The Waking Dark (38 page)

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Authors: Robin Wasserman

BOOK: The Waking Dark
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“I’m good,” West said.

No one suggested taking the gun.

They descended into the basement. The light switch on the stairs had no effect, and the narrow beam of West’s useless cell phone cast more shadows than it did light. It only increased the sense that they were delivering themselves up to a dungeon.
I’m sorry.
Who knew what secrets were lurking underground? If not decaying skeletons chained to the wall or tables laid out with instruments of torture, then surely at the very least, families of rats summoned from far and wide by the ever-richening smell. But the dim light caught only what Jule remembered, a small space crammed with folding tables, each topped with old-fashioned radios in varying stages of dilapidation. Most were only for listening, but a few served as ham radios that would connect the Sorenson house to the outside world. Kyle Sorenson had been a man of organization and habit, laying the radios out from worst to best working order. Trying very hard not to think of the corpse upstairs or the stench, Jule crossed to the far corner, where, as she’d expected, she found the transceiver. It wasn’t the best or most powerful in his collection, and lacked digital tuning, but it was the one he’d shown her how to use all those years ago, his hand covering hers as she inched across the dial.

She swallowed another mouthful of bile, and held out her open palm. “Phone,” she said, and West handed over the light.

“You sure you can get this thing to work?” he asked.

“I’m sure.”

“If we can’t get a signal out —”

“We will.”

“And if there’s no one listening on the other end?”

“There will be,” she said. “There always is.”

A whole world of strangers without ever having to leave the house. She’d always wondered what Sorenson saw in these machines – why, if he was clever enough to crave the world beyond Oleander’s limits, he didn’t exercise his adult prerogative and join it. Why settle for voices, she’d wondered, when you could have the whole thing: new faces and new landscapes, oceans and mountains and canyons and anything but the endless flat? He’d always acted like this was his only option for expanding his small world. “I’m no good around people,” he’d said whenever she asked, and she would think
You’re good with me.

Then Scott had gone to prison, and she’d never gone back. And now Sorenson was dead.

She took a few slow, deep breaths, trying to remember what she’d once known. She twisted the dial and tuned in the frequency Scott had used for his coded messages, in hopes the feds were still holding vigil.

“This is a distress call from Oleander, Kansas. People masquerading as soldiers have quarantined the town. There’s been a leak of toxic material at the factory nearby, and people here are getting sick. People here are dying. They won’t let us out, and soon they’re going to kill us all. This is not a joke. My name is —” No one would believe a Prevette. “Eleanor King.” She said another silent apology. “You can look me up. I live in Oleander, Kansas, and if you can hear this, please send the authorities. Send help. Oleander, Kansas. I know this sounds crazy, but if you look into it, you’ll see the town is completely cut off. We need your help. Please.” Jule sent out the same message on another frequency, and then another. Someone a few miles down the road might tune in and hear her; someone in China might hear her. Someone from GMT might hear her, and do what was necessary to shut her up. There was no way of knowing. You just had to send your voice into the void, and believe someone was listening.

She broke off at the sound of footsteps overhead, seized by the impossible certainty that, stirred by the use of his shortwaves, Kyle Sorenson had woken from death and was on his way downstairs to show them exactly how it was done. But that was nightmare, and these days, reality was bound to be worse. Daniel raised a finger to his lips. Jule darkened the phone.

They held still in the dark, trying not to breathe. The radio crackled. Feet stomped overhead. There was a sound of porcelain crashing against tile, then a shout. “Smoke ’em out!”

The basement door eased open and something clattered down the stairs. Jule assumed it was a tear-gas canister – until it erupted in a ball of fire. She hit the ground. West and Daniel piled on top of her. Smoke billowed, and though the rational part of her brain tried to tell her that she still had time before the basement filled with smoke and fire, she could already feel her lungs tightening, her eyes watering, her heart thumping to the steady tune:
Get
out
get
out
get
out
get
out.

“We got the message out,” Daniel murmured. “That’s what counts.”

They could die now, he meant, and maybe the town would live. The town that didn’t mind cornering them in a basement, burning them alive.

“Just keep behind me,” West said. Assuming a tackle position, head tucked, shoulders hunched, he charged through the smoke. Jule gave in to her body’s panicked demands and followed, Daniel bringing up the rear, all of them bursting into the kitchen and drawing in great breaths of foul air. Six armed men were waiting.

“Told you I saw ’em go inside,” Michael Louch crowed. He lived next door and, in a saner life, owned the gas station on State Street. Now he carried a rifle in one hand and a wine bottle stuffed with a dirty handkerchief in the other. Which explained the Molotov cocktail. Louch was notorious for playing with fire.

Six men: a gas-station owner, a shoe salesman, two drunks who spent most days in the drugstore alley, a football coach who by this time had probably killed his wife, and Jule’s eighth-grade math teacher, who had, from the apparent goodness of his heart, passed her despite an 80 percent absence rate. He was the one who dragged her out of the house, while the shoe salesman grabbed Daniel. It took the coach and both of his drunk deputies to subdue a wild West.

To
hell
with
prudence,
Jule thought, struggling in Mr. Schubert’s grasp. Exhilarated despite herself by the fresh air, she told the truth. “There’s something in the air, in the water. It’s making you crazy, but you can fight it.” She had no idea whether that was true. “This isn’t really you, Mr. Schubert.” She had no idea whether that was true, either. “You’re a math teacher. This is crazy!” The man showed no sign of hearing her. When she stopped walking and started kicking, he simply hoisted her off her feet and carried her down the stone path, into the street. Behind her, she heard West grunt in what sounded like pain. Daniel was ominously silent. “They’re going to kill us all,” she tried again. “The soldiers. They’re not really soldiers. They’ve been experimenting on us, and when the experiment’s over, they’re going to kill the lab rats.
They’re
the enemy. You want to go crazy, go crazy on them.”

“Seems like you’re the crazy one,” Mr. Schubert said. “But that’s all right. We have a place for you now.”

“You liked me,” she said, twisting in his grip. “Remember? Please, remember.”

“You were a little bitch,” he said. “But you looked good in a tank top.”

“You deserve what they’re going to do to you,” she shouted. “All of you. I hope they burn the place down. I hope you all burn.”

The math teacher pinned Jule with the same disdainful stare he always gave the class when they mixed up sine and cosine. “You first.”

 

West hadn’t been inside the abandoned grocery store since he was fourteen, still young enough to think that breaking glass, scribbling on walls, and pretending to inhale the occasional joint marked him as daring. After that year, the pack of feral boys he’d run with divided: Half went straight, joining the football team and signing on to a new life of pep rallies and vaguely clean living. The other half graduated from pot to meth, from trespassing to vagrancy, and, in more than one case, from middle school to jail. West had joined the team. Thus saving his life – that’s how the coach had put it. Now the coach was the one who shoved him through the door and slammed the padlock in place behind him. The building, abandoned since Clarkson’s had gone under in the late nineties, had never been especially spick-and-span – there had always been discarded rags, used condoms, splashes of unidentifiable bodily fluids and heaps that might have been animal, vegetable, or mineral, a whiff of decay. But now the building warehoused nearly thirty of Oleander’s undesirables, along with their assorted waste products. The smell of the place was part porta-potty, part charnel house.

The windows were boarded up, the cracks between rotting boards too narrow to let in more than a trickle of the dawn. Bodies cluttered the linoleum, most breathing heavily with sleep, a few suspiciously still. Couples hugged the corners, taking advantage of the darkness and the comfort of a warm body. A handful of solitary figures stood watch by the door, greeting the new arrivals with a hostile snarl that suggested they would find no friends here. So when the hand emerged from the shadows to grab West’s shoulder, he seized it and flipped the body hard to the floor. A head cracked against tile. Jason blinked up at him, dazed.

“Nice to see you again, too.”

West cursed. He pulled Jason off the ground, righted him, fussed over the bump on his head, apologized more than once and was shrugged off each time. It was stupid to sneak up on someone in here, Jason admitted. It was smart to stay on guard. It was right to strike first, ask questions later.

It was, all of it, worse than they’d thought.

Jason hugged him. West hugged back. Tightly. And didn’t care who saw.

“Tell us,” West said. “What happened. What’s happening.”

Jason told them it was no safer inside the makeshift prison than out. Arguments turned into fights turned into brawls, and some of the bloodied bodies fell without rising. No one tried to help. Every few hours the door opened, and either someone was pushed in or someone was yanked out. No one knew what happened to those who were taken away. But they all knew what had happened to Ellie King.

Everything was crazy, Jason told them. Everything impossible was possible; everyone was different. He’d once had a gun, Jason told them, and if he had it now, he’d cut to the last chapter and pull the trigger on himself. He said this without an abundance of emotion, as if standing in the rain expressing mild regret that he’d forgotten his umbrella. When West confided what they suspected about the “final containment,” he barely seemed surprised. “Guess it sucks to be us.”

Something had been extinguished in him, and West found that he missed it.

“We should check out the door,” Jule said. “Maybe there’s some way to break it open.”

“There’s not,” Jason said.

“Doesn’t hurt to look.”

“Not as much as it’ll hurt if you get through to the guys with the guns standing on the other side of it.”

Jule stood. “Thanks for the input,” she said, disgust plain in her voice. “Daniel?” She left. He followed. Leaving West and Jason relatively alone.

“Did they hurt you?” West asked quietly. “When they brought you here?”

Jason shrugged. “What’s it matter?”

“It matters.”

“I can’t blame them,” Jason said. “I bet it felt good.”

“What are you talking about?”

“You want to know what it’s like? To be ‘infected,’ as you call it? It’s not like having some voice in your head telling you to do bad things. It’s like… being yourself. But more than you ever were. It’s like everything you want and everything you feel is suddenly
right,
as long as it’s ugly. And everything you want is ugly. Everything you are is ugly.” He raised his fist, slowly, bringing it into the beam of West’s cell-phone light. The knuckles were scraped, the fingers stained with dried blood. “Yesterday I beat up some guy for his candy bar. I wasn’t even that hungry, not then. But he had it, and I wanted it, and I was bigger than him, so… I took it. And then I bashed his head into the wall a few times, for good measure.” He laughed. “Turned out to be an Almond Joy. And I hate coconut.”

West cradled the fist in both hands, running his thumbs over the swollen knuckles. Jason winced. “I’m a pacifist, you know? Was a pacifist. And a vegetarian. Let no harm come to fish or fowl. Or any living thing. Until I decide I need a candy bar.”

West had a strange impulse to press his lips to the knuckles.

“We got a message out,” he said. “Someone’s going to come and stop this and then…”

“Then what?” Jason said, in a choked voice. “They lock us all up somewhere? Do some superfun experiments?”

“Find a cure.”

“You don’t get it, do you?” He shook his head and pulled his hand out of West’s. “I’m not sick. I’m
me.
These things I’ve done, these things I feel… even if you ‘cured’ me tomorrow, I’d still remember them. I’d still know how it felt to crush that kid’s head into the wall, and how it felt to
want
to. The sound it made, his skull against the concrete, again.
Again.
” Jason smiled faintly at the memory – then realized he was doing it, and shuddered. “I’m always going to be the person who did that.”

West’s father liked to say
You
are
the
sum
of
your
choices.

“You don’t have to be,” West said. “A person can be whoever he wants.”

“Funny, coming from you.”

“Meaning?”

“It’s just funny, that’s all,” Jason said. He looked very small, and very afraid.

“Jason…” West wanted to take his hand again, assure him that he was a good person, whatever he’d done. But he didn’t want to lie, and he didn’t know what was true.

“I miss Nick,” Jason said.

“Me too.”

 

Daniel hadn’t owned a watch since he was ten. There was no way to measure how much time passed in the dark. It was, somewhere, daylight: he knew that much. Time was moving forward, too quickly. Running out. Once, the door creaked open. Daniel and Jule rushed it… along with most of the other prisoners. A crush of desperate flesh grabbed and pushed and stomped toward freedom. There was gunfire, and screams. When it was over, there were more bruised and bloodied bodies on the ground, three additional prisoners, and a locked door, and no one was any closer to getting out.

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