Fear (Gone 5)
Page 149
“I haven’t tortured anyone, Caine. I haven’t turned anyone over to some psycho girl who’ll drive them insane.”
Caine sagged a little at that. He looked away. “Yeah, well… You pretty much had me beat, Quinn. Albert was already thinking about how he’d get rid of me, not whether.”
“Albert had his escape plans ready.”
Caine’s eyes glinted in the firelight. “We’ll see. I liked that island. Never should have left. Diana told me not to. There are other boats. Just maybe I’ll pay old Albert a visit one of these days.”
“You should do that,” Quinn said. He was remembering the sight of those tiny eyes like beans in the blackened sockets of Cigar’s head. Let Caine go after the island. It might be good to see whether those missiles Albert claimed to have would work.
But Caine seemed already to have lost interest in Quinn’s anger. “More likely we’re all dead soon,” he said.
“Yeah,” Quinn agreed.
“I would have liked to see Diana again. No baby now.”
“Are you relieved?” Lana asked harshly.
Caine thought it over for so long it seemed he’d forgotten the question. Then at last, “No. Just kind of sad.”
THIRTY-THREE
5 HOURS, 12 MINUTES
WAS THAT LIGHT?
Astrid opened her eyes wide. Stared.
Yes. An orange glow. A fire.
A fire!
“Cigar, I think I see town. I think I see a fire.”
“I see it, too. Like devils dancing!”
They walked forward eagerly. Astrid registered the fact that the ground beneath her boots was no longer flat and hard and occasionally interrupted by some unnamed weed, but had become bumpier, dry clods of dirt that tripped her as they rose and formed rows and from those rows rose neatly ordered plants.
What she noticed was the light.
And then Cigar’s screams.
But Cigar screamed a lot, so Astrid kept walking and ignored his mad shrieks that something was in his feet.
Then it all came together and Astrid knew. She felt something pushing at the leather of her boot.
“Zekes!” she cried, and stumbled back, fell down, jumped u
p like the ground was electrified, crawled, stood, ran back, back until the ground was hard and flat again.
She fumbled in the dark, fingers searching for and then finding the whipping worm, its head already through the leather and touching her flesh, and she got her hands around it even though it fought, and she pulled at it with all her strength and it came free and whipped around, quick as a cobra, and sank its nasty, tooth-ringed mouth into her arm, but she had the tail and yelled, “No! No!” and then it was away from her.
She had thrown it. Somewhere.
Cigar cried pitiably.
And then, so much more terrible, laughed and laughed in the dark.
Astrid with shaking hands grabbed the shotgun and fired it once.