Wayward

27

 

 

 

 

The torched car was still smoking. The traffic light was dark and the streetlamps had gone out. Absent a single light in operation in the entire valley, the stars burned down with a vivid, icy intensity.

 

Ethan walked out into the middle of the street, Theresa clinging to one arm, Kate on the other side of him. If it irked Theresa for the three of them to be so close, she didn’t show it. Truth be told, Ethan wasn’t sure how he felt walking between them.

 

So much love and passion and pain.

 

Like he was caught between repelling forces.

 

The same poles of two magnets in dangerous proximity.

 

People were beginning to filter out of the theater.

 

Ethan handed Kate the bullhorn, said, “Do me a favor. Keep everybody here. I need to go check on something.”

 

“What’s happening?” Theresa asked.

 

“I’m not entirely sure.”

 

He pulled away from her and headed toward the Bronco.

 

The abby had wrecked it. There was a large hole in the center of the windshield and the front seats were covered in glass and eviscerated, foam padding spilling out. He couldn’t even see through the windshield, so he climbed up on the hood and stomped out the rest of the glass.

 

He drove south up Main, wind streaming through the open window frame and his eyes watering against it.

 

When he reached the curve, he veered off the road and followed the tire tracks from his last foray into the forest, high beams shooting through the trees.

 

He found his way back to the dead pine stump and turned off the engine.

 

Stepped out into the dark forest.

 

Something was wrong, and as he approached the fence, he realized it was the silence that unnerved him.

 

It shouldn’t be this quiet.

 

Those conductors and studded cables should be humming.

 

He walked west beside the dead fence.

 

Began to jog.

 

Then run.

 

After a hundred yards, he came to the gate—a thirty-foot, hinged section that provided egress from the valley. It was how nomads left, and—rarely—returned. Pilcher sometimes sent trucks through it into the wild to harvest firewood or obtain short-range reconnaissance.

 

Until this moment, Ethan had never actually experienced the terror of seeing it locked wide open.

 

As he stood staring through the gate into the unimaginably hostile country beyond, he was gripped with the cold, sinking conclusion that he had misread Pilcher completely.

 

A scream rose up out of the woods.

 

No more than a mile away.

 

Another scream answered.

 

Then another.

 

And another.

 

The noise expanding and growing until the ground seemed to tremble with it, as if all of hell was running through the forest.

 

Toward the dead fence.

 

The open gate.

 

Toward Wayward Pines.

 

For two seconds, Ethan stood frozen, a single question looping through his head as the panic and the fear and the terror swelled inside of him.

 

What. Have. You. Done?

 

And he began to run.

 

 

 

WAYWARD PINES

 

 

 

 

 

AND NOW A SNEAK PEEK FROM THE THIRD BOOK IN THE WAYWARD PINES SERIES, COMING IN 2014 FROM THOMAS & MERCER

 

 

 

 

Ethan sprinted back to the Bronco, the panic growing with every stride, every desperate breath, already trying to see a way out, a way to fix this.

 

But that quiet fence.

 

The open gate.

 

It was pure and simple death.

 

He drove too fast through the trees, pushing the suspension package to the limit, jarring the last few jags of glass out of the windshield.

 

Up the embankment, onto the road.

 

He pinned the gas pedal to the floorboard.

 

 

 

 

 

The entire town was waiting for him out in front of the theater.

 

Four hundred and something people standing around in the dark like they’d been kicked out of a costume ball en masse.

 

Ethan thinking, We don’t have a prayer.

 

The noise of the crowd was overwhelming.

 

People emerging from their disbelief and shock, beginning to talk to one another, in some ways, for the first time.

 

Kate came over. She’d procured real clothes and someone had done a fast stitch job on the gash above her left eye.

 

Ethan took her over to the car, out of earshot.

 

He said, “Pilcher killed the power.”

 

“Yeah, I figured.”

 

“No, I mean he killed the power to the fence. He also opened the gate.”

 

She stepped back, studied him.

 

As if trying to process exactly how bad a piece of news she’d just received.

 

“So those things,” she said. “The aberrations…”

 

“They can walk right in now. And they’re coming.”

 

“How many do you think?”

 

“No telling. But even a small group would be devastating.”

 

Kate glanced back at the crowd.

 

The conversations were dying out, people edging closer to hear the news.

 

“Some of us have weapons,” she said. “A few have machetes. We’ll defend ourselves.”

 

“You don’t understand these things.”

 

“And you’re looking at me like you don’t know what to do.”

 

“Any ideas, partner?”

 

“Can’t you reason with Pilcher? Call him up? Change his mind?”

 

“I don’t think that’s possible.”

 

“Then we should get everyone back inside. There are no windows. Just one exit on either side of the stage. Double doors leading in. We’ll barricade ourselves in the theater.”

 

“And then what? What if we’re under siege for days? No food. No heat. No water. And there’s no amount of barricading that would keep the abbies out indefinitely. You understand what would happen if just one of those things got in?”

 

“Then what, Ethan? What do you propose?”

 

“I don’t know, but they’re coming, and we can’t just send people back to their homes.”

 

“Some have already gone.”

 

“I told you to keep everyone here.”

 

“I tried.”

 

“How many?”

 

“Fifty, sixty.”

 

“Jesus.”

 

“Ethan, we’ll get through this.”

 

“You don’t understand what’s coming. When I escaped several weeks ago, I was attacked by one of them. A small one. I came this close to getting ripped apart.”

 

“So what are you saying? This is a death sentence? We’re all going to die and that’s just how it goes?”

 

Ethan saw Theresa and Ben moving toward him.

 

He said, “If I can get into the superstructure, if I can show the people inside who the man they serve really is, then we might have a chance.”

 

“So go. Go right now.”

 

“I’m not leaving my family. Not like this. Not without a real plan.”

 

Theresa reached him.

 

They embraced.

 

She kissed him in front of Kate.

 

Kissed him showily, he thought.

 

“What did you find?” Theresa asked.

 

“Nothing good.”

 

“Wait,” Kate said.

 

“What?”

 

“We need to be somewhere safe while you break into the superstructure.”

 

“Right.”

 

“Somewhere protected. Defendable. And already stockpiled with provisions.”

 

“Exactly.”

 

She smiled. “I might actually know of a place like that.”

 

 

 

 

 

Ethan stood on the Bronco’s roof, bullhorn in hand.

 

“We’re splitting into four groups of around a hundred each. Harold Ballinger will lead the first. Kate Ballinger, the second. Dave and Anne Engler the third and fourth. There isn’t time to explain everything, but please believe me when I say we are all in imminent danger.”

 

Someone shouted, “I have a question!”

 

They were answered with a single, distant scream.

 

The crowd had been murmuring.

 

Everyone went suddenly silent.

 

The sound had come from south of town—a fragile, malignant wail.

 

Nothing that could be explained or described, because you didn’t just hear it.

 

You felt its meaning.

 

And its meaning was this: death is coming.