The cockpit was empty. Banks of dead instrumentation and a view of empty ocean.
Nikki sought out the galley at the back of the plane. She hoped to find soft drinks, cartons of long-life milk and maybe biscuits.
She found cartons of orange juice in an overturned stewardess trolley. The cartons were frozen solid. She ripped away packaging. A yellow brick of juice. She smashed the brick in the galley basin and sucked shards as she explored the plane.
She noticed one of the toilets was engaged. She casually kicked the door, then jumped back when a voice said, ‘Don’t come in.’
‘Jesus,’ said Nikki, addressing the bathroom door. ‘How long have you been aboard?’
‘Leave. Just leave.’ A male voice.
‘Look, there’s no need to hide. There’s just me. I’m on my own. Come on out.’
‘The door’s jammed. It’s staying jammed. Don’t come in.’
‘Please. Come out.’
‘No.’
‘Look, this is stupid.’
‘Fuck you.’
‘The plane ditched. You know that, right? There’s no one on board but you.’
‘I’m not leaving.’
‘You’re in the middle of the fucking ocean. Everyone took to the rafts. You’re alone. And this plane is barely afloat. If it takes on even a cupful of water it’ll sink to the bottom and take you with it.’
‘Just fuck off.’
‘Well, shit. I’m not going to argue with you.’
Nikki found a pallet of bottled water in a galley locker. She stacked the bottles by the hatch.
She found a wash-bag and baby wipes among the scattered luggage and locked herself in a club-class lavatory. She stripped out of her hydro-suit and wiped herself down. She brushed her teeth and spat. She kept her lock-knife open on the edge of the basin in case her unseen companion decided to emerge from his den.
She found fresh clothes in a suitcase. Socks and underwear. She tried to repair her cracked and wrinkled hands with moisturiser.
She crouched on the wing and tried the radio. She hoped the metal plane would act as an antenna and boost the signal.
She couldn’t raise Rampart. It was out of range, over the horizon and lost in perpetual night.
Nikki scanned the wavebands. A flickering LED. The radio was trying to lock on to a ghost signal.
‘…God’s help… terrible deci… arkest day..!’
The voice died away.
Nikki loaded food and water on to the boat, then walked to the lavatory at the back of the plane. She knocked on the toilet door.
‘This is your last chance. I’m leaving.’
‘Bye.’
‘Seriously. I’m heading south. You could join me. If you stay here you’ll die.’
‘Then leave me. You can do that. You’ve done it before.’
‘Leave you?’
‘Yeah. Save your own ass. After all, everyone has a talent.’
‘Who are you?’ demanded Nikki. ‘What’s your name?’
No reply.
‘Alan? Is that you?’
Nikki kicked at the door. Four blows then the lock splintered. The cubicle was empty.
‘Have I gone insane?’ asked Nikki, interrogating her reflection. ‘Is that the deal?’
‘Let’s just say,’ said her dead boyfriend’s voice,’ that your perceptions have undergone a radical adaptation.’
Nikki enjoyed VIP luxury. She sat in a club seat. A porthole gave her a view of open sea. She wrapped herself in airline blankets and reclined. She clamped in-flight headphones to warm her ears.
‘This place is a welcome piece of luck,’ she murmured as she snuggled down to sleep.
‘Yeah,’ said Alan. ‘God crashed this plane just for you.’
She pulled a TV from a slot in the arm of the chair. A little screen on an armature. She jacked her headphones and selected Brief Encounter from the menu. She dozed as the movie played.
‘You realise that screen is completely blank,’ said Alan. ‘The plane is dead. Nothing works’
‘But I like the movie.’
‘Jesus. It’s like that joke. My wife thinks she’s a chicken. I’d take her to the doctor, but we need the eggs’
‘That’s fucking ironic. My dead boyfriend posing as the voice of sanity.’
‘You think you left me behind? You’re stuck with me as long as you live. Bonnie and Clyde. Sonny and Cher. I’ll look after you, until the end of your days’
‘Could you get me back to Rampart?’ asked Nikki. ‘Could you master the boat? The ropes, the sail? If I wanted to get back, could you show me the way?’
‘I can take you anywhere you need to go, Nikki.’
She sat cross-legged on the wing of the jet and ate crackers.
She saw a red glow on the skyline, a fine aurora. It was the wrong time of day, the wrong point of the compass for sunset.
They must have nuked the cities. Ahead of her, beyond the southern horizon, Europe was burning.
Army of the Damned
Self-awareness came and went like a weak radio signal. Stuttering, time-lapse moments of consciousness. It began in the main lobby. She was sipping Scotch. She hated Scotch ever since she vomited Macallan out of her nose during a college drinking game. She retched at the smell of it. A shot glass full of bile. But now she drank single malt like it was Coke. She couldn’t taste it and it didn’t make her drunk.
Three infected people in front of her. Two brass-buttoned waiters and an old lady welded to a walking frame.
Blackout.
Two naked old guys and a chef.
Blackout.
Two officers and a cleaner fused to a broom.
Rye smiled. It was like pulling the arm of a slot machine. Three different fruit, every time.
One moment Rye was sitting at the blackjack table, checking her cards, nudging chips with the rotted club that used to be her hand. Next moment she found herself standing in a deserted coffee bar staring out of a porthole at the stars. She wondered how much time had passed. The next instant she found herself standing in one of Hyperion’s little gift shops cramming fistfuls of shortbread into her mouth then spitting the biscuits because they tasted dry as dust. Time passed in a series of jumpcuts, each lucid moment met with anger and frustration. Why was she, among all the shambling, leprous passengers, one of the few cursed with long moments of wakefulness in which she experienced the full horror of her condition?
Rye checked the diesel tanks. She descended a ladder. Her boots splashed, ankle-deep. The floor of the fuel room was wet with octane. A flare would be enough, or a struck match.
She patted her pockets, tried to find a lighter. Next moment she couldn’t remember who she was or why she was standing in a strange, wide room. She stood staring into space for hours, fuel slowly rising round her legs.
She found herself pounding a door. Infected passengers jostled around her, scraping and clawing at the metal.
She backed away from the crowd.
The hatch separated the Rampart crew from a savage horde that wanted to tear them apart.
Rye tried to drive the passengers back. She grabbed collars and pulled them away, but they immediately returned to punch and kick at the door. She blasted the crowd with a carbon extinguisher. Foam jetted over faces and bodies. The infected passengers were oblivious. They dripped white. Rye battered heads with the spent extinguisher. They shrugged off the blows.