Lipstick & Zombies (Deadly Divas Book 1) (10 page)

BOOK: Lipstick & Zombies (Deadly Divas Book 1)
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Noah coughed and took another step forward, a devilish smile on his face. But it wasn't right. Noah never smiled like that.
Because Noah is dead,
she reminded herself.

"Ahh, and here's Noah," Tammi said, and then rambled on about something else Jo didn't bother following. Tammi kept one hand on Noah's shoulder. He seemed at ease. Like he was part of this world.

She stared straight at him, waiting for him to disappear, or explain himself, or for his existence to make sense. For him to lurch forward and bite at Tammi's hand, like the decaying version of him she saw in her dreams. One of the negatives of joining Deadly Divas had been giving up her goal of joining the military, finding his walking corpse on the other side of the wall, and putting it to rest at last. She'd listened at the wall, heard the groaning, and been sure that one of them was him.

But then he spoke, proving beyond a doubt that he was there, and still in his first life. "Ladies," he said, with another glance at Jo. She tightened her grasp on her forearms. Her crossed arms were keeping her together.

Someone explained something about their dances involving fight scenes and the tight collaboration between the three instructors. Someone explained something about this being important. Someone explained something about doing something very soon. Jo didn't know. Jo didn't care.

Noah went to lean against the wall, giving Marvin and Tammi time to go over some basic something with them for the afternoon. Her mind was numb. Her body followed instructions. Her eyes stayed locked on Noah.

 

GERRI

 

Jo was staring at Noah like she'd never seen a boy before. Gerri didn't know much about the survivalist compound out by the wall, so maybe Jo really hadn't ever seen a cute guy before. Still, he wasn't
that
cute.

Willa came in the room, silent, her head down while she went through her phone. Everyone stopped what they were doing and turned to look at her. Well, except Jo, who stopped, but still kept staring at Noah. Girl had problems.

"Everyone needs to check their updates for directions on the first single," Willa said, no greeting needed, apparently. "We'll get moving on this tomorrow."

"Tomorrow?" Marvin asked.

"That's not enough time," Tammi said. "We need to go over their skills and be sure they know the basics if they're going to be able to tackle the real work."

"Real work starts tomorrow, Tamara," Willa said. Tammi nodded and opened up her phone, presumably to check out the updates. Guess that was the end of that discussion.

"How do we have a first song already?" Sadie asked. "We haven't discussed anything yet."

"There's nothing for you to discuss," Willa said. "It's been prepared for you. Tomorrow you'll be getting it together."

"Couldn't we collaborate on this?" Carrie asked. "I wrote a few things I thought we could use for songs..."

"That's nice." Willa turned to leave the room. None of them bothered hollering after her this time.

"How does she do that?" Dee asked.

"She's definitely got it down," Gerri agreed.

"Got what down?" Sadie asked.

"Willa is
boss.
" Gerri said. "She barely says a thing, but can anyone argue with her? No one can ignore her." Gerri looked at Jo and rolled her eyes. "Well, almost no one."

"I'm gonna be like that," Dee said. "Queen B."
"That could be your stage name," Sadie suggested.

"Princess Dee," Gerri said.

"
Queen
," Dee corrected.

"Title's taken," Gerri said. "Wanna fight me for it, Princess?"

"Oh, girl, you wanna go?" Dee put her fists up.

"Oh, honey," Gerri said.

"I think we all know what Gerri's stage name would be," Carrie said. Sadie laughed.

"And what is
that
supposed to mean?"

"What do you think it means?" Sadie said. "Hasn't anyone ever pointed it out to you before?"

"Pointed what out?"

"You say
honey
quite a bit there,
honey
."

Gerri smiled and threw her shoulders back. "That's just 'cause I'm a sweet lady, honey."

"Mhm," Sadie said. "Sweet trouble."

Gerri shrugged, proud of the observation.

Marvin clapped again; apparently he and Tammi were done going over their new instructions. They were more intense for the rest of the afternoon, barking orders and making something as fun as dance into the most boring hours of her life. Dancing should be free and loose and exciting and energetic and just
life
. But the people assigned to teach her, who'd actually made dance their lives, were going over things she'd learned in those constricting classes of her early years. Lessons meant for a five-year-old, then six, seven, eight... the pace picked up as the afternoon went on, testing them faster and with less patience, but still, boring. When Tammi and Marvin passed them off to Noah, already exhausted and drenched in sweat, Gerri was ready to flee and start an impromptu parade on the afternoon streets, or hijack a helicopter and check out the tops of the wall, or anything else that would make her skin stop itching.

Noah pulled on a rope, dragging a piece of metal attached to five stand-up dummies into the room. This seemed more fun straight away.

It wasn't.

 

DEE

 

Fight class was like dance class was like voice class, which was to say, yawn. The cute boy got a lot less cute each time he told one of them to "focus" on hitting the dummies. Dee had put up with this twice now, and that was it. She let her body fall to the ground.

"You okay down there, hon?"

"I died. Of boredom." Her head fell to the side.

"Oh, oh no!" Gerri's body shook with the force of a lightning strike, arms raised to the sky. "The boredom." She choked, and fell to the floor beside Dee.

"You're bored?" Noah asked. His voice was quiet and calm, his hands clasped behind his back. He relaxed back against the wall, no longer the jerk fiercely ordering them around—
focus, try harder, dig deeper!

"Hells yes," Gerri said. "Wanna have some fun, Noah, sir?"

"That's a great idea." Noah pushed off the wall and crossed the large gym.

"Where you goin', hon?"

"To get us a good time," he said, and pulled open the wooden double doors to reveal a sliding glass door and a room full of cages. Cages of corpses.

Dee groaned. She got it: he was trying to scare them. She'd thought that when she became a Deadly Diva this cheesy scare-tactic elementary school stuff was, like, over. Obviously not.

What did he expect them to be scared of? It was just the other day they'd fought zombies themselves, and that was a
test—
way scarier than rotting corpses sitting in their cages.

"Don't worry," Noah said. "You'll need more than your shoe to take out one of these, Dee.”

“Don't underestimate her shoes, hon.”

“Wouldn't dream of it,” Noah said. “I still think you'll want something more for these. They're fresh."

Dee and Gerri sat up. More than a second's glance at the cages made it obvious: he wasn't kidding.

He loosely crossed his arms. "What's wrong, honey?"

"That's not funny," Gerri said.

"Was I laughing?" Noah asked. "The killers we put in your round three trial were meant to test your ability to handle the grosser elements, your levels of creativity in the kill, and to see how you responded when in fear for your lives. The danger was as minimized as possible. We put you in with an older, slower corpse that had many of its most dangerous parts discreetly removed, and a kill button installed in its brain."

"How does that work?" Sadie asked.

Noah pulled a trinket from his pocket. It was half the size of his pinkie and sharp on one end, flat on the other. "See this coil? Surgeons install this inside them, and with a click of a button, the killer's disabled."

"Neat," Carrie said.

"Gross," Dee corrected.

“Also, not the point,” Carrie said. “Fresh zombies? Why would anyone keep those around?” It was a good question. Everyone had seen fresh corpses before, people who'd died without anyone noticing. Not paying attention to your lonely neighbors was a dangerous thing. But, like, when that happened, you called for help and hid until it was taken care of. You didn't put it on display in a shiny box.

"Wait, so we were safe at auditions the whole time?" Gerri asked.

"Ha! No," Sadie said. "The only safe zombie is a headless zombie."

"She's right," Noah said. "But you weren't in as much danger as you could have been, and unless you feel comfortable taking on one of these fine specimens, you are still in need of training."

"Gulp," Gerri said.

"Why do we have to know how to take on a fresh zombie?" Carrie asked.

"It's always a good skill to have," Noah said. "You will be put in risky situations. Only so much of a staged fight can truly be staged when you're working with corpses. Also, the staged fights need to appear real; it needs to look like you know what you're doing. The best way to assure that is for you to actually know what you're doing. Any more objections to training?"

"Yes," Dee said.

"Fine," Noah said. "I'll make it more interesting." He opened the sliding door, and Dee and Gerri got up off the floor.

"Honey? Whatcha doing there?"

"Keeping you from dreaded boredom."
"How about we go to a nice dinner instead?" Dee adjusted her underpants. The dress she'd worn was too short for all this nonsense and was creating a world of problems that none of these people seemed to care about. Why style wasn't these people's first concern was a complete mystery to her, and she was seriously starting to doubt whether they knew all they needed to know to make her a star. "I have no end to my list of ideas for things we could do that would be better than this. We could pick you out a new wardrobe? Or, well, I could? And work on the rest of you while I'm at it. Time well spent. Much better spent than playing with dead things."

"Don't be scared, Dee," Noah said. He was unlocking one of the cage doors. He waved over at them, like he wanted them to come closer. Like that was going to happen. "What do you say? Wanna show 'em how it's done, Josie?"

Jo's nostrils flared. It was
not
pretty, not that Dee thought Jo cared about those things, because, even with the ugly that was Jo's shoes, Dee wasn't sure where she'd start correcting Jo's "look", if that's what you'd call it

"Josie?" Noah took a step toward her, ignoring the zombie cage he'd just unlocked. People loved to tell Dee she was dumb, but damned if it didn't seem to her that she was the only one with a brain.

"That's close enough, asshole," Dee said, one hand on her hip. "She obviously doesn't wanna talk to you. And her name is just Jo."

"Yeah," Gerri said, and gave Dee a funny look.

"I believe we're done for today," Sadie said.

"And you might wanna relock your scary zombie door." Dee grabbed Jo's arm and escorted her from the room. "I guess we can't all be beautiful
and
brilliant."

 

WILLA'S PHONE

 

Tammi:
How can I teach them to dance, if they won't listen?

Noah:
I'm going to need more time with them.

Marcus:
These are the worst clients I've ever had to dress. I don't even want to talk to them. I'm only doing this for you, you know. Anyone else asked me? I'd be done.

Marvin:
These are the wrong girls for the job. Maybe, if we had gotten them years ago, we could turn them into real dancers.

Meghan:
Unless you buy me a cattle prod, you're going to have to stop complaining about them showing up late.

Willa, to The Deadly Divas Team:
Suck it up. They're going to make us rich.

 

 

 

 

Chapter Nine

 

CARRIE

 

"So you are actually, in real life, not going to tell us what's going on with you and
our teacher
?" Gerri asked.

"Way to make it sound sordid," Carrie said.

"I didn't have to make it sound anything," Gerri said. "It is what it is. Which is?" She looked at Jo expectantly.

"Nothing," Jo said.

"You don't need that asshole," Dee said. "Hey, wanna go party?"

“Language,” Carrie admonished.

“Are you kidding?” Gerri laughed. “We're zombie killers.”

“Popstars,” Carrie corrected.

“Popstar zombie killers.”

“We're role models,” Carrie insisted.

“Right,” Gerri agreed. “For zombie killing.”

“Anyway!” Dee stomped her foot. “Do you want to go to a party, Jo? I can do your hair for you.”

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