James Dashner

The Kill Order

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  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    Because there were too many people from too many places describing the same thing before I got away from the masses. And supposedly the news agencies put out warnings right before they struck. It’s sun flares, all right. Extreme heat and radiation. Double whammy. It was something the world thought it was trained and prepared for. The world was wrong, in my humble judgment.”
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    Mark couldn’t hold it in anymore. “I’ll tell you what happened. They probably thought she was sick from the dart and left without her.” The words sounded wrong, though. How could anyone actually do that? To a little kid
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    Mark watched, and hoped for a day when life could be good and safe again. When the horrors might end and boredom became their worst problem. When a girl like Deedee could run around and laugh like kids were supposed to
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    It has something to do with their head,” Trina murmured.

    Everyone looked at her. She’d just voiced something obvious, but vital.

    “It definitely had something to do with their head,” Mark chimed in. “They all had massive pain. And loss of sanity. Darnell was hallucinating—plain crazy. And then Misty. And the Toad …”
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    The smell hit them when the wind shifted, just as they were approaching the first buildings, small huts made of logs with thatched roofs.

    It was the same smell that had assaulted Mark and Alec when they’d approached their own village after chasing down the Berg and marching back. The smell of rotting flesh
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    It seemed such a childlike thing to say, and for some reason it brought memories of Madison slamming to the forefront of Mark’s thoughts. His heart ached. He wished this girl were his little sister. And as always, he tried his hardest to keep his mind from wandering down the darkest road of all. Imagining what might’ve happened to her when the sun flares struck
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    Mark was sure he’d never liked her as much as he did right then.
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    Lana gave him a sharp glare. “Come on. You know what I mean. Can’t you all see it?”

    “See what?” Mark asked.

    “That it seems to be affecting people differently?” Trina asked.

    “Exactly,”
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    It’s not consistent. I’m not a scientist, but could it be mutating or something? Changing as it jumps from one person to the next?”
  • olswydhar citerati fjol
    “Mutating, adapting, strengthening—who knows. But something. And it seems to take longer to kill you as it spreads, which—contrary to what you’d assume—actually means the virus is more effectively spreading. You and Mark weren’t there, but you should’ve seen how quickly those first victims went. Nothing like Misty. It was bloody and brutal and awful for an hour or two, but then it was over. They convulsed and bled, which only helped it to spread to more human incubators.”
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