London Eye: 1 (Toxic City) (2 page)

BOOK: London Eye: 1 (Toxic City)
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Breaking News:
A suspected gas attack in Central London has left hundreds dead or injured. Hospitals have been put on Major Incident alert. UK Threat Level raised to Critical. Homeland Security Threat Level raised to Severe/Red. More soon.

—CNN, 11:58 a.m. EST, July 28, 2019

J
enna answered the front door, looking excited and scared.

“Come on!” she said. “Sparky's already here.”

“How did he get here so quickly?” Lucy-Anne asked.

“I went to his place on my bike. Don't worry, I didn't use the phone.” Jenna turned and disappeared back into her house.

“I bet she bloody did,” Lucy-Anne said as she stepped over the threshold. “Bet she called him.”

Jack shook his head and followed his girlfriend inside. They were all careful, but sometimes she was ready to take caution too far. They always went under the assumption that the authorities listened to all telephone communication, but if any eavesdropper heard a girl calling a boy and saying,
Come over, I have a nice surprise
, it was doubtful they'd press the panic buttons.

He immediately noticed the strange atmosphere inside the house. There was nothing definable, nothing he could put his finger on, but the place had an air of…change.

A shadow filled the doorway to the kitchen, and the thunderous voice that followed was familiar to them both. “Hey, you bastards, finished playing with each other long enough to join us?”

“Hey, Sparky,” Jack said, smiling. They'd become friends through circumstance, brought together because of their beliefs and suspicions, but Sparky was a boy Jack would have got on with anyway, even if Doomsday hasn't happened and London was still there. Sure, he had a wildness about him. Sometimes he acted as if he had a fault-line running along his spine. One day he'd blow. Sparky's brother had blown long before Doomsday, taking to drugs, stealing cars, and running with a gang in the suburbs of London. But Jack was confident that Sparky would keep it together. If he ever did quake, it would be on the shoulders of someone that deserved it.

“Sparky,” Lucy-Anne said, “I
never
play.” Her false-seriousness made them all laugh, but something about Sparky's mirth sounded different.

“What is it?” Jack asked.

His friend stepped into the hallway. He was sweating, short blond hair pasted to his forehead. His eyes were wide and wild, and Jack thought he'd never seen the boy this worked up. “Something you've got to see for yourselves.”

Jenna appeared behind him in the kitchen doorway, short and slight, and wearing her beautiful long dark hair in its usual twisted mess on the back of her head. “You guys coming, or what?”

“Where are your parents?” Lucy-Anne asked.

“They went out. Come on!” Jenna turned and went back into the big kitchen-diner at the rear of the house. Sparky pressed himself against the wall and gestured for them to follow, bowing slightly.

As Jack walked past his big friend they swapped glances, and Sparky's eyes were alight.

There was an old woman sitting in a chair at Jenna's kitchen table. A pot of tea, several used cups, and crumbed plates cluttered the table's surface. The woman looked up and smiled. There was nothing particularly outlandish about the way she was dressed. She
had grey, unkempt hair, heavy boots which looked as though they'd suit Lucy-Anne better, old clothes that had seen better days. But a vivid red scar above one eye gave her a wild look. And her smile hid a deep sadness.

“Hello,” the woman said. “My name's Rosemary, and I'm from London.”

Jack shook his head and backed against the wall.
No one comes out of London
, he thought.
They shoot the things that try. They
burn
them!

Rosemary's smile grew. “Don't believe everything you see in the media. But then, you're the last people I need to say that to.”

“Did you…read my mind?” Jack asked.

“No, not me,” Rosemary said, “although I know a young woman back in the city who can do just that.”

“Isn't it wonderful?” Jenna asked. She stared at Jack and Lucy-Anne, as if expecting her enthusiasm to wash over them as well.

“Bloody miracle, is what it is,” Sparky said.

“How did you get out?” Jack asked.

Rosemary took a glass from the kitchen table and sipped at the water it contained. She closed her eyes and sighed; the sweetest thing ever. “Tunnels. There's a whole network under London, and not all of them are guarded.”

Jack shook his head. It didn't make sense. “So why haven't more people come out before now?”

“The route's only just been found. There's a man called Philippe who can see the lie of the land. A three-dimensional map in his mind, that's how he explains it to me, and he discovered this way to escape the city. We're afraid that a larger escape would be spotted, so I came alone to meet Jenna's father.”

“Why?” Jack was still pressed against the wall, and he felt his friends’ eyes on him; Jenna angry, Sparky challenging, Lucy-Anne…he could not read her. She was a blank. He hoped it was caution.

“So many questions,” Rosemary said.

“What the bloody hell do you expect?”

“Jack,” Jenna said, stepping forward. She touched his shoulders and looked up at him. She was sweet, her caramel skin impossibly smooth, and in other circumstances he could have seen them being together. But she was usually so filled with sadness that she rarely let anyone close.

“It's just something I never expected.”

“It's something we've always
hoped
for!” Jenna whispered.

“So what can you do?” he asked over his friend's shoulder.

“I'm a healer,” Rosemary said.

“Huh!”

Jenna squeezed his arms, but he would not catch her eye.
She could have been sent here by the Capital Keepers
, he wanted to say. And the more he thought about that, the more likely it seemed. If that were the truth they were already doomed, and they'd be whisked away, and even if they
were
allowed back home they'd be changed like Jenna's father. Ghosts of their former selves.

“Need an open mind, mate,” Sparky said.

Jack shook his head. “It just can't be.”

Jenna sighed, and rested her head on his shoulder to whisper into his ear. The closeness surprised him. “Always the doubter,” she said.

And then she stabbed him.

Lucy-Anne went for Jenna. The girl turned with the knife held out. Lucy-Anne feinted right, then moved left, swinging her forearm before her to divert Jenna's arm. But the knife fell and struck the tiled floor with a splash of blood, and Jenna retreated against the closed back door.

Lucy-Anne snatched up the blade and was on the other girl in a second. She pressed her against the door with an arm across her
throat, and then they locked stares; two friends who had been through so much, and Lucy-Anne remembered a dozen times when they had eased each other's tears.

“What the hell…?” she asked, and Jenna shook her head.

“Lucy-Anne, trust me.”

Lucy-Anne looked down at where Jack had slumped to the floor. He was pale, but for the startlingly bright blood pulsing between his fingers from his leg.
Artery
, she thought,
oh shit, she got his artery
. She glanced across at where a phone was fixed to the wall.

Rosemary rose from the table, sighing as her joints clicked with audible pops. “Don't worry,” she said, her voice endlessly calm.

“Don't worry?” Lucy-Anne shouted. She pulled Jenna from the door and pushed her across the kitchen towards the old woman, facing them all with the bloodied knife held before her. “Don't worry?” She looked at Sparky, expecting support from him but seeing only a strange, subdued excitement in his eyes. He was not looking at her, or the knife she held, or even at their friend bleeding to death on the floor. He was looking at Rosemary.

Jack groaned. He was staring down at his leg, watching as pressure pumped the blood past his pressing hands.

Rosemary stood by Jack's feet and looked at Lucy-Anne. “Girl, I'll give you a reason to believe,” she said, and then she knelt beside the wounded boy. Jack tried to wave her away, but his coordination was failing.

“Let her,” Jenna said.

Lucy-Anne watched. Her own heart was beating in time with Jack's pulsing blood, and she held the knife so tight that her fingers hurt.
I won't let go
, she thought.
Not until I'm sure.
But she was holding the knife on her best friends in the world, and something about that made her feel sick.

Rosemary lifted Jack's hands away from his wound, and used a
small pair of scissors to cut open his sodden jeans. Then she replaced his hands with her own. She gave him a quick, sad smile, and then her eyes closed. Her face went blank—
empty
—as though she had gone elsewhere.

And then her hands slipped inside Jack's leg.

When Jack came to, Jenna was on her hands and knees mopping up the blood, but she could not take her eyes off the old woman. Rosemary sat at the kitchen table again, drinking water and sighing as though it were nectar.

“Do you actually fix it, or is it, like…?” Lucy-Anne trailed off. She was sitting opposite the old woman. She had a knife in her left hand, resting on her leg, and as she shifted it fell to the floor. She did not seem to notice.

“Hey…” Sparky lifted the short sleeve of his tee shirt exposing the tattoo of his brother's name that he'd done himself. He'd been drunk at the time, and the ‘S’ of Stephen looked more like an ‘F.’ “Can you fix this?”

Rosemary smiled and shook her head.

“How about this?” Sparky pointed at his face.

Rosemary frowned. “What's wrong with it?”

“Ugly,” Jack said, and it seemed to take all his energy. Here he was, subject of a miracle, and everyone's attention was elsewhere. But when he looked at his leg at last—and saw the smooth spread of skin that minutes earlier had been pouting open—he realised that he was wrong. He was not the miracle at all.

“So do you now believe, non-believer?” Jenna roared, her voice mock-deep. Jack stood cautiously, leaning against the wall. He put weight on his leg. It felt as though the wound had never been there at all.

“You stabbed me.”

“Well…” She shrugged, raising her eyebrows.

“Yeah,” Jack said. “I believe.”

“So can we all talk now?” Jenna asked. She sat at the table and motioned the others to join her.

This is it
, Jack thought.
This is when it all changes. I've been touched already, but if we sit and listen to this woman, we'll get drawn in.
Rosemary smiled at him, inviting him to join them at the table, and in that moment he saw something of his mother in her. She was much older than his mum—maybe seventy-five—and weary, worn by time and circumstance. But she exuded a deep-set goodness from every pore.

“Does it hurt to heal?” Jack asked. That question suddenly seemed very important.

“No,” she said. “It feels as natural as breathing.”

Jack nodded, went to the table and sat down next to Lucy-Anne. She grabbed his hand and squeezed too hard, her nervousness and excitement obvious. Sometimes he sensed such violence in her that it scared him.

“So why have you come for my father?” Jenna asked.

“Things are falling apart,” Rosemary said. She sighed, and looked around the table. “How much do you all know?”

“We know it wasn't terrorists,” Jack said. “An army scientist crashed a helicopter into the London Eye and released a virus they called Evolve.”

“Angelina Walker,” Jenna said. “No one knows why she did it.”

Jack nodded. “We know that not everyone in London was infected and killed.”

“And that the survivors are hunted,” Jenna added.

“And they're special,” Lucy-Anne said. “They're called Irregulars, like you.”

“Not all like me,” Rosemary said. “I can heal. Others can do different
things, a whole host of
amazing
things. And we're all sought-after by the Choppers.”

“Choppers?”

“That's what
we
call the ones that hunt us. You call them Capital Keepers. But whether they're scientists or military, it doesn't really matter. When they catch an Irregular they do…terrible things. So we call them Choppers.”

“What terrible things?” Lucy-Anne asked, squeezing Jack's hand even harder.

Rosemary closed her eyes. “We need help. We need to get out of there, and the only way that will happen without slaughter is if the general public—
all
of them—know the truth of what's happening. We need exposure.” She looked at Jenna. “That's why I came to find your father. To ask him to come in with me, gather evidence, and then present it to the world. So…will he be here soon?”

“It's
us
you're talking to here!” Lucy-Anne said. She stood sharply, sending her chair scraping across the floor. “And don't you bloody
dare
look down on us just because we're just kids. We've all grown up a lot since Doomsday, because we've
had
to.” She pointed at Jack. “Mother and father.” At Sparky. “Brother.” And herself. “Mother, father, brother.”

Rosemary's expression did not change at this roll-call of the missing and dead. “The last thing I'd call you is kids,” she said.

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