Amplified (12 page)

Read Amplified Online

Authors: Alexia Purdy

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Horror, #Dark Fantasy, #Urban Life, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Coming of Age, #Sword & Sorcery, #Urban

BOOK: Amplified
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That
has never stopped her before
, he thought. The bunch of vampires made it to the corner, and the band of infiltrators jumped the group. Behind them, Elijah and Sarah slipped in and took out the two back guards. The last one had jumped back and was already dashing back the way he’d come when they’d attacked.

April took off after the rogue and reached him in time to slice the sword
diagonally across his back. He groaned as he toppled over, slamming his face into the ground and knocking himself out. She hopped onto the fallen figure and thrust the sword deep into his back.

She remained there, perched on the vampire
’s back as she huffed and puffed, looking even wilder than she had before. A strange feeling flooded Rye as he watched her reach down to pull the blade out of the guy’s back and touch his blood with her fingers. Her fingers went immediately to her mouth, and she sucked the blood off of each one.

He
flinched away and checked the hallway for more soldiers. She had looked somewhat pale when he’d pulled her to him earlier, and the thought of her being drained nauseated him. That was the reason she was probably starved and weaker now, though she had shown them she was on the road to recovery. But what had the draining done to her mind?

“You okay, April?” h
e asked while turning back to find her finally satiated and licking her lips.

“I
’m perfect now.” Her eyes remained hooded in ecstasy. “Let’s find the lab. I need to see Rick again.”

“There
’s a lab on this side of the quarantine?” Sarah wrinkled her nose as she swiped her sword across the fallen vampire’s clothes to clean the blood off. “It must have been added later. It wasn’t on the blueprint.”

April stared at her friend as if she didn
’t know her at all. “You memorized the blueprint?”

Sarah nodded, looking like it was no big deal. “I
’ve had an enhanced memory ever since the change.”

April eyed her friend for
a moment before bursting into a chuckle. “I still can’t get over you being a killer hybrid human. Just thought I’d never see the day.”

Sarah scowled as Elijah laughed. “Why not? I can be beautiful and fight like a man
, too.”

“You sure can.
” Elijah threw her a rare grin, and a blush flared across her face. Her pale skin flashed like a red light, and she was left speechless as they proceeded farther down the hall, April already so many steps ahead of them all.

“April, stop.” Rye grasped onto her arm
, hoping she wouldn’t swing back with her sword.

S
he stopped in her tracks, turned and drilled her eyes into him. “What?”


What’s wrong? Why are you acting so strange, and why won’t you answer me?”

Her anger melted into anguish as she stared hard into him. He felt his heart pounding as Elijah
moved forward to scout for more vampires. Sarah kept to the rear.

“Come on, love. What
’s going on?”

“I−I….” S
he swallowed and turned away. Whatever had her upset wasn’t easy to get out. “I can’t do this right now, Rye. I’ll tell you soon, I promise. I just can’t right now.”

Rye nodded and let go. It crumbled his resolve to
pull it out of her, and all he could do was walk away. Joining Elijah, he hoped that when this was all over, there would still be something left between them. The feeling of foreboding twirling in his stomach told him otherwise, but he tried to shake it off.

“It
’s just around this hall and through the double doors at the end,” April stated dryly. Her voice came out stiff and calm, as if she hadn’t almost lost her nerve a few moments ago. Her face was now a still mask with cold eyes. She refused to look in Rye’s direction, choosing instead to trudge ahead and swing the lab doors wide open without scoping it out first.

“What the fuck, April! W
ait!” Elijah grimaced as he ducked into the room behind her only to find her facing just one other person. Rye had sped up to join them in the lab.

“Rick.”

The man stood from his chair and backed away, eyes widening at the sight of the four of them. “April? What are you doing here?” He walked backward and bumped into the wall swinging his head both ways to find an exit. He was surrounded and looked like a cornered animal. She wasn’t the person he’d been expecting to see today, if ever again.

“I want the antidote, Rick. And…
.” She walked to a doorway that led into a small hall. “And you’re going to let Randy go, too.”

He shook his head as he watched her
approach, glancing at the tiny containment block down a small hallway on one end of the lab. “You shouldn’t take him out of there. His results have only been negative once.” Elijah had a large hunting knife pointed at Rick’s throat, so he stopped talking.

“Where
are the keys, chief?” Elijah smirked as Rick’s eyes widened at the massive man pointing the knife at him. He reached into his lab coat and held them out.

“Thank you for your cooperation.”

Rye stared at Rick and then flicked his eyes to April, who snatched the keys from Elijah. She motioned toward the scientist. “Tie him up.”

Rye followed he
r down the hall to a row of bar-lined cells modified for prisoners who needed medical treatment. “April… who’s Randy?”

 

 

Chapter Fifteen

Battle Scars

 

 

 

Nothing was going to get in my way. I was ready for anything. I slammed my way toward the cell blocked infirmary where Rick had kept Randy since injecting him with the antidote a few days before. There was no one there, never was. I’d visited Randy for the past two days, watching his continuing transformation in fascination. Where skin had been ripped open now lay new skin, taut and healing. His face had been left mostly intact as a feral, which was fortunate since I’d seen a ton of ferals without faces or with a good chunk torn off.

It
had taken him almost a full day to begin to speak. He’d started with short wails, grunts and unintelligible noises that had me shaking my head that I didn’t understand. His vocal cords had to heal, and they took forever to do so. Once he could pronounce simple words, much like a toddler learning to speak, he could finally whisper simple sentences to me.

“Helen?”
His voice was hoarse.

I
’d shake my head, looking away. It hurt too much.

He
’d met me with silence, settling back on the cot in the cell he’d been moved to once he’d been deemed safe enough to remove from the padded observation room. His wrists were still healing from the handcuffs digging into the skin, leaving the skin purple and yellow but regenerating where the top layer had been rubbed off.

We
’d had no further discussion about my mother. She’d left an abyss of emptiness in us both. Instead, as his words came easier, we’d spoken about the world outside. He told me his memory wasn’t good from the time he’d been lost in the fog. He described it like floating in a nightmare, where nothing made sense and noises bounced off the walls and echoed in his head. He knew it was a possibility that he’d killed people in his feral state. He took it pretty well, considering. I knew he’d been in prison for something before the outbreak, but I’d never asked him about it. Maybe it’d been for murder. It wasn’t as if anyone was innocent anymore. These days, that was a luxury only little children possessed.

“So what now?” he asked. His hair had grown thicker, and his eyes were now their normal blue color. Still, he wasn’t unscathed by the virus. He’d be left with scars from quarrels with other ferals and possibly victims. His body was peppered with slashes, bite marks and nail scratches. I guess we all wore our scars differently.

“I guess we
’ll see. I have to get out of here. I need that antidote and need to figure out how to give it to the population. Or find someone who can distribute it more effectively than in a shot.”

“That
’s not your job, April.”

“I know.”

“So why do you want to do that?”

He
’d frustrated me in our talks. I’d sat back in the creaky folding chair outside the bars of his cell. “I don’t know. Maybe it’s a purpose that I’m here for. I’ve felt lost since my mother died. Like her death stole this fire that I had inside. Snuffed it right out. It’s been… difficult.”

He’d nodded and not asked
any further questions.

But it was my turn to ask questions.
“What are you thinking of doing?”

He
would shrug, leaning back and closing his eyes. He’d slept a lot; recovering must have taken a huge toll on his body. I couldn’t imagine how it felt as his body morphed back to human. So far, Rick’s test samples of Randy’s blood were promising. He was not a hybrid, not feral but not quite human. What he would eventually end up as was a mystery to us all. Still, it had to be better than being a feral, right? Zompire no more.

Now
here I was, grabbing the keys from Rick to release Randy. As I unlocked the cell door and rolled it back in a loud clang of metal, Randy stood up and joined us. I hoped he’d have enough strength to escape with us. Sarah and Elijah eyed him suspiciously. Those two really didn’t trust anyone. Probably a good thing. I had trusted too much, and it’d been my undoing.

“Let
’s go,” Rye said. He was at my side, looking at Randy with apprehension, narrowing his eyes as if conveying a threat to him with only a look. “No funny business now. We don’t exactly know if this antidote worked, do we?”

The last part he
’d directed at Rick, who stood a few feet away, shuffling his feet side to side as his fingers nervously rubbed the hem of his shirt.

“I
’m positive he’s fine right now. His body is just adjusting to the rapid change back to normal. The antidote speeds up healing, so he may look different every hour until it’s done.”

Rye nodded
, but his eyes never left Randy. “It’s time to go.”

“Al
l right.” Randy nodded, exited the cell and following us down the hall.

Sarah waved at us, pointing
toward the door. “I think we’ve been spotted.”

Camera
s against the lab wall showed us the chaos spreading throughout the hive. Dozens of vamps were gathering nearby, Mercer yelling and gesturing to get the group moving. They looked frantic. I scanned the screens for any sign of Christian. It wasn’t that I didn’t want him to escape, I just didn’t know what to feel about him anymore, or even Rye, for that matter. The escape was a welcomed focus, and I pointed to a satellite armory untouched by the hordes that were gathering.

“We don
’t have much time left. The bombs are timed for twenty minutes from now.” I peered up at Sarah, Miss Photographic Memory. “How do we get to this armory and then out? I can delay the timer if we get back to it.”

She smiled, a wicked gleam growing
in her eyes. “I saw that on the blueprint. It’s this way. I know a way out from there, too. It’ll take us back to the dusty warehouse we came in through.”

Perfect.

 

~~~~~

 

The trek to the armory
ended up being more difficult than I’d hoped. The moment we left the lab and headed down to a deeper level—one Sarah thought would be free of guards—we were ambushed. I was still low on weapons, having only Rye’s second sword for defense. The gun’s ammunition was low, so I was reduced to slicing my way through the wave of vampires as they headed toward the same armory. At least they were light on the weaponry, too. Otherwise, we’d have been terribly outnumbered.

“Girl…
move!” Elijah snapped behind me. His bulk shoved me aside, and I turned just in time to watch him slice open another vamp’s chest, one who had obviously been attempting to get to me. The slick plop of blood and guts splattering across the clean tile floors mixed with the slap of bodies colliding. I peered down at the convulsing vamp who’d almost gotten me. Damn, I was getting too lax.

“Thanks!
” I yelled back to him before spinning and cutting down another figure who had pointed his sword at us. I fell to my knees, jamming the side of the sword against his legs and sending him flying over the metal and crashing to the floor. I didn’t have any time to recover since the hall had filled with more vamps. I’d even lost the others in the mass. The bodies piled up on both sides of me as I pushed forward, slicing, swinging and shoulder-butting the vamps out of my way. I just hoped we were winning.

At that rate, t
here was no way we’d make it to the armory in time for me to disarm the bombs. Final resting place? I really hoped not. I kept on, punching and slicing my way through the crowded hall.

U
ntil, that is, the stars spilled across my vision when someone hit me from behind, sending me flying into the wall. Hitting full force with my side, I struggled to regain my breath as my ribs screamed in protest and the pain made the air feel like fire. Still, I saw him coming and managed to flip toward my left as his sword rammed into the wall where’d I’d been leaning.

“Try that again!
” I yelled, though with my lungs still seized, it sounded more like a rough hiss. I glared at the vamp, a medium-sized man who was slender but fast. He cracked a wicked smile as his dark eyes gleamed.

“Thanks for the invitation.” He brought the sword up again and
sliced it downward, but I managed to stop it in time with my own blade. Pushing hard against him, I made it to my knees but couldn’t shove him off enough to stand. I thought for sure he’d have the best of me, but he was holding back. Why?


Kind of short, aren’t you?” I muttered. He really wasn’t, he was at least two inches taller than I was, but his comrades towered over him. I guessed his speed and strength made up for that. His slender physique made him faster and more dangerous than his fellow vamps.


Height makes no difference.” His lips curled back, showing off his sharp fangs. I wasn’t impressed and didn’t give him any satisfaction. Instead, I huffed to push him back again, but only found that we were at a standstill.

Crap!
My arms were on fire, and I could feel the tiny muscle fibers beginning to shake from the strain. If only I was at full strength, this guy would’ve been toast.

“What? Mercer sent his
peons to take us down? Not much of battle, is it?” I laughed, garnering the effect I had wanted. The vamp narrowed his eyes, his frown deepening as he pushed back against me. Only then did I notice he didn’t have any halo rings around his irises. What the hell?

Another type of hybrid?

Well, ain’t the world a candy store?

“Rick fuck with you
, too? Your haloes are missing,” I snickered, hoping to rub him the wrong way.

My words confused him, as if they
might’ve hit some sensitive thing that he’d hidden deep down. He pushed me back with a final rough shove but backed away and stared at me with disgust.

“How do you know
anything like that?” He didn’t look scared but stunned. I was hoping it would be enough to catch him off guard.

“He fucks with everyone.
Don’t you know?” I spit out a mouthful of blood and glared at him. My body was tiring, and I could feel every bruise, ache and cut from the fight. Even the adrenaline wasn’t helping, and I stumbled back, trying my best to hide the weariness. The others were still fighting, but a bubble had formed around us, keeping me and him encircled. Just as I backed away, I found the room where I had initially run into Rye and the group. I took that moment to turn, burst through the door and run past the cell blocks, which were now empty, and down the hall. I found myself in a dusty warehouse lined with piles of crates, canvas-covered vehicles and junk stacked to the roof.

I didn
’t have to wait long for Mr. No-Halo to rush into the room behind me. I slipped behind a stack of crates, still sealed from delivery, and took a moment to rest. I was breathing hard, and the burn of my broken ribs seared through me with each intake. The pain worsened with each movement, and I worried it was more serious than it appeared. I held the bloodied sword, gripping the hilt so tightly my fingers felt numb.

“April…
that’s your name, right? Christian told me all about you. He’s got some sick fascination with you, like you’re his mate or something insane like that.” The man let his blade drag across the cement, sending up a loud, echoing screech probably meant to grate on my nerves. What kind of a sick bastard was he?

Glancing around, I took in my surroundings, looking for the way out. There was hidden walkway
circling the entire room up above. A cement railing hid it from sight since it blended in so well with the walls. I could see it, though, and followed it around to find the doors that had to be up there somewhere.

“I wish I could
’ve met you under different circumstances. We have so much more in common than you know. I’m Felix, by the way. It stuns me that you know Rick did something to me. Most just assume I didn’t morph all the way. You see, I was a hybrid human, much like you, April. But Rick had to go and mess with things, claiming he’d fix me, cure me….”

I hoped he wasn
’t asking for sympathy. I was all out. His voice echoed, making it hard for me to pinpoint where he was. Apparently, the others hadn’t yet noticed our absence, for no one had followed us into the warehouse. I took a chance and peeked around the edge of the row. Finding it empty, I crept along, silencing each movement as I struggled with the tiny breathes my damaged ribcage allowed for. If I didn’t get some blood or get out of there soon, I was pretty sure Felix would overpower me without dripping any sweat.

“Do you know what it did to me?”

I sure hoped he didn’t expect me to keep up the conversation. I kept limping on, my chest feeling like it was being squeezed. Pneumothorax? I was pretty sure one of my lungs was punctured because the tightness had turned into wheezing, and my vision swam as the pressure increased.
Crap!
Where was everyone?


It made me an outcast to both humans and the vampires. But that’s okay. I’m stronger, faster and more powerful than any of them now.”

So much for his mental health. N
ot stronger there.

I made it to the end of another row and stopped, the wheezing
now louder. Pretty soon I was going to lose consciousness, I was sure of it. I glanced around, trying not to breathe, for each inhalation only made it worse. I was out of options, and it wasn’t looking pretty.

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