Who, p.16
Who:,
p.16
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so maybe they were still at school."
Maylee flipped open the phone and looked at the screen.
Message: Lori, it said.
"Hey," said Maylee.
Either Mom didn't hear or was ignoring her. "Do you even
know what school they were going to?"
Maylee pressed a button on the phone to open the text message.
Ella?, it said.
"How would I fucking know what school they were going to?"
said Park.
Who is this?, Maylee typed and sent.
Your sister. No time for joking around.
Maylee frowned and typed. I'm not Ella.
"Oh I don't know, Parker," said Mom from the front seat,
steering the car. "Maybe you would know something about them
through the magical power of being their fucking father!"
Who is this? said the phone.
"Guys!" said Maylee. No one listened. She frowned and typed
as fast she could. My name's Maylee. I'm with your dad.
Gregory? Here with me.
No, your real dad. Parker. We found your sister's phone. Where
are you?
"Oh don't you dare start up with that shit!" said Park. "Just
because you think you're mother-fucking parent of the year or some
shit."
"Guys!" shouted Maylee, staring at the phone. No one listened.
The phone buzzed as a new message came in.
At the zoo. Ella must've left her phone at home. We're both
here. Gregory has me tied up, won't let me go.
Maylee typed, moving her thumbs over the small keypad as
accurately as she could. Let me call you. You can talk to your dad.
No time. He's coming. Gotta go.
Then the phone was silent.
"You're no fucking parent at all!" yelled Mom. "The only
reason you even fucking know where they fucking live is because
you're legally obligated to be told!"
"Guys!" Maylee yelled at the top of her voice. The car fell
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silent. Dalton stared at her.
"Goddammit what, Maylee?" yelled Mom.
Maylee held the phone out toward the front seat. "I know where
they are."
* * *
Ella paced the Communications Office, her arms wrapped
tightly around her frame. She hated that she was back in the office
without Lori. She hated that she was pacing again. She'd made no
progress whatsoever.
She shuddered, feeling free to do it since the room was empty.
She remembered the old man gripping her, the crazy woman yelling at
her. How long had it been? Two days? Did people lose their minds that
quickly? And what was wrong with the animals? They used to love her.
Ella heard Caleb and Shelley talking from the breakroom. They
spoke quietly to each other, sounding scared. Caleb and Shelley were
the only ones in the breakroom. The three of them were the only ones
in the whole office. All the other Keepers were at the Bites.
Lee and the Keepers had won. The crowd, tired of being
drugged or killed, had panicked and broken up. Lee and the Keepers
had taken over the Bites, high-fiving each other and laughing. Ella had
seen it on one of the screens Caleb used.
Ella paced faster. She was scared and angry. Where was her
sister? What were Caleb and Shelley going to do to help find her? They
were older than Ella, but they were just as scared as she was.
They were hurt, too. Ella stepped over to the breakroom and
stood in the doorway. Caleb and Shelley sat at one of the tables, leaning
toward each other and talking. Caleb clutched one of his arms. Shelley
had bruises on her face. Ella was the only one of the three who was
unhurt. Caleb no longer wore his Keeper vest. He'd left it slung over
one of the chairs in the main room. Ella wondered if it meant Caleb was
done being in charge. So who was left?
They didn't notice her standing there.
Ella shook her head and paced back into the Communications
Office. She sighed at the screens, all showing different aspects of the
zoo. She could see more animals biting and growling. Stomping their
feet angrily at nothing.
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Her eyes landed on one screen, showing a still image of the
street outside the zoo. Ella suddenly remembered. Caleb had been
showing her the recording of the night Stepdad brought Lori back to the
zoo. The night everything had gone insane.
She stepped over to the screen and stared at it. It was paused
and frozen in place. She briefly considered calling to Caleb. Asking
him to unpause it. But no. He was hurt and scared. Ella could do it.
Ella looked at the panel below the screen, confused by the dials
and buttons. There were too many to make sense of. But there was a
button that was blinking. Ella shrugged and clicked it.
The image unfroze and continued.
First it showed nothing new. Just the same view of the street.
Then a man came into frame. Ella blinked and recognized it as
Gregory. He pulled a teen girl after him. The image was blurry but Ella
could tell it was Lori. Lori struggled as Gregory tried to lead her across
the street.
The image was silent but Ella saw Lori yell something at
Gregory. Gregory turned to her and yelled back. It made Ella's chest
constrict. Stepdad never yelled like that. Lori's face was too blurry to
make out full expressions, but Ella knew she was scared. Ella wished
she could climb into the recording and knock Stepdad in the head. Free
Lori from him.
Gregory pulled on Lori, trying to force her across the street.
Lori wrenched away, screaming something at him. Gregory stepped
over and slapped her across the face.
Hard.
Ella gasped, stepping back from the screen. Fury built in her.
She'd have smashed the screen in if she believed there was the slightest
chance of it somehow hurting him.
She was done. She stepped back up and clicked the button she'd
used before. The image froze and the button resumed blinking. In the
image, Lori had her head turned, still reacting to the force of the slap.
Stepdad's arm was extended in the follow-through of the slap.
Ella looked toward the breakroom, breathing through her teeth.
Caleb and Shelley would try to stop her. She couldn't ask them. She
couldn't even tell them.
She'd find Lori herself.
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She walked to the chair with Caleb's vest slung over it. She felt
in the front pocket until she found his keycard. She slipped it into her
jeans pocket and strode toward the door that led out.
She opened it as quietly as she could, bracing as cold wet air
rushed in. She looked back toward the breakroom and listened. Caleb
and Shelley were still talking quietly. No sign they'd heard.
Ella looked back at the paused screen. At the frozen image of
Gregory striking Lori.
"Fuck you, Stepdad," whispered Ella. She stepped outside and
shut the door.
Eight
Angie pulled the car into the lot of Ashton Memorial Zoo. It
was clogged full of cars, parked at odd angles. Cars were crushed into
others, blocking any way through. Angie only got the car in a few feet
before she had to stop.
She pushed the shifter into park and drummed her fingers on
the steering wheel. Night was falling. Light rain drummed on the
windshield. "Gee," she said. "And I thought parking was a bitch the last
time I brought the kids here."
Park nodded, staring out at the lot. "Okay. Just let me out here.
I'll find them."
"Don't be a fucking moron, Parker," said Angie. "I'll help you."
"And do what?" said Park, turning to her. "Leave the kids in the
car? Or will you bring them with you? Either way's not safe. These are
my kids. My issue. You get the fuck out of here."
Angie frowned at him, then looked at Maylee and Dalton in the
back seat. Dalton was staring out the side window. Maylee was
clutching her bat and looking very serious. Like she was straining to
appear adult.
Park had a point. But she didn't have the slightest idea what to
do about it.
"We'll come, too, Mom," said Maylee, leaning forward. "I'll
protect Dalton. We'll be safe."
Angie sighed back at her. "Maylee..."
Dalton looked at her. The bruise on his forehead still looked
angry. "We have to help Mr. Park, Mom."
Angie looked at him, then at Park. Park shrugged. "You know
what I think," said Park. "So whatever you want to do."
Angie took in a deep breath and let it out. "Fine. We're going. If
the kids are in the zoo, they must have it locked down or something. If
we can get inside, it'll be safer than here. We can decide what to do in
the morning."
Maylee nodded.
"But," Angie said, turning around in the seat and giving Maylee
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her best stern look, "you be more careful than you've ever been in your
life. You stay the hell away from anything that even looks like a
corpse."
Maylee frowned but nodded. "Fine."
Angie nodded back. "Good."
They all opened their doors and climbed from the car. Cold rain
pelted Angie's head. She looked toward the front entrance. Cars
clogged the whole way. It would be a long, winding walk.
She looked at Park, who took the rifle from his shoulder and
nodded.
"Okay," said Angie. "Let's go."
They slowly started working their way through the cars. They
squeezed between bumpers and worked their way around hoods and
trunks. Dalton was still limping, Maylee helping him along. Angie
made sure they all stayed together. The light patter of rain on metal was
the only sound.
They reached a spot they couldn't get past. Three cars had
crashed into each other, crushed together so close there was no opening
they could get through.
"Here," said Park, stepping up onto the hood of one of the cars.
He looked around, then took a step. The car bounced under his weight.
Groaning came from the front seat.
Park spun to face the windshield. Angie moved to block the car
from the kids. Inside she saw a man crushed against the steering wheel.
His ribcage was exposed, bone crunched around the plastic and steel.
He tried to pull free, straining to reach Park. His ribs caught on the
steering wheel, red glop falling from his chest with each tug.
"Shit," said Park, stepping back. The hood crunched under his
boots. The metal creaked and groaned loudly.
Moans came from all around. Angie whipped her head from
side to side, looking for the source. A chill gripped her as she realized
the source was the cars surrounding them. She cursed herself for being
so stupid. There'd been a panic in the parking lot. People rushing to get
out. People crashing into each other. People dying. Dying and...
Maylee screamed. Angie whipped around to see a corpse
reaching from a car and clutching Maylee's hair. Maylee twisted away
and smacked the hand aside with her bat. A second corpse reached
from another car, almost snagging Dalton.
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"Look out!" yelled Angie just as a hand closed on the back of
her shirt. It yanked her backward, toward the nearest car.
"Mom!" yelled Maylee, running forward.
Angie twisted her head around. A woman, forehead split and
embedded with glass, leaned from the car and gnashed her teeth as she
pulled Angie closer. Angie pulled back but the awkward angle kept her
from getting any traction.
Maylee's bat slammed downward, narrowly missing Angie's
head. The bat slammed into the corpse's arm. Angie heard bone snap
and the corpse let go. Angie fell forward against the car Park stood on.
"Up here!" Park yelled, kneeling down to reach for Angie.
Angie straightened and stepped back. She grabbed Maylee and
Dalton and pushed them toward Park. "On the car! Hurry!"
Maylee and Dalton climbed onto the hood of the car. Park
helped them up. Once they were up, Angie followed. She stood and
pulled her kids close. Corpses groaned and reached from all around,
bloody arms and heads protruding from windows.
"Fuck," she said, looking around. "What now?"
"We go car to car," said Park. "Don't see what else we can do."
He stepped across the hood and hopped to the nearest trunk. It buckled
under his weight. A corpse in the back window groaned and reached for
him, but was unable to break free of the window.
"See your point," said Angie. She motioned Maylee and Dalton
to follow. "Go. Hurry."
Maylee nodded. She hopped to the next car and helped Dalton
limp across. Park backed up and climbed on the roof of the car to make
room. The corpse reached upward for him. He kicked the hand away,
cursing. Maylee and Dalton backed up for Angie to follow. Angie did,
jumping to the trunk and wincing as the car bounced under their
weight.
"Okay," she said. "Good job guys. Let's keep it up until we're
clear. And be careful!"
They climbed across, and jumped to the next car, keeping clear
of the reaching corpse. They slowly climbed across the next car,
watching the old man inside as he bit and clawed at the windshield, at
them. The rain increased, slamming down cold and hard on the cars.
Groans and the sound of rain on metal filled Angie's ears.
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Park climbed across the hood of the car and jumped to the hood
of a nearby truck. He ran up onto the roof and turned to look back. He
motioned for them to follow.
Maylee stepped up to the edge of the hood, helping Dalton
along with her. Dalton waved her away and made the jump himself. He
let out a little cry when he landed and Park caught him.
"Dalton!" yelled Angie.
"I'm fine, Mom!" yelled Dalton, wincing and bouncing on his
good foot.
"You need to let your sister help you, bubba," said Park,
stepping back to make room for Maylee.
"Yeah," said Maylee, stepping forward. She jumped and landed
on the hood of the truck. Her sneakers gave off a squeaking noise as
they slipped out from under her. She stumbled and began to fall off the
truck.
"Maylee!" yelled Angie, jumping across and catching her arm.
Maylee jerked to a stop, straining Angie's back. Angie almost slipped
herself. Park grabbed her shoulder and pulled them both up.
Angie hugged Maylee and looked over the side. A corpse was
leaning out of a nearby window. It looked back at her with yellowed
eyes and hissed. Maylee would have fallen straight into that thing.
"Goddammit, Maylee, be careful," Angie whispered, hugging
her.
"I will Mom, I will," said Maylee, pushing away. She gripped
the bat and drew herself up but Angie could see fear in her eyes.
"Just a few more," said Park.
Angie turned to follow Park's gaze across the remainder of the
lot. She wasn't so sure she'd call it "a few," but they were over halfway
to the end. The rain was coming even harder now, cold and pelting.
Angie felt her shoes slowly slide along the metal of the hood. "We've
gotta keep moving. Soon we won't be able to keep our feet at all."
The next few cars went without incident. They jumped from
hood to trunk, car top to car top. Corpses groaned and reached but they
were able to stay clear.
"Just one more," said Angie as they caught their footing on the
back of an old truck. Park nodded and they slowly climbed over the top
of the truck to the rain-slick hood. Angie struggled to keep her footing.
Park steadied himself and jumped to the hood of the next car. It
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131
crumpled as he landed. The car had a broken and bloody windshield,
with red-stained cracks running along its surface. Behind it, Angie
could see rotting hands working their way along the inside. Reaching
for them, slow but relentless.
Park looked at the hands for a moment, as though making sure
the corpse behind them was safely trapped in the car. After several
seconds he turned to Angie and nodded.
"Okay, guys," said Angie. "Go."
Maylee jumped. Angie winced at the sound of Maylee's shoes
squeaking on the hood of the car. Maylee kept her footing and reached
back for Dalton. Dalton took Maylee's hand and hopped across. He let
