The Resurrected Compendium Read online



  Somehow they made it to the stairs and the shadows there before Doug had to take a break. Hidden in the stairwell, Kathleen watched as the two things from the beach made it to the parking lot. Doug had put his head in his hands, his breathing still harsh and loud here with the concrete walls muffling the other sounds. With another glance outside to see where the things were, Kathleen tore a strip of her ruined dress from the hem. She slapped the sand from it, but there was nothing she could about the salt water. Maybe it would help clean the wound.

  She couldn’t see much, but the bullet seemed to have passed right through Doug’s calf, leaving a slightly bigger and more ragged hole on the other side. She didn’t see any glimpse of bone, but then it was hard to see anything through the blood. She wrapped the strip of her dress around the wound and tied it tight. The green had already gone dark from wet, but now it bloomed even blacker.

  “Give me your sweatshirt.”

  The material was too thick for her to tear, so she simply folded it into thirds and used the arms to tie it around his leg. She peeked again around the wall. The things were there, hidden now by one of the abandoned cop cars. She caught a glimpse of the crawling one from under the car and withdrew quickly — if she could see it, it might be able to see her.

  “The blood.” Doug’s voice had gone thin, wispy. The shadows made it too hard to see the color or lack of it in his face, but Kathleen had no trouble noting that his eyes couldn’t seem to stay open.

  “I think the sweatshirt will stop it.”

  He shook his head, clearly an effort he was barely able to make. “No. The blood. What if they follow. It.”

  Shit. Shit, shit, he was right. How smart were they? Could they smell it? Doug had left a trail of blood all across the parking lot, leading right to them.

  No time to think of it now. If they could get upstairs, they could… “Shit. My phone.”

  She’d lost her bag somewhere, not that her phone would’ve been much good after being soaked. The apartment might have a phone. She hadn’t checked because she hadn’t needed it. Molly had a phone.

  “Molly,” she said and stood. “Oh, God. We need to make sure they’re ok.”

  Some of Kathleen’s friends, back in those long-ago high school days, had talked about the runner’s high, that place when you pushed through the pain of your breath stabbing your lungs and your stomach threatening to spill up and out of your mouth and found some magical place instead. You were supposed to find it when you pushed your body’s endurance, but she never had back then, and she wasn’t finding it now. What she did have, though, was determination. You couldn’t get through Disney World with two toddlers and an infant without the ability to haul your ass from one place to another, and Kathleen had done that twice.

  It hurt. A lot.

  By the time Kathleen and Doug made it up the final few concrete steps to the sixteenth floor and the outside corridor, a red haze had begun clouding the edges of her vision, and white spots blinked in front of her even when she closed her eyes. Her ankle had swollen and gone so stiff she couldn’t put weight on it — but it was better than being shot, she thought as Doug took several stumbling steps forward to collapse against the railing. Unit 1699 was at the far end of the corridor, which had been great when they booked it, because it meant a corner balcony overlooking both the ocean and, if you craned your neck, a glimpse of the bayside too. It wasn’t so great now, when they had to pass the other eight units before they could get to it.

  Just before they got there, Kathleen fell. Her ankle simply gave way and she went to her knees with Doug close behind, his weight sudden and unforgiving as it pushed her to the ground. She smacked her face against the concrete; the pain was bright and sharp and chased away the threat of unconsciousness that had been plaguing her, but she couldn’t quite find it within herself to be grateful for it. Not when she was spitting blood and her teeth had gone loose, and oh, God, her nose was bleeding and probably broken too.

  “Sorry, I’m sorry,” Doug said, but it wasn’t his fault, even if Kathleen wanted to blame him for everything that would never have happened if only he’d never smiled at her that first time.

  In the parking lot, a woman screamed.

  The sound rose and rose, high-pitched and furious, tapering off into a guttural howl that cut off abruptly. Kathleen’s skin crawled. Her fingers curled on the concrete. She froze in the midst of pushing herself up. Her blood dotted the dirty white floor. It tasted thick and coppery, so she turned her head to the side and spit. She clung to the concrete like it meant to heave up and toss her off, and she listened for more screams, but none came. Only the thunder-thump of the helicopter again, and the constant bleat of sirens. She could hear a fire alarm too, but with the smell of her own blood in her nose there was no way for her to catch even a whiff of smoke.

  “Kathleen.” Then again, a little louder. “Kathleen.”

  It was Doug, breathing in her ear like a lover. She groaned, eyes fluttering. So she’d passed out, after all. It couldn’t have been for long. Her nose was still dripping. Her teeth, rough-edged under the tender exploration of her tongue. She pushed herself up onto her hands and knees and looked at Doug, who’d propped himself up against the wall beside the door.

  “They’re inside,” he told her. “I can hear music.”

  Her key was gone along with her purse and phone, but Kathleen got onto her feet and thumped the door with her fist. Harder. Her knuckles split, but what were a few more cuts and bruises on top of all the rest? She pounded, her head down, eyes closed, and the door swung open so suddenly she fell forward.

  Molly caught her. “What happened? What’s going on? We’ve been hearing sirens and stuff.” Still holding Kathleen from falling, Molly looked her up and down. “Did that guy hurt you?”

  “No,” Kathleen started to say, but shaking her head made the world turn upside down and sideways.

  Molly looked over her shoulder, out the door. “Holy shit, how many cop cars are in the parking lot?”

  “Let us in.”

  Molly had given Kathleen advice about erections, shared her prom dresses and listened to Kathleen bitch about her husband and kids. She was the sort of friend who’d keep your secrets and share your joys — and now she was the kind of friend who didn’t ask stupid questions, just acted. Shouting for Steve, Molly helped Kathleen to the couch and helped her onto the lumpy cushions. Then she and Steve did the same for Doug.

  “Shut the door.” Doug sounded a little stronger. “Lock it. Use the chain too, if you have one.”

  Steve didn’t move, but Molly did. She secured the door and turned to lean against it, her eyes wide. “What happened?”

  “There’s something going on. I don’t know…there’s things. These things came…” Doug shuddered and bent forward.

  Kathleen thought once she’d settled onto the couch, she’d never get up again. But that was impossible. She needed ice for her face. Doug needed his wound taken care of. They had to figure out what the hell was going on, and what they were going to do…she’d often said “Mama doesn’t get a sick day,” and it was just as true now, here, where she was nobody’s mother, as it was at home. She pushed at Doug’s shoulder, gently, to settle him against the back of the couch.

  “Shhh,” she said. “Let’s get you taken care of.”

  Steve paced with unsteady steps. Still drunk, Kathleen thought, but without malice. She wished she were drunk. Hell, maybe she was. Maybe someone really had put something in her drink, and all of this was some sort of drug-dream. Maybe she’d wake up raped in some alley…and that might be better than all of this. It might actually be better.

  The thought sickened her, but she pushed it aside. Focused on one thing at a time. She told Molly to bring ice and dishtowels, dish soap and some hot water, all of which Molly did right away with swift efficiency, because she was a mother too.

  “What is going on?” Molly asked in a low voice with a quick glance at Steve, who now stood in front of the picture windows