fire in time.
“So now, with the fire all around, I pick her up, carry her out before the fire gets us, and as soon as we’re outside, she turns to me and smiles, not even noticing anything strange is going on.
“And that’s when I realize that she’s dead.
“Yeah, she’s alive, but she’s also dead! That thing . . . it ate her soul and left her body alive!
“She smiles at me and says Hi, like everything’s blue skies and sunshine, and I think
“I couldn’t stand it, so I ran from her as fast as I could . . . but only got to the next street before I started puking my guts out. That’s when you found me.”
Only an angry chorus of sleet responded to Michael’s terrible tale. No one had anything they could say. No words of consolation. No advice. Everyone’s eyes began to sting with cold tears.
Michael bit his tongue to stop his teeth from chattering and wiped the tears from his eyes. “So now I know why we’re dying. Those horrible beasts in the observatory didn’t just come out of nowhere. They were there all along. They’re here now. All four of them.”
Someone let out a wail of agony—it must have been Lourdes, and then tears of anger, terror, but most of all helplessness, burst out around the van. It was simply too much to take alone, and in an instant all eight of their hands were reaching for the others, longing to make connection once more—even Winston. They clasped hands, the circle of four was closed, and their breath and their heartbeats began to match—panicked and fast. The truth was indeed terrible, but easier to grasp and accept when the circle was closed.
“We’re possessed ...” said Winston.
“Not possessed, infected,” said Tory.
They looked at each other’s faces, for the first time seeing the ravages of the infestation for what they really were. The creature that hid within Lourdes crushed life out of others and turned it into fat. The one clinging to Tory could turn flesh rancid from disease. The one in Winston paralyzed anything it touched and was stealing Winston’s life away years at a time. And everyone knew what Michael’s did.
“Why us?” said Winston, shaking his head, still not wanting to believe.
“Because we’re star-shards,” answered Tory. “It’s like that elephant and the giant tapeworm; these monsters can only live and grow inside of
“Gould be that everyone’s got them,” suggested Lourdes. '. . . it’s just that ours have grown a few million times bigger than normal.”
Winston shivered. “Cosmic Killer Leeches,” he said. “I wish my father were alive—he could have pulled a cure, right out of his pharmacy.”
“Yeah,” said Michael. “Shampoo twice a day, and drink lots of sulfuric acid.” They all laughed at that, and found it strange that they could laugh at all. Perhaps they weren’t as hopeless and helpless as they thought.
“We gotta figure out a way to destroy them,” said Tory, “before they destroy us.”
“Or worse,” said Lourdes.
Tory looked at Lourdes, wondering what could possibly be worse than having an invisible parasite rout your soul . . . and then she looked at the central card that Bayless had dealt to them, and shivered.
How powerful were these creatures? How many people in this world could they destroy if they had the chance—and what if the kids lost complete control and gave themselves over to the will of these dark beasts, choosing to feed them by visiting their horrors upon others? To paralyze them. To disease them. To crush them. To devour their souls.
If any one of them chose that path rather than bear the suffering, the devastation left behind would be unimaginable. It would be like tearing the world in half.
They looked at each other, four souls, thinking a single thought.
10. The Fall Of Blackburn Street
Dillon dreamed he was riding on the back of a panther—a great, dark beast bounding into a wild unknown. The power he felt in the dream made the rest of humanity seem small and unimportant, and as he rode he saw the weak, guilt-ridden boy he was before trampled beneath the beast’s pounding feet. Dillon awoke from the dream exhilarated, out of breath, and knowing that it was not entirely a dream. He wondered why he had resisted for so long.
His wrecking-hunger had evolved. Now it felt like a creature, burning with primal fury, yet acutely intelligent . . . and Dillon had learned that riding this beast was far better than letting it ride him.
He imagined Deanna there beside him, riding her own creature—a powerful pale horse—a terror-mare. To gether he and Deanna would charge their beasts into the wind, and no one would stop them as they sped down paths of greater and greater destruction.
Deanna, on the other hand, was no longer so entranced by her situation.
She had watched Dillon change from a teary-eyed boy, crushed by the weight of his own terrible actions, to a young man who was getting far too sure of himself.
Yet in spite of that, Deanna knew that he still needed her. Who else but Deanna could look deep into his eyes and find something inside that, even now, was still good and worthy of love? And if her capacity for love were greater than her capacity for fear, perhaps it would save her in spite of the destruction. Perhaps it would save them both.
Dillon gratefully accepted her love, and, in turn, she accepted his wisdom:
“Forget about the ‘Other’ ones,” he had told her. “They’ll only bring us trouble.” If Deanna didn’t accept this she would have to face the alternative, and so Deanna pushed The Others out of her mind as they raced headlong into the great northwest.
“We’re the strong ones,” Dillon had said. “Those Others are nothing compared to us.” And it was true. She and Dillon were stronger than all The Others combined.
Then why did she feel so weak?
Dillon had said he was like her good luck charm, but she wasn’t exactly wearing him around her neck; it was more like she had climbed into his pocket and hidden there.
Was her soul so frail that all she could do was follow him, borrowing his will for her own? She had been a hostage of her fears, and Dillon had freed her. . . . Did that make her
The streets of Idaho Falls were gilded with a million orange leaves. The tall oaks on Blackburn Street had begun to shed summer, day by day, but still kept a dense cloak of yellowing leaves.
Dillon and Deanna arrived late in the afternoon, his arm around her waist, and her hand wedged in his back pocket, holding each other the way people in love often do. They stood there, in the middle of the quaint residential street, staring at the old homes on either side. Dillon looked at the homes one by one, then turned his head, as if sniffing the air.