see the glint of gun metal, too.

“I want to speak to someone in charge!” My voice echoed back at me.

A bullhorn crackled. “I’m in charge, Valdiva. Speak to me.”

“Recognize the voice, Ben?”

He gulped. “Crowther junior. You know he hates your guts. You’ll get nothing from him.”

“Crowther,” I shouted. “We need two hundred pounds of dynamite, fuse wire and detonators.”

There was a pause. Then in a friendly voice, Crowther said, “Come right up to the gates, Greg. We’ll see what we can do.”

That was enough to make me duck my head back down into the ditch, out of sight. “Crowther! I’m not falling for that one! Your people will blast me to kingdom come the second they get a clear shot.”

The bullhorn boomed back. “Suit yourself. Either get away from here right now or we’ll come out there and blow you to shit.”

“You won’t do that, Crowther. One: You’re too chicken shit scared of infection. Two: We’ve got guns. You won’t get through the gate in one piece.”

“OK, Valdiva. Stalemate. But you’re not getting what you want.”

I risked a glance over the ditch. Damn… the dust kicked up by the wheels had reached us. I got an eyeful of dust and ducked back down again. And Christ, that smell of rotting meat was worse than ever. My stomach heaved.

“Greg,” Ben hissed, “let’s get out of here.”

He’d seen this stink was working its black magic on my guts, too. I waved him away. Then, without lifting my head, I yelled, “I’m here with Ben!”

“That geek? You’re welcome to him.”

I wiped the grit out of my eyes, but more blew across as I heard vehicles pull up on the far side of the fence. Sullivan was mustering an army. They came in such numbers, I could even smell aftershave on the Guard.

With a deep breath I shouted, “Here’s the deal, Crowther. We leave you alone in return for the dynamite.”

“You’ve got to be kidding, Valdiva. You can sit out there in the ditch until Thanksgiving for all we care.”

“Crowther, there are ten of us out here. We’re armed with military sniper rifles. If you don’t give us the dynamite we will sit out here until Thanksgiving. And whenever any of you or your neighbors walk out into the open we’re going to blow their heads clean off their shoulders. We’ll keep doing that until you give us the stuff. OK?”

“You’re bluffing, Valdiva.”

“Try me.”

Beside me, Ben, edged away from a corpse with a hole in its head you could have waggled your fist in. He kept swallowing, his eyes watering. I rubbed my stomach as it gave a queasy squirm.

I’d expected some response from Crowther, but it became quiet. I guess the guys were in conference all of a sudden. Time to make my contribution to the debate. Carefully I eased my head up above the ditch. More dust carried downwind, creating a golden mist. With luck the guardsmen who were keeping watch might not see me through that swirling filth.

My stomach muscles bucked. Christ, that smell of rot had gotten itself deep down into the pit of my belly. I held out my hand. “Ben, pass the rifle.”

Wiping the back of his mouth, he handed it to me. I chambered a round. Raised it to my shoulder. Looked through the telescopic sight. Sullivan had grown soft and careless. Magnification bloated the heads like beach balls. Sitting in the center of the crosshairs I saw Mike Richmond looking up over the top of a car. There were others I recognized, too. Finch, the old cop whose daughter Lynne had been murdered by the townsfolk. There was Mel, who grew the marijuana, toting an Uzi. Every so often she lifted her head above the back of a truck, an easy target. A tempting target as well, bearing in mind that she’d snitched on me that I was hiding a stranger in my cabin. But life’s short anyway. I allowed the crosshairs of the telescopic sight to slide over one target after another. I counted six heads I could get a clear shot at. And even though I’d lied about the number of marksmen we had I knew we could leave a couple of our people here who’d turn this side of town into sniper’s alley. Lifting the rifle a little, I could even get a clear shot of the main street. I could pick off townsfolk as they went to the mall or the courthouse.

I lowered the rifle. The veil of dust was thinning. Gold specks settled on my bare arms. Make this quick, Valdiva, I told myself. They’re going to see you any moment now.

Once more I traced the line of vehicles. When I reached a truck I stopped. Although I couldn’t see him I saw the bullhorn protruding from behind the front fender. Crowther had shielded himself. Even so, the bullhorn poked out like a bird’s tail from behind a bush. I panned the rifle until the crosshairs sat squarely on the bullhorn; then I gently squeezed the trigger.

The sound of the bullet striking the bullhorn was amplified by the thing’s mike into a shriek of feedback. The bullhorn flew out of Crowther’s hand to the ground.

This time a hail of lead came back in our direction, but we were well hidden by the time it did. Once the dirt stopped erupting from the lip of the ditch there was silence again.

When Crowther spoke next it was without the aid of the bullhorn. But to be honest I didn’t recognize the voice. Fear squeezed it into a high squeal.

“Valdiva! OK! You’ve got what you want! But you’ve got to promise that you won’t come back here.” The voice rose even higher. “Do you hear that, Valdiva?”

I smiled at Ben. I could picture Crowther all sweaty and scared and still rubbing his tingling fingers from when the rifle bullet had smashed the bullhorn from his hand.

“Valdiva! Did you hear me!”

“Yes, I heard. Remember, I want three hundred pounds of dynamite. Detonators. Fuse wire.”

“Valdiva, you asked for two hundred.”

“The price just went up.”

“OK, you bastard, you’ve got it.”

“Leave it outside the gate. Two people in an army Jeep will collect it. Don’t harm them… otherwise I’ll sit out here and pick you all off one by one. Right?”

“OK! OK! Give us half an hour.”

Ben smiled and held out his hand. “You’re the miracle man.”

Smiling, I slapped his palm. “It was easier than I thought.”

“That’s because you scared them good and hard, old buddy.”

My smile turned grim. “I had help from other quarters.”

“Oh?”

I rubbed my stomach as it spasmed. “Ben, they’re scared because they’re in the early stages of infection.”

His eyes went wide.

“That’s right, old buddy; Sullivan’s lousy with Jumpy. They just don’t know it yet.”

With Ben staring at me like I’d just punched him, I began to make my way back along the ditch to where Michaela waited with the others.

Forty-seven

“How long do you give them?” Michaela asked from the passenger seat as we drove away from Sullivan.

“A few days before the symptoms become obvious.” I shifted the gearshift. “Then they’ll cull the ones they know are infected. Only the ones doing the killing will be infected themselves.”

She pushed her hair back from her eyes. “So why aren’t we infected?”

I shrugged. “Natural immunity.”

“I wish you could be so sure.”

“You’ve been exposed to the bug enough, and you haven’t been infected yet. Those people back in Sullivan managed by sheer chance to avoid contamination for so long because they were isolated from the rest of the

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