He turned and looked at the house.
Morgie collected all his cards and put them neatly into his pack. Then he picked up his sword and walked out into the yard to practice the drills Tom had taught him.
CHAPTER 64
Grimm ran ahead as they approached the shattered face of the cliff. The air lock was a twisted ruin. Beyond it was a wide chamber with metal walls and concrete floors. Soot streaked those walls now. Shattered light fixtures swung from the ceilings on webs of torn wiring.
They stepped carefully and silently inside. The entrance chamber split into two corridors.
“Should we split up?” asked Lilah. “I can—”
“Not a chance,” said Joe. “This isn’t a bad horror movie. We stay together and we watch each other’s backs. No one goes into the basement in a negligee to investigate a strange noise.”
Lilah looked at him as if he was deranged. “What?”
“Nothing. Old pop-culture reference whose expiration date has apparently passed. Sad.”
Benny thought he heard the Lost Girl mutter the word “idiot.”
They took the left-hand corridor first, for no other reason than because it was closer to where they stood. There were closed doors on one side of the corridor. Joe stopped in front of the first one and gently tried the knob. It turned easily. He glanced at Lilah, who took up a defensive position beside him, then turned the handle the rest of the way and kicked the door open.
It was a closet. Metal shelves filled with boxes of office supplies. No zoms, no people.
They moved to the second door and repeated the process.
And froze.
There was a person in the room.
Seated behind a big desk. A laptop computer was open on the desk. The office was decorated with big framed photographs of running brooks, snowy mountainsides, lush autumn forests. The man in the chair sat with his head — what there was of it — thrown back. A shotgun stood on its stock between his thighs. Even from the doorway Benny could read the scene. A person — either desperate or perhaps infected — sits down, props the shotgun on the edge of the chair, thumb on the trigger, barrel under the chin, and says good-bye to everything in the most final way possible.
The wall behind the desk, and part of the ceiling, was painted with chocolate brown that had once been bright red and moldy green that had once been gray brain matter.
All very disgusting, all very final. And a long time ago. Months, at the very least.
No reanimation.
What made it worse was what the man had written in black ink on his desk blotter:
MAY GOD FORGIVE US FOR WHAT WE HAVE DONE
WE ARE THE HORSEMEN
WE DESERVE TO BURN
There was no signature. There was no need for one.
They stood around the desk.
Nix looked from the writing to the body sprawled in the chair. “That poor man.”
Benny nodded. “What does it mean, though?”
“Watch the hall,” Joe said as he began quickly going through each drawer. He rummaged through the contents, tossing some things onto the floor, ignoring others. Then he found a sheaf of papers that made him stiffen and stare. He cursed softly.
“What is it?” asked Benny.
“I think I found out why Dr. McReady came to this facility.”
He showed the top page to Benny and the girls.
ZABRISKIE POINT BIOLOGICAL EVALUATION AND PRODUCTION STATION UNITED STATES ARMY
“What’s that mean?” asked Benny. “ ‘Biological Evaluation and Production’? Is this some kind of lab?”
Joe took the papers back and crumpled them up, his face a mask of disgust.
“This is a monster factory,” he said.
CHAPTER 65
Brother Peter watched as two of the Red Brothers carried Sister Sun up the slope. Every day the woman seemed to have aged ten years. The cancer that consumed her was a merciless and ravenous thing. It would take her soon. A few days, a week at the most.
In a way, Brother Peter envied her. She would be going into the darkness soon, and he was doomed to live until the work of the Night Church was completed.
The reapers set her down, and one of them produced a small folding stool and supported her as she sat down on it. Peter ordered one of them to fetch water and directed another to erect the portable awning.
They were in a cleft of rock that provided an excellent view of the chain-link fence, the airfield, the row of siren towers, and the hangars on both sides of the miles-long trench. However, from a reverse position, the reapers were invisible inside a bank of deep shadows.
A reaper came trotting into the cleft.
“Beloved of god,” he said to Sister Sun and Brother Peter, “we are ready.”
Brother Peter nodded. “Good. Has there been any sign of the helicopter?”
“No, my brother. I have ten scouts watching for it.”
“Very well.”
“The wind continues to veer,” said the reaper. “Sister Alice thinks it will shift two or three more points, but I ran the math a couple of times. We’re good to go now.”
Brother Peter nodded again. “Go down to the fence and wait for the net crews. Sister Sun will be giving the signal.”
The man bowed and left.
Sister Sun smiled at Brother Peter and reached for his hand and squeezed it with what little strength she had. “You’ll let me do that? That’s so kind of you, Peter.”
“This is your victory, sister.”
“I know that Saint John is so proud of you,” she said, “and you will be gathered in with loving arms when it is your time to go into the darkness.”
He bent and kissed the skeletal hand and pressed it to his cheek. On the other side of the desert, beyond the red rock mountains, the sun was beginning its long fall toward a fiery twilight. To both of them, the vital young man and the dying older woman, it looked like the whole world was about to burn.
There was a rustling sound behind them, and they turned to see a dozen reapers walking in pairs along the shaded path by the rock wall heading down to the fence. Each pair held a bundle of rope ends that were connected to huge nets. The nets looked impossibly huge, but they were wrapped around clusters of brightly colored balloons. Thousands of them in each net.
The men in each net crew nodded their respect as they passed. Down below, closer to the fence, the reaper known as Sister Alice was tossing handfuls of sand into the air to watch the direction of its fall.
“It’s time,” said Brother Peter.
But before she could give the signal, a terrible coughing fit struck Sister Sun. She bent over as sharply as if she’d been punched in the stomach, and drops of blood splattered her lap and knees and the dust at her feet. Brother Peter watched helplessly as the fit tore the dying woman apart. Other reapers stood by, their faces mournful. Even though each of them wished only the soothing darkness for Sister Sun, they ached for her to first witness the triumph of her plan.
By slow, torturous degrees the coughs eased in intensity and then slowly, slowly passed.
Sister Sun perched on the edge of her stool like a frail puppet held in place by a single frayed string. The reapers — and the world around them — held their breath, and even the wind slackened for a moment as if unwilling to blow without her permission.
Her right hand trembled in her lap, and it was clear that she could barely lift it. Finally it rose. First barely an inch, then another, and another.
Brother Peter let out a burning ball of air that was searing the walls of his lungs, and in a ringing voice he called, “Sister Sun has given the word. May the darkness bless us all.”
The reapers at the fence made final cuts in work they had already begun with tin snips and bolt cutters. A quarter-mile length of the fence collapsed to the ground. Immediately the net teams rushed onto the airfield, running between the two southernmost of the siren towers. They formed a long line, and other reapers ran up to help them slash the lines that formed the nets. Immediately the captured balloons tumbled out and were shoved away by the wind that blew out of the southeast.