Read H2O Online

Authors: Virginia Bergin

H2O (21 page)

“You get scared, you bang your spoon on the table,” Darius told her, and we went to see what we could get.

We hadn't even gotten halfway up the stairs before the spoon banged on the table. We rushed back in expecting some sort of horror, and instead found an enormous ginger bruiser of a cat sitting on the table, eyeballing Darling.

“Kitty just wants to see what there is to eat,” I said, and, as Darling hadn't touched the sardines, I lured the cat off the table with them and shut it in the den. The kid watched, tight-lipped.

“Dogs don't like fish,” said Darius, plonking a handful of dog biscuits that were way too big for Darling on the table.

I got a rolling pin and gave them a battering—the kid and Darling flinched.

“So she can eat them,” I said softly, wondering how come everything I did somehow ended up with me seeming like an ogre when all I was ever trying to do was HELP.

Darling crunched delicately; the kid relaxed and spooned herself another peach.

Ever worn second-hand clothes? Ever worn them and wondered who they had belonged to? We didn't have to wonder; there was a couple dead on the bed. I decided I'd rather stick with sequins than the clothes of a dead Mrs. Farmer, but Darius didn't exactly have much choice.

“Can I get some privacy here?” he said, pulling clothes out of their closet.

There was no reason to go poking around; I was just looking for the bathroom to see if I could find something for Darius's pits. I opened a door.

She was lying on the bed. Her room was just like mine. Same mess of stuff she probably got yelled at for every day. Clothes jumbled on the floor with her school stuff: same books, same exams coming up. Same mess of makeup scattered all over the dressing table. Same wall plastered with photos of her and her friends… I wondered which boy she had liked. I decided it had probably been the dark-haired one.

I wondered if she had died before her parents, and had her mom to comfort her, or whether she'd died alone.

I felt cold then, shivery. I looked in her closet. I took one of her cardigans because I had to; I took a T-shirt for a Princess dress.

“Thanks,” I said to her. I wanted to do something for her.

It takes a girl to know a girl. I picked out what I knew would be her best dress—this gorgeous lacy white frock she'd probably had to beg to get. I took it off the hanger. I held it by the straps and, careful not to touch her, I laid it on her body.

“That's a great dress,” I said. “You look really pretty.”

When I came out of the room, Darius, in jeans, was coming out of the bathroom, spraying stuff into his pits.

“Are you OK?” he asked as he ditched the empty can of man-spray and pulled on a checked shirt.

Before I could have some weird, random thought about him looking not too repulsive, really, considering, I blanked it by staring at his dead man's socks. I felt it again, that I really, really wanted to talk. It just wasn't the time.

“Here,” I said, throwing the T-shirt at him. “You'd better give this to her.”

“I'll get your skirt,” he said.

“I don't want it.”

“Ruby?” said Darius. “
Are
you OK?”

Shut
up, shut up, shut up
, I thought. I didn't know whether I meant him or me.

“Don't go in there,” I said, closing the door to her room.

Apart from there being nothing much but the syrup from canned fruit to drink, the house was good to us. Very good. It sounds awful—well, it would have sounded awful to the me that used to be me—but they had a big old stove like Zak's parents had, only even older, and it was still on, so we made a massive pile of scrambled eggs and sat and ate them in the stinking house of dead people. It was the first hot food I'd eaten since…that stew Simon had made. Which was…

“How long has it been?” I said out loud.

Darius didn't ask what I meant.

“Six days,” he said.

After breakfast, we got busy. First we fought. Darius, dead-man's sock feet shoved in rain boots, wanted us all to get geared up in garbage-bag armor, and I refused. I had to stand in the yard and shout about how blue the sky was (it was!) before he'd listen. Then I got on with things. I checked the truck, ignoring Whitby's boomy barks (he wanted out) and the cows' mooing (I guess they wanted out too). I started it up: over half a tank of gas. I didn't know how far that would take us, but anywhere out of there was good enough. We raided the house for everything that was useful—and I mean everything: food, anything waterproof, more rain boots, garbage bags, tape, blankets, tools—a whole bag of them, but no pointless electric stuff.

Crazy, really. I thought I'd never get us stuck like that again with no gas, and the way things were, it seemed like we could pretty much go into any house or any shop and get what we needed. It was just that…there's this fear thing, isn't there? Every time you go in someplace, the fear that there might be someone, anyone there…and the other fear, which is really more a fear of yourself, that you are going to see something, yet another something, that will upset you.
May
Meltdown
. So it's easier—isn't it?—to stock up.

“We should let them out,” I said to Darius, looking at the shouty cows.

“Hn,” he said.

“Well, we should, shouldn't we? It's not like any of them are gonna be murderers, is it?”

“Cows kill more people than sharks,” he said.

“Keep out of the way, then, if you're scared.”

“I'm not scared. I'm just saying.”

I was scared too, but another thing I'd learned on Simon's country walks was how to deal with cows. Mostly they won't come near you anyway, so you should just ignore them and not crowd them…but if they're frisky or curious, you need to show them who's boss. You need to act big and stern and noisy. And if you're really worried, you should get a branch or a nice chunky stick. I got a mop from the house.

Darius brought the kid out to see. (The kid in her new Princess T-shirt dress that was a hundred sizes too big and a pair of rain boots that were a hundred sizes too big.) That surprised me—like, why would he do that?—and it annoyed me—like, are they just going to stand there and watch me mess it up? Afterward, I thought maybe he did it so she could learn something: either that cows could turn nasty and were best avoided (“See how they're trampling Ruby?”) or a thing about handling animals (“See how Ruby nearly got trampled?”). In either case, it was not a great lesson.

As I walked toward the barn, the cows came barging forward. When I got right to the gate, they backed up a little, jostling each other, nervous. I eyed my escape route, unbolted the gate, swung it open, and clambered up onto the fence. The cows did barge out but in a fairly orderly manner—not quite single file, but almost. They were mooing with delight and pretty darn speedy for plodders. What I hadn't really thought about was where they would go, but they seemed to know exactly where they were headed. They all turned right and disappeared up a muddy track. Darius and the kid came to see. We walked up the side of the barn and watched the cows speed-plod into a field, fanning out to gorge on the grass.

There was another thing I hadn't thought about; they weren't lady cows, milking cows, they were boy cows. Young boys. I know two (Simon) things about them: 1) a lady cow will just come get you if she thinks you're messing with her calf, but if her calf has gone, she's probably going to be OK; but boy cows—young boy cows—like to hassle people, for fun; and 2) boy cows are only kept for meat.

So they'd been double saved, hadn't they? No starving to death in a barn and no one-way trip to Burgersville either.

The kid climbed up on the fence to get a better look.

“Now they're happy,” I beamed. “Lovely fresh grass!”

Princess ignored me, but I knew she'd heard. Some random horrible thought about what it was they were chomping
on
bubbled up in my head: how wet the grass might be, whether…if that
thing
was in the rain and the grass drank up the rain and the cows ate the grass. Hey, I was veggie, what did I care? But lady cows…what about milk and—cheese?! Was there going to be no more CHEESE?! I popped the thought and carried on beaming. I even smiled nicely at the Spratt.

“We could just stay here,” said Darius.

Huh?
Instant frown.

“We'd have to go and get some stuff to drink, get some more food, but then we could come back and hang out here—just for a few weeks or something…until we work out what to do…”

“I
know
what I'm doing!” I said.

“No you don't. I mean, you don't seriously think your dad's still going to be alive, do you?”

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

I have only driven a truck that one time; it was old and more worn out than my dad's beater. It rattled your bones, it crawled along, it guzzled gas, and NO WAY would it have kept the rain out, not for one second. There was moss growing in the little grooves where the windows should have slid open; now you couldn't even slide them closed.

Oh, and it was really noisy. That was FINE, because basically I didn't want to speak to Darius Spratt EVER AGAIN.

He didn't even apologize. OK, the words “I'm sorry” came out of his mouth, but they were followed by the words “but it's pretty unlikely he's alive, isn't it?”

Kid or no kid, I went NUTS. I shouted so loud the cows got spooked and ran across the field. I said every nasty thing to him I could think of. I ranted and raved and stomped around. I think you could summarize what I had to say as “
HOW
DARE
YOU?!
” and I think you could summarize what Darius Spratt had to say as “I'm just trying to be realistic,” which apparently involves not caring ONE BIT what anyone else feels.

It should have ended with me getting into the truck and driving off. That's what I felt like doing. It ended with me getting into the truck and starting up and just sitting there.

Please
don't leave
me!

Over the clatter of the engine, I couldn't hear what Darius was saying to Princess, but I had a bad feeling it was basically going to be her decision, whether they stayed or came with me. And as far as that kid was concerned, I was Rumpelstiltskin, wasn't I? Not my lovely made-up version, but the shouty, horrible real thing. If they decided to stay, I'd take Darling back—that's what I thought. Hey, I could even threaten to take Darling from her unless they got in the truck. I thought that too. I think I would have done it, I was that tightly wound, when the kid suddenly made this funny little shruggy gesture and trailed toward the truck…but not toward the passenger door. Apparently, I was too awful to sit next to. Apparently, I was worse than the memory of a car crash. Apparently, I was now more revolting than death-breath Whitby, whose rear end was already letting us know that the leftover scrambled eggs didn't really agree with him.

We rattled on in silence for a while. Every time I accidentally glanced at the Spratt, he was frowning. Seemed as if he was deep in thought about something; how sorry he was, that's what it should have been.

“ZERO POINT TWENTY-SEVEN PERCENT,” shouted Darius.

“PARDON?” I shouted back.

“SAY THE POPULATION OF DARTBRIDGE IS APPROXIMATELY TEN THOUSAND. I MEAN, IT CAN'T BE THAT MANY, BUT IF YOU INCLUDED THE CLOSEST VILLAGES IT PROBABLY IS. SAY THERE WERE TWO PRISONERS ALIVE IN EACH CELL, PLUS US… THAT'S TWENTY-SEVEN. TWENTY-SEVEN PEOPLE LEFT MEANS ZERO POINT TWENTY-SEVEN PERCENT SURVIVED.”

I drove. I just drove. I was just a girl out for a drive on a lovely sunny day.

“SAY THE UK POPULATION IS SIXTY-THREE MILLION,” bellowed Darius, “THAT MEANS…THERE'S APPROXIMATELY…”

An age went by. Like I say, I was just a girl out for a drive on a lovely sunny day.

“ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY THOUSAND AND ONE HUNDRED PEOPLE LEFT,” shouted Darius triumphantly.

I gripped the steering wheel.

“DOES THAT SEEM ABOUT RIGHT TO YOU?”

“WHATEVER,” I shouted.

“NO, BUT DOES IT?”

“NO! ACTUALLY, NO! YOU DON'T KNOW. THERE COULD BE TONS OF PEOPLE. THEY COULD BE HIDING. THERE WAS A GUY AT THE SUPERMARKET AND THERE WAS A GUY AT THE PUB.”

I saw Darius open his trap.

“AND I THINK SASKIA MIGHT STILL BE ALIVE,” I shouted.

And
Caspar—and Caspar—and Caspar
, I thought. I didn't speak it. I couldn't bear to have to tell about that, to hear what Darius thought.


SASKIA
MILLER?
” he shouted.

“YOU KNOW HER?!”

Like, really, was he some kind of perv? How come he knew all our names?

“WELL, YEAH!”

I glanced at him. He smirked. Revolting. Apparently, like every other boy in the school, Darius Spratt liked her.

“AND THERE WAS A GUY WHO
MURDERED
MY STEPDAD,” I shouted, to shut him up.

It didn't work. There was this intense waft of stink, which could have been Whitby's bottom or could have been Darius Spratt blowing off from the strain of calculating.

“A HUNDRED AND NINETY-FIVE THOUSAND, THREE HUNDRED!” he shouted.

“WHY DON'T YOU SHUT UP?”

“I'M JUST SAYING—”


SHUUUUUUT
UUUUUUP!

Please
, my heart thought,
please
don't say another word I can't bear to
hear
.

I knew we needed to turn off and find another car. Though I hated the thought that this might involve speaking to Darius, it'd have to be done. No way was there enough fuel in the truck to get us much farther.

I was so busy thinking about how awful it was going to be, having to speak to him, that I missed the first turn-off. I could have turned around and gone back, but I couldn't bring myself to do that, to admit I'd made a mistake. I was bristling about that so much we rattled past the next turn-off. That's when Darius spoke up.

“RUBY,” he shouted.

“I KNOW!” I shouted.

He was quiet for a moment.

“I NEED TO GO TO A PHARMACY,” he shouted.


WHAT?!

“A PHARMACY.”

“WHAT FOR?”

Even as I said it, I knew. It wasn't just Darius's trousers that had been left in the polytunnel; it was that stash of medicine he'd had in his bag.

“I NEED MEDICINE,” he shouted.

“ARE YOU GONNA HAVE AN EPILEPTIC FIT?!” I shouted, panicked.

“NO.”

I glanced at him; he was crimson.

“I JUST NEED THEM. THAT'S ALL.”

“WHAT DO I DO IF YOU HAVE A FIT?”

“I'M NOT GOING TO HAVE A FIT.”

“YEAH, BUT WHAT IF YOU DO?”

“I'M NOT. I JUST NEED MY PILLS.”

So the epilepsy thing was a total no-go sore spot, discussion-wise. Hello, Darius Spratt! Just like my dad's chances of being alive! I felt like pointing that out. Only thing that stopped me was that if I pointed that out, he'd probably end up saying again that my dad was DEAD. So I shut up…but I was boiling mad—and pretty scared that Nerd Boy would have some kind of fit on me.

Great, eh? But wait! It gets even better!

When we got to the suspension bridge in Bristol, the barrier was down. Being smart like I am, I backed up and drove across in the other lane. Not so smart; the barrier at the other end was down and I guess someone else had tried to leave through the incoming lane because they were still stuck there. Lovely choice: I could either reverse right back across the bridge or attempt to turn around.

Do you know how high that bridge is? Do you know what that drop is like? Do you know how, out of the corner of your eye, you can see seagulls swoop through the air and down UNDER the road?

Want to know something about me?

I DON'T DO HEIGHTS. I DO NOT DO HEIGHTS.

I revved up a little—OK, a lot—and—

“RUUU-BY!” screamed Darius as I jammed my foot down on to the accelerator.

Too late. That barrier just snapped right off. Easy.

(Probably a lot of people got panicky on that bridge, so they didn't even bother replacing the barrier with a decent one every time.)

You think that's the good part? Nuh-uh!

The pharmacy was already smashed open, the pills raided—but no one wanted the drugs Darius was after. He took what they had: two boxes.

“How long will those last you?” I asked, rooting through their (poor) selection of makeup for emergency items.

Darius shrugged. “A while,” he said and swallowed down two big purple tablets with some babies' rosehip syrup.

I dabbed on some brand-you've-never-heard-of eye shadow, while Darius hunted for something, anything, to drink and found precisely nothing but more yucky baby drinks.

“Do you think you can drink this stuff?” asked Darius, examining a bottle of contact-lens potion. “It says it's mainly water…”

“Of course you can't!” I said, deciding against a plum-colored lipstick (that reminded me too much of the fingernails on a certain lady's hand).

Thing is, I was really thirsty. I almost would have at least tried that contact-lens stuff. Hadn't I told Darius not to put so much salt in the scrambled eggs?

We're nearly at the good part.

• • •

We'd left the kid, clutching Darling, just outside on the street, instructed to bang the crowbar on the side of the truck if she got scared. You couldn't blame her for not wanting to stay in there, even with all the windows open; Whitby's bottom was out of control. So the kid banged on the truck…and she banged on it pretty hard because you could hear it above the noise of an engine, above the blare of music, above Whitby's big boomy bark.

But it was that, Whitby's bark, I heard first. Dumb, smart, big, stinky dog. Gentle smelly-bummed giant. He heard that car coming long before we did. He warned us.

Me and Darius looked at each other; I hate that, when you see your own in fear in the face of another person—how it had been with my friends at Zak's, how it had been with Simon. People just shouldn't look at each other when they're scared.

What could we do? We couldn't just leave the kid, could we? We had to go outside—and nothing to defend ourselves with if a someone, anyone nasty was there…unless what? We threw sponges and baby bath toys at them? Pelted them with plum-colored lipsticks? The fear wasn't just crackling in my bones—it was jumping about in every cell of my body.

Parked next to our truck—and blocking us in—was a pink stretch limo. Oh yes. One of those party cars that are kind of tacky in some ways and in other ways you just want to get in. Music thumped away inside it, but you couldn't see a thing through the blacked-out windows. You could only see this boy driver (who looked about ten!) in a peaked cap that was way too big for him sitting in the front of the car and staring straight ahead, a bunch of wild-eyed kids packed into the passenger seat next to him.

Then the rear passenger doors cracked open like it was a spaceship—might as well have been!—and smoke and music and people piled out of it…but not just any people: super-cool people. Most seemed twenty-something—two fashionista-type trendy girls, a skater dude, some punky-looking characters, and an ultra-preppy boy, and even the oldest one—who looked as old as Grandma Hollis, but was wearing some kind of skintight leopard-print Lycra catsuit and a feather boa—looked desperately cool.

“Hello, sweetie!” one of the fashionistas cooed at Princess, trying to offer her some water from a bottle.

I sort of squared myself up—but not for a fight. It was weird, meeting that bunch of people, but I didn't feel afraid of them. I tried to come over all dignified and like I'd never been scared at all, not even for one second…while at the same time: 1) relieved I had a superb outfit on, because—no matter how weird my hair and makeup were, they would surely see I was cool too and 2) wondering how come the world goes mental and some people end up with people straight out of some mega-stylish style magazine, whereas other people end up with Darius Spratt and a dog with a stinky bottom.

They swarmed around Princess. It didn't even seem to matter to them that Darius barged through them to put his arm around the kid, and it didn't seem to matter to them that the kid wanted nothing to do with them and just stood there looking (impressively) hostile: a small, fierce thing in gigantic rain boots.

“Look at her little dog!” cooed the other fashionista, reaching out to pet Darling (who didn't even snarl).

The kid (even more impressively) actually raised the crowbar to stop the dog petter. Darius took the crowbar from her and held it down by his side, but I could see his hand all tense on it—and his eyes were as angry as the kid's.

“Do you wanna come with us?” the preppy boy asked Princess, and the others laughed as if that was a brilliant idea.

“Hey,” I said, sort of starting to think that they were actually being pretty rude in some ways; it was like me and Darius Spratt weren't even there.

I glanced at Darius; he glanced at me. He was frowning—boy, was he frowning.

Then this…
other
guy
got out of the limo. Unfolded himself from it. The guy was seriously tall. Looked like a Dartbridge tree-hugging crusty type, but cleaner and paler: skinny and scruffy and ratty blond dreadlocks poking out from under this country gent's flat-cap hat, the sort of wintery, tweedy, what-are-you-wearing-that-for-when-it's-boiling thing that made you feel hot (and thirsty) just looking at it (and wonder whether he sucked head sweat out of it, like I'd thought about licking pit sweat out of my raincoat). And I wouldn't have looked at the hat or at him at all except 1) he was actually pretty good-looking and 2) although he didn't speak a word, not to begin with, the way the others all acted around him it seemed like he was their king or something.

“Xar! Look! Can we keep her?” asked a fashionista.

“You picked the last one!” said a punky-looking boy.

“But she's so cute!” said the fashionista. “Xar!
Please?
” she whined.


off!” shouted Darius.

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