Draculas (18 page)

Read Draculas Online

Authors: J A Konrath,Blake Crouch,Jack Kilborn,F. Paul Wilson,Jeff Strand

Tags: #Horror, #Fiction

Working from memory, Jenny flailed out her hands until she found the shelf on the wall, then followed it until she came to the children's art supplies: boxes of crayons, construction paper, bottles of finger paint, balloons...

Dammit, where are they?

Her probing fingers found their way into a cardboard box, locking onto a cylindrical, pen-shaped object. She shook it vigorously and bent it in half with a faint
CRACK
. Immediately, it gave off a faint, green light. Glow sticks. Essential for any underage patient afraid of the dark.

Apparently encouraged by the light, the monsters outside the door became even more frantic in their zeal to get in. The glass window shattered, and a taloned arm forced itself through, slashing at the air inches from Jenny's face.

Jenny lurched away, tripping over someone's legs, falling onto her ass. The children continued to scream. The dracula thrashed and swiped its claws. It even managed to push its head through, scraping its face against the jagged, broken glass, its neck kinked at an odd angle.

Jenny tore herself away from the horror, reaching for the box of glow sticks. To quiet the screaming of the children, she began bending, shaking, and passing them out as fast as she could. There were different colors, red and purple and yellow and orange, all giving off a diffuse, pastel light that reminded Jenny of another of Randall's favorite VHS tapes--the movie
Tron
.

But rather than pacify the kids, the increased illumination allowed everyone to focus on the spastic dracula stuck in the window.

"Shh. Quiet. Everyone quiet down. It's okay. The worst is over."

She was wrong. The creature went from hissing to screeching, its head and arm flopping around as if in the throes of a grand mal seizure. Its eyes rolled up, showing the whites. Froth, then blood, sprayed from the torn vestiges of its lips. It began to shake its head, faster and faster, beating it against the sides of the windows, shredding off its own ears in the process.

Then the monster's eyes bulged, protruding like hardboiled eggs. With an audible
POP
, they escaped their sockets, dangling by their optic nerves.

No...not the nerves. The eyeballs were pierced on the ends of two talons.

Another dracula had dug into the back of this one's skull.

A millisecond later the dead creature was yanked free of the door. Jenny and the children listened to the frenzied feeding. Growls. Snapping jaws. Gurgling blood. Wet smacking.

It was like listening to a BBQ in hell.

Jenny sat back in the corner of the room, four children desperately clinging to her. Their hysterical screaming eventually subsided to steady sobs. Jenny kept her arms around them, patting arms, tousling hair, trying to figure out what to do next while nervously waiting for something else horrible to happen.

But nothing did. Eventually the feasting sounds died down, then vanished all together.

Jenny began to count her heartbeats. At any moment, she expected another dracula to try and force itself in through the window.

By the time she reached two hundred, all sounds had ceased.

There was only silence.

Dreadful, expectant silence.

"Are they gone?" one of the kids asked.

"I don't know," Jenny answered. "Is anyone hurt? Did anyone get bit?"

"I wet my pants."

"It's all right," Jenny told the little boy. "We can take care of that later. You've all been very brave so far. I need you to keep being brave."

Jenny tried to stand, but eight little hands clung to her.

"I have to check to see if they're still there."

"No! Don't go!"

"It's okay. I promise I'll be fine. I need to get to the intercom and call my husband."

"Is he the big man with the chainsaw?"

"Yes."

"Is he going to save us?"

Jenny pictured Randall.

Big, clumsy, stupid Randall.

Loyal, loving, brave Randall.

"Yes," she said, surprising herself with the certainty of her conviction. "He is."

Lanz

KURT Lanz, MD, inhaled through the scorched, gaping hole in his face where his nose used to be. Part of him--the rational, thinking part--knew that when he'd yanked off his burned nose to eat, he'd managed to deviate his septum. But that didn't matter now.

All that mattered was blood.

After killing the lights, he'd scampered to the geriatric ward, giddy with the thought of defenseless old people. But it had been picked clean.

Next, he'd gone to the Birthplace, but found the entrance locked. He couldn't fit through the small window hole in the door, which infuriated him, because he could smell humans in there.

Oncology was next and yielded similar results. The beds were empty, the ward in disarray. Lanz tried to squeeze a few drops of blood from a severed leg he'd found on the floor, but it had been sucked dry. He made do chewing on a blood-soaked bed sheet, swallowing the torn strips.

The many others roaming the halls had sensed their blood supply gone and begun to turn on each other. Lanz even joined in, pouncing on a smaller creature--a teenager--that was being eviscerated by a group of larger adults. Lanz got away with a kidney and half the liver.

Neither soothed the growing ache in his belly.

He craved blood.

He wanted it more than he'd ever wanted anything in his life.

Half-insane with bloodlust, he remembered that bitch up in pediatrics. Jenny. Assuming she'd been resourceful enough to fight off the horde, perhaps she was still alive. Maybe she'd even managed to protect some of the children.

The innocent, defenseless, delicious little children.

Only one way to find out...

Lanz slunk into the stairwell, taking the steps three at a time, his mouth salivating at the thought of the nurse's sweet, warm blood.

Stacie

AT first, she thought she'd lost consciousness, but the pain was still there, like her back was ripping itself apart, and then the lights returned, only in a much diminished state--nothing but a cold, blue glow emitting from the battery-backup above the door to her room.

Two figures emerged out of the shadowy corridor--Adam and Nurse Herrick hurrying back.

"What happened to the lights?" Stacie asked through gritted teeth.

"I don't know," the nurse said.

"Epidural," Stacie moaned. "I didn't want it, wasn't part of the plan, but now--"

"I'm sorry, sweetie." Nurse Herrick patted her hand.

"What do you mean 'sorry'? I can't keep..." Her voice trailed into another groan as Adam came around and put his hand on her shoulder. "Don't touch me," she seethed through the pain.

"Baby, this too shall--"

"Oh my God, if you quote another fucking bible verse, I'm gonna rip your eyes out of your head. Nurse, get me the epidural."

"I'm not qualified to administer it."

Desperate now, she pleaded, "How hard can it be?"

"It's a spinal block. I could accidentally paralyze you for life. You could get an infection and die. It takes a high level of skill that I don't have."

Stacie glared at Adam, felt a rush of anger flooding through her.

"You can do this," he said. "I know you can. You're so beautiful."

She shook her head. "You did this to me.
You
did, and I will never forgive you as long as I--"

"Stacie--"

"Stop. Talking."

The nurse perused one of the cabinets, finally emerging with a flashlight. She came around to the foot of the bed and lifted Stacie's gown.

"I need to push," Stacie begged. She'd never wanted anything so badly.

"Not yet."

"
Why?
" She could feel the nurse's hands probing under her gown.

"You're almost fully dilated," Herrick said. "I can't believe how fast you're progressing. Wait until the next contraction, and when it comes, you grab your husband's hand and push like you've never pushed before. But not on this one."

She thought about crushing the bones in Adam's fingers and this made her briefly happy.

"
Don't
push," Herrick warned.

"I'm not! Adam?"

He was suddenly right there.

"What, baby?"

"I'm never doing this again."

"I know."

And suddenly she could breathe again, her chest heaving, sweat running down into her eyes. A break between the bouts of torture.

She could hear more gunshots blasting in the hospital.

"Are the doors out there holding?" she asked.

"Don't think about it," Adam said.

"Please check."

Her husband hustled out of the room as Nurse Herrick fed her another ice chip. "This is the threshold, Stacie," she said. "I've seen a lot of women at this point, where you think you can't go on, and you know what?"

"What?"

"Babies get born, every day."

"So what do I do?"

"You breathe through it. Just breathe. The baby's coming no matter what you do."

Adam returned. "The barricade's still in place."

And then it came, a contraction a step above all others, a new revelation of pain, and Stacie felt the ring of fire her girlfriends had joked about--nothing in the history of language had been so aptly named--and the voices in her ear all swirling, yelling,
Push! The head's coming! You're almost there! Just a little longer!

Three minutes of the most intense pain of her life, and all she could think was,
There better be a motherfucking baby at the end of this contraction,
and when it finally, mercifully passed, it was like coming up for air after three minutes underwater.

She didn't hear any crying, just her husband's voice in her ear, distant and echoey, telling her how great she was doing.

Nurse Herrick was right at her ear.

"The head is halfway out. Baby's in a good position. You push it out next contraction."

Next?

She was nodding, and before she could wrap her head around the concept of "next" she was pushing again, her throat raw from screaming, screaming for what seemed like hours through unending pain, and then her head fell back into the pillow. She was done. She had nothing left. She quit, because the contraction was over and still this thing was inside of--

A small, precious cry brought her head instantly up off the pillow.

Nurse Herrick stood at the foot of the bed, holding a tiny creature, suctioning its mouth and nose, and then a baby-cry erupted and this living, squirming creature was on Stacie's chest, blue and covered in vernix, all the anger, fear, and pain replaced by a shot of the most all-encompassing joy she'd ever known, and Stacie was sobbing, and Adam right there with her--strong, beautiful, loving, perfect Adam--and he was crying and patting their baby's back.

"You're amazing, baby," he said, laughing. "Both of you."

She could feel the umbilical cord pulsing against her stomach.

"I'll leave you two for a minute," Herrick said, and as she slipped outside, Stacie looked at Adam, touched his blue-lit face.

"Should we check?" she said.

"Check what?"

"If this is Matthew or Daniella."

Adam laughed. "I hadn't even thought of it."

"Introduce us," Stacie said.

"You sure?"

"Yeah."

Stacie turned her head away as Adam lifted their cooing baby and then eased it back onto her chest. He had tears in his eyes when she looked back.

"Stacie," he said, and she looked down into the little face, eyes struggling to open, staring cross-eyed right into hers. "I'd like to introduce you to your daughter, Daniella."

"Hey, baby girl," Stacie said, touching the back of her finger to Daniella's little cheek. "Meet your mom and dad. We're going to..."

"Stace? You all right?"

She was. She was great. The pain was gone, just a little dizziness. Well, maybe a lot of dizziness, and it was coming on stronger with every passing second.

"Yeah, I just...little light-headed."

Adam moved around to the end of the bed, said, "Oh, God," and Stacie watched him rush out of the room, heard him calling Nurse Herrick, something in the tone of his voice that unnerved her. She couldn't take her gaze off Daniela, but she was having a hard time keeping her eyes open now, and the last thing she noticed before she descended into unconsciousness were the bloody footprints--Adam's--leading out into the corridor, dark as crude oil in the lowlight.

Adam

HE found Herrick at the nurse's station, making entries in a chart by flashlight.

"She's bleeding," he said. "A lot."

Herrick dropped her pen and came around the desk into the corridor, practically ran down the hall.

"Is this normal?" Adam said.

They passed through the open door into Stacie's room and Herrick stopped, staring at the bloody sheets, the dark drops falling into a puddle on the floor.

"Stacie!" she yelled, and Adam followed her to his wife's bedside. "Stacie. Can you hear me?"

Stacie still held the baby in her arms, but her eyes were closed, and even in the lowlight, Adam thought she looked pale.

Herrick lifted Stacie's wrist, checked her radial pulse.

She turned on her flashlight and lifted Stacie's hospital gown.

"Is she gonna be okay?"

"Shhh."

A beat of terrible silence, and then Herrick turned and faced him.

"She's postpartum hemorrhaging."

"What does that mean?"

"She passed the placenta immediately following birth. What I'm guessing is there's still a piece of it in there."

"Why is that bad?"

"Because it's stopping her uterus from contracting."

"How much blood has she lost?"

"I don't know for sure, but at least half a liter, which is past the point of being okay."

"Oh God."

"Listen to me."

"Can you fix her?"

"Yes, but I need your help."

"Anything."

"I think I can stop the bleeding, but she's lost so much already, she's gonna need a transfusion."

"Okay."

"You have to go down to the blood bank."

Adam felt a tremor of fear ride down his legs.

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