Tags:
Fiction,
General,
People & Places,
Action & Adventure,
Juvenile Fiction,
Young Adult Fiction,
Zombies,
Europe,
Horror Tales,
Horror & Ghost Stories,
London (England),
Horror stories
coming?
He stepped back and went over to the window to try to see inside, but al the shutters and barricades were up. He banged on the glass. Shouted again.
He huffed. This wasn’t how he’d pictured it at al .
Something caught his eye and he turned to look back the way he had come. Bodies walking. His heart lifted for a brief moment. It must be a scav party returning. They’d get him in.
They were too big, though, too slow.
And there were too many of them.
Tears sprang back into his eyes Why had he lied to himself?
It was the grown-ups who had chased him down Seven Sisters Road. They must have carried on, doggedly fol owing his trail, and now they were shuffling nearer.
He ran back to the door and tugged at the bel pul , screaming at the top of his voice.
“Let me in let me in let me in!”
The grown-ups heard him and broke into a lazy jog. They weren’t exactly hurrying, though. Why would they need to? They’d catch up with him in the end.
C alum could hear someone outside. Ringing the bel, banging on the windows, shouting. He stayed in his chair, unmoving. If he sat here long enough they would go away. For the first time in a year he was alone. Properly alone. He truly believed that if he was careful, if he stayed hidden and kept quiet, the grown-ups would ignore the shop, leave him be. Arran had left him some food and water, without tel ing the others. That was a cool thing to do. But what Arran couldn’t have known was that Cal um already had loads of stuff stashed away. He had been hoarding since they first came here. In secret places. Above loose ceiling panels, in the wal spaces behind cabinets, in forgotten storage areas. It had been obvious to him from the start—if he didn’t look after himself, he was going to wind up dead. Let the others share, let them ration everything, divide food into portions—when everything ran out they’d quickly start fighting over what was left.
There was only one of him. This was his kingdom now. He was Arran, Achil eus, Freak, and Ol ie al rol ed into one.
He hadn’t been making it up when he’d told Arran he thought that some other kids would want to stay, though. He’d half hoped they would, but after the initial surprise that nobody did, he’d soon discovered that it was much better this way.
There was nobody to get on his nerves. Just him and his stash. Alone. Peaceful. Bliss. No more arguments. No more petty fights. No more needling or bul ying. Most of the time, being here had felt like being in the Big Brother house. Everyone living on top of each other, with nothing to do except moan and bitch. Occasional y a scav party had brought back books they’d looted, or games and puzzles, anything to lift the boredom, but it had never been enough.
Now there was nobody to tel him what to do. What was the point, if the adults had al died, of simply getting jumped-up kids to boss you about? Oh, sure, he liked Arran, but he didn’t ever remember voting that he should be in charge.
It would be different now. Cal um could do whatever he wanted. He even had a portable CD player. He’d kept it hidden in his most secret stash, along with some CDs and, most important of al , batteries. Batteries were more precious than gold. They’d found stacks of them in the shop when they first arrived, and they’d thought that they would last forever. Cal um had been the first to realize just how quickly they would run out, though, and had set about hoarding them. Now he didn’t have to hide them anymore.
He was looking forward to putting on some music. He hadn’t listened to any music for about six months. A lot of the kids had had iPods and other MP3 players, but they were completely useless as there was no way to charge them. Deke had once found a solar charger in a shop, but it never worked properly and it eventual y broke. And that was the end of that.
Until now.
Sweet.
Cal um was nicely set up.
But now someone was trying to spoil it. Making a racket outside,
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