The New Hunger

Read Online The New Hunger by Isaac Marion - Free Book Online Page B

Book: The New Hunger by Isaac Marion Read Free Book Online
Authors: Isaac Marion
Tags: Fiction, Literary, General, Romance, Paranormal, Dystopian
Ads: Link
gasoline on a leather couch. A man in a tie screaming into a radio. A blonde woman touching the man’s face, then dying beside a river.
    THERE, the brute shouts, interrupting his daydream, and the images fade. GO. TAKE. EAT.
    The cloud of hands surges down into the city like a squid on the hunt. With his head bowed, the man goes where he’s led.

 
    “Are we going back to the Space Needle?” Addis asks when the motel has vanished from sight and they have recovered some composure.
    “No.”
    “Why are we going over this bridge again?”
    “I don’t know.”
    “You don’t know?”
    “Surprise. Big sister doesn’t know everything.”
    Silence.
    “Maybe we should go up there.” He points east, toward a distant hill topped by three radio towers.
    “Why?”
    “I don’t know.”
    “If you want to go places for no reason, just keep following me. You get to be our new leader when you come up with a plan.”
    “Maybe there’s people up there. Look at all the houses.”
    Nora considers the plateau of palatial Colonials, balconies and roof decks, stunning water views. That must be where all Seattle’s money used to go. Surely those estates have good enough security to keep out a few shambling corpses.
    “Okay,” Nora says, shrugging. “Let’s go find Bill Gates’s house.”
    “Who’s Bill Gates?”
    “A super rich guy.”
    “What’s ‘rich’ mean?”
    Nora opens her mouth to answer, then chuckles, pondering the vocabulary of future generations.
    “Nothing, Addy,” she says. “Nothing much.”
    • • •
     
    When they reach the bottom of the highway hill, she looks back to see how far they’ve come and notices two figures in the distance, cresting the peak. They are so far away they’d be invisible except that they are the only things in her entire field of vision that are moving. She can’t make out any details of their faces or features, but one of them is much taller than the other and the short one is limping severely, as if missing a foot, perhaps.
    So they travel together on their little murder spree. Boney and Clyde. How cute.
    “Those things are following us,” Nora tells Addis as they exit the highway and start heading east, toward the trio of radio towers that tops the hill like a tiara. “We need to find more bullets.”
    “I’m really hungry,” Addis says.
    “Did you finish your leftovers?”
    “Yeah.”
    “Check mine.”
    He unzips her backpack and digs around in

    Nora frowns at it. “Is that all I saved?”
    “Yeah.”
    “God. What a fatty.”
    Addis opens it and squeezes a clump of tofu into his mouth. He offers the bag to her and she starts to take it, then looks at her brother’s face. His cheekbones.
    “You have it,” she says. “I’m not hungry.”
    Her stomach chooses that moment to growl ferociously.
    “Are too,” Addis says.
    “Okay I’m lying. But you’re a growing boy and I’m just a lazy old teenager. You eat it.”
    “Do you think there’s food in those houses?”
    “Probably. Hopefully.”
    He relents. He squeezes out another precious helping of tofu and cold margarine and they keep walking.
    They pass a small Airstream trailer turned on its side, napkins and plastic forks spewed out into the street. A menu Sharpied onto its steel panels advertises grass-fed burgers on locally baked brioche, but the stench emanating from it advertises maggots.
    “Cheeseburgers,” Addis points out.
    “Yummy.”
    Addis sighs and digs his face into the Ziploc, licking out the last of the tofu.
    “We’ll look for food as soon as we get safe,” Nora says. “Bullets before burgers.”
    He gives her an accusatory glare that’s somewhat undermined by the globs of margarine in his eyebrows. “Are you gonna kill them next time?”
    “I’m at least gonna kill the lady one.”
    “Why not the man?”
    “I don’t know. I’ll probably kill him too. But he’s a little different.”
    “Because he didn’t try to eat us?”
    “Maybe.”
    “Why didn’t

Similar Books

Table for Two

Marla Miniano

Rainbow's End

James M. Cain

End Time

Keith Korman

The Essential Writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ralph Waldo Emerson, Mary Oliver, Brooks Atkinson

Seduced by Chaos

Stephanie Julian

Screamer

Jason Halstead

The Blue Line

Ingrid Betancourt

Crunch Time

Diane Mott Davidson