roiling clouds above. The two men, two women and their host were all caught in the blinding explosion that followed.

Two miles away on the side of a talus-strewn hill, Gibson winced as the beams of light connected, a bright golden beam from the shiner on the ground, and the Hubal’s brilliant red beam that raced down from above to meet it.

Gibson rubbed his eyes after the explosion that followed. Damn it. What had lured them this time? Chocolate? Fresh fruit? Coca Cola?

They kept falling for it — the promise of something long thought gone, ever since the sky had come alive. Ever since the Hubal came.

How many had been caught this time?

Gibson carefully picked his way down the slope, the explosion a ghost on his retinas.

At first it was the large gatherings, but lately it had been groups of six, seven, eight — sometimes as few as four. The Hubal were afraid of groups. An individual couldn’t do much against them, but if enough got together, if they had time to think and plan and devise — that’s what they were afraid of. That’s what they destroyed.

Gibson finished descending the hill and started toward the freshly burned area. The surrounding landscape was a patchwork of flora and ash — rough circles where the Hubal had attacked scattered amidst rich farmland gone fallow. Stands of trees stood here and there to mark what used to be property lines and windbreaks. The cities in the distance were no more.

Gibson spotted the girl lying on her stomach drinking from a languid creek. Her clothes were too large, and a pair of men’s shoes hung ridiculously loose on her feet. Gibson cleared his throat. The girl froze. “You should boil it first,” Gibson said.

The girl pushed herself up, turned and sat to face him, crossing her legs in front of her. “It’s good water here,” she said.

“There’s no such thing.”

She wiped the back of her sleeve across her mouth.

“You alone?” Gibson noticed that her hand hid something on the ground next to her. “Hey, I’m not going to hurt you.”

“Go away,” the girl said, picking up the thing beneath her hand and clutching it in front of her; a stainless steel butter knife. “Please?”

Gibson held up his hands. “Okay. Just passing through.” He started to circle, giving her a wide berth.

The fear on the girl’s face turned to a frown. “Wait.” She stood, brushing dead grass and dirt off her clothes and reached into her shirt. She pulled out a small square and held it out.

Gibson stopped and regarded her carefully. Finally, he took the square — a photograph.

“Mom and Dad,” the girl said. “You seen ’em?”

Gibson studied it. A thirty-something couple smiled at the camera, the sun glimmering off a small lake behind them.

“Nope,” Gibson said. “Sorry.”

“Probably dead,” the girl said.

“Maybe. Maybe not.” He handed her back the picture. “But probably.”

She tucked the photo back into her shirt and put a hand on her belly.

Now Gibson saw how it protruded, despite the oversized clothes. “How far along?” he asked.

She looked to be only fourteen or fifteen. Sixteen at most. She didn’t answer.

“There are shiners around here,” Gibson said.

The girl said, “I saw the lights.”

Gibson’s own daughter would’ve been fourteen by now. “Why not tag along with me for a bit?” he said. “Just the two of us should be okay.”

She patted her belly and smiled shyly. “There’s three of us, though, aren’t there?”

“What’s your name?” Gibson asked.

“Julia.”

“Like the Beatles’ song.”

Julia shrugged. “Mom said I was named after an aunt. Didn’t mention any song.”

“I’m Gibson. Named after the guitar.”

“Why would someone name a kid after a guitar?”

Gibson chuckled. “I like the name.”

“Better than my boyfriend’s name; Tabor.”

Gibson nodded at her belly. “The father?”

“No.”

“What happened to him?”

“The first wave took him out.”

“Sorry to hear.”

She shrugged. “He wasn’t all that great.”

He led Julia through the fresh burn. They stepped carefully around the charred bones and tree stumps rising stubbornly from the smoldering ash. The frame of an old school bus, burned and twisted almost beyond recognition except for the letters ISTRI on a miraculously untouched orange spot of painted metal, smoked with heat. Maybe a year ago, Gibson would have avoided the area; protect the girl from the horror strewn about. But now he figured she should see this. Smell the burned flesh and bone, experience the dead silence within the rough ashen circle.

He asked again, “When are you due?”

She stopped. A gentle dusting of ash rose from the ground and danced around her. “It’s not like I can see a doctor.” She looked hopefully at Gibson. “You’re not a doctor, are you?”

“An accountant,” he said.

Julia looked down. “You go on,” she said. “I shouldn’t be with you.” She put a hand to her chest and coughed. She dropped to her knees, retching, producing only a thin line of pink drool.

“Ouch,” she moaned.

Gibson held out his hand. After a moment, she took it and stood, brushing the ash off her knees. She nodded at the ground. “It’s still hot. But it’ll make good soil someday.”

“Come on,” Gibson said.

“We shouldn’t be together.”

“Just the two of us. That’s okay. They won’t bother just the two of us.”

“Promise you’re not a shiner?”

“What kind of alien would name themselves after a guitar?” He winked. “We need to trust each other. At least for a while. Can you do that?”

She rubbed her hand lightly over her belly. “I’ll try.” Then she smiled. “She likes your voice. Whenever you talk, she kicks.”

“You know it’s a girl?”

“I just want a girl, that’s all. Wishful thinking.”

They walked. Gibson wanted to keep her moving, keep her mind and legs busy while the rest of her body prepared for the delivery. But on the second day, Gibson realized she was the one leading him somewhere — the way she nonchalantly walked slightly ahead, but with a definite purpose and in a definite direction.

“Wait a second,” Gibson said. “Where, exactly, are we headed?”

She cleared her throat. “I know where there are some caves,” she said. “They were on my parents’ land.” She turned away from him. “I was in one of the caves when the first attack came, in a small alcove about thirty feet in. I don’t think anyone had been in there before me for a long time. I found pieces of flint, some broken

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