wisps he barely felt. He slid into the minivan theyâd bought only two weeks before, in anticipation of the twins.
Lowering his head to the wheel, he wept out his broken heart.
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CHAPTER THREE
By the end of the first week of January, the reported death count topped a million. The World Health Organization declared a pandemic spreading with unprecedented speed. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention identified it as a new strain of avian influenza, one that spread with human-to-human contact.
But no one could explain why the birds tested showed no signs of infection. None of the chickens, turkeys, geese, pheasants, or quailâconfiscated or captured within a hundred-kilometer radius of the MacLeod farmârevealed any infection.
But the peopleâthe MacLeod family in Scotland, their neighbors, the villagersâdied in droves.
That detail the WHO, the CDC, and the NIH kept under tight wraps.
In the scramble for vaccines, distribution ran through complex and maddening loops. Delays incited rioting, looting, violence.
It didnât matter, as the vaccines proved as ineffective as the fraudulent cures selling briskly on the Internet.
Across the globe, heads of state urged calm and called for order, promised assistance, spoke of policies.
Schools closed, countless businesses locked their doors as people were urged to limit contact with others. The sale of surgical masks, gloves, over-the-counter and prescription flu remedies, bleach, and disinfectants soared.
It wouldnât help. Tony Parsoni couldâve told them, but he died in the same hospital bed as his mother-in-law less than seventy-two hours after her.
Plastic barriers, latex gloves, surgical masks? The Doom scoffed at all and gleefully spread its poisons.
In the second week of the New Year, the death toll topped ten million and showed no sign of abating. Though his illness went unreported, and his death was kept secret for nearly two days, the President of the United States succumbed.
Those heads of state fell like dominoes. Despite extreme precautions, they proved just as susceptible as the homeless, the panicked, the churchgoer, the atheist, the priest, and the sinner.
In its wave through D.C. in the third week of the Doom, more than sixty percent of Congress lay dead or dying, along with more than a billion others worldwide.
With the government in chaos, new fears of terrorist attacks lit fires. But terrorists were as busy dying as the rest.
Urban areas became war zones, with thinning police forces fighting against survivors who looked at the end of humanity as an opportunity for blood and brutality. Or profit.
Rumors abounded about odd dancing lights, about people with strange abilities healing burns without salve, lighting fires in barrels for warmth without fuel. Or lighting them for the thrill ofwatching the flames rise. Some claimed to have seen a woman walk through a wall, others swore theyâd seen a man lift a car with one hand. And another who had danced a jig a full foot off the ground.
Commercial air travel shut down in week two in the vain hope of stopping or slowing the spread. Most who fled before the travel bans, leaving their homes, their cities, even their countries, died elsewhere.
Others opted to ride it out, stockpiling supplies in homes and apartmentsâeven office buildingsâlocking doors and windows, often posting armed guards.
And had the comfort of dying in their own beds.
Those who locked themselves in and lived clung to the increasingly sporadic news coverage, hoping for a miracle.
By week three, news was as precious as diamonds, and much more rare.
Arlys Reid didnât believe in miracles, but she believed in the publicâs right to know. Sheâd worked her way from a predawn newsreader in Ohio, doing mostly farm reports and a few remotes at local fairs and festivals, to a fluff reporter at a local affiliate in New York.
She gained popularity, if not many opportunities