Undead with Benefits (2 page)

BOOK: Undead with Benefits
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JAKE DAY!

We started walking later that morning. The miles of wide-open farmland didn't seem as intimidating in daylight as they had the night before. It was slowgoing, mostly because I was carrying Cass over my shoulder. Amanda didn't offer to take a turn, not that I really expected her to.

Eventually, we found a creek and decided to try following it toward civilization.

“This is how the pioneers did it,” I told Amanda. “They found water and it led them to Thanksgiving.”

“Uh-huh,” Amanda replied. She nodded toward Cass. “Should we try dunking her?”

“Come on, Amanda. Don't be mean.”

“I don't mean, like, waterboarding her. Maybe if we splash her face, she'll wake up and do some actual walking.”

I set Cass down at the edge of the creek and gently splashed some water on her face. She didn't move. Some of the dried blood around her nose and mouth floated away in crusty little islands. I looked at Amanda and shrugged.

“Maybe we should wash up too,” I suggested. “We look like we just escaped from a Rob Zombie movie.”

Amanda looked down at herself. Both of us were pretty covered in gore, some darkened and stiff from the night before, and some fresh from the horses.

“Yikes,” she said. “You've got a point.”

We washed up as best we could in the creek. It would've gone better if we'd actually had soap, but at least we managed to downgrade from total blood-soaked horror show to mildly filthy teens with suspiciously stained clothes. The sun was out and the creek water was surprisingly warm and refreshing. Something in me unclenched at that point. Even though I knew it wasn't logically true, it felt like we were finally out of danger. Amanda must have felt the same because soon we were splashing each other and laughing like dumb little kids.

We didn't even notice the fisherman approaching until he was just twenty yards away.

“Good morning!” he shouted, causing both me and Amanda to jump.

He was a middle-aged guy in a floppy khaki hat and those big rubber wading boots.

“Rough night?” he asked us, smiling. He'd noticed Cass passed out on the bank and must've figured we were just coming off a night of farmland partying. But then he noticed the pinkish tint to the water flowing toward him, took a closer look at our appearance, and his face fell. “Uh,” he added, suddenly nervous.

“Real rough night,” Amanda replied, grinning and stepping toward him. “You wouldn't believe it.”

The fisherman took a step back. “I suppose I wouldn't.”

“Say, mister,” I began, a folksy twang in my voice, because we were in the Midwest now. “You wouldn't happen to know which way the road is, would ya?”

The fisherman pointed with his rod in the direction we'd been headed.

Amanda turned to me. “You were right. Such a good pioneer.”

I grinned at her, then stepped out of the creek and picked up Cass. “Much obliged,” I said to the fisherman, and started toward the road. He hopped onto the creek's opposite bank as we passed, not wanting to be near us. Amanda lingered a few steps behind me, staring him down.

“You should forget you saw us,” Amanda told the fisherman, her voice so sweet you could almost ignore the menacing, unspoken
or else
.

About a mile farther on, we started hearing car noises from the highway. The creek eventually burbled its way into a little park and picnic area—wooden tables, a swing set, a hillside overlooking where the creek fed into a larger river. It was the kind of place teenagers in the '50s drove out to for secret groping sessions. Only a beat-up maroon sedan was parked there now. It probably belonged to the fisherman.

Amanda opened the unlocked driver-side door, reached her hand behind the sun visor, and came away with a set of keys.

“Lucky break,” she said. “Probably karma for not eating that guy.”

“Karma shmarma,” I replied, setting Cass on the ground so I could stretch out my arms. “This is the Midwest! Where people trust their neighbors enough to leave their keys in the car. Where strangers politely greet innocent if blood-covered zombies while out for a midmorning fishing trip. I
love
the Midwest!”

Amanda went to the back of the car and opened the trunk. Inside was a picnic basket, which she immediately tossed aside, and a blanket, which she spread out across the trunk's grease-stained floor.

“Not bad,” she said. “Plenty of legroom.”

“Um, why can't we just use the backseat?” I asked, my mind wandering back to our glorious encounter at the silo.

Amanda narrowed her eyes at me. “Not for us. For
her
.”

I looked at Cass, pale and slumped against the side of the car.

“You want to put her in the trunk.”

“Yes.”

“That seems mean.”

Amanda checked her reasons off on her fingers. “We're fugitives and she looks dead. We kind of kidnapped her. She'll be safer locked in there if one of us suddenly needs to eat.”

“But . . .” I looked again at Cass, mentally urging her to wake up. A bug landed on her face. “That's where we usually keep, you know,
our food
.”

“It's not like that,” Amanda replied. “It's for everyone's safety.”

I sighed. “Okay, but we have to check on her, like, every hour.”

“I'm sure she'll kick the backseat when she wakes up,” Amanda countered, then put up her hands when I gave her a stern look. “All right, all right. Every hour or so.”

Together, we lifted Cass into the trunk. I tried to set her down gently, but Amanda dropped her ankles before I let go of her armpits, so there might've been some clunking around.

With that done, Amanda turned on the radio and pulled me into the backseat for twenty minutes of making out.

JAKE DAYYYYYY!

 

“Fuckin' guys shooting nets at us,” I said, feeling what I'd call hyperwistful, thinking about last night's scene at the farmhouse. It was like remembering clips from a really over-the-top action movie as seen through a strobe light while hopped up on one of those direct-to-the-heart adrenaline shots. “That literally happened to us. It figuratively blows my mind.”

“I know, right?” Amanda replied. She was sitting in the passenger seat, rubbing my leg, because we still couldn't keep our hands off each other. We couldn't stop moving. “That guy with the hatchet?”

“Red Bear!”

“Who is
like
that?” she exclaimed. “Seriously, who does that? Who buys a hatchet?”

“Bananas. Bananas times one thousand.”

We were only driving through some small town in western Illinois, but a powerful rush had come over me. Everything we'd gone through, plus the lack of sleep, plus hooking up with Amanda this morning—goddamn, I felt invincible. By the way she gripped my leg and how wide her eyes were as she scanned the passing storefronts, I could tell Amanda felt the same.

“There we go!” she yelled, pointing at the department store that anchored what was otherwise a completely vacant shopping plaza. I swerved into the empty parking lot and slammed the brakes, parking across two spaces because no painted line could contain me. I felt like a bank robber.

We barged into the store, startling the college-aged dude who stood behind the only open register. There was some horrible Michael Bolton soft rock on the store's sound system, but it was otherwise library-quiet.

“Shall we shop?” I asked Amanda, my voice echoing off the linoleum tiles.

“Hell yes,” she replied as she snatched a pair of sunglasses off a nearby stand and shoved them on.

We were still wearing our creek-washed gore ensemble—well, I was anyway. Amanda pulled off her shirt as she walked toward the nearby women's department and tossed it aside. She took her time picking out a replacement, settling eventually on a blue-and-white, striped, sleeveless thing.

The cashier was staring at her—I had been too, of course, but I stopped before he did. When I started toward him, I noticed him gulp and glance toward the phone next to his register. He was trying hard to look at me without actually looking at me, like he didn't want to make eye contact. He was scared. I felt kinda bad about that, briefly. But at least we weren't going to eat him, right?

“Hey, dude,” I said as I arrived at his register. “Can I get some shopping bags?”

“Su-sure,” he replied. When he bent down to get them, I yanked the cord out of the back of his phone. Just in case.

“Don't make a big deal out of this, but we're not paying for any of this shit,” I explained. “We've been victimized by the government.”

“Okay, man. C-cool.”

Amanda tackled me from behind, kissing my neck and ear, cackling as I stumbled into a table of impulse-buy cuff links and earrings. I grabbed her shoulders and kissed her hard. Distantly, I heard the cashier shudder. Who knows what he thought—likely that he was about to be murdered by a pair of horny psychos—a feeling I guess I could understand. We looked the part.

“Did you tell him to give us all the cash too?” Amanda asked me once we were finished kissing.

“Not yet,” I said.

She spun toward the cashier and screamed, “Put the money in the bag, motherfucker!”

Jake Day involves some crime, okay?

 

After the store, it was at least half an hour of frenzied driving before our laughter subsided. We had a stolen car and stolen clothes, and a psychic who had promised to help us get into Iowa, where there was supposedly some kind of zombie cure. Granted, she was unconscious in our trunk, but still. We were in love. Life was good.

As the sun set, it started to feel like I was coming down. Amanda leaned her head against my shoulder drowsily. We passed a highway ramp toward Des Moines that was blocked by huge, orange detour signs. Neither of us mentioned it, but a few miles later Amanda spoke up.

“So, what now?”

I knew Amanda wanted to talk about our future undead-related plans, but I wasn't ready for that yet. Except for occasional breaks to make sure Cass didn't suffocate in the trunk, I didn't want to think about going to Iowa. I wanted to keep living in the incredibly consequence-free moment.

“I don't know,” I replied. “We've got some cash. Motel room?”

“No, I meant . . .” Amanda looked up at me and must've read my reluctance, because she trailed off. “Yeah,” she said after a moment, kissing my cheek. “That sounds perfect.”

And it was perfect. Because it was Jake Day. All the heavy stuff didn't matter so much. We hadn't eaten all our friends, we weren't fugitives pursued by a shadowy government agency, and we weren't going to have to snack on something with a heartbeat sooner rather than later. Things were easy. Somewhere in Iowa, there was a cure waiting and we were going to find it. I mean, whenever we got around to it. Piece of cake.

Then Cass woke up and everything started to change.

CASS

COPING WITH TELEPATHY. THAT'S WHAT THE GOVERNMENT called the special class crammed into the training schedule for us psychic recruits. Not Your Mind Is Magical 101 or something equally positive.
Coping
. Because our powers aren't meant to be enjoyed; they're meant to be managed and endured. The class was three hours long and met six times total, which is literally one-fourth of the class time devoted to the Necrotic Control Division's Headshot Techniques and Logistics course. Thinking back, I'm not sure if the class was so short because the government didn't know all that much about psychics, or because they didn't want
us
to know all that much about ourselves.

Our instructor devoted one whole session to nosebleeds. The prevailing wisdom was to recognize that the sight of blood meant you were going too hard. Also, always keep a pack of tissues handy.

There wasn't any time spent on blowing beyond your previously understood psychic boundaries by simultaneously knocking out two people at once. None of the pamphlets addressed what to do upon waking up in the trunk of a car driven by zombies, with no idea how long you've been unconscious for. And of course our instructors never discussed going AWOL from an organization you'd once had faith in because . . . because why? Sudden objections to living-on-undead brutality? Loneliness? A stupid schoolgirl crush? As I lay there, curled up and trying to figure out what I'd done and where I was going, the car pulled over. Two doors opened. Slammed closed. Keys jingled, clinked in the lock. Sunlight poured in and I had to shield my eyes.

“Oh, look,” said Amanda. “Sleeping Boring awakens.”

That's how I—a government-trained psychic—found myself standing on the side of a deserted country road with the two zombies I'd spent the last week of my life tracking across the country.

And one of them in particular looked less than happy to see me.

“All right, Magellan,” Amanda said, one hand on her hip and the other pointing on the map to an empty spot of country on the southern border of Iowa. “We're here. Where's this secret entrance?”

Still clad in my bloodstained NCD jumpsuit, my hair matted and crunchy with sweat, I glanced between the freshly showered Jake and Amanda and felt the keen urge to dive back into the trunk.

“Guide us,” Jake said, and my heart cooed like a little dove I wished I could've crushed the life out of. After all that time in his head, I was kind of thrilled to be talking to him in person. Except that was stupid. He didn't know me. I mean, they'd been keeping me in
the trunk
. I'd gotten myself into a dangerous mess, and I didn't know how to get out of it.

“We have no idea what we're doing,” Jake continued.

That made three of us.

I accepted the road atlas from Amanda and pretended to study it while trying to mentally compose myself. Even through the haze of my telepathic hangover, the bloodbath at the farmhouse was painfully fresh in my memory, like a bad dream I couldn't shake. In exchange for saving me from the wild Iowan zombies
and
the corrupt Necrotic Control Division, who I'd learned had sinister plans of their own, I promised Jake that I'd escort him and his murderous girlfriend into Iowa. He'd kept his end of the bargain. Now, five minutes awake and out of the trunk, it was time to keep mine.

BOOK: Undead with Benefits
5.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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