Fear (Gone 5)
Page 157
“Feed it,” he ordered.
Diana shook her head.
Yeah, Drake thought with a smirk, all the snark has been beaten right out of that girl. Still, he’d have loved to make her beg.... But no. The will of the gaiaphage was clear in his mind. The baby body must be nurtured, protected. That baby now was the gaiaphage. Drake’s god. And he would follow it. He would obey it.
Even though the baby itself was a girl.
That was a shame. It would have been cooler if it was a dude’s body. But okay, what was a body but a tool or a weapon?
Drake gave Diana the baby. Diana closed her eyes, squeezing out a tear.
The baby latched on and nursed.
Now, at irresistible urging from the gaiaphage, Drake went to Penny. She was white as a ghost. She was shivering like she was cold, although it was hot as always down here.
She was lying in a pool of her own blood.
Fine with Drake. She was too full of herself. Way too impressed by her own power. The gaiaphage didn’t need her.
But a voice in his head made him turn around. The baby was sitting up on Diana’s belly. Sitting up. Looking at Drake.
Drake knew nothing about babies, but that wasn’t right. He knew that much. This was definitely not right. Babies still covered with slime weren’t supposed to be sitting up and making eye contact.
Then, to his even greater shock, the baby seemed to be trying to speak. No sounds came out, but he knew without question what the gaiaphage wanted.
“Yeah,” Drake said, annoyed but submissive.
He curled his tentacle arm around Penny. She was small, not hard to carry. So he brought her, shivering and muttering incoherently, to the baby gaiaphage.
Drake set her down and the baby toppled over. It would have been comical in another time and place. The baby’s giant head was too big for the body to support it very well.
So it toppled, but then, with surprising speed, it was on all fours. It crawled the few inches to Penny.
It reached out a pudgy hand and touched the grisly wound.
Penny gasped, a sound that might have been either pain or pleasure.
Drake felt a stab of jealousy, thinking the gaiaphage might give Penny the gift of a whip hand. But no, all it did was to heal the wound.
The baby healed the shotgun-destroyed flesh in seconds.
And then the baby crawled back to her mother and nursed.
Brianna had not expected to return to Justin. But there he was, breathing softly in the pitch-black. And here she was, a mess of cuts and bruises, but alive.
“It’s me, kid,” she said wearily.
“Did you rescue her?”
“No. I didn’t. I couldn’t pull it off. It was a fight I couldn’t win. Not by myself. Besides…” She stopped herself, unwilling to explain about the baby. And about the overwhelming urge to place the baby on the gaiaphage.
“I need to find Sam,” Brianna said. “Which is pretty hard in the dark.”
“Take me, too, okay?”
“Yeah. Of course, little dude, what am I going to do, leave you here?” Actually the thought had occurred to Brianna. She was already slowed to a crawl by the dark. With Justin she’d be moving at whatever it was that was slower than a crawl.
They began feeling their way, inch by bruising inch, toward the mine shaft entrance. In her imagination, with her boundless optimism, Brianna still hoped that when they emerged they would find the world magically restored. Sun shining. Light everywhere.