51

Louis turned, his heart pounding mercilessly.

He turned and found himself staring down the barrel of a double-ought shotgun. The woman clutching it had crazy eyes, messy blond hair. She was dirty, bruised, her shirt was ripped open in the front and he could see most of her left breast quite plainly. But it was those eyes that held him: they were blank, almost unfocused like the eyes of a sleeper.

In a voice that was too calm, too easy, she said, “You just set that pistol on the countertop, mister, and I won’t blow your fucking head off.”

She spoke clearly. Her speech was not garbled or filled with snarling glottals like the regressed ones. He thought she was still human. Yet… her eyes were scary. They made him feel weak, vulnerable, everything inside him running like tepid water.

“Easy,” he said, setting the 9mm down carefully. “I’m not like them. I’m not an animal. I’m still human.”

“No shit? Well, excuse me, fuckhead, if I don’t exactly believe that.”

Louis realized then that she wasn’t crazy, just scared, confused, and more than a little desperate. She would kill if she had to. But he saw that she did not really want to.

He kept his hands in the air. “I’m human and you know it. If you doubted it, you would have shot me. Have you ever seen one of them with a gun?”

She sighed. “I guess not.”

“It’s the regression,” he told her. “A return to the jungle, to the original man, the original woman. They are like our ancestors. They hunt. They kill in packs. They reject anything of our world. I think it might almost be a phobia with them.”

“Listen,” she said, lowering the shotgun, “I don’t have any idea what you’re talking about. But I’m glad I found you. We might be the only two left. I’m Doris Bleer. You?”

“Louis Shears.” He crossed over to the window. Practically dark. “We don’t have time for this. There was a girl with me. In that car out there. I think she wandered off. I have to find her. She’s in shock.”

Doris shook her head. “She didn’t wander off, Louis. They took her. The crazy ones. I saw ‘em from the window in the back room where I was hiding.”

“Then I have to go after them,” he said, grabbing up the 9mm.

“Louis,” the woman said, looking very compassionate for the first time. “I’m sorry about your girl. But you’ll never see her again. Next time you do, she’ll either be dead or she’ll be one of them.”

“You’re fucking crazy,” he said, filled with emotional turmoil that turned within him like a steel screw.

“Wish I was. But I’m not. Neither are you.” She looked at him with those lost eyes. “They rushed in our house. They killed my husband. They… they cut him in two. They took my daughter. I escaped.”

“I’m sorry,” he said.

She shrugged, almost bulky beneath her defensive armor. Nothing could touch her. Not now. Not with what she’d seen. “An hour ago… before I hid out here… a pack of them chased me. My daughter was running with them. My own fucking daughter, Louis. She had a knife in each hand. She was hunting me. Do you understand? She was hunting her own mother!”

Louis bled for her, but there was only so much blood in him. Right now his blood was reserved for Macy and Michelle. “I’m going out. I’m going to get her back.”

Louis scrambled over to the door and something let out a sharp, piercing ring. His cellphone. He fumbled it from his pocket.

“Hello?” he said, his voice tinny and weak. “H-hello?”

There was breathing on the other end, deep and drawn-out.

“Who is this?” he said. “Who the fuck is this?”

There was a muted giggling on the other end and then a voice. “Hello, hello, hello.”

An echo.

Michelle.

But not Michelle.

This was an imitation of Michelle’s voice. Flat where it should have been bright; hollow where it should have been full; scraping where it should have been smooth and silky. Like a recording slowed down or sped up. A synthetic voice, a deranged voice. Some insane woman had borrowed Michelle’s voice and this was the blasphemy she was doing with it.

“Michelle?” he said. “Baby? Baby? Is that you?”

More breathing. The sound of a tongue licking lips. “Hello.”

“Michelle, please—”

The line went dead.

And Louis went dead with it…

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