Behind me I heard shots-the rapid buzz of automatic fire. The discipline the girls had shown on the piers had evaporated in the face of a dark hallway full of death. Was it Ayaan, I wondered, or had they already got her? I dashed forward into the dark and pushed open a set of swinging doors to find myself in the other elevator lobby, facing the other emergency stairway.
I looked back. I pushed open the doors and ran my flashlight over the corridor beyond, searched for any signs of pursuit. “Girls?” I called, knowing it would attract the dead but also knowing I couldn’t just leave them behind, not if there was a chance of regrouping with them. “Ayaan?”
In the very far distance I heard someone shouting in Somali. She was yelling too rapidly for me to make out any of the words in my limited vocabulary. I listened, craning my head forward as if I could hear better if I could get closer to the sound, but no gunfire or screams followed. Just silence.
“Ayaan,” I called, knowing I was alone.
I gave her the time it took me to breathe ten long breaths and then I tried to push open the stairwell door. It resisted so I put my shoulder into it and finally it budged, opening maybe two or three inches. It must have been blocked from the other side. I kicked furiously at it which didn’t seem to help at all.
Halfway down the corridor to my right I heard something come roaring toward me. I stabbed out with my flashlight and saw a rolling cart spinning slowly until it collided with a wall. Farther up the passage my light speared a pile of bedclothes, thick with dried blood.
No. Not bedclothes. A woman in a blue paper hospital gown. Dead, of course. Her hair was so fine and sparse it looked like silken threads tied to her mottled scalp. In the yellow flare of my flashlight her skin showed up as a pale green. She didn’t have any eyes. I realized in a second what had happened. Coming down the hallway toward me she had stumbled against the rolling cart and fallen to the floor. Even if she couldn’t see me she knew I was there. I guess she could smell me.
Slowly, achingly she began to rise to her feet, bracing herself against the wall with one unfeeling arm.
I pushed again at the unyielding door to the fire stairs but it just wouldn’t move. I shoved my AK-47 into the gap I’d made and tried to pry open the door. I felt it give a little… and then a little more. The dead woman was on her feet at this point and walking toward me. She was stooped and she walked with a pronounced stiffness in her legs. I kept my flashlight on her all the time as I heaved and heaved against the stock of the rifle. Finally the door sprang open and I saw what had been blocking it-a heavy metal bookshelf. Judging by the bloodstains on the floor of the landing someone had barricaded themselves in the stairwell. Unsuccessfully.
I didn’t worry about that. I pushed past it and raced down the stairs and into the hallways of the ground floor. I kept running until I could see daylight ahead through the emergency room doors. I had no idea if any of the girls were still alive but I knew that at that moment I couldn't be of any help to them at all.
David Wellington - Monster Island
Monster Island
Chapter Thirteen
A bullet panged off the passenger-side door and the car rocked on its tires. The Volkswagen’s windshield had a long silver crack running across its width but it hadn’t broken yet.Gary assumed a fetal position in the leg well of the driver’s seat and tried not to make a sound.
The demented girl scouts or whatever they were had spotted him and opened fire before he could say a word. He’d tried to run away but he was pinned between two hazards: the boat on the river with its sniper ready to shoot anything that moved, and these heavily-armed schoolgirls who had taken over half of theWestVillage. It was inevitable that he would be spotted and so he had. He’d barely had time to take cover in the abandoned car before they started spraying the neighborhood down with lead. He was pretty sure they didn’t have a fix on him, though, that they were just firing blind. He was pretty sure they would eventually leave, if he could stay perfectly still and not give himself away. Which, considering his current state of health (undead), seemed entirely doable.