Since Freak Day, nothing is as it seems.
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*****
The
wait outside seemed interminable. The
Christmas music changed to the Chipmunks singing about hula hoops, one of Kendra's favorites when she was
young. The high-pitched revelry made her
eyes sting with tears. She and her
mother and father had sucked helium from balloons and sung along to that song
every year. The sudden memory was so
vivid that her knees went weak and the sky seemed to dim.
After
what seemed like forever, Ursulina and Dean came back out, trailed by the
portly stranger. Only the stranger was
smiling. He proudly held out a cake
cutter he might have retrieved from the kitchen.
"Clear,"
Ursulina said. "No one in the
house. Looks like the family's out
back. We saw them through the
window."
"Kids?"
Sonia said, anxious.
Ursulina
nodded.
"Just
like I told you," the stranger said, and waved them all along the side of
the house. "Come on around. They're waiting."
The
little man bounced ahead of them to a back yard gate that lay open, waiting,
walking light on the balls of his feet.
Happy happy, joy joy. Could it be
contagious?
They
followed him around to the back. First
they passed a play set that looked almost new:
swings and a small slide. Next to
that, a tree house with both wood-slat ladders nailed into a bare-limbed apricot
tree, and a knotted rope that looked an inch and a half thick, now swaying in
the breeze. All of it looked like it
might have been constructed since Freak Day.
Past
the tree, Kendra finally saw the stranger's family. Three of them sat at a large red cedar picnic
table had been draped with a gaily-colored table cloth; two small girls and a woman with frizzy yellow hair. "One...two...three..." the girls were saying in piping unison, and
dissolving into giggles.
"One...two...three..."
The
others didn't see their approach because their backs were to them, all of them
wearing identical birthday hats, oblivious to the world around them. A small evergreen beside the table was strung
with tinsel and candy canes, and topped with a silver star. The table was piled with gaudily wrapped
boxes and what looked like mailing tubes.
How
had this family created an oasis when everything else was gone? The girls were laughing and eating cake with
their fingers, not waiting for their father to cut it.
Kendra
was close enough to Terry to hear him draw a startled breath. "I don't know if I want to laugh or
cry," he whispered to her. Kendra
wanted to do both. Her hand sought his,
their fingers twining together.
Everything seemed...so normal.
As if the devastation that had touched the rest of the world hadn't
quite penetrated here.
But
not quite. What was it? Suddenly,
Kendra knew, and felt a chill:
Why were they celebrating outside the house? The December air was cold, and only the
father was wearing a jacket. The others
were barely dressed, practically in rags.
What the--
The
sudden sound of Hipshot's urgent barking
made Kendra jump, startled. The
dog had followed them after all, standing between them and the picnic table.
"I
knew it..." Ursulina said, taking a step back. If not for the tremor in her voice, she'd
have sounded triumphant.
Now
that she was only twenty feet from the table, Kendra was close enough to see
the cords wound around the family's feet.
Dean
swung his rifle up. "What the hell
is going on?"
"Just
a party," the little man said, and when he turned, he seemed too bright,
too happy. Why hadn't they seen it? "Every day, we have a party. Can't wait for Christmas."
Their
kids and the mother turned toward them, their private party disturbed. Their eyes were reddish, their faces threaded
with tiny vines, like rogue veins, growing where no veins should grow. All three tried to lunge to their feet, but
they were held in place by cables fastened to their waists. They hissed and thrashed, but the girls made
laughing sounds.
"One...two...three..." they said in unison, twins even now.
The
girls might have been pretty once, but no more.
Their round cheeks and matted blonde hair were ghoulish. Kendra stood behind Terry, who had pulled out
his Browning 9mm. Sometimes, freaks
could talk! After the way she'd lost
Grandpa Joe, Kendra didn't think she could ever forget it, but those girls had
fooled her. What if one of them had been
too close?
Everyone who'd brought a gun
had it trained on someone. Terry's was
on the stranger.
"What
do you want from us?" Terry said, raising his voice to be heard over
Hipshot's ferocious growling and barking.
"Why'd you bring us back here?"
"The
girls were born on Christmas Day," he said. Now Kendra could hear his pain, grief,
shock. "We've always celebrated all
month, so they wouldn't feel cheated.
Can you help me give them their present? I know it's what they want."
Terry
backed up a step, and Kendra gladly backed up with him. Piranha cursed, and they formed an
instinctive half-circle to protect themselves, ready to fire and flee. His family was straining at the end of their
ropes now, mouths stretched wide, yearning, fingers questing.
"What
present?" Terry said, his voice unsteady.
"Man, you're crazy. You
can't help them. Let us make sure you're
not bit, and you can come with us. Leave
them here."
The
man shook his head, insistent. "I
need you to help me give them their present," he said, and his voice
broke. "I can't do it. Can't you see? Look at them!
Listen to my girls laughing! They
sound exactly the same. I want to,
but...I can't."
Those
might have been his sanest words yet, Kendra realized. Her throat swelled with grief for a family
she'd never known.
"Let's
get the hell out of here," Sonia said, tugging on Piranha.
But
Piranha didn't move. He was staring at
Terry. And Ursulina. For the first time Kendra could remember,
they didn't have a plan. They didn't
know what to do.
"She's
right," Kendra said. "Let's
go. We shouldn't have stopped."
Terry
shook his head, taking another step back.
"I'm sorry," he told the pleading man. "We can't help you."
But
Kendra's eyes were drawn to Ursulina, who was gazing at the kids with curled
lips and dead eyes. Then Ursulina looked
toward Dean, and their eyes locked with a spark of communication. A pair of barely perceptible nods between
them in an unspoken tongue that only they seemed to know.
Ursulina,
after all, had fought in a war when the barracks where they'd found her fell to
an army of freaks. And Dean's war had
followed him to his dreams; the war he'd fought at home.
"I
can do it," Dean said.
Ursalina
nodded. "Yeah. We can do this."
Dean
looked at Darius, who shook his head.
All jokes were far from Darius's face.
"Not me, bro," Darius said.
"I'm going back to my bike."
"Go
on," Dean said, nodding. "You
and the others wait for us."
"Sir?"
Terry gently to the man. "Step
around front with us, please. You don't want to be here right now."
Kendra
dared to hope that if she made it back to the bus fast enough and covered her
ears, she could pretend she'd never seen the bizarre Christmas scene in the
back yard. But she never had the chance.
The
stranger didn't come toward Terry.
Instead, he rushed to the picnic table, toward his wife and children,
his arms wide to embrace them. All
Kendra saw was the ecstatic grin on his face.
"I'm sorry, Melissa," he said.
"I'm sorry, Caitlin and Cathy.
Merry Christmas, angels. Happy
birthday!"
For
an instant, Kendra thought they were only trying to hug him too; they were all
wrapped in an iron embrace, a tangle of frantic limbs.
But
Kendra closed her eyes when she saw their teeth.
By
the time the gunshots finally came from Ursulina and Dean, she had been praying
for the sound of death.
© Copyright 2013 by Steven Barnes and Tananarive Due
© Copyright 2013 by Steven Barnes and Tananarive Due
DOMINO FALLS (Atria) is the sequel to DEVIL'S WAKE (2012). This zombie series is appropriate for adults and YA readers age 14 and older. For a daily newsletter from the zombiesphere, "The Devil's Wake Survivors' Daily," follow @ZombiesFreak on Twitter. You can also join the Devil's Wake Series page on Facebook.
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