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S.W. Tanpepper's GAMELAND: Season Two Omnibus (Episodes 9-11)

Page 89

by Tanpepper, Saul


  Leave! his mind screamed. Get out!

  But he couldn’t leave White behind. She had the cure. She would save him and Kyle from this thing inside their bodies. She could save the world from the infection inside of it.

  He crawled over and smashed the glass and pulled the extinguisher out, slicing open the back of his hand on a shard. He carried the tank back to the office and began to pound at the door handle with the base. With a splintering crunch, it snapped off and the newly repaired frame crumbled once again.

  “Doctor White!”

  This time the office was empty.

  Wasting time! Get out!

  The building shook again. He heard the rumble of walls crumbling somewhere. A ceiling light fixture fell and hit his back, the bulbs exploding. He pushed it away and hurried for the stairwell.

  The standing water was now at least an inch deep and rising. He could hear it cascading down the steps. He didn’t know where the fire was or even if it had been doused; all he knew was that the closest emergency exit was two stories down, an alarmed door in the basement that opened up into the parking garage.

  A firefighter in full gear thundered past him, knocking him against the wall. “Keep going,” the man said, his voice muffled by his mask. “Get the hell out of the building! They’re going to bomb it.” Then he was gone.

  There was no escape from the smoke in the stairwell. It rose in thick coils from below, choking and blinding him. He found the handrail and stumbled down with his eyes squeezed shut, tears streaming down his cheeks.

  He reached the half-landing and stopped to catch his breath. Someone down below was crying, calling for their mama.

  “Hello?” he shouted. “Where are you?”

  They didn’t answer.

  “I’m coming! Stay where you are.”

  He tried to wipe some of the sprinkler water from his eyes, but the smoke was still too thick and burned them. He squeezed them shut again and proceeded to crawl down the steps toward where he hoped the child was waiting.

  The crying abruptly stopped.

  “Hello? Don’t be scared. I’ll help you get out. Where are you?”

  There was no answer.

  He was now on the first floor. The door to the hallway was shut. He placed a hand against it and found it hot to the touch. Blinking his eyes open for a moment, he saw the red flicker of flames through the small window. Thick black smoke billowed in from the narrow cracks between the door and the frame.

  “Are you down there?” he called, inching his way toward the next flight down. He thought he heard movement, but he couldn’t be sure. There was too much background noise, and the acoustics distorted everything. “Hello?”

  Mama? a tiny voice cried.

  “I’m coming, honey. Just hold tight! Stay down near the ground and breathe through your shirt if you can.”

  Mama?

  “Don’t try to talk.”

  He stumbled down the steps in the eerie gloom, glad to find the smoke beginning to clear. It was easier to breathe.

  He came around the landing and spied a pair of large rubber boots on the steps below. They were the same boots the fireman had worn, and they were attached to a pair of yellow fire-resistant pants.

  Mama?

  “Hello?” He paused. “Can you hear me?”

  The feet thumped down a step, drawing further out of view. He followed them.

  Mama?

  The child’s doll was lying on the fourth step down. It was on its back and blinking its pale blue eyes at the ceiling. “Mama?” it said.

  It was covered in blood.

  Two more steps down and the fireman’s face came into view. His neck was bent at an odd angle. His helmet had been pulled away from his face — a face he no longer possessed — and a dead girl sat by his side. His hand still gripped the handle of the pickaxe now embedded deep in her chest.

  She looked up from her chewing and regarded Kelly with her solemn black eyes. When she swallowed, the meat bulged down her throat. She bent down again and took another bite, crunching through the firefighter’s bony sinuses as she worked her way to the fatty prize inside. She groaned as if in ecstasy.

  She didn’t even look up when Kelly wrenched the axe from her body. With a sob, he swung it down, aiming for the tender, unblemished skin where her hair parted over her neck. Her head separated cleanly from her shoulders, yet remained embedded inside the fireman’s face. The rest of her slipped down the stairs to the basement landing.

  Above him, the doll cried out for its mama.

  But Kelly didn’t hear it. He barely made it into the parking garage before throwing up onto the hood of some doctor’s fancy car.

  Chapter 18

  “Give me one good reason why I shouldn’t kill you right now?”

  Jessie’s mind was going a mile a minute, calculating the odds that the man would be able to make good on his threat before she was back inside the church. On the other hand, if he really wanted her dead, why hadn’t he done it already?

  She stepped back toward the door, and a shot rang out, notching the wood beside her foot.

  “I’m serious, young lady.”

  “Just one reason?” she asked, trying to mask the shaking in her voice. He would know she was stalling, but she needed time to calm herself down so she could think properly. “What could I possibly say that would be better than the ten million reasons you’ve got to do it?”

  Grant Pearson stood up from behind the car. It was a mid-sized sedan, probably painted sky blue, although it was difficult to tell anymore with the dirt caked onto it. He made the car look tiny.

  “Ten mil is a lot,” he admitted. “Certainly not pocket change.” He placed the pistol on the roof and leaned forward on his elbows.

  “So?” Jessie asked.

  “So, I want to know what’s so damn special about you that they’d want you dead this badly. I’m giving you a chance to tell your side of the story. Somehow, I don’t think it’s the same one Arc has been giving out.”

  “What does it matter?”

  “It matters. And, to be perfectly honest, I’m not sure I’m a hundred percent comfortable with this whole live-on-live thing.”

  “Strange. That’s not what you said the other day. In fact, I believe the word you used was fun. Like being back in the gladiator days is what you said.”

  “I was trying to psych you out. I had no idea it would ever come true.”

  “So what made you change your mind? Was it your daughters? Didn’t you say they were about my age?”

  Even from as far away as she was, she could see the emotion flash through his eyes. He plucked the gun from the car and pointed it at her head.

  “Where’d you get the gun?”

  “Arc issued ‘em to us,” he told her as he made his way around the car. “We had a whole new briefing, new rules, new weapons.”

  “What rules?”

  He shrugged. “Anything goes.”

  “That must be why the Stream is off.”

  He shook his head. “Killing must be done live or it doesn’t count.”

  So that’s why he didn’t do it!

  “That’s awful sporting of them,” she said, relaxing slightly. “The gun, however, doesn’t seem very fair.”

  “It’s not meant to be. It’s only meant to be effective.” He gestured toward the door. “Open it. Slowly now! Get inside.”

  Now he was at the base of the steps. This was her last opportunity to escape. But as she stared down the barrel of the gun, she didn’t like her chances. He could still shoot her in the leg, then finish her off when the Stream came back.

  “Inside,” he repeated, then took the steps so quickly she didn’t have time to react. He grabbed her shirt and shoved her up against the wall while he pulled the door open. “I’m feeling a little agoraphobic out here.”

  She stumbled inside, then spun around.

  “There,” he said, pushing her back again before ordering her to sit on the floor. He kept the gun trained on her
as he dragged a large wooden cabinet from the entryway to block the door. The piece had to weigh two hundred pounds, yet he required only one hand to move it. “Where’s your Player?”

  “Dead. Where’s your partner?”

  He snorted. “Not too many alliances survive when there’s ten million dollars at stake. After the briefing, everyone voted to go it alone.”

  “How did you explain helping me?”

  He ignored her.

  “I’m surprised they didn’t kill you right then.”

  He shrugged. “I’m not their target, you are, and since I’m their best tracker, you can bet they’re following me.” He smiled. “But not too closely. I didn’t make it easy for them.”

  “Now that you found me, they’ll put a bullet in the back of your head first chance they get. Actually, how did you track me here?”

  “Wasn’t hard. They told us you’d be headed for the mainframe. After that, it was just a race against time to get there before you left. Unfortunately for me, the storm hit last night, otherwise I would’ve caught you twelve hours ago.” He chuckled.

  “What’s so funny?”

  “Just thinking about that path of destruction you left behind. The place looked like a bomb hit it.”

  “That was the storm.”

  “I meant the Infecteds you killed. It’s a real shame Arc’s not paying you for them.”

  “Maybe I should ask. I’ll even split the money with you.”

  He stepped over to her, the humor gone from his face. “I don’t think you realize the gravity of your situation, young lady.” He shook his head. “Now, I’m not going to ask again. Where is your Player?”

  “I already told you. He’s dead.”

  “I don’t believe you.” He cocked his head toward the front of the choir. Jessie noticed it too, a scuffling sound. Micah had heard them and was trying to get loose. “Dead, huh?”

  “That’s Micah. I’m not lying about my Player. He’s dead.”

  “It’s dead,” he corrected. “And what’s a mica?”

  She sighed. “It’s a long story.”

  “I’ll give you ten minutes.”

  “Screw you. What do you care?”

  He pulled off his backpack and opened it up, then threw her a bottle of water and an emergency food ration.

  “Not much of a last meal, I know,” he said, “but it’s better than nothing.”

  * * *

  Grant shook his head as he paced. “I’m sorry, but I don’t believe—”

  “It’s true. All of it.”

  He stopped and stared at her, his face a mixture of skepticism and horror. She’d just finished telling him what Micah had told her, but had kept the part about the file on her Link a secret.

  “Arc has been lying to us for years, Grant. You have to believe me.”

  “Oh, I believe they’ve been lying about a lot of things, including their intentions for the technology. But I don’t believe the part about them being alive.”

  “So, you think Arc wants to take over control of our minds?”

  He shrugged. “I was actually one of those people who protested the implants when the government first recommended that we all have them put in. It was everyone’s biggest fear. But laws were passed forbidding access to our brains as long as we’re still alive. And assurances were made that the implants would remain off until they were needed.”

  “They’re not kept completely off. They actually operate at a very low level. That’s how they monitor our status, how Arc knows when we die.”

  “Okay, let’s assume I believe that and it’s true—”

  “It is.”

  “And he— I mean, that thing on the floor over there told you this?”

  Jessie nodded. “His name is Micah. He was a friend.”

  Grant looked skeptical. He stood up and went to the front of the nave, where he peered down at him.

  “You say you can hear his thoughts? How? Why can’t I? Is it just him or any Undead?”

  “The way he explained it to me, the implants have to be programmed specifically to connect.”

  “How? The Stream’s down.”

  “It’s short-range. Micah said there’s a defect in their transmission protocol that allows them to communicate directly with each other bypassing the network. But the connected implants have to be in close proximity. And they have to be coded that way.”

  “Can he hear your thoughts?”

  “No. Latent implants can’t transmit, only receive.”

  “He told you this?”

  “Look, I’m not crazy!”

  “Says the girl who broke into Gameland twice.” He studied her for a moment, then shook his head. “Well, if not crazy, then definitely stupid.”

  “I’m not stupid!”

  “I have two teenage daughters, so I think I’m qualified to recognize stupid when I see. They make rash decisions all the time despite knowing better.” He paused and exhaled heavily. “It doesn’t mean I don’t love them, just means that I understand teenagers. But this . . . . Well, I hope they’d never do anything this spectacularly stupid.”

  “Fuck you.”

  He went over and kicked Micah. “I don’t suppose you can prove any of this?”

  “If you just wait till noon, my brother will tell you. He’s head of Necrotics Crimes in Greenwich.”

  “He’s here? On the island?”

  She shook her head. “Connecticut.”

  “How’s he going to get through the firewall?”

  “You’ll see.” She pulled the Link from her pocket. “Just wait another twenty minutes.”

  “We may not have twenty minutes. I may be the best tracker. I was careful to cover my own tracks, but that doesn’t mean the other Players are slouches.”

  She shrugged. “Twenty minutes. You’ll see I’m telling the truth by then. Then it won’t matter if the others find us.”

  “You sound pretty damn confident about this. For my own sake, I hope you’re not bullshitting me.”

  Chapter 19

  Lana Daniels watched Kelly until he disappeared back inside the hospital. She sucked in a deep breath and tried to rouse herself from the daze her pain medications put her in, but it was so hard to feel anything, much less a sense of urgency. She shut her eyes and tried to focus, tried to feel some alarm at what was happening.

  She shifted in the seat and winced as her legs cramped up. Painful muscle contractions were a side effect of the kidney drugs they had her on. Thankfully, they’d been mild, but the sudden evacuation had exacerbated them, as well as woken her older injuries. Every part of her hurt; every muscle felt abused, every bone as brittle as ice crystals.

  Even so, she was glad to be out of the hospital, away from the spiteful nurses and their hard needles and cold fingers and even colder and harder stares. They knew who she was, and they gave her no clemency beyond what was minimally expected of them as professionals.

  Her abduction ordeal — that first cold and wet night in the woods behind the house, then in Ashley Evans’s basement, had completely sapped her of strength and spirit. So when consciousness finally slipped away from her a few days later, she’d welcomed its smothering darkness. She resented waking up in the hospital and discovering she hadn’t died.

  She could see the guilt in Kelly’s eyes for his role in her mistreatment, but she didn’t blame him or Reggie for what they’d done. Though she’d never have guessed the horrible truth, she still knew that they weren’t acting of their own accord. Of course, she’d also not suspected that it was Ashley behind it.

  In her mind, there was only one person who hated her enough to do this, and that was her father-in-law.

  Ulysses had never forgiven her for the affair she’d had with Eugene Halliwell during the Nobel Ceremony. Somehow he’d found out, and took it as a personal affront against him instead of his son. He’d refused to even acknowledge Jessie’s existence, at least until he found out she carried the exact same immunity to Reanimation that Halliwell did.


  When the kids told her Ulysses had died on Long Island, she had her doubts. He was too smart, too careful, too cunning, to be taken as easily as Jessie had described it. He had to be behind the implant hacking and abduction, not Micah. Not Ashley. They were all just pawns. It was Ulysses.

  He was exacting his revenge.

  She sighed and opened her eyes again. Keeping them closed wasn’t really working for her, not with all the sirens getting louder and all the shouting going on. For a moment, she almost forgot what was happening.

  Where’s Kelly? How long has he been gone?

  Besides, having her eyes closed made her feel claustrophobic again. It was the same feeling she’d had down in Ashley’s basement.

  She smacked her lips and wished she had something to drink, something preferably alcoholic, and that made her feel resentful again.

  It was Jessie’s fault. She’d made her promise to stop drinking. But though Lana had managed to keep that promise, where was Jessie? Nowhere to be seen.

  Why won’t she visit me?

  Because she’s still in Gameland.

  I thought she was back home.

  She returned.

  Or had she dreamt that part?

  God, it was so hard to keep her thoughts straight.

  Resisting the alcohol had been so hard, harder than she’d ever thought it would be. Alcohol had been her shield all these years. It was the only thing that kept her sane.

  She peered out past the parked cars and tried not to think about how ironic it was that her own daughter, who had been conceived in deception, could hold her sinning mother to such a high standard. Jessie tolerated nothing less than total loyalty and honesty, and in that way she was a lot like her grandfather. Like him, and yet nothing like him at all.

  Eric, on the other hand, always forgave even her most grievous sins. He was always too easy on her.

  Something in the Daniels blood, she thought, remembering that Jessie carried none of it in her own veins.

  She watched the people starting to flee the hospital. What’s happening out there? What am I doing here?

 

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