He turned to face forward. Little Tim Feely aimed the water cannon to the right, shooting a long, spreading spray at the hatchlings, people and muscle-monsters that poured out of buildings, desperate to get at the still-accelerating fire truck.
Klimas dropped, blood pouring from his knee. He reached both hands to grab it; his SCAR-FN tumbled over the side to clatter against the snow-covered street.
Roth had yet to get up.
Cooper fired his Sig Sauer — his slide locked back. His weapon was also out.
A hatchling scrambled over the right side and shot toward Klimas. The SEAL saw it coming, managed to get his hands up in time. Tentacles wrapped around arms: Clarence saw what lay on the bottom of those pyramid bodies — thick teeth made to tear off huge chunks of flesh.
Clarence reached to his belt. He gripped the handle of the knife he’d used to kill his wife. Klimas pushed the hatchling against the inside of the equipment box. Clarence drew the blade and drove it into the plasticine body. The hatchling let out a high-pitched squeal. Clarence lifted the knife and flicked the creature over the side.
Klimas’s knee was a b.l.o.o.d.y mess. He grimaced against the pain, but held out one b.l.o.o.d.y hand.
“Can I have my knife back?”
Clarence handed it over. He never wanted to touch the thing again.
He looked forward over the truck cabin’s roof. Another wave of bad guys rushed down the middle of the tree-lined street, coming head-on.
Bosh floored it.
Engine 98’s flat face hit people so hard the cabin rattled with each impact. Bodies flew in all directions. The truck wobbled and bounced as killers of all kinds fell under the wheels, spraying blood onto the snowy street and even up onto the sidewalks.
And then, there were no more attackers in front. Bosh had driven through, broken free. Clarence looked out the back.
Hundreds of them — no, thousands — filled the street, a rushing mob straight out of a zombie flick. The closest ones weren’t even fifteen feet away.
Tim was still aiming his spray off the right side. Clarence grabbed his shoulder. Tim yanked back on the cannon’s valve-handle. The spray of water quickly faded and died, dripping down onto the bed’s hoses. His face was a sheet of blood; a round had grazed his forehead.
Clarence pointed to the rear. “You wanted them concentrated.”
Tim looked. He’d been wide-eyed the entire time, terrified of everything, but now his fear vanished.
Tim Feely snarled.
“Come get some,” he said. He pointed the chromed cannon at the chasing horde and shoved the valve-handle all the way forward.
A concentrated blast shot out, hit a muscle-monster in the chest. Tim moved the stream side to side, knocking people down, kicking up a huge spray that soaked everyone around them.
And still the mob came on.
SLOW RIDE
Engine 98 slammed into something big, catching Tim unawares and smashing into the back of the pockmarked cabin. The blow stunned him. He blinked, tried to clear his vision. When he looked up, he saw Clarence manning the water cannon.
Clarence aimed high, creating a wide, spreading spray that rained down on the army of pursuers.
How many had been exposed? Five hundred? More?
Tim hurt so bad. Every bone, every muscle, if not from jarring impacts then from the endless shivering. His hands were so cold he couldn’t move his fingers, which were curled up as if they still gripped the water cannon’s handles.
Far behind, he saw some of the pursuers — soaking wet, chests heaving with big, deep breaths — giving up the chase. They would die within twenty-four hours, but not before, hopefully, exposing dozens of others.
We did it, Margo … we did it.
Tim looked around. Roth was moving again, struggling weakly to rise. Blood matted the right shoulder of his letterman’s jacket. Just to the left, on the other side of the cannon’s base, Klimas clutched at his b.l.o.o.d.y, ruined knee.
And in the middle of the bed, Cooper Mitch.e.l.l, standing tall and flipping a double bird at the pursuers.
“How’s that taste, motherf.u.c.kers?” Cooper grabbed his crotch and shook it. “Lick it up! Lick it allllll up!”
Engine 98 lurched. A grinding noise joined the diesel’s gurgle. The truck started to slow.
Tim saw the street signs: State and Banks. They weren’t far from Lincoln Park now. Two long blocks and they’d be on the green gra.s.s.
He heard a noise up above. There, two spots far off in the sky … helicopters?
Rescue. They had done it. They were going to make it.
Then he saw something else, something much closer … something hanging from a tree by its oversized, yellow-skinned arms.
Engine 98 drove directly underneath it.
The monster let go.
GOOD-BYE
Paulius didn’t see it drop, but he saw it land in the middle of the truck bed, almost on top of Roth. In that frozen, awful moment, Paulius noticed the monster had almost a full head of curly red hair. He wondered if the person had been Irish.
A pale, sore-speckled arm stabbed down: a bone-blade slid through Roth’s letterman’s jacket, deep into his belly. The creature lifted the 250-pound man like he was nothing. Lifted, and threw — a screaming Roth sailed off the back of the truck to land hard on the pavement.
Paulius gripped his knife and reactively started to get up, but the agony of his ruined knee stopped him cold.
The wide-headed monster turned, locked eyes with Paulius. Rippling muscles drove its arm forward. Paulius flinched right — the tip of the bone-blade slashed the side of his neck before it punched through the cab’s back wall.