Hunger_A Gone Novel

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Hunger_A Gone Novel Page 13

by Michael Grant


  Anyway, she had a right to have a life of her own. She

  wasn’t everyone’s servant. She belonged to herself.

  Come to me.

  Lana bit her lip. She was ignoring it, the voice, the hallucination, whatever it was.

  Just going to ignore it.

  She cranked up the volume on the music.

  She veered away from the beach as she approached town.

  Maybe if she went along the back streets more. Maybe she

  could vary her route more and make it harder for people to

  track her down.

  So long as she ended the same way: back up the hill to

  Clifftop. Up to the FAYZ wall. Not to touch it, but to get very

  close to it as she panted and sweated and nursed the inevitable stitch in her side.

  She felt she needed to see that barrier up close every day. It

  was a devotion, somehow. A touchstone. A reminder that she

  was here, and this was now. Whatever she had been before,

  she wasn’t that person anymore. She was trapped in this place

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  and in this life. Not her choice: the wall’s choice.

  Come to me. I have need of you.

  “It’s not real,” Lana shouted.

  But it was real. She knew it was real. She knew the voice.

  Where it came from.

  She knew she could not shut the voice out of her mind.

  The only way to silence the voice was to silence it forever. She

  could be its victim, or she could make it her victim.

  Madness. Suicidal madness. She skipped a slow song and

  went to something manic. Something loud enough to banish

  crazy thoughts.

  She walked harder, faster, almost running, pumping her

  arms and forcing Patrick into a long lope to keep up. But she

  wasn’t fast enough to outrun a truck that zoomed crazily up

  to her honking its horn.

  Again she tore off her headphones and yelled, “What?”

  But this was no loose tooth or skinned knee.

  Albert and Howard piled out. Howard helped pull Orc

  from the back. The boy . . . the creature . . . staggered as if

  drunk. He probably was, Lana thought. Then again, maybe

  he had a pretty good excuse.

  There was a hole in one of the last human parts of him, his

  cheek. Dried blood crusted his cheek and neck. Fresher, redder blood still oozed down his cheek and neck.

  “What happened?” Lana asked.

  “Zekes got him,” Howard answered. He was torn between

  a kind of low-level panic and relief that he had finally reached

  the Healer. He held Orc’s elbow as if Orc needed Howard’s

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  frail strength to support him.

  “Has he got a worm in him?” Lana asked, cautious.

  “No, we got the worm,” Albert reassured her. “We were

  just hoping you could help him.”

  “I don’t want no more rock on me,” Orc said.

  Lana understood. Orc had been a garden variety thug,

  unaware of any special power, until the coyotes had gotten

  to him in the desert. They had chewed him up badly. Very

  badly. Worse than anything that had happened to Lana, even.

  Everywhere they had chewed him had filled in with the gravel

  covering that made Orc nearly indestructible.

  He didn’t want to lose the last of his human body, the patch

  of pink skin that included his mouth and part of his neck.

  Lana nodded.

  “You need to stop weaving back and forth, Orc. I don’t

  want you falling on me,” she said. “Sit down on the ground.”

  He sat down too suddenly and giggled a little at it.

  Lana lay her hand against the gruesome hole.

  “Don’t want no more rock,” Orc repeated.

  The bleeding stopped almost immediately.

  “Does it hurt?” Lana asked. “I mean the rock. I know the

  hole hurts.”

  “No. It don’t hurt.” Orc slammed his fist against his opposite arm, hard enough that any human arm would have been shattered. “I barely feel it. Even Drake’s whip, when we was

  fighting, I barely felt it.”

  Suddenly he was weeping. Tears rolled from human eyes

  onto cheeks of flesh and pebbles.

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  “I don’t feel nothing except . . .” He pointed a thick stone

  finger at the flesh of his face.

  “Yeah,” Lana said. Her irritation was gone. Her burden

  was smaller, maybe, than Orc’s.

  Lana pulled her hand away to see the progress. The hole

  was smaller. Still crusted with blood, but no longer actively

  bleeding.

  She put her hand back in place. “Just a couple minutes

  more, Orc.”

  “My name’s Charles,” Orc said.

  “Is it?”

  “It is,” Howard confirmed.

  “What were you guys doing going into the worm field?”

  Lana asked.

  Howard shot a resentful look at Albert, who answered,

  “Orc was picking cabbage.”

  “My name’s Charles Merriman,” Orc repeated. “People

  should call me by my real name sometimes.”

  Lana’s gaze met Howard’s.

  Now, Lana thought, now he wants his old name back. The

  bully who reveled in a monster’s name was now a monster in

  fact, and wanted to be called Charles.

  “You’re all better,” Lana announced.

  “Is it still skin?” Orc asked.

  “It is,” Lana reassured him. “It’s still human.”

  Lana took Albert’s arm and drew him away. “What are you

  doing sending him into the worm field like that?”

  Albert’s face went blank. He was surprised at being

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  reproached. For a moment Lana thought he would tell her to

  take a jump. But that moment passed, and Albert slumped a

  little, as if the air had gone out of him.

  “I’m trying to help,” Albert said.

  “By paying him with beer?”

  “I paid him what he wanted, and Sam was okay with it.

  You were at the meeting,” Albert said. “Look, how else do you

  think you get someone like Orc to spend hours in the hot sun

  working? Astrid seems to think people will work just because

  we ask them to. Maybe some will. But Orc?”

  Lana could see his point. “Okay. I shouldn’t have jumped

  all over you.”

  “It’s okay. I’m getting used to it,” Albert said. “Suddenly

  I’m the bad guy. But you know what? I didn’t make people the

  way they are. If kids are going to work, they’re going to want

  something back.”

  “If they don’t work, we all starve.”

  “Yeah. I get that,” Albert said with more than a tinge of

  sarcasm. “Only, here’s the thing: Kids know we won’t let them

  starve as long as there’s any food left, right? So they figure,

  hey, let someone else do the work. Let someone else pick cabbages and artichokes.”

  Lana wanted to get back to her run. She needed to finish,

  to run to the FAYZ wall. But there was something fascinating

  about Albert. “Okay. So how do you get people to work?”

  He shrugged. “Pay them.”

  “You mean, money?”

  “Yeah. Except guess who had most of the money
in their

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  wallets and purses when they disappeared? Then a few kids

  stole what was left in cash registers and all. So if we start back

  using the old money we just make a few thieves powerful. It’s

  kind of a problem.”

  “Why is a kid going to work for money if they know we’ll

  share the food, anyway?” Lana asked.

  “Because some will do different stuff for money. I mean,

  look, some kids have no skills, right? So they pick the food

  for money. Then they take the money and spend it with some

  kid who can maybe cook the food for them, right? And that

  kid maybe needs a pair of sneakers and some other kid has

  rounded up all the sneakers and he has a store.”

  Lana realized her mouth was open. She laughed. The first

  time in a while.

  “Fine. Laugh,” Albert said, and turned away.

  “No, no, no,” Lana hastened to say. “No, I wasn’t making

  fun of you. It’s just that, I mean, you’re the only kid that has

  any kind of a plan for anything.”

  Albert actually looked embarrassed. “Well, you know, Sam

  and Astrid are working their butts off.”

  “Yeah. But you’re looking ahead. You’re actually thinking

  about how we put it all together.”

  Albert nodded. “I guess.”

  “Good for you, man,” Lana said. “I gotta go. Orc will be

  okay. As okay as he can be, anyway.”

  “Thanks,” Albert said, and seemed genuinely grateful.

  “Hey, let me see that hand,” Lana said.

  Albert seemed puzzled. He looked at his own hand, swollen and discolored from punching Orc’s stone face.

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  7

  “Oh, yeah,” Albert said as Lana briefly took his hand in

  hers. “Thanks again.”

  Lana put her headphones back on and trotted a few steps.

  Then she stopped. She turned and took them off. “Hey.

  Albert. The money thing.”

  “Yes?”

  She hesitated, knowing that in this moment she was perhaps starting a chain reaction. Knowing that it was dangerous to the point of madness. It was eerie, as if fate had intervened

  in the person of Albert, showing her the way to her half-

  formed goal. “Wouldn’t gold work? I mean, as money?”

  Albert’s sharp eyes found hers. “Should we get together

  and talk?”

  “Yeah,” Lana said.

  “Stop by the club tonight.”

  “The what?”

  Albert grinned. He fished a half sheet of paper from his

  pocket and handed it to her.

  Lana glanced at it. Then at him. She laughed and handed

  it back. “I’ll be there.”

  She started running again. But her thoughts were taking a

  different tack than before. Albert was planning for the future,

  not just letting it happen to him. That was the thing to do. To

  plan. To act. Not just to let things happen.

  She was right to plan.

  Come to me.

  Maybe I will, Lana thought. And maybe you won’t like it

  much when I do.

  ELEVEN

  70 HOURS, 11 MINUTES

  “ M O T H E R M A R Y W A N T S to draft two more kids,” Astrid

  told Sam.

  “Okay. Approved.”

  “Dahra says we’re running low on kids’ Tylenol and kids’

  Advil, she wants to make sure it’s okay to start giving them

  split adult pills.”

  Sam spread his hands in a helpless gesture. “What?”

  “We’re running low on kid pills, Dahra wants to split adult

  pills.”

  Sam rocked back in the leather chair designed for a grown

  man. “Okay. Whatever. Approved.” He took a sip of water

  from a bottle. The wrapper on the bottle said “Dasani” but it

  was tap water. The dishes from dinner—horrible homemade

  split-pea soup that smelled burned, and a quarter cabbage

  each—had been pushed aside onto the sideboard where in

  the old days the mayor of Perdido Beach had kept framed

  pictures of his family. It was one of the better meals Sam had

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  9

  had lately. The fresh cabbage tasted surprisingly good.

  There was little more than smears on the plates: the era of

  kids not eating everything was over.

  Astrid puffed out her cheeks and sighed. “Kids are asking

  why Lana isn’t around when they need her.”

  “I can only ask Lana to heal big things. I can’t demand she

  be around 24/7 to handle every boo-boo.”

  Astrid looked at the list she had compiled on her laptop.

  “Actually, I think this involved a stubbed toe that ‘hurted.’”

  “How much more is on the list?” Sam asked.

  “Three hundred and five items,” Astrid said. When Sam’s

  face went pale, she relented. “Okay, it’s actually just thirty-two.

  Now, don’t you feel relieved it’s not really three hundred?”

  “This is crazy,” Sam said.

  “Next up: the Judsons and the McHanrahans are fighting

  because they share a dog, so both families are feeding her—

  they still have a big bag of dry dog food—but the Judsons

  are calling her Sweetie and the McHanrahans are calling her

  BooBoo.”

  “You’re kidding.”

  “I’m not kidding,” Astrid said.

  “What is that noise?” Sam demanded.

  Astrid shrugged. “I guess someone has their stereo cranked

  up.”

  “This is not going to work, Astrid.”

  “The music?”

  “This. This thing where every day I have a hundred stupid

  questions I have to decide. Like I’m everyone’s parent now.

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  I’m sitting here listening to how little kids are complaining

  because their older sisters make them take a bath, and stepping into fights over who owns which Build-A-Bear outfit, and now over dog names. Dog names?”

  “They’re all still just little kids,” Astrid said.

  “Some of these kids are developing powers that scare me,”

  Sam grumbled. “But they can’t decide who gets to have which

  special towel? Or whether to watch The Little Mermaid or

  Shrek Three?”

  “No,” Astrid said. “They can’t. They need a parent. That’s

  you.”

  Sam usually handled the daily dose of nonsense with equanimity, or at least with nothing worse than grouchy humor.

  But today he was feeling it was finally too much. Yesterday

  he’d lost E.Z. This morning he’d seen almost no one show

  up for work. And Edilio had been forced to track kids down

  for two hours. Even then they had come back with a pitiful

  amount of cantaloupes, barely enough to feed the day care.

  All of that followed by Duck Zhang and some crazy story

  about falling through the ground into a radioactive tunnel

  full of water bats.

  The only person who’d been productive was Orc. He had

  picked several hundred cabbages before the worms had nearly

  killed him.

  “What is that music?” he demanded, angry and needing

  to yell at someone or something. Sam stomped to the window and threw it open. Immediately the volume of the music, most
of it vibrating bass, increased dramatically.

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  1

  Down in the square things were dark but for the streetlights and a strobe light blinking through the front window of McDonald’s.

  “What in the . . .”

  Astrid came and stood beside him. “What is that? Is Albert

  throwing a party?”

  Sam didn’t answer. He left without a word, annoyed, angry,

  and secretly glad of any excuse to get out of answering kids’

  stupid questions and handling their stupid problems.

  He took the steps two at a time. Down to the ground floor,

  out through the big front door, ignoring a “Hello” from the

  kid Edilio had guarding the town hall, and down the big

  marble steps to the street.

  Quinn was passing by, clearly heading toward McDonald’s.

  “Hey, brah,” Quinn said.

  “What is going on, do you know?” Sam asked.

  “It’s a club.” Quinn grinned. “Man, you must be working

  too hard. Everyone knows about it.”

  Sam stared at him. “It’s a what?”

  “McClub, brah. All you need is some batteries or some toilet paper.”

  This announcement left Sam baffled. He considered

  asking Quinn for clarification, but then Albert appeared,

  formally dressed, like he thought it was graduation or something. He actually had on a dark sports coat and slacks in a lighter shade. His shirt was pale blue, collared, and ironed.

  Spotting Sam, he extended his hand.

  Sam ignored the hand. “Albert, what is going on here?”

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  “Dancing, mostly,” Albert said.

  “Excuse me?”

  “Kids are dancing.”

  Quinn caught up then and stepped in front of Sam to shake

  Albert’s still-extended hand. “Hey, dude. I have batteries.”

  “Good to see you, Quinn. The price is four D cells, or eight

  double As, or ten triple As, or a dozen Cs. If you have a mix,

  I can work it out.”

  Quinn dug in his pocket and produced four triple A batteries and three D cells. He handed them to Albert, who agreed to the price and dropped the batteries into a plastic

  bag at his feet.

  “Okay, the rules are no food, no alcohol, no attitude, no

  fights, and when I call ‘time,’ there’s no arguing about it. Do

  you agree to these rules?”

  “Dude, if I had any food, would I be here? I’d be home eating it.” Quinn put his hand over his heart like he was pledging allegiance to the flag and said, “I do.” He jerked a thumb back

  at Sam. “Don’t bother with him: Sam doesn’t dance.”

  “Have a good time, Quinn,” Albert said, and swung open

 

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