hunting along the bottom of the Chesapeake Bay the same way they hunted through the city’s streets? Couldn’t they just walk along the bottom, feeding off fish and crabs until they reached the ocean itself? And then what? Sharks versus zombies? The image was ridiculous, but what if? What if…
What if Hamelin’s Revenge spread to the sea life?
“They can’t reach us now,” Malik shouted. “Nothing can get us out here!”
Tasha hugged him and he hugged her back. Both of them smiled. I turned back toward the land and watched the city burning. Stared at the orange-and-red skyline. By morning, there would be nothing left. Baltimore would be a smoldering pile of ashes. Port Discovery and the section of the city that housed popular bars like Ramshead and Howl at the Moon were obscured by smoke. The trade center and the Harbor Place shops belched flames. Yesterday, the skyline had been made up of tall buildings: offices, parking garages, banks, muse urns and apartment complexes. Now, it was composed of towering torches, each of them a blazing inferno. The city skyline looked like a row of Roman candles. And below them, growing smaller with every minute as the
“I’ll tell you one thing, kids.”
Tasha looked up at me. “What’s that, Mr. Reed?”
“Lamar. Call me Lamar.”
“Okay. What are you thinking, Lamar?”
“That this was the longest getaway I’ve ever seen.”
“Doesn’t matter,” Tasha said. “We’re safe now. Like Malik said, they can’t get us out here.”
The dead watched us leave. More of them tumbled into the water. Birds squawked above us. The sky was full of smoke, obscuring the moon and the stars. The ocean itself seemed lifeless. No fish leaping from the water or dolphins following the boat. Just the waves, and even those seemed small. The ship’s engines throbbed as we picked up speed. The bay’s surface was black, but the full moon lit a silvery path for us. The flames reflected off the waves. Then a cloud passed over the moon and the gradually lights vanished. Under the cover of darkness, we sailed out onto a dead sea.
Chapter Five
I don’t remember much about that first night onboard the
Mitch pulled a small rifle cleaning kit out of his backpack and went to work on the guns, using long cotton swabs to get the debris and residue out of the barrels, and then oiling them down. He explained each step to the three of us as he went along, so that we’d be able to do it, too. When he was finished, he stowed our weapons beneath his mattress and slid one pistol under his pillow. He didn’t unload his backpack; instead, he stuffed it between his rack and the bulkhead. Then he took off his boots and lay down. We all did the same. Each bed had a tiny feather pillow, one sheet, and a thin gray blanket that felt like it was made out of horse hair—very rough and scratchy. They smelled musty and mildewed.
“This pillow stinks,” I complained.
“Mine does, too.” Tasha wrinkled her nose. “Smells like a zombie.”
“They should,” Mitch said. “They’ve probably been sitting on this boat for the last twenty years.”
I propped myself up on one elbow. “What do you mean?”
“This is a museum ship,” he explained. “The
“Okay,” I said, “but what’s that got to do with why these pillows smell funky?”
“Think about it, Lamar. This is a museum. A tourist attraction. How long have you lived in Baltimore?”
I shrugged. “All my life.”
“And in all that time you never took a tour of the ships? Not even when the
“No. I mean, I knew about them. Knew a little of their history. But I never toured one.”
“Damn. Well, I guess I can’t say anything. All the years I lived in Towson, I never came downtown and visited Edgar Allan Foe’s grave.”
That told me something about him. Towson was the suburbs, way out on the edge of the city. I wondered what had brought Mitch down into Fells Point.
“Were you a fan of Foe’s?” I asked.
“Sure. Read the shit out of him when I was in the ninth grade. My grandfather gave me a big collection of all his stories. My favorite was always “The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym.’” He chuckled. “It takes place on a boat, now that I think about it—a ship sailing to the South Pole.”
“So if you dug the man’s work, why not visit his grave?”
“Didn’t feel like getting shot. That’s a bad area of town, isn’t it?”
I shrugged again. “When you actually live down here in the city, all of it’s a bad area, Mitch. That’s just how things are. You get used to it.”
“Yeah,” he said. “I guess I can see that.”
But I knew he’d never really understand it. He couldn’t. He had no frame of reference; only what he’d watched on episodes of
“Well,” Mitch continued, “the
“You mean—”
“That’s right. Your pillow stinks because thousands of tourists have walked through here over the years and got their funk on it. Housewives from Illinois saying, ‘Hey, George, lay down on the bed just like a sailor would and I’ll take your picture with the kids.’ Think about it.”
My nose wrinkled. “That’s gross.”
Exhausted from our ordeal, Tasha and Malik fell asleep soon after. Mitch and I lay there in the darkness, not