As I came up behind the priest, I could hear him speaking, his voice low. I soon realized he was either praying or reciting some biblical passage, so I stopped, waiting for a respectful moment to butt in.
“The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little child shall lead them,” he pronounced, with an accent of finality.
“Father,” I began, just as Patient One lifted his head. I stopped dead, watching as the prisoner gazed up into Isley’s eyes. His movements were achingly slow, and accompanied by very soft, moist sounds.
“Not lions,” he gurgled. He didn’t stutter, but dragged out his words to the point where they ticked like a reading off a Geiger counter. “He has no lions. No leopards.”
“What?” Isley asked as the guards shakily unslung their rifles and aimed them into the cage. “No, stop!”
“No lions. No leopards,” Patient One said. “The Devil keeps tigers.”
After enlightening us as to the feline nature of the Devil’s menagerie, Patient One clammed up again. We spent upward of an hour cajoling him, without results. The dead man simply laid his chin back on his chest and sank into silence.
Eventually we returned home as a group. It took us all of fifteen minutes to convene our war council and head for the attic. Renfield was already there, messing about with his computers when we stomped our way upstairs.
“I take it class is in session?” he said by way of greeting, as I moved to snag one of Isley’s cats. The skinny tabby wriggled in my arms as I sat down on the floor.
“Yep. Pleasantries later,” Bram said as he closed the attic door. “Let’s get right to business. First up, bombing. Ladies, spill. Everything.”
As the others settled down, I started getting them up to speed. Pamela chimed in a few times. By the time we were done, all eyes were on her.
“Okaaay. Masked dudes do not sound ran-dom to me,” Chas said. Her new voice reminded me of the very people she was talking about. It was getting better, her control over the new tech improving, but I willed her to hurry up.
“Isambard,” Tom said, “you haven’t been out there making a name for yourself, have you? Getting into fights or anything?” The boy shook his head.
Ren piped up. “Zombies have been the target of intolerant attacks since December, though. Mr. Griswold and Miss Dearly were in the carriage. This could be an extension of that.”
“Yeah, but it’s hard to believe something this big isn’t personal,” I said. “And it’s too weird that both our families were on the receiving end.”
“There’s something else.” Everyone looked at Bram. “Every time I’ve been around the Changed, I’ve heard the words ‘brother’ and ‘sister’ bandied about. It was even on that note Laura left. What did one of the masked guys say the night we were attacked, Nora?”
“ ‘Careful, brother.’ ” My heart jumped into my throat. “Oh my God.”
“Yeah.” Bram let us in on what he’d seen and heard on the coastal road. When he described the camp briefly for Pam’s and Isambard’s benefit, Pamela gave me such a look.
“Why would anyone want Patient One, though?” Issy asked.
“For ransom? Possibly to use as a biological weapon?” Renfield shook his head. “Shades of Averne. Not a happy thought.”
“Seeing that Changed girl on the road,” Bram said, “the way Hagens acted, the way Claudia talked on the boat, the masks at the camp—it kind of all fits together.”
“You really think Hagens has it out for us, though?” Tom said to him. “I mean, she was always a hard-ass, but a good soldier. Maybe she just feels she can state her piece now that Company Z no longer exists.”
“I could buy that. But this? Zombies attacking the cops?” Bram looked to Chas. “You’ve gone to a few protests. Did any of the zombies you met talk about attacking the living?”
“If they had, I would-n’t have gone back,” she said, crossing her arms over her chest. “They just talked about protesting. Marching. Keeping zombies in Parliament.”
“Maybe someone’s chosen to step it up a notch. Turned anti-living for some reason. But I don’t get the feeling Laura’s lying, either. That’s the problem.”
“So do you think the masked people are from the Changed?” I asked. “We don’t have any hard evidence for that.”
“I know it sounds kind of paranoid, but think about Hagens’s threats. She told you to go to ground, Nora. She told all of us to watch our backs. That’s not evasive language. In fact, she asked how you were right off the bat—like she thought something might’ve already happened to you.”
“But I was standing right there—she might’ve been mouthing off. And how would she know about the Roes?”
“If they’re a gang of criminals, though,” said Tom, “someone might know how to make a bomb. This could make sense.”
At that, Pamela spoke up. “My father said the police didn’t have anything new yet. They’re waiting for forensics results on the bomb.” Her voice was tired.
Bram sent her a sympathetic look. “While we’re waiting on that, I think we should look into things. For starters, I want to learn more about that camp. Hagens. And clearly Nora and I can’t go.”
“Maybe Samedi could go back,” I suggested. “Convince them he wants to help that kid.”
“Wait. We’re talking about a recon mission to the zombiiie camp?” Chastity raised her hand. “Hello?”
“Yeah, Chas,” Bram said. “And I nominate you, Coalhouse, and Tom. No offense, Ren, but if it comes to blows, they’ll need to be able to dish it out.”
“None taken, I assure you.” Renfield saluted the three chosen ones, a smirk playing over his lips.
“Yes. I like this. Back on the horse,” Tom said. “So, what’s the goal of this little mission? And who’s heading it up?”
Bram had clearly slipped back into captain mode, and the others back into a military mind-set. “Coalhouse.”
Coalhouse looked at him curiously, only his good eye moving—the other dead, loose one remaining stationary in its exposed socket. “Me? Usually I’m backup.”
“You did well today. You deserve a chance.”
Tom didn’t exactly look thrilled by this turn of events, but he nodded at Bram.
“Got it.” Coalhouse smiled broadly. “I’ll do right by you, Cap, I swear.”
“Good. Head back up, blend, ask around. Be smart. All we need to do is figure out if someone there knows something about the attack on the road, the stuff that’s been going on in town. If nothing else, check around for the bird masks.” Bram looked at everyone in turn. “Hagens obviously doesn’t like me or Nora, whatever her reasoning. If you attract her attention, act like you’re growing to hate us, too. Like what she said got you thinking, and that’s why you came back.”
“I get to talk about what an imbecile you are, openly and freeely?” Chas punched the air. “Best mission ev-er!”
“Be smart,” Bram stressed, leaning closer to her. “Meanwhile, Ren—suggestions?”
“I could start a database of all suspected attacks, look for commonalities. I could look for information on any names you bring me.”
“Right. Start with background checks on Hagens and a woman named Mártira Cicatriz.”
“And Edmund Lopez,” I said. When Pamela looked at me, I anticipated her response and told her, “I’m with you. I’ll do whatever you need me to do.” She actually smiled a bit.
Standing up, Bram added, “I’m going to ask around the boats. See if maybe the Changed have tried to recruit zombies, and if they did, what was said.”
Pamela asked, “Shouldn’t we also go to the authorities? The press?”
Bram looked down at her for a moment before responding. “It’s all speculation at this point, Miss Roe. I think we should see how far we get on our own. Laura, Dog … there are zombies up there who I sincerely doubt are in on this. And the last time the army went up against t
he Changed …” His brow furrowed. “The army was ready to kill them. And the press spins things, spreads rumors. You can’t control it once it’s out.”
Pamela glanced at her brother and capitulated with a nod. “All right.”
Bram was silent a moment longer, before adding, “No more unnecessary deaths, guys. No more violence, no more lies. We have to handle this. Now.”
“Yes, everyone shoo,” Ren said, finding his feet. He tapped a few buttons on his round-buttoned metal keyboard, and an email sprang up on his computer screen—a bouncing animated envelope, its virtual wax seal green and stamped with the letters ACL. “What in … bollocks. Aethernet Chess Live will not stop emailing me.”
Pamela stepped up behind his chair to watch, Issy joining her. I left them to their distraction, moving to follow Bram. The moment the others got ahead of us, he caught my hand and kissed my fingertips. It was a casual, tender little gesture that made my insides tickle.
And I needed it. Because the idea, as tenuous and unproven as it was, that someone had targeted Pamela and her family because of me? Or Bram? It was too horrible to contemplate—so horrible I found myself actively trying to block the thought. It was enough to make me hope for the first time that it was some random madman who’d gone after them.
A random madman would be easier to deal with than that.
Dog and Abuelo the Treasure Hunter slumbered beside me as I watered my plants with a thick brass syringe. It was another gift from Abuelo, whose sharp eye proved profitable when it came to Dumpster diving. Almost everything I owned had come from him, at one point or another—my books, my plant seeds. He was a husk of a man, ancient and arthritic and legless long before the Laz came.
Elsewhere in the large communal tent cons and beggars stirred at the behest of Claudia, shoving aside their narrow bedrolls and talking wistfully of the days when they might’ve boiled up a pot of coffee before heading out for their shift. Dead kids were traded off to those who wished to use them in their daily ploys—it always paid to beg with a small herd of children behind you. Drummed up more sympathy. Didn’t matter if they were your own or not.
“Christ,” I heard Claudia say. “Why are you lazy bums still abed? The carriages are heading to New London in ten minutes!”
I hastened to finish, dropping the syringe into a chipped glass of cloudy stream water. The tink it made seemed louder than it ought to.
Abuelo finally opened his eyes and started to sit up. “Morning, Miss Laura,” he coughed.
“Good morning, Abuelo.” He wasn’t really our grandfather, merely the oldest member of the Changed that I knew of. We’d left New London around a hundred strong. Over the last four days or so our number had more than doubled. Zombies had come and just … stayed. Like Smoke, once upon a time.
Claudia finally caught sight of us and headed over. I watched her approach with a heavy heart, expecting she would tell me to head into town with Abuelo, to watch him sell his trinkets. And oh, I didn’t want to go back there.
Despondency pulled me to my feet. “Please, please, don’t make me go back to the city, Claudia. I’ll do whatever else you want—”
“Who said I wanted you to go to the city, you useless thing?” she snapped. Claudia’s hair always reminded me of a tower of brambles when she got angry—as if she were some horrible Thorn Queen from a fairy tale. “Dog, you get the honors today.”
Surprised, I said, “Really?”
Claudia grabbed my hand. “Don’t make me repeat myself.”
Abuelo pushed himself up into his cart and started fussing with the faded blankets there, swaddling his bandaged leg stumps. I didn’t have time to say anything more to him or Dog, for Claudia started pulling me through the tent. The others watched as we passed, lingering over their clothes and packs of cards and trick cups. I knew they disliked that I so often got out of work. They resented the fact that I wasn’t expected to bring in any coin—mostly because Mártira knew I was so bad at it. It was hard to ask people to part with their money for a handful of stolen flowers.
“Get out of here! What’re you waiting for? Y’all suddenly become performers?” Claudia hollered at the others, urging them on their way. “Except for the leaders! We’re going to Mártira’s tent today!”
Mártira’s tent?
As Claudia yanked me roughly outside, I glanced back to see Dog attending to Abuelo, struggling to do so with one hand. Hagens and Claudia had to let Mr. Griswold help. Neither of them was in control, and they had no right to chase him and his friends away. If the leaders were meeting, then I could bring this fact up.
And yet I wasn’t sure if I dared.
Few people were outside, and most of the smaller tents stood empty. It was almost noon, but noon was now like dawn to us—the performers who had danced and sung late into the night slumbering on, the hustlers forced awake and shoved into the convoy to New London to ply their trade. Mártira said they could stop once the parties became big enough, famous enough. I eagerly awaited that day.
“What is everyone meeting about?” I asked as my sister escorted me across the camp.
“You’ll see.” Claudia’s grip tightened on me, and a second later she stopped and pulled me in front of her, tipping her head down so I could better see into her eyes. “Hagens told me to bring you, and I’m not sure why. But you better not mess this up for me. Hagens has plans—big plans. Plans people come here, seventy-some miles outside of New London, to talk to her about. If Mártira is smart, she’ll start listening to her today. So you keep your mouth shut, you hear?”
I had no idea what was going on, but I nodded. I had no choice.
Soon we were at the base of the stage, where we found the others already assembled. Mártira’s tent stood perhaps ten yards beyond, in an area all its own. Aside from Hagens, there were seven other zombies waiting—the leaders of their respective crafts. Their impatient voices told me that they’d been there a while, and I wondered why Claudia had thought to call for stragglers. As I did, I tried not to look at Miss Hagens, who appeared, as always, as if she might happily toss us all into a mass grave.
“You finally ready to get this started?” Bruno Allende asked Claudia.
“Yeah.” Claudia let me go and continued on to the tent, the others falling in behind her.
Moving to the back, I could hear Mártira interrogating the first few entrants. I was the last to duck in, and I drifted toward the low, armless stool I knew awaited me along the eastern sweep of the wall. The others filed in around me, finding seats.
“What is the meaning of this? I didn’t summon any of you.” Mártira stood beside a red velveteen curtain nearly the same shade as her hair, her eyes narrowed. Her tent was filled with orphaned pieces of furniture, salvaged luxuries, and long swaths of patchwork fabric created from handkerchiefs that Mr. Invierno’s boys had once pickpocketed but couldn’t sell. Just like her room back in town.
“I’m here to ask for a vote on behalf of Hagens, sister,” Claudia said, as she and Hagens remained standing. “That’s why I brought the leaders.”
“About time this happened,” said Mr. Invierno. He was a little person, now a little zombie, with a mad thatch of black hair and swollen features roughened by drink and death. Allende was seated next to him.
“Indeed.” Mother Perfore, formerly the leader of the streetwalkers, leaned forward and flicked a length of ash from her stubby cigar. She was missing both of her eyes. One of her girls had used black quilting thread to tether her eyelids open, and the exposed sockets were black and gaping. “Get talkin’.”
Claudia glanced at Hagens, ceding the floor. Hagens hooked her thumbs into her leather waistcoat—she wore a jacket, waistcoat, and trousers, like a man—and said, “You never listen, so I chose to talk to the others first. I’ve come here to convince you that we need to get Smoke back. And I think I know how.”
Mártira responded to this strange statement with silence. Hagens apparently viewed that as permission to continue. “I told you that before I came
here I served in a company of zombies affiliated with the army.” Hagens spared a look at Claudia’s face. “The man who formed it was Dr. Victor Dearly. And he has a daughter who’s immune to the Laz. The only immune individual discovered so far. She was here last night.”
“Immune?” Mártira asked, still puzzled.
“Totally unaffected.”
“I still don’t see what this has to do with us.”
“Everything,” Hagens said, pulling her hands free of her clothing. “Have you given one thought to Smoke since he was arrested? Especially now that we all know just how important he is? That he’s carrying a new form of the illness?”
“Of course I have, but that is none of your concern.”
“It is my concern. Bombs, guns, none of those things matter anymore—he is currently the most dangerous thing on the face of the earth. We can’t leave him in human control. Let them use him. You know how these things work—he’s a big freaking bargaining chip!”
“Be that as it may—”
“And so is the girl! Nora Dearly!” Hagens’s delivery was so forceful that Mártira actually hushed. “If we bring Miss Dearly here, we could exchange her for Smoke. Or, if her people don’t want her back, we could use her as bait to reel in a better hostage. Her father, for example? The infamous Dr. Dearly?”
Dearly? Girl? It hit me that they must be discussing the black-haired girl I’d seen the previous evening, and I sat up taller, wondering what this was really about.
“Our brother bit people. He is where he needs to be, at the moment.” Mártira paused. “Are you honestly suggesting we try to get him out of prison? Engage in kidnapping, extortion?”
“Bro …” Hagens threw up her hands. “You need to stop talking like this group is some kind of commune! We can’t just sit around with our ‘brothers’ and ‘sisters’ and sing songs about love and death. Do you not see how the living could exploit Smoke? As a nuclear option against the other living tribes? As propaganda, to convince the living of the need to exterminate every last zombie? As an excuse to give the army more power—the very same army that once tried to hunt us all down?”