Contaminated (22 page)

Read Contaminated Online

Authors: Em Garner

BOOK: Contaminated
7.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

As if he’d care. As if I should. The days of name-brand hoodies and designer jeans are long over for me. I keep my coat zipped. He looks up when we come in.

“Hey.” He smiles, looking curious.

“Is Jean here?” I motion for Opal to sit down on one of the broken plastic chairs. “She called me.”

“Hold on a sec. Mom!” The boy leans back in his chair to call into the back room. He looks at me. “She’ll be right out.”

“Hello!” Jean comes through the doorway with a bright, wide, and genuine smile. It’s been so long since I’ve seen one, I almost forgot what it looks like to see someone who is actually happy when I am standing in front of her. “Dillon, look. It’s Velvet.”

Wow, that wasn’t subtle or anything. Dillon stares at me, and I stare at him. I think we both look away at the same time. I’m blushing, I don’t want to be blushing, it’s too hot, and I still won’t unzip my coat.

“Your mom was picked up by one of the patrols,” Jean begins, and cuts me off when I start to reply. “She’s fine. She was cold and hungry when they brought her here, that’s all. Because she had the collar on, they were able to identify her right away, but your phone’s been disconnected?”

She ends it on a question mark.

“Um … yeah, well … we were kicked out of the apartment. So we moved back home. I don’t have a phone. Yet.”

“Oh, that’s terrible! They kicked you out? Weren’t you in assisted housing? Don’t they have—”

“It was because of your mom, right?” Dillon says quietly.

“Yeah.”

Jean makes a sad sound. “Oh, hon, I’m so, so sorry. That
should never happen. I mean, we’re doing our best to get new legislation, protection against discrimination, but …”

“It’s okay,” I say. It’s not her fault. “We moved back to our old house. It’ll be fine. Really.”

“Well. Good, then. But, Velvet, you know you have to make sure she’s restrained when you leave her. I don’t have to tell you what might’ve happened.” She throws a look at Opal, who’s busy coloring some picture she found in a kids magazine.

“I know.”

Jean nods. “The collar saved her.”

Funny how that works. The collar that could kill her was what kept her from being hurt this time. And it allowed the patrols to get her someplace safe and for Jean to contact me.

“Can we take her home now? I don’t have to fill out any other papers or anything, do I? I mean … do I have to pay a fine?”

“It’s been taken care of,” Jean says. “Dillon, please go bring Malinda out for Velvet and her sister.”

“Wait, will she be okay?” I don’t want her to be upset.

“Oh, hon, Dillon knows your mom. She’ll be just fine. He’ll bring her right out.”

I nod. When I look at him again, he’s smiling again. He’s got a really nice smile.

“I’ll be right back.” He smiles right at me, no question about it, he’s not just being nice. He’s looking at me on purpose.

I’m filled with embarrassed heat. When he disappears through the door, I take the chance to unzip my coat and fan my face. Jean’s watching me with a small grin.

“He’s a cutie, isn’t he?”

“Um … Jean …”

She waves a hand. “Oh, I know, I know. You don’t want to tell a boy’s mom that you think he’s cute. But he is. And, Velvet.” She drops her voice. “He doesn’t have a girlfriend.”

It feels so nice to have a boy’s mother actually think I’m worth dating that I laugh and don’t feel too embarrassed anymore. “Okay, Jean.”

She holds up her hands. “I’m just saying.”

“Velvet doesn’t have a boyfriend,” Opal pipes up, without looking away from her picture. “She broke up with Tony because he was a jerk.”

“Opal!” I smack my forehead with my palm. “Shut up!”

Jean laughs. Before she can say anything else, the front doors bang open hard enough to smack the walls. Two cops in helmets, visors down, storm into the room with a writhing, struggling, screaming figure pinned between them. They’re between me and Opal, and I jump back while she cringes in her seat.

The Connies they round up these days are all malnourished, dressed in rags. They’ve been living in the woods or sewers or houses that nobody thoroughly checked. Sometimes, the cops find them in basements or attics where people have … kept them. This guy’s in a business suit, tie
pulled half off, hair wild. He’s got dirt all over his pants, like he was rolling in mud. He’s snapping his jaws and kicking out. He’s missing a shoe.

“What are you doing? You can’t come in here that way!” Jean shouts. “New arrivals come in the back. Are you crazy?”

“I’m not crazy,” says the cop on the left. The visor muffles his voice, but it’s clear he’s struggling to keep his voice steady as the man at his side squirms and fights. “This guy, on the other hand …”

The man is screaming, low and hoarse. Over and over. Sort of like a dog barking, only much worse. He’s looking at all of us but not seeing anything. Foam curdles in the corners of his lips.

“Oh, God,” Jean cries, flapping her hands. “Take him in the back. What are you doing? Don’t you see there are children in here?”

“Sorry, ma’am,” says the cop on the right. He sounds more reasonable than his partner. At least until he turns to the man between them and without a word, without warning, jams his elbow into the guy’s gut. The guy doubles over, and the cop hits him on the back of the head.

We’re staring, horrified, as the man drops to the tile floor. His screaming stops, probably because he has no breath left for it. His hands are bound behind him with some sort of plastic cuffs, and he writhes and wriggles on the tiles like he’s swimming underwater.

Jean’s face has gone white and she has both hands over her mouth. “You can’t …”

The cop’s voice is louder than her whisper. “You have someone here who can take this thing?”

“It’s not a thing. It’s a person.” I say it before I can stop myself. I don’t want to stop myself. I can’t stop looking at him.

The cops both look at me. They look like space troopers. It’s scary not seeing their faces, even if something tells me it might be scarier to see what’s in their eyes. Or not there.

“This isn’t your business,” says the one on the left.

Opal lets out a squeak, and they both look at her. The one on the right mutters a curse. “Get this …” he trips on the word, but changes it “… guy out of here. There’s a kid, man. Get him out of here.”

Jean’s already pushing a button and calling for someone named Carlos to get up front right away, it’s an emergency. Everything’s happening very fast. I duck behind the cops, well out of reach of the Connie on the floor, and put my arms around Opal. We cling to each other as Carlos, a huge guy with arms like a professional wrestler’s, comes out of the back and stops at the sight of the man on the floor.

“Take him, please,” Jean says. “Officers, there’s paperwork to fill out.”

The one on the right lifts his visor as Carlos yanks the man to his feet and drags him away. The door closes behind him, and it’s like the room suddenly fills again with air we
didn’t know we weren’t breathing. Opal’s shaking against me, but not crying. Jean’s eyes glisten with tears.

She takes a long, deep breath. “Officers, paperwork.”

The one on the right takes off his helmet and steps up to her. “At least that never changes.”

He takes the clipboard she hands him, and the pen. His partner looks at us. His face without the visor is young and tired-looking. He moves toward us and winces when we both shrink away.

“Hey.” His voice is quieter when he doesn’t have to talk through the visor. “Sorry about that. Hey, little girl, don’t cry. It’s okay.”

He looks at me. “Sorry, I used to carry lollipops, but I don’t have any now.”

“She doesn’t need a lollipop.”

Opal peeks around the shelter of my arms. “Yes, I do!” The cop laughs. “Sorry, kid.”

From behind him, his partner’s talking to Jean, and his voice raises just enough for me to hear him say, “He was in the grocery store.”

I look over Opal’s head. Jean’s not looking at me. I say to the cop in front of me, “The grocery store?”

“Yeah.” He looks uncomfortable, like he shouldn’t say anything.

Opal, denied a lollipop, goes back to her magazine. “Just … there?” Looking at him, I realize he’s not so much older than me. Sort of like the soldiers who came to
our house that first time. Not much older than me at all.

“Yeah,” he says again. “Just went bat sh—uh—nuts right there in the frozen foods aisle. Took out a couple of shopping carts, broke open all the glass. We thought maybe he was drunk and disorderly, but we don’t take chances anymore with stuff like that.”

Before he can say anything else, a woman, who looks almost as wild eyed as the man did, bursts through the front doors. “Is my husband here?”

The cop turns from me. “Ma’am, I’m going to have to ask you to identify yourself.”

There’s a huge kerfuffle then, with the woman wailing, Jean trying to calm her, the cops trying to get some information. I guess in times past, the guy would’ve been taken to jail. Now they bring them straight to the kennels.

The cops go with the woman into the back, and Jean’s staring at me. She looks pretty shocked, which is the way I feel. She clears her throat and messes with some folders on the desk.

“Do you think he’s …,” I start to say, but it’s a day for interruptions, because Dillon and my mom come out of the other door, the one leading to the cages.

“Mama!” Opal cries.

And my mother, seeing us, opens her arms and runs to hug and hold us. Pressed against her, I close my eyes and try to forget this is different from what it used to be. She doesn’t smell the same, and I open my eyes.

She’s hugging us tight, not saying anything. Her hand strokes my hair. I can feel her heart beating against my cheek. I don’t want her to let go.

“Wow,” Jean says in a hushed voice. “I’ve never seen any of them do that before.”

I hold on to my mom as tight as I can.

NINETEEN

“IT’S JUST AMAZING,” JEAN SAYS.

My mom’s smiling and patting both me and Opal on the cheeks. Opal giggles and hugs her. I move away, just a little.

“They’re not supposed to be able to come back, right?” I say this quietly, so my mom and Opal don’t hear.

Jean nods. “That’s right. That’s what they say.”

I smile, head spinning but feeling good about everything that’s happened. “I guess ‘they’ don’t know it all, huh? C’mon, Mom. Opal. Let’s get home. Oh, shoot. The bike.”

I haven’t thought about how I’m going to get my mom home. She can’t ride the bike, she’s not coordinated enough to balance on the crossbar, and there’s no way she’ll be able to fit in the carrier. It’s a long, long walk home. Maybe I can leave my bike here and we can take the bus, at least to the Foodland parking lot.…

“I’ll give you a ride,” Dillon says. “I have my dad’s
pickup truck. Your bike can go in the back. You live all the way out of town, right?”

I shoot a glance at Jean, wondering if she’s been talking to Dillon about me as much as she’s been talking to me about him. “Yeah, could you? That would be awesome.”

He gives me a grin so bright, so shiny, so cute that I’m smacked into another totally embarrassing blush. “Sure.”

Jean laughs. “Okay, you two, why don’t you take Opal and Malinda out of here. I have work to do.”

From the back we hear the faint shout of raised voices, and Jean frowns with a look toward the door where Carlos took that guy and the cops followed. When she looks back at us, her smile looks a lot like her son’s, only not as bright. Not as shiny. Jean looks worried.

Dillon lifts the bike and cart into the back of his dad’s truck, and, okay, I’m a total girl about the way he’s so strong. I don’t say anything, of course. It wasn’t long ago I had a boyfriend I luuuurved. I’m not exactly in the place to be scoping out a new dude.

Dillon, on the other hand, isn’t shy about giving me the eye while Opal helps my mom get into the truck’s backseat with her. He’s not gross about it or anything, but I notice. And I like it.

“Everyone okay back there?” He twists in the driver’s seat to check on Opal and my mom. “Seat belts?”

I find the fact he’s eighteen and cares about seat belts unbearably cute. I look into the backseat to see Opal helping
my mom. She sits back and buckles herself. I put my own on, too.

Dillon grins and starts the truck. “Just give me directions. Spring Lake Commons, right?”

“Your mom must’ve told you a lot.” I stick my feet under the heater with a wiggle of relief when hot air starts blowing out. It feels like I’ve been some version of cold for weeks now.

Dillon shrugs as he pulls up to the stop sign. He looks carefully both ways before pulling into the intersection. “She’s talked about you, yeah. She likes your mom.”

I have to look out the window when he says this, because who could like my mom now, the way she is? I love her because she’s my mother, and I know Opal does. But do we like her? How can we?

There’s something else I like about Dillon. He doesn’t fill the silence with lame jokes or talk just for the sake of having something to say. He turns on the radio and hums along under his breath to songs I don’t really recognize. Static hisses and the station wavers in and out until he tunes it, and then a voice breaks in. It’s not the local station, and doesn’t sound like a DJ. It’s a young kid who identifies himself as “the Voice,” and the station as “Telling the truth they don’t want you to know.”

Dillon makes a face. “Oh, this guy.” He moves to change the station, but I stop him.

“What guy?”

“Ham radio,” he says. “Conspiracy theories. Stuff like that.”

“Wait. I want to hear this.”

“Sure.” He gives me another look from the corner of his eye.

We’ve reached the light in front of the Foodland parking lot, and it turns red, so he stops. The Voice has a low, rumbly voice. He sounds rushed but not crazy.

“Police and localized military units are asking citizens to remember that curfews are still in effect and that suspicious activity should be reported immediately. In other words, guys, stay off the streets after dark, or you might end up in a shock collar. And this just in from sources in the know, a man who lost control of himself in a local grocery store has been taken for questioning. Witnesses say the man, who has been identified but whose name is not yet being released, did not appear to be ill until he was unable to find the brand of frozen peas he was looking for. At that point, witnesses claim he shoved a grocery cart through the glass freezer case, then proceeded to break the others. Nobody was injured during the incident, but the suspect was taken into protective custody at once. No word has been released on whether this was a new case of Contamination, or something else. It’s out there, ladies and gents. It’s still out there.”

Other books

VirtualDesire by Ann Lawrence
EntangledTrio by Cat Grant
Thirteen Phantasms by James P. Blaylock
The Drowners by Jennie Finch
House of Shadows by Iris Gower