“I write stuff down,” I said. “I just like to write.”
“Bet there’s stuff about me in there,” he said and he grabbed the journal from me.
“Come on!” I said, jumping to my feet.
He held it behind his back, an arm’s length away.
When I tried to grab it, he’d switch it to the other hand.
It was a scene straight out of first grade.
“I bet there’s stuff about all of us,” Brayden taunted. “Especially Astrid.”
I would’ve killed him if she’d overheard that. But she was off with the kids.
You know, you’d think that being locked in a Greenway during the end of the world would bring out the best in everyone, but—surprise!—Brayden was still an a-hole and a bully.
Brayden tore a page out and squinted at it, keeping the rest held above his head and out of my reach.
“Jeez, man, this stuff is dark,” he said, reading to himself.
“You’re such a jerk, Brayden!” I shouted. “How can you still be this immature?”
“Brayden, drop it,” Jake commanded.
“Don’t you want to know what it says about you, Simonsen?”
“I SAID DROP IT!” Jake shouted.
Brayden jumped. We all did.
Jake was standing, squared off to Brayden, with his hands in fists. His good-natured smile was gone. He was pissed.
“Whatever,” Brayden said and tossed the notebook to the end of the aisle.
“You gotta learn when to lay off, man,” Jake said with a rumble.
“Dude, I apologize,” Brayden said to Jake, palms turned up in an appeal. He shrugged. “For real. Sorry.”
Did I call Brayden a dick under my breath as I scrambled over the fallen books to retrieve my journal?
Of course I did.
And then there came this thin, tinny sound. Like a fire alarm or a siren. But it was coming from inside and it was getting louder.
It was Ulysses.
He was screaming and running for us.
We ran toward him and then we could hear the melee from the bathroom. Shrieking and screaming and inhuman sounds.
Niko pushed the door open.
The little children had gone crazy.
The McKinley twins were hiding under the sinks.
Chloe was sitting on Max and had her teeth sunk into his scalp. There was blood on the ground.
They were screaming and crying and attacking each other.
But Astrid.
She had Batiste by the throat, up against the wall.
Her face was red. The veins in her throat were throbbing, huge. She looked like a bull.
And Batiste was getting killed. He was getting strangled to death and I hope you never see it because it is a horrible thing to see. His face was blue and his eyes were big and his legs were limp.
Niko and Jake were on her in a flash and they pulled her off him. She fought and thrashed and bit and punched and I wanted to watch and I wanted to join in and I could feel my blood rising, hard, when I was jerked out of there by a set of hands.
Sahalia, if you can believe it.
“You stay out of there, rage boy,” she told me.
And I would have ripped her head off, but I had had only a little whiff of the stuff, so I forced myself to walk away. I walked off down an aisle and got myself to breathe.
Niko came out, holding a screaming, writhing Chloe.
“It’s the water,” Niko said. “The chemicals are coming in through the water.”
He was starting to blister up.
“I’m okay,” I told him through my teeth. “I can help.” I took Chloe’s hands. She was trying to claw me. She struggled and cried and tried to bite me. But I was much stronger—stronger than I normally am. The whiffs of compound coming off her were sweet to me. And the fury in her was met with my own fury.
Chloe was such an annoying kid anyway, it was a pleasure to restrain her. I’m ashamed to write that, but it is the truth. I held her fat little wrists with a big, mean smile on my face.
Niko was starting to blister again.
“Go get Benadryl,” I told him.
He ran, tripping, down the aisle.
“Be right back,” he shouted.
Sahalia came out with the McKinley twins, who were clearly hallucinating and freaking out. You couldn’t make out their words—they were just clutching each other and screaming.
Max came behind next, sobbing and pressing his hands onto his bleeding scalp.
“The water’s off,” Sahalia huffed.
Jake burst through the doors with Batiste in his arms. Batiste’s head lolled on his shoulders.
“Clear some space,” Jake said. “He’s not breathing.”
Brayden came forward. I hadn’t realized he was not in the bathroom. He’d been somewhere behind us in the aisles.
A coward.
“I know CPR,” Brayden said and he knelt down beside Batiste. But then he looked up, suddenly clammy and afraid. Maybe the compounds were taking effect. I guess I can give him the benefit of the doubt.
“So do I,” Niko said. He moved into Brayden’s space as Brayden gratefully slid aside.
Niko put his mouth over Batiste’s blue lips and huffed into him, like Batiste was a dying campfire. It didn’t take long, thank God. I don’t think Niko could have done it for long.
As it was, Niko started coughing and it was a wet sound.
A couple of long breaths, a couple of gentle but confident pushes on Batiste’s skinny rib cage, and his eyes fluttered. He took a jagged breath. And then another.
I watched Brayden, watching Niko. It was jealousy on his face, mixed with regret. Maybe fear, too. But mostly jealousy.
Meanwhile, Jake wrestled Astrid out of the bathroom.
Her shirt was torn and she was bleeding from the ear.
“I need like rope or something!” Jake shouted. Astrid bucked and screamed. She elbowed Jake in the side of the head and he lost his grip.
She broke away and lurched from him. She slipped, but regained her balance and ran off into one of the dark aisles.
Astrid cast one last look at us and I read horror in her eyes.
We had five weeping grammar school kids, contaminated to some degree with chemical warfare compounds.
Now, anyway, we knew who was which blood type.
In addition to the beating he’d received from Chloe, Max was also starting to blister up (type A). The McKinley twins were hiding from us—they clearly had the paranoia (type AB). Ulysses was chattering to himself in Spanish, a rapid-fire monologue that made me pretty sure he had the paranoid type—type AB—as well as the twins.
Batiste had type B, the blood type that exhibited no symptoms, as did Alex, Jake, and Sahalia (sterility and reproductive failure—hooray!).
“We have to get them clean,” Brayden said.
“You think?” I sort of shouted at him (type O).