Blackout

“Steve?” said Shaun.

 

“The building is surrounded,” said Steve. He moved to put the bin on the table. “I took the liberty of retrieving your weapons. We may be shooting our way out.”

 

“Surrounded?” asked Becks, as she moved to rummage through the bin. “By what, political protestors?”

 

“No,” said Steve. “Zombies.”

 

“It’s always zombies,” complained Shaun. No one laughed. He frowned. “Tough crowd.”

 

“What is it about you two and massive outbreaks?” asked Steve. “We were outbreak-free until you got here.”

 

“Just lucky, I guess,” I said. “Where’s everyone else?”

 

“With Dr. Shoji. I doubled back when I saw the moaners on the lawn.”

 

At least something was going right. The Secret Service agents with President Ryman looked stunned, although whether it was at the zombies or our flippancy, I couldn’t have said. They weren’t with us on the campaign trail. They didn’t understand that this was how we coped.

 

“Can’t we get out through the tunnels?” asked Rick.

 

“Only if you enjoy being zombie-chow,” said Steve.

 

“The CDC is nothing if not efficient.” Shaun took his gun from Becks, careful not to touch her hand. “Is there any route out of here that doesn’t get us eaten?”

 

“We go through the parking garage to the covered motorway,” said Steve. “We may still get eaten, but we’ll have a better shot at getting out alive.”

 

President Ryman was starting to look distinctly unhappy. Poor guy. Leader of the free world—and unwilling tool of an international conspiracy—one minute, potential zombie-food the next. “How did this happen?” he demanded.

 

“Our extraction of your wife may have trigged some alarms,” said Gregory. “Between that and the situation here… the CDC is taking steps to resolve the matter. Congratulations. We are all expendable.”

 

“Cheer up, everybody,” said Shaun, and grinned—the grin of a manic Irwin getting ready to shove his way into danger. “This is going to be great for ratings. Let’s go.”

 

We went.

 

 

 

 

 

The past thirty years bear a startling resemblance to the Greek myth of Pandora when looked at clearly, in the light. A box that should not have been opened; a plague of pains and pestilences loosed upon the world; and, at the end, hope. Hope that we refused, for many years, to allow ourselves to look upon with unshadowed eyes. What were we afraid of? Were we afraid hope would prove another phantom, slipping through our hands like mist? Were we afraid something worse was hidden in its wake?

 

I think not. I think we were, quite simply, afraid to admit to hope because admitting to hope would mean admitting the world had changed forever. There is no return to the world we knew before the Rising. That world is dead. But as the Rising itself took such great pains to teach us…

 

Even after death, life still goes on.

 

—From Pandora’s Box: The Rising Reimagined, authored by Mahir Gowda, August 10, 2041.

 

 

 

 

 

Look, Ma! I’m abducting the president! Aren’t you proud of your baby girl now?

 

—From Charming Not Sincere, the blog of Rebecca Atherton, August 7, 2041. Unpublished.

 

 

 

 

 

SHAUN: Forty

 

 

We fell into a ragged formation with President Ryman at the center. Alaric was almost as well protected; he’d never passed his field certifications, and none of us was particularly enthused by the idea of him firing a gun in an enclosed space. The next ring was made up of Secret Servicemen—all of them except Steve, who was on the outer ring with me, Gregory, and the rest of my team… including Rick, who’d taken a pistol from one of the agents and was walking next to Becks. None of them objected to the vice president endangering himself. Either they were giving up, or they figured they’d be lucky if they managed to get any of us out alive, much less both of the elected officials.

 

“You people still know how to throw a party,” he said nervously.

 

“Practice. Alaric!” I didn’t turn to face him; my attention remained on the hall ahead of us. Steve was on point, since he was the one who actually knew the way, but I wasn’t going to let him hit the first wave—if there was a first wave—alone. “How are you doing with bouncing a signal out of this loony bin?”

 

“I’m still trying to get a clean connection!”

 

“Well, keep trying. We need to get this footage to Mahir before we get ripped to pieces by the living dead.”

 

“You’re always such an optimist,” muttered George.

 

I slanted a grin her way. “Like I said. Practice.”

 

“Is that also where you learned to be such an asshole?”

 

“Yup. How’m I doing?”