Read Ashes Online

Authors: Ilsa J. Bick

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Ashes

EGMONT
We bring stories to life
First published by Egmont USA, 2011
443 Park Avenue South, Suite 806
New York, NY 10016
Copyright © Ilsa J. Bick, 2011
All rights reserved
1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2
www.egmontusa.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bick, Ilsa J.
Ashes / Ilsa J. Bick.
p. cm.
Summary: Alex, a resourceful seventeen-year-old running from her incurable brain tumor, Tom, who has left the war in Afghanistan, and Ellie, an angry eight-year-old, join forces after an electromagnetic pulse sweeps through the sky and kills most of the world's population, turning some of those who remain into zombies and giving the others superhuman senses.
ISBN 978-1-60684-175-4 (hardcover)—ISBN 978-1-60684-231-7 (electronic book)
[1. Science fiction. 2. Survival—Fiction. 3. Zombies—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.B47234As 2011
[Fic]—dc22 2010051825
Printed in the United States of America
CPSIA tracking label information: Printed in July 2011 at Berryville Graphics, Berryville, Virginia
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher and copyright owner.

I tell you the past is a bucket of ashes …

—C
ARL
S
ANDBURG

“W
HERE ARE YOU
?” A
UNT
H
ANNAH DEMANDED AS SOON AS
Alex thumbed
TALK
. “What do you think you're doing?”

“I just crossed into Michigan,” Alex said, choosing the easiest question first. When she'd spotted the
WELCOME TO MICHIGAN
sign—
GREAT LAKES! GREAT TIMES!
—she felt a sense of things opening up, expanding, as if she'd been traveling in a perpetual night on a lonely road hemmed by a thick, black forest and was only now getting her first glimpse of the sun. “I had to get gas.” Which was really neither here nor there.

“Michigan. What the bloody hell's in Michigan?” Aunt Hannah's second husband had been a Brit. Aunt Hannah wasn't. She was originally from Wisconsin—Sheboygan, which Alex didn't think was a real place until the Everly Brothers mentioned it—and said
bloody
was way better than other swears because all her friends, most of whom were Lutherans, thought she was just being cute:
Oh, that Hannah
. So Aunt Hannah said
bloody
quite often, especially in church.

“Lots of things,” Alex said. She stood a few feet away from the gas station's bathrooms in a blush of salmon-colored light from the setting sun. Across the street, a billboard suggesting a visit to Oren in Amish country jockeyed with one exhorting families to bring their elderly to a hospice named Northern Light—
GOD'S LIGHT IN DARK TIMES
—and another suggested a visit to the Iron Mining Museum north of town. “I just needed some time.”

“Time. Time for
what
?” Aunt Hannah's voice was tight. “You think this is a bloody game? We're talking about your
life
, Alexandra.”

“I know that. It's just …” She toyed with a silver whistle on a sterling chain around her neck. The whistle had been a gift from her father when she was six, on their first overnight hike:
You ever get into trouble out here, honey, you just blow that and I'll be there in a heartbeat
. This was one of her few, clear, precious memories of him. “I need to do this now, while I still can.”

“I see. So they're with you?”

Alex knew what—
who—
she meant. “Yes.”

“I notice your father's gun is missing, too.”

“I've got it.”

“I see,” Aunt Hannah said again, although her tone suggested she really didn't. “Do you honestly think suicide is the answer?”

“Is that what you think?” From somewhere over her shoulder, Alex heard the bathroom door open, and a moment later two girls, a blonde and a brunette, swished by, each wearing a powder-blue sweatshirt with
SOMERVILLE HIGH
and a tennis racket stenciled in a blaze of white. “You think I'm going to kill myself?”

She regretted the words as soon as they were out of her mouth. Glancing at Alex, Ponytail Blonde leaned in to whisper something to Ponytail Brunette, who also threw Alex a look. They both did the whole peek-whisper-giggle routine all the way across the lot to a small, ancient-looking school bus and a harried older guy with glasses and a frizz of Einstein hair.

Cheeks burning, Alex turned away. “It's nothing like that.”

Although if she were being truthful, it wasn't like she hadn't downed a couple shots of Jack and taken her dad's gun out a few times for a good hard stare. The thing that stopped her, mainly, was the thought that her hand might jerk and she'd end up giving herself a frontal lobotomy or something, which would be just too pathetic. She could picture the gossip girls—kids like Ponytail Blonde and Ponytail Brunette—at lunch afterward:
Like, gawd, how
lame.

Aunt Hannah said, “Yes, but if you were coming back, you wouldn't have taken them.”

“No. All it means is that
they're
not coming back.”

“Alexandra, there's no need for you to do this on your own. Your mother was my sister.” Aunt Hannah's voice got a little watery. “I know she would never have agreed to this. This was not their
intention
.”

“Well, isn't it good they're not around to argue the point?”

Aunt Hannah went from watery to desert-dry in a nanosecond. “Don't use that tone of voice with me, Alexandra. You are only seventeen. You are a very sick young woman, and you are not old enough to know what's best in this situation. Stubbornness and self-pity are not answers.”

This was getting them nowhere. All Aunt Hannah saw was a seventeen-year-old orphan, with a brain tumor the size of a tennis ball, who'd finally cracked under the strain. “I know, Aunt Hannah. You're right. Feeling sorry for myself and being a pain in the ass are not answers.”

“Good. Now we've cleared that up.” Her aunt honked into a tissue. “When are you coming back?”

Uh … maybe never?
“First week in October. Maybe … the eighth?”

She could hear her aunt counting under her breath. “Twelve days? Why so long?”

“It takes that long to hike there and back.”

“Hike?”

“Well, there aren't any roads.”

“But you can't be serious. You're not strong enough.”

“Sure I am. It's been three months since the last cycle. I've been running and swimming and lifting, and my weight's up again. I'm plenty strong.”

“But what about the
new
treatments? You're due in three days and—”

“I'm not doing any more treatments.”

“Dr. Barrett was very clear that this new procedure—” Her aunt broke off as Alex's words registered. “What? What do you mean you're not doing any more treatments? Don't be ridiculous. Of course you are. What are you saying?”

“I'm saying that I'm done, Aunt Hannah.”

“But … but the experimental drug,” her aunt spluttered. “The procedure, the
PEBBLES
—”

“You know they're not going to work.” Like the new drug, the PEBBLES—Probes Encapsulated By Biologically Localized Embedding—were also experimental: nano-sized beads, full of poison and coated with a special light-sensitive chemical. Once injected into her bloodstream, the PEBBLES made their way to her brain, where they snuggled up to the tumor: a stubborn monster that had, after a dozen rounds of chemo and radiation, refused to die. When activated by an optic probe, the beads were supposed to release their deadly payload. So far, after four tries, hers had not, even though the doctors had reloaded her brain with enough PEBBLES to run a few dozen pinball machines.

“You have to give it time, Alexandra.”

That's so easy for you to say. You've
got
time.
“Aunt Hannah, it's been two years since they found the thing. Nothing's worked.”

“Granted, but the tumor's growing relatively
slowly.
Dr. Barrett said you
could
go several more years, and by then, there will be new drugs.”

“Or there might not be. I just can't do this anymore.” She expected an explosion on the other end, but there was only dead air. The silence spun out so long Alex thought their connection had dropped. “Aunt Hannah?”

“I'm here.” Pause. “When did you decide?”

“After my appointment with Barrett last week.”

“Why now?”

Because my left hand shakes,
Alex thought
. Because I can't smell anything. Because I've got a headful of teeny, tiny little rocks that aren't working and that means more regular chemo and radiotherapy and I am so sick of losing my hair and puking my guts out for nothing and doing schoolwork in bed, and I'm not going into some hospice. Because, for once,
I'm
calling the shots.

But what she said was, “I don't think there will be a better time. I need to do this while I still can.”

More silence. “I imagine the school will ask after you. Dr. Barrett will have a stroke.”

Privately, she thought Barrett might be relieved. No more having to look on the bright side. “What are you going to say?”

“I'll think of something inventive. Will you call?”

“When I make it back,” she said, unsure if this was a promise she would keep. “To the car, I mean. Once I'm in the Waucamaw, there's no cell coverage.”

“And what am I supposed to do? Hang a lantern from a tower? Twiddle my thumbs? Take up knitting?” When Alex didn't reply, her aunt continued, “I've half a mind to call the police and have you dragged back.”

“What's the other half say?”

“That you're stubborn. That once you've made up your mind, there's no talking to you.” Her aunt paused. “And that I'm not sure I blame you. That is
not
the same as saying that what you're doing is
right
, but I understand.”

“Thanks.”

“Don't mention it.” Her aunt sighed. “Oh, Alex, do be careful, all right? Try to come back in one piece?”

“I'll be okay. It's not like I've never backpacked before.”

“It's not your competence I question. Make a fire, live off the land, build a house out of twigs and chewing gum … so like your father. If the bloody zombies attack, you're set.”

“Thanks,” she said against the prick of tears. Crying was not the way she wanted this to end. “I should probably go. I love you, Aunt Hannah.”

“Oh, you bloody little fool,” her aunt said. “Don't you think I know that?”

They never spoke to each other again.

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