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Zero Day




  Praise for The Hatching Series

  “Guaranteed to do what Jaws did to millions of people.”

  —Suspense Magazine

  “You know those people who claim spiders are more afraid of us than we are of them? When it comes to The Hatching, they lied. Great gory fun—and creepy, in every sense of the word.”

  —John Connolly, #1 internationally bestselling author of A Time of Torment

  “The Hatching takes an impressively terrible doomsday scenario and adds spiders, making it one of the creepiest books of all time.”

  —Tor.com

  “It’s an original plot, with a horrifying premise guaranteed to entertain and shock the reader . . . The Hatching is a page-turner.”

  —New York Journal of Books

  “The Hatching is a hair-raising thriller that reads like the love child of Independence Day and World War Z, but is creepier than both.”

  —The Real Book Spy

  “It’s been too long since someone reminded us that spiders are not just to be feared, but also may well spell doom for mankind. Fortunately, Ezekiel Boone has upped the ante on arachnophobia. This is a fresh take on classic horror, thoroughly enjoyable and guaranteed to leave your skin crawling.”

  —Michael Koryta, New York Times bestselling author of Those Who Wish Me Dead

  “Prepare to be terrified . . . Hair-raising.”

  —Parade

  “Peter Benchley (with an assist from Spielberg) scared everyone out of the water with Jaws. Hitchcock showed us how terrifying birds can be. Michael Crichton’s Congo went overboard on gorillas. . . . Add Boone to the list. He has given everyone more reason to fear spiders.”

  —Men Reading Books

  “Globe-hopping, seriously creepy read.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “Building on the success of The Hatching, Ezekiel Boone’s Skitter is scary-good fun that sets the stage for at least one more epic showdown between mankind and the terrifying eight-legged beasts hell-bent on destroying them. If you’re not already reading this series, it’s time to start!”

  —The Real Book Spy

  “The mark of a good series for me is that I’m ready for the next book as soon as I finish the current one, and sometimes even before I’m finished. As soon as I finished the last page of Skitter, I hopped on Goodreads to see if book three had been listed yet.”

  —Michael Patrick Hicks Reviews

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  For Zoey.

  I’ll try to write faster.

  PROLOGUE

  Mars Conquest Shuttle, Low Earth Orbit

  Commander Reynard never used foul language, so pardon him, but this was some grade-A bullpoop. Where the heck was his parade?

  Reynard was a born-and-bred Saskatchewan wheat farmer. Canola and lentils and peas, too, but durum wheat most of all. His mom had managed the farm with an iron fist. She was quick with a kiss or a kind word, but she could squeeze a nickel hard enough to make it weep two quarters. Reynard’s dad was in charge of the actual physical work of farming—sowing and reaping, disking fields and tasking the hired help, soil testing and fertilizing—but it was his mom who ran the show. And one of the things she’d always told Reynard and his sister was that complaining about the weather neither makes it rain nor shine. If you can’t change it, don’t complain; and if you can change it, change it. And you still don’t complain. For his entire childhood, he’d been taught that the worst accusation that could be leveled against another person was that they were a complainer. “A dog barking at the wind,” his mother said. And if it held true when he was just a boy on a farm, his mother told him, it held doubly true now that he was an astronaut.

  But still.

  Bullpoop.

  He’d left the farm for university at seventeen, and although he’d gone back for vacations and holidays, he’d never really looked back. Yes, in some ways he knew that the open skies of Saskatchewan and the red dirt roads of his childhood would always define him, but he’d spent his entire adult life working to trade that childhood in for the endless skies of space and the red dirt of an entire planet.

  Commander Brian Reynard. The first man to set foot on Mars.

  And this was what he was coming back to?

  Forget the hours he’d spent studying—an engineering and biochemistry double major as an undergrad—or in flight simulators as part of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Forget the time he’d spent at Edwards Air Force Base during a joint program that allowed him to attend the US Air Force Test Pilot School, or the time he’d spent getting his master’s in aeronautics. Forget the chunks of his life that were eaten by the basement offices at NASA and the meeting rooms of the Canadian Space Agency. Forget the time he’d spent running and working out at the gym, making sure he was in better shape than the younger and more polished astronauts who were trying to bump him out of the spot he’d earned. Forget, even, all the years he’d spent preparing specifically for this one single mission.

  Just look at the mission itself: eight and a half months flying the Mars Conquest shuttle using a fuel-efficient but relatively slow Hohmann Transfer Orbit to Mars; one and a half years establishing the first research station on Mars itself and waiting for the window to align for the trip back; another eight and a half months flying the return. How about that? Almost three years of his life. Sure, humanity had reached the point where simply going to space was no longer enough to make you famous—the Wikipedia list of people who’ve been in space was absurdly long—and even walking on the moon was a crowded field. But to be the first person on Mars? The first man to set foot on the Red Planet? The first human to stride upon a giant, cold, dusty sphere floating among the stars? That had to count for something, didn’t it?

  When it was already old news, the black-and-white echo of Neil Armstrong’s one small step on the moon gave him the shivers as a kid. And even as Reynard stepped down the ladder and let the weak gravity of Mars pull him to the surface—even as he said the words that had been so carefully prepared for him by the committee that represented all six of the countries on the Mars Conquest Shuttle team—Armstrong’s voice, static and all, ran through him like lightning. It felt electric.

  So Commander Reynard thought it was reasonable to want a hero’s welcome when he landed back on Earth. He thought it was reasonable to believe that he’d take his place among the great explorers of human history. And, gosh darn it, he thought it was reasonable to expect a ticker-tape parade when he returned.

  He knew he was being ridiculous. Even if he hadn’t been raised by a mother who thought that complaining was a cardinal sin—followed closely by bragging and then using foul language—he would have recognized that it was crazy for him to be upset that there wasn’t going to be a parade. There were bigger things to worry about.

  Maybe that was why he was fixated on his disappointment about the lack of a parade. It gave him something to think about other than the unthinkable. He and the rest of the crew had followed along when the first news of the spiders started making the rounds—bandwidth was limited at times, but they did have Internet access—and they’d alternated between disbelief and horror. It had seemed bad enough as they’d gotten closer and closer to Earth: a nuclear accident in China that turned out to be no accident and was just a harbinger of things to come, followed by outbreaks of spid
ers around the globe. And then, suddenly, it seemed like it was over. The Earth was reeling, but it still turned as it always did. As they settled into low Earth orbit in preparation for landing the shuttle, Commander Reynard thought how easy it would have been for him and his crew to be oblivious to what had happened below.

  From two hundred kilometers up, Earth was luminous and peaceful. So startling in its beauty that Reynard, who never tired of gazing upon the planet of his birth, sometimes doubted that what he was looking at was even real. If he hadn’t been a man of science, he might have entertained the idea that this was all some sort of dream, or that Earth was the product of some great being beyond his comprehension. Despite a childhood of being a good Protestant, as an adult he’d become a member of the church of science. He worshipped at the altar of math and engineering, so it was difficult to think of the hand of God. And yet, as he watched the sun rise and set and rise and set over Earth as the shuttle sped around in orbit at a speed of more than seven kilometers per second, it was almost impossible for Reynard not to believe in a higher power. As he’d said when he first stepped foot on Mars, “Mankind’s place is among the heavens.”

  And then there’d been the second round of outbreaks.

  But in the days between the end of the first outbreak and the beginning of the second, the crew had spent a lot of time . . . Well, no matter what kind of a spin he wanted to put on it, probably the best way to say it was that they had spent a lot of time freaking out. Science officers Ya Zhang and Vasily Sokolov had gotten extremely different information from the Chinese and Russian governments, respectively, which made everybody nervous. They were all scientists, and they were used to working with data. Ya was told not to worry despite the fact that China had basically nuked half of itself, and Vasily was told there was a spider menace but it was being contained because of Russian ingenuity.

  Reynard had called a meeting to talk about it, and after hours and hours of comparing information, of going back and forth, they’d decided that there wasn’t anything to do but wait for orders. So they’d done everything they could to prepare for landing the shuttle, which under normal conditions would have kept them busy and anxious enough as is.

  But it quickly became clear that these were not normal conditions, and when the second round of outbreaks began, it was almost a relief; Reynard realized he’d been expecting it from the moment the first outbreak died out, and to have it finally happen felt like a release.

  They watched President Pilgrim’s address to America, listened to her explain her plan to try to break the country apart in order to save it. Out of respect, Reynard and the rest of the crew acted like they didn’t see the flight engineer, Shimmie, crying. And then, as near as they could tell, all hell broke loose. Communications were sporadic from Earth, until suddenly, with great bursts of light, communications were no more. They had another argument—the kind that only overly educated people can have in a time of crisis—over whether they had lost touch with Earth because the nuclear weapons detonated across the face of America caused an electromagnetic pulse that fried satellites and circuits in a way that the Chinese nukes had not, or because society was simply unraveling. But after an hour or two Reynard cut it off.

  “It doesn’t matter,” he said. By then they’d seen the pinprick glow of three dozen tactical nuclear weapons dot North America, and they’d talked and fought for long enough to see a pair of sunrises and sunsets, the Mars Conquest shuttle making a neat circle of Earth roughly every two hours. “We might as well make a decision. We have enough redundancy to stay up here another two months. So we can wait for orders until our margins are razor-thin, at which point, if we haven’t heard anything, we’ll have to act on our own anyway. Or, and maybe I’m posing the answer as a question, we can recognize that things are all messed up down there, that we’re never going to actually get real orders, and we should just say screw it, and go ahead and land her.”

  Despite the trappings of a military expedition, Commander Reynard took a vote. One by one, Vasily, Ya, Shimmie, Turk, and even Jenny each voted to take the shuttle out of orbit.

  “Okay,” Reynard said. “Let’s go home.”

  The reentry made the ship buck and rattle like two bullfrogs mating on a cymbal, but once things had smoothed out and his body no longer felt buffeted, Commander Reynard was surprised to find himself crying. Two years, eleven months, three days. That’s how long he’d gone without stepping foot on Earth. No matter that he’d always be the first man to have stepped on Mars: Earth was his home. From the captain’s chair, the view was stunning. Sunny skies over Florida. A blue so clear that the few wisps of clouds only served to make it more perfect. The Atlantic Ocean a sparkling jewel.

  The landing itself was almost anticlimactic. They used the same runway at the Kennedy Space Center that had been used for the space shuttle, and even though the Mars Conquest shuttle flew more like a running shoe than an eagle, they touched down gently. Commander Reynard used fourteen thousand of the runway’s fifteen thousand feet to bring the ship to a stop. They ran through all their checklists and procedures and finally they stepped outside, with Commander Reynard, as was his right as the first person to have set foot on Mars, being the first person to set foot back on Earth.

  After nearly three years of canned and recycled air, the thick soup of a Florida afternoon felt wonderful and alive in his lungs. For a moment he was unaccountably happy, all thoughts of spiders and nuclear weapons and mayhem and death and the end of the world set aside at the simple joy of breathing in and out and in and out with Earth’s gravity keeping his feet connected to the ground beneath him.

  But it was so quiet.

  Nobody there to greet them.

  No parade.

  There was never going to be a parade.

  Commander Reynard sighed. Total, complete, grade-A bullpoop.

  Bethesda, Maryland

  It took less than five minutes for Lance Corporal Kim Bock to realize they were on their own. Just before the nukes fell, they’d watched a helicopter fly off with the five scientists and two civilian passengers, Amy Lightfoot and Fred Klosnicks, along with Amy’s great, goofy chocolate Lab, Claymore, to the safety of an aircraft carrier. Amy’s husband, Gordo, and Fred’s husband, Shotgun, were left behind with Kim and the Marines. The helicopter pilot had promised that she’d come back for them, but despite Kim’s desire to believe in salvation, she knew it was an empty promise. The helicopter had been overloaded as it was, and while Dr. Guyer and the other scientists might have been a critical priority, Kim and her fellow Marines certainly weren’t. No. Kim was pretty realistic about it: they were on their own. Spiders were eating people, the United States government was using nukes on its own soil, and the cavalry was not coming to rescue them.

  At first they kept busy. For a little while they worked to transform Professor Guyer’s lab and the biocontainment unit at the National Institutes of Health into a place where they could hide from the spiders. They gave up on that endeavor once Shotgun pointed out to Staff Sergeant Rodriguez that the suburbs of Washington, DC, might not be a safe place even if they could keep away from the spiders.

  “The whole reason I built a bunker in the first place was because of nuclear weapons,” Shotgun said. “Obviously, I didn’t expect to need shelter from nuclear weapons because they were being used to protect us from spiders. Well, theoretically protect us. I have to be honest, I’m not sure that this has been the best strategy. But the point still stands: there’s a reasonable expectation that DC could be next. The risk of getting vaporized if we stay here is bigger than the risk of spiders. We’re working with incomplete information, but, still, I wouldn’t wait around for orders if I were you.”

  They were working with incomplete information. Everything was crumbling around them—power outages, cell phone circuits overloaded or down, the radio nothing but static, the Internet more of an idea than a reality—but they heard about the nukes: Denver, Minneapolis, Chicago, Kansas City, Cleveland, Memphis, Dallas, L
as Vegas. Maybe thirty, the best they could tell, wiping out all the major metropolises that were known to be infested. Not to mention the hundreds of thousands of pounds, maybe millions of pounds, of conventional explosives that had already been dropped on highways and byways in an attempt to make America impassable. The theory being that the harder it was for people to travel, the harder it was for spiders to travel with them.

  “Well,” Private Sue Chirp said, “at least Disneyland was spared. I’ve always wanted to go.”

  Kim started to correct her and then stopped. What was the point of telling Sue that Disneyland was, in fact, destroyed, along with all of Los Angeles and a good chunk of the West Coast? Kim knew that Sue was talking just to talk, to try to make both of them feel better. Besides, Sue really meant Disney World. And as far as Kim could tell, Sue was probably right: Florida, at least so far, seemed to have remained untouched by the spiders.

  For some reason, thinking about Florida and Disney World made Kim start thinking about the difference between the two cartoon dogs, Goofy and Pluto, wondering why one could talk and walk on two legs, while the other was a straight-up dog, which made her think of Amy’s dog, Claymore, which made her start crying. Again. She’d been doing that a lot.

  While Rodriguez did his best to give the platoon busywork, there was still a lot of downtime. Which meant Kim had the free time to keep thinking about that stupid dog. She’d always wanted a dog as a kid, but her dad was allergic. And wasn’t that the craziest thing? As close as they were to the Woodley Park neighborhood where her parents lived only walking distance from her dad’s job at the National Cathedral School, Kim had barely thought about them. But she couldn’t stop crying at the thought of Claymore wagging his tail while she loaded him onto that helicopter.

  Meanwhile, Teddie, who worked at CNN, walked around filming everything and seemed excited about the idea of making some sort of a documentary. While she did that, the other two civilians, Shotgun and Gordo, got busy tinkering with their machine, the ST11, which was supposed to be a spider killer but mostly just seemed to make the arachnids sleepy. However, that didn’t stop Shotgun from periodically calling Rodriguez over and repeating his point, which was that if the United States government in all its glory and wisdom had decided to drop a few dozen nukes as a way of eradicating infested cities, Washington, DC, might not be that far behind. And while the National Institutes of Health were not, technically, in Washington, DC, a couple of miles didn’t seem like sufficient distance where mushroom clouds were concerned. Every time Shotgun said it, Kim could see Rodriguez struggle with it. Rodriguez wasn’t exactly an independent thinker, and with everything messed up and the platoon essentially without orders, it was clear that the staff sergeant didn’t know what to do.