Trask—onetime reptile keeper at Edinburgh Zoo, occasional burglar, and former leader of the Edinburgh Resistance—moved through the dead town, his body shifting with the machine pistol he held, letting its muzzle lead. It was a community that he’d never known when people still lived in it. He only stalked its nighttime shadows now that it was deserted, now that all who’d once strolled this very street laden with shopping bags, or walking dogs, or heading off to post letters, were long gone.
Behind him, to his right and left, crept two similar shapes, encased, like Trask, in protective clothing, oxygen tanks strapped to their backs. A fourth figure brought up the rear, its attention focused behind them.
Keeping to their diamond formation, they scanned the abandoned cottages and stores for signs of movement in the bright moonlight. They wore heavy boots that extended to their knees, and black pads of hard plastic on their shoulders and elbows. They had learned from bitter experience that these were vulnerable spots, prone to snagging on nails or bits of masonry as they scavenged. All it took was one tear. Just one.
The suits limited visibility, and the sound of their own breathing made it hard to hear anything else, even with the addition of external microphones that fed into their earpieces. Nobody liked the suits, but dying seemed like a less preferable option.
This was as far east as they had yet ranged, and they had encountered no other survivors for a long time. The dawn chorus commenced, the sweet song of a blackbird, the earliest riser of them all, soon followed by the robin. The birds hadn’t been taken. Neither had any insects or bugs, or the littlest of mammals and rodents. It had been suggested that their brains were too small, but that made no sense. The Others were able to wrap themselves around the brain stems of anything that walked, swam, flew, or crawled on the surface of the earth, so the size of a creature’s brain made no difference. No, the Others only needed warm flesh in which to implant themselves, and after that the host was guaranteed an unpleasant death, the spores multiplying in its body until it eventually burst open, giving birth to more spores in an explosion of blood and bone. They’d seen it happen. They’d all left loved ones to die in that way.
And yet still the birds and bugs thrived, and they weren’t entirely alone: Trask and his people had seen rabbits and mice, even stoats and the occasional feral cat. Once, in the weeks immediately after the infestation, during the early sorties, Trask had glimpsed a horse running across the Burren, silhouetted against the evening sky like a piece of animation. He had gone after it, followed by Davy, one of his fellow survivors, but when they reached the hill on which he had seen it, the horse was gone, and Davy was convinced that Trask had imagined it. But he hadn’t. He knew that he hadn’t. He also knew that it was probably dead now. Most of the larger mammals were. But it was impossible to know whether the other animals had simply been lucky, and avoided or resisted infection, or if they contained dormant spores within them, waiting for the right moment to multiply. For now, Trask was just glad that anything at all had survived, whatever the reason.
Gradually, as the sky turned a deep cool blue, more birds began to sing, wrens, thrushes, and finches adding their voices to the chorus. Winter had culled them, so there were fewer than in the past, but soon they’d begin breeding again. They seemed to be adapting well to the new ecosystem, just like the insects. It was a pity that the same couldn’t be said for what remained of the planet’s most evolved life-form, his own.
It was the bigger birds—the crows, the ravens, the seagulls—that you had to watch out for. They were scavengers, just like Trask and his kind, and smart with it.
And as for the rats . . .
“Trask.” It was Dolan’s voice in his earpiece.
“Yes?”
“I thought I saw something move in that house to your left, the one with the green walls.”
Trask paused at the glassless window of a cottage. Dolan was right. There were signs of movement inside. He slipped his finger under the trigger guard, hit the flashlight that hung beneath the barrel of the machine pistol, and directed the beam into the cottage for a moment before recoiling in disgust. The floors and walls were alive with lazy, black flies, still sluggish in the cool air, but their buzzing was like static in his ears. In the center of the room, between an old couch and a television, lay a body. It was in an advanced state of decay, and crawling with maggots, but Trask could still see the great hole that had been ripped in it from belly to neck by the emergence of the spores. It looked like a man. Trask felt a terrible sadness. Someone had survived out here for a while, even without protective clothing, but his luck had run out in the end. The chances were better out on the coast, and that was where they’d found the most survivors.
But that was in the early days. It had been many months since they’d come across anyone left alive.
“Flies,” reported Trask, “and a body.”
“Recent?” asked Dolan.
“Recent enough for maggots.”
“Poor sod.”
“Hey, look up,” said a female voice, and Trask recognized the tones of his older daughter, Nessa. She was bringing up the rear of the formation. “There, over to the southwest.”
It didn’t take Trask long to find it. They were all used to them by now. The sky was clear, marred only by wisps of stratus, and against it moved a small silver speck. They’d come to realize that three different Illyri ships still orbited Earth: a cruiser, a destroyer, and one of the big transporters that had brought the Others to this world. Earlier, when the infection commenced, there had been more, many more, but they were all gone now. After all, there was no need to police a dying world, and the Others would eventually account for the last of humanity.
The silver dot spotted by Nessa was lost briefly behind a strand of cloud. Trask didn’t know why these ships still bothered to hang around. It wasn’t as if what was left of mankind could go anywhere, or even take potshots at the orbiting craft. Briefly, there had been a sliver of hope, for a secret advanced missile base had remained intact and undiscovered in North Korea, and another in China, but the North Koreans had botched a test launch and drawn the Illyri destroyer down on themselves, and it was said over the shortwave radio that the Chinese had been sold out by the Russians, whose premier was living in a bunker somewhere in Siberia and still trying to negotiate his way off the planet. Trask found that grimly amusing; the Russian leader had sided with the Illyri from the start, hoping that the aliens wouldn’t turn on friends, but he’d been screwed over just like everybody else.
In the first year the Illyri had regularly scattered more spores, using remote-controlled airships that flew over land at low level. When possible, the Resistance shot them down, destroying the spores in fiery explosions, but it was a risky business since an attack inevitably caused the Illyri to come looking for those responsible. The airships appeared more rarely now, and the Illyri no longer sent down hunting parties to try to winkle out survivors. Trask suspected that they had done it mostly to stave off boredom, like a kind of sport, but had eventually grown weary of it.
Meanwhile drones, many of them equipped with snares and claws, searched for signs of movement, and when they caught stray humans they pinned them to the ground and forcibly injected them with spores. But mostly the Illyri were content to leave the work of eradicating the remnants of humanity to the Others alone.
Well, not quite alone. That was why Trask and his team were all armed. It wasn’t just to fight off rats and seagulls. Spores weren’t the only alien entities breeding here, and the Others weren’t the only horrors hunting humanity.
For the Cutters had come.