“Lock ’em in,” Hadley said, and he was smiling as well. For now. He’d find something else to stress about soon.
Sitterson tapped a key and—
—Marty’s door slammed shut behind him. After the slam came the slide and
He gasped and held his breath, listening for more. Weak light from the single light reflected from one half of the window, making the darkness outside even more complete. The other half stood wide open. He’d unlatched and opened it earlier when he was laid back on his bed smoking pot, having some vague idea that the fumes could spread through the air outside and chill the forest. It had been a little too
“On the outside,” he muttered. But that felt wrong, too. He tried to recall what the doors looked like from out there, and he was pretty sure they were the same— just a handle, nothing else.
No keyhole.
No lock.
In which case…
The cabin shook again with another terrible impact. Curt cried out from somewhere and more glass broke, and Marty’s window suddenly seemed larger than ever. He moved then, slowly to begin with, two small, quiet steps, and then in his mind’s eye he saw zombie-girl’s face intruding through the window. He leapt the last few steps, grabbed the handle and pulled it close, flicking the latch to secure it shut. Something shattered behind him and he shouted, turning around and hardly prepared for what he might see.
He must have knocked the table with his leg as he rushed by, and the lamp on top had wobbled and smashed after he’d turned the latch.
He looked down.
It was a moment that punched him in the gut. Amongst all the chaos, thumping, shouting from outside, and his own terrified panting, it was the sight of the smallest thing that finally succeeded in knocking Marty’s breath out of him.
The remains of the china lamp were splayed across the floor, and from its plastic heart a white cable led to the plug socket in the wall. The bulb had survived— shielded from impact by the bent-out-of-shape shade— and in its glare he saw a
It was thin and black, and there was something about it that seemed all wrong.
The wire snaked through the remains of the broken lamp, its end pointing directly at him.
He bent and picked up the wire, squinting at its end, and thought,
Curt’s weird behavior.
Jules’s brutal death.
“Oh, man,” he muttered.
“That’s deep,” Hadley said. “‘Oh, man.’”
“He’s not there for his philosophical insightfulness.” The guy’s face filled the screen now as he stared into the hi-tech camera, distorted by the closeness to the domed end of the cable, and for the first time ever Sitterson experienced a glimmer of fear.
He shoved it quickly down. He wasn’t here to empathize.
But he couldn’t ignore the obvious.
“Uh-oh,” he said, “that’s not good.”
Hadley flipped down the microphone on his headphones and flicked a switch. “Chem, I need five hundred cc’s of Thorazine pumped into room three,
“No no no,” Sitterson said, because he’d seen movement elsewhere.
Sitterson checked a few settings and smiled.
“Judah Buckner to the rescue,” he said. And the brief pity he’d had for the kid was eaten away by the sight of Buckner’s zombified face.
He could have mouthed obscenities or flipped them the finger, but that wouldn’t do anything to help him right now.
Now, he needed answers, and perhaps some clue as to how the hell they could
As he pulled the wire taut and started following it around the room—across the floor, along the skirting to the corner, then up to where a small hole was drilled in the ceiling’s corner—the realization dawned that he’d been made to look like a complete dick.
He stared up at the ceiling and smiled.
“Oh my God, I’m on a reality TV show.” Every breath they took, the booze they’d drunk, the almost biblical amount of pot he’d already smoked, the kissing couple on the sofa, everything was for public consumption. The stuff in the cellar really
Those things outside, the zombies, Jules’s death and her head rolling about on the floor like that… all of that was thrown in just to scare the shit out of them.
“My parents are gonna think I’m such a burnout.” And then he realized that he’d be the one they’d be focusing on right now, and if they didn’t want him to ruin everything for the others, they’d have to—
The window behind him smashed, and Marty aimed a knowing smile at the fiber optic cable still in his hand.
He turned to the window, ready to see the cameras and the presenter, so sun-baked that he or she had passed tanned and entered somewhere into the orange spectrum. Microphones thrust at him, producers with fingers at their lips silently pleading for him to
And though he felt cruel and immature even thinking about it, he couldn’t wait to see what a job they’d made on the fake Marty-Slashed-Up-And-Dead mannequin.
The zombie wasn’t quite as tall as the big one they’d seen outside, but his face was about ten times as horrific.
The fingers squeezed hard and Marty felt things