**This has not been edited yet either; I don't send the MS to the editor until it is completely done. Content might change before final publication.**
The Contagium Series
Book # 3
Copyright Emily Goodwin 2013
It never occurred to me to look up until
it was too late. Someone jumped down, landing hard on my back. I fell forward
and the wind got knocked out of me. Another launched himself down at Rider.
Rider dodged out of the way and rolled to my side. He kicked the guy on top of
me hard in the ribs. The guy cried out and pulled a gun from his side.
“No!” I shouted. I struggled to get my
own weapon. The other guy was faster. My fingers closed on my knife right as
the shot rang out. Birds took flight, the flapping of their wings echoing off
the trees. Rider fell to his knees, his hands on his stomach. Blood pooled
around his fingers.
“No!” I screamed again. I closed my hand
around the knife and sprang up. “Rider!” I cried, rushing over to him. Tears
blurred my vision.
“Riss,” he muttered and started coughing.
Blood bubbled from his lips.
I crawled to him, crying. He reached out
for me and just as our fingers touched, I was jerked away. I swung my hand
around and made contact with who ever had a handful of my hair. He yelled in
pain and kicked me in the back, his foot hitting my kidney.
I thrashed forward, desperately wanting
to get away and get to Rider. I raised my hand again and brought the point of
the knife down on the guy’s foot.
“Dumb bitch,” he said and grabbed my
wrist. The guy who shot Rider walked over. He laughed when he saw me
struggling.
“This one seems like fun,” he said and
kicked the knife from my hand.
“I will kill you both!” I threatened. I
elbowed the guy who was holding me in the ribs and brought my foot up to smash
his balls. His grip on my hair loosened and I was able to pull away. The other
guy leaned in to grab me. I reached behind me to get the M9 but it wasn’t
there. It must have fallen out when the bastard landed on me.
I didn’t have time to get the M16 from
around my neck. Something stuck me in the back of the head. Stunned, I wavered.
Then I felt a heavy blow to my knees, causing me to fall. I made one last
attempt to get to Rider, who was coughing and gurgling up blood.
“I’m sorry,” I cried. My fingers closed
around his. He gave them one last squeeze. I made a mad grab for his pistol. I
grabbed it, aimed at my attacker and pulled the trigger.
Nothing happened. Unlike me, Rider was
smart and kept his safety on. From behind, someone kicked me in the side and
then kicked the pistol out of my hands. He raised his foot and it came crashing
down on my ribs. A horrible, biting, sharp pain flooded my body. It hurt so
badly I could barely breathe.
Hands harshly grabbed a handful of my
hair and pulled me back, dragging me over the rough ground. I cried out in
protest and pain when another blow came to my ribcage. Heavy, rough hands
gripped my arms.
The guy who attacked Rider picked up my
pistol and hit me in the temple. My vision was fuzzy and blood dripped in my
face. I struggled to get away, trying to twist and sink my fingernails into my
attacker’s skin.
I couldn’t get my feet to work properly.
I was a couple yards away from Rider now. I reached up and dug my nails into
the guys arm.
“Ah!” he yelled. I heard the familiar
sound of a magazine sliding in a gun. The guy stopped dragging me. I felt a
bone shattering pain in the back of my head.
And then everything went black.
Radiating, heart stopping pain woke me
up. I was sprawled out on a clammy cement floor. The air was rancid and
something dripped, splashing into a shallow puddle. Little droplets of liquid
splashed onto my face. My vision was too fuzzy to tell if it was blood or
water.
I took a deep breath and was hit with a
dizzying round of pain again. It took all the strength I had to move my hand to
my tender torso. I flinched when my hand touched my ribs. I took a shallow
breath and slowly sat up.
I couldn’t do it. I collapsed back down,
sending red hot hurt across my entire rib cage. I closed my eyes and carefully
touched each rib. I was certain that no less than two ribs on the ride side
were at cracked if not completely broken. I could barely breath the pain was so
intense.
I was shivering uncontrollably, which
wasn’t helping the situation at all. With my cheek pressed to the cold, dirty
floor, I concentrated on getting enough oxygen. After a minute, I pushed myself
up again. Every part of me screamed in protest. What the hell had been done to
me? I felt as if I had been hit by a truck, thrown down a flight of stairs…or
dragged through a field and then into a prison cell.
I opened my eyes. Yes, the latter was
what had happened. A lump of vomit threatened to come up but was choked down by
a sob.
Rider.
I crawled to the front of the cell. I
could hear the distant shuffle off feet and the murmur of hushed voices. A
rolling office chair and a stained coffee cup sat a few feet to the right of my
cell. Candy wrappers littered the space around it. A hand gun rested on the
faded blue cushion of the chair.
I desperately looked around for Rider.
Suddenly remembering that I might not be alone, I whirled around—a bad move on
my part. Pain hit me like a fist in the face. I doubled over, feeling like I
might really puke.
The shuffling of feet turned into
footfalls and the voices grew louder. I scuttled back to my spot on the floor
and lay down again.
“…took his weapons. He was still
breathing when we brought the bitch inside,” a gruff voice spoke.
“She put up a good fight, ‘eh? Heard she
got Pauly pretty good.”
“Hells yeah. Adrian—I mean Dre—will get a
kick outta her. What do we do with her until he gets back?”
“Kisha says to leave her be. And don’t
mess up her face. You know Dre likes ‘em pretty.”
The two men came to a stop in front of
the cell. I didn’t move a muscle. One of them picked up the gun and pulled back
the hammer, a sound I was familiar with. He plopped heavily in the chair and
the wheels skid back under his weight.
“Get off your ass, Joe!” the gruffer of
the two voices shouted. “You’re such a lazy piece of shit,” he huffed.
“Get off it, Cutter!” Joe shifted his
weight, causing the chair to creak. “What’s she gonna do? She’s still knocked
out cold.”
Cutter laughed—it was deep and husky and
vile. “Yeah, I clocked her good.”
I made a mental note of that. I had no
idea how I’d do it, but I was going to crack Cutter’s skull until his brain
oozed out.
“Can we play with her?” Joe asked.
“I told you—leave her be! Dre should be
back in a few. Then we’ll decide.”
“Yeah,” Joe agreed.
“Don’t. Touch. Her,” Cutter reiterated.
“Fuck you, Cutter,” Joe jeered. “I can
handle my own shit.”
“We’ll see about that,” Cutter mumbled
and walked away. “Come on, we have to get that Ginger prick’s body before it
attracts the biters.”
Thinking they had both left, I was just
about to look up when I heard the chair creak again. I didn’t want to move
until he was gone. But then what? I was locked in a prison cell. Even I
couldn’t get myself out of this.
Mentally deciding it was now or never, I
took a sharp intake of breath as if I was just waking up. That, of course, hurt
like a mother.
“Hey!” Joe dumbly yelled. I slowly pushed
myself up. “Hey! Hey girl!” he shouted. “Are you awake?”
I groaned and pushed myself up even more.
I momentarily considered acting like I was waking up dead—as in zombie dead.
But that might have gotten me shot. I pulled myself to my knees, the pain in my
rib cage blinding. “No, I’m still asleep, dipshit,” I sneered.
“About time you woke up. Lucky you got a
nap,” he told me. I wasn’t sure if he was trying to be nice.
“Yeah, so lucky.”
I looked out into the hall. Joe was no
taller than me, incredibly pale, very thin, and had a wispy blonde chin strip
of a beard that was grown out and banded together. His gray eyes widened and
his nostrils flared. He jumped up from the chair.
“Calm your shit,” I spat, just to piss
him off. I had a nagging feeling he didn’t like being told what to do.
“Watch your mouth,” he warned me.
“Or what, you’ll beat me up?” I glared at
him, swallowing the lump of fear in my throat.
“Just you wait. Wait till Dre gets back.
You’ll wish beat is all he does.”
“Yup. I’ll wait. I’m not going anywhere,
dumbass.” Insulting him made me feel less afraid. Really, it should have been
packing the fear into me. I had no idea what Joe was capable of. I wondered if
I should reason with him, let him know we are on the same side: Living in this
dead world.
No. They shot Hayden and Rider. Tears
pricked the corners of my eyes when I thought of them. I knew Hayden heard the
shot. He would come for me, I didn’t want him to but I knew he would. If he was
lucky, Ivan would have held him back until they came up with a plan. I hoped to
God that they had gotten to Rider in time.
It was absolutely ridiculous to hold onto
that shred of hope. I wanted so desperately to believe that Rider was going to
pull through. I wanted to see his big smile, blue eyes, and messy red hair
again.
“Listen here,” Joe sneered and bent close
to the bars. Before he could begin attempting to put the fear of God in me, he
straightened up and looked down the hall. “Anything?” he shouted.
“No,” a female voice answered. “Just the
red head and the bitch. Fucking stupid, if you ask me. I don’t know what the hell
they were trying to accomplish. Doesn’t matter now, I suppose.”
My heart skipped a beat and I had to
remind myself not to look up with a doe-eyed look. They hadn’t found Hayden. He
was still alive. And if he was still alive, then Rider had a chance.
“This is her?” the woman asked. “I
thought she’d be bigger from how Cutter described her.” She leaned close to the
bars and inspected me as if I was a zoo animal. I wished I was able to run to
the bars with my teeth bared.
She smacked gum, chewing with her lips
apart. As she continued to look me over, I stole a glance of her as well. She
had on dark jeans that were a size too small; they squeezed her narrow waist so
much that skin spilled over the waistband. Her tee shirt was cut so that it
fell off her shoulder and the ends were gathered and balled up, held together
with a hair-tie. Her hair baffled me; half was in braids that ended in perfect spiral
curls. Who the fuck curled their hair when freaking zombies ran amuck?
Rainbow laces were loosely tied in her
high top Converse shoes and gold bangles rattled from each arm. She stood up
and flicked her hair back, revealing large hoop earrings as well. She couldn’t
be any older than twenty-one.
Her brown eyes lingered on me for a few
more seconds. Then she waved her hands and spun around. “Leave her be. Once my
Dre-Dre gets back we’ll figure somethin’ out.”
“You’re the boss, Kisha.”
“Uh-huh,” Kisha replied, her words high
pitched at the ends like she was just so innocent. Without so much as one look
back, she walked down the hall. A moment later, Joe followed.
I was alone as far as I could tell. I
could hear voices echoing through the hall but I couldn’t make out a word of
what was being said. They steadily grew louder. I moved to the front of the
cell and turned my head, only able to see their shadows.
“You fucking retard!” Cutter yelled.
“It’s not my fault!” someone yelled back.
“You had one job to do and that was to
kill the boy and get rid of the body!” Cutter spat.
“My foot!” the guy yelled. “She stuck a knife
in it!”
“Pauly, do you know what this means?”
Cutter bellowed.
“Nothing, it means nothing!” Pauly
argued. “He was shot! In the stomach. No ways he’s gonna recover from that!” I
put my hands on the bars. My heart sped up. They were talking about Rider.
“He’s not a threat!”
“Bullshit!” Cutter screamed. “How do we
know he didn’t run off to his buddies, huh?
Tell them we took their bitch? They’ll come after her, come after us!”
“There’s no way—” Pauly began but was cut
off when Cutter punched him, the smacking of flesh on flesh echoing in the
empty hall.
“Dre’s not gonna be happy about this,”
Cutter mused. “No, not at all.”
“We’ll tell him what happened; that I was
hurt and you handled the girl.”
“Hurt? It’s your fucking foot! Not good
enough…no, not enough. It would be more…tragic though if you were fatally
wounded too. Yeah…and I was the-the hero for taking them both on. I tried to
save you too. What a shame. Good thing biters got the bastard. There is nothing
left.”
“What? None of that happened. You want me
to lie to Dre?” Pauly asked. “Wait, no! Cutter what are you—”
Cutter shoved a knife into Pauly’s
stomach. Pauly cried out in pain and slid against the wall.
“Would you look at that?” Cutter said
calmly. “That bitch got you real
good. No wonder the ginger got away from ya. It’s a shame we lost a good man
out there. I’ll tell Dre you went down fighting.” He raised the knife again,
putting an end to Pauly’s cries of pain.
I pushed away from the bars. Holy shit.
Cutter just killed one of his own. He terrified me more than any zombie. My
breath came out in ragged huffs. Cutter picked up Pauly’s ankles and dragged
him away. Trembling, I put my hand over my mouth. Rider was alive. He had
gotten away. He had a chance!
I moved my hand from my mouth to my chest;
my heart was beating so fast it hurt. I forced myself to take a slow, deep
breath and winced from the pain. I closed my eyes and took another. I moved
away from the front of the cell and began to feel the panic of being trapped. I
looked around the cell for anything useful. It had been striped. The metal bed didn’t have a
mattress on it anymore and the built in furniture had been removed. There was
nothing in here that could help at all.
I had been in jail once before and in
juvie twice. Though, I had never come close to a maximum security prison. The
escape factor was low for me with this one. I closed my eyes and thought about
how bad my ribs hurt. I was terrified and thinking about the pain distracted me
from my fear.
It didn’t last long, however. The image
of Hayden’s face lingered in my memory.
I hated that he was worrying about me. I hated what he had to be going
through.
“…no, I’ll be fine. She’s behind bars,
you dumb-bo,” Kisha told someone, her voice gradually growing loud enough for
me to hear. I took a shaky breath and waited.
“Hi Hayden,”
she said in a girly voice and sat in the rolling chair. My heart skipped a beat
at the sound of his name. Hayden? How did she know about Hayden? Oh my God—they
must have gotten him too! My hand flew to the dog tags that hung around my
neck. Oh, right. Idiot, I thought to
myself. “I’m Kisha. So, you stumbled upon our hide out. How did you get here?”
“I walked,” I said simply.
She laughed and the sound was like wind
chimes. “Duh! Where did you come from?”
“Kentucky.”
“Wow! You walked all the way from Kentucky?” she asked, trying to
pronounce the state’s name in a southern accent.
“Yup.”
“Where are your friends?” she asked and
dropped some of her charm.
“Dead,” I said bitterly.
She laughed again. “Come on, Hayden, we
don’t have to be like this. We’re just talkin’, ya know, like girls do.”
I glared at her.
“So,” she pressed. “Tell me straight.
Where are your friends? Do they know you are here?”
“They did. But they’re dead now.” My
heart beat in my throat. I looked up, refusing to cry. I needed to hold it
together.
“Where did you two get your guns? You
both had big machine guns, right?”
“We found them.”
“Mh-hm,” she muttered. “You’re in the
army,” she began and I resisted the urge to roll my eyes and correct her. “So
are you sure you just found them? The
government didn’t supply you with guns?”
“Yes, the government gave us each a
machine gun and sent us on our merry way,” I spat dryly.
She narrowed her eyes, glared and me, and
sighed. “You’re gonna be a fun one, aren’t ya?”
When I didn’t say anything in response,
she continued drilling me. “And how did you get here?” she asked again, as if
asking me the second time would make me suddenly tell the truth.
“We wandered. We went anywhere just
trying to escape the zombies.”
She leaned back in the chair. “I see. And
you just thought you could move in on our set up?”
“Of course not; there were only two of
us.” I looked up and took a jagged breath. “Listen, Kisha. I think this is a
misunderstanding. We had no intentions on moving in or whatever. As far as I’m
concerned, there are only two teams right now: dead and alive. Seeing that we
are both alive, I think something can be worked out, don’t you?” I reasoned.
She huffed, flipped her hair, and crossed
her arms. “Outsiders are threats. We’re fine without you.”
“Then let me go. I’m just one girl; I
can’t do any damage,” I pleaded.
“We’re not done with you, yet,” she
threatened. She cast me one more telling glance before striding down the hall. I
got up and thoroughly searched the cell, knowing it was a moot point since it
was a cell after all. I walked back
and forth, trying to will the stiffness out of my body.
It was my damn injured ribs that hindered
me. I couldn’t take a deep breath, straighten up, or twist my torso without pain
crippling me. And I was so incredibly thirsty. I even broke down and tried the
small sink; it had been disconnected.
Feeling hopeless, I sat on the hard bed
and tried to come up with a plan. Maybe I could fake the extent of my injuries
to get some sort of medical attention. I planned to punch whoever came in to
look at me hard in the throat so he couldn’t call for help and slam his head
into the cement walls at least twice before making a break for it.
Then I’d no doubt run into a closed door
or a locked hall…or get shot.
Dammit.
I
just didn’t see a way out for me unless I reasoned and bartered…and that plan
didn’t seem too promising considering I had just witnessed Cutter plunge a
knife into someone he knew with no hesitation. Slowly, I rose from the bed and walked to the
front of the cell. My fingers wrapped around the cool, sticky metal. For good
measure, I gave the bars a shake. As expected, they didn’t budge.
I looked for the lock and was confused
for a few seconds when I didn’t find it. Then I remembered Brock saying that
this jail was rather new; everything was no doubt controlled electronically
now, as was almost everything before the outbreak. The only ‘key’ was inside
some sort of electrical device. Hell, maybe there was even an app for it.
I wrapped my arms around myself, gently
cradling my sore ribs and sat back on the bed. Even though I had nothing to
pick a lock with, it was disheartening to know that the slight chance of escape
was nonexistent. I ran my hands through my hair and took careful deep breaths,
unable to keep Hayden off my mind. I wanted to look into his hazel eyes, to
hear him laugh, to feel his touch on my skin. I wanted to hold him and tell him
I was sorry for wandering off without him.
It
felt like hours had passed before I couldn’t sit any longer. I got up and paced
around the cell, ignoring the pain every breath caused. My throat was beginning
to burn from being so dry. My stomach grumbled with hunger, though I didn’t
think I’d be able to eat if a feast was laid out in front of me.
Voices floated down the hall. Angry
voices; it sounded like two men arguing. The identifiable sound of someone
getting a fist to the face made me jump. Someone whistled and the sound of
pounding feet echoed through the dark hall. I moved to the front of the cell.
The fuzzy outlines of three men became
visible. Only two were walking, the third was being dragged. Ignoring my
stares, the guys dragged the body in front of the cell across from mine. One of
the men let go of the unconscious man’s hand, which smacked against the
concrete floor with a thud. He hurried off down the hall to press the button on
whatever controlled the locks.
The cell door clicked open, and the body
was deposited inside.
“Let him rot,” one of the men grumbled.
“Traitor,” the other spat. They cast
curious looks at me but walked away. I put a hand on the bars and peered across
the way. His back was to me, so I couldn’t see his face.
“Hey,” I said quietly. “Knocked out
cold,” I speculated when the man didn’t respond. I shook my head and plotted
back to the metal bed. I stared straight ahead and tried not to panic. Forcing
myself to remain calm, I counted to one hundred. As soon as I began to count
backwards, the guy groaned. I watched, waiting for him to come to.
Slowly, he sat up, rubbed his head, and
looked around. He let out a heavy sigh of annoyance, as if waking up in a cell
was something he’d done before. He stood and stepped close to the bars. The dim
hallway light illuminated his face. Dark brown eyes peered at me curiously. He
had a mess of black hair and tan skin. I wasn’t expecting him to be so young—or
so attractive.
“Hey,” he finally responded. “You’re the
girl they found?”
“Define found,” I said back cattily.
He laughed and flashed a white smile.
“Yeah, the boys are a little, uh, unorthodox, I suppose.”
“Yeah,” I agreed.
“I’m Carlos,” he introduced.
“Hayden,” I said, sticking with the lie.
“Why are you in here?” I blurted.
“Long story,” he chuckled.
“I’m not going anywhere. And neither are
you,” I pointed out.
“Right, right. Why am I here? The first
time it was for drug dealing. Now, it’s because I want out.”
“Out?” I asked, swallowing my pounding
heart.
“Yeah, out.”
“Why can’t you leave?”
“Oh, I can leave,” he told me. Seeing my
confusion, he continued. “Leaving is suicide. I got no support out there. I
want to leave the life. I wanted to before hell broke loose.” He leaned on the
bars and laughed. “I was supposed to get out a month after the first guy went
crazy.”
“Get out?” I asked, and then suddenly
realized that Carlos had never left. And if he hadn’t, then the others probably
hadn’t either. It made sense, now that I thought about it. I had assumed that
this Dre and his band of survivors were just that—survivors. I assumed they
wandered around like we had and stumbled upon a nice, safe jail to reside it.
But I was wrong. The guys in here had been here since before zombies roamed the
earth. They were dangerous and had been locked up for a reason; they were all
criminals.
If no one could get out, then no one
could get in. No one infected. In all actuality, it was almost perfect; zombies
would never breach the walls. My mind raced with thoughts of what it was like
after the virus hit. What happened to the guards? How did Dre come into power?
“Yeah,” Carlos answered. “I was gonna get my GED, go to college, and
make a life for myself. My uncle was gonna let me move in with him up in
Jersey. A fresh start, ya know?”
“I do,” I told him.
“What’s your story?” he asked, tipping his head back a bit.
“My friend and I were looking for survivors. We saw tire tracks and
followed them.”
“You have a camp?” he inquired.
I shook my head. “No. We are always on the move.”
He narrowed his eyes. “You look too well fed to be on the move. I’ve
seen my fair share of wanderers. You’re from a camp.”
“Why do you care?” I spat.
“Oh, I don’t. They do,” he
whispered in warning. “Listen,” he said with urgency. “Whatever you do, don’t—”
He cut off when someone came down the hall. The man who called himself
Cutter stopped in front of my cell.
“The girl doesn’t know anything,” Carlos said quickly. “I already
questioned her.”
“Fuck off,” Cutter said over his shoulder. “Why would I trust her, and
why would I trust you, traitor?” he
jeered. I caught a glimpse of Carlos’s face; his dark eyes were full of pity.
Oh shit.
“Unlock it!” Cutter yelled. The door clicked open. He held up a knife,
weak light shining off the silver blade. “Don’t even think about it,” he
taunted. “Get up.”
I stood quickly, grimacing in pain. Knowing this was going to hurt, I
took a breath and braced myself. The moment Cutter stepped into my cell, I
dropped and spun, kicking my leg out and knocking Cutter off of his feet. I
scrambled up, moving slower than I wanted to. I kicked his right hand, sending
the knife skidding out of the cell and across the hall. Carlos grabbed it
before Cutter even noticed what happened.
On its own accord, my body doubled over in pain. Cutter sprang to his
feet, grabbed a fistful of my hair, and yanked my head up. With his other hand,
he hit the side of my head. I sank to the ground, my vision fuzzy. Heavy hands
grabbed my shoulders and harshly flipped me over. His fist hit my face once
more before he took a handful of my hair.
“You like that, bitch?” he jeered. He yanked my head up, causing me to
cry out in pain. I planted my hands on the ground and raise my right leg,
kneeing him in the back. The blow caused him to fall onto me. Searing pain
webbed across my rib cage. I clasped my hands around his face and dug my
fingernails into his skin. Cutter rolled off of me, getting away from the pain.
“Cutter!” someone shouted. “What’s going on in there?” Cutter froze,
knowing he wasn’t supposed to hurt me. His eyes met mine for a millisecond
before he backed off.
“Nothing!” he yelled. “Bitch took a swing at me, that’s all.”
“Cutter!” a high pitched voice screamed. “What the hell are you doing in
there?” Kisha’s voice grew louder as she moved down the hall. “Bring her here!”
she ordered. “Now!”
“Yes, m’am,” Cutter replied. He moved to grab me; I shied away. I knew
he was going to take the knife. Acting on impulse, I threw it across the aisle.
It slid to a stop in front of Carlos, who quickly snatched it up.
“You’ll pay for this,” he threatened and hit me once more, knocking me
out.
When I came to, I was sitting in a chair. My arms and legs were strapped
down. I had a horrible ringing in my ears and a pounding headache.
“Hi, Hayden,” Kisha said with
fake charm, her voice as irritating as nails on a chalk board. I blinked and
looked around the room; it was dimly lit and empty except for the chair I was
sitting in, a table, and two chairs on its other side. Through a window, I saw
that the daylight had vanished from the clear sky. Knowing that hours had
passed since I had last seen my friends made my stomach flip-flop with nerves.
I wanted out. I needed out.
“Glad you finally woke up,” she
sneered, crossing her arms to show off the gun she had tucked into an ugly,
overly bedazzled jacket. “I have a few questions for you. If you answer like a
good girl, everything will be fine.”
I didn’t open my mouth to spit back a sarcastic remark. Instead, I tried
to keep breathing. Cutter leaned over me, grinning. He placed his hand on my
cheek and exhaled. His breath smelled like stale cigarettes. He let his hand
fall, his fingers trailing down my neck and caressing my collar bone. I
shivered in disgust.
He laughed and leaned in closer. With his face just inches from mine, he
parted his lips. And I head butted him. He recoiled; one hand flying to his
nose and the other landing hard on my face.
“Bitch!” he yelled and raised his fist.
“Cutter!” Kisha yelled. “What are you doing?”
Cutter snarled at me, exhaled, and lowered his hand.
“Save it,” Kisha said in a level tone. Her dark eyes met mine and her
mouth curved into a wicked smile. “Come,” she ordered to Cutter, who took a
step back. He looked away and then jumped at me again, trying to scare me. I
set my face and glowered at him.
He flicked off the lights when he left the room. Totally in the dark, I
couldn’t see anything. I kept my eyes focused on what I thought was the
doorway, but I was soon seeing gray shapes moving around the room that I knew
only existed in my head.
I jerked my arms, causing the metal cuffs to cut into my skin. The arms
of the chair weren’t going to break easily. I tried standing up; the chair was
bolted to the floor. I planted my feet on the ground, grabbed the arms of the
chair and tried to stand. The legs wiggled slightly. I repeated the effort
again and again, until I was out of breath. I exhaled and was reminded of my
broken ribs. The chair has loosened; I could probably break it free with one
more tug…once I could breathe again.
I shook my head. How was I going to get out of this one? If every breath
hurt, could I really run to safety?
“Maybe,” I said aloud. My sophomore year of high school I dated Cory
Thomas, the starting quarter back for our school’s football team. He was tall,
blonde, and two years older than me. My stepdad Ted did not approve. Three days
before the homecoming game, Cory broke several ribs during practice. But he
played, and played well. He ended up in the hospital after the game, though.
If he could push past the pain for the sake of a stupid football game,
then I could do it for my life. I nodded in the dark. I had to do it.
“I will,” I whispered. I saw Rider’s face flash across my mind; I had
more than just my life to fight for. I wanted revenge.
Footfalls echoed through the empty hall. I swallowed any doubt and
straightened up. Rage fueled my weak body. A cone of light from a flashlight illuminated
the door. The person carrying it stopped and shut it off. A second later, the
lights flicked on. I blinked, my eyes madly trying to adjust to the harsh
artificial light.
“Wakey-wakey!” Kisha cooed. A man I assumed to be Dre followed her in.
He wasn’t any taller than me, but was muscular. Tattoos and scars covered his
tan arms. His head was shaved clean and a thin beard covered the bottom half of
his face.
“Hi Hayden,” he said to me, his eyes glinting with pleasure when he
spoke my name, as if he expected me to be surprised. I raised an eyebrow and
leaned back in the chair. “I’m Dre,” he introduced. “I run this place. I got
people to take care of. Ya understand, right?”
I pressed my lips together and didn’t respond.
Dre sighed dramatically and cracked his knuckles. “We can’t risk
strangers walking into our camp, ya know?”
Yes, I did know. And I agreed. But I’d be damned to tell him that.
“So,” he continued. “I’ve got some questions for you.” He walked behind
the chair; nerves tingled by not being able to see him. “Where did you come
from?”
“Kentucky,” I said shortly.
“Is your camp there?”
“I don’t have a camp,” I told him.
Dre put a hand on my shoulder. “Yes, you do. Where is it?”
“I don’t have a camp,” I repeated.
Kisha’s eyes widened and she smiled, watching Dre. My heart beat faster.
“Where is your camp?” he asked again, saying each word slowly.
“I don’t have a camp,” I said for the third time. Dre walked around me,
his hand sliding down my arm. He held something in his other hand and a flicker
of fear ran through me when I recognized the taser. Dre turned it on and
pressed a little black button. A blue line of electricity zapped from the
prongs.
“Tell me where your camp is,” he said through clenched teeth and let go
of the button.
“I don’t have a camp,” I said flatly, feeling like a broken record.
He pressed the taser to my abdomen. “Yes you do.” The jolt of
electricity shocked through my body and continued to tingle after Dre released
the taser. “Thing is, Hayden, my boys
have now shot two of your friends.”
My blood ran cold. I struggled to keep my face neutral. “I don’t know
what you’re talking about,” I said.
He hit me again with the taser. “Yes you do. You think we’d forget a
pretty face like this? You have a camp.” He took a step back and crossed his
arms. “You have food. You have weapons. You have that truck with the gun
mounted in the back.”
I shook my head, feeling like I was sinking in frigid water. “No, I
don’t. You’re thinking of someone else.”
Dre laughed, put the taser in a pocket of his baggy jeans and hit me,
his fist smacking into the same spot that Cutter had hit me. The pain made a
twist of nausea surge in my gut.
“Tell me where the camp is. I know you have one. Some of your other
friends went after my boys.”
Fuck. They did…and they killed two and injured another. “No,” I told him
defiantly.
He hit me again. “Listen bitch, you tell me where the camp is or—”
“Or what?” I interrupted. “You’ll kill me?”
“You’ll be begging for death.”
I rolled my eyes. “Oh, please. Seen enough cheesy mob movies? If you’re
gonna threaten me, at least make them original. I bet Bubba the executioner is
on his way with a big bag of knives, am I right?”
The only answer I got was Dre’s fist landing on my forearm and then the
taser pressing into my right shoulder.
“Last chance—tell me where the camp is!” Dre demanded.
I forced myself to keep from screaming in pain. “No. Kill me…and then
you’ll never know.”
Dre let out a breath and stared at me, unmoving. Waiting for his next
move was almost as bad as being beaten. Finally, he stood, walked over to
Kisha, and took something from her. A wicked smile revealed Dre’s yellowed
teeth. He turned around, holding up a large knife. Fear swelled in my heart.
“Time for some fun,” he leered. Part of my brain screamed at me to just
make up some lie and end the torture. I was positive this wasn’t going to end
well no matter what I told them. I had to hold out as long as I could. I had
something they needed; I hoped they wouldn’t really kill me just yet. I needed
to buy time. Hayden would do something; that I was sure of.
Dre rested the tip of the knife on my arm. “Let’s make this simple,” he
began. “Do you have a camp?”
“You already said you knew the answer to that one, asshole,” I retorted.
Dre added pressure to the knife. I watched the blade push down my skin.
“Where is your camp?”
“I never was good with directions,” I told him innocently. The blade
punctured my skin. A cry of pain escaped my lips.
“Where is it?”
“I’m drawing a blank. All those blows to the head must have messed with
my memory.”
Dre dragged the knife down my arm, slowly tearing my skin. I couldn’t
help but cry out in pain again. Blood dripped onto the floor.
“Tell me,” he demanded. I curled my lips over my teeth and kept my mouth
shut. Dre put the tip of the knife in the cut and pushed down. I screamed when
he dragged it through my broken skin. He asked me where the camp was again and
repeated the horrible process of deepening the wound. He moved behind me again
and put a hand on my shoulder.
“I’m not playing around,” he warned. He raised the knife to my throat.
“Tell me where the camp is or I’ll slit your throat.”
“Go ahead and do it,” I tried to snarl but my voice faltered. My body
hurt and I was terrified. Tears blurred my vision.
“Just do it!” Kisha encouraged. My heart skipped a beat, thinking that
Dre would really do it. It’d only take minutes, if even that long, for me to
die. At least I really wouldn’t suffer.
“Not yet,” Dre scolded.
I closed my eyes and tears rolled down my cheeks. I let out a breath and
felt a smidgen of relief. My hands were shaking uncontrollably. I pressed them
on the arms of the chair. Blood spilled from the gash in my left arm.
Dre let the knife clatter to the floor, splattering my blood on the
white tile. He knelt down in front of me. “You’re gonna wish I had killed you,
you stupid cunt.”
“I’ll kill myself,” I threatened. “With the blood loss it won’t be
hard.” I looked at my bleeding arm and then back at Dre.
Angered, he grabbed the taser and pressed it against my neck. My hair
blocked some of the shock. Still, the electricity shot through my body and I
thought I was going to have a heart attack. I let my eyes roll back and my head
drop.
Dre pulled the taser back and stood.
“Did you kill her?” Kisha asked, her voice shrill.
Dre’s fingers pressed against my neck. “No. She’s alive. Just knocked
out.” I heard feet scuffle away from me. I opened one eye and saw that Dre was
a few feet away from me with his back turned. Heart racing, I wrapped my hands
around the arms of the chair. I pressed my feet on the ground and sprang up.
The bolts didn’t snap like I had hoped. Kisha screamed and Dre whirled
around. He advanced on me fast and hit me once more, knocking me out for real
that time.
Want more? Let me know what you think of this so far and I'll post chapter 2!
Really Emily?? Do you really need to ask? Of course we want more! It was amazing! This was not what I was expecting and I love it!
ReplyDeleteMy attention has been taken. This chapter has given me a nearly physical need to read more.
ReplyDeleteI don't think I breathed once through the whole chapter! The wait is going to be as tough as that beat down .
ReplyDeleteI cant wait to see what happens next
ReplyDeleteI agree^^ I don't think I took one breath the whole time!!! More more more! It was perfect!!
ReplyDeleteOMG you can't just give us that much and leave us wanting more....please give us more......you are such a great writer you held my attention the whole chapter and left us wanting more you have a gift....
ReplyDeleteOmg!!! I can't wait for more! Edge of the seat stuff there!
ReplyDeleteI can't believe it I am loving this! this was so much more than what I expected. I have to know what happens next and I have to know soon. please post Chapter 2. awesome job!
ReplyDeleteomg i cant wait until it comes out!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteChapter one wasnt long enough! ! :)
ReplyDeleteReally gotta wonder how shes gona get out this one, cant wait to read more xx
Loved it!
ReplyDeleteAwesome!!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely fantastic! The richness of your writing is so consuming. Very nice and quite unexpected for the first chapter! More please!
ReplyDeleteLove it! This chapter is a great start to the 3rd book. I love the other two books and this one makes me want to keep reading! Great job. When is the release date?
ReplyDeleteCan we have the whole book? Awesome first start to the 3rd book.
ReplyDeleteAmazing. Simply amazing. I cannot wait for more. Im a lifer fan wise.
ReplyDeleteI been checking evryday for months on kindle & amazon for book 3. Contagious is one of my favorite series. So I been reading other zombie books for now. But tnx for posting dis. It helps. We do want more. When is book 3 coming out? And is der going to be a book 4? If you can pls let us know. Tnx. Love ur work. Email. Imeldabermudez1@gmail.com pls let me know.
ReplyDeleteoh myy.... when are we getting more? This was amazing and the worst teaser ever! I need another book!
ReplyDeleteI am anxious to have the whole book !!!!
ReplyDeleteI absolutely devoured books 1 and 2 of contagious. There so good. I've never been on the stationary bike for an hour reading and not even noticed how much time had passed but I did while reading Contagious. The sexual tension was really killer by the way. I've never seen the hero interrupted so many times like that before. I was about to throw my phone across the room from frustration but it was still awesome. Well done!!!! I haven't finished 2 yet but I'm already drooling over book 3.
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh!!!!! Love it!!! Love it!! Love it!!!!! Please post chapter 2!!!!!
ReplyDeleteThis is me begging for chapter 2! Pretty pretty please!!! :)
ReplyDelete