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"Peter, we can't stay here!"YCznovelsGo

He shook off his torpor at the sound of Alicia's voice. Beside him, Theo appeared frozen in place, the barrel of his gun pointed uselessly at the ground, his face slack, eyes wide and impassive: What's the use?YCznovelsGo

"Theo, listen to me," Alicia said, shaking him roughly by the arm; for a moment Peter thought she was actually about to strike him. The virals at the base of the steps had begun to stir. A collective twitch passed through them, like wind rippling the surface of a pool of water. "We have to go, right now."YCznovelsGo

Theo shifted his gaze toward Peter. "Oh, brother," he said. "I think we're f**ked."YCznovelsGo

"Peter," Alicia pleaded, "help me."YCznovelsGo

They each took him by an arm; by the time they were halfway across the lot, Theo was running on his own. The feeling of unreality was gone now, replaced by one desire only: to get away, to escape. They rounded the corner of the filling station to see Caleb, on his horse, barreling away. They mounted their horses and kicked to a gallop, tearing after him across the hardpan. In their wake, Peter could hear more explosions of glass. Alicia was pointing, yelling over the wind: the mall. That's where Caleb was headed. At full speed they tore up a ridge of crested sand and down into the empty lot in time to see Caleb leaping from his horse by the building's west entrance. He slapped its hindquarters and darted through the opening while his horse raced away.YCznovelsGo

"Inside!" Alicia yelled. She was in command now; Theo said nothing. "Go, leave the horses!"YCznovelsGo

The animals were bait, an offering. There was no chance to say goodbye; they dismounted and dashed inside. The best place, Peter knew, would be the atrium. The glass roof had been torn away, there was sunlight and cover, they could make some kind of defense. Down the darkened hall they ran. The air was heavy and sour, the walls bulging with mold, exposing rusted beams, dangling wires, encrusted pipes. Most of the stores were shuttered but others stood open like amazed faces, their dim interiors clogged with debris. Peter could see Caleb running up ahead, fat beams of golden daylight falling down.YCznovelsGo

They emerged into the atrium, into sun so bright they blinked against it. The room was like a forest. Nearly every surface was choked with fat green vines; in the center a stand of palms reached toward the open ceiling. More vines dripped from the exposed struts of the ceiling, like coils of living rope. They took cover behind a barricade of overturned tables at the base of the trees. Caleb was nowhere to be seen.YCznovelsGo

Peter looked at his brother, crouched beside him. "Are you okay?"YCznovelsGo

Theo nodded uncertainly. They were all breathing hard. "I'm sorry. About back there. I just ... " He shook his head. "I don't know." He wiped the sweat from his eyes. "I'll take the left. Stay with Lish." He skittered away.YCznovelsGo

Kneeling beside him, Lish checked the load on her rifle and pulled the bolt. Four hallways met the atrium: the attack, if it came, would come from the west.YCznovelsGo

"Do you think the sun got them?" Peter asked.YCznovelsGo

"I don't know, Peter. They seemed pretty mad. Maybe some but not all." She wrapped the rifle's sling tightly around her forearm. "I need you to promise me something," she said. "I won't be one of them. If it comes to that, I need you to take care of it."YCznovelsGo

"Flyers, Lish. It won't. Don't even say it."YCznovelsGo

"I'm saying if it does." Her voice was firm. "Don't hesitate."YCznovelsGo

There was no more time for words; they heard footsteps racing toward them. Caleb careened into the atrium, clutching an object to his chest. As he dove behind the tables, Peter saw what he was holding. A black shoe box.YCznovelsGo

"I don't believe it," Alicia said. "You went scavenging?"YCznovelsGo

Caleb lifted the lid and tossed it aside. A pair of bright yellow sneakers, still wrapped in paper. He kicked off Zander's boots and shoved his feet into them.YCznovelsGo

"Shit," he said, wearing a crestfallen frown, "they're way too big. They're not even close."YCznovelsGo

And then the first viral fell, a blur of movement first above and then behind them, dropping through the atrium roof; Peter rolled in time to see Theo being lifted up, tossed toward the ceiling, his rifle dangling where the sling had tangled in his arm, his hands and feet scrabbling at space. A second viral, hanging upside down from one of the ceiling struts, snatched Peter's brother by the ankle as if he weighed nothing at all. Theo's body was fully inverted now; Peter saw the look on his brother's face, an expression of pure astonishment. He'd made no sound at all. His rifle fell away, spinning to the floor below. Then the viral flung Peter's brother through the open roof and he was gone.YCznovelsGo

Peter scrambled to his feet, his finger finding the trigger. He heard a voice, his voice, calling his brother's name, and the sound of Alicia firing. Three virals were on the ceiling now, launching from strut to strut. Peter detected, at the periphery of his vision, Alicia shoving Caleb up and over the counter of a restaurant on the far side of the atrium. Peter fired at last, fired again. But the virals were too fast; always the spot where he aimed was empty. It seemed to Peter as if they were playing a kind of game, trying to trick them into expending their ammunition. Since when do they do that? he thought, and wondered when he'd heard these words before.YCznovelsGo

As the first one let go, Peter saw, in his mind's eye, the fatal dimension of its arc. Alicia was standing with her back to the counter now. The viral descended straight for her, arms outstretched, legs bent to absorb the impact, a being of teeth and claws and smoothly muscled power. In the instant before it landed, Alicia stepped forward, positioning herself directly under it, holding the rifle away from her body, like a blade.YCznovelsGo

She fired.YCznovelsGo

A mist of red, a confusion of bodies tumbling, the rifle clattering away. In the time it took Peter to realize that Alicia was not dead, she was on her feet again. The viral lay where he'd come to rest, the back of his head cratered with blood. She'd shot it through the mouth. Above them, the other two had come to an abrupt halt, stiffening, teeth flashing, their heads swiveling toward Alicia as if pulled by a single string.YCznovelsGo

"Get out of here!" she called, and vaulted over the counter. "Just run!"YCznovelsGo

He did. He ran.YCznovelsGo

He was deep inside the mall now. There seemed to be no way out. All the exits were barricaded, blocked by mountains of debris: furniture, shopping carts, dumpsters full of trash.YCznovelsGo

And Theo, his brother, was gone.YCznovelsGo

His only option was to hide. He tore down a hall of shuttered storefronts, yanking upward at their grates, but none would open; all were locked tight. Through the fog of his panic, a single question emerged: Why wasn't he dead yet? He had fled from the atrium not expecting to make it more than ten steps. A flash of pain and it would all be over. At least a full minute had passed before he'd realized the virals weren't pursuing him.YCznovelsGo

Because they were busy, he thought. He had to clutch one of the grates just to keep standing. He dug his fingers between the slats and pressed his forehead against the metal, fighting for breath. His friends were dead. That was the only explanation. Theo was dead, Caleb was dead, Alicia was dead. And when the virals were done, when they had drunk their fill, they'd be coming for him.YCznovelsGo

Hunting him.YCznovelsGo

He ran. Down one hall and into another, tearing past shuttered storefront after shuttered storefront. He wasn't even bothering with the grates now; his mind was seized with one thought: to get outside, onto open ground. Daylight ahead, and a feeling of openness: he turned a corner and emerged, skidding on the tiles, into a wide, domelike space. A second atrium. The area was clear of debris. Sunshine descended in smoky shafts from a ring of windows, high above.YCznovelsGo

In the center of the room, standing motionless, was a herd of tiny horses.YCznovelsGo

They were grouped in a tight circle beneath some kind of freestanding shelter. Peter froze, expecting them to scatter. How had a herd of horses gotten into the mall? He stepped cautiously forward. Now it was obvious: the horses weren't real. A carousel. Peter had seen a picture of one, in a book in the Sanctuary. The base would turn and music would play, and children would ride the horses around and around. He stepped onto the decking; a heavy layer of dust encased them, dulling their features. He squared his shoulders to one of the animals and brushed the grime away, revealing the bright colors beneath, the precisely painted-on details: the lashes of its eyes, the grooves of its teeth, the long slope of its nose and the flaring nostrils.YCznovelsGo

He felt it then, a sudden awareness at his extremities, like a touch of cold metal. He startled, lifting his face.YCznovelsGo

Standing before him was a girl.YCznovelsGo

A Walker.YCznovelsGo

He couldn't have said how old she was. Thirteen? Sixteen? Her hair was long and dark, and thick with mats; she was wearing a pair of threadbare gaps cut off at the ankles and a T-shirt stiff with dirt, all of it too large on her boyish frame. Her pants were cinched to her waist with a length of electric cord; on her feet she wore a pair of sandals with plastic daisies poking between the toes.YCznovelsGo

Before Peter could speak, she raised a finger to her lips: Don't speak. She moved briskly toward the center of the platform and turned to wave him on, to tell him to come with her.YCznovelsGo

He heard them then. A skittering in the hall, the rattle of metal grates on the shuttered storefronts.YCznovelsGo

The virals were coming. Searching. Hunting.YCznovelsGo

The girl's eyes were very wide. Hurry, her eyes said. She took his hand and pulled him to the center of the platform. There she dropped to her knees and dug at a metal ring in the floor. A trapdoor, flush with the wooden decking. She climbed inside so that only her face was showing.YCznovelsGo

Quickly, quickly.YCznovelsGo

Peter followed her down the hole and sealed the trapdoor above him. They were under the carousel now, in some kind of crawl space. Angled blades of light, spangled with dust motes, fell through the slats of the decking over their heads, revealing a dark bulk of machinery and, on the floor beside it, a rumpled bedroll. Plastic bottles of water and tins of food stacked in rows, their paper labels long since worn away. Did she live here?YCznovelsGo

The decking shuddered. The girl had dropped to her knees. A shadow moved across them. She was showing him what to do.YCznovelsGo

Lie down. Be still.YCznovelsGo

He did as she asked. Then she climbed on top of him, onto his back. He could feel the heat of her body, the warmth of her breath on his neck. She was covering his body with her own. The virals were all over the carousel now. He could feel their minds searching, probing, hear the soft clicking in their throats. How long before they discovered the trapdoor?YCznovelsGo

Don't move. Don't breathe.YCznovelsGo

He closed his eyes tightly, willing himself into absolute stillness, waiting for the sound of the door being ripped off its hinges. The rifle was on the floor beside him. He might get off a shot or two, but that would be all.YCznovelsGo

Seconds passed. More shudders above, the sharp, excited breathing of virals with human scent in their nostrils. Tasting the blood in the air. But something was wrong; he sensed their uncertainty. The girl was pressing down upon him. Screening him, protecting him. Silence from above; had the virals gone? A minute moved by, and then another. His sense of expectation shifted from the virals to what the girl would do next. At last she climbed off him. He rose to his knees. Their faces were just inches apart. The soft curve of her cheek was like a child's, but her eyes were not, not at all. He could smell her breath; there was something sweet to it, like honey.YCznovelsGo

"How did you-"YCznovelsGo

She shook her head sharply to silence him, pointing to the ceiling, then pressed her fingers to her lips again.YCznovelsGo

They're gone. But they'll be back.YCznovelsGo

She rose to her feet and opened the trapdoor. A quick turn of the head to show him her meaning.YCznovelsGo

Follow me. Do it now.YCznovelsGo

They emerged onto the decking of the carousel. The room was empty, but he could feel the virals' departed presence, the air swirling in unseen eddies around the places they had stood. Moving quickly, the girl led him to a door across the atrium. It was propped open, held in place with a wedge of concrete. They stepped inside and she let the door close behind them, sealing them inside; he heard the click of a lock.YCznovelsGo

Blackness.YCznovelsGo

A new panic gripped him, a feeling of complete disorientation. But then he felt her taking his hand. Her grip was tight, meant to reassure; she pulled him farther in.YCznovelsGo

I have you. It's all right.YCznovelsGo

He tried to count his steps, but it was useless. He could feel in her grip that she wanted him to go faster, that his uncertainty was holding them back. He stumbled on something in his path and the rifle fell away, lost in the darkness.YCznovelsGo

"Wait-"YCznovelsGo

A wang from behind, and the groan of bending metal. The virals had found them. Ahead he detected a glow of daylight; his surroundings began to emerge to his vision. They were in a long, high-ceilinged hallway; slims were shoved against the walls, a chorus of grinning skeletons, their limbs contorted in what seemed to be postures of warning. Another crash from behind; the door was failing, caving in on its hinges. The hallway ended at another door, which stood open. A stairwell. From high above came a glow of yellow daylight, and the sound and smell of pigeons. On the wall was a sign: ROOF ACCESS.YCznovelsGo

He turned. The girl was still standing in the hallway, just outside the stairwell door. Their eyes met briefly, hauntingly. Before another second passed, the girl stepped forward and, rising on her toes, pressed her closed mouth-a bird pecking water-against his face.YCznovelsGo

Just that: she kissed him on the cheek.YCznovelsGo

Peter was too stunned to speak. The girl backed away, into the dark hall. Go now, her eyes said.YCznovelsGo

Then she closed the door.YCznovelsGo

"Hey!" He heard the click of the lock. He gripped the handle, but it was immovable. He pounded on the sealed metal. "Hey! Don't leave me!"YCznovelsGo

But the girl was gone, a departed spirit. He saw the sign again: ROOF ACCESS. That's where she wanted him to go.YCznovelsGo

He began to climb. The air was roasting, nearly asphyxiating with the gas of pigeon. Long streaks of guano smeared the walls, encrusting the stairs and banister like layers of paint. The birds seemed to take scant notice of him, fluttering here and there as he made his ascent, as if his presence were no more than a curiosity. Three flights, four; he was panting with exertion, the taste in his mouth and nose was excruciating in its foulness, his eyes stung as if splashed by acid.