Read Slated Online

Authors: Teri Terry

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Slated (28 page)

The lights flicker several times, then go out. It is pitch black. My eyes open wide and wider but can see nothing in the windowless hall. A scream starts trembling deep in my gut, trying to work its way out.
Get a grip; you know the way: remember!
I breathe in slow and deep, force the grid of the hospital into my mind. Eighth floor.
Go to the nurses’ station
, Dr Lysander had said.

One hand on the wall, light on my feet, trembling but careful to make no sound I walk to the end of the hall. Double doors, turn left: you have reached your destination.

All is silence. I walk forward, hands out to find the edge of the desk, but slip on something on the floor, and sprawl on the ground.

The floor is wet. Sticky. There is a funny metallic smell that catches at the back of my throat, and makes me gag.
Blood
.

I back up blindly, on hands and knees and smack into something – no, someone – on the floor: a hand, an arm. A whole person, a woman, in a nurse’s dress. No sound, no movement, a great sticky pool… I force myself to follow her arm up to her neck. She is still warm, just, but quite clearly dead. That last scream I heard, before those two men came. With the gun. They shot her; they must have.

Dead.

I scramble back to my feet and run blind, back down the dark hall.

Stop; too much noise! Hide.

Some instinct forces me to slow down, take careful steps. Quiet ones. I try to think if I noticed the nurse at the desk earlier, when I got off the lift. I walked right past her on my way in, but I can’t think what she looked like. If I knew her, I would have noticed, wouldn’t I? But I was distracted, saying goodbye to Mum, and then…

Mum! She went to have tea with her friend like she always does. Where do they go? I don’t know! Mum, where are you?

Take control. Calm down, NOW.

I breathe in and out until my heart rate slows and the wave of panic is retreating, walled in. Contained.
Stand still and listen
. But I can’t hear anything, not a sound. The hospital is eerily quiet like it never has been before.

Without consultation my feet take me to the emergency exit stairs, automatically heading for the place they know best: the tenth floor. My old room. Careful and quiet, one hand on the wall, I climb, one step at a time. Stopping to listen now and then but hearing nothing. Finally I reach for the door to the tenth, suddenly afraid it will be locked. It opens: perhaps because of the power failure? I step through the door and into the hall: there are dim emergency lights on this floor. Voices and people moving about; calm voices, no shouts or screams. I step forward.

Then a light shines in my face.

‘Is that Kyla? Oh, it is.’ The light is lowered, and it is Nurse Sally, one of the tenth floor nurses who was on my wing when I stayed here. I’m absurdly happy to see a face, a living face, one I know. I smile and she clasps my shoulder. ‘It
is
you. Oh darling, here for a check up, were you? Come on. We must all go to the cafeteria. Help us, will you, with some of the newbies. They’re confused.’

And she has me take the hands of two Slateds. New ones. Unsteady on their feet, but smiling great beatific grins as if this is the most wonderful day of their lives.

She pushes a wheelchair: a very new one. Not trusted to walk.

Down the hall we go; soon it is crowded with nurses and patients.

‘Hurry!’ An impatient voice at the back. One of several Lorders, herding us along.

We shuffle to the tenth floor cafeteria – the only place big enough to get everyone in. They push the last of us in and barricade the door.

There is natural light here from high barred windows, bright after the dim emergency lights, and I blink.

‘Kyla, you’re hurt! What happened?’ And Nurse Sally is pushing me into a chair, checking my arm, my shoulder.

‘Hurt? I’m not… Oh. I see. This isn’t my blood. I tripped on someone, who…’ And I can’t think about that, or even finish the sentence, so switch to another. ‘What’s happening?’

‘Don’t worry. I’m sure everything will be fine.’

‘They’re shooting people; killing them. They’re not fine.’

Her mouth drops open. She shakes her head. ‘I forgot how direct you can be. There was an AGT attack. It’s over. They’re just tracking the last few down, so they’re keeping everyone under wraps until they do.’

‘Are you okay, honey?’ Another nurse beams at me, with a handful of syringes of Happy Juice. Making the rounds of the room.

‘Fine,’ I say, and think of Sebastian. It must work – my poker face – she moves along. Sally goes with her; they start checking everyone as they go.

I back up and sit on a chair at one of the tables. There is a girl strapped in a wheelchair next to me, brown hair cascading forwards over her face. Her Levo vibrates. I look about for a nurse, wave at Sally to come over but she doesn’t see. The girl is slumped down in her wheelchair, trying to reach for something…

Ah. There, on the floor. I pick up the soft toy she must have dropped: a floppy eared bunny.

‘There you go,’ I say, and put it in her hands. She looks up, and smiles. A beautiful wide smile of perfect joy.

I recoil. No; it can’t be. That smile doesn’t belong on that face. She is gorgeous with it, it suits her, but it is all
wrong
.

‘Phoebe?’ I whisper.

CHAPTER THIRTY FIVE
 
 

Something sharp jabs my shoulder.

Warmth slides through my veins. Almost instant: my heart rate slows, my fists uncurl. Ah… Not just Happy Juice. Something stronger.

I fade in and out.

At some level I am aware, but not.

The lights are back on. I’m in a wheelchair, going down a hall but I don’t know where; all I see is the floor. I can’t lift my head to look.

There is the warmth of a shower. A nurse holds me upright while another scrubs my skin. Blood washes away so easily when it belongs to someone else. I watch as my skin is perfect and white again. Pretty.

Fluffy towels, clean clothes.

Hospital issue clothes. This is wrong. I fight to focus on why, but cannot.

I’m tucked into a bed, but it isn’t my bed. The sheets are cool, my skin feels feverish against them. Not my bed? I try to keep my eyes open. They flutter, then shut.

‘Kyla, come on, now. Wake up. Kyla…’

I’m warm, and happy; floating; unconnected to my body. I don’t want back.
Leave me alone
. I slip through layers of darkness, the voice fades away…

Bricks are all around me. Above, too, as far as I can see. I scratch at the mortar. It is starting to crumble. Bit by bit. It won’t be long, now…

Soon, I’ll be free.

Another voice. ‘Come on, Kyla. It’s time to go home.’

Mum?

My eyes snap open.

We spiral out of the hospital car park to the exit.

Mum seems completely unruffled. She told me on the way to the car that she’d been in her friend’s office when the first blast hit. They locked themselves in and hid under a desk.

When it was over, she couldn’t find me. No one knew where I was. The floor where I’d been, and the one below – doctor’s offices, meeting rooms – had been targeted. No key personnel were hurt, though. They were all whisked away like Dr Lysander. But when I pressed her she admitted that some nurses and a few Lorders died. And all the AGT.

Eventually I was tracked down: away in la-la land by the time she found me. Delayed reaction and shock, they thought, had caused my levels to plunge. They just caught me with an injection before I blacked out. And since I’d been sedated, they didn’t want to release me without a full going over and scans.

Mum said she pulled strings. Called a few friends in high places to get me out and take me home. Said everyone at the hospital was in so much of a tizzy that they went along with it to make her go away.

Home.

I sleep some in the car, then pretend to sleep. The injection is wearing off. Things are starting to come back: in pieces, at first, then all in a rush.

And I am unable to even believe that the terrorists got into the hospital, let alone what they did, the people they killed.
Don’t waste the bullet
. If they had more bullets, maybe I’d be dead now, too. All that blood; the nurse whose face I cannot remember…

I force my mind away from her, and it slips back to Dr Lysander’s office. On her computer, it said
Board recommends termination; Dr Lysander overrules
. What does it mean?

Strangest of all: somehow, through everything that happened, I’d stayed level, or near enough. It makes no sense.

It was seeing Phoebe that finally pushed me over the edge.

With some sort of serious delayed reaction of her own, Mum’s iron nerves wait until we get home and through the front door, then collapse. She rolls into a ball on the sofa and dissolves in tears.

‘What should we do?’ I say.

‘Call Dad,’ Amy suggests. Mum shakes her head
no
from the sofa.

‘How about Aunt Stacey?’ And she seems okay with that, so Amy calls her.

Soon Amy is playing with baby Robert while telling me how to make dinner, and Stacey and Mum are well into a bottle of red wine.

By now Amy has gleaned a little of the story: that terrorists attacked the hospital. I haven’t told her – or anyone – that I saw two of them in Dr Lysander’s office, or that one nearly shot me. Or about the nurse who died. Amy is fascinated and wants
every
detail, and that is enough to keep them to myself.

On the news that night there is a five second mention:
earlier today, armed AGT attempted to mount a vicious attack on dedicated medical staff at a major London hospital. They failed.

Tell that to the nurse whose blood was all over the floor.

CHAPTER THIRTY SIX
 
 

‘Quite an adventure you had yesterday,’ Dad says, one eye on me and one on the road.

‘I guess so.’

‘Were you scared?’

‘Yes.’

‘Good.’

I look at him in surprise. ‘You’d have to be completely mad not to be scared,’ he says. He stops at a red light. ‘Did you sleep all right?’

‘Yes.’

‘No nightmares?’

‘No.’ I’d been afraid to close my eyes, but if I dreamed, I remembered nothing.

‘Interesting. There you have something
real
to be scared of for a change, and you sleep like a baby.’ He looks quite fascinated, like I’m a puzzle he is trying to figure out. I get the feeling he doesn’t like not understanding things, people; anything.

‘Maybe the injection I had at the hospital hadn’t worn off yet,’ I suggest.

‘Perhaps,’ he says, but I get the feeling he knows they don’t last that long. ‘What did you think of the terrorists?’

Does he somehow know that I saw two of them, face to face? No. How could he? His eyes are on the road now, as he navigates a twisty narrow stretch.

‘Well?’

What do I think about the terrorists… I haven’t been able to stop thinking about them. Blowing up bus loads of students, and killing nurses. ‘They’re evil,’ I say.

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