Memoirs of a Neurotic Zombie (8 page)

BOOK: Memoirs of a Neurotic Zombie
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Standing on the beach, I heard a whisper on the wind.

‘Nesty and freaky friends, over here.’

I scanned the darkness beyond the beach, expecting a moose to nudge its huge head out of the woods. But instead, a girl with auburn hair, wearing a plaid dress, skipped onto the sand and gave Ernesto a moose-sized hug. Melissa.

‘Isn’t he cute?’ asked Melissa, turning to us. ‘I mean, I think I prefer him in scales, but this’ll do too.’

I couldn’t tell in the moonlight, but I think Ernesto was blushing. I looked at Corina and she looked paler than ever.

‘I’m thinking about puking,’ she said.

‘You’re right, Nesty,’ said Melissa, ‘she
is
frosty, even for a vampire.’

‘You told her?’ Corina asked.

‘Don’t worry, sister,’ said Melissa. ‘Nesty told me everything. About you, him, the neurotic zombie and that awful camp that wants to turn you all into doughnuts.’

Melissa led us deep into the woods, forging an expert path through the trees and bushes. ‘You know,’ she said, ‘it’s the same for our herd.’

‘Moose doughnuts?’ I asked.

‘Now I will barf,’ threatened Corina.

‘More like steaks, fillets, burgers,’ explained Melissa. ‘Hunters come up to these woods and shoot us moose to put us on the menu.’

‘You see,’ said Corina. ‘This is why I’m a vegan.’

‘I like her,’ said Melissa.

‘She’s pretty cool,’ said Nesto.

‘Frosty though?’ said Corina.

‘How ’bout you, Adam?’ asked Melissa. ‘You like Corina, don’cha?’

Like her?
I was
crazy
about her. But I wasn’t going to admit it or I’d never hear the end of it from the chatty chupacabra, sassy weremoose, or the sometimes vicious vampire in question.

‘Yeah, I guess,’ I said instead. ‘Corina’s nice.’

‘That’s the last thing I am, zom-brain,’ scoffed Corina. ‘If you can’t say anything interesting, don’t bother.’

‘Awkward,’ said Melissa, and she and Ernesto shared a giggle in front of us. They held hands and trudged through the forest, with Corina and me trailing behind.

‘I didn’t mean that,’ I finally said to Corina. ‘You’re not nice, you’re—’

‘Oh, thanks for that,’ she said.

‘Whoa, no, what I meant was—’

‘Zip it, zom-boy,’ she said. ‘Let’s just get out of here, save the campers from the cannibals and get back to our normal lives as not-so-nice, nice monsters in hiding.’

‘Wait, Corina, you’re not a monster. You’re super cool and sometimes that much coolness is hard to classify.’

‘Really?’ she asked, finally stopping to turn around.

‘Yes, really,’ I admitted. ‘I think so, Nesto thinks so, all the kids at school think so, though they’re too scared of you to admit it. The only “people” who don’t seem to think so are your parents, so don’t let their blindness stop you from seeing how great you are. You’ve been insanely hungry on this whole trip and you haven’t even eaten one person. That’s worthy of a greeting card!’

She threw her arms around me. I braced myself for lift-off.

‘Where are we going?’ I asked. But we didn’t fly, we just stayed on the ground.

‘I don’t know,’ said Corina, holding me tight. It was a real hug, not a form of transportation. Wow!

‘Um, guys,’ I heard Ernesto call.

‘Hey, Nesty,’ I called back, ‘now
we’re
having a moment.’

‘Could use a little help here,’ he replied.

Corina opened her arms and I looked over, then up, to see Nesto hanging in the air.

He was held up, tangled in the antlers of a very large, and very angry-looking moose.

‘Daaad.’ Melissa sighed. ‘Put him down.’

We were surrounded by muscly moose.
*
I counted at least ten and we had no obvious route for escape. Melissa was still in human-girl form, pleading with her father, and Ernesto was perched precariously on top of big papa’s antlers.

‘All humans are hunters,’ the daddy moose grunted. ‘And you are forbidden from cavorting with these …’ He snorted and took a good look at Corina and I. Then he sniffed us with his bulbous snout. ‘…What exactly are these … creatures?’

‘Chupacabra,’ said Ernesto with a wave.

‘Bless you,’ said the papa moose.

‘Isn’t he sweet?’ said Melissa. ‘He’s not a hunter. And he’s got manners.’

The big moose shook his head (shaking Nesto inside the antler cage) and muttered under his breath. But he slowly lowered his head and Ernesto climbed off the antlers.

‘We’re different like you,’ Nesto said. ‘I’m a chupacabra, which is kinda like a Mexican weremoose, I think. And Adam here used to be human, but is now a zombie, but not the rampaging, flesh-eating kind. And Corina’s a vampire.’

‘Vegan,’ she added.

‘You have very strange friends, Melissa,’ the alpha moose said. ‘I’m worried their strangeness is contagious.’

‘I’m helping them escape,’ she said.

‘The people who run the camp we were at,’ I explained, ‘are kind of like hunters. They trapped us inside and unless we stop them, they’re going to turn the kids into food. We need to get far away from here, get to our parents and get help.’

The moose surrounding us all grunted and snorted.

‘The herd will help,’ said Melissa’s father. ‘We’ll lead you as far south as we can.’

‘That’d be great,’ I said.

He crouched down and said, ‘Melissa, climb on. You ride on me.’

Three other moose followed his lead. Nesto, Corina, and I each clambered onto a moose. It was time to travel in a pack, in a herd.

My moose was Melissa’s uncle, Gordy, and he explained that the weremoose originated a bunch of years ago when radiation leaked from a nuclear plant way up north.

‘My dad, Melissa’s grandmoose, was innocently grazing when he wandered into some glowing sludge,’ he explained. ‘On the next full moon, much to his shock and surprise, he mutated into a person. Gramps never could choose between his life in the wild and life in the town, so he didn’t. He led a type of double life, married the daughter of the town grocer, and started a herd of his own.’

I got the herd’s whole story, from migration patterns to dodging hunters.

Aside from being full of doughnut-chomping cannibals and surprisingly friendly weremoose, my major observation of Canada was that it’s a really, really big place.

I mean, I knew it was big from the TV weather map because it’s where all of our bad weather comes from (cannibals plus cold snaps – that’s two strikes against
you, Canada!), but you only truly know how big a place is when you ride a moose for hours and hours through the woods.

‘Are we there yet?’ asked Nesto, pretty much every hour, on the hour.

Finally, up ahead, we heard the rush of the occasional car or truck. We pushed through the forest and found the main road.

‘We leave you here,’ said papa moose, whose name was Tom but insisted on being called sir.

‘Thank you, sir,’ I said, as the moose retreated from view.

‘Bye, Melissa,’ said Nesto.

‘Bye, Nesty,’ she said, joining her herd in the forest. But a moment later, she popped her head back out, in full moose mode, and added, ‘Be careful, okay.’

With our moose escort gone, it was just the three of us at the side of the wilderness highway. Nesto immediately ignored Melissa’s advice and walked to the tarmac and stuck out his hitchhiking thumb.

‘Whoa,’ I protested. ‘Put that away.’

‘Why?’ he asked. ‘No more moose. We need a lift.’

‘We can’t hitchhike. That’s like asking to get abducted and murdered,’ I said.

‘You mean, abducted and murdered like we would be in the place we just escaped from?’ asked Corina.

‘Yes,’ I agreed. ‘There’s no need to jump from the fire and into the frying pan.’

‘Unless there’s bacon in that frying pan,’ said Nesto. He sniffed the air. ‘Wait, I think there is.’

He turned his head southwards and sniffed the morning air. ‘This way!’

We walked, single file, down the two-lane highway for about a mile, which is 2,042 steps (not that I was counting – okay, I was), until we found a roadside DINE (the R was broken) that boasted fresh mooseburgers.

‘That’s so wrong,’ Ernesto fumed.

As we opened the glass doors to step inside, I noticed a plastic sign taped to the window: SOLD, Soon to be another Can Nibble Donut Shop.

The diner was bustling with clad-in-plaid locals and truckers topped in baseball caps that had nothing to do with baseball.

‘Just take a seat where ya can find one, kids,’ said a rotund, bearded man from the kitchen. He looked like Santa Claus in the off-season.

We took a booth. It was red plastic over a cushion, held together with strips of clear duct tape. Half of the
lights were out and the black-and-white chequered floor was more like black and beige now. This place had seen better days.

But then again, so had I.

A chirpy woman in an apron and a name tag that read Shelly approached the booth with a coffee urn and pulled it back. ‘You kids are too young for coffee.’

‘Then I’ll take theirs,’ insisted Corina, not taking no for an answer. ‘In fact, Shelly, you can just leave that right here.’

‘Any food for you, boys and girl?’ she asked.

‘Not the mooseburger,’ said Nesto. ‘I’ll have a plate of fries, Shelly.’

‘Sorry, kid,’ Shelly said. ‘We don’t cook lunch until eleven.’

‘I’ll take them raw,’ he said.

‘Frozen fries,’ she jotted down.

‘Can you put some gravy and cheese curds on them?’ I asked.

Nesto looked at me like I was crazy.

‘Trust me,’ I said, turned back to our waitress. ‘Grapefruit and muesli for me, and Corina’s fine with the coffee.’

‘Black as night, as sugary as candyland,’ she ordered.

‘Oh, and a milkshake,’ added Nesto. ‘With three straws.’

‘Two,’ said Corina.

‘One,’ I clarified. ‘But I’d like a bottle of water. Bottled at the source, not a bottle that you fill up from the tap.’

Shelly rolled her eyes, which looked like it took a lot of effort. ‘You kids have money to pay for all this?’

‘Ooh,’ said Nesto, shifting awkwardly on the bench.

‘Don’t worry,’ I said. ‘Mom gave me an advance on my allowance. Do you take American dollars?’

‘More Yanks, eh?’ she said. ‘Just like them over there. You know ’em? Ha! Just kiddin’, eh.’

I looked over at two truckers inhaling plates of eggs, bacon, and something that resembled toast. One wore a King-of-the-Road trucker cap and a T-shirt that boasted USA A-OK. The other guy was clad in plaid. I just hoped their driving skills were better than their fashion skills.

‘Um, Shelly?’ I said. ‘Do you know which truck belongs to them?’

‘The one with the logs,’ she said, disappearing to log our order with Santa in the kitchen.

Outside, at least a dozen trucks were lined up in the parking lot, but only one had long rows of felled trees on its trailer.

‘What are you thinking, zom-boy?’ asked Corina.

‘I’m thinking we just found our ride.’

*
I’ve always thought the plural of ‘moose’ should be ‘meese’.

We kept a close eye on the truckers and kept pace with their eating (which was hard) in a contest to the finish. As they were paying, I left a handful of bills on the table and we slipped out of the DINE and rushed towards the tree truck.

I noticed it had New York state plates, so although it wasn’t Ohio, it was, at least, the right country. There was nobody we could talk to in Canada. I feared they were all complicit in their cannibal Can Nibble treats. We had to get stateside to talk to someone we could trust.

I pulled myself onto the back of the trailer and climbed up the horizontal logs. Of course, I was worried about splinters and insects, but I had to keep focused to reach the top of the pile. Nesto and Corina quickly followed and Nesto straddled a tree trunk like it was a pony.

‘Giddy up, tree!’ he said.

‘Shhh,’ I warned. ‘Keep it down.’

‘Is this safe?’ asked Corina.

‘Worrying about safety is my department,’ I said. ‘But if we’re going to get to safety, this is our best bet. But please, hold on.’

Suddenly, a police car zoomed past, heading north, with its sirens blaring.

‘Duck,’ I said.

‘Oooh, where?’ asked Nesto.

I waved him down. ‘Haven’t you just eaten enough?’

‘I don’t know where my next meal’s coming from. Excuse me for living.’

‘And you want to keep living, right? If the camp leaders woke up this morning and noticed we’re not there, they could hunt us down. We’re fugitives.’

‘Cool,’ said Nesto.

‘Actually, Adam, that is pretty cool,’ agreed Corina.

The two truckers walked across the tarmac towards their cab.

‘Flip ya for the wheel,’ the King said.

‘Nah, you take it. I wanna play on the CB.’
*

‘So long as it’s not Name That Tune,’ complained King trucker.

Mr Plaid laughed. ‘You spoil all the fun.’

The King jingled an enormous pile of keys in his hand. ‘I’m thinkin’ straight shot to the border, get some home cooking on American soil.’

‘Amen, brother. Amen.’

The truck rumbled to life and pulled onto the two-lane highway. The wind swept our hair and the three of us did our best to stay low, crouching amid the timber.

It must have been the fresh air, the sleepless night, or the rhythmic rumbling of the semi-trailer, because I fell fast asleep.

*

The landscape around me was turquoise and vast. I was all alone, until out of the corner of my eye, I spotted something move. I turned around, but nothing.

Whoosh
.

There it was again. And then behind me.

Suddenly, the smooth blue surface I was standing on, which reminded me of the kitchen counter at home, was overrun by slimy spheres, zipping and jumping all
around me like kernels about to pop. I took a closer look – they were germs … but they were alive with bulging eyes and jabbering mouths. I recognised them from my science textbook.

‘Get away!’ I shouted as salmonella slipped past me. ‘Ick! Leave me alone.’

But the more agitated I got, the closer they came. A dozen E. coli ran rings around me, like a real-life ‘ring-a-ring o’ roses’. And I was going to be the one to
all fall down
.

The surface of this place, a planet perhaps, was now covered in germs. They spread and multiplied as far as I could see. And then something blocked out the light.

At first I thought it was a spaceship, white and angular. But as the strange ship got closer, I saw it for what it really was: a giant spray bottle.

A hand gripped the trigger and a spray showered from above.

‘NO!’ I shouted. ‘I’m not one of them!’

But the antibacterial spray doused me and swept me away in a tumbling river of chemical cleanliness. The germs shouted and complained as we were all pushed off the flat surface of this strange world and down, down, down in an endless waterfall cascade of cleaning product.

‘Adam,’ called a voice, a girl’s voice. Corina’s voice. ‘Adam.’

And suddenly I was somewhere else.

*

‘I don’t want to be cleaned away!’ I shouted.

‘You were dreaming, Adam,’ said Corina, as my eyesight readjusted to our treetop trailer. We were stationary and I could smell the fumes of idling traffic combined with something else – a fresh mist in the air.

‘You were freakin’ out,’ said Ernesto. ‘It was awesome!’

‘Where are we?’ I asked, groggily.

‘You’re not going to believe it,’ said Corina. ‘Look.’

I slowly raised my head and looked down, instantly regretting it. Below, far below, was nothing but raging water. I shook and trembled.

‘Easy there, zom-boy,’ said Corina, calmly. ‘Look.’

I glanced around and saw that the truck was in a line of traffic high above a river on a very long bridge. And then I saw the source of the mist: Niagara Falls.

The water rushed over the horseshoe-shaped cliff to our right. Water vapour billowed into the sky, clouding
out the sun and creating a triple-rainbow bridge over the gap that separated the two countries.

I’d been here before, when I was in second grade, on one of Mom and Dad’s epic road trips. We stayed in a motel that had more mice than guests, and we lined up along the edge of the Falls to watch some daredevil barrel over in a … well, barrel. It was one of those things that adults did because it was there – tempting death with feats of stupidity. On the plus side, there was ice cream.

‘We’re on the bridge between cannibal land and Home of the Brave,’ said Corina.

I looked back at the start of the bridge and spotted the Canadian flag flying next to the stars and stripes. I exhaled, a sigh of relief. ‘We made it.’

‘Not quite,’ said Corina, pointing to the checkpoint up ahead. The American border police were checking every car, every truck, every passenger. Two uniformed guards held mirrors on sticks, checking the undercarriages of trucks and cars for things that shouldn’t be there. And they were looking on top of every truck. I didn’t know if there was an illegal immigration issue from Canada, but these zealous border guards weren’t letting anyone in without a passport.

Which we didn’t have.

‘It’ll be fine,’ I said. ‘We’re Americans returning home and we’ll just explain everything to the guards.’

But Nesto shook his head and looked more scared than when I told him we were destined to be turned into doughnuts. ‘But what if I’m not American?’

‘You’re, like, fourth-generation American,’ I reminded him. ‘That makes you as American as apple pie, or at least apple tacos.’

He shook his head urgently. ‘No, I just tell everyone that. I was born in Guadalajara and my parents smuggled me in when I was a baby. That passport I have is a fake. It’s a really good fake, but without it …’

‘If they find him, they will deport him,’ said Corina. ‘You know that, right?’

The truck rumbled forward, inching towards the border … and the border control. I couldn’t let my friend get caught.

‘C’mon,’ I urged. ‘Let’s get down.’

‘Not down there!’ Nesto said, pointing to the raging river below.

‘Well, not yet,’ I said. ‘There’s more than one way to cross the border.’

I pointed to the Horseshoe Falls. Masses of water rushed over the falls, sending a plume of mist high into the sky. The water poured into the lower Niagara River, which washed up onto the north shore of the United States.

That’s when it came to me, an idea for how to sneak into our homeland.

*
ACB is a Citizens Band radio, like a short-distance mobile phone used by truckers and people who really like to say ‘ten-four’.

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