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Kyle took her into the back where the sink was.

“Where’d you find her?” Parker asked Hughes.

Hughes and Frank looked at each other.

“She came running out of the trees,” Frank said, “looking like one of those things. You saw her. All that blood on her face and all over her shirt. She was waving her arms around and looking all crazy so Hughes shot at her.”

“I take it you missed?” Parker said.

“I fired the Mossberg as Frank swerved around a car,” Hughes said. “So, yeah, I missed. She’s really damn lucky.”

Parker said nothing. He wasn’t thrilled to have another person around. With himself, Kyle, Hughes, Frank, Carol, and now this Annie person, there were six of them. An even number. Parker didn’t like even numbers. An even-numbered group could be deadlocked on decisions.

And Parker didn’t like the looks of this Annie. She was what, twenty-five years old at the most? Kyle’s age and Carol’s gender. A crap combination. Could she pull her weight? Well, maybe. She had blood all over herself, which meant one of two things. Annie was about to turn into one of those things or she’d killed a bunch of those things. Parker couldn’t imagine Carol squishing a bug.

“Something’s up with her,” Hughes said.

Parker raised his eyebrows. “What?”

“She doesn’t remember anything.”

“Well, that’s just great.”

“She knows who she is. She remembers everything except the last couple of months. She didn’t even know about the plague until Frank and I told her.”

“Can you believe that shit?” Frank said.

“She must be traumatized,” Carol said.

“You think?” Parker said.

Hughes grabbed Parker’s arm. Parker knew what that meant. Don’t be an asshole. Hughes was the only person Parker would let get away with that. Not that he could really stop him.

Kyle returned from the back of the store.

“Annie’s washing up,” he said. “She really wants to change out of those bloody clothes as soon as it’s safe to unload the truck.”

Everyone got quiet. Parker stepped up to the door and pressed his ear against the plywood, the Beretta M9 in both hands. He heard nothing but the sound of the sink running in back as Annie washed up. “Quiet out there. We might be okay.”

Ten more minutes, he thought, and if nothing comes and bangs on the windows and doors, they can slip out and unload the truck.

Annie shut off the sink and Parker could hear his tinnitus again. Or the hum of the earth. Or whatever it was. He heard nothing else but his own heartbeat and his breathing.

Kyle approached the door. He, too, placed his ear next to the boards. He didn’t seem to hear anything either.

Parker thought that was too good to be true. Something had to be out there. They were in a town, for Christ’s sake.

They both pressed their ears to the boards again.

Then Parker heard something that sounded like footsteps on asphalt. Not the footsteps of a dog or a cat and certainly not a rat. Not a deer or a coyote or any other animal that might have wandered into town now that people were gone. No, Parker heard the footsteps of humans.

Or things that used to be human.

He and Kyle stepped away from the door.

Parker twitched when Annie whispered from just behind him, “Is it clear?” He didn’t know she was there. He didn’t hear her sneak up on him. So that was a point in her favor. She knew how to move really damn quietly when she had to.

“Shh,” Parker said.

The footsteps outside grew louder.

“They’re regular people,” Kyle said. “Not infected. Those footsteps sound normal.”

The footsteps stopped outside the door. After a moment of silence, somebody knocked.

Parker flicked his Beretta’s safety off.

Kyle felt a surge of elation when he heard the knock on the door. More survivors!

But Parker looked spooked. The man stepped back and pointed his pistol right at the door.

“Who’s there?” Parker said.

“Please,” said a man’s hushed voice outside. Kyle could barely hear him through the boards. “We’ve got wounded out here. We need help.”

“How many are you?” Parker said.

“There are three of us. Please.”

“Are any of you infected?” Kyle said.

“No. But we were attacked. Not by the infected, but by other people. Then we saw your truck. You’ve got to let us inside before they see us. They’re armed.”

Kyle looked first at Parker and then at Hughes. Hughes nodded. So did Parker. Kyle unlocked the door and opened it.

Outside stood three men wearing black and pointing pistols at Kyle’s face.

“Shit,” Parker said.

The man in the center, the tallest of the three, saw Parker’s gun and aimed his pistol squarely at Parker’s head.

Kyle heard Carol skitter away, but he had no idea how the others were reacting. He could not take his eyes off the intruders and their guns. Kyle still held a hammer in his hand and wouldn’t let go of it.

“You’d better let us in,” said the tall man, “before some of those things see us.” He was the one who had spoken through the door. The leader.

“I thought you said you were attacked by people,” Parker said.

“I did,” said the tall man.

“Which of you is injured?” Kyle said.

The tall man sighed. “None of us. But you will be if you don’t back up and get out of our way. We’re coming in.”

Kyle stepped aside but kept hold of his hammer. The men stepped inside, but Parker stayed right where he was, barely a dozen feet away, and kept his handgun pointed at the intruders.

“Bobby,” the tall man said. “Lock the door.”

The one who answered to Bobby reached behind himself and closed the door. Half the light in the room vanished. Bobby fiddled with the lock.

“Were you followed?” Kyle said.

“We’re all clear. There’s nothing else out there. We’ve been searching the area for more than an hour. We could all pull our triggers right now and nothing would hear us.”

“We pull, you die,” Parker said. He held his gun level.

“You die too,” said the man. “And you die first. You can shoot one of us, but we will shoot all of you. So I strongly suggest you lower your weapons and that you do it now.”

Kyle set down his hammer. Hughes held a crowbar, but he set it down a little more slowly and a lot more reluctantly. Parker wouldn’t budge. Kyle wasn’t sure he even blinked.

“I am not setting my gun down,” Parker said.

Kyle wasn’t sure if he should be glad Parker kept his weapon trained on the man or if Parker was being reckless. He was probably being reckless.

“You’ll all die,” the man said.

Definitely reckless.

“The hell do you care?” Parker said. “You’ll be dead. It won’t make a rat’s-ass bit of difference to you if the rest of us die. So I know as a fact you aren’t pulling that trigger. You may as well stick that gun in your mouth and shoot your own brains out the back of your head.”

The two men stared at each other. Nobody moved. Nobody breathed.

“Guys—” Annie said, but Parker shushed her.

“So we’re at an impasse,” the man said.

“You’re goddamned right we are,” Parker said and took a step forward. All three straightened their arms and inched their guns closer. “And we’re at an impasse in my house. Step outside, and you’re free to go wherever you like. We won’t chase you. But if you don’t go, at least one of you dies. Maybe all three of you.”

“Everybody relax,” Kyle said. “No one’s going to shoot anybody. We have plenty of food here and lots of space to spread out in.”

“Kyle,” Parker said. “Pick up your hammer.”

Kyle didn’t move. Was Parker nuts? This was no time to escalate.

“Everybody just chill,” Kyle said. “We have plenty of food, plenty of water, plenty of space, and we obviously have plenty of weapons. We’re better off sticking together. We have no reason to fight, and if we work together we’ll be safer next time we’re attacked.”

“He’s right,” said the tall man to Parker. “So why don’t you just drop the gun.”

“Our house,” Parker said. “You drop ’em.”

Kyle glanced at the faces of his companions. Hughes looked ready to rip heads from torsos and could probably do it if he wouldn’t get himself shot first. Frank looked too nervous to do anything. Annie seemed

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