Page 23 of The Lost


  You want the truth.

  I get it. I’ve wanted the same thing my whole life.

  But now I’m convinced the only real truth is the one you find out for yourself. Not what some grown-up or CNN tells you. The problem is, the truth isn’t always kittens and rainbows. It can be harsh. It can be extremely hard to believe. In fact, the truth can be the very last thing you want to believe.

  But if you’re like me, you’d rather put on your big-girl pants than dwell on things—and truths—beyond your control.

  Like the fact that I was a test-tube baby whose DNA was grafted with a bird’s, so rather than your typical childhood filled with cartoons and tricycles, I spent my most adorable years in a dog crate, poked and prodded by men in white coats.

  Cowardly jerks.

  And how my flock and I escaped and spent our entire lives after that being hunted down by Erasers—human-wolf mutants with truly eye-watering dogbreath.

  While rolling with the punches (and bites and kicks), I had a mountain of personal crap to deal with, too. I was betrayed by my own father, who also turned my half brother, Ari, into an Eraser to kill me. Family fun!

  Then Fang left us—left me, heartbroken—to start a new flock with my freaking clone. I won’t lie—that one stung.

  And I can’t forget the crazies.… There are a lot of bad people out there who want to do a lot of bad things. From the suicidal Doomsday cult to the population-cleansing nutcases, we’ve fought them all.

  And the icing on the cake? Something happened—a meteor? A nuclear bomb? We might never know—that caused all hell to break loose… and destroyed the world.

  Yep.

  But you want to know what really happened after the apocalypse. Fair enough. The story belongs to all of us, especially you. Our history is your future.

  Disclaimer: This is a story of perseverance and hope, but it’s also one of grief. I’ve seen things—terrible things—that no one should even know exist. I’ve witnessed the world’s darkest days and humanity’s ugliest moments. I’ve watched cities collapse, friends die. This is the hardest story I’ve ever had to tell.

  Still think you can handle it?

  Let’s go back, then. Our journey starts on an island somewhere in the South Pacific, not long after the sky first caught fire. You’ll want to make sure your seat is in a locked, upright position, and prepare for some turbulence.

  After all, we’re talking about the end of the world.

  Book One

  APOCALYPSE

  1

  BREATHE, MAX. FORCE the air in and out.

  The air was heavy, and the rotten-egg stench burned the inside of my nose, but I focused on inhaling and exhaling as I ran. The earth shook violently and my feet slid over loose rocks as I raced down the slope. Red-hot coals pelted the earth around us as volcanic ash set our hair on fire and ate tiny, stinging holes in our clothes.

  “Our backpacks!” I yelled, stumbling to a stop. I couldn’t believe I’d forgotten them. “They’re all we have left. Tools, knives—the crossbow!”

  “We left them in the field!” Nudge cried.

  I shaded my eyes and looked up—the air was thick with spewing magma, ash, and glowing rock belched up from deep beneath the earth. “I’m going for them,” I decided. As the leader of the flock, responsible for everyone’s survival, I didn’t have much choice. “You guys get to that rock outcropping by the southern beach. It’s the only protection we’ll find.”

  “You have five minutes, tops,” warned Gazzy, our nine-year-old explosives expert. “This whole part of the island’s gonna blow.”

  “Right,” I said, but I was already sprinting up the hill through the hailstorm of fiery pebbles. I might have flown faster, but I couldn’t risk singeing my flight feathers right now. I grabbed the backpacks and raced back.

  The ground shuddered again—a churning quake this time that felt like it was shifting my organs around. I lost my balance and catapulted forward, the provisions we needed torn from my arms as I face-planted hard.

  Sprawled in the dirt, I focused through the dizziness just in time to see a smoking boulder the size of a refrigerator bouncing toward my head. I tucked my chin and rolled, saying a silent prayer.

  Then I heard the sound—BOOM! It was like a rocket had been set off inside my brain. I may have blacked out, I don’t know.

  Shaking my head, I opened my eyes and gasped. The boulder had obliterated the space where I had just been lying, but beyond that, the top of the volcano was now shooting off a thousand-foot column of liquid fire and smoke.

  I gaped, mesmerized, as bright orange lava oozed over the cliff we’d called home for the last three months. Then the sky started to rain blazing rocks, big ones, and I snapped back to attention.

  Craaaaap.

  I leaped to my feet, frantically grabbing backpacks and scooping up the scattered tools that were all we had left. The ground around me was being covered with hot ash, and as I reached for Gazzy’s pack, it went up in flames. I snatched my burned hand back, swearing as the nerves convulsed with pain.

  “Max, hurry!” My ears were ringing, but Angel’s voice was clear inside my head. Ordinarily, I would be annoyed at being bossed around by a mind-reading seven-year-old, but the terror behind her words made my throat dry up.

  I looked back at the volcano. Considering the size of the boulders it was hurling out of its crater, conditions could be even deadlier farther down the mountain.

  What was I thinking, leaving my family? Forget the tools—I had to run!

  My mouth filled with the taste of deadly sulfurous gas, and as it tore at my lungs I wheezed, choking on my own phlegm while glowing bombs fell all around me. I stumbled through the ash and rubble, tripping again and again, but I kept going.

  I had to get back to my flock.

  Another hundred yards and I would be at the meeting place. Pumping my legs, I took the turn onto the rock outcropping at top speed…

  And sailed toward a river of boiling lava.

  2

  WHOAAA—

  I windmilled my arms as momentum propelled me out into midair, with nothing but red-hot death below. As gravity took hold and I felt myself starting to drop, my avian survival instinct kicked in automatically. A pair of huge speckled wings snapped out from my back and caught the air, swooping me aloft on a hot, acrid updraft. I quickly wheeled back to the outcropping and closed my highly flammable wings.

  “Wow!” Total’s voice reached me over the sounds of the eruption, and then I saw his small, black Scottie-like head peer out from a shallow cave beneath the boulders. He came and stood next to me, his paws stepping gingerly on the hot ground. His small black wings were tucked neatly along his back. Did I mention that everyone in my mutant flock had wings? Yup, even our talking dog.

  “I thought you were a goner,” he said, nose wrinkling from the horrible smell.

  “Your faith in me is touching, Total.” I tried to steady my voice, but it sounded hollow and shaky.

  Gazzy came out and nodded up at the volcano with seriously misplaced admiration. “She’s a feisty one. This is just the start of it.” With his love of fire and explosions, this eruption was the best thing that had ever happened to him.

  “The lava’s, what? Fifty feet wide?” I backed up as the edge of the outcropping began to get swallowed up by the tar-like river—a thick black goo with brilliant flashes of orange where molten stone glowed with heat. “We’ll fly across, find a safer place on the northern side.”

  Gazzy nodded. “Right now we can. But see that molten mudslide rolling toward us? It’s about two thousand degrees Fahrenheit. If we don’t get to high ground fast, we’re cooked.”

  It already felt like my clothes were melting onto my body—clearly Gazzy knew what he was talking about.

  “Let’s move!” I yelled.

  Fang was already grabbing up the backpacks. Always calm and always competent, he was the steady rock to my whirling tornado. I rushed to join him, trying not to wince as my burned
hand throbbed. We didn’t have much, but what we had we couldn’t replace: Besides our few weapons, we had some clothing stripped from the dead, cans of food that had washed up on shore, medicinal herbs plucked from now-extinct trees.

  “Okay,” I panted. “Have we got everything?”

  Nudge shook her head, her lovely face smudged with soot. “But if the lava reaches the lake…”

  Then the water supply we’ve stored there will be obliterated.

  “I’ll go back for the jugs,” Dylan and I said at the same time.

  “The sulfur levels just tripled!” Iggy shouted. “Smells like acid rain!”

  “I’ll go,” Dylan repeated firmly.

  Fang was my true love, but Dylan had literally been created to be a perfect partner for me: It would be against his nature not to protect me if he could. It was both endearing and maddening, because, hello? I’m not so much a damsel in distress as I am an ass-kicking mutant bird kid.

  Now Dylan touched my burned hand so tenderly that for a second I forgot about being tough and was just grateful for his help during the chaos. He nodded at the other kids. “They need you here. Just work on getting everyone to the northern beaches, and I’ll be back in a minute.”

  I frowned. “Yeah. But be careful, okay?”

  “You’re not actually worried about me, are you, Max?” His turquoise eyes twinkled playfully.

  “No,” I said, making an ew face at him.

  He laughed. “I’ll catch up.”

  I turned, smiling and shaking my head, and of course there was Fang, standing behind me silent as a shadow. He cocked an eyebrow and I flushed. I opened my mouth to say something, but he was already reaching past me for the backpack Dylan had left.

  “Hover chain?” Fang asked brusquely. He knew me better than anyone, so he knew when to leave things alone. When I nodded, he unfurled his huge black wings, then leaned down and picked up Akila. A big, beautiful malamute, she was the only non-mutant among us—and the love of Total’s life. Trying not to breathe the poisonous air, Fang leaped up and took off across the steaming river of molten rock.

  “Okay, Iggy,” I ordered. “You’re up next! Nudge, get ready. Total, wings out. Gazzy and Angel, I’ll be right behind you. Let’s go, go, go!”

  When I was sure my flock was airborne, I shook out my wings and followed, pushing down hard with each stroke as I struggled through the swirling ash. Burning and smoking debris pelted me from above, and waves of lava roiled below. The air was so toxic I could actually feel my lungs shriveling.

  It was a short, hard flight. There was a fierce swirling wind from above that pushed us down almost as hard as we pushed up against it. The lava below us burned a deep red-orange, and as it took in more oxygen, it crackled loudly and started to spit. It took all my strength to stay aloft as my flight feathers curled up in embers. I blinked away tears, trying to spot my flock through the sizzling smoke and steam. The skin on my ankles started to blister—I was literally being slow-roasted, and I prayed that the others had made it across.

  You are in a cool place. You are in Alaska. It’s freezing. Cool air in your lungs… I saw Fang emerge from the steam, a dark figure carrying a large dog. Everyone else was across now, but I veered back over the river of lava to do one final sweep, make sure we had everything.…

  My neck snapped sideways as a red-hot rock smacked into my head, and before I knew it I was careening down again toward the smoking, burping mouth of hell. I managed a strangled scream and then felt my whole body jerk as a hand yanked me upward.

  “Gotcha.” Fang smirked at me with that crooked smile of his and held me in his arms. “What do you say we get outta here?” Even with the chaos swirling around us, my heart skipped a beat at that smile.

  Our feet sank into the far bank just before the mudslide surged into the river. It sent lava shooting up hundreds of feet like a fizzy explosion of orange soda, but we were already out of its reach. And even though my feathers were smoking and my eyebrows were singed and I was gagging on ash, I was grinning as I ran.

  We made it. We’ve all—

  “Wait.” I skidded to a stop and turned around.

  “What is it?” Fang asked, still tugging at my hand.

  The hot air pressed in and sweat dripped down my face, but cold horror gripped my stomach like a fist.

  “Where’s Dylan?”

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Welcome

  BOOK ONE: DEMON, BEGONE Chapter 1: Whit

  Chapter 2: Whit

  Chapter 3: Wisty

  Chapter 4: Wisty

  Chapter 5: Darrius

  Chapter 6: Wisty

  Chapter 7: Whit

  Chapter 8: Wisty

  Chapter 9: Whit

  Chapter 10: Wisty

  Chapter 11: Darrius

  Chapter 12: Whit

  Chapter 13: Whit

  Chapter 14: Whit

  Chapter 15: Whit

  Chapter 16: Whit

  Chapter 17: Wisty

  Chapter 18: Wisty

  Chapter 19: Darrius

  Chapter 20: Wisty

  Chapter 21: Wisty

  Chapter 22: Whit

  Chapter 23: Whit

  Chapter 24: Wisty

  Chapter 25: Wisty

  Chapter 26: Wisty

  Chapter 27: Whit

  Chapter 28: Wisty

  Chapter 29: Wisty

  Chapter 30: Wisty

  Chapter 31: Wisty

  Chapter 32: Whit

  Chapter 33: Whit

  Chapter 34: Whit

  Chapter 35: Whit

  Chapter 36: Whit

  Chapter 37: Whit

  BOOK TWO: LOVE OR DESTRUCTION Chapter 38: Whit

  Chapter 39: Wisty

  Chapter 40: Wisty

  Chapter 41: Whit

  Chapter 42: Whit

  Chapter 43: Whit

  Chapter 44: Wisty

  Chapter 45: Whit

  Chapter 46: Wisty

  Chapter 47: Whit

  Chapter 48: Darrius

  Chapter 49: Wisty

  Chapter 50: Wisty

  Chapter 51: Wisty

  Chapter 52: Wisty

  Chapter 53: Whit

  Chapter 54: Whit

  Chapter 55: Whit

  Chapter 56: Whit

  Chapter 57: Wisty

  Chapter 58: Wisty

  Chapter 59: Wisty

  Chapter 60: Whit

  Chapter 61: Whit

  Chapter 62: Wisty

  Chapter 63: Whit

  Chapter 64: Wisty

  Chapter 65: Whit

  Chapter 66: Wisty

  Chapter 67: Whit

  Chapter 68: Wisty

  Chapter 69: Whit

  Chapter 70: Wisty

  Chapter 71: Wisty

  Chapter 72: Whit

  Chapter 73: Whit

  Chapter 74: Pearce

  Chapter 75: Wisty

  Chapter 76: Wisty

  Chapter 77: Wisty

  Chapter 78: Wisty

  EPILOGUE: WITCH & WIZARD Chapter 79: Whit

  About the Authors

  Books by James Patterson

  A Sneak Peek of Maximum Ride Forever

  Copyright

  Copyright

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2014 by James Patterson

  Witch & Wizard® is a trademark of JBP Business, LLC.

  Excerpt from Maximum Ride Forever copyright © 2014 by James Patterson

  Cover art © 2014 by Sean Freeman

  Cover design by David Caplan

  Cover © 2014 Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publish
er is unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at [email protected] Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Little, Brown and Company

  Hachette Book Group

  1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10104

  lb-teens.com

  Little, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

  First ebook edition: December 2014

  ISBN 978-0-316-20773-7

  E3

 


 

  James Patterson, The Lost

  (Series: Witch & Wizard # 5)

 

 


 

 
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