TWO
Two hundred and fifty miles to the south, as the morning sun climbed into a cloudless sky, Thomas Phillips was on his way to meet actress Skylar Stover at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. Yet so far this exercise had been plagued by problems. His iPhone refused to download new messages (The mail server at imap.gmail.com is not responding), and all the way to the airport on crowded freeways he found himself trapped behind morons who intentionally clogged the leftmost lanes to enforce impractical speed limits.
The real source of his anxiety, though, was the actress herself. Skylar Stover was a worldwide celebrity attached to his second picture who wanted to discuss possible changes to the script and her character in particular. Thomas should have been floored by her interest, by her willingness to stop in Dallas on her way to L.A., since by any reasonable measure she was one of the most alluring women in Hollywood and honestly the entire planet of women. If her turn as a disaffected college student in the acclaimed Life…Unexpected hadn’t won over every human male on the earth, her blonde hair extensions and ample cleavage in the action thriller Darkest Energy surely had. In fact, when his agent first told him about the requested meeting, Thomas assumed he was joking.
The project in question was The Pulse, a post-apocalyptic story so brutal it had frightened him even as he wrote it. But now that the film had been greenlit (primarily because Skylar was attached to it) her power over the project vastly exceeded his own. Which wasn’t the worst outcome Thomas could imagine. Skylar had studied philosophy at Yale. She was one of a few actors who could bounce between independent films and glossy comic-book thrillers and somehow remain both credible and bankable. Depending on the project, she was paid scale or eight figures, and her compact, buxom figure was the standard by which other women were judged. Thomas was nervous as hell to meet her.
All morning he’d been deliberating on how to demonstrate respect for Skylar without appearing too earnest. Thomas had been paid a staggering $6 million for the screenplay, which compelled the trades to label him “Scribe of the Moment,” but no amount of money or favorable press could overcome Skylar’s towering influence in the film industry. Which meant the only way to keep her fingerprints off the script would be to earn her respect, and the way to do that, Thomas felt sure, was to impress her with his wit and charm and intelligence. Easier said than done.
Eventually his phone connected to Gmail, and a few minutes later he was standing in a special terminal designated for chartered flights, feeling out of place. Several women had gathered in front of an elevator door and kept looking at Thomas as if they should know who he was. He resisted the urge to look at his phone again and tried to imagine the scene of their meeting. He would shake hands with Skylar. Introduce himself. And then what? Thank her for agreeing to star in the film? He didn’t want to come across as a fan. This was his idea, after all. His story. And still he didn’t understand why she had bothered to come all this way to talk to him in person. The only reason that seemed to make any sense was that she wanted to take the plot in a different direction, that she planned to hire another writer. She was here to break the news to him gently. That had to be it. Anything else could have been handled through email.
Then the elevator doors opened and chattering flight attendants parted like a Biblical sea. Skylar looked smaller than he had imagined. Thinner. Her eyes were a bug’s eyes, black and round, at least until she flipped a pair of sunglasses over her forehead and used them to pin back her thick, blonde hair. By the time she reached Thomas, he could see her actual eyes were human-sized and an electric shade of green.
“Thomas!” she said and threw her arms around him. Her hair was shoulder length and smelled vaguely of coconut. Her skin was soft. Her arms were toned but feminine. Everything about her was feminine.
“It’s so good to finally meet you,” said Skylar. “Thomas World was awesome. And I have some ideas for this new project I hope you’ll really like. If you’re open to that sort of thing, I mean.”
Their encounter had begun so differently from what Thomas expected that his only answer was a burst of nervous laughter. He realized he was smiling at her. And not a confident smile, either, but an earnest, goofy grin that would send exactly the opposite message he hoped to convey.
“I’m glad to meet you, Skylar. I honestly couldn’t believe it when you agreed to do the film. Your talent and screen presence will—”
“Don’t do that. Don’t blow that industry sunshine up my ass. And please don’t call me Skylar, either.”
“No?”
“Call me ‘Sky.’ Everyone does.”
“Sky?”
“That’s me.”
It was strange how the world worked. Two years ago, Thomas had agreed to end a marriage that had never been a real marriage in the first place. He spent his days toiling in a cubicle and his nights alone, agonizing over past relationships and what had gone wrong with them. Naturally Thomas assumed the problems were his, because everything he touched turned to shit—including his own screenwriting career. But then one evening, while he sat drunk in front of his computer, a story idea so basic and absurd occurred to him that he couldn’t help but open Final Draft and start banging away. Six hours later he’d written twenty-five pages and felt energized in a way he hadn’t known in years. He slept until noon, got up to write again, and by midnight had completed Thomas World, the story of a man so unhappy with life that he built an improved reality inside his computer. On first read, Thomas realized he’d written a screenplay transparently about himself, had saddled the protagonist with his own problems and burdened him with the dreams he had chased for years. It was the sort of amateur exercise that should never have been exposed to the outside world, but instead of burying the document in an archive folder, he got drunk again and emailed it to his agent. The next morning, as Thomas suffered under the hot glare of a hangover, his agent called to say how much he loved the script. He loved it so much he got four producers to feel the same way, each who tried to outbid the other until the property sold for an even three million dollars. Eighteen months later the completed film was branded the “thinking person’s thriller” about “an ordinary man in extraordinary circumstances,” and went on to become the second-highest grossing movie of the year. His agent had leveraged the equity of that success to sell The Pulse, and now Skylar Stover wanted him to call her Sky, and the whole scene felt unstable. Like any minute he would wake up and find himself in front of the computer, having awakened from a two-year dream.
“Well,” Thomas finally said. “Now we need to figure out where to pick up your luggage. Then we’ll get out of this airport and find some breakfast. Hungry?”
Sky was repositioning a backpack on her shoulders.
“Starving. But I have to run to the ladies’ room first. And anyway I have this form that tells me where to go for the luggage. So if you can wait a short minute, I’ll just run in here and do my thing, and then we’ll get my bags. And then some B. Man, I am starving. I never eat on planes unless it’s overseas, but now I wish I had nibbled on one of those bagels. Not smart.”
Sky disappeared into the bathroom along with her electric magnetism. If this was how she behaved with everyone, it was no wonder she was so goddamned famous. Even a blind person would be drawn to her.
To clear his head, Thomas pulled out his iPhone, reflexively clicked on Apple News, and scrolled through the list of stories.
Markets panic as Trump tweets gibberish again
Scientists concerned about supernova after neutrino detectors go
haywire
Juan de Fuca could trigger “deadly tsunami”
Being connected to every facet of his electronic life had turned him into the same kind of over-dependent technology snob he’d poked fun at in Thomas World. Before smartphones, he could go hours, sometimes an entire weekend, without watching the news or reading email. Now even five minutes seemed too long to wait.
He switched to mail and saw this:
Dick McClaren |
9:56 AM |
Get BIGGER with PROMO |
|
|
|
Overfat, M.D. |
9:44 AM |
Lose more weight with this ONE weird trick |
|
|
|
Seth Black |
9:39 AM |
Time to pay up, wife-fucker |
Thomas swiped the first two messages away and his thumb was on the third when he realized something was terribly wrong. Seth Black could be no one but Natalie Black’s husband. And “wife-fucker,” well, that made no sense at all.
Six weeks ago, Thomas had spoken to Natalie for the first time since high school, an encounter occasioned by their twenty-year reunion. Over the course of a surreal, drunken weekend, Natalie had unloaded a burden she clearly had been carrying far too long. Thomas listened to the story of Seth’s infidelity and offered as much support as he could, even via email in the weeks after the reunion. But there was little anyone could do until Natalie confronted the situation directly, which thus far she had been reluctant to do.
The accusation of adultery was mystifying and a little frightening. He nervously opened the message and saw this:
Dear Mr Phillips,
I don’t even know where to start. Thanks a lot for fucking my wife.
Even if she came onto you, you didn’t have to accept. She’s a
married woman.
Thomas looked up to find bustling passengers and bored flight attendants and a smiling pilot who tipped his hat to Thomas as he rolled by with a pet suitcase. He didn’t want to look at the phone again. Any moment Skylar would step out of the bathroom and Natalie’s angry husband was the last thing he wanted on his mind.
Anyway, I need to ask you a favor and I expect you to honor it considering what you …
“All ready?” asked Sky, who had materialized next to him.
“Uh, sure. Let’s go get your bags.”
“Everything okay? You’re looking at your phone like it just bit you.”
Thomas shoved the phone into his pocket. It was obvious now he should never have corresponded with Natalie after the reunion. Even when your intentions were pure, it was always a bad idea to insert yourself into someone else’s marriage.
“Sorry,” he said. “Personal thing.”
Sky giggled and hooked her arm through his.
“I know this visit is totally last minute. Don’t feel like you have to babysit me. We’ve got all weekend to talk shop, right?”
Thomas looked over at Sky and was again struck by her eyes. He’d believed them at first to be green, but now he could see blue in them as well, which produced a color not unlike tropical ocean water. Under other circumstances he would not have been able to stop thinking about eyes like that. Skylar was by far the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen in person, and she was looking at him as if he were the best thing that had happened to her in weeks.
“We do have all weekend,” he said. “By the time we’re done, the screenplay will have Oscar written all over it.”
“I can’t fucking wait, Tommy. Can I call you Tommy?”
“Not if you expect me to answer.”
“We’ll see about that. This is going to be a weekend to remember, Tommy. Mark my words.”
Thomas did mark them, so to speak, and often thought of them later. How prophetic they had seemed, even as she uttered them.
After all, those words were the kind of scene-ending dialogue he might have written himself.
* * *
In a nearby office they found Sky’s luggage, an expensive-looking black suitcase and a smaller pink bag embroidered with the Hello Kitty logo. Thomas knew he wouldn’t be able to stop thinking about Seth’s email until he read the rest of it.
“Let me go get the car,” he said as they approached the exit. “I’ll pull up to the door and—”
“I’m not fragile cargo,” Sky replied. “I can walk, at least if you slow down a little. What’s the rush?”
“Sorry. If you want to wait here, I can just get the—”
“I’ll walk with you.”
“But people are going to recognize you.”
“It’s happened before, you know.”
“Right. Okay.”
She smiled and kissed him on the cheek. Thomas stood there feeling ridiculous.
“So let’s go!” Sky told him.
She pulled the sunglasses over her eyes and they strode toward the door. At first no one noticed them, but outside the terminal, on the sidewalk, a teenaged girl was waiting at the shuttle stop. Her jaw fell visibly open as the two of them approached.
“Oh my God! You’re Skylar Stover!”
Sky smiled and lifted her sunglasses. “I am! What’s your name?”
“My name? I’m Dillan Johnson. But you’re Skylar Stover! Holy shit, will you take a selfie with me?”
A nearby elderly couple, also waiting for a shuttle, pretended not to notice.
“Of course I will.” Sky stood her suitcase on the sidewalk and put her arm around the girl. “You’re going to be a hit on Instagram.”
The girl’s response was an unintelligible screech.
Eventually Thomas realized there was time during this transaction to retrieve his phone. He switched on the display, where Seth’s email still waited.
…I expect you to honor it considering what you did. I did some Googling and figured out your a rich screenwriter. Whoopdy fuckin do! Guess what I am? A million dollars in debt! Most of it is to my dad but $213 grand is to a bookie in Dallas. Which happens to be where you live, lucky me. My insurance policy should take care of all this but just in case they screw me over I want you to …
“Tommy?”
Sky was tugging on his arm.
“You ready?”
The look in her eyes was not impatience, as he might have imagined, but excitement. By now there was no way to take her manner with him as anything but flirtatious, which Thomas found in equal parts flattering and impossible to believe.
Still, his mind kept going back to Seth’s email, back to gambling debts and a bookie and an insurance policy. How did you redeem a large insurance policy other than—
Skylar tugged on the sleeve of his shirt.
“Which way is your car?”
“It’s, um, this way. Follow me.”
He directed her across the street and into the amber darkness of a parking garage.
“Is everything okay?” Sky asked.
“I think so. My car is down here at the end. But I’m going to check something real quick if you don’t mind.”
“No worries. Just don’t leave me in the dust. I’m doing my best to keep up.”
As they walked toward his car, Thomas looked down at his phone and found the message again.
…I want you to pay off this bookie. His name is Jimmy Jameson. His contact info is below. It’s a lot of money for me but it’s nothing for a rich Hollywood guy like you. Consider it payment for fucking my wife.
Here’s another thing: You should probably come here and take care of Natalie and my boys. They’re gonna need help after I’m gone. Why not get married? You can be one big happy family! Move Nat to L.A. so she can be a celebrity. It’s what she’s always wanted. I could never satisfy her champagyne taste.
You must know where we live but in case you don’t have the address I put it below too.
Have a nice fucking life. I’m ending mine now.
All at once Thomas couldn’t feel his hands. The phone slipped from his grasp and clattered to the concrete floor of the garage. When he picked it up, he saw the screen had shattered, glass forking into jagged shapes as if split by lightning.
“Shit.”
“Oh, no,” said Skylar. “Don’t tell me your phone went to meet its maker.”
They reached his car, a ’68 Ford Mustang Shelby convertible, cherry red, painstakingly restored. He’d brought it to impress Skylar. He felt like an idiot.
“It’s not the phone,” Thomas muttered, and tossed her bags into the rear seat. When he opened the passenger door and scooted Sky inside, she’d finally had enough.
“Thomas!”
A few seconds later he was behind the wheel. The engine roared like a jet.
“We have to go. I need to think. Fuck.”
He backed out of the parking spot and steered quickly for the exit.
“Will you please tell me what the hell is going on?”
“Natalie’s husband just sent me an email. Sounds like he’s going to kill himself.”
* * *
Compared to the low ceiling of the parking garage, the sky looked enormous, blue and empty except for the rising sun. While Thomas squinted through a spider web of cracks to find Natalie’s number, Skylar fidgeted in the seat next to him.
“Who’s Natalie?”
“This woman I know from high school.”
“And you think her husband is going to kill himself.”
“That’s what he said in an email he just sent.”
“He emailed that? To you?”
Finally, Thomas had Natalie’s name in front of him. He put the call through and waited for the phone to ring. By now he was on the airport access road, six lanes wide, built like a freeway. Traffic was steady but not bumper-to-bumper. He wished he hadn’t left the top down, because wind noise overpowered the phone speaker.
Voice mail answered.
“Natalie. You need to call your husband. Like right now. He just sent me an email. It sounded like a suicide note. Someone needs to check on him right away. It’s ten o’clock on Friday morning.”
All at once Natalie’s problems came into clearer focus. If what Seth said was true, his extended time away from home and any missing money was not related to a mistress named JJ but a gambling problem and a bookie named Jimmy Jameson. Seth was overwhelmed by debt and not thinking clearly. Thomas hoped Natalie was already on the phone with him.
Sky was waiting to hear more, but since Thomas wasn’t sure where to begin he looked back at Seth’s email again. He noticed there was an auto signature at the bottom. There was a cell number in the signature.
“Dude,” Sky finally said. “I don’t want to butt into your personal business, but if some guy is threatening suicide, you need to call the police. Like 9-1-1. Voice mail isn’t enough.”
“What if I call the guy directly?”
“You have his number?”
“It’s at the bottom of this email.”
“Then, yes! Call him now!”
The telephone number was a hyperlink, but if Thomas were honest with himself, he was hoping no one would answer. He wanted Seth to have already thought better of his plan and aborted.
The phone rang. Then rang again. And again. And again. And— “Hello?” asked a raspy, broken voice. “Who is this?”
“Seth?”
“Whoever you are, your timing is improbable.”
“Seth, it’s Thomas.
A long stretch of silence passed while Thomas piloted the car and glanced at Skylar, whose aqua eyes were wide and concerned. He had never imagined his encounter with her would begin like this.
“Dude,” Seth said in a weak voice, “I told you everything you need to know. Can’t you just let me be done with it?”
“Don’t do it!” shouted Thomas, surprised at the sudden empathy he felt for this man he’d never met. “I can help you. You don’t need to do this.”
“Help me with what?”
“With money! With whatever you need.”
“If this is about money,” Skylar offered loudly, “I’ll help, too.”
“Who is that?” grunted Seth. He sounded lethargic, like he’d woken from a deep sleep.
“We just want to help you. You don’t need insurance. You don’t—”
“It doesn’t matter. Even if you paid every last dime of my debt, I still have to live with what I’ve done. And I can’t. I won’t. It’s too late.”
“It’s never too late, Seth. Let me help you.”
“Just come here when it’s over. Please.”
“Seth.”
“Promise me, man. Promise me you’ll come here and take care of my family. Please.”
Seth was crying. His voice was hoarse, and he coughed as if his lungs were failing him.
“Please, man. Promise me.”
“I promise, Seth. Just stop and I’ll do whatever you want.”
Now there was no answer.
“Seth?”
Thomas pressed the phone to his ear, trying to dampen the sound of the wind, but it was no use. Eventually he looked at the display again and saw it was dark. He swiped and tapped the screen, but nothing happened. “Thomas, look out!”
He glanced up and saw he was about to rear-end a white Ford sedan that was either slowing down or stopped. He quickly checked his mirrors and veered into an adjacent lane. Jammed his hand on the horn.
“What the hell is wrong with you?” he yelled involuntarily. “This is a highway!”
“Thomas, again!”
He looked back at the road and saw they were rapidly gaining on a black pickup truck rolling on four enormous tires. Thomas changed lanes, sliding just past the truck and the noise of its monster tread.
“What the hell is going on?” he yelled.
“I don’t know, but something is weird. All the cars are slowing down. Look over there. It’s the same thing on both sides of the road.”
Skylar was right. Everyone was slowing down, but no one seemed to be using their brakes. Well, wait. In the far-right lane, about fifty yards ahead of them, a small car came to a screeching stop and Thomas heard the dull thunk of bumper-to-bumper contact.
“He totally hit that truck!” Sky yelled. “Why is everyone stopping?”
Thomas had slowed down and was switching lanes almost continuously as vehicles around him came to rest. When he looked briefly at Skylar, he saw something in the sky above her, something so odd and unexpected that he could hardly make sense of it.
People were beginning to climb out of their vehicles. Others stood in the road, gawking at the sky. Thomas moved toward the inner shoulder, trying to divine a clear path, but other drivers were having the same idea. Ahead, a woman stood beside a giant Lexus SUV and gestured to him.
“Skylar,” he said. “Look in the sky on your right.”
Thomas was rapidly approaching the woman on the shoulder. She was tall and thin, wearing a yellow sundress and flip flops. Maybe thirty-five years old.
“What is that?” Sky asked.
“Looks like a star, doesn’t it?”
“Yeah…except you don’t usually see stars during the day.”
They reached the woman in the sundress. She approached the driver’s side door. Her face was drained of color.
“Excuse me, sir. Do you know what’s happened?”
“I’m not sure. But I would guess it had something to do with that.”
Thomas gestured toward the new point of light in the sky, which was twenty or so degrees above the horizon, brilliant and white. It was bigger and brighter than any nighttime star but much smaller than the sun, which was almost directly above it. In different circumstances, like if he had been on his back porch, looking at it over the lake, the new star might have been the most amazing thing Thomas had ever seen. Instead, Natalie’s husband was trying to kill himself and the airport freeway was a war zone and the whole world seemed to have lost its mind. No vehicle was operational except his and people were noticing. Especially because, aside from the rumble of his engine exhaust, the airport was quiet. Eerily quiet. Nothing else mechanical was running.
Nothing.
The woman’s face was slack, her mouth wide open. She seemed to be holding back tears. Next to him, Skylar whispered words he couldn’t hear.
Something was terribly wrong about the silence. It was never quiet on this road, ever, not even in the middle of the night, because D/FW was one of the busiest airports in the world. The sound of jet engines and traffic was so ubiquitous you never even noticed it.
Until it wasn’t there at all.
“I’m sorry,” he said to the woman. “We have to go.”
Thomas inched his car forward. The woman’s eyes widened.
“Wait! Can you help me? I’m stuck here.”
Thomas kept driving, watching the stalled cars carefully. He picked up speed. Changed lanes often.
“Don’t you think we should have helped that woman?” Sky asked.
“Help her do what?”
“I don’t know. Get home. Something.”
“We only have so much room. We can’t take them all.”
Thomas realized why his car worked and the others didn’t. Honestly, he’d known it all along.
In his new screenplay, the one Skylar was here to discuss, he’d written about an apocalyptic event known as an electromagnetic pulse. The eponymous pulse in his story was the byproduct of a massive solar flare and had rendered useless every electronic device on Earth. The way this happened was technical in nature, but easy enough to summarize: Transistors and microchips and power transformers were fried by intense electromagnetic radiation, and anything that relied on them was rendered useless. Like for instance the entire power grid and just about every vehicle built since the 1970s.
His acquisition of the vintage Mustang, therefore, was no accident. He loved to drive it, but the reason Thomas had even considered a classic vehicle was because research for The Pulse had frightened him. In a world without power, without daily deliveries of food into large cities, chaos would erupt almost immediately, and a working car could mean the difference between life and death.
He’d never expected such an event to occur, at least not of the magnitude he’d written about in The Pulse, and maybe this was not that. Maybe the new object in the sky had generated a temporary disruption that would soon be over. But if the event was not temporary and the effect was anything like what he feared, it was imperative to push them as far away from the airport as possible.
But it was already too late. Thomas had driven maybe a hundred more yards when he heard it, the whining roar of a plane in uncontrolled descent. He looked in the direction of the sound just in time to see a sprawling, bubbling cloud of orange and black. The impact was maybe a half mile away. The shock wave arrived a moment later, louder than anything Thomas had ever heard, the sound so deep it hummed in his bones. Heat swirled around the car, a searing wind choked with the heavy smell of fuel.
Sky was crying. Screaming. People were climbing back into their cars. They were running away from the blast. Thomas drove as fast as he safely could, watching the fireball recede into the distance, but he knew they weren’t safe yet. How many planes circled the airport at any one time, waiting to land? Five? Ten? Fifty?
“Oh my God, Thomas. Oh my God. Is this because your car is old? Is that why it’s still running?”
“Should we stop?” he asked her. “Pick up someone? I could fit a couple of people in the back seat.”
“I don’t know! Maybe? I don’t know!”
Thomas reached into her lap and used his free hand to grab hers.
“Skylar, I’ll get us out of here. It’ll be okay. Trust me. I’ll get us to a safe—”
Before he could finish, another plane hit, just as close, somewhere behind them. The reflection of the fireball covered the entire surface of his rearview mirror. The heat was a hand that pushed them roughly forward. The air itself seemed to be on fire, shimmering and bubbling in front of him. Thomas kept driving. He tried to keep his eyes on the road, ignore the fireball, but it was impossible not to look at it.
The plane had landed on the highway in roughly the same spot where he’d spoken to the woman with the SUV. The woman who was dead now.
Skylar was still screaming.
“Don’t stop! I’m sorry but if we stop we might die!”
Thomas drove faster. People were fleeing on foot. They veered into the grassy median and were running north, away from the airport. They were children, mothers, teenagers in football jerseys. Thomas saw a man in an expensive-looking suit slip and fall headfirst, spilling the contents of his briefcase into the grass. Incredibly, the man stopped to gather scattering sheets of paper as people streamed around him. Thomas felt an instinctive need to pull over and help someone, like maybe the elderly couple that was struggling to make progress in the crowded median. But he couldn’t stop now. The car would be swarmed by helpless people trying to flee the airport. If he stopped here, they’d never get going again.
A few seconds later, another plane hit, farther away. Then another one, closer again, a massive explosion that dwarfed all previous impacts.
“Oh my God, Thomas! Oh my God!”
“I think that one hit the terminal. Imagine all the planes parked there, the fuel trucks…”
“Can we get to your house? Is that where you’re headed?”
“Yes. I think we can make it there. As long as the roads aren’t blocked.”
“Thomas,” Sky finally said. “This…this is just like your screenplay, isn’t it? Your car is still running because there aren’t any computers in it.”
He nodded. “The pulse must have come from that thing in the sky. I’m not sure but I think it might be a supernova. I read about them during my research, but they don’t happen very often. Everyone assumed if an EMP got us it would be a solar flare or a nuclear strike.”
“So that means everything is off? Power. Cars. Phones. The Internet.”
“Hopefully not. Maybe it’s not as bad as we think.”
Another plane hit then, this one to their southeast, a couple of miles away. Within seconds, a giant plume of smoke rose above the tree line, and now the entire southern sky behind them was apocalyptic. The horizon itself seemed consumed by fire.
“It looks pretty bad, Thomas.”