29
I WANTED TO DO A TRIAL RUN, SLIPPING OUT OF
DEADTOWN and getting into position at Boylston Street, before we
had to do it for real. The sun had set on Deadtown an hour ago, so
the containment order was now in force. We still had several hours
left before curfew. Now was the time to give our plan a try.
I called Tina and asked her to come over and stay
with Mab. She let out a whoop of excitement before she cleared her
throat and tallied up another favor I owed her, so I didn’t think I
was inconveniencing her too much. Then I called Clyde and told him
I was expecting her, so he wouldn’t get too apoplectic when she
breezed past his desk.
Next, weapons. To make the trial run as close to
the real thing as possible, I needed to arm myself the way I
planned to be armed tomorrow night. I unlocked my weapons cabinet
and made my selections. I strapped on a double shoulder holster and
filled it with pistols: bronze bullets on the right, silver on the
left. Two thigh sheaths held daggers: I stuck with the pattern of
bronze on the right and silver on the left. I slid a silver
throwing knife into each boot. Last, I strapped on a vertical back
sheath designed for the Sword of Saint Michael. It held the sword
straight up-and-down, the hilt behind my neck. To draw it, I just
had to reach back, grab the hilt, and pull the sword up and out in
an arc, I practiced a couple of times.
A knock sounded on the door. “Just a minute!” I
called. I took a coat from my closet—the coat was leather and
midcalf length, with a hood—and pulled it on. I flipped up the hood
to hide the hilt of my sword. Then I answered the door.
Tina came in, carrying a thermos. “Chicken soup,”
she said. “For your aunt. My mom used to make it for me when I got
sick.”
I took the thermos. “Feels kind of light.”
“I only had a little, to make sure it tasted okay.”
I set the thermos on the coffee table as she made a beeline for the
kitchen. “Did you get a chance to buy more ice cream? Because—” She
stopped and spun on her heel, gawking at me. “What are you
wearing?”
“My coat. I’m taking Killer out again.”
“No, no, no. You can’t wear that. You look like
Little Goth Riding Hood.” She came over, examining me.
“The coat is fine. I’m going—”
“Well, at least don’t pull the hood up like that.
Here . . .” She yanked on the hood, pulling it down and exposing
the hilt of my sword. Her eyes grew wider. “You’re carrying a sword
to walk your dog?” Her hand flashed out, and she pulled my coat
half off my shoulder. “Oh my God, you are totally armed.
Where are you really going? To fight some demons?”
No need to tell Tina I was sneaking out of Deadtown
in violation of the containment order. “Yeah, that’s right. I’ve
got a quick demon extermination to take care of. I’ll be back
before curfew.”
I headed for the door. Tina stepped in front of
me.
“What kind? I’ve been studying. Go ahead—quiz
me.”
“Um, Harpies. I don’t have time to quiz you now.” I
pulled my hood back up.
“Harpies, really?” She wrinkled her nose. “Those
weapons are, like, total overkill for fighting revenge demons. What
are you going to do with that big sword, shish-kebab them?” She
lifted the side of my coat. I slapped it back down. And you’re
carrying silver, too—what’s that supposed to do against
Harpies?”
What a time for Tina to get all smart about demon
fighting.
“Gotta go,” I said. “Come on, Killer.” I opened the
door. Kane, wearing Roxana’s charm, shot out from wherever he’d
been hiding and ran to the hall. I was right behind him.
“You’re taking your dog on a demon
extermination? What—?”
I shut the door on her incredulous face.
There’s a saying that a little learning is a
dangerous thing. But who’d have thought that Tina’s little bit of
learning about demons would be so dangerous to my sanity?
DEADTOWN’S STREETS WERE CROWDED. NOT ONLY HAD
every single resident returned to Designated Area 1, they all
seemed to be rushing to get groceries and light bulbs and beer and
whatever other emergency supplies they thought they’d need before
curfew confined them to their homes.
We pushed through the crowds and made our way to
the side street where Kane’s network of secret tunnels began. There
were so many people around, I thought I’d never get a chance to
pull open the bulkhead door and slip inside. Kane sat on the
ground, and I lounged against the wall, trying to look nonchalant.
Of course, since everyone else was out running errands, standing
still made me stick out as much as a huge boulder in the middle of
a rushing stream. Zombies shot curious glances my way as they
passed.
One man stopped in his tracks as he came even with
us. He turned his head sharply, nostrils flaring. Uh-oh.
Werewolf. And he smelled Kane. A charm wouldn’t disguise his scent
to one of his own kind.
Kane stood, hackles rising with him. He barked
sharply. Then he lowered his head and growled.
The werewolf stepped back. He glanced at me.
“Sorry,” he muttered, and hurried away.
“Nice dominance display,” I told Kane. He sat and
thumped his tail. I wished it had been that easy with the werewolf
bachelorettes.
After several more minutes of waiting, the crowd
thinned and I saw our chance. I grabbed the handle to the bulkhead
door and pulled. And nearly wrenched my back. I pulled again. The
door was locked.
“Is there another way in?”
Kane shook his head.
“Okay, let’s try plan B.” Always have a contingency
plan.
I led the way to Deadtown’s northern boundary,
where there was a dead spot in the electric fence. What I found was
a big, new sign that read: DANGER. HIGH VOLTAGE. DO NOT TOUCH. I
didn’t stand around long wondering if the sign was for real. A moth
flitted past, attracted by portable floodlights trained on Deadtown
from the other side. It bumped the wire, and got zapped into
oblivion.
So much for our contingency plan.
“THERE MUST BE SOME WAY OUT,” I SAID. WE
WERE IN THE bedroom, having a strategy meeting with Mab. Tina was
in the kitchen, cleaning up. Again. I could hardly believe
it.
“You could shift,” Mab said. “Become a bird, for
example, and fly over the fence. Although there would be several
drawbacks.”
“I’ve thought about those. I couldn’t carry out any
weapons, and there’s no telling how long the shift would last.” Not
to mention I’d wake up naked in some strange place, perhaps miles
away from my goal. My human mind and personality didn’t have much
control over whatever animal I shifted to, so if the bird decided
it was time to fly up north to its nesting grounds in Nova Scotia,
that’s what it would do.
“What about the man who made my ID? Can he
help?”
“I already called him. He can smuggle documents,
but not people. He didn’t have a clue.”
My shoulders sagged. Kane, lying on the floor, put
his head on his paws.
“Think, child. We must get you past the
boundary.”
The door opened, and Tina stuck her head in. “Is
that all you want to do? Get out of Deadtown?”
“Tina, this is a private conversation,” I
said.
“Sorry, I couldn’t help overhearing.”
“Through a closed door?”
Mab held up a hand. “Let her speak, Victory. We
need all the ideas we can get.”
Tina came in and sat at the foot of the bed. “I
sneak out of Deadtown all the time. It’s easiest in the winter,
because then everyone’s all bundled up with hats and scarves and
stuff and nobody can even tell you’re a zombie.”
“Are you thinking of that dead spot in the north
fence?” I asked. “Because it’s got lots of juice now.”
“I’ve used that spot, but there are lots of other
ways.” She bit her lip and looked at each of us, considering.
“Okay, I’m not supposed to tell anybody this, but there’s this
club. We sneak out of Deadtown and visit different places in
Boston. It’s fun.” Sort of like a zombie version of the urban
exploration club Roxana mentioned.
“Tina, do you know how much trouble you’d be in if
you got caught outside of Deadtown without a permit? They’d call in
the Removal Squad.” Zombies who got removed were never heard from
again. And that was true even when there wasn’t a containment order
in place.
She shrugged. “So we don’t get caught.”
“And right now it’s too dangerous. They’ve fixed
the electric fence. They’ve added police patrols. They’ve even
called in the National Guard.” I turned to Mab. “I’ll have to
shift. It’s not ideal, but it’s the only way.”
“It’s not the only way. Some of us are
sneaking out tomorrow night.” Tina flipped her hair behind her
shoulder. “What? If it’s too easy, it’s no fun.”
Mab laughed. “That young lady,” she said, shaking a
finger at Tina, “reminds me of myself at that age.”
Tina puffed up like a preening cockatoo.
“Okay,” I said. “Where are you planning to sneak
out? I’ll go take a look now.”
“I don’t know yet. I haven’t heard from Brendan.
He’s the one with all the maps and police information and stuff.
He’ll text us tomorrow and tell us when and where to meet.”
“I don’t like it,” I said to Mab. I didn’t want to
be caught with a bunch of teenage zombies trying to sneak out of
Deadtown on a lark. And if I had to wait until tomorrow, there
would be no chance for a trial run.
“Let’s reserve judgment until we learn of this
Brendan’s plan,” Mab said. “If it doesn’t seem feasible, you can
still get out by shifting.”
“Awesome!” Tina said, bouncing on the bed with
excitement. “This will be so fun. It’ll almost be like we’re
out fighting demons again.” She got up. “I know, I know. You don’t
have to say it. I’m not your apprentice anymore.” She grinned. “But
it’ll still be fun.”
TINA LEFT TO MAKE IT BACK TO HER GROUP HOME BEFORE
the curfew took effect. About two minutes past ten, there was a
knock on my door. I went to answer it, wondering why Clyde hadn’t
called to announce the visitor. Then I realized he was under
curfew, too. He’d be home, like everyone else.
Everyone but the Goon Squad. Because that’s who was
at my door.
Pam McFarren, the female zombie Goon, stood
outside, a clipboard in hand. “Curfew compliance check,” she
said.
Lucky me. Right at the top of the list.
“Mind if I come in?” she asked.
“Do you have to? You can see that I’m home.”
She held her clipboard at arm’s length and squinted
at it like she needed reading glasses. “Says here this apartment
has three residents. I don’t need to go inside if they all come to
the door.”
Three. Carlos had done a good job of putting Mab in
the database. But I wasn’t going to drag her out of bed just to
parade her in front of the Goon Squad. They’d insist on checking
the apartment, anyway, since Juliet wasn’t here.
I opened the door wider. McFarren walked past me.
Behind her came a human cop I’d never seen before. He was tall and
thin, with a shaved head and an oversized Adam’s apple. He nodded
as he passed.
“Where’s Norden?”
“Elmer quit the task force,” McFarren said,
shrugging. “He said he wanted to go back to working in the human
parts of town.”
Yeah, right. What he’d actually said was probably
more along the lines of “just get me away from those goddamn
freaks.”
“I felt kind of bad for him,” McFarren said. “I
really think his old partner’s death got to him. It was like he
couldn’t stand being around PDHs anymore. Last time we patrolled
together, he wouldn’t even walk on the same side of the street as
me.” She shook her head sadly. “The department’s got good
psychological resources. I hope he’ll make use of them.” She tapped
her clipboard with her pencil. “Now, I’m looking for three
residents. You’re Vaughn, Victory.” She made a checkmark on the
page. “Where’s Vaughn, Mabel?”
“That’s my aunt. She’s in the bedroom. Do you have
to disturb her? She’s sick.”
“Just a peek.” McFarren cracked open the bedroom
door and looked inside. “Sorry to bother you, Mabel, dear,” she
said, pulling the door shut. I hoped Mab was asleep. It wouldn’t be
good for her condition to have steam shooting out of her ears at
being called Mabel.
“And what about Capulet, Juliet?” McFarren
asked.
“Is that supposed to be a trick question? You know
as well as I do that she’s missing.”
“So that’s an X then.” She marked the clipboard.
“Where’s her room?”
I showed her. She and her partner took a quick look
inside. They also checked the bathroom and the kitchen. I didn’t
know where Kane was, but I was glad he was keeping out of
sight.
At the front door, McFarren tucked her clipboard
under her arm. “You still don’t know Ms. Capulet’s
whereabouts?”
“I wish I did.” I’d give a lot to know where Juliet
was right now.
“All right. Let me leave you with a reminder that
all residents of Designated Area 1 are to remain in their
residences between now and four a.m. Failure to do so could result
in a fine, a lengthy prison term, or both.”
“Have a nice night,” her partner said as they left.
Watching them move down the hall to the next apartment, I almost
missed Norden. At least he didn’t pretend to be polite while
stomping all over your nonexistent rights.