Read Twenty-Five Percent (Book 2): Downfall Online

Authors: Nerys Wheatley

Tags: #Zombies

Twenty-Five Percent (Book 2): Downfall (24 page)

BOOK: Twenty-Five Percent (Book 2): Downfall
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23

 

 

 

 

“Psst.”

Alex stopped, immediately on alert. He looked back along the corridor behind him, but saw nothing.

“Over here,” a voice hissed.

A door was slightly ajar. When Alex looked at it, it edged open and Brian peered out. Alex tensed, ready to run or attack.

“I just want to talk to you,” Brian whispered. “Come in here, away from the cameras.” He opened the door wider.

Keeping Walker’s rifle trained on him, Alex walked into the room.

As soon as Brian had shut the door, Alex charged at him, grabbing him by the neck and slamming him up against the wall. He tried to gasp for air, clawing at Alex’s hand around his throat.

“You hurt Sam,” Alex growled. “Give me one good reason why I shouldn’t snap your neck right now.”

Brian’s eyes bulged. He opened his mouth to speak, but Alex’s grip was too tight for more than a vague rasp to emerge.

Alex found himself torn between wanting the man to suffer for what he’d done to Sam and needing to hear what he had to say in case it was important. Having made his decision, he loosened his grip a little. It wasn’t what he’d really wanted to do.

“I didn’t do it,” Brian gasped. He tried to tug Alex’s hand away. It didn’t budge.

“Didn’t do what?”

“I didn’t break his finger. I told him to scream, to pretend I had.”

Alex narrowed his eyes. “I don’t believe you.”

“Not all of us agree with Mr. Boot,” Brian said.

“What do you mean?”

Brian’s eyes flicked downwards. “Could you let me down?”

Alex looked at his feet. His toes were barely touching the floor.

“If you try anything...”

“I won’t. I want to help.”

Alex let go and took the pistol from the holster beneath Brian’s jacket. Then he stepped back, levelling the rifle he’d taken from Walker at his chest. “Okay, talk.”

Brian leaned forward, bracing his hands on his thighs as he gasped for breath. After a few seconds, he straightened and coughed, rubbing his neck. Up close, Alex estimated him to be at least six five, with a build that could almost rival Walker’s.

He was getting tired of having to look up at everyone around here.

“Boot is deranged,” Brian said when he could speak again.

“So why are you still here? Why haven’t you tried to stop him?”

“I can’t do it on my own and I don’t know who else feels the same way I do. If it got back to Boot that I wasn’t loyal...” He shuddered.

“What?”

“I don’t want to end up in the labs.”

The sight of the bodies in the morgue drawers came back to Alex. It all made sense, the white eyes, the lack of an apparent cause of death.

“He used his own people as guinea pigs?”

Brian looked at the floor for a few moments. “When the outbreak in Sarcester began, there were people here who objected. Some of them got out before Boot locked down the building and surrounded it with his eater army. The ones who didn’t get away and objected were sent to the labs. I don’t know exactly what happened to them there, but they never came back.”

Alex could guess what happened to them. Boot used them to test the cure he was planning to ultimately use on himself, when it was perfected. He sat on the edge of a desk behind him, keeping the rifle trained on Brian. “How many were there?”

“I don’t know.” He leaned back against the wall. “Most we just never saw again. A few, the more senior managers...” He stopped, rubbing one hand over his face. “...he forced them to drink eater blood, watched them turn, then sent them out to join the horde. He doesn’t take what he regards as betrayal very well.”

Alex touched a hand gently to his chest. “Yes, I know.”

“How did you survive anyway? I watched your boyfriend stab you.”

“He’s not my... never mind. I’m not really sure about that myself. Why is Boot so scared? What’s going on here?”

Brian glanced at the door apprehensively, as if his boss could hear him. “When the outbreak got bad in Sarcester, Boot flew there. While he was away, the Omnav governing board had a meeting here. We, those of us wearing these penguin outfits,” he tugged at his jacket lapel, “we don’t technically work for Omnav. We’re Boot’s personal security, we work for him. So none of us were allowed anywhere near that meeting, but when Boot got back and found out about it, he flipped. The next day, none of the board came in for work. I don’t know for sure what happened, but...” He stopped, looking at the door again as he wiped the back of one hand across his forehead. “Most of us are just motivated by the money, and he pays us a
lot
. I mean, I’d been paying off my student loans for five years and barely made a dent, and then I started working for Boot and I was debt free after a year. All because I grew a few inches more than most other men. But there are a few, like Frobisher, who buy into his whole power trip thing, and there’s not much they wouldn’t do to ride his coattails to the top. So the board members? I doubt they
all
decided to quit at the same time, if you know what I mean.”

Alex did know what he meant and he didn’t doubt for a second Boot would do it. He probably wouldn’t even think having the entire board murdered was wrong.

“So then Boot had complete control,” Brian continued, “but that’s when the barriers fell in Sarcester and I know he wasn’t expecting that. Nor was anyone else. I overheard one of the brainiacs who worked here say the eaters weren’t behaving how they expected them to. Something about them working together much more than they thought they would. The day after the barriers went down, about half the people who worked here didn’t show up. Then Boot told us everyone who was left wouldn’t be allowed to leave. He told us it was for our safety with the eaters coming, but I think it was because he was getting scared he’d be left alone. Why he didn’t just leave, I don’t know.”

Alex knew. Boot was obsessed with becoming a Survivor. He wouldn’t leave the only chance he had. And with the eaters advancing further every day and every other country zealously guarding their borders and airspaces, where would he go anyway?

“That was when he started sending anyone who objected to the labs.” Brian shuddered, twisting his hands around each other. “He forced the scientists to infect them so they could test the cures they’d been working on. Then when they’d had enough and refused, he had them infected and put them outside the fence. He had your friends kidnapped and brought here to take their place. When the eaters arrived, he used the bug guns, the pheromone cartridges, to attract them in to surround us.” He looked down at his hands. “You have to believe me, I wanted to stop it, I really did, but Boot is insane. You have no idea. I’d have been killed too, or ended up like those poor people outside the fence.”

Alex wasn’t sure whether he believed that Brian wanted to stop Boot, but he believed the rest. It was too detailed a story for him to make up. And it all made sense.

He pushed himself off the desk. “Are Micah, Sam and Claire back in the cells with the others?”

Brian nodded. “I took them there myself.”

“Alright, we’ll go there now. If Sam’s okay, then I’ll think about believing you.”

Brian appeared nervous, which was strange for someone who looked like he crushed boulders with his bare hands for fun. “I can’t be seen with you. There are a couple of cameras in the corridors and one in the cell room.”

“The cameras are out of action,” Alex said.

Brian frowned. “How?”

“I had a chat with your colleague, Ben Walker, in the security office in the foyer. He was very eager to help, once I’d explained the situation to him.”

“You mean he wanted to help bring down Boot?”

“Not exactly.”

After checking the corridor outside was clear, Alex ushered Brian through the door and they made their way to the cells. He kept the rifle trained on Brian in front of him. Alex didn’t want to trust him, but he couldn’t for the life of him think why else he would be helping.

Unless it was some trick Boot had to get them to... what? He shook his head. He was getting paranoid.

Although just because he was paranoid, it didn’t mean they weren’t out to get him.

They didn’t see anyone else on the way. Maybe now everyone was safely locked up again, or in his case, dead, the guards had been allowed to return to bed.

Alex made Brian enter the room ahead of him. To his relief, everyone was there. Sam and Claire were sharing a cell, huddled together. Hannah was curled in the corner of her bed, sobbing quietly. Alex’s heart ached for her pain while at the same time dancing for joy that she was upset at his ‘death’. The doctors looked in various states of dejection.

Micah was standing, his eyes on the door. As soon as Alex walked in behind Brian, his face broke into a grin so big it looked like his cheeks were trying to touch the ceiling. For a moment, Alex forgot to be angry at him for the whole knife in the chest thing and he smiled back.

“Alex?” Sam was staring at him, his mouth hanging open. His face was starting to swell where Chester had hit him.

The others looked up. There were a couple of seconds of shocked silence. Then everyone spoke at once.

Alex held up the hand not clutching the gun and they quietened enough for him to speak. “Before I answer any questions, Sam, how is your finger?”

Sam smiled. “Oh, it’s fine. See?” He held up both hands and wiggled all ten digits. “Brian told me to pretend he’d broken it.”

“Why didn’t you tell us?” Pauline said.

Sam shrugged. “Micah told me about the camera. I didn’t want anyone to see and get Brian into trouble.” He pointed at his bruised face. “The punch was real though.”

“Do you believe me now?” Brian said.

Alex lowered the rifle. After a moment’s hesitation, he handed Brian’s pistol back to him. “Get the doors. We need to get out of here before anyone comes to check why the cameras aren’t working.”

Brian went to the panel to open the cells. As soon as she was free, Hannah ran to Alex and threw her arms around him. While he loved the hug, he couldn’t stop his grunt of pain.

She gasped and stepped back, to his disappointment. “I thought you were dead,” she said, her eyes shimmering with tears.

“Yeah, well, I did get stabbed.” He unbuttoned the shirt to reveal the wound in his chest. It was still oozing blood.

There were gasps as they all gathered around him.

“I need a first aid kit,” Hannah said, suddenly all business. “Brian?”

“On it.” He went to the door, checked the corridor, and slipped out.

Alex hoped he didn’t come back with a dozen of his massive, heavily armed guard buddies, but he couldn’t do anything about that now. If it was going to happen, it was going to happen.

Hannah led Alex into her cell and stripped the sheet from her bed. They sat down and she began to carefully clean the blood from around the wound. He would have been lying if he’d said it wasn’t causing him a lot of pain, but the fact that it involved Hannah touching his bare chest was proving an effective distraction.

Micah sat on the other end of the bed, still grinning.

“What are you smiling for?” Alex said. “You stabbed me.”

“You told me to.”

“But I didn’t think you’d actually do it.  I thought you’d find a way to save both of us that didn’t involve plunging a knife into my chest.  I’m lucky to be alive.”

Micah’s expression became indignant. “That wasn’t luck.  I stabbed you where the blade would hit your ribs and kept my thumb on the retract button so it would depress back into the handle. And even if I’d made an error and it passed
between
your ribs, I made sure it would go in without hitting any major organs, like I told you I could.”

“When did you tell me that?”

“After we found Gaz and the others dead in that house.  Don’t you remember?”

Alex shook his head.

Micah frowned.  “So you thought I’d tried to kill you?”

“It did cross my mind when you thrust a very sharp knife into my chest, yes.”

Micah bit his lip and grimaced, looking apologetic.  “Oh. Sorry about that.” He frowned. “Hang on, if you thought I’d really stabbed you, what did you think the kiss was for?”

“What
was
the kiss for?” Alex said, relieved he wasn’t the one to have to bring the awkward subject up.

“So I could put my hand on your chest and feel for your ribs and the right place to put the spiker and be close enough to make sure it went in properly. If I hadn’t pretended I wanted to kiss you, Boot would have got suspicious.”

Alex let out a mental sigh of relief. “Oh. Well. That’s good to know.”

Micah’s eyes widened. “Did you think I’d kissed you because I... because I thought we were...” he huffed out a breath, “...a
couple
?”

“I was reserving judgement until I’d spoken to you, but it did occur to me that maybe you had misconstrued our friendship.”

“What about anything I’ve ever done since we’ve known each other would lead you to believe I wanted us to hook up?”

BOOK: Twenty-Five Percent (Book 2): Downfall
3.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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