Read Zom-B Online

Authors: Darren Shan

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Horror & Ghost Stories

Zom-B (14 page)

TWENTY-FOUR

Nine of us left. Me, Trev, Meths, Elephant, Stagger Lee, Tyler, Seez, the other Muslim boy and the Indian. As we run, twisting through corridors, I try to remember how many of us there were to begin with, but I can’t. I’ve already forgotten the names and faces of the dead. I’m sure, if I sat down for five minutes, I’d be able to recall them. But right now they’re vaguely remembered ghosts.

Sounds behind us again. The zombies must have overcome their fear of the light. The chase has resumed.

“Hold on,” Trev pants, coming to a stop. “Where are we? I don’t know if we’re heading back towards the gym or close to the front.”

We gaze around. There are classrooms
on both sides but I don’t recognize them. All of the corridors have started to look the same. I’m as lost as Trev. By the blank stares of the others, I know that they are too.

Tyler coughs shyly and points. “The front’s that way.”

“You’re sure?” Trev asks.

“Yeah,” he says with a small smile. “I’m good at directions, me.”

“Then let’s go.”

We head the way Tyler pointed. He’d better be right. If he’s not, I’ll kill him before the zombies can.

We turn a corner and I run into a boy my own size. We collide, bounce off each other and fall. Sitting up and rubbing my head, I realize it’s Pox and I burst into a smile.

“Pox! I thought you were…”

I stop. Pox is staring at me with a hungry look. I remember that the last time I saw him, he was dining on Dunglop’s brain. My eyes flash to the fingers of his left hand and I see a light green moss running along the bite marks. Bones jut nastily from the ruined tips of his fingers.

Rick’s just behind Pox. He’s limping, dragging one leg. His foot’s missing. Pox or another zombie must have chewed it off before he turned. But there’s not much blood.

Pox scuttles after me. Dunglop’s brain obviously wasn’t enough to satisfy his appetite. Like Meths, poor old Dunglop never was the brightest of sparks, so he must have made for no more than a snack.

I kick at Pox’s face, driving him back. As I try to scramble to my
feet, Meths wades in and kicks Pox harder. Rick hops towards Meths, arms wide, fingers flexed like a cat’s claws. Meths slips. Rick ducks in for the kill–

–then there’s an unnatural roar and the zombie flies backwards, stomach ripped to shreds, blood spattering the wall and floor behind him.

Pox gets up and snarls. Goes for me again. There’s another roar and his head explodes. Somebody’s firing bullets. Someone has a gun.

Bloody
yes
, mate!

“His head!” I roar as Rick hobbles forward, guts spilling down his legs. “Shoot him in the head! That’s the only way to stop them!”

The gun fires again and Rick’s temple cracks open. He drops in a lifeless heap.

I turn to face the gunman. The others have all turned too, jaws slack, hardly able to believe that this is real. I’m hoping for a squadron of soldiers but it’s just a normal-looking guy with a rifle. He hasn’t lowered it and is staring grimly down the barrel at
me
.

“Were you bitten?” he growls.

“No!” I scream.

“Don’t lie. I saw it attack you. Stand back!” he barks at the others.

I gape at the man with the gun. This is so unfair. To survive the zombies, only to be finished off by an idiot who won’t listen. I’d love to knock some sense into his thick head. But it doesn’t look like I’ll
have a chance, because he’s aiming at the middle of my face. Any second now he’s gonna–

“Stop!” another man roars. “Don’t shoot! That’s my daughter!”

“But I saw–” the man with the rifle begins.

The rest of what he says is lost to me. Because suddenly Dad is there, pushing past the idiot with the gun, spreading his arms wide, stooping to hug me.

“Dad!” I cry with a rush of relief.


Becky!
” he moans, wrapping his arms around me and hugging me tight. “My girl! My girl!”

Then he’s kissing me and hugging me, and I don’t care how many zombies or idiots with trigger-happy fingers there are. They can’t hurt me. They don’t matter anymore. Dad loves me. He risked his life to find me. Everything will be all right now. Dad will save me. He’ll save us all. He’s a bloody hero!

TWENTY-FIVE

“Todd,” the man with the gun says, interrupting our hug fest. Dad looks up, happy tears sparkling in his eyes, grinning like a loon. “Our kids aren’t here. We have to push on.”

Dad’s grin fades. He pats my head, then stands. The two men shake hands. There are a couple of women behind the guy with the gun, one white, one Chinese. Dad smiles sadly at the white woman but only scowls at the other one.

“You’re sure you want to continue?” Dad asks Gun Guy.

“I have to.” He turns to the rest of us. “Any of you know Jimmy Wilkins?” Most of us nod. “Have you seen him?” We shake our heads.

“What about Lindsay Hogan?” the white woman asks.

Linzer.

“The zombies got her,” I mutter.

The woman’s face hardens. “No!” she snaps. “You’re wrong.”

“We saw them grab her.”

“Where?” she screams.

I turn and point. The woman starts running. “It was on the top floor,” I shout. “You’re too late. She’s dead.”

But the woman isn’t listening. She’s gone.

The Chinese woman asks us if we’ve seen her son and daughter, but we don’t know either of them. She heads off with Gun Guy, the pair advancing swiftly, checking each room as they pass.

“It’s madness,” I whisper to Dad. “They’re gonna get killed.”

“I know, love,” he says. “But that’s what parents do for their kids. I knew I’d probably get eaten when I came looking for you, but did that stop me? Hell no.”

I beam at him, so proud. He looks around, smiles at my friends, sniffs at the Muslims, the Indian and Tyler. “Come on,” he says. “I’m getting you out of here.”

We follow Dad back the way he came. He’s moving quickly but he isn’t racing. “Slow down,” he says as Trev tries to force the pace.

“But the zombies…” Trev gasps.

“You think I don’t know about them?” Dad snorts.

“We have to get out,” Trev insists.

“That’s what we’re doing,” Dad says calmly. “But if we go
flapping around like headless chickens, we’ll run into trouble, the way you lot did before I found you. These zombies aren’t so tough if you’re prepared for them. I’ve finished off a few of them already.” He shakes a metal bar at us—it’s red with blood. “But you have to go about it the right way, keep your head, make sure you have the time and space to spot them coming.”

He takes a left turn and we pass the staff room. The door’s open. I spot a couple of teachers inside, chewing on the remains of some of their colleagues.

“They won’t be failing you again,” Dad says and we both laugh.

“Straight F’s in most courses,” I chuckle. “But A-plus in zombie survival!”

“Been a long time since I was a student here,” Dad mutters nostalgically. “But I remember the place like it was yesterday. Didn’t have any trouble finding my way around.”

“How’d you get over here so quickly?” I ask. It feels like we’ve been running for hours since the gym, but it can’t have been more than fifteen or twenty minutes.

“I was working nearby,” Dad says. “When I heard about the attacks on the radio, I ran like the wind. I tried calling ahead to check if things were all right but the phones aren’t working.”

“Then it’s true?” Elephant asks. “This is happening in other places too?”

“Yeah,” Dad says. “Schools, hospitals, shops, factories, all sorts and all over the place. Getting out of here won’t be the end of it.
London’s in an uproar. But the zombies tend to keep to the shadows. If we stick to the main streets and roads, we should be all right. At least until night.”

“What about Mum?” I ask, able to think about her now that I have someone else to watch out for me.

“We’ll swing by home, see if she’s there,” Dad says.

“Can’t we call and get her to–”

“Weren’t you listening?” he snaps. “The phones are dead. Cells, landlines, the lot. TV stations are down too. A lot of radio stations as well, but a guy I work with has a top-of-the-range radio that picks up all sorts of frequencies. That’s how I know it’s widespread. It started about…” He checks his watch. “Not quite an hour ago. But I didn’t hear about it immediately. As soon as I did, I came.” He flashes me a shaky smile. “You didn’t think I’d leave you to be gobbled by zombies, did you?”

I want to burst into tears and hug him again, but there’s no time. We have to keep moving. We’ll be relatively safe in the sunlight once we get out of here. We can hug all we want then.

We move steadily through the school, drawing closer to the front of the building. For the first time since the gym I really allow myself to hope. I don’t want to tempt fate but I think we’ve made it.

We come to a corridor that’s only a few turns from the main exit. Everyone’s excited. We can virtually smell freedom. There’s a fire door ahead of us. Once we push through that, the corridor
branches. The right turn leads back into the school. The left will lead us all the way home.

Dad shoves the door. It rattles but doesn’t open. He frowns and pushes it again. No joy. “That’s not right,” he says. “I came through here on my way in.”

The Indian kid slides up to the crack in the door and peers through. “It’s been locked,” he moans. “There’s a chain.”

“What?” Dad shouts, shoving him aside and squinting through the crack. “Who the hell did that?”

“The mutants,” I sigh. As if in answer, I hear a whistle blow somewhere close behind us. “Dad! They’re coming!”

Dad stares at me. He starts to ask how I know we’re in trouble, then shakes his head and slams the door with his shoulder. “Keep back,” he grunts at those around him. “It’ll take more than a chain to hold
me
here.”

We stare at Dad as he rams the door again and again. It’s a thick, heavy door, designed to slow the spread of flames in case of a fire. The chain is sturdy too. Dad doesn’t look to be achieving much but he keeps going, sweating like a marathon runner, totally focused.

I glance back down the corridor and spot four zombies slipping into it. They lock sights on us and slither forward.

“Dad!” I wail.

“I nearly have it,” he pants.

Trev throws himself at the door, trying to help. Meths and Seez
take turns too. Dad glares at them, but then there’s a snapping sound and the door starts to give. “That’s the way, boys!” Dad whoops. “Give it everything you have.”

They hurl themselves at the door, one after the other. Their arms and shoulders will be black and blue later but they don’t care. No matter how much of a battering they take, they don’t back down.

Elephant, Stagger Lee, the Indian and the other Muslim kid watch helplessly as Dad and the three boys fly at the door like rabid dogs. I’m a bit farther back, Tyler by my side. I’m looking for anything I can use to fend off the zombies but I’m not having much luck. They’re closing in. They could have rushed us by now, but they see that we’re trapped, so they’re taking their time.

“Dad!” I yell.

“Just another few blows,” he wheezes, launching himself at the door again.

More zombies appear at the far end of the corridor, loads of them, a couple of whistle-blowing mutants in the middle, guiding them towards us.

“Dad!”

Dad looks back and whitens. “Holy hell,” he croaks.

Meths bangs into the door and it cracks. The hinges give. Meths cheers and starts shaking the door. Dad and Seez join him. There isn’t room for Trev—he’s been pushed out of the way.

“They’re almost on us,” I shout.

Dad looks at me, then at the zombies, and curses. “You’ve got to stall them. We only need a few more seconds.”

“How?” I scream. “There’s nothing I can do to–”

“Throw them the black kid!” Dad roars.

I stare at him. Tyler stares too, both of us stunned, momentarily forgetting about the zombies.

“Do it!” Dad shouts.

“But he’s Tyler,” I whisper. “He’s one of us. He helped us get–”

“Throw them the bloody chimney sweep or I’ll whip you raw!” Dad screams.

And suddenly I’m reacting, doing what he tells me, the way I always do when he loses his temper, because it’s easier to obey him than stand up to him. Years of conditioning kick in. Fear takes over. I go into my dutiful-daughter act. The racist in me swims to the fore and rejoices at being set free.

On autopilot, I grab Tyler’s arm and hurl him at the zombies.


No!
” he shrieks as he stumbles towards them. “B! No! Help me!”

Tyler crashes into the zombies. All five go down, and the zombies sprawl like bowling pins. Tyler starts to get up. Immediately guilt-stricken and appalled, I reach out to him, desperately wanting to put right what I’ve done. But before I can drag him to safety, a zombie catches hold and bites Tyler’s neck. Tyler chokes and stiffens, blood spurting, and I watch with horror as the other three zombies crowd around and tuck into the tasty human morsel that I’ve thrown them.

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