S.W. Tanpepper's GAMELAND, Season One Omnibus (35 page)

Read S.W. Tanpepper's GAMELAND, Season One Omnibus Online

Authors: Saul Tanpepper

Tags: #horror

BOOK: S.W. Tanpepper's GAMELAND, Season One Omnibus
12.61Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub


Changing your catheter, honey,” she murmurs. “This won't hurt a bit.” She apparently talks just to hear herself speak. From what I can gather, she's the only one on duty here. She must be lonely. I almost feel sorry for her.

She doesn't deserve your sympathy.

I crack open my eyelids and watch as she pulls a syringe out of her smock pocket. She turns her back so I can't see what she's doing. I feel her reach down and draw my knees apart. I feel the tube wiggle against my skin. It makes my skin crawl.

When she straightens again a moment later I can see that the syringe is full of some kind of clear liquid, presumably withdrawn from whatever is inside of me. She sets this onto the table beside me. I then feel her tug on the tube. It slips easily out of me, but the sensation makes me want to pee so badly that I almost whimper.

She reaches over and slips a new tube from a plastic package and lets it unfurl like a dead snake.


Okay, young lady. This might hurt a little going in.”

And I swear I'm not imagining it, but there seems to be the faintest hint of a smile in her voice when she says it.

 

Chapter 16

I have to
get the hell out of here.

I have no clue where I am and why I'm here. I don't even know who my captors are. I just know I need to escape.

I need to find Ashley. I need to save her.

I wonder if any of the others are here, too. How can I save us all?

The man said they lost one of us already. What did he mean by that? And which one was it? Reggie? Micah?

Please, God. Make it not be Kelly.

I wish I could remember more. I wish I knew what they meant by the blast.

But remembering is a luxury that I just can't afford right now. I don't need to know what happened to bring me here in order to escape. I only need to know that I have to get away.

I wait until Mabel leaves the room, watching her carefully through slitted eyes as she inserts the cardkey attached to her belt into a slot above the doorknob. There's a beep when the release activates. She exits and the door clicks shut behind her. Then I wait some more, just in case she's forgotten something and decides to come back in.

Move!
my mind screams.

But my body refuses to obey. I know the longer I wait, the more likely it is that she'll return, but I'm suddenly paralyzed with fear. I don't even let myself cry, though I want to. I want to break down and give up. I want to crawl into a corner and roll up into a ball and cry. Let someone else take care of me for once.

But there isn't anyone to do that. There never has been.

I bite away the tears. It's better that way. If she sees them on my cheeks, she'll know I'm awake. She'll tie me to the bed. She'll sedate me and inject me with whatever they're planning on giving to Ash. I can't let that happen to either of us.

So why aren't I moving? Why do I just lie here, frozen, choking on sobs my body doesn't seem to remember how to let out?

Finally, just when I've managed to push the fear far enough away that I can move, the door opens again and Mabel comes in. The terror I've so desperately pushed away comes flooding back in again.


Don't know why I have do this every hour,” she mumbles unhappily to herself.

She goes through the same routine, all the while talking to herself. Despite my panic and loathing for her, I find myself drifting in the sound of her voice. She checks my blood pressure and eyes, stimulates my foot, takes my temperature. It's easier this time to keep still, now that I know what to expect.

I watch her between the slit of my eyelids as she bends down out of sight. She talks to the catheter bag as she measures and empties it. She moves to the head of the bed and does something to my IV. I hear the rustle of her clothes, smell the soap on her skin and the slight tang of body odor. Then she goes and stands at the foot of the bed and records her findings on the medical Link. She clicks it back to the bed frame when she's done.


Back in another hour, honey.” Then, with a dry chuckle, she adds: “Don't go anywhere.”

Finally she leaves.

Don't go anywhere?

I want to throttle her.

I try to remember Kwanjangnim Rupert's wise advice. Patience and pliability. Strength in waiting for just the right moment to act.
A skilled hapkido expert will always bend to adapt to his situation.

So I lie in the darkness for several more minutes, thinking about my situation—what little I know about it. I consider my enemy's skills and strengths—not just hers, but who I assume she works for: ArcWare. I assess their known and presumed disadvantages. I strain my ears for any hint of a sound outside the room.

But there's nothing, just the quiet clicks of the IV drip and the occasional ticks and creaks of the bed as I breathe.

Fifteen minutes have passed since she came in. I measure this by the digital readout on the instruments beside me.

Ever so slowly, I sit up. I reach down and find the Link and turn the screen to me and wake it. It tells me it's Friday, eleven twenty three in the evening. Almost a week has passed since we first broke into LI, probably three days that I've been in this place. Eric must be going frantic by now—assuming he doesn't know.

He doesn't.
That's what my instincts tell me.

I wonder if Grandpa knows.

My instincts remain silent on that one, as they do regarding whether Mom has realized I'm gone.

I want to apologize to her. I want to tell her she's not as bad of a mother as I always believed. It's me who's bad.

I scroll through the Link, blinking away tears that aren't there, and find the initial admittance report. The basic information is there: my name and age, height and weight, blood type, viral infection status (clean), implant status (version 4a, intact, latent), and life expectancy. Then there's the triage nurse's report at the emergency room at the New York Medical Center:

<<17Y/O F ADMITTED POST TRAUMA (EXPLOSION)>>

<>

<>

<>

<>

<< CXR, ABD/NECK/HD CT SCANS, IV RINGERS. CBC, TYPE & CROSS. 3 UNITS.>>

Most of this is incomprehensible to me, just a bunch of medical mumbo jumbo, but I get the basic gist of it. There was an explosion, just as the man and nurse said there was. The cuts and bruises all over my body are proof enough of that.

Why can't I remember?

I look, but there's no mention of any of my friends.

No mention of us being in East Harlem.

Third tunnel.

Kelly and Jake were coming back. We were going to meet up with them. That's it. They were trying a different way back to avoid the zombies around the midtown. That's why we were there, to meet them, not to go through ourselves. We were in a boat. Reggie was rowing. And then…

Something happened. Planes. Flying over us. A bomb.
Napalmed the shit out of everything.
That's what the man had said. A sob escapes from my throat. Kelly and Jake had been in the tunnel when it was bombed.
Already lost one subject.

Who died?

No!
I can't let this stop me.

I glance over the side of the bed at the floor, looking for the motion sensors. I do see something there in the darkness: four small pods at the corners of the bed, red eyes in the shadows staring at each other. They're directly in line with where a person getting up would set their feet. Easy enough to avoid now that I know about them.

First, though, I need to take care of these damn tubes in my body.

The IV turns out to be harder than I thought. I waste precious minutes trying to loosen a corner of the tape holding the needle in my neck. I finally manage to peel a little away. It sticks like glue and feels like I'm ripping ten layers of skin off. I give it a hard yank and the needle comes out. Blood leaks out of the hole and drips down my neck. I feel it pool in my collar before spilling down my chest. I dab at it with the sheet, but I can't bother with stopping it right now. It'll have to clot on its own.

Blood all over the bed. No way to hide it now. No going back.

Another ten minutes have passed. Nurse Mabel will be returning in another twenty. I need to hurry.

I lift the sheet off my legs and look down between them at the urinary catheter. Just the sight of it makes me shake with fury. My hands tremble as I give it a tug. It doesn't move. A crazy thought enters my head: maybe they sewed it in. But then I remember Mabel and her syringe.

About a foot past the point where the yellow tube comes out of me, there's a Y. One arm connects to a clear rubber tubing that snakes off the side of the bed. I watch that line for a moment, fascinated as several teaspoons of pale yellow urine leak out of me and run down the tube.

The other arm of the tubing ends in some kind of adapter. It looks like it would fit a syringe. After inspecting it more closely, I guess that it must be where the nurse extracted the liquid earlier. There must be some kind of balloon inside of me that holds the catheter in place. But without a syringe to empty it, how am I supposed to get it out? I can't very well escape dragging a bag of pee around with me.

I check the time. Fifteen minutes before she's back.

I could disconnect the catheter from the bag. It looks like it'd just pull apart. But then what? I'd still have the tube inside of me and I'd leak all over the place.

Pop the balloon.

Minutes tick by and panic rises up inside of me as I consider this. How the hell am I supposed to pop it?

Finally I bend down as far as I can and stretch the tubing until it reaches my face. I stick it between my teeth and try to bite through it just below the syringe adapter, grimacing. My stomach revolts. Then my teeth pierce the soft rubber and a warm gush of liquid spurts into my mouth. I immediately spit it out onto the bed before realizing it's just water. I give the balloon an experimental tub, but it still won't budge.


Fuck,” I whisper.

Ten minutes.

I bend down one more time. This time I try and suck out the remaining water. My mouth fills. I spit that out, too. Finally the tube slides out.

Five minutes.

I make my way to the foot of the bed, then slowly and carefully crawl over it, avoiding the motion detectors. My head swims and the room spins, but I blink and force myself to focus. I'd puke, but there's nothing in my stomach. I haven't eaten in days and my body shakes from weakness. I don't know how I'm ever going to overpower anyone, much less free Ashley and any of the others and escape.

Two minutes.

My feet hit the floor. I'm completely naked, but I don't feel the cold. Blood drips down my chest, splattering on the floor. My vision swims before my eyes. I'm barely able to stand upright.

One minute.

I lean on the bed frame and wait for Nurse Mabel to walk in, not a clue what I'm going to do, not caring anymore. The minute passes and the door remains closed. I breathe deeply, hoping to clear my head.

My strength slowly returns. I'm still shaking, but it feels good to stand. I bend down, carefully, wobblingly, then straighten back up again. Every muscle sings out at me. My stomach actually grumbles. And still she doesn't come.


Little Miss Mabel must have fallen asleep,” I whisper.

I make my way over to the IV and yank the tubing free from the bag and wrap it around my fist. I can use it to choke her if I have to.


Let's get things moving,” I whisper, and I kick the motion detector across the floor.

Within moments, footsteps sound on the other side of the door. My heart pounds in my ears and my skin tingles. Now I'm ready.

I'm behind her as she comes through the door.

“—
ways happens when I'm sound asleep.” She's already halfway across the room before it registers I'm not in the bed. It's empty and covered in blood, my blood. “What the—“


Looking for me?”

She spins around, but I'm ready for her. I grab her arm and yank as she turns. She's off-balance, completely unprepared. The motion jolts her off her feet and she slams to the floor with a loud cry of pain and alarm. I hear a crack—probably her elbow—but I'm on her in an instant. I yank her arm up her back, past the point of resistance. She screams.


Shut up!” I tell her, growling to keep the weakness from my voice.

She keeps right on screaming. I yank even harder, then realize she's in agony, so I yield a little.


Shut the fuck up, you bitch,” I breathe into her ear, “or I'll rip your arm out of your socket.”

She snaps her mouth closed but continues to struggle a little. Tears fall from her eyes. It just pisses me off all the more seeing them.


Who else is here?”

She doesn't answer. I twist her arm and she yelps.


Who else is here?”


The guards.”


Don't you fucking lie to me, you little shit!”


I'm not. I'm— Fuck! Okay, okay. It's…just me.”

I place my knee on her arm and lean all my weight onto it. She grunts but I don't let up. I unwind the plastic IV tubing from my fist and grab her other hand and pull it behind her and up against the other.


You're hurting me.”


I told you to shut up.”

Once I've got her wrists tied, I loop it around her neck so she can't pull them down. Then, standing up with my foot on her neck, I reach over and grab the catheter off the bed.

Other books

Girl in Profile by Zillah Bethell
Saga of the Old City by Gary Gygax
Lady in the Mist by Laurie Alice Eakes
The Fifth Favor by Shelby Reed
Ship Who Searched by Mercedes Lackey, Anne McCaffrey
Warheart by Terry Goodkind
Lure of Song and Magic by Patricia Rice