Read Yield Online

Authors: Bryan K. Johnson

Tags: #Thrillers, #Fiction

Yield (32 page)

BOOK: Yield
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At 12:22 P.M

.Eastern

Standard Time

a


the voice starts. The noise begins to swell again all around it. The hissing words cut off abruptly. An alert tone suddenly begins to blare through the three-inch speaker.


What?

a choir of survivors gasp.


Who did this?


Quiet!

Devin shouts impatiently.

The single tone continues to blare defiantly across the ruins of the freeway, its piercing cry echoing off the death and devastation resting so peacefully along it.

 

*  *  *

 


No, no, no. Come on!

Dave yells from inside the KOMO news van. He taps the green-hued waveform monitor and the solid audio line now splitting the screen beside him. He slams the metal door open.

We

ve lost our link, Jean.


What?


It

s gone. Out of juice, or cut off,

the engineer says. He turns back to retest the levels on his audio board.

I

m not sure which. But it

s gone.


We can get cut off?

Kevin asks. He sets the news script down with shaking hands.


I think we just did.

 

Chapter
16

 

 

Loose water shoots from Katherine Bane

s minivan as she hits a speed bump doing 60. Shock fills her hazel eyes, cutting lines of fear along her forehead. Cars pack the streets. Panic flies with them down Portland

s teeming roadways. Even in the heavy traffic, Katherine

s attention keeps drifting uncontrollably down to the dark words emanating from her stereo.

She passes an accident pushed off to the shoulder. Two drivers get out and exchange heated words, then punches, before one pulls out a crowbar. Without hesitation, he slams it into the other man

s face. Katherine cries out as the dead man crumples to the ground.


To maintain order in the affected regions, martial law has now been declared nationwide,

the news reporter says.

Local law enforcement and military officers will be implementing those orders


Katherine glances worriedly up at the black skies covering the entire northern horizon. Darkness stretches into the heavens, bathing the city in a panicked dusk. She jerks the wheel onto a side street.

Please, God. Let Devin be okay
, she prays.


We are also starting to hear

unconfirmed reports of hostiles being

spotted in


A swell of static suddenly turns into an alert tone sounding loudly through her speakers.

The single note is piercing, shriller than anything she

s ever heard. The vibrating sound waves rattle the change in her ashtray. Hairs on the nape of Katherine

s neck begin to tingle.

What the hell?

she says, switching to a different channel. The alert tone plays back from every station on her presets.
Nothing?
Her eyes go wide.

Turning back onto 82nd, she guns it. People swarm down sidewalks and streets. Katherine taps the AM button, her finger pausing.

Static

She scrolls past several other presets. Searching. Hoping.

Come on!

The need to know grows into a consuming desperation, almost overwhelming her fractured nerves. Katherine

s heart jumps.



infrastructures in those cities have been completely destroyed,

a voice returns.

The New York Stock Exchange is gone. Completely gone


Katherine passes her local U.S. Bank branch on the corner, watching on while they forcibly close and lock their doors. A large mob of people cluster around the entrance. Hands pound on the glass, but the security guard just shakes his head from inside. Bodies beg to be let in. Terror presses against the windows. The savings of generations, built from a lifetime of blood, sweat, and sacrifice, stays trapped securely within.


Financial markets still active around the world are in free-fall, taking massive losses as investors pull whatever money they have left out of banks and institutions


People push in and out of a grocery store on the other side of the street. Their carts overflow with water and piles of food. A green-smocked employee puts a large, hastily-scrawled sign up on the front window. WATER: $6/GALLON.


Food and supplies, we

re told, will run out quickly in locations closest to the impact zones. The Federal Emergency Management Administration says relief aid has been mobilized but might not arrive for some time. They warn outlying areas to brace themselves for an influx of refugees fleeing the damage


Sirens get louder as she flies over a familiar crosswalk. She eases slightly on the accelerator, veering her minivan to the right. The BMW in front of her barely yields when the ambulance screams past. The wailing sound gets lower and lower, its tragedy receding into the distance.


Major cities all across the U.S. have been put on high alert,

the anchor continues.

With our leaders

refusing

to


But the odd emergency tone again overtakes the news report. Its sharp pitch slices through freedom like a knife. Katherine hits the search button over and over, but only the piercing tone blares back at her from all frequencies. No music, no commercials — only the monotonous shriek of silence broadcasting oblivion over the airwaves.

Katherine jumps on her van

s parking brake with both feet. It skids to a stop beside a row of cars along Columbia Academy

s curb. A cloud of white smoke billows behind the vehicle, carrying the stink of melted tires with it.

People are running everywhere. The blaring of sirens and emergency vehicles booms through the air.

Kat throws the door open and lunges out of the van, hurtling steps two at a time up the walkway. Kids and parents dart across the grounds, searching and shouting for each other in the chaos. Katherine spins. Her eyes frantically hunt for her children, but the sea of blue uniforms blur identities and faces together. Her heart is pounding.

She sees a young boy and a teenage girl with blue backpacks running at the edges of the crowd.

Tyler! Haley!

she shouts.

Over here!

She runs several feet toward them before the children turn. Their real mother is
already
there to sweep them away.

Katherine pivots and starts moving against the crowd. Dread knots in her stomach. Nausea chokes her throat. She pushes against the sea of people, but her babies are gone.

Haley! Tyler!!

she screams.
Gasping,
she hunches over, hands on her knees.


Mom!

a familiar voice shouts in the distance. Her head snaps up. Katherine glances from face to face, trying to pinpoint the sound. She pushes into the pack again. Even as the cries of a hundred other voices fill the yard, her maternal instincts somehow direct her toward the sounds of her own.

She stretches her 5

8

body while she walks, straining to look over the crowd. Her head whips from side to side. A single lock of pink-streaked blond hair shimmers in the light behind rows of blurred faces. That color is the most beautiful shade Katherine has ever seen.


Mom!!

Haley shouts, locking eyes with her mother.

The air thunders out of Kat

s chest, almost sending her to her knees. She stumbles forward and forces her way through the mob.

Thank God,

she cries, pulling her daughter tight.

The crowd coming in and out of the school

s front doors pushes through them in search of their own happy reunions. Katherine hesitantly lets go. She looks around, new worry filling her hazel eyes.

Where

s your brother?!


I don

t know!

Haley screams.

I couldn

t find him. What happened? They wouldn

t tell us anything!


Just help me find Tyler!

Katherine yells. She grabs her daughter

s hand and pulls her into the running horde. They work their way through the entrance, looking uncertainly down both crowded halls.


Tyler Bane!

Kat

s voice echoes down the hallways.

Has anyone seen my son?

Blank faces continue on without slowing.


Tyler!

Haley shouts.

They push over to a frantic teacher still trying to maintain order within the busy hallway.

Slow down!

the stern Catholic woman yells to the children around her.

Stop running, please!


Have you seen Tyler Bane?

Katherine asks.

The teacher

s head swivels back and forth, counting heads while she ushers her class out of the chaos.

What grade?

she asks without looking up.


Third.

The nimble Catholic woman deflects a thrown ball of paper as it approaches, quickly spotting the troublemaker.

Knock it off!


Have you seen him?!

Katherine screams into the woman

s face. The teacher

s scared eyes finally dart back to Kat

s.


No. But t
hird and fourth are at the end of the hall,

the woman gestures to their left.

That way!

Katherine and Haley take off again, deeper into the school. Rumbling voices fade behind them. The fire alarm begins to sound overhead as they move, its loud bells adding to the madness.

They slide to a stop on the smooth tiles at the end of the corridor.

Check over there!

Kat shouts, pointing Haley to the other side of the hallway. Katherine yanks open the door on the right and darts inside.

Tyler!!


Tyler!

Haley echoes behind her.

Both are greeted with empty rooms. There

s no sign of the 8-year-old. Katherine takes another step in, craning her head. Her stomach drops to the floor when she hears the horrible scream.


Mom!

Haley

s voice shudders from across the hall.

Katherine spins and bursts into the room like a lightning strike.


Over here!

Haley calls from the back of the class. The teenager

s eyes are terrified. The look sends shivers through Katherine

s body.

BOOK: Yield
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