an hour to follow up on details, writing furiously to keep up with the endless sea of information flowing from the young man's mouth.

They had agreed on a basic strategy, which was their standard for any dangerous situation: scout first, observe and record, and adjust their plans as needed. That agreement was long-standing and required no discussion.


What do we do with him?” Kell asked as he stared into the flames.


I've been thinking about that,” Kate said. “It's not like we can turn him over to the local sheriff or anything, you know? We can't let him go, can we? I mean, look at what he's done.”

Kell frowned. “Much as I hate to say it, I've been thinking almost the same thing. I just don't see how we let him walk.”

“I don't know, guys,” Laura said. “I talked with him for a while. I get the impression he didn't know what he was getting into, and by the time he figured it out it was too dangerous for him to leave.”


Do you think he didn't help them take people?” Kate asked angrily. “He outright told us what they've been up to. You know he didn't say a word against them.”

Laura scowled at her. “I know. But dammit, you saw the kid. He's scared out of his mind, and the look on his face when he told us about what those marauders have been up to said it all. He's ashamed. Guilty as hell. I don't think he'd be a threat to anyone after this. He knows he has a second chance.”

“No,” Kell interrupted. “He
thinks
he has a second chance. That's what we're talking about, isn't it? Whether or not we cut Ben loose or kill him in cold blood.”


I vote to give him a chance,” Laura said fiercely. “There are few enough people left. We shouldn't kill him unless we suspect he'll join up with other marauders and start the whole thing over again.”

Kate scowled. “I vote for killing him. It should be quick and painless since he's giving up a whole band of marauders, but that doesn't excuse him standing by and doing nothing when his group kidnapped and killed. He could have taken a stand, even if it killed him. He didn't. He's a coward who doesn't deserve any mercy from us.”

Suddenly Kell felt very tired. He ran a hand over his forehead and scalp, trying to see the right way forward.


It can wait,” he finally said. “I'm not saying one way or another until we at least confirm the location of the camp.”

Laura smirked, which rubbed Kell the wrong way.

“Don't get cocky,” he said as he shook a finger at her. “I'm not convinced Ben has really seen the error of his ways. Kate isn't wrong. He admitted to being with these fuckers for months. Do you really think he couldn't have walked off at some point? Or gone out on a trip by himself and just kept on going? I don't buy it, but I'm willing to hear him out.”

Kate didn't react, but she rarely did. Kell rounded on her in his seat. “And you need to take a good, hard look at yourself. All of us do, really, but I'm not taking this lightly and neither should you. A few days of waiting aren't such a big deal when you consider we're weighing a man's life. But look at how you're reacting, Kate. You're angry at your best friend in the world because she thinks some compassion and understanding might be called for. You're willing to write off another human being without a second thought.”

He stood, suddenly wanting to be anywhere but in the house. “I'm going out for a while. You two need to...I don't know, talk this out or something. I'll tell you this much. I scared that kid today. We all did. I don't know how you feel about it, but I think I scared myself just as much.”


We got the information,” Kate said in an even voice. “It was just playacting.”


No,” Kell said. “It was only acting because we didn't have to take it any further. But we agreed to if it came to that. And while
we
knew we'd rather not have to hurt him, Ben was convinced we were disappointed. I put a lot of energy into being convincing, and it worked.”


That's a good thing,” Laura said.

As he walked to the front door, Kell shook his head. “It isn't. Because at the time, I enjoyed it. I
wanted
him terrified.”

With that, he left the house.

The world outside was dark, the moon hidden by clouds. Snow had fallen, restoring the blanket over the land. Despite how terrible a place the world was, the illusion created by the pristine snow comforted him. The cold was simple, a problem he could tackle easily and without ambiguity. Even the undead were relatively uncomplicated, and as he took up the spear from its place hanging from the eaves of the front porch, he could hear them.

The frigid air burned his nose as it invigorated. He didn't want to fight, but made his way toward the sounds of the undead. Shirking his duty to clear out wandering zombies wasn't an option, even if killing was the thing he needed to distance himself from for a little while.

Halfway down the long and winding driveway, he spotted them. A small group, only four, and moving with the jerky weakness some of the zombies still showed in the cold weather. Many people in North Jackson had been reading observations someone had been making. A blog, as impossible as it seemed in the current circumstances. The author put a tremendous effort into cataloging changes and behavior in the victims of the plague.

Kell had seen them as well, though unlike everyone else in the world he knew what to look for and more important,
why
the undead were changing. The cold had been universally immobilizing at first, giving people a respite from the ceaseless zombie attacks, at least where it was cold enough to slow or stop them.

Then a mutation happened. Kell knew it for what it was, having seen Chimera subtly alter to fit a circumstance in the lab. He'd mentioned it to Laura not long ago, along with his theory that Chimera was changing so as to up the amount of sugar in the host body. She'd joked that the organism must have gotten the idea from a diabetic, which Kell agreed in total seriousness was a good explanation.

But these zombies were, at best, only halfway there. It was below freezing out and they moved, but it was a pathetic shamble barely sufficient for forward motion.

There was no anger in the killing, no art or passion. Like a farmer scything wheat, he moved around them in a constant circle as he killed them. One last step back as he moved into position around the last of the four, and he was staring into its eyes.

A dozen feet separated them. Kell waited, spear ready, as the staggering corpse tottered through the ankle-deep snow toward him. Knees bent, back arched, hands tight on the haft of his weapon but arms loose and limber, Kell tensed and drew back slightly as he prepared to thrust the weapon.

If not for the fact that all his attention was on his last victim's face, Kell would have missed the expression that flashed across it. The eyes narrowed, following the tiny jerk in Kell's hands as he readied to strike. Sudden as a lightning strike, the jerkiness was gone from the zombie. The tip of the spear shot forward like a piston, but the point met only air.

The zombie ducked to the side and leaped at him, dragging itself forward by grabbing onto the spear as it moved. The only thing that kept Kell from having his throat shredded by the thing's free hand—no armor, stupid, stupid—was he saw the change as it happened. As the zombie yanked itself forward, Kell threw his foot out wide and to the left, using the momentum provided by the zombie's pull to catapult himself in an outward spiral.

The corpse lost its balance and tumbled into the snow, scrambling to right itself. Kell gave it no time, running forward and bringing the spear down in an overhead arc, smashing the weighted butt into its head.

Fear and excitement raced through him, veins pumping and mind working. This was something new to him: intelligence. Not human-level from what he could see, but the cleverness of the  predator. Feigning weakness, situational awareness, tactical thinking.

Something new.

Chapter Nineteen


That,” Laura said in a low voice, “is a lot of men with guns.”

Following Ben's directions, Laura and Kell found the marauder camp. It was laid out exactly as described, with a main courtyard defined by the circle of vehicles filling both sides of the small valley. The hills on either side were not, in Kell's opinion, what he would call hills in the strictest sense. The peaks rose to a lofty twenty feet. Just high enough to hide the cars, trucks, and trailers from casual observation.

Ben's information came with a warning to watch from the south, at least half a mile away. The reason was clear: two men standing guard at the southern opening of the valley, watching the world through binoculars at regular intervals.

He and Laura were lying flat, nestled snugly together on the catwalk of a water tower in the small town south of the marauder camp. It was a lucky break for them that the ladder leading up the tower was facing away from the camp, allowing them to ascend unseen. There was little chance the guards below would see them, given the distance and angles involved.

Each of them studied the camp through a spotter's scope.

Kell grunted and lowered his scope. “I don't know how we can do this alone,” he said.

Laura grunted. “You did it.”


I was lucky. And there are at least fifty people in this camp.”

Laura inhaled deeply, slowly letting the breath out. “Sixty two, if my count is right.”

“Too damn many, is what I'm getting at,” Kell said. “It would be different if we had ten, twelve people. Sharpshooters, maybe. As it is we've got me and you and Kate, and that's just not going to be enough.”

She eyed him askance. “Listen to you, sounding like a soldier. Guess you can't science them to death, can you?”

Kell laughed, but cut off suddenly. He wore a curious expression, a mixture of distant wondering and the beginnings of an idea she had learned never to discount.


What is it?” Laura asked.

A roguish grin spread across his face. “You gave me an idea,” he said. “Let's get down from here and I'll tell you about it on the way back home.”

After a careful descent and a mile walk back to their car during which they stayed as silent as possible, Kell explained.


It's not so muc a solid idea yet,” he said. “More like you made me realize maybe I've been looking at things the wrong way. Maybe I've just spent too much time around you two, but my first instinct now is how to apply force to fix things.”

One hand lazily on the steering wheel, Laura flipped her free hand over. “What can I say? I'm pretty awesome that way. Two thousand years ago my powers of inspiration would have had me my own temple.”

“Hey, keep hope alive,” Kell replied. “We're basically living in a new bronze age, so the sky's the limit. I'm kind of surprised people haven't gone all
Lord of the Flies
yet.”

Laura sniffed. “I'm going to pretend you didn't just sort of compare me to a decapitated pig's head.”

“Very generous of you,” Kell said.


What kind of ideas are you having? I know when that giant brain of yours is cooking something,” Laura said. Her tone was light, carefully designed to avoid distraction.


I thought about maybe synthesizing or finding a heavy gas, at first,” he said. “There are several elemental gasses that would be pretty damaging. There are simple compounds, too. I'm not a chemist, but I know the methods well enough that with the right books and equipment, I could do it.”


I hear a 'but' in there.”


Yeah,” Kell said. “Thing is, if they still have captives, gas is going to hurt them as well. Then I considered the area, the way the north end of the valley slopes south, and realized it's just not practical. Outside, those gasses are going to roll right down that hill.”

The change in his manner was subtle but clear to anyone who had spent as much time with him as she had. His words grew more precise, his mannerisms more relaxed, and there was undeniable excitement in his voice.

“So chemical warfare is out,” Laura said.

The gears in Kell's head were spinning. “Not gas, no. If they were living in a building it might work. But there are a lot of other possibilities. I can make thermite, though I don't know how well only the three of us could utilize it. The best thing would be something like that, a way to start a fire quickly and in a controlled way so it doesn't spread.”

BOOK: The Fall: Victim Zero
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