Remnants 13 - Survival (6 page)

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Authors: Katherine Alice Applegate

BOOK: Remnants 13 - Survival
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“I — I don’t want to eat them,” Tate managed to get out. “Who knows what I’d be letting into my head?”

<>

“You don’t know that —”

Tate didn’t have time to finish the thought.

Duncan — or whoever, whatever — began to drip off the ceiling as a fine mist. The tiny droplets fell on Tate’s shoulders. On her head.

Tate saw a bright burst of flame. The smell of burning hair reached her nostrils.

“Ahh!” Tate batted at her hair. She shook her head like a wet dog. The flames went out. But the mist was still falling.

<>

 

Busy with her hair, Tate had stumbled into a thin layer of slime. Where had that come from?

She froze in horror, looking down at her feet. Her rubber soles began to smoke and then melt into a whitish puddle. The heat leaped up around her ankles. The nylon upper began to melt.

<>

No way out…

Something was happening.

The red vision. The tongue. The teeth.

Tate tried to resist, tried to hold on, but she felt herself slip away. Then there was only the bright-hot ecstasy of teeth grinding together.

“Whoa

ho

ho!”
Duncan laughed in Amelia’s head.
“What have
we
here? Interesting,
very interesting

so primitive. Primal, almost, wouldn’t you say? Nothing like the mutation I
had.”

Tate’s transformation wasn’t as violent as Amelia had expected. Tate still sort of looked like Tate — only her head and mouth and teeth were bigger Yes, the teeth were
much
bigger Up on the ceiling, Duncan was withdrawing, pulling himself away from the gaping Mouth that was snapping at him like a rabid dog.

“Lots of pieces.”
he advised Amelia.
“Get into lots of pieces so she can’t get her teeth into you.

Well, well, that
was
fun. I guess I finally bugged her enough

Amelia,
what
are you
—”

Amelia had formed herself into a ball once again. Now she zoomed past Duncan, heading straight for Tate’s snapping jaws.

CHAPTER 9

<>
The Mouth bit down on the Enemy. The Enemy was slippery. It slid down her throat almost eagerly. The Mouth gulped and gagged. Too much, too big … But the Enemy would not come up. The Mouth swallowed and…and …

Tate stumbled. She saw the floor. Smelled smoke.

<> Yago’s voice.

“Sleep,” Tate mumbled. “I need sleep.”

<> Not Yago’s voice. Tate felt her head jerk up and her eyelids open wider. She hadn’t moved them. Someone else was controlling them.

“Amelia?” Tate asked warily. She struggled for control of her body. Her eyes and head responded, but her feet began to twitch oddly. Her right foot — oh, agony. The pain was radiating up her bones into her legs. She did not want to move her foot. “Stop it!”

<>

Definitely Amelia.

Tate moaned low. “I told you this would happen,” she said,

<> Yago said arrogantly.

Amelia laughed. <>

“Schedule?” Tate said angrily. “You want to make a schedule for controlling my body?

What are we going to do — tack it up on the fridge? Review it at our family meetings?”

The burst of anger kept her alert as long as she was talking, but as soon as she finished, she began to feel limp with fatigue. Sleep. She needed sleep Tate sank cross-legged onto the floor and rested her head in her hands. Her foot was throbbing dully.

She was already nodding off when her eyelids moved slowly upward, offering her a view of her fingers.

<> Amelia said determinedly.

Tate didn’t need to close her eyelids to fall asleep. Her eyes had already rolled back in her rather crowded head.

Tate dreamed.

She was floating above the gray Earth. She would have been at tree height had there been any trees. The landscape was nothing but dirt. Lifeless. A cemetery for her friends, and the seven billion who had died before them.

Such a sad place. Such a lonely place.

Then Tate’s eyes picked up movement. She strained, trying to see what it was. Her vision shifted, she saw them — bands of people marching steadily toward some distant object. They were like believers moving toward Mecca. Or wildebeests converging on a water hole.

 

Primitive. Matted hair. They wore furs, bundles of shapeless clothing. They looked exhausted

—. shoulders hunched forward, eyes on the ground.

Tate scanned the horizon, trying to unlock the puzzle, anxious to see where they were going

— but there was nothing on the horizon but dust.

Tate woke to the sound of arguing.

<> Yago was saying, <>

Sensations began to flood in. Her right foot was throbbing hotly. She avoided looking at it, imagining her burned skin.

Her neck ached. Someone was trying to turn it and succeeding only in making her twitch painfully. Amelia. Judging from the ache in her muscles, Amelia had been twitching them for hours.

“Cool it, Amelia,” Tate said irritably.

<> Amelia said in a huffy tone. <we’re
smelling something strange. They’re close.>>

<> Yago interrupted. <>

“Why?” Tate asked warily. Her drowsiness was falling away and she was starting to feel scared again. Amelia was right. Two more slime monsters were still out there. She couldn’t run on her foot. It felt as if someone had drilled a hole straight through it. If Duncan and Charlie attacked, she was toast.

<> Yago muttered. <>

<> Amelia interrupted. <>

<> Yago put in. <> Tate agreed. Vehemently. But she didn’t like Yago and Amelia giving her orders. “The Mouth just
appears,”
she said peevishly. “I can’t control it.”

<me
do it,>> Amelia said.

Tate felt like telling Amelia where to go. But then she imagined another voice added to the chorus in her head. Psycho Charlie. Arrogant Duncan. Or — oh, god — maybe even
both
of them. Not a happy thought.

Then came the smell.

Matches. Sulfur. Something burning.

Faint now, but growing stronger.

<> Yago asked urgently.

<> Amelia said, and she sounded much calmer than Tate felt. <> Tate didn’t trust anyone who promised to take care of everything. Besides, she didn’t know how to let go of her body. And, if she
could
do it, she wondered if she’d ever be able to wrest control back from Amelia.

She looked around. Was that a glistening patch on the ceiling off to her left? Yes, she was quite certain it was. Duncan was up there. Or Charlie.

Tate’s heart leaped up like a fluttering bird. She tried to run. The pain in her right foot brought her to her knees, whimpering.

 

<> Yago whispered conspiratorially. <>

<> Amelia said flatly.

The glistening patch was growing closer now. The sulfur smell was stronger. Tate made her decision.

It wasn’t difficult.

Tate wanted to hide. She let the feeling consume her. She imagined herself growing smaller, shrinking down to stand next to a bite-size Yago. She imagined Amelia rising up, swelling like ohe of those hot-air balloons in the Thanksgiving parade —

<> Tate yelled.

Amelia had sensed her opening. Tate felt Amelia hovering over her eagerly — and then Amelia was squeezing her, suffocating her, crushing her, pushing her roughly aside —

Tate was weightless. Gravity was gone.

It was like the floating moment before sleep descends. Her body felt fuzzy, distant. The pain in her foot had receded to a dull ache. That gave Tate some satisfaction. If Amelia wanted to be in charge, let her deal with the full force of the pain.

Tate tried to wiggle her toes. For one terrifying moment, nothing happened. Panicking, Tate clamped down, concentrated, and managed a painful wiggle. She checked in with her fingers, eyebrows, wrists, neck —

“Please,” Amelia said testily. “I don’t need a backseat driver.”

<> Tate said, feeling oddly chagrined.

<> Yago said. <

slime monster at two o’clock.>>

Suddenly, she — they — was, were running, a strange disorienting feeling like being bounced along on an invisible horse.

<running away
is your brilliant plan?>> Yago asked nastily. <>

<> Tate said shakily <>

“Let me know if you have a better idea,” Amelia said, and now some of her cool confidence was gone.

<you
had a better idea,>> Tate said furiously. Being scared and out of control was worse than just being plain scared, she discovered.

And now an awful thought occurred to Tate for the first time. What if this was a trick? What if Amelia was working with Duncan and Charlie somehow? What if the three of them took control of her body and forced her out?

<> Tate shouted. <>

“In your dreams, sweetie,” Amelia said.

An image from her dream came to Tate. A band of ragged people — then it was gone.

<> Yago said. <>

The slime monster was dripping off the ceiling, forming a pool in front of them. Tate watched in horror as it moved into a circle shape around them, cutting off any escape.

“Ideas?” Amelia asked nervously. This was the first time she had faced one of the slime monsters in battle.
It
showed, Tate thought angrily.

<> Yago said impatiently.

 

“No,” Amelia said stubbornly. “I’m not sharing this body with anyone.”

<else
!>> Yago said furiously.

Tate had never felt more like throttling someone. Amelia was going to get them killed! Tate watched resentfully as the slime monster tightened the circle.

Was she doomed to spend eternity with Yago
and
Amelia?

“I’m going to just — push through,” Amelia announced.

Push through a wall of acid? Not a bright idea.

<> Tate shouted. She concentrated on restraining her body, pulling back against Amelia’s forward movement. Yago was trying to work with her. The battle for control made her body flail awkwardly. The slime brushed against her elbow. She felt a shock of pain — then cold fury.

How exactly did a slime creature eat?

She was about to find out.

Then — it happened. Her vision shifted to red. Amelia guessed what was happening and began to scream. That changed nothing. The Mouth had identified the Enemy.

She/Them/It surged forward.

The Mouth was powerful. The Mouth was efficient.

It closed over the head of the Enemy and Amelia could do nothing to stop it.

CHAPTER 10

<>

Amelia gave a low animal groan. She ran a few loping steps, got the obligatory sickness out of the way, stumbled to the left, and fell heavily on her side. Her eyes fluttered closed.

A second later, Tate could hear her snoring ever so slightly. The sound infuriated her. This was the woman who had demanded
she
stay awake?
Look
at her. She had no control.

<> Yago said disgustedly, <

Know your limits, respect your limits. Is that so hard?>>

<> Charlie’s voice cracked with uncertainty.

<> Yago asked insolently.

<> Charlie asked.

There was a pause as Yago apparently considered how to answer this question. Finally he simply said, <>

<> Tate scolded. But the truth was she could relate to Yago’s reluctance to try to explain the situation.

<> Charlie said with surprise. <you
doing here?>>

<> Tate snapped. <>

<> Charlie whispered the last word.

<> Yago said. <your
body is gone — actually, it’s being digested even as we speak. But that’s okay because you can still think and still talk and you can even experience the world as Tate experiences it.>> Long pause.

<> Charlie finally said. <>

<> Yago said coldly.

<> Charlie rambled on. <>

Tate nervously noted the edge of hysteria in his voice. Great. The last thing they needed was Charlie having a breakdown in their head.

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