The fifth wave pdf free online

The fifth wave pdf free online

The 5th Wave

The Fifth Wave (Series)

Book 1

Rick Yancey Author (2013)

The fifth wave pdf free online

The Infinite Sea

The Fifth Wave (Series)

Book 2

Rick Yancey Author (2014)

The fifth wave pdf free online

The Last Star

The Fifth Wave (Series)

Book 3

Rick Yancey Author Phoebe Strole Narrator (2016)

The fifth wave pdf free online

The Last Star

The Fifth Wave (Series)

Book 3

Rick Yancey Author (2016)

The fifth wave pdf free online

After the 1st wave, only darkness remains. After the 2nd, only the lucky escape. And after the 3rd, only the unlucky survive. After the 4th wave, only one rule applies: trust no one.

Now, it's the dawn of the 5th wave, and on a lonely stretch of highway, Cassie runs from Them. The beings who only look human, who roam the countryside killing anyone they see. Who have scattered Earth's last survivors. To stay alone is to stay alive, Cassie believes, until she meets Evan Walker. Beguiling and mysterious, Evan Walker may be Cassie's only hope for rescuing her brother--or even saving herself. But Cassie must choose: between trust and despair, between defiance and surrender, between life and death. To give up or to get up.

This dissertation thesis describes a research inquiry that took place at a large Midwestern University, in the Fall semester of 2009, is comprised of three case studies, and attempts to respond to the question: “How do prospective teachers perceive, think about, and respond to the instructionally relevant variation of their students”. Instructionally Relevant Variation (IRV) is conceptually related to notions of pedagogy, characteristics of students and the mediating spaces between students and teachers, and indicates a set of qualities, or markers, that is fluid and all encompassing. IRV is used to represent competencies and circumstances that impact teaching and learning, while allowing for overlap and gradation. IRV stands for, not only those qualities that are innate or long-term, but also circumstances that may be punctual, or of short-duration (including the child’s relationship with their teacher), and that either provide affordances or prevent learning from occurring if a teacher- lead action does not take place. This study is based on the premise that Three Problems of Practice promote particular ways of seeing and doing which compel teachers to see narrow categories of children. Thus, Preservice teachers that are prepared in programs that are steeped within narrow notions of Multicultural Education, conceptualizations of professionalization based on expertise areas, and induction practices guided by silent binaries, might have restricted perceptions of children, and ii have difficulty identifying IRVs that fall outside of the purview of their pre-conceived professional lens and, in turn, have restricted ways of seeing and doing which result into unresolved tensions when attempting to plan and instruct ALL students. This investigation is based upon three case-studies, and follows three pre-service teachers in their first semester of the internship year. The participants were followed throughout 14 weeks, both in a graduate course on Literacy and in their internship placements, and while they planned and instructed students within the context of a literacy unit. All the work produced by the participants during the semester was gathered and analyzed, and further augmented with informal conversations, semi-structured interviews, and on-site observations. Because this is an investigation that delves into discursive practice and discourse-in-practice, an interpretative analysis method (Holstein, J.A., & Gubrium, F.F., 2011) was used to analyze the context and transcripts of all oral interactions.

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THE 5 WAVE 



THE 5 WAVE 



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Rick Yancey 



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ALWAYS LEARNING PEARSON 



For Sandy, 
whose dreams inspire 
and whose love endures 



IF ALIENS EVER VISIT US, I think the outcome 
would be much as when Christopher Columbus 
first landed in America, which didn't turn out 
very well for the Native Americans. 



— Stephen Hawking 



1 st WAVE: Lights Out 

THE 2 nd WAVE: Surfs up 

THE 3 rd WAVE: Pestilence 
THE 4 th WAVE: Silencer 



INTRUSION: 1995 



THERE WILL BE NO AWAKENING. 

The sleeping woman will feel nothing the next morning, only 
a vague sense of unease and the unshakable feeling that someone 
is watching her. Her anxiety will fade in less than a day and will 
soon be forgotten. 

The memory of the dream will linger a little longer. 

In her dream, a large owl perches outside the window, staring 
at her through the glass with huge, white-rimmed eyes. 

She will not awaken. Neither will her husband beside her. The 
shadow falling over them will not disturb their sleep. And what 
the shadow has come for — the baby within the sleeping woman — 
will feel nothing. The intrusion breaks no skin, violates not a single 
cell of her or the baby's body. 

It is over in less than a minute. The shadow withdraws. 

Now it is only the man, the woman, the baby inside her, and 
the intruder inside the baby, sleeping. 

The woman and man will awaken in the morning, the baby a 
few months later when he is born. 

The intruder inside him will sleep on and not wake for several 
years, when the unease of the child's mother and the memory of 
that dream have long since faded. 

Five years later, at a visit to the zoo with her child, the woman 
will see an owl identical to the one in the dream. Seeing the owl is 
unsettling for reasons she cannot understand. 

She is not the first to dream of owls in the dark. 

She will not be the last. 



XIII 



ALIENS ARE STUPID. 

I'm not talking about real aliens. The Others aren't stupid. The 
Others are so far ahead of us, it's like comparing the dumbest 
human to the smartest dog. No contest. 

No, I'm talking about the aliens inside our own heads. 

The ones we made up, the ones we've been making up since we 
realized those glittering lights in the sky were suns like ours and 
probably had planets like ours spinning around them. You know, 
the aliens we imagine, the kind of aliens we'd like to attack us, 
human aliens. You've seen them a million times. They swoop down 
from the sky in their flying saucers to level New York and Tokyo 
and London, or they march across the countryside in huge ma- 
chines that look like mechanical spiders, ray guns blasting away, 
and always, always, humanity sets aside its differences and bands 
together to defeat the alien horde. David slays Goliath, and every- 
body (except Goliath) goes home happy. 

What crap. 

It's like a cockroach working up a plan to defeat the shoe on 
its way down to crush it. 

There's no way to know for sure, but I bet the Others knew 
about the human aliens we'd imagined. And I bet they thought it 
was funny as hell. They must have laughed their asses off. If they 
have a sense of humor ... or asses. They must have laughed the 
way we laugh when a dog does something totally cute and dorky. 



1 



Oh, those cute, dorky humans! They think we think like they do! 
Isn't that adorable? 

Forget about flying saucers and little green men and giant 
mechanical spiders spitting out death rays. Forget about epic battles 
with tanks and fighter jets and the final victory of us scrappy, un- 
broken, intrepid humans over the bug-eyed swarm. That's about 
as far from the truth as their dying planet was from our living one. 

The truth is, once they found us, we were toast. 



1 

SOMETIMES I THINK I might be the last human on Earth. 

Which means I'm the last human in the universe. 

I know that's dumb. They can't have killed everyone . . . yet. 
I see how it could happen, though, eventually. And then I think 
that's exactly what the Others want me to see. 

Remember the dinosaurs? Well. 

So I'm probably not the last human on Earth, but I'm one of 
the last. Totally alone — and likely to stay that way — until the 4th 
Wave rolls over me and carries me down. 

That's one of my night thoughts. You know, the three-in-the- 
morning, oh-my-God-I'm-screwed thoughts. When I curl into a 
little ball, so scared I can't close my eyes, drowning in fear so 
intense I have to remind myself to breathe, will my heart to keep 
beating. When my brain checks out and begins to skip like a 
scratched CD. Alone, alone, alone, Cassie, you're alone. 



2 



That's my name. Cassie. 

Not Cassie for Cassandra. Or Cassie for Cassidy. Cassie for 
Cassiopeia, the constellation, the queen tied to her chair in the 
northern sky, who was beautiful but vain, placed in the heavens 
by the sea god Poseidon as a punishment for her boasting. In 
Greek, her name means "she whose words excel." 

My parents didn't know the first thing about that myth. They 
just thought the name was pretty. 

Even when there were people around to call me anything, no 
one ever called me Cassiopeia. Just my father, and only when he 
was teasing me, and always in a very bad Italian accent: Cass-ee- 
ob-PEE-a. It drove me crazy. I didn't think he was funny or cute, 
and it made me hate my own name. "I'm Cassie!" I'd holler at 
him. "Just Cassie!" Now I'd give anything to hear him say it just 
one more time. 

When I was turning twelve — four years before the Arrival — my 
father gave me a telescope for my birthday. On a crisp, clear fall eve- 
ning, he set it up in the backyard and showed me the constellation. 

"See how it looks like a W?" he asked. 

"Why did they name it Cassiopeia if it's shaped like a W?" I 
replied. "W for what?" 

"Well ... I don't know that it's for anything," he answered 
with a smile. Mom always told him it was his best feature, so 
he trotted it out a lot, especially after he started going bald. You 
know, to drag the other person's eyes downward. "So, it's for any- 
thing you like! How about wonderful? Or winsome? Or wise?" 
He dropped his hand on my shoulder as I squinted through the 
lens at the five stars burning over fifty light-years from the spot on 
which we stood. I could feel my father's breath against my cheek, 



3 



warm and moist in the cool, dry autumn air. His breath so close, 
the stars of Cassiopeia so very far away. 

The stars seem a lot closer now. Closer than the three hundred 
trillion miles that separate us. Close enough to touch, for me to 
touch them, for them to touch me. They're as close to me as his 
breath had been. 

That sounds crazy. Am I crazy? Have I lost my mind? You can 
only call someone crazy if there's someone else who's normal. 
Like good and evil. If everything was good, then nothing would 
be good. 

Whoa. That sounds, well . . . crazy. 
Crazy: the new normal. 

I guess I could call myself crazy, since there is one other person 
I can compare myself to: me. Not the me I am now, shivering in a 
tent deep in the woods, too afraid to even poke her head from the 
sleeping bag. Not this Cassie. No, I'm talking about the Cassie I 
was before the Arrival, before the Others parked their alien butts 
in high orbit. The twelve-year-old me, whose biggest problems 
were the spray of tiny freckles on her nose and the curly hair she 
couldn't do anything with and the cute boy who saw her every 
day and had no clue she existed. The Cassie who was coming to 
terms with the painful fact that she was just okay. Okay in looks. 
Okay in school. Okay at sports like karate and soccer. Basically 
the only unique things about her were the weird name — Cassie for 
Cassiopeia, which nobody knew about, anyway — and her ability 
to touch her nose with the tip of her tongue, a skill that quickly 
lost its impressiveness by the time she hit middle school. 

I'm probably crazy by that Cassie's standards. 

And she sure is crazy by mine. I scream at her sometimes, that 



4 



twelve-year-old Cassie, moping over her hair or her weird name 
or at being just okay. "What are you doing?" I yell. "Don't you 
know what's coming?" 

But that isn't fair. The fact is she didn't know, had no way of 
knowing, and that was her blessing and why I miss her so much, 
more than anyone, if I'm being honest. When I cry — when I let 
myself cry — that's who I cry for. I don't cry for myself. I cry for 
the Cassie that's gone. 

And I wonder what that Cassie would think of me. 

The Cassie who kills. 



3 

HE COULDN'T HAVE BEEN much older than me. Eighteen. 
Maybe nineteen. But hell, he could have been seven hundred and 
nineteen for all I know. Five months into it and I'm still not sure if 
the 4th Wave is human or some kind of hybrid or even the Others 
themselves, though I don't like to think that the Others look just 
like us and talk just like us and bleed just like us. I like to think of 
the Others as being . . . well, other. 

I was on my weekly foray for water. There's a stream not far 
from my campsite, but I'm worried it might be contaminated, 
either from chemicals or sewage or maybe a body or two upstream. 
Or poisoned. Depriving us of clean water would be an excellent 
way to wipe us out quickly. 

So once a week I shoulder my trusty Ml 6 and hike out of 



5 



the forest to the interstate. Two miles south, just off Exit 175, 
there're a couple of gas stations with convenience stores 
attached. I load up as much bottled water as I can carry, which 
isn't a lot because water is heavy, and get back to the highway 
and the relative safety of the trees as quickly as I can, before 
night falls completely. Dusk is the best time to travel. I've never 
seen a drone at dusk. Three or four during the day and a lot 
more at night, but never at dusk. 

From the moment I slipped through the gas station's shattered 
front door, I knew something was different. I didn't see anything 
different — the store looked exactly like it had a week earlier, the 
same graffiti-scrawled walls, overturned shelves, floor strewn with 
empty boxes and caked-in rat feces, the busted-open cash registers 
and looted beer coolers. It was the same disgusting, stinking mess 
I'd waded through every week for the past month to get to the 
storage area behind the refrigerated display cases. Why people 
grabbed the beer and soda, the cash from the registers and safe, 
the rolls of lottery tickets, but left the two pallets of drinking 
water was beyond me. What were they thinking? It s an alien 
apocalypse! Quick, grab the beer! 

The same disaster of spoilage, the same stench of rats and rot- 
ted food, the same fitful swirl of dust in the murky light push- 
ing through the smudged windows, every out-of-place thing in its 
place, undisturbed. 

Still. 

Something was different. 

I was standing in the little pool of broken glass just inside the 
doorway. I didn't see it. I didn't hear it. I didn't smell or feel it. 
But I knew it. 



6 



Something was different. 

It's been a long time since humans were prey animals. A hun- 
dred thousand years or so. But buried deep in our genes the 
memory remains: the awareness of the gazelle, the instinct of the 
antelope. The wind whispers through the grass. A shadow flits 
between the trees. And up speaks the little voice that goes, Shhhh, 
it's close now. Close. 

I don't remember swinging the Ml 6 from my shoulder. One 
minute it was hanging behind my back, the next it was in my 
hands, muzzle down, safety off. 

Close. 

I'd never fired it at anything bigger than a rabbit, and that 
was a kind of experiment, to see if I could actually use the thing 
without blowing off one of my own body parts. Once I shot 
over the heads of a pack of feral dogs that had gotten a little 
too interested in my campsite. Another time nearly straight up, 
sighting the tiny, glowering speck of greenish light that was their 
mothership sliding silently across the backdrop of the Milky 
Way. Okay, I admit that was stupid. I might as well have erected 
a billboard with a big arrow pointing at my head and the words 

YOO-HOO, HERE I AM! 

After the rabbit experiment — it blew that poor damn bunny 
apart, turning Peter into this unrecognizable mass of shredded 
guts and bone — I gave up the idea of using the rifle to hunt. I 
didn't even do target practice. In the silence that had slammed 
down after the 4th Wave struck, the report of the rounds sounded 
louder than an atomic blast. 

Still, I considered the M16 my bestest of besties. Always by 
my side, even at night, burrowed into my sleeping bag with me, 



7 



faithful and true. In the 4th Wave, you can't trust that people are 
still people. But you can trust that your gun is still your gun. 

Shhh, Cassie. It's close. 

Close. 

I should have bailed. That little voice had my back. That little 
voice is older than I am. It's older than the oldest person who 
ever lived. 

I should have listened to that voice. 

Instead, I listened to the silence of the abandoned store, lis- 
tened hard. Something was close. I took a tiny step away from the 
door, and the broken glass crunched ever so softly under my foot. 

And then the Something made a noise, somewhere between a 
cough and a moan. It came from the back room, behind the cool- 
ers, where my water was. 

That's the moment when I didn't need a little old voice to tell 
me what to do. It was obvious, a no-brainer. Run. 

But I didn't run. 

The first rule of surviving the 4th Wave is don't trust anyone. 
It doesn't matter what they look like. The Others are very smart 
about that — okay, they're smart about everything. It doesn't mat- 
ter if they look the right way and say the right things and act ex- 
actly like you expect them to act. Didn't my father's death prove 
that? Even if the stranger is a little old lady sweeter than your 
Great-aunt Tilly, hugging a helpless kitten, you can't know for cer- 
tain — you can never know — that she isn't one of them, and that 
there isn't a loaded .45 behind that kitten. 

It isn't unthinkable. And the more you think about it, the more 
thinkable it becomes. Little old lady has to go. 

That's the hard part, the part that, if I thought about it too much, 



8 



would make me crawl into my sleeping bag, zip myself up, and die 
of slow starvation. If you can't trust anyone, then you can trust no 
one. Better to take the chance that Aunty Tilly is one of them than 
play the odds that you've stumbled across a fellow survivor. 
That's friggin' diabolical. 

It tears us apart. It makes us that much easier to hunt down 
and eradicate. The 4th Wave forces us into solitude, where there's 
no strength in numbers, where we slowly go crazy from the isola- 
tion and fear and terrible anticipation of the inevitable. 

So I didn't run. I couldn't. Whether it was one of them or an 
Aunt Tilly, I had to defend my turf. The only way to stay alive is 
to stay alone. That's rule number two. 

I followed the sobbing coughs or coughing sobs or whatever 
you want to call them till I reached the door that opened to the 
back room. Hardly breathing, on the balls of my feet. 

The door was ajar, the space just wide enough for me to slip 
through sideways. A metal rack on the wall directly in front of me 
and, to the right, the long narrow hallway that ran the length of 
the coolers. There were no windows back here. The only light was 
the sickly orange of the dying day behind me, still bright enough 
to hurl my shadow onto the sticky floor. I crouched down; my 
shadow crouched with me. 

I couldn't see around the edge of the cooler into the hall. But I 
could hear whoever — or whatever — it was at the far end, cough- 
ing, moaning, and that gurgling sob. 

Either hurt badly or acting hurt badly, I thought. Either needs 
help or it's a trap. 

This is what life on Earth has become since the Arrival. It's an 
either/or world. 



9 



Either it's one of them and it knows you're here or it's not one 
of them and he needs your help. 

Either way, I had to get up and turn that corner. 
So I got up. 

And I turned the corner. 



4 

HE LAY SPRAWLED against the back wall twenty feet away, 
long legs spread out in front of him, clutching his stomach with 
one hand. He was wearing fatigues and black boots and he was 
covered in grime and shimmering with blood. There was blood 
everywhere. On the wall behind him. Pooling on the cold concrete 
beneath him. Coating his uniform. Matted in his hair. The blood 
glittered darkly, black as tar in the semidarkness. 

In his other hand was a gun, and that gun was pointed at my 
head. 

I mirrored him. His handgun to my rifle. Fingers flexing on the 
triggers: his, mine. 

It didn't prove anything, his pointing a gun at me. Maybe he 
really was a wounded soldier and thought I was one of them. 

Or maybe not. 

"Drop your weapon," he sputtered at me. 
Like hell. 

"Drop your weapon!" he shouted, or tried to shout. The words 
came out all cracked and crumbly, beaten up by the blood rising 



10 



from his gut. Blood dribbled over his bottom lip and hung quiver- 
ing from his stubbly chin. His teeth shone with blood. 

I shook my head. My back was to the light, and I prayed he 
couldn't see how badly I was shaking or the fear in my eyes. This 
wasn't some damn rabbit that was stupid enough to hop into my 
camp one sunny morning. This was a person. Or, if it wasn't, it 
looked just like one. 

The thing about killing is you don't know if you can actually 
do it until you actually do it. 

He said it a third time, not as loud as the second. It came out 
like a plea. 

"Drop your weapon." 

The hand holding his gun twitched. The muzzle dipped toward 
the floor. Not much, but my eyes had adjusted to the light by this 
point, and I saw a speck of blood run down the barrel. 

And then he dropped the gun. 

It fell between his legs with a sharp cling. He brought up his 
empty hand and held it, palm outward, over his shoulder. 

"Okay," he said with a bloody half smile. "Your turn." 

I shook my head. "Other hand," I said. I hoped my voice 
sounded stronger than I felt. My knees had begun to shake and 
my arms ached and my head was spinning. I was also fighting the 
urge to hurl. You don't know if you can do it until you do it. 

"I can't," he said. 

"Other hand." 

"If I move this hand, I'm afraid my stomach will fall out." 

I adjusted the butt of the rifle against my shoulder. I was sweat- 
ing, shaking, trying to think. Either/or, Cassie. What are you going 
to do, either/or? 



11 



"I'm dying," he said matter-of-factly. From this distance, his 
eyes were just pinpricks of reflected light. "So you can either finish 
me off or help me. I know you're human — " 

"How do you know?" I asked quickly, before he could die on 
me. If he was a real soldier, he might know how to tell the differ- 
ence. It would be an extremely useful bit of information. 

"Because if you weren't, you would have shot me already." He 
smiled again, his cheeks dimpled, and that's when it hit me how 
young he was. Only a couple years older than me. 

"See?" he said softly. "That's how you know, too." 

"How I know what?" My eyes were tearing up. His crumpled- 
up body wiggled in my vision like an image in a fun-house mirror. 
But I didn't dare release my grip on the rifle to rub my eyes. 

"That I'm human. If I wasn't, I would have shot you." 

That made sense. Or did it make sense because I wanted it to 
make sense? Maybe he dropped the gun to get me to drop mine, 
and once I did, the second gun he was hiding under his fatigues 
would come out and the bullet would say hello to my brain. 

This is what the Others have done to us. You can't band together 
to fight without trust. And without trust, there was no hope. 

How do you rid the Earth of humans? Rid the humans of their 
humanity. 

"I have to see your other hand," I said. 

"I told you—" 

"I have to see your other hand!" My voice cracked then. 
Couldn't help it. 

He lost it. "Then you're just going to have to shoot me, bitch! 
Just shoot me and get it over with!" 

His head fell back against the wall, his mouth came open, and 
a terrible howl of anguish tumbled out and bounced from wall 



12 



to wall and floor to ceiling and pounded against my ears. I didn't 
know if he was screaming from the pain or the realization that I 
wasn't going to save him. He had given in to hope, and that will 
kill you. It kills you before you die. Long before you die. 

"If I show you," he gasped, rocking back and forth against the 
bloody concrete, "if I show you, will you help me?" 

I didn't answer. I didn't answer because I didn't have an an- 
swer. I was playing this one nanosecond at a time. 

So he decided for me. He wasn't going to let them win, that's 
what I think now. He wasn't going to stop hoping. If it killed him, 
at least he would die with a sliver of his humanity intact. 

Grimacing, he slowly pulled out his left hand. Not much day 
left now, hardly any light at all, and what light there was seemed 
to be flowing away from its source, from him, past me and out 
the half-open door. 

His hand was caked in half-dried blood. It looked like he was 
wearing a crimson glove. 

The stunted light kissed his bloody hand and flicked along 
the length of something long and thin and metallic, and my fin- 
ger yanked back on the trigger, and the rifle kicked against my 
shoulder hard, and the barrel bucked in my hand as I emptied the 
clip, and from a great distance I heard someone screaming, but it 
wasn't him screaming, it was me screaming, me and everybody 
else who was left, if there was anybody left, all of us helpless, 
hopeless, stupid humans screaming, because we got it wrong, we 
got it all wrong, there was no alien swarm descending from the 
sky in their flying saucers or big metal walkers like something out 
of Star Wars or cute little wrinkly E.T.s who just wanted to pluck 
a couple of leaves, eat some Reese's Pieces, and go home. That's 
not how it ends. 



13 



That's not how it ends at all. 

It ends with us killing each other behind rows of empty beer 
coolers in the dying light of a late-summer day. 

I went up to him before the last of the light was gone. Not to 
see if he was dead. I knew he was dead. I wanted to see what he 
was still holding in his bloody hand. 

It was a crucifix. 



5 

THAT WAS THE LAST PERSON I've seen. 

The leaves are falling heavy now, and the nights have turned 
cold. I can't stay in these woods. No leaves for cover from the 
drones, can't risk a campflre — I gotta get out of here. 

I know where I have to go. I've known for a long time. I made 
a promise. The kind of promise you don't break because, if you 
break it, you've broken part of yourself, maybe the most impor- 
tant part. 

But you tell yourself things. Things like, J need to come up with 
something first. I can't just walk into the lion's den without a plan. 
Or, It's hopeless, there's no point anymore. You've waited too long. 

Whatever the reason I didn't leave before, I should have left 
the night I killed him. I don't know how he was wounded; I didn't 
examine his body or anything, and I should have, no matter how 
freaked out I was. I guess he could have gotten hurt in an accident, 
but the odds were better that someone — or something — had shot 
him. And if someone or something had shot him, that someone or 



14 



something was still out there . . . unless the Crucifix Soldier had 
offed her/him/them/it. Or he was one of them and the crucifix was 
a trick . . . 

Another way the Others mess with your head: the uncertain 
circumstances of your certain destruction. Maybe that will be the 
5th Wave, attacking us from the inside, turning our own minds 
into weapons. 

Maybe the last human being on Earth won't die of starvation 
or exposure or as a meal for wild animals. 

Maybe the last one to die will be killed by the last one alive. 

Okay, that's not someplace you want to go, Cassie. 

Honestly, even though it's suicide to stay here and I have a 
promise to keep, I don't want to leave. These woods have been 
home for a long time. I know every path, every tree, every vine 
and bush. I lived in the same house for sixteen years and I can't 
tell you exactly what my backyard looked like, but I can describe 
in detail every leaf and twig in this stretch of forest. I have no clue 
what's out there beyond these woods and the two-mile stretch of 
interstate I hike every week to forage for supplies. I'm guessing 
a lot more of the same: abandoned towns reeking of sewage and 
rotting corpses, burned-out shells of houses, feral dogs and cats, 
pileups that stretch for miles on the highway. And bodies. Lots 
and lots of bodies. 

I pack up. This tent has been my home for a long time, but it's 
too bulky and I need to travel light. Just the essentials, with the 
Luger, the Ml 6, the ammo, and my trusty bowie knife topping the 
list. Sleeping bag, first aid kit, five bottles of water, three boxes of 
Slim Jims, and some tins of sardines. I hated sardines before the 
Arrival. Now I've developed a real taste for them. First thing I 
look for when I hit a grocery store? Sardines. 



15 



Books? They're heavy and take up room in my already bulging 
backpack. But I have a thing about books. So did my father. Our 
house was stacked floor to ceiling with every book he could find 
after the 3rd Wave took out more than 3.5 billion people. While 
the rest of us scrounged for potable water and food and stocked 
up on the weaponry for the last stand we were sure was coming, 
Daddy was out with my little brother's Radio Flyer carting home 
the books. 

The mind-blowing numbers didn't faze him. The fact that we'd 
gone from seven billion strong to a couple hundred thousand in four 
months didn't shake his confidence that our race would survive. 

"We have to think about the future," he insisted. "When this 
is over, we'll have to rebuild nearly every aspect of civilization." 

Solar flashlight. 

Toothbrush and paste. I'm determined, when the time comes, 
to at least go out with clean teeth. 

Gloves. Two pairs of socks, underwear, travel-size box of Tide, 
deodorant, and shampoo. (Gonna go out clean. See above.) 

Tampons. I'm constantly worrying about my stash and if I'll be 
able to find more. 

My plastic baggie stuffed with pictures. Dad. Mom. My little 
brother, Sammy. My grandparents. Lizbeth, my best friend. One 
of Ben You-Were-Some-Kind-of-Serious-Gorgeous Parish, clipped 
from my yearbook, because Ben was my future boyfriend and/or/ 
maybe future husband — not that he knew it. He barely knew I 
existed. I knew some of the same people he knew, but I was a girl 
in the background, several degrees of separation removed. The 
only thing wrong with Ben was his height: He was six inches taller 
than me. Well, make that two things now: his height and the fact 
that he's dead. 



16 



My cell phone. It was fried in the 1st Wave, and there's no way 
to charge it. Cell towers don't work, and there's no one to call if 
they did. But, you know, it's my cell phone. 

Nail clippers. 

Matches. I don't light fires, but at some point I may need to 
burn something or blow it up. 

Two spiral-bound notebooks, college ruled, one with a purple 
cover, the other red. My favorite colors, plus they're my journals. 
It's part of the hope thing. But if I am the last and there's no one left 
to read them, maybe an alien will and they'll know exactly what I 
think of them. In case you're an alien and you're reading this: 

BITE ME. 

My Starburst, already culled of the orange. Three packs of 
Wrigley's Spearmint. My last two Tootsie Pops. 
Mom's wedding ring. 

Sammy's ratty old teddy bear. Not that it's mine now. Not that 
I ever cuddle with it or anything. 

That's everything I can stuff into the backpack. Weird. Seems 
like too much and not enough. 

Still room for a couple of paperbacks, barely. Huckleberry Finn 
or The Grapes of Wrath} The poems of Sylvia Plath or Sammy's 
Shel Silverstein? Probably not a good idea to take the Plath. De- 
pressing. Silverstein is for kids, but it still makes me smile. I decide 
to take Huckleberry (seems appropriate) and Where the Sidewalk 
Ends. See you there soon, Shel. Climb aboard, Jim. 

I heave the backpack over one shoulder, sling the rifle over 
the other, and head down the trail toward the highway. I don't 
look back. 

I pause inside the last line of trees. A twenty-foot embankment 
runs down to the southbound lanes, littered with disabled cars, 



17 



piles of clothing, shredded plastic garbage bags, the burned-out 
hulks of tractor trailers carrying everything from gasoline to milk. 
There are wrecks everywhere, some no worse than fender bend- 
ers, some pileups that snake along the interstate for miles, and the 
morning sunlight sparkles on all the broken glass. 

There are no bodies. These cars have been here since the 1st 
Wave, long abandoned by their owners. 

Not many people died in the 1st Wave, the massive electromag- 
netic pulse that ripped through the atmosphere at precisely eleven 
A.M. on the tenth day. Only around half a million, Dad guessed. 
Okay, half a million sounds like a lot of people, but really it's just 
a drop in the population bucket. World War II killed over a hun- 
dred times that number. 

And we did have some time to prepare for it, though we weren't 
exactly sure what we were preparing for. Ten days from the first 
satellite pictures of the mothership passing Mars to the launch of 
the 1st Wave. Ten days of mayhem. Martial law, sit-ins at the UN, 
parades, rooftop parties, endless Internet chatter, and 24/7 coverage 
of the Arrival over every medium. The president addressed the na- 
tion — and then disappeared into his bunker. The Security Council 
went into a locked-down, closed-to-the-press emergency session. 

A lot of people just split, like our neighbors, the Majewskis. 
Packed up their camper on the afternoon of the sixth day with 
everything they could fit and hit the road, joining a mass exodus 
to somewhere else, because anywhere else seemed safer for some 
reason. Thousands of people took off for the mountains ... or the 
desert ... or the swamps. You know, somewhere else. 

The Majewskis' somewhere else was Disney World. They 
weren't the only ones. Disney set attendance records during those 
ten days before the EMP strike. 



18 



Daddy asked Mr. Majewski, "So why Disney World?" 
And Mr. Majewski said, "Well, the kids have never been." 
His kids were both in college. 

Catherine, who had come home from her freshman year at 
Baylor the day before, asked, "Where are you guys going?" 

"Nowhere," I said. And I didn't want to go anywhere. I was 
still living in denial, pretending all this crazy alien stuff would 
work out, I didn't know how, maybe with the signing of some 
intergalactic peace treaty. Or maybe they'd dropped by to take a 
couple of soil samples and go home. Or maybe they were here on 
vacation, like the Majewskis going to Disney World. 

"You need to get out," she said. "They'll hit the cities first." 

"You're probably right," I said. "They'd never dream of taking 
out the Magic Kingdom." 

"How would you rather die?" she snapped. "Hiding under 
your bed or riding Thunder Mountain?" 

Good question. 

Daddy said the world was dividing into two camps: runners 
and nesters. Runners headed for the hills — or Thunder Mountain. 
Nesters boarded up the windows, stocked up on the canned goods 
and ammunition, and kept the TV tuned to CNN 24/7. 

There were no messages from our galactic party crashers dur- 
ing those first ten days. No light shows. No landing on the South 
Lawn or bug-eyed, butt-headed dudes in silver jumpsuits demand- 
ing to be taken to our leader. No bright, spinning tops blaring the 
universal language of music. And no answer when we sent our 
message. Something like, "Hello, welcome to Earth. Hope you en- 
joy your stay. Please don't kill us." 

Nobody knew what to do. We figured the government sort of 
did. The government had a plan for everything, so we assumed 



19 



they had a plan for E.T. showing up uninvited and unannounced, 
like the weird cousin nobody in the family likes to talk about. 

Some people nested. Some people ran. Some got married. Some 
got divorced. Some made babies. Some killed themselves. We 
walked around like zombies, blank-faced and robotic, unable to 
absorb the magnitude of what was happening. 

It's hard to believe now, but my family, like the vast majority 
of people, went about our daily lives as if the most monumentally 
mind-blowing thing in human history wasn't happening right over 
our heads. Mom and Dad went to work, Sammy went to day care, 
and I went to school and soccer practice. It was so normal, it was 
damn weird. By the end of Day One, everybody over the age of two 
had seen the mothership up close a thousand times, this big grayish- 
green glowing hulk about the size of Manhattan circling 250 miles 
above the Earth. NASA announced its plan to pull a space shuttle 
out of mothballs to attempt contact. 

Well, that's good, we thought. This silence is deafening. Why 
did they come billions of miles just to stare at us? It's rude. 

On Day Three, I went out with a guy named Mitchell Phelps. 
Well, technically we went outside. The date was in my backyard 
because of the curfew. He hit the drive-through at Starbucks on 
his way over, and we sat on the back patio sipping our drinks 
and pretending we didn't see Dad's shadow passing back and 
forth as he paced the living room. Mitchell had moved into town 
a few days before the Arrival. He sat behind me in World Lit, 
and I made the mistake of loaning him my highlighter. So the 
next thing I know he's asking me out, because if a girl loans 
you a highlighter she must think you're hot. I don't know why 
I went out with him. He wasn't that cute and he wasn't that 



20 



interesting beyond the whole New Kid aura, and he definitely 
wasn't Ben Parish. Nobody was — except Ben Parish — and that 
was the whole problem. 

By the third day, you either talked about the Others all the time or 
you tried not to talk about them at all. I fell into the second category. 

Mitchell was in the first. 

"What if they're us?" he asked. 

It didn't take long after the Arrival for all the conspiracy nuts 
to start buzzing about classified government projects or the secret 
plan to manufacture an alien crisis in order to take away our lib- 
erties. I thought that's where he was going and groaned. 

"What?" he said. "I don't mean us us. I mean, what if they're 
us from the future?" 

"And it's like The Terminator, right?" I said, rolling my eyes. 
"They've come to stop the uprising of the machines. Or maybe 
they are the machines. Maybe it's Skynet." 

"I don't think so," he said, acting like I was serious. "It's the 
grandfather paradox." 

"What is? And what the hell is the grandfather paradox?" He 
said it like he assumed I knew what the grandfather paradox was, 
because, if I didn't know, then I was a moron. I hate when people 
do that. 

"They — I mean we — can't go back in time and change any- 
thing. If you went back in time and killed your grandfather before 
you were born, then you wouldn't be able to go back in time to 
kill your grandfather." 

"Why would you want to kill your grandfather?" I twisted 
the straw in my strawberry Frappuccino to produce that unique 
straw-in-a-lid squeak. 



21 



"The point is that just showing up changes history," he said. 
Like I was the one who brought up time travel. 
"Do we have to talk about this?" 

"What else is there to talk about?" His eyebrows climbed to- 
ward his hairline. Mitchell had very bushy eyebrows. It was one 
of the first things I noticed about him. He also chewed his finger- 
nails. That was the second thing I noticed. Cuticle care can tell 
you a lot about a person. 

I pulled out my phone and texted Lizbeth: 

help me 

"Are you scared?" he asked. Trying to get my attention. Or for 
some reassurance. He was looking at me very intently. 

I shook my head. "Just bored." A lie. Of course I was scared. 
I knew I was being mean, but I couldn't help it. For some reason 
I can't explain, I was mad at him. Maybe I was really mad at my- 
self for saying yes to a date with a guy I wasn't actually interested 
in. Or maybe I was mad at him for not being Ben Parish, which 
wasn't his fault. But still. 

help u do wat? 

"I don't care what we talk about," he said. He was looking 
toward the rose bed, swirling the dregs of his coffee, his knee pop- 
ping up and down so violently under the table that my cup jiggled. 

mitchell. I didn't think I needed to say any more. 

"Who are you texting?" 

told u not to go out w him 

"Nobody you know," I said, dont know why i did 

"We can go somewhere else," he said. "You want to go to a movie?" 

"There's a curfew," I reminded him. No one was allowed on 
the streets after nine except military and emergency vehicles. 

lol to make ben jealous 



22 



"Are you pissed or something?" 
"No," I said. "I told you what I was." 

He pursed his lips in frustration. He didn't know what to say. 

"I was just trying to figure out who they might be," he said. 

"You and everybody else on the planet," I said. "Nobody actu- 
ally knows, and they won't tell us, so everybody sits around guess- 
ing and theorizing, and it's all kind of pointless. Maybe they're 
spacefaring micemen from Planet Cheese and they've come for 
our provolone." 

bp doesnt know i exist 

"You know," he said, "it's kind of rude, texting while I'm try- 
ing to have a conversation with you." 

He was right. I slipped the phone into my pocket. What's hap- 
pening to me? I wondered. The old Cassie never would have done 
that. Already the Others were changing me into someone differ- 
ent, but I wanted to pretend nothing had changed, especially me. 

"Did you hear?" he asked, going right back to the topic that I 
said bored me. "They're building a landing site." 

I had heard. In Death Valley. That's right: Death Valley. 

"Personally, I don't think it's a very smart idea," he said. "Roll- 
ing out the welcome mat." 

"Why not?" 

"It's been three days. Three days and they've refused all con- 
tact. If they're friendly, why wouldn't they say hello already?" 

"Maybe they're just shy." Twisting my hair around my finger, 
tugging on it gently to produce that semipleasant pain. 

"Like being the new kid," he said, the new kid. 

That can't be easy, being the new kid. I felt like I should apologize 
for being rude. "I was kind of mean before," I admitted. "I'm sorry." 

He gave me a confused look. He was talking about the aliens, 



23 



not himself, and then I said something about me, which was about 
neither. 

"It's okay," he said. "I heard you don't date much." 
Ouch. 

"What else did you hear?" One of those questions you don't 
want to know the answer to, but still have to ask. 

He sipped his latte through the little hole in the plastic lid. 

"Not much. It's not like I asked around." 

"You asked somebody and they told you I didn't date much." 

"I just said I was thinking about asking you out and they go, 
Cassie's pretty cool. And I said, what's she like? And they said you 
were nice but don't get my hopes up because you had this thing 
for Ben Parish — " 

"They told you that? Who told you that?" 

He shrugged. "I don't remember her name." 

"Was it Lizbeth Morgan?" I'll kill her. 

"I don't know her name," he said. 

"What did she look like?" 

"Long brown hair. Glasses. I think her name is Carly or 
something." 

"I don't know any . . ." 

Oh God. Some Carly person I don't even know knows about 
me and Ben Parish — or the lack of any me and Ben Parish. And if 
Carly-or-something knew about it, then everybody knew about it. 

"Well, they're wrong," I sputtered. "I don't have a thing for 
Ben Parish." 

"It doesn't matter to me." 

"It matters to me." 

"Maybe this isn't working out," he said. "Everything I say, you 
either get bored or mad." 



24 



"I'm not mad," I said angrily. 
"Okay, I'm wrong." 

No, he was right. And I was wrong for not telling him the 
Cassie he knew wasn't the Cassie I used to be, the pre-Arrival 
Cassie who wouldn't have been mean to a mosquito. I wasn't 
ready to admit the truth: It wasn't just the world that had changed 
with the coming of the Others. We changed. I changed. The mo- 
ment the mothership appeared, I started down a path that would 
end in the back of a convenience store behind some empty beer 
coolers. That night with Mitchell was only the beginning of my 
evolution. 

Mitchell was right about the Others not stopping by just to 
say howdy. On the eve of the 1st Wave, the world's leading 
theoretical physicist, one of the smartest guys in the world (that's 
what popped up on the screen under his talking head: ONE OF THE 
smartest guys in the world), appeared on CNN and said, "I'm 
not encouraged by the silence. I can think of no benign reason 
for it. I'm afraid we may expect something closer to Christopher 
Columbus's arrival in the Americas than a scene from Close En- 
counters, and we all know how that turned out for the Native 
Americans." 

I turned to my father and said, "We should nuke 'em." I had 
to raise my voice to be heard over the TV — Dad always jacked 
up the volume during the news so he could hear it over Mom's 
TV in the kitchen. She liked to watch TLC while she cooked. I 
called it the War of the Remotes. 

"Cassie!" He was so shocked, his toes began to curl inside his 
white athletic socks. He grew up on Close Encounters and E.T. 
and Star Trek and totally bought into the idea that the Others had 
come to liberate us from ourselves. No more hunger. No more 



25 



wars. The eradication of disease. The secrets of the cosmos un- 
veiled. "Don't you understand this could be the next step in our 
evolution? A huge leap forward. Huge." He gave me a consoling 
hug. "We're all very fortunate to be here to see it." 

Then he added casually, like he was talking about how to fix 
a toaster, "Besides, a nuclear device can't do much damage in the 
vacuum of space. There's nothing to carry the shock wave." 

"So this brainiac on TV is just full of shit?" 

"Don't use that language, Cassie," he chided me. "He's entitled 
to his opinion, but that's all it is. An opinion." 

"But what if he's right? What if that thing up there is their ver- 
sion of a Death Star?" 

"Travel halfway across the universe just to blow us up?" He 
patted my leg and smiled. Mom turned up the kitchen TV. He 
pushed the volume in the family room to twenty-seven. 

"Okay, but what about an intergalactic Mongol horde, like he 
was talking about?" I demanded. "Maybe they've come to con- 
quer us, shove us into reservations, enslave us . . ." 

"Cassie," he said. "Simply because something could happen 
doesn't mean it will happen. Anyway, it's all just speculation. This 
guy's. Mine. Nobody knows why they're here. Isn't it just as likely 
they've come all this way to save us?" 

Four months after saying those words, my father was dead. 

He was wrong about the Others. And I was wrong. And One 
of the Smartest Guys in the World was wrong. 

It wasn't about saving us. And it wasn't about enslaving us or 
herding us into reservations. 

It was about killing us. 

All of us. 



26 



I DEBATED WHETHER to travel by day or night for a long 
time. Darkness is best if you're worried about them. But daylight 
is preferable if you want to spot a drone before it spots you. 

The drones showed up at the tag end of the 3rd Wave. Cigar- 
shaped, dull gray in color, gliding swiftly and silently thousands 
of feet up. Sometimes they streak across the sky without stopping. 
Sometimes they circle overhead like buzzards. They can turn on a 
dime and come to a sudden stop, from Mach 2 to zero in less than 
a second. That's how we knew the drones weren't ours. 

We knew they were unmanned (or un-Othered) because one 
of them crashed a couple miles from our refugee camp. A tbu- 
whump! when it broke the sound barrier, an ear-piercing shriek as 
it rocketed to earth, the ground shuddering under our feet when 
it plowed into a fallow cornfield. A recon team hiked to the crash 
site to check it out. Okay, it wasn't really a team, just Dad and 
Hutchfield, the guy in charge of the camp. They came back to re- 
port the thing was empty. Were they sure? Maybe the pilot bailed 
before impact. Dad said it was packed with instruments; there 
wasn't any room for a pilot. "Unless they're two inches tall." That 
got a big laugh. Somehow it made the horror less horrible, think- 
ing of the Others as being two-inch Borrower types. 

I opted to travel by day. I could keep one eye on the sky and 
another on the ground. What I ended up doing is rocking my head 
up and down, up and down, side to side, then up again, like some 
groupie at a rock concert, until I was dizzy and a little sick to my 
stomach. 



27 



Plus there are other things at night to worry about besides 
drones. Wild dogs, coyotes, bears, and wolves coming down from 
Canada, maybe even an escaped lion or tiger from a zoo. I know, 
I know, there's a Wizard of Oz joke buried in there. Shoot me. 

And though it wouldn't be much better, I do think I'd have a 
better chance against one of them in the daylight. Or even against 
one of my own, if I'm not the last one. What if I stumble onto 
another survivor who decides the best course of action is to go all 
Crucifix Soldier on anyone they come across? 

That brings up the problem of my best course of action. Do I 
shoot on sight? Do I wait for them to make the first move and risk 
it being a deadly one? I wonder, not for the first time, why the hell 
we didn't come up with some kind of code or secret handshake or 
something before they showed up — something that would iden- 
tify us as the good guys. We had no way of knowing they would 
show up, but we were pretty sure something would sooner or 
later. 

It's hard to plan for what comes next when what comes next is 
not something you planned for. 

Try to spot them first, I decided. Take cover. No showdowns. 
No more Crucifix Soldiers! 

The day is bright and windless but cold. The sky cloudless. 
Walking along, bobbing my head up and down, swinging it from 
side to side, backpack popping against one shoulder blade, the 
rifle against the other, walking on the outside edge of the median 
that separates the southbound from the northbound lanes, stop- 
ping every few strides to whip around and scan the terrain behind 
me. An hour. Two. And I've traveled no more than a mile. 

The creepiest thing, creepier than the abandoned cars and the 
snarl of crumpled metal and the broken glass sparkling in the 



28 



October sunlight, creepier than all the trash and discarded crap 
littering the median, most of it hidden by the knee-high grass so 
the strip of land looks lumpy, covered in boils, the creepiest thing 
is the silence. 

The Hum is gone. 

You remember the Hum. 

Unless you grew up on top of a mountain or lived in a cave 
your whole life, the Hum was always around you. That's what 
life was. It was the sea we swam in. The constant sound of all 
the things we built to make life easy and a little less boring. The 
mechanical song. The electronic symphony. The Hum of all our 
things and all of us. Gone. 

This is the sound of the Earth before we conquered it. 

Sometimes in my tent, late at night, I think I can hear the stars 
scraping against the sky. That's how quiet it is. After a while it's 
almost more than I can stand. I want to scream at the top of my 
lungs. I want to sing, shout, stamp my feet, clap my hands, any- 
thing to declare my presence. My conversation with the soldier 
had been the first words I'd said aloud in weeks. 

The Hum died on the tenth day after the Arrival. I was sitting 
in third period texting Lizbeth the last text I will ever send. I don't 
remember exactly what it said. 

Eleven a.m. A warm, sunny day in early spring. A day for dood- 
ling and dreaming and wishing you were anywhere but Ms. 
Paulson's calculus class. 

The 1st Wave rolled in without much fanfare. It wasn't dra- 
matic. There was no shock and awe. 

The lights just winked out. 

Ms. Paulson's overhead died. 

The screen on my phone went black. 



29 



Somebody in the back of the room squealed. Classic. It doesn't 
matter what time of day it happens — the power goes out, and 
somebody yelps like the building's collapsing. 

Ms. Paulson told us to stay in our seats. That's the other thing 
people do when the power goes out. They jump up to ... To what? 
It's weird. We're so used to electricity, when it's gone, we don't know 
what to do. So we jump up or squeal or start jabbering like idiots. 
We panic. It's like someone cut off our oxygen. The Arrival had 
made it worse, though. Ten days on pins and needles waiting for 
something to happen while nothing is happening makes you jumpy. 

So when they pulled the plug on us, we freaked a little more 
than normal. 

Everybody started talking at once. When I announced that my 
phone had died, out came everyone's dead phone. Neal Croskey, 
who was sitting in the back of the room listening to his iPod while 
Ms. Paulson lectured, pulled the buds from his ears and wondered 
aloud why the music had died. 

The next thing you do when the plug's pulled, after panicking, 
is run to the nearest window. You don't know why exactly. It's 
that better-see-what's-going-on feeling. The world works from the 
outside in. So if the lights go off, you look outside. 

And Ms. Paulson, randomly moving around the mob milling in 
front of the windows: "Quiet! Back to your seats. I'm sure there'll 
be an announcement . . ." 

There was one, about a minute later. Not over the intercom, 
though, and not from Mr. Faulks, the vice principal. It came from 
the sky, from them. In the form of a 727 tumbling end over end 
to the Earth from ten thousand feet until it disappeared behind a 
line of trees and exploded, sending up a fireball that reminded me 
of the mushroom cloud of an atomic blast. 



30 



Hey, Eartblings! Let's get this party started! 

You'd think seeing something like that would send us diving 
under our desks. It didn't. We crowded against the window and 
scanned the cloudless sky for the flying saucer that must have 
taken the plane down. It had to be a flying saucer, right? We knew 
how a top-notch alien invasion was run. Flying saucers zipping 
through the atmosphere, squadrons of F-16s hot on their heels, 
surface-to-air missiles and tracers screaming from the bunkers. In 
an unreal and admittedly sick way, we wanted to see something 
like that. It would make this a perfectly normal alien invasion. 

For a half hour we waited by the windows. Nobody said much. 
Ms. Paulson told us to go back to our seats. We ignored her. Thir- 
ty minutes into the 1st Wave and already social order was break- 
ing down. People kept checking their phones. We couldn't connect 
it: the plane crashing, the lights going out, our phones dying, the 
clock on the wall with the big hand frozen on the twelve, little 
hand on the eleven. 

Then the door flew open and Mr. Faulks told us to head over to 
the gym. I thought that was really smart. Get all of us in one place 
so the aliens didn't have to waste a lot of ammunition. 

So we trooped over to the gym and sat in the bleachers in near 
total darkness while the principal paced back and forth, stopping 
every now and then to yell at us to be quiet and wait for our parents 
to get there. 

What about the students whose cars were at school? Couldn't 
they leave? 

"Your cars won't work." 

WTF? What does he mean, our cars wont work? 
An hour passed. Then two. I sat next to Lizbeth. We didn't talk 
much, and when we did, we whispered. We weren't afraid of the 



31 



principal; we were listening. I'm not sure what we were listening 
for, but it was like that quiet before the clouds open up and the 
thunder smashes down. 

"This could be it," Lizbeth whispered. She rubbed her nose ner- 
vously. Dug her lacquered nails into her dyed blond hair. Tapped 
her foot. Rolled the pad of her finger over her eyelid: She had just 
started wearing contacts and they bugged her constantly. 

"It's definitely something," I whispered back. 

"I mean, this could be it. Like it it. The end." 

She kept slipping the battery out of her phone and putting it 
back in. It was better than doing nothing, I guess. 

She started to cry. I took her phone away and held her hand. 
Looked around. She wasn't the only one crying. Other kids were 
praying. And others were doing both, crying and praying. The teach- 
ers were huddled up by the gym doors, forming a human shield in 
case the creatures from outer space decided to storm the floor. 

"There's so much I wanted to do," Lizbeth said. "I've never 
even . . ." She choked back a sob. "You know." 

"I've got a feeling a lot of 'you know' is going on right now," I 
said. "Probably right underneath these bleachers." 

"You think?" She wiped her cheeks with the palm of her hand. 
"What about you?" 

"About 'you know'?" I had no problem with talking about sex. 
My problem was talking about sex as it related to me. 

"Oh, I know you haven't 'you know.' God! I'm not talking 
about that." 

"I thought we were." 

"I'm talking about our lives, Cassie! Jesus, this could be the end 
of the freakin' world, and all you want to do is talk about sex! " 



32 



She pulled her phone out of my hand and fumbled with the 
battery cover. 

"Which is why you should just tell him," she said, fiddling with 
the drawstrings of her hoodie. 

"Tell who what?" I knew exactly what she meant; I was just 
buying time. 

"Ben! You should tell him how you feel. How you've felt since 
the third grade." 

"This is a joke, right?" I felt my face getting hot. 
"And then you should have sex with him." 
"Lizbeth, shut up." 
"It's the truth." 

"I haven't wanted to have sex with Ben Parish since the third 
grade," I whispered. The third grade? I glanced over at her to see 
if she was really listening. Apparently, she wasn't. 

"If I were you, I'd go right up to him and say, 'I think this is it. 
This is it, and I'll be damned if I'm going to die in this school gym- 
nasium without ever having sex with you.' And then you know 
what I'd do?" 

"What?" I was fighting back a laugh, picturing the look on his face. 
"I'd take him outside to the flower garden and have sex with him." 
"In the flower garden?" 

"Or the locker room." She waved her hand around frantically to 
include the entire school — or maybe the whole world. "It doesn't 
matter where." 

"The locker room smells." I looked two rows down at the out- 
line of Ben Parish's gorgeous head. "That kind of thing only hap- 
pens in the movies," I said. 

"Yeah, totally unrealistic, not like what's happening right now." 



33 



She was right. It was totally unrealistic. Both scenarios, an alien 
invasion of the Earth and a Ben Parish invasion of me. 

"At least you could tell him how you feel," she said, reading 
my mind. 

Could, yes. Ever would, well . . . 

And I never did. That was the last time I saw Ben Parish, sitting 
in that dark, stuffy gymnasium (Home of the Hawks!) two rows 
down from me, and only the back part of him. He probably died 
in the 3rd Wave like almost everybody else, and I never told him 
how I felt. I could have. He knew who I was; he sat behind me in 
a couple of classes. 

He probably doesn't remember, but in middle school we rode 
the same bus, and there was an afternoon when I overheard him 
talking about his little sister being born the day before and I 
turned around and said, "My brother was born last week!" And 
he said, "Really?" Not sarcastic, but like he thought it was a cool 
coincidence, and for about a month I went around thinking we 
had this special connection based on babies. Then we were in high 
school and he became the star wide receiver for the team and I 
became just another girl watching him score from the stands. I 
would see him in class or in the hallway, and sometimes I had to 
fight the urge to run up to him and say, "Hi, I'm Cassie, the girl 
from the bus. Do you remember the babies?" 

The funny thing is, he probably would have. Ben Parish 
couldn't be satisfied with being the most gorgeous guy in school. 
Just to torment me with his perfection, he also insisted on being 
one of the smartest. And have I mentioned he was kind to small 
animals and children? His little sister was on the sidelines at 
every game, and when we took the district title, Ben ran straight to 



34 



the sidelines, hoisted her onto his shoulders, and led the parade 
around the track with her waving to the crowd like a home- 
coming queen. 

Oh, and one more thing: his killer smile. Don't get me started. 

After another hour in the dark and stuffy gym, I saw my dad 
appear in the doorway. He gave a little wave, like he showed up at 
my school every day to take me home after alien attacks. I hugged 
Lizbeth and told her I'd call as soon as the phones started work- 
ing again. I was still practicing pre-invasion thinking. You know, 
the power goes out, but it always comes back on. So I just gave 
her a hug and I don't remember telling her that I loved her. 

We went outside and I said, "Where's the car?" 

And Dad said the car wasn't working. No cars were working. 
The streets were littered with stalled-out cars and buses and 
motorcycles and trucks, smashups and clusters of wrecks on every 
block, cars folded around light poles and sticking out of build- 
ings. A lot of people were trapped when the EMP hit; the auto- 
matic locks on the doors didn't work, and they had to break out 
of their own cars or sit there and wait for someone to rescue them. 
The injured people who could still move crawled onto the road- 
side and sidewalks to wait for the paramedics, but no paramedics 
came because the ambulances and the fire trucks and the cop cars 
didn't work, either. Everything that ran on batteries or electricity 
or had an engine died at eleven a.m. 

Dad walked as he talked, keeping a tight grip on my wrist, like 
he was afraid something might swoop down out of the sky and 
snatch me away. 

"Nothing's working. No electricity, no phones, no plumbing . . ." 

"We saw a plane crash." 



35 



He nodded. "I'm sure they all did. Anything and everything in 
the sky when it hit. Fighter jets, helicopters, troop transports . . ." 
"When what hit?" 

"EMP," he said. "Electromagnetic pulse. Generate one large 
enough and you knock out the entire grid. Power. Communica- 
tions. Transportation. Anything that flies or drives is zapped out." 

It was a mile and a half from my school to our house. The 
longest mile and a half I've ever walked. It felt as if a curtain had 
fallen over everything, a curtain painted to look exactly like what 
it was hiding. There were glimpses, though, little peeks behind the 
curtain that told you something had gone very wrong. Like all the 
people standing on their front porches holding their dead phones, 
looking up at the sky, or bending over the open hoods of their 
cars, fiddling with wires, because that's what you do when your 
car dies — you fiddle with wires. 

"But it's okay," he said, squeezing my wrist. "It's okay. There's 
a good chance our backup systems weren't crippled, and I'm sure 
the government has a contingency plan, protected bases, that sort 
of thing." 

"And how does pulling our plug fit into their plan to help us 
along in the next stage of our evolution, Dad?" 

I regretted the words the instant I said them. But I was freaking 
out. He didn't take it the wrong way. He looked at me and smiled 
reassuringly and said, "Everything's going to be okay," because 
that's what I wanted him to say and it's what he wanted to say 
and that's what you do when the curtain is falling — you give the 
line that the audience wants to hear. 



36 



AROUND NOON on my mission to keep my promise, I stop for 
a water break and a Slim Jim. Every time I eat a Slim Jim or a can 
of sardines or anything prepackaged, I think, Well, there's one less 
of that in the world. Whittling away the evidence of our having 
been here one bite at a time. 

One of these days, I've decided, I'm going to work up the nerve 
to catch a chicken and wring its delicious neck. I would kill for 
a cheeseburger. Honestly. If I stumbled across someone eating a 
cheeseburger, I would kill them for it. 

There are plenty of cows around. I could shoot one and carve 
it up with my bowie knife. I'm pretty sure I'd have no problem 
slaughtering a cow. The hard part would be cooking it. Having 
a fire, even in daylight, was the surest way to invite them to the 
cookout. 

A shadow shoots across the grass a dozen yards in front of me. 
I jerk my head back, knocking it hard against the side of a Honda 
Civic I was leaning against while I enjoyed my snack. It wasn't a 
drone. It was a bird, a seagull of all things, skimming along with 
barely a flick of its outstretched wings. A shiver of revulsion goes 
down my spine. I hate birds. I didn't before the Arrival. I didn't 
after the 1st Wave. I didn't after the 2nd Wave, which really didn't 
affect me that much. 

But after the 3rd Wave, I hated them. It wasn't their fault, I 
knew that. It was like a man in front of a firing squad hating the 
bullets, but I couldn't help it. 

Birds suck. 



37 



AFTER THREE DAYS on the road, I've determined that cars are 
pack animals. 

They prowl in groups. They die in clumps. Clumps of smash- 
ups. Clumps of stalls. They glimmer in the distance like jewels. 
And suddenly the clumps stop. The road is empty for miles. 
There's just me and the asphalt river cutting through a defile of 
half-naked trees, their leaves crinkled and clinging desperately to 
their dark branches. There's the road and the naked sky and the 
tall, brown grass and me. 

These empty stretches are the worst. Cars provide cover. And 
shelter. I sleep in the undamaged ones (I haven't found a locked 
one yet). If you can call it sleep. Stale, stuffy air; you can't crack 
the windows, and leaving the door open is out of the question. 
The gnaw of hunger. And the night thoughts. Alone, alone, alone. 

And the baddest of the bad night thoughts: 

I'm no alien drone designer, but if I were going to make one, 
I'd make sure that its detection device was sensitive enough 
to pick up a body's heat signature through a car roof. It never 
failed: The moment I started to drift off, I imagined all four 
doors flying open and dozens of hands reaching for me, hands 
attached to arms attached to whatever they are. And then I'm 
up, fumbling with my Ml 6, peeking over the backseat, then do- 
ing a 360, feeling trapped and more than a little blind behind the 
fogged-up windows. 

Dawn comes. I wait for the morning fog to burn off, then sip 
some water, brush my teeth, double-check my weapons, inventory 



38 



my supplies, and hit the road again. Look up, look down, look all 
around. Don't pause at the exits. Water's fine for now. No way am 
I going anywhere near a town unless I have to. 
For a lot of reasons. 

You know how you can tell when you're getting close to one? 
The smell. You can smell a town from miles away. 

It smells like smoke. And raw sewage. And death. 

In the city it's hard to take two steps without stumbling over a 
corpse. Funny thing: People die in clumps, too. 

I begin to smell Cincinnati about a mile before spotting the 
exit sign. A thick column of smoke rises lazily toward the cloud- 
less sky. 

Cincinnati is burning. 

I'm not surprised. After the 3rd Wave, the second most com- 
mon thing you found in cities, after the bodies, were fires. A single 
lightning strike could take out ten city blocks. There was no one 
left to put the fires out. 

My eyes start to water. The stench of Cincinnati makes me gag. 
I stop long enough to tie a rag around my mouth and nose and 
then quicken my pace. I pull the rifle off my shoulder and cradle it 
as I quickstep. I have a bad feeling about Cincinnati. The old voice 
inside my head is awake. 

Hurry, Cassie. Hurry. 

And then, somewhere between Exits 17 and 18,1 find the bodies. 



39 



THERE ARE THREE OF THEM, not in a clump like city folk, 
but spaced out in the median strip. The first one is an older guy, 
around my dad's age, I guess. Wearing blue jeans and a Bengals 
warm-up. Facedown, arms outstretched. He was shot in the back 
of the head. 

The second, about a dozen feet away, is a young woman, a 
little older than I am and dressed in a pair of men's pajama pants 
and Victoria's Secret tee. A streak of purple in her short-cropped 
hair. A skull ring on her left index finger. Black nail polish, badly 
chipped. And a bullet hole in the back of her head. 

Another few feet and there's the third. A kid around eleven or 
twelve. Brand-new white basketball high-tops. Black sweatshirt. 
Hard to tell what his face used to look like. 

I leave the kid and go back to the woman. Kneel in the tall 
brown grass beside her. Touch her pale neck. Still warm. 

Oh no. No, no, no. 

I trot back to the first guy. Kneel. Touch the palm of his out- 
stretched hand. Look over at the bloody hole between his ears. 
Shiny. Still wet. 

I freeze. Behind me, the road. In front of me, more road. To my 
right, trees. To my left, more trees. Clumps of cars on the south- 
bound lane, the nearest grouping about a hundred feet away. 
Something tells me to look up. Straight up. 

A fleck of dull gray against the backdrop of dazzling autum- 
nal blue. 

Motionless. 



40 



Hello, Cassie. My name is Mr. Drone. Nice to meet you! 

I stand up, and when I stand up — the moment I stand up; if I 
had stayed frozen there a millisecond longer, Mr. Bengals and I 
would be sporting matching holes — something slams into my leg, 
a hot punch just above my knee that knocks me off balance, send- 
ing me sprawling backward onto my butt. 

I didn't hear the shot. There was the cool wind in the grass and 
my own hot breath under the rag and the blood rushing in my 
ears — that's all there was before the bullet struck. 

Silencer. 

That makes sense. Of course they'd use silencers. And now I 
have the perfect name for them: Silencers. A name that fits the job 
description. 

Something takes over when you're facing death. The front part of 
your brain lets go, gives up control to the oldest part of you, the part 
that takes care of your heartbeat and breathing and the blinking of 
your eyes. The part nature built first to keep your ass alive. The part 
that stretches time like a gigantic piece of toffee, making a second 
seem like an hour and a minute longer than a summer afternoon. 

I lunge forward for my rifle — I had dropped the Ml 6 when the 
round punched home — and the ground in front of me explodes, 
showering me with shredded grass and hunks of dirt and gravel. 

Okay, forget the Ml 6. 

I yank the Luger from my waistband and do a sort of running 
hop — or a hopping run — toward the closest car. There isn't much 
pain — although my guess is that we're going to get very intimate 
later — but I can feel the blood soaking into my jeans by the time I 
reach the car, an older model Buick sedan. 

The rear windshield shatters as I dive down. I scoot on my 
back till I'm all the way under the car. I'm not a big girl by any 



41 



stretch, but it's a tight fit, no room to roll over, no way to turn if 
he shows up on the left side. 
Cornered. 

Smart, Cassie, real smart. Straight As last semester? Honor 
roll? Riiiiiigbt. 

You should have stayed in your little stretch of woods in your 
little tent with your little books and your cute little mementos. At 
least when they came for you, there'd be room to run. 

The minutes spin out. I lie on my back and bleed onto the cold 
concrete. Rolling my head to the right, to the left, raising it a half 
inch to look past my feet toward the back of the car. Where the 
hell is he? What's taking so long? Then it hits me: 

He's using a high-powered sniper rifle. Has to be. Which means 
he could have been over a half mile away when he shot me. 

Which also means I have more time than I first thought. Time 
to come up with something besides a blubbery, desperate, dis- 
jointed prayer. 

Make him go away. Make him be quick. Let me live. Let him 
end it . . . 

Shaking uncontrollably. I'm sweating; I'm freezing cold. 

You're going into shock. Think, Cassie. 

Think. 

It's what we're made for. It's what got us here. It's the reason I 
have this car to hide under. We are human. 

And humans think. They plan. They dream, and then they 
make the dream real. 

Make it real, Cassie. 

Unless he drops down, he won't be able to get to me. And when 
he drops down . . . when he dips his head to look at me . . . when 
he reaches in to grab my ankle and drag me out . . . 



42 



No. He's too smart for that. He's going to assume I'm armed. 
He wouldn't risk it. Not that Silencers care whether they live or 
die ... or do they care? Do Silencers know fear? They don't love 
life — I've seen enough to prove that. But do they love their own 
lives more than they love taking someone else's? 

Time stretches out. A minute's longer than a season. What's 
taking him so damn long? 

It's an either/or world now. Either he's coming to finish it or he 
isn't. But he has to finish it, doesn't he? Isn't that the reason he's 
here? Isn't that the whole friggin' point? 

Either/or: Either I run — or hop or crawl or roll — or I stay un- 
der this car and bleed to death. If I risk escape, it's a turkey shoot. 
I won't make it two feet. If I stay, same result, only more painful, 
more fearful, and much, much slower. 

Black stars blossom and dance in front of my eyes. I can't get 
enough air into my lungs. 

I reach up with my left hand and yank the cloth from my face. 

The cloth. 

Cassie, you're an idiot. 

I set the gun down beside me. That's the hardest part — making 
myself let go of the gun. 

I lift my leg, slide the rag beneath it. I can't lift my head to see 
what I'm doing. I stare past the black, blossoming stars at the grimy 
guts of the Buick as I pull the two ends together, cinch them tight, as 
tight as I can, and fumble with the knot. I reach down and explore 
the wound with my fingertips. It's still bleeding, but a trickle com- 
pared to the bubbling gusher I had before tying off the tourniquet. 

I pick up the gun. Better. My eyesight clears a little, and I don't 
feel quite so cold. I shift a couple of inches to the left; I don't like 
lying in my own blood. 



43 



Where is he? He's had plenty of time to finish this . . . 
Unless be is finished. 

That brings me up short. For a few seconds, I totally forget to 
breathe. 

He's not coming. He's not coming because he doesn't need to 
come. He knows you won't dare come out, and if you don't come 
out and run, you won't make it. He knows you'll starve or bleed 
to death or die of dehydration. 

He knows what you know: Run = die. Stay = die. 

Time for him to move on to the next one. 

If there is a next one. 

If I'm not the last one. 

Come on, Cassie! From seven billion to just one in five months? 
You're not the last, and even if you are the last human being on 
Earth — especially if you are — you can't let it end this way. Trapped 
under a goddamned Buick, bleeding until all the blood is gone — is 
this how humanity waves good-bye? 

Hell no. 




THE 1ST WAVE took out half a million people. 

The 2nd Wave put that number to shame. 

In case you don't know, we live on a restless planet. The conti- 
nents sit on slabs of rock, called tectonic plates, and those plates 
float on a sea of molten lava. They're constantly scraping and rub- 
bing and pushing against one another, creating enormous pressure. 



44 



Over time the pressure builds and builds, until the plates slip, re- 
leasing huge amounts of energy in the form of earthquakes. If one 
of those quakes happens along one of the fault lines that ring every 
continent, the shock wave produces a superwave called a tsunami. 

Over 40 percent of the world's population lives within sixty 
miles of a coastline. That's three billion people. 

All the Others had to do was make it rain. 

Take a metal rod twice as tall as the Empire State Building and 
three times as heavy. Position it over one of these fault lines. Drop 
it from the upper atmosphere. You don't need any propulsion or 
guidance system; just let it fall. Thanks to gravity, by the time it 
reaches the surface, it's traveling twelve miles per second, twenty 
times faster than a speeding bullet. 

It hits the surface with a force one billion times greater than the 
bomb dropped on Hiroshima. 

Bye-bye, New York. Bye, Sydney. Good-bye, California, Wash- 
ington, Oregon, Alaska, British Columbia. So long, Eastern Seaboard. 

Japan, Hong Kong, London, Rome, Rio. 

Nice to know you. Hope you enjoyed your stay! 

The 1st Wave was over in seconds. 

The 2nd Wave lasted a little longer. About a day. 

The 3rd Wave? That took a little longer — twelve weeks. Twelve 
weeks to kill . . . well, Dad figured 97 percent of those of us un- 
lucky enough to have survived the first two waves. 

Ninety-seven percent of four billion? You do the math. 

That's when the Alien Empire descended in their flying saucers 
and started blasting away, right? When the peoples of the Earth 
united under one banner to play David versus Goliath. Our tanks 
against your ray guns. Bring it on! 

We weren't that lucky. 



45 



And they weren't that stupid. 

How do you waste nearly four billion people in three months? 
Birds. 

How many birds are there in the world? Wanna guess? A mil- 
lion? A billion? How about over three hundred billion? That's 
about seventy-five birds for each man, woman, and child still alive 
after the first two waves. 

There are thousands of species of bird on every continent. And 
birds don't recognize borders. They also crap a lot. They crap five 
or six times a day. That's over a trillion little missiles raining down 
each day, every day. 

You couldn't invent a more efficient delivery system for a virus 
that has a 97 percent kill rate. 

My father thought they must have taken something like Ebola 
Zaire and genetically altered it. Ebola can't spread through the 
air. But change a single protein and you can make it airborne, like 
the flu. The virus takes up residence in your lungs. You get a bad 
cough. Fever. Your head starts to hurt. Hurt bad. You start spit- 
ting up little drops of virus-laden blood. The bug moves into your 
liver, your kidneys, your brain. You're packing a billion of them 
now. You've become a viral bomb. And when you explode, you 
blast everyone around you with the virus. They call it bleeding 
out. Like rats fleeing a sinking ship, the virus erupts out of every 
opening. Your mouth, your nose, your ears, your ass, even your 
eyes. You literally cry tears of blood. 

We had different names for it. The Red Death or the Blood 
Plague. The Pestilence. The Red Tsunami. The Fourth Horseman. 
Whatever you wanted to call it, after three months, ninety-seven 
out of every hundred people were dead. 

That's a lot of bloody tears. 



46 



Time was flowing in reverse. The 1st Wave knocked us back 
to the eighteenth century. The next two slammed us into the 
Neolithic. 

We were hunter-gatherers again. Nomads. Bottom of the pyramid. 

But we weren't ready to give up hope. Not yet. 

There were still enough of us left to fight back. 

We couldn't take them head-on, but we could fight a guerilla 
war. We could go all asymmetrical on their alien asses. We had 
enough guns and ammo and even some transport that survived 
the 1st Wave. Our militaries had been decimated, but there were 
still functional units on every continent. There were bunkers and 
caves and underground bases where we could hide for years. You 
be America, alien invaders, and we'll be Vietnam. 

And the Others go, Yeah, okay, right. 

We thought they had thrown everything at us — or at least the 
worst, because it was hard to imagine anything worse than the 
Red Death. Those of us who survived the 3rd Wave — the ones 
with a natural immunity to the disease — hunkered down and 
stocked up and waited for the People in Charge to tell us what 
to do. We knew somebody had to be in charge, because occasion- 
ally a fighter jet would scream across the sky and we heard what 
sounded like gun battles in the distance and the rumble of troop 
carriers just over the horizon. 

I guess my family was luckier than most. The Fourth Horse- 
man rode off with my mom, but Dad, Sammy, and I survived. Dad 
boasted about our superior genes. Not something you'd normally 
do, brag on top of an Everest of nearly seven billion dead people. 
Dad was just being Dad, trying to put the best spin he could on 
the eve of human extinction. 

Most cities and towns were abandoned in the wake of the Red 



47 



Tsunami. There was no electricity, no plumbing, the shops and 
stores had long since been looted of anything valuable. Raw sew- 
age was an inch deep on some streets. Fires from summer light- 
ning storms were common. 

Then there was the problem of the bodies. 

As in, they were everywhere. Houses, shelters, hospitals, apart- 
ments, office buildings, schools, churches and synagogues, and 
warehouses. 

There's a tipping point when the sheer volume of death over- 
whelms you. You can't bury or burn the bodies fast enough. That 
summer of the Pestilence was brutally hot, and the stench of rot- 
ting flesh hung in the air like an invisible, noxious fog. We soaked 
strips of cloth in perfume and tied them over our mouths and 
noses, and by the end of the day the reek had soaked into the ma- 
terial and all you could do was sit there and gag. 

Until — funny thing — you got used to it. 

We waited out the 3rd Wave barricaded inside our house. Partly 
because there was a quarantine. Partly because some pretty whacked- 
out people roamed the streets, breaking into houses and setting fires, 
the whole murder, rape, and pillaging thing. Partly because we were 
scared out of our minds waiting for what might come next. 

But mostly because Dad didn't want to leave Mom. She was 
too sick to travel, and he couldn't bring himself to abandon her. 

She told him to go. Leave her behind. She was going to die any- 
way. It wasn't about her anymore. It was about me and Sammy. 
About keeping us safe. About the future and hanging on to the 
hope that tomorrow would be better than today. 

Dad didn't argue. But he didn't leave her, either. He waited 
for the inevitable, keeping her as comfortable as possible, and 
looked at maps and made lists and gathered supplies. This was 



48 



around the time the whole book-hoarding, we-have-to-rebuild- 
civilization kick started. On nights when the sky wasn't totally 
blanketed in smoke, we went into the backyard and took turns 
with my old telescope, watching the mothership sail majestically 
across the backdrop of the Milky Way. The stars were brighter 
now, brilliantly bright, without our man-made lights to dim them. 

"What are they waiting for?" I would ask him. I was still expect- 
ing — like everybody else — the saucers and the mechanical walkers 
and the laser cannons. "Why don't they just get it over with?" 

And Daddy would shake his head. "I don't know, pumpkin," 
he would say. "Maybe it is over. Maybe the goal isn't to kill all of 
us, just wean us down to a manageable number." 

"And then what? What do they want?" 

"I think the better question is what they need," he said gently, 
as if he were breaking some really bad news. "They're being very 
careful, you know." 

"Careful?" 

"To not damage it more than absolutely necessary. It's the rea- 
son they're here, Cassie. They need the Earth." 

"But not us," I whispered. I was about to lose it — again. For 
about the trillionth time. 

He put his hand on my shoulder — for about the trillionth 
time — and said, "Well, we had our shot. And we weren't handling 
our inheritance very well. I bet if we could somehow go back and 
interview the dinosaurs before the asteroid struck . . ." 

That's when I punched him as hard as I could. Ran inside. 

I don't know which is worse, inside or outside. Outside you 
feel totally exposed, constantly watched, naked beneath the na- 
ked sky. But inside it's perpetual twilight. Boarded-up windows 
that block out the sun during the day. Candles at night, but we're 



49 



running low on candles, can't spare more than one per room, and 
deep shadows lurk in once-familiar corners. 

"What is it, Cassie?" Sammy. Five. Adorable. Big brown teddy- 
bear eyes, clutching the other member of the family with big 
brown eyes, the stuffed one I now have stowed in the bottom of 
my backpack. 

"Why are you crying?" 

Seeing my tears got his started. 

I brushed past him, headed for the room of the sixteen-year- 
old human dinosaur, Cassiopeia Sullivanus extinctus. Then I went 
back to him. I couldn't leave him crying like that. We'd gotten 
pretty tight since Mom got sick. Nearly every night bad dreams 
chased him into my room, and he'd crawl in bed with me and 
press his face against my chest, and sometimes he forgot and 
called me Mommy. 

"Did you see them, Cassie? Are they coming?" 

"No, kiddo," I said, wiping away his tears. "No one's coming." 

Not yet. 



11 

MOM DIED ON A TUESDAY. 

Dad buried her in the backyard, in the rose bed. She had asked 
for that before she died. At the height of the Pestilence, when hun- 
dreds were dying every day, most of the bodies were hauled to the 
outskirts and burned. Dying towns were ringed by the constantly 
smoldering bonfires of the dead. 



50 



He told me to stay with Sammy. Sammy, who'd gone zombie- 
like on us, shuffling around, mouth hanging open or sucking his 
thumb like he was two again, with this blankness in his teddy- 
bear eyes. Just a few months ago, Mom was pushing him on a 
swing, taking him to karate classes, washing his hair, dancing with 
him to his favorite song. Now she was wrapped in a white sheet 
and riding on his daddy's shoulder into the backyard. 

I saw Dad through the kitchen window kneeling by the shallow 
grave. His head was down. Shoulders jerking. I'd never seen him 
lose it, not once, since the Arrival. Things kept getting worse, and 
just when you thought they couldn't get any worse, they got even 
worse, but Dad never freaked. Even when Mom started showing 
the first signs of infection, he stayed calm, especially in front of 
her. He didn't talk about what was happening outside the barri- 
caded doors and windows. He laid wet cloths over her forehead. 
He bathed her, changed her, fed her. Not once did I see him cry 
in front of her. While some people were shooting themselves and 
hanging themselves and swallowing handfuls of pills and jumping 
from high places, Dad pushed back against the darkness. 

He sang to her and repeated stupid jokes she'd heard a thou- 
sand times, and he lied. He lied the way a parent lies to you, the 
good lie that helps you go to sleep. 

"Heard another plane today. Sounded like a fighter. Means 
some of our stuff must have made it through." 

"Your fever's down a bit, and your eyes look clearer today. 
Maybe this isn't it. Might just be your garden-variety flu." 

In the final hours, wiping away her bloody tears. 

Holding her while she barfed up the black, viral stew her stom- 
ach had become. 

Bringing me and Sammy into the room to say good-bye. 



51 



"It's all right," she told Sammy. "Everything is going to be all 
right." 

To me she said, "He needs you now, Cassie. Take care of him. 
Take care of your father." 

I told her she was going to get better. Some people did. They 
got sick, and then suddenly the virus let go. Nobody understood 
why. Maybe it decided it didn't like the way you tasted. And I 
didn't say she was going to get better to ease her fear. I really be- 
lieved it. I had to believe it. 

"You're all they have," Mom said. Her last words to me. 

The mind was the last thing to go, washed away in the red 
waters of the Tsunami. The virus took total control. Some peo- 
ple went into a frenzy as it boiled their brains. They punched, 
clawed, kicked, bit. Like the virus that needed us also hated us 
and couldn't wait to get rid of us. 

My mother looked at my dad and didn't know him. Didn't 
know where she was. Who she was. What was happening to her. 
There was this, like, permanent, creepy smile, cracked lips pulled 
back from bleeding gums, her teeth stained with blood. Sounds 
came out of her mouth, but they weren't words. The place in her 
brain that made words was packed with virus, and the virus didn't 
know language — it knew only how to make more of itself. 

And then my mother died in a fury of jerks and gargled screams, 
her uninvited guests rocketing out of every orifice, because she 
was done, they'd used her up, time to turn off the lights and find 
a new home. 

Dad bathed her one last time. Combed her hair. Scrubbed the 
dried blood from her teeth. When he came to tell me she was 
gone, he was calm. He didn't lose it. He held me while I lost it. 

Now I was watching him through the kitchen window. Kneeling 



52 



beside her in the rose bed, thinking no one could see him, my fa- 
ther let go of the rope he'd been clinging to, loosened the line 
that had kept him steady all that time while everyone around him 
went into free fall. 

I made sure Sammy was okay and went outside. I sat next to 
him. Put my hand on his shoulder. The last time I'd touched my 
father, it was a lot harder and with my fist. I didn't say anything, 
and he didn't, either, not for a long time. 

He slipped something into my hand. Mom's wedding ring. He 
said she'd want me to have it. 

"We're leaving, Cassie. Tomorrow morning." 

I nodded. I knew she was the only reason we hadn't left yet. 
The delicate stems on the roses bobbed and swayed, as if echoing 
my nod. "Where are we going?" 

"Away." He looked around, and his eyes were wide and fright- 
ened. "It isn't safe anymore." 

Dub, I thought. When was it ever? 

"Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is just over a hundred miles 
from here. If we push and the weather stays good, we can be there 
in five or six days." 

"And then what?" The Others had conditioned us to think this 
way: Okay, this, and then what? I looked to my father to tell me. 
He was the smartest man I knew. If he didn't have an answer, 
there was no one who did. I sure didn't. And I sure wanted him 
to. I needed him to. 

He shook his head like he didn't understand the question. 

"What's at Wright-Patterson?" I asked. 

"I don't know that anything's there." He tried out a smile and 
grimaced, like smiling hurt. 
"Then why are we going?" 



53 



"Because we can't stay here," he said through gritted teeth. 
"And if we can't stay here, we have to go somewhere. If there's 
anything like a government left at all . . ." 

He shook his head. He hadn't come outside for this. He had 
come outside to bury his wife. 

"Go inside, Cassie." 

"I'll help you." 

"I don't need your help." 

"She's my mother. I loved her, too. Please let me help." I was cry- 
ing again. He didn't see. He wasn't looking at me, and he wasn't 
looking at Mom. He wasn't looking at anything, really. There was, 
like, this black hole where the world used to be, and we were both 
falling toward it. What could we hold on to? I pulled his hand off 
Mom's body and pressed it against my cheek and told him I loved 
him and that Mom loved him and that everything would be okay, 
and the black hole lost a little of its strength. 

"Go inside, Cassie," he said gently. "Sammy needs you more 
than she does." 

I went inside. Sammy was sitting on the floor in his room, 
playing with his X-wing starfighter, destroying the Death Star. 
"Shroooooom, shroooooom. I'm going in, Red One!" 

And outside, my father knelt in the freshly turned earth. Brown 
dirt, red rose, gray sky, white sheet. 



54 



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