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Brett Battles

Pale Horse

What Came Before

Time is running out for the human race. First it was the test, a contained release of the KV-27a virus by its creators at Project Eden. It proved so successful that the world gave it a name, the Sage Flu, and collectively breathed a sigh of relief when it seemed to burn itself out.

It left its scars, though, on Army Captain Daniel Ash and his children, Josie and Brandon. His wife was one of the Sage Flu’s first victims, and he was later accused of being the man responsible for its release. Ash had nothing to do with the spread of the disease, but he did plan on doing something to keep it from happening again.

Aligning himself with a group that worked out of a secret facility in Montana, calling itself the Resistance, Ash, along with several others, went in search of the Project’s headquarters, a place known as Bluebird, in hopes of stopping Project Eden’s true plan — the removal of over ninety-nine percent of mankind so that humanity could have a restart.

He found Bluebird on Yanok Island above the Arctic Circle, where he ran into former Project member Olivia Silva. She, too, had been looking for Bluebird, but while it seemed their goals were the same, she was not entirely forthcoming.

Back in Montana, at the Resistance’s headquarters known as the Ranch, a Project Eden attack squad was spotted heading their way. Having no choice, Resistance leader Matt Hamilton sealed up the underground bunker where members were hiding. Two people were not able to make it inside on time. One was Daniel Ash’s son, Brandon.

At Bluebird, Ash, Olivia, and the people they’d brought along took over the Project Eden control room. Ash was relieved when they were able to stop the virus’s release, but the feeling was short-lived as Olivia revealed her true plan and input the go code.

As her finger hovered over the keyboard, Ash aimed his gun at her, and…

Epigraph

And I looked, and behold a pale horse;

and his name that sat on him was Death,

and Hell followed with him.

— Revelations 6:8

IMPLEMENTATION DAY

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22nd

World Population

7,176,323,921

Change Over Previous Day

+ 280,229

1

BLUEBIRD, YANOK ISLAND
11:03 AM CENTRAL STANDARD TIME

Daniel Ash locked eyes with Olivia Silva, his gun held out in front of him.

For a moment it was as if time itself had frozen solid.

Then the corner of her lip curled up in the slightest of smiles.

Oh, God. No!

Even as he thought this, he squeezed the trigger, but her finger was already plunging toward the ENTER key.

2

RIDGECREST, CALIFORNIA
8:25 AM PACIFIC STANDARD TIME

Martina Gable’s plan had been to sleep as late as possible. She’d arrived home the previous evening, after spending the first few days of her winter break getting in some extra workouts at Cal State University Northridge’s athletic facility. Like most freshmen, she had wanted to come home right away, but she knew if she put in a little more time at the gym, it would go a long way toward scoring points with Coach Poole and the other members of the softball team’s staff. As good as she had been at the game in high school, she was just one of a hundred or so equally talented players at the university vying for a spot on the squad.

It had been a good move. Only two other freshman girls and one sophomore had hung around, and the coaches seemed both annoyed that more hadn’t stayed and pleased that Martina and the other three were there.

Instead of trying to one-up the other girls, Martina had gotten them to work together, helping each other like teammates would. It wasn’t any kind of strategy on her part; she was just good at that kind of thing. But it was clear from the comments she received from the coaches before she left that her leadership skills had not gone unnoticed.

Finally, once the staff had left for the break, she drove the two and a half hours back to her hometown.

Sleeping in her own bed for the first time in months, she was sure she wouldn’t open her eyes until noon, but by eight o’clock she was wide awake. With a groan, she pushed the covers back, swung her legs off the bed, and pulled on the running clothes she'd laid out the night before.

Five minutes later, she was out the door, and heading east toward town. When she’d left for college that August, it had been blazing hot. That was to be expected, of course. Ridgecrest was located at the northern edge of the Mojave Desert, so blazing hot in summer was the norm.

Winter was a different thing altogether. Most days wouldn’t rise above fifty degrees and many were considerably colder. On this particular morning, three days before Christmas, the temperature was hovering just above freezing. If it had been cloudy, there would have been a good chance for some snow, but the sky, as it was most days, was clear.

As soon as she reached that blissful state she always felt when she ran, the cold became a distant memory and her mind turned to other things, like the gifts she still had to buy for her parents and a couple of her high school friends she was getting together with that evening. And, of course, Ben.

On she went, past the track homes, the churches, then down through the old business district on Balsam Street. Would it be tacky to get her dad a gift card to Home Depot or someplace like that? Probably, but it would be so much easier, and he’d undoubtedly be happier in the end.

You can’t do that, she told herself. Just talk to Mom. She’ll know what he wants.

A car horn honked, the driver waving and smiling as the vehicle passed by. It was Mrs. Henson, one of the secretaries at Burroughs High School.

Martina waved back, then returned to her thoughts of Christmas and her parents and her almost boyfriend. There had been several days that previous spring when she was sure she’d never see another summer, let alone Christmas, but she’d been one of the lucky ones who’d survived after contracting the Sage Flu during the outbreak. That was a nightmare she never wanted to live through again, yet if it hadn’t been for the quarantine, she and Ben would have never met.

The truth was, though she didn’t know it, she could never live through a hell like that again. At least not in the way she did before. Her exposure to the virus had given her immunity. So if the Sage Flu bared its fangs again, she would not fall victim.

Of course, the same couldn’t be said about nearly everyone else she knew.

MONTANA
9:35 AM MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME

Lizzie Dexel was not a typical recluse. She had lived, if not quite thrived, for many years right in the middle of Denver, Colorado. It hadn’t been easy, and she had been prone to the occasional panic attack, but she had made it work. She’d even had a couple friends. Well, one work friend, anyway. When she left for the day from the accounting office where she was employed, she would go straight home, make some dinner, and watch Animal Planet until it was time to go to sleep. She had no pets. She liked cats, but was allergic, and dogs took too much work. So she contented herself with watching them on TV.

When her brother Owen died, things had changed. He’d been even worse with crowds than Lizzie. The one time he had visited her in Denver, he had barely left her apartment, and when he did, his eyes watched every face he passed. He was much happier in his isolated home in Montana, where he was able to feed his paranoid belief of a coming war.