The Hatching (The Hatching #1)(80)



She picked up the binoculars again. Without the binoculars, the spiders were a black mass, four hundred yards out now, but through the glass, Kim could see a woman flailing her arms, her head shimmering with black beads. The woman dropped suddenly, and Kim wasn’t sure if it was from the spiders or a bullet. At first, it seemed like there was no pattern to it, but Kim realized most of the people were running from right to left. And the firing Marines didn’t seem to matter. The people were more scared of the spiders than of the guns.

“Kim?” Mitts leaned forward. He had his hand on her shoulder. “Kim? What are we supposed to do?”

She didn’t know, but there was something bothering her. Something about the way the spiders were moving. It reminded her of a sort of dance. Liquid spilling forward and back, waves of black washing forward over certain people and then tucking back under, like the ocean pulling sand into the deeps. And some people, inexplicably, left standing, the bugs splitting around them, desert islands. Three hundred yards out now, and with the binoculars, she could see the spiders as individual drops, but without the binoculars, they were a single flood of liquid, moving together.

And then the radio came to life: “Fall back! Fall back!”

She didn’t hesitate. She shoved the JLTV into drive and hit the gas. Because they were out on the wing, the last vehicle in the barricade, all she had to do was crank the wheel all the way to the left to spin a spitting semicircle of dirt, stone, and dust before she was turned in the other direction.

“What the f*ck?” Elroy ducked down, holding tight to the edges of the turret. “We’ve got orders to—”

“They’re calling for us to fall back. It’s too late,” Kim yelled. “They f*cked up. This isn’t the flu. We can kill as many civilians as you want, fire until you’re in the black, but it isn’t going to stop the spiders. We can’t shoot our way out of this one.” She kept the gas pedal tight to the floor, and the JLTV was picking up speed now that it was moving straight. On the highway, she could get the fourteen-thousand-pound beast up to seventy miles per hour, but on the sand and dirt, she’d be happy with thirty. In the rearview mirror she saw Sue’s Hummer tracking behind her, the rest of the line in a mix of chaos. Mitts scrambled across the seat to the other side so he could look out the window and back at the barricade.

There was another explosion, bigger this time. The entire JLTV bounced and bucked, but the tires bit back into the sand and it kept moving forward. The fast movers screamed over them again, from the other direction, payloads emptied, and Kim risked a look in the mirror again. All she could see was smoke and fire.





National Institutes of Health,

Bethesda, Maryland


Melanie figured she had another ten minutes or so before the helicopter got there. Manny had been insistent. Despite the president’s speech and all indications that the infestation was only in LA, people were starting to stream out of DC to go . . . To go where? Where did people think they were going to run to, Melanie wondered, a hotel in the Hamptons? It didn’t matter, though, because the end result was that the normally bad traffic around the DC area was even worse, and the half-hour drive to the White House was going to take a lot longer. So. Helicopter.

She leaned into the window of the isolation unit to try to get a better view of what the surgeon was doing. At first, she thought it was going to be a simple thing. They’d cut Bark open, the dead spider had flopped out, and the egg sac had presented itself. Snip some threads, pull the sac out and drop it in the insectarium, sew Bark back up, call it a day. But it wasn’t so easy. The strands of silk weren’t just tacked around the sac. They were literally sewn through Bark’s body. And worse. The threads were dotted with eggs, like mini egg sacs on a highway throughout his body. Nasty little surprises, and the surgeon had to track each thread and make sure he caught each of the eggs. The big egg sac was still in there; the surgeon wanted to work around it, to make sure he didn’t lose any of the precious threads. As an added bonus, the egg sac, all the spider silk, was incredibly sticky. It was nothing like the sac from Peru. That thing had been hard, designed to go the distance. But this egg sac was different, and the surgeon had to be careful to avoid getting tangled up.

Plus, as a final bonus, it was vibrating and getting warmer.

None of it made any sense to her. Normally it took two or three weeks for an egg sac to hatch, and the spiders that came out were hatchlings, growing slowly to their full sizes. But these things could lay eggs and have full-sized spiders popping out in twelve hours. Or twenty-four? She didn’t actually know. She would have said twenty-four based on what was happening everywhere else, but this egg sac seemed as though it was moving faster. It would hatch within twelve hours for sure. Maybe even quicker. It was like they were speeding up. One generation burning out quickly and the next even more so. Maybe the way she’d described it to Manny had been the best: like a rocket burning itself up.

But that didn’t make sense either. What evolutionary advantage was there in dying quickly? The parasitic part made sense. By laying eggs inside hosts, the spiders had guaranteed food sources once they hatched. But the fact that they could eat their hosts wasn’t normal either. Most spiders dissolved their prey and ground it up with their pedipalps since they didn’t have teeth. She’d described it once to Manny as having a broken jaw and needing to run everything through a blender before slurping it up through a straw. But these spiders? They had more in common with piranhas than anything else. Actually, Melanie thought, that might not be a bad comparison, though she didn’t know much about the fish other than what she’d seen in a couple of bad horror films. The spiders were uncommonly social and coordinated, swarming together and almost organized.

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