‘Well, maybe he is. Let him tell you.’
‘Jonah,’ Vic said, ‘I’ve seen something on the footage. Has Marc sent you the passwords to this site?’
‘Yes,’ Jonah said. ‘But I haven’t had time to look.’
‘One of them doesn’t act like all the others. She just stands there, watching. An observer.’
Jonah held his breath and closed his eyes.
‘Jonah, you there?’
‘This observer — what does it look like?’
‘She’s lost an arm,’ Vic said.
‘And her stomach’s all fucked up,’ Marc added.
‘Her face?’
‘Well, she looks quite normal there. Expressionless, but then they’re all. .’ Vic trailed off, because he did not need to finish.
‘Interesting,’ Jonah said. ‘Let’s see if we can find any more. Meanwhile, Marc, have you any thoughts?’
‘Sure. Get me to Coldbrook, let me through the breach, and I’ll get a sample of the disease from over there, compare it with however it’s spread and mutated in us, and maybe I can come up with something. Piece of cake. In the meantime, things are moving on apace. They’ve started bombing Atlanta, and it’s spreading fast.’
‘What have you been doing down there?’ Vic asked.
‘Just doing my best to survive,’ Jonah said. They arranged another call time in two hours, then signed off. Jonah put the phone down and breathed into the silence, and the wall screens flickered off.
He held his breath.
The lights went out as the power failed, and the laptop switched to battery mode, flashing a red-highlighted message:
7
The aircraft was mostly silent, even though it was full, and many people were concentrating on their mobile and laptop screens. Jayne had taken a walk to the bathroom an hour into the flight, and the sight of so many people with their heads tilted down had been unsettling. The night flight passenger compartment was darkened, and the glow from screens and phones had formed islands of light across the cabin. People had been whispering, and one woman was crying.
An old episode of
The churu had started to settle in her joints and bones, and for the past hour she had been steadily massaging her hips and shoulders. The man beside her hadn’t seemed to notice, or if he had he’d not seen any reason to comment. Stranger things were happening. Worse things. She shifted in her seat and groaned as her hips flexed. The man glanced up, then down again at his netbook.
‘It’s the bites,’ he said. They were his first words since the start of the journey.
‘Bites,’ she repeated. The pain in her arm was a sharp slice down to her bone. It was a different pain from the churu — a wound rather than a blazing ache — and she concentrated on it because it was easier to control.
‘Fucked up,’ the man muttered, and he started tapping at his computer again.
Jayne looked out of the window; she didn’t want to see the computer screen. There was nothing to see outside but she couldn’t sleep with this pain, so staring into the darkness was the next best thing. She kept massaging herself — left hip, right hip, left shoulder, right shoulder — and she twisted and flexed her ankles and knees, trying to work blood through her joints. But however much she worked at herself, she knew she’d need help to walk by the time they reached London.
A slow, misty warmth began behind her eyes, and she closed them, trying to will the fainting away. It was never the pain that drove her down into these comas — the worst agonies conspired to keep her awake — but something else to do with the churu.
It was bad enough having a body she couldn’t rely on. The idea of losing her mind. . she could never live with that. Tommy had known that, too. And they’d never discussed it, because they were both afraid of what she would ask of him.
‘Shit,’ she slurred, and the mist thickened into a fog.
On the small screen in front of her, three children played in a garden, spraying a St Bernard with a hose.
Jayne blinked a few times, trying to focus through the pain. She shifted in her seat and cried out, and her heartbeat set whispers echoing in her ears. Her joints burned, but her vision and other senses were rising from the blackout.
He was gone. So were the people across the aisle from them, every seat empty. And past the opposite aisle, more empty seats. She turned and looked between the seat uprights, groaning again at the pain in her stiffened shoulders. No one.
Everyone was gone.
Her jacket had been sliced off, ragged cuts up the sleeves showing clumsy scissor cuts. Her shirt had been pulled open, her bra sliced in two, and her breasts and stomach were exposed.
‘What the hell. .?’ she said, and it was when she grabbed her opened shirt to cover herself that she saw the wound on her arm. The dressing had been ripped back and now hung by one strip of tape. The scabbed bite was exposed, seeping a dribble of thin blood.
The whispers in her ears became startled voices, not her heartbeat at all, and though she heard no words she understood their fear well enough.
They were standing along the aisle, clumped together and staring at her across the heads of empty seats. Terrified.
‘I’m. .’ she said, and then a man appeared beside her from the other direction, moving quickly and keeping low. There were grey flecks in his closely cropped hair and his eyes flashed wide and white against his brown skin.
In his hands was a squat pistol.
And he had been paying attention to the news, because it was aimed directly at her head.