long. The noisesâI was sleeping, woke up and ... panicked. Iâm sorry.â
âYouâre Welsh?â Mason asked.
âYes.â
âI might accept your apology if you tell me how you have electricity.â
Dr. Welsh stood from his stool by the long lab counter and ambled forward, hands in his pleated pockets. âHydroelectric power pumped by an underground generator. Pretty nice, huh?â
âThis isnât just a basement,â Mason said. âItâs a bunker.â
âThatâs what I always thought. Glad of it too.â
âSo you have hot water?â Ange asked.
âYup.â
Jenna cocked an eyebrow. âI shouldâve kissed this guy.â
âYou still could,â Welsh said, his smile affable as he looked Jenna up and down. Mason had the sudden urge to try taking the manâs head off. âBut I recommend you shower first.â
â He didnât mind,â she said, hooking a thumb toward Mason.
Welsh shook his head. âIf survival means kissing somebody who smells like you, I want no part of it.â
âWuss,â Tru said.
âCertified. Look, do you have to sit right there? I have researchââ
Mason laughed as he pulled upright. His back felt pricked by a thousand hot needles. âYou listened to a lot of CDs, didnât you, Welsh?â
âProbably while he was ironing his Dockers,â Tru added. â Très cool, Harvard.â
âNo,â the doctor said, frowning slightly. âNever had the time. And I went to Cornell.â
Tru smirked. âWhatever, Harvard.â
Jenna sighed and sliced the air in a dismissive gesture. âEnough. Can somebody hazard a guess about that thing at the pit?â
Tru hopped down from the counter. âThe one on two feet? He was messed up. Like, Edna levels of messed up.â
âWait,â Welsh said. âWhat?â
Jenna shrugged. Apparently theyâd come so far that a beast-man cross was merely shrug worthy. Take it in stride or go mad. âThis monster we saw in the woods,â she said. âOut by that pit.â
Welsh seemed frustrated as well as perplexed. âWhat pit? And whoâs Edna?â
Mason found he enjoyed the doctorâs muddle of frustrations. Only natural . The guy shot me.
âDude,â Tru said with a sigh. âYou are seriously behind.â
While Mason sat quietly, the others spent the next twenty minutes telling Dr. Welsh how theyâd assembled, heard the ham radio broadcasts, and made the suicide run.
He used the time to assess their unsuspecting host, a guy as tightwound as they cameâall hospital corners and spit shines. A man living by himself for more than a week, isolated and losing his grip, could have let the place go to seed. But every surface in the bunkerstyle basement lab gleamed, and rows of neat books, clothes, journals, foodstuffs, and medicines lined shelves stacked four high.
Despite his panicky trigger finger and the fist-worthy way he eyed Jennaâs rack, Welsh seemed like a thinker, maybe one who could sort out this new natural order. If any such thing still existed.
Mason took another look at those shelves, gratified by the provisions theyâd have available for their defense: first aid, books, blankets, matches, hygiene products.
âAnd then thereâs the one outside,â Jenna finished.
Listening, Welsh paled. But his eyes lit with a curious fire at the news. âA dead one?â
âYeah,â Ange said. âThe thing turned into a man after it died. Jenna killed it.â
âShe shoots, she scores.â Tru made a crowd-goes-wild noise from where heâd settled on the floor. He was cleaning his rifle. Good soldier.
Welsh seemed oddly focused. âSo thereâs a body outside?â
Mason sat a little straighter. âWhat of it?â
The scientist seemed like a man who knew how to pick his battles. Apparently this was one
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