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    Hunger_A Gone Novel

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    G R A N T

      in preparation, worked them down beneath the leaves, down

      to cradle the cabbage. Then he fell back on his rear end. “Ow!”

      he yelled.

      “Not so easy, is it?” Edilio teased.

      “Ah! Ah!” E.Z. jumped to his feet. He was holding his right

      hand with his left and staring hard at his hand. “No, no, no.”

      Sam had been only half listening. His mind was elsewhere,

      scanning for the missing birds, but the terror in E.Z.’s voice

      snapped his head around. “What’s the matter?”

      “Something bit me!” E.Z. cried. “Oh, oh, it hurts. It hurts.

      It—” E.Z. let loose a scream of agony. The scream started low

      and went higher, higher into hysteria.

      Sam saw what looked like a black question mark on E.Z.’s

      pant leg.

      “Snake!” Sam said to Edilio.

      E.Z.’s arm went into a spasm. It shook violently. It was as if

      some invisible giant had hold of it and were yanking his arm

      as hard and as fast as it could.

      E.Z. screamed and screamed and began a lunatic dance.

      “They’re in my feet!” he cried. “They’re in my feet!”

      Sam stood paralyzed for a few seconds, just a few seconds—

      but later in memory it would seem so long. Too long.

      He leaped forward, rushing toward E.Z. He was brought

      down hard by a flying tackle from Edilio.

      “What are you doing?” Sam demanded, and struggled to

      free himself.

      “Man, look. Look!” Edilio whispered.

      Sam’s face was mere feet from the first row of cabbages.

      H U N G E R 9

      The soil was alive. Worms. Worms as big as garter snakes

      were seething up from beneath the dirt. Dozens. Maybe hundreds. All heading toward E.Z., who screamed again and again in agony mixed with confusion.

      Sam rose to his feet but went no closer to the edge of the

      cabbage field. The worms did not move beyond the first

      row of turned soil. There might as well have been a wall, the

      worms all on one side.

      E.Z. came staggering wildly toward Sam, walking as if

      he were being electrocuted, jerking, flailing like some crazy

      puppet with half its strings cut.

      Three, four feet away, a long arm-stretch away, Sam saw

      the worm erupt from the skin of E.Z.’s throat.

      And then another from his jaw, just in front of his ear.

      E.Z., no longer screaming, sagged to the ground, just sat

      there limp, cross-legged.

      “Help me,” E.Z. whispered. “Sam . . .”

      E.Z.’s eyes were on Sam. Pleading. Fading. Then just staring, blank.

      The only sounds now came from the worms. Their hundreds of mouths seemed to make a single sound, one big mouth chewing wetly.

      A worm spilled from E.Z.’s mouth.

      Sam raised his hands, palms out.

      “Sam, no!” Albert yelled. Then, in a quieter voice, “He’s

      already dead. He’s already dead.”

      “Albert’s right, man. Don’t do it, don’t burn them, they’re

      staying in the field, don’t give them a reason to come after us,”

      10 M I C H A E L

      G R A N T

      Edilio hissed. His strong hands still dug into Sam’s shoulders,

      like he was holding Sam back, though Sam wasn’t trying to

      escape any longer.

      “And don’t touch him,” Edilio sobbed. “Perdóneme, God

      forgive me, don’t touch him.”

      The black worms swarmed over and through E.Z.’s body.

      Like ants swarming a dead beetle.

      It felt like a very long time before the worms slithered away

      and tunneled back into the earth.

      What they left behind was no longer recognizable as a

      human being.

      “There’s a rope here,” Albert said, stepping down at last

      from the Jeep. He tried to tie a lasso, but his hands were shaking too badly. He handed the rope to Edilio, who formed a loop and after six misses finally snagged what was left of

      E.Z.’s right foot. Together they dragged the remains from the

      field.

      A single tardy worm crawled from the mess and headed

      back toward the cabbages. Sam snatched up a rock the size

      of a softball and smashed it down on the worm’s back. The

      worm stopped moving.

      “I’ll come back with a shovel,” Edilio said. “We can’t take

      E.Z. home, man, he’s got two little brothers. They don’t need

      to be seeing this. We’ll bury him here.

      “If these things spread . . . ,” Edilio began.

      “If they spread to the other fields, we all starve,” Albert

      said.

      Sam fought a powerful urge to throw up. E.Z. was mostly

      H U N G E R

      11

      bones now, picked not quite clean. Sam had seen terrible

      things since the FAYZ began, but nothing this gruesome.

      He wiped his hands on his jeans, wanting to hit back,

      wishing it made sense to blast the field, burn as much of it

      as he could reach, keep burning it until the worms shriveled

      and crisped.

      But that was food out there.

      Sam knelt beside the mess in the dirt. “You were a good

      kid, E.Z. Sorry. I . . . sorry.” There was music, tinny, but recognizable, still coming from E.Z.’s iPod.

      Sam lifted the shiny thing and tapped the pause icon.

      Then he stood up and kicked the dead worm out of the

      way. He held his hands out as though he were a minister

      about to bless the body.

      Albert and Edilio knew better. They both backed away.

      Brilliant light shot from Sam’s palms.

      The body burned, crisped, turned black. Bones made loud

      snapping noises as they cracked from the heat. After a while

      Sam stopped. What was left behind was ash, a heap of gray

      and black ashes that could have been the residue of a backyard barbecue.

      “There was nothing you could have done, Sam,” Edilio

      said, knowing that look on his friend’s face, knowing that

      gray, haggard look of guilt. “It’s the FAYZ, man. It’s just the

      FAYZ.”

      TWO

      106 HOURS, 16 MINUTES

      T H E R O O F W A S on crooked. The blistering bright sun

      stabbed a ray straight down into Caine’s eye through the gap

      between crumbled wall and sagging roof.

      Caine lay on his back, sweating into a pillow that had no

      case. A dank sheet wrapped around his bare legs, twisted to

      cover half his naked torso. He was awake again, or at least he

      thought he was, believed he was.

      Hoped he was.

      It wasn’t his bed. It belonged to an old man named Mose,

      the groundskeeper for Coates Academy.

      Of course Mose was gone. Gone with all the other adults.

      And all the older kids. Everyone . . . almost everyone . . . over

      the age of fourteen. Gone.

      Gone where?

      No one knew.

      Just gone. Beyond the barrier. Out of the giant fishbowl

      called the FAYZ. Maybe dead. Maybe not. But definitely

      gone.

      H U N G E R

      13

      Diana opened the door with a kick. She was carrying a

      tray and balanced on the tray was a bottle of water and a can

      of Goya brand garbanzo beans.

      “Are you decent?” Diana asked.

      He didn’t answer. He didn’t understand the question.


      “Are you covered?” she asked, putting some irritation into

      her tone. She set the tray on the side table.

      Caine didn’t bother to answer. He sat up. His head swam

      as he did. He reached for the water.

      “Why is the roof messed up like that? What if it rains?” He

      was surprised by the sound of his own voice. He was hoarse.

      His voice had none of its usual persuasive smoothness.

      Diana was pitiless. “What are you, stupid now as well as

      crazy?”

      A phantom memory passed through him, leaving him

      feeling uneasy. “Did I do something?”

      “You lifted the roof up.”

      He turned his hands around to look at his palms. “Did I?”

      “Another nightmare,” Diana said.

      Caine twisted open the bottle and drank. “I remember

      now. I thought it was crushing me. I thought something was

      going to step on the house and crush it, squash me under it.

      So I pushed back.”

      “Uh-huh. Eat some beans.”

      “I don’t like beans.”

      “No one likes beans,” Diana said. “But this isn’t your

      neighborhood Applebee’s. And I’m not your waitress. Beans

      are what we have. So eat some beans. You need food.”

      Caine frowned. “How long have I been like this?”

      14 M I C H A E L

      G R A N T

      “Like what?” Diana mocked him. “Like a mental patient

      who can’t tell if he’s in reality or in a dream?”

      He nodded. The smell of the beans was sickening. But he

      was suddenly hungry. And he remembered now: food was in

      short supply. Memory was coming back. The mad delusion was

      fading. He couldn’t quite reach normal, but he could see it.

      “Three months, give or take a week,” Diana said. “We had

      the big shoot-out in Perdido Beach. You wandered off into

      the desert with Pack Leader and were gone for three days.

      When you came back you were pale, dehydrated, and . . . well,

      like you are.”

      “Pack Leader.” The words, the creature they represented,

      made Caine wince. Pack Leader, the dominant coyote, the

      one who had somehow attained a limited sort of speech. Pack

      Leader, the faithful, fearful servant of . . . of it. Of it. Of the

      thing in the mine shaft.

      The Darkness, they called it.

      Caine swayed and before he rolled off the bed, Diana

      caught him, grabbed his shoulders, kept him up. But then

      she saw the warning sign in his eyes and muttered a curse

      and managed to get the wastebasket in front of him just as

      he vomited.

      He didn’t produce much. Just a little yellow liquid.

      “Lovely,” she said, and curled her lip. “On second thought,

      don’t eat any beans. I don’t want to see them come back up.”

      Caine rinsed his mouth with some of the water. “Why are

      we here? This is Mose’s cottage.”

      “Because you’re too dangerous. No one at Coates wants

      H U N G E R

      15

      you around until you get a grip on yourself.”

      He blinked at another returning memory. “I hurt someone.”

      “You thought Chunk was some kind of monster. You

      were yelling a word. Gaiaphage. Then you smacked Chunk

      through a wall.”

      “Is he okay?”

      “Caine. In the movies a guy can get knocked through a

      wall and get up like it’s no big deal. This wasn’t a movie. The

      wall was brick. Chunk looked like roadkill. Like when a raccoon gets run over and over and over and keeps getting run over for a couple of days.”

      The harshness of her words was too much even for Diana

      herself. She gritted her teeth and said, “Sorry. It wasn’t pretty.

      I never liked Chunk, but it wasn’t something I can just forget,

      okay?”

      “I’ve been kind of out of my mind,” Caine said.

      Diana wiped angrily at a tear. “Answer the question: Can

      you give an example of understatement?”

      “I think I’m better now,” Caine said. “Not all the way better. Not all the way. But better.”

      “Well, happy day,” Diana said.

      For the first time in weeks Caine focused on her face. She

      was beautiful, Diana Ladris was, with enormous dark eyes

      and long brown hair and a mouth that defaulted to smirk.

      “You could have ended up like Chunk,” Caine said. “But

      you’ve been taking care of me, anyway.”

      She shrugged. “It’s a hard new world. I have a choice: stick

      by you, or take my chances with Drake.”

      16 M I C H A E L

      G R A N T

      “Drake.” The name conjured dark images. Dream or reality? “What’s Drake doing?”

      “Playing junior Caine. Supposedly representing you.

      Secretly hoping you’ll just die, if you ask me. He raided the

      grocery store and stole some food a few days ago. It’s made

      him almost popular. Kids don’t have a lot of judgment when

      they’re hungry.”

      “And my brother?”

      “Sam?”

      “I don’t have another long-lost brother, do I?”

      “Bug’s gone into town a couple of times to see what’s going

      on. He says people still have a little food but they’re getting

      worried about it. Especially since Drake’s raid. But Sam is

      totally in charge there.”

      “Hand me my pants,” Caine said.

      Diana did as he asked, then ostentatiously turned away as

      he pulled them on.

      “What defenses do they have up?” Caine asked.

      “They keep people all over the grocery store now, that’s

      the main thing. Now Ralph’s always has four guys with guns

      sitting on the roof.”

      Caine nodded. He bit at his thumbnail, an old habit. “How

      about freaks?”

      “They have Dekka and Brianna and Taylor. They have

      Jack. They may have some other useful freaks, Bug isn’t sure.

      They have Lana to heal people. And Bug thinks they have a

      kid who can fire some kind of heat wave.”

      “Like Sam?”

      H U N G E R

      17

      “No. Sam’s like a blowtorch. This kid is like a microwave.

      You don’t see any flames or anything. It’s just that suddenly

      your head is cooking like a breakfast burrito in a Kitchen-

      Aid.”

      “People are still developing powers,” Caine said. “Any

      here?”

      Diana shrugged. “Who knows for sure? Who’s going to be

      crazy enough to tell Drake? Down in town a new mutant gets

      some respect. Up here? Maybe they get killed.”

      “Yeah,” Caine said. “That was a mistake. Coming down on

      the freaks, that was a mistake. We need them.”

      “Plus, in addition to some possible new moofs, Sam’s people still have machine guns. And they still have Sam,” Diana said. “So how about if we don’t do something stupid like try

      and fight them again?”

      “Moofs?”

      “Short for mutant. Mutant freaks. Moofs.” Diana shrugged.

      “Moofs, muties, freaks. We’re out of food, but we’ve got plenty

      of nicknames.”

      Caine’s shirt was laid over the back of a chair. He reached

      for it, wobbled, and seemed about to fall over. Diana steadied

      him. He glared at her hand on his arm
    . “I can walk.”

      He glanced up and caught sight of his reflection in a mirror over the dresser. He almost didn’t recognize himself.

      Diana was right: He was pale, his cheeks were concave. His

      eyes seemed too large for his face.

      “I guess you are getting better: you’re becoming a prickly

      jerk again.”

      18 M I C H A E L

      G R A N T

      “Get Bug in here. Get Bug and Drake. I want to see them

      both.”

      Diana made no move. “Are you going to tell me what happened to you out there in the desert with Pack Leader?”

      Caine snorted. “You don’t want to know.”

      “Yes,” Diana insisted, “I do.”

      “All that matters is I’m back,” Caine said with all the bravado he could manage.

      Diana nodded. The movement caused her hair to fall forward, to caress her perfect cheek. Her eyes glittered moistly.

      But her lush lips still curled into an expression of distaste.

      “What’s it mean, Caine? What does ‘gaiaphage’ mean?”

      He shrugged. “I don’t know. I’ve never heard the word

      before.”

      Why was he lying to her? Why did it seem so dangerous

      that she should know that word?

      “Go get them,” Caine said, dismissing her. “Get Drake and

      Bug.”

      “Why don’t you take it easy? Make sure you’re really . . . I

      was going to say ‘sane,’ but that might be setting the bar kind

      of high.”

      “I’m back,” Caine reiterated. “And I have a plan.”

      She stared at him, head tilted sideways, skeptical. “A

      plan.”

      “I have things I have to do,” Caine said, and looked down,

      incapable, for reasons he couldn’t quite grasp, of meeting her

      gaze.

      “Caine, don’t do this,” Diana said. “Sam let you walk away

      H U N G E R

      19

      alive. He won’t do that a second time.”

      “You want me to bargain with him? Work something

      out?”

      “Yes.”

      “Well then, that’s just what I’m going to do, Diana. I’m

      going to bargain. But first I need something to bargain with.

      And I know just the thing.”

      Astrid Ellison was in the overgrown backyard with Little

      Pete when Sam brought her the news and the worm. Pete was

      swinging. Or more accurately he was sitting on the swing as

      Astrid pushed him. He seemed to like it.

      It was dull, monotonous work pushing the swing with

      almost never a word of conversation or a sound of joy from

     


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