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There were no zombies in sight, but the moaning from the north and east was getting louder. I tightened the straps on my gloves, grabbed my helmet, and slung my leg over the bike?s still-warm seat. Inside the van, I knew Buffy would be checking her cameras, fastening her seatbelt, and trying to figure out why we were reacting so badly to zombies that probably weren?t even in range. If there?s really a God, she?s never going to know the answer to that one.

 

The van pulled out, bumping and shaking as it made its way onto the freeway. I gunned the bike?s engine and followed, pulling up alongside the van before moving out about ten feet ahead, where Shaun could see me and we could both watch the road for obstructions. It?s a simple safety formation, but it?s saved a lot of asses in the last twenty years. We rode like that, separated by a thin ribbon of broken road, all the way out of the valley, through the South Bay, and into the cool, welcoming air of Berkeley, California.

 

Home sweet zombie-free home.

 

 

 

 

 

? as he pressed his hand to her cheek, Marie could feel his flesh burning up from within, changing as the virus that slept in all of us awoke in her lover. She blinked back tears, licking suddenly dry lips before she managed to whisper, ?I?m so sorry, Vincent. I never thought that it would end this way.?

 

?It doesn?t have to end this way for you,? he replied, and smiled, sorrow written in his still-bright eyes. ?Get the hell out of here, Marie. There?s nothing in this wasteland but the dead. Go home. Live, and be happy.?

 

?It?s too late for that. It?s too late for me.? She held up the blood testing kit and watched his eyes widen as he took in the meaning of the single red light burning at the top. ?It?s been too late since the attack.? Her own smile was as weak as his. ?You called me the hyacinth girl. I guess I belong in the wasteland.?

 

?At least we?re damned together,? he said, and kissed her.

 

 

?From Love as a Metaphor,

originally published in By the Sounding Sea,

the blog of Buffy Meissonier, August 3, 2039

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shaun and I never met our parents? biological son. He was a kindergarten student during the Rising, and he survived the initial wave thanks to our parents, who pulled him out of class as soon as the data started pointing to public schools as amplification flash points. They did everything they could to protect him from the threat of infection. Everyone assumed he?d be one of the lucky ones.

 

The people next door had two golden retrievers, each weighing well over forty pounds, putting them in the range where amplification becomes possible. One of them was bitten?it was never determined by what?and began conversion. No one saw it coming because it had never happened before. Phillip Anthony Mason was the first confirmed case of human Kellis-Amberlee conversion initiated by an animal.

 

This honor does not help my parents sleep at night.

 

I am aware that my stance on pet ownership legislation is not popular. People love dogs, people love horses, and they want to continue to keep them in private homes. I understand this. I also understand that animals want to be free, and that sick animals are twice as likely to slip their restraints and go looking for comfort. Eventually, ?comfort? becomes ?something to bite.? I support the Biological Mass Pet Ownership Restrictions, as do my parents. Were my brother alive today, he might feel different. But he?s not.

 

 

?From Images May Disturb You,

the blog of Georgia Mason, November 3, 2039

 

 

 

 

 

 

Three

 

 

Buffy?s neighborhood doesn?t allow nonresident vehicles to enter without running blood tests on all passengers, so we dropped her at the gate where she could get tested and head inside on foot. I don?t like pricking my fingers, and we were already looking at a second blood test when we reached the house. We live in an open neighborhood?one of the last in Alameda County?but our parents have to meet certain requirements if they want to keep their home-owner?s insurance, and until we can afford to move out on our own, we have to play along.

 

?I?ll upload the footage as soon as I finish cleaning it up,? Buffy promised. ?Drop me a text when you hit the house, let me know you made it okay??

 

?Sure, Buff,? I said. ?Whatever you say.?

 

Buffy?s a great techie and a decent friend, but her ideas about safety are a little skewed, probably thanks to growing up in a high-security zone. She?s less worried in the field than she is in supposedly protected urban environments. While there are more attacks on an annual basis in cities than in rural areas, there are also a lot more large men with guns once you get away from the creeks and the cornfields. Given a choice between the two, I?m going to take the city every time.

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