Flesh & Bone (Rot & Ruin, #3)(82)
Conclusions:
I think we can put to rest the debate as to whether the Reaper pathogen has mutated.
We have been able to isolate fairly pure examples of the parasite, and we can begin studying them once we get back to Sanctuary.
The sequencer at Hope 1 is on the fritz again, so we have been unable to sequence the DNA, either of the parasite or these new mutations; however, it seems clear that Reaper is continuing to mutate. There is no way at this point to know how many new strains of the disease are active within the reanimate population.
I would like to again strongly urge the lifting of the communication ban. Without open discussions with colonies of survivors, we will never be able to amass a reliable body of information. We simply do not know enough, and it is imperative that we establish the location and spread of new Reaper strains.
I am gravely concerned about the R3 variations. Does this mutation occur only in new reanimates? If not, is there a possibility it could spread to the existing population of R1’s? It’s doubtful we could survive a catastrophe of that magnitude.
I believe we should put five to ten more field teams in play before the end of January. The sooner we can verify this information and collect data, the better.
Postscript: There are reports, as yet unverified by our teams, of reanimates moving in clusters. This seems improbable, but in light of other radical changes I believe it would be prudent to investigate this. Perhaps Captain Ledger and his rangers would be best suited for this.
There was more of it, but what they had just read was almost too much to grasp.
“Captain Ledger?” echoed Benny. “Hey, I know him . . . I mean, I have a Zombie Card with him on it.”
Nix said nothing. Her eyes were closed and she swayed for a moment, and then suddenly her knees buckled and she sagged to the floor. Benny caught her under the arm and steadied her.
“Whoa! Nix, what’s wrong?”
She shook her head. Tears rolled down her cheeks. “It’s all real,” she murmured. “The jet . . . other people. The world isn’t . . . isn’t . . . ”
She threw her arms around Benny’s neck, buried her face against his chest, and began to cry.
Dumbfounded and confused, Benny wrapped his arms around her as she wept.
All the time Nix kept saying, “It’s real . . . it’s real.”
64
SAINT JOHN AND BROTHER PETER SQUATTED IN THE DIRT ON EITHER SIDE of a burly man with a bushy brown beard and the iron-hard muscles of the steelworker he had been in his youth.
Now that man lay screaming, and with each scream he yielded up more and more of his power to the saint and the high priest of the Night Church. Red mouths had been opened by the score in his trembling flesh. Every bit of bravado and contempt and resistance had flowed out of him.
This man, Brother Eric, was one of Mother Rose’s most trusted team leaders. A deacon of great power among the reapers. Close friend to Brother Simon and Brother Alexi. A confidant of Her Holiness.
And sadly for him, he was intimately aware of what Mother Rose was planning.
Where once he had thought himself too committed to her and too powerful in himself to be forced to betray even the most casual secret, now he could not scream enough of the truth.
Saint John rose and turned away from the screaming man.
“He has told us everything of use,” he said quietly. “He has paid for his sins and now the darkness wants him. Send him on.”
Brother Peter looked down at the blade in his hand and stifled a disappointed sigh. He would never question an order from the saint, however. With a deft flick of his wrist, the screaming stopped.
“Praise be to the darkness,” he murmured as he wiped his knife clean with a handful of grass. He rose and stood with the saint. “I am sorry for your pain.”
Saint John shook his head.
“I knew about this betrayal long ago. I have already shed my tears.”
Even so, Brother Peter could see the glisten in the saint’s eyes. It filled him with a red rage that howled in his head. That anyone would bring harm to this beloved servant of their god was unbearable. There was nothing he would not do to remove that hurt from this holy man.
However, he was also filled with doubts.
“Honored One,” he began, “the infection within the Night Church runs so deep.”
“Yes. To its very heart.”
“How can it be purged?”
Saint John looked at the bloody knife in his own hand. He watched a drop of red fall and splatter on a green leaf.
“Mother Rose believes that her victory lies beyond the walls of Sanctuary.” He gestured as if shooing away a fly. “Let her have it.”
“But—”
“Let her take her ‘chosen ones,’ Peter. Let her carve the infection out of our army. Whoever is left . . . well, we know we can trust them.”
“We won’t help her attack Sanctuary?”
“No.”
“Honored One . . . we’ve spent so much time preparing for this, searching for this place. Our people fear it as a citadel of evil. We can’t just walk away.”
Saint John said, “That is exactly what we will do. We will leave this place of evil to Mother Rose.”
“But—”
The saint turned and looked toward the northwest. “I feel that we are called elsewhere, Peter. I feel that call with all my heart and soul.”