Thirty feet.
Panda raised the gun again. His face was a fright mask of fear and indecision.
Sam dropped to the ground, rolled, and came up in a squatting position as Panda fired again.
Sam extended his arm, fingers splayed. The green-white light missed Panda and burned a hole in the brick beside his head.
Panda threw down the gun, turned, and ran.
Ten feet.
“Dekka, get the door.”
Dekka raised her hands high and gravity beneath the door was suspended. The whole wall, including the door frame, lurched suddenly, as if struck by a truck from the other side. The door swung slowly open. Loose dirt and fallen mortar shot straight up toward the sky.
Dekka dropped her hands and the dirt fell back to earth, the bricks slumped and cracked, the door jamb sagged and splintered.
Sam fired into the dark interior through the open door. He and Dekka barreled through and slammed back against opposite walls, panting and ready. Paper signs and once-colorful posters on the walls burned and curled from Sam’s blast.
There was no sound.
Sam glanced at Dekka. She looked as scared as he felt.
They edged along the hallway, nerves taut, eyes searching each doorway.
The office was on the right side, fronted by a reinforced glass wall. Sam crept closer. Peered inside. Nothing. Lights still on from the day of the FAYZ.
Should he move on without checking the office thoroughly? If one of Caine’s people was in there, Sam and Dekka could end up surrounded. Sam made a motion to Dekka: go in.
Dekka shook her head violently.
“Okay,” Sam said. “I got it.”
He crossed the hallway quickly and opened the door himself. Something large flew at him, he ducked instinctively, but he’d been hit, smacked a glancing blow that spun him around.
A boy with dark hair was crouched atop the school secretary’s desk. He held a wooden club, short and thick, in one hand. The boy grinned. Then he leaped again, fast as a jungle cat.
Sam was caught off guard and landed hard, banging his head on the floor. He saw stars.
He rolled over, but the move was sluggish. The boy had jumped away to safety and was gathering himself for another assault.
Suddenly the boy, the papers and mementos on the desk, and the desk itself lifted off the floor, flew straight up, and smashed into the low ceiling.
The boy had just long enough to register surprise and pain before Dekka restored gravity and he dropped like a rock. Sam reached him before he could recover, knelt with one knee on his chest, and grabbed his head with both his hands.
“Twitch and your head’s a cinder,” Sam said.
The boy went limp.
“Good decision,” Sam said. “Dekka, get his club. Find some duct tape.” To the boy he said, “Who are you? And where’s Caine?”
“I’m Frederico. Don’t burn me up.”
“Where’s Caine?”
“Not here. They all went out the back as soon as we got here. They left me and Panda.”
Sam’s insides twisted. “They left?”
Frederico read the fear in Sam’s eyes. “You can’t beat Caine. Him and Drake, they have it all scoped.”
“I found tape,” Dekka said. “You want me to tie him up?”
“It’s a diversion,” Sam said. He punched Frederico in the nose, hard enough to distract him. Frederico roared in pain.
“Now tape him up. Fast.” He keyed the walkie-talkie. “Astrid.”
Her voice was barely audible. “Sam. Oh, my God.”
“What’s happening?”
Her answer was too garbled to understand. But in snatches of static, he heard fear.
“I screwed up,” Sam said. “It was all a trick.”
FORTY-TWO
02 HOURS, 23 MINUTES
“QUINN. QUINN.”
“Is someone yelling my name?” Quinn wondered.
Brianna pointed at the steeple. Quinn squinted and saw Astrid in dark silhouette waving her arms like a crazy person, pointing, gesticulating, yelling something.
“I’ll go see what she wants,” Brianna volunteered. She blurred, then she stopped suddenly, having just reached the top of the ladder. “Oh, my God, look.”
Racing through the street, coming up from the south, pouring down the alley, came a swarm of rough, yellow canines. They threaded through parked cars, bounded over fire hydrants, paused briefly to sniff at garbage, but overall moved with shocking speed.
They were going straight for the day care.
Brianna began pulling the ladder up. Quinn jumped to help her. They slid it up and out of the way as the first coyotes passed beneath.
“What do I do?” Quinn cried.
“Shoot them,” Brianna said.
“Coyotes? Shoot coyotes?”
“They’re not here by accident,” Brianna yelled.
One coyote, hearing them, glanced up.
“Quiet,” Quinn hissed. He crouched behind the wall and clutched the machine pistol to his chest.
“Quinn, they’re going after the littles,” Brianna said.
“I don’t know what to do.”
“Yes, you do.”
Quinn shook his head violently. “No. No one told me to shoot coyotes.”
Brianna peeked over the side and sat back down very suddenly. “It’s him. Drake. And he’s…there’s something wrong with him.”
Quinn didn’t want to look, didn’t want to, but Brianna’s ashen face made looking the less terrifying option. He rose just enough to get a view of the alleyway.