I immediately cursed my stupid decision to scream.
Not content with just ripping chunks of flesh from my friend sprawled on the stairs, three of them turned their grotesque heads to me and started running toward me.
They weren’t fast, but that didn’t make them any less scary.
“REBECA?” I heard Victoria’s voice boom above me. “LAURA?”
“I am fine!” I yelled back, unsure how to report Laura’s condition.
I turned to run back up to my group, but I tripped and fell to the ground. My shin bumped against the edge of the step and a grunt of pain leaked from my lips. Only then did I realize how I was shaking. The metal bar continually hit the floor, emitting a constant metallic sound due to the lack of instability with which I held it.
With no time to waste, I supported myself on my arms and climbed some stairs on all fours until I was able to stand. I ran to the end of that flight of stairs and looked back.
One of them was very close to me. How close did he come to grabbing me while I was down? I felt a gross shiver go through my body, but I didn’t run again. There was no use going up and taking those monsters to my colleagues, to surround us in that dead end.
I tightened my fingers around the metal bar tighter, gripping it with both hands now. I stared at the approaching thing, paying attention to its movements: it didn’t seem to be fast, although it climbed determinedly, grunting and keeping its eyes on me. It was a girl and her face was intact, so I recognized her by sight, but I didn’t know her name. I didn’t care. I positioned myself with one leg in front of the other and brought the bar hard back, looking for momentum. I swung around and, with all the strength I could find, slammed the bar into the creature’s chest just as it hit the bottom step.
The blow made my arms ache, but it worked: she was thrown violently backwards and, unable to find her balance, fell backwards down the stairs, landing violently on the floor. I heard a grotesque sound as her head met the concrete, splattering blood from the side. I felt like vomiting.
I braced myself for another blow when she stood up, but the former student remained completely still, her neck twisted at a bizarre angle. I gripped the bar hard, bracing myself for a sudden rage from that thing, but nothing happened for a few seconds.
I couldn’t watch any longer, as at that moment the other two monsters turned the curve, entering my line of sight. I don’t know where the courage that led me to face that being came from, but I wouldn’t challenge my luck against two of them and I bolted up the stairs. I could hear growls behind me and the constant thunderous protest of the door with every kick.
As soon as I rounded the next turn, however, I felt something hit me hard and a searing pain shot through my head as I hit something hard. I had to hold back a scream of terror as I went on alert with shock. I tried to move away, but as soon as I looked up, I saw Guilherme’s green eyes.
“My God, I’m sorry Rebecca!” He said, putting one hand on his chin and holding my shoulder with the other. I felt completely dizzy “Are you all right? Were you attacked?”
“No,” I groaned, thanking him for his support. “They got Laura. They ate her… I ran away. I hit one and he fell headfirst to the floor. He didn’t move anymore… “ I vomited the words in a hurry, dominated by the adrenaline that the scare had caused me.
“I’m glad you’re okay.” I heard growls right behind us and Guilherme’s hand wrapped around my wrist. “ Come on, go up.” He put his arm around me, guiding me to the stairs. The dizzy feeling lingered in my body, causing me to zigzag up.
Just as we reached the top, a final crash echoed off the walls and declared that the door had finally opened. A few pieces of wood flew out as the double doors swung open and the hinges groaned loudly. The late afternoon sun invaded that dark staircase.
Everyone immediately bolted into the street except Melissa and Victoria, who stopped to see if I was okay. When I put my hand where I hit my head, I felt a hot liquid, but I declared that I was fine.
“Come on, damn it!” Shouted Carlos. “Do you want to die?”
I saw that Guilherme looked at him with disapproval, but he put his hands around me again, indicating that I should go outside. I obeyed, joining the girls.
“You can close it, Laura couldn’t.” I heard Guilherme shouting behind.
As soon as we were through the door, I heard another noise as they closed it. Everything revolved around me. When I felt a sudden lack of balance, I was held up by the chubby boy with the glasses and I smiled at him in gratitude.
“Come on, help me barricade this!” I heard Rogério’s call and the boy’s support went away. I didn’t pay attention to what was happening and I just sat on the floor, closing my eyes, not before I saw that Faber was also sitting there, eyes wide. I wanted to exchange any words with him, but my body was flooded with adrenaline and, again, the clatter of the metal bar against the floor told me I was shaking. I realized only then that I was still carrying it.
“Rebecca, what happened to your head?” Victoria asked, kneeling beside me. I felt like she pressed something against my wound, making it hurt. I groan.
“I… I was hit by G-guilherme.” I replied, opening my eyes and finding her black pupils next to me. Finally everything had stopped spinning.
I saw that the boys were dragging a rust-corroded metal cabinet to the door, while Carlos and Davi struggled with their bodies to keep it closed. Ana joined the group to move the locker more quickly, using it as a barricade. Soon they started looking for some tables and chairs that could give more support. I felt a little useless at that moment.
“I’m glad you’re okay. What happened to Laura? Didn’t she make it?” I finally realized that what Victoria was pressing against my forehead was a piece of gauze.
“Thank you, Victoria.” I muttered, taking her hand away with mine so I could hold the gauze. “I’m better now, I think I got a little dizzy.” I opened my mouth to speak, but found it very difficult to continue with the speech.
“Laura… When I arrived they were already… She didn’t even move.” I felt the tears coming again.
Laura wasn’t a great friend of mine. In fact, one of my best friends had been killed that morning and I had no idea where the other one was and at that moment it hit me like thunder. It was almost late afternoon on the day of the apocalypse and that was the first time I remembered my friends. Would Amanda have saved herself or managed to run from that freak show that unfolded in the schoolyard? I shivered, letting the tears flow. What kind of friend was I?
I felt Victoria’s thin arms wrapping around my body and offering me warmth. That gesture alone was enough to set off an uncontrollable wave of crying. I didn’t know if my friends were okay, my last contact with my grandmother didn’t give me security, nor did I know if I would have any chance of meeting the rest of my family again. My father… My brother…
My God, Mei should be so scared.
I squeezed Victoria tightly into her embrace, feeling the bones prominent in her back.
Carlos knelt, facing me. He seemed calmer and looked at me with understanding. I felt his warm hand on my shoulder.
“Rebeca, I know it’s not easy. It’s not being for anyone. You were very brave to have gone to save Laura,” he began, looking me in the eye. “But you can’t fall apart now. We’ll need to continue soon.” He nodded toward the emergency stairs and I immediately understood what he was talking about.
Carlos was right. It was no use crying like a child. If I was worried about everyone, that was precisely why I needed to get out of there soon. I took a deep breath, trying to hold back the tears, and wiped my face on the back of my arm.
“Thank you so much, Victoria.” I smiled at her, pulling out of her embrace and standing up again.
I looked around and found everyone else standing near the edge of the penthouse overlooking downtown. Only Carlos and Guilherme were further away, talking softly to each other while looking at me, not bothering to be discreet.
I helped Victoria to her feet and we approached the edge.
Not even in my worst nightmares could I witness as much fear as what dominated my body at that moment.
As our school was in a higher part of the rest of the city, we had a privileged view of the penthouse, beautiful on all other days. Today, however, this cabin only gave us a worse prospect of the end of the world that lay beneath us.
There was a lot of smoke, and that was the most noticeable right away. Several spots of a thick black curtain rose to the sky from high flames of fire. Almost every street we saw was completely dominated by cars parked in single file and only then did the honking of horns become evident. And these were the good ones. On other streets, it was possible to see grotesque pile-ups, crashes of almost ten cars at once. But the worst was the people running. Like thousands of desperate little ants, they ran wildly from grotesque and infernal beings, but so much like the prey they were chasing. In that profane setting, the case proved to be the only law. Far from the city, the blue carpet of the sea stretched to the horizon, daring to show itself beautiful and calm in the face of this horrible spectacle. I followed its length until I reached the bridge that connected the center of our city to the mainland, trembling with despair: it was completely bottled up, with no possibility of crossing in vehicles.
“I d-don’t…” Melissa began, immediately breaking into a frantic cry. I saw that Ana accompanied her and it was possible to see tears forming in the corners of Rogério’s eyes. I dreaded seeing despair settling on everyone’s faces.
“Calm down. The police should be aware by now. They’ll send the army to help, for sure.” Rogério said, without any belief in his voice. “Let’s stay here, all of us. I’ll try to contact the police.” He took his cell phone out of his pants and brought it to his ear.
That was my cue to let go of the terrified state I was in and realize that it was my time to prepare to finally leave school.
I headed towards the emergency stairs, to check how it was down there. Its metal frame swayed a lot in the wind and looked dangerous, but at that moment this was the last thing I would be afraid of.
To my surprise, the high school woods were completely peaceful, looking like an untouched piece of paradise. In a short, silly daydream, I thought about staying there forever.
“You’re not really thinking about going, are you?” asked Roger in disbelief. “Rebeca, have you seen how the city is? Will you throw yourself into this chaos alone? You will not leave!” He tried to make his voice authoritative, but a subtle stutter got in the way.
“With all due respect, professor, but I can’t stay here. I need to go home. My grandmother and Mei could be in danger, I need to try to talk to my father and brother. Even if I wanted to, I couldn’t just sit here and wait for rescue. I’ve been through hell today and I’ll go through as many more as it takes.” The speech would have been beautiful if it hadn’t been for the not-so-subtle tone of dread. Still, I held to the resolve that those words carried.
“And we go along with her.” added Guilherme, coming a little closer to me. If our small group already seemed shocked by my stampede, the surprise that I would be accompanied was more evident.
“My house is also over the bridge. I think I better try to get there before things get worse.” Carlos said, not bothering to bring words of hopelessness.
“It’s stupid to stay here,” said the curly-haired girl.
There was silence in the place, while everyone looked at us as if we were crazy. Maybe they were right.
“I-I… Can you guys drop me off at home?” We heard a low, faint voice from behind the group. Melissa, still sniffling and wiping her eyes with the back of her hand, moved closer to us. Her blond hair was messy and she looked shabby. “I live close by.” She pointed somewhere in the distance, towards the sea, without any precision.
“ It’s on the way downtown. On Avenida das Torres.” She sniffled again and looked at none of us in particular, her big eyes wet with tears.
Carlos and Guilherme looked at each other. They were Melissa’s friends and I knew it. I was sure they would make the decision on their own, so I prepared to announce my departure from the newly formed group, when Carlos caught my eye.
“What you think?” He looked at me, his face sincere, then turned to look at the mess our city had become.
A small feeling of satisfaction raced through my body, seeing that my opinion would matter after all. Maybe that’s why I didn’t think of any consequences.
“It’s on the way,” I muttered hesitantly. “I don’t see why not.”
The black girl next to us just shrugged.
Melissa looked directly at me now.
“Can Ana and Victoria go together?” she asked. “Vic’s house is almost on the other side of the island, but her parents are friends with mine, so it’s okay for her to stay there. Then she looked at Anna. “And I know you live across the bridge, you can stay at the house too. If you want to go with them later…”
An uncomfortable feeling coursed through my body. I didn’t mean to sound selfish, but as that group grew, my concern grew with it. Of course, I wouldn’t deny help to anyone, but… It would be difficult enough with Guilherme and Carlos, who can certainly take care of themselves. The other girl was so calm it almost seemed as if no dead roamed the world…
“I’ll come along too,” announced the chubby boy, another person I still hadn’t figured out the name of. His brown hair a little too long was blowing in the wind and he had a serious expression on his face. “ My house is on the other side of the bridge. I don’t think it makes sense to stay here waiting.”
Although no one invited him, none of us showed any disapproval. After all, apparently everyone who thought it was better to get out of there also decided to join us.
I sought the approval of Guilherme and Carlos with my eyes, which did not seem to show any disapproval. The curly haired girl was quiet.
Rogério and Davi remained looking at us as if we werewe are completely crazy. Faber, meanwhile, stood in shock looking out over the burning city. Only God knew what could be going on in his heart, far from his family, in a country whose evil dominated the native language. I wanted to invite him, but even I wasn’t sure of my choices.
Now, next to me were Carlos, Guilherme, Melissa, Victória, Ana, and the other two students whose names I didn’t know.
“I know now is an awkward time for this question, but what are your names?” I looked at them both.
“Helena,” the girl replied, her skin as dark as her serious eyes. “I’m a sophomore. Since you didn’t ask our names, I assumed you might know us.” After all, it was a little more common for younger students to meet seniors.
“Hector.” answered the boy with the glasses, nervous. “I heard you are called Rebeca. That’s it, right?”
I nodded at him.
“Now that the introductions are over, shall we?” Guilherme asked, putting his hand on my shoulder.
I looked at him and then at all the other students who had eyes full of anticipation and nervousness on me.
It was time for us to go, then.
May God watch over us.
The emergency stairs swayed in the wind, creating an uncomfortable sway, followed by the clatter of the metal frame slamming against the building’s wall. Each beat was punctuated by a squeal from Melissa, who was trembling right in front of me. Helena, beside me, looked at her with disapproval, rolling her eyes and landing them on me, trying to identify my opinion on that. I silently agreed with her, chuckling to try to express my disapproval.“Melissa, can’t you shut up?” Ana asked, ahead of her, focused on the steps and squeezing hard on the safety rail.Melissa stay quiet, trying to hold back the next little squeak as the structure we were in shook. As she turned to the next flight of stairs, I could look at her face and saw that two paths of tears stood out on her tanned cheeks. I immediately regretted my mocking laugh, feeling sorry for the terrified girl.“We’re almost to the ground, Melissa,” said Guilherme, beside Carlos, at the head of the entire group.The two boys were the
A little embarrassed, I got off Guilherme, who gave a tortured groan of pain due to the fall. The pounding in my stomach made breathing a little harder. I almost wanted to laugh, but a familiar scream filled my ears, sending a wave of despair through my body.I tried to help Guilherme up, but my hands were shaking so much that he preferred to get up on his own. Hot tears streamed from my eyes, the control of my body almost slipping away from me. I tried to turn my face away, not sure if I would really like to see it, but I was stopped. A soft hand pulled my face to the opposite side and I felt arms wrapping around my body. I pressed my face to Guilherme’s chest and held tightly to the sides of his uniform, mentally fighting to make the grotesque mental image of that girl being devoured go away, but I knew she never would.I tried to help Guilherme up, but my hands were shaking so much that he preferred to get up on his own. Hot tears streamed from my eyes, the control of my body almos
The soft summer night breeze refreshed my face, sending a shiver down my spine. I was still alone, leaning against the icy balcony railing, staring angrily at my cell phone screen, which again told me the call couldn’t be ended. Everyone had already given up on cell phones by that time, some had also cried about it, starting to get in a constant nervousness for not being able to contact their relatives and friends anymore. I’ve managed my anxiety well so far, but I dreaded seeing it spiral out of control at any moment.Finally I gave up and put my cell phone in my pocket, refusing to look at social media, full of more backlash from cases, endless debates about what the fate of cities would be and texts of mourning that only made my heart ache more. When I looked again at the scene below me, I went back to paying attention to the groans. They hadn’t stopped once since I’d been there, but sometimes I could almost distract myself from them when there was something to hold my attention. B
That dinner hadn’t been a particularly pleasant experience, but under the circumstances, it wasn’t surprising.The noise of cutlery clattering dryly against porcelain was the only thing that disputed space with the television news channel, which continued to announce with the same incredulity as the first time all the brutality that was spreading across the country. The noodles were great, but no one praised them. We didn’t even open our mouths to talk. Melissa even cringed a little and a few tears leaked out of her eyes after leaving more than half of her food untouched on her plate. Victoria hadn’t even touched the dinner.Everyone’s emotions were in a very delicate state, and that included mine. At times, especially when adrenaline dominated our bodies, we had the initiative to talk and even discuss what was happening. Yet just as suddenly these lapses of mood appear, they fade away, leaving us only in a constant state of fear, despondency, and sadness.I no longer believed there w
I was trapped in the bathroom again.This time it was smaller, suffocating. If I tried to move in any way, I felt the uncomfortable cold of the tiled wall. There was no gap between the door and the floor or ceiling, turning this already small cubicle into a closed box. I was sweating, but it wasn’t hot. There were things moving outside, moaning, growling. I could only hear them, but there was something else that told me they were there… Their presence took my breath away, as if they were already beside me, crushing my throat with their bony hands.I heard a scream and the feeling of being suffocated dissipated, at least a little. The voice I had heard was the same one uttered by one of the girls who was trapped on the other side of the door. But this time he didn’t just stay away, he came against the door, punching it hard, creating a deafening noise in the concrete box that held me.“RELIEF!” I heard the scream. “OPEN, OTHERWISE HE WILL CATCH ME!” she pleaded, her voice choked with a
As you rethink all your values to escape a cruel fate, you may discover that surviving the dead is just the beginning.My heart raced again as I remembered the need to get out of this place, as if the mere mention of that idea was evidence of my undoing. Still, the fact was that in one morning I had already seen more carnage than even my most visceral nightmares could count; and surviving that freak show to death locked in a bathroom stall seemed like the least digestible thing about my day. I thought if I was going to die, it would be from exhaustion trying to fight these monsters, instead of suffering like a scared rat.Too bad those heroic thoughts were useless in motivating me to leave that fetid bathroom I was locked in. Courage is beautiful in the books, but in real life it weighs a ton and stinks like death.I heard the groans once more and knew they were there—as if I’d ever really been able to forget them. There was also a corpse. These elements were familiar to me because I
When they finally fell silent, silence fell over the bathroom and we cried together. They were in tears and I was softly. My body was frozen and the shame of having been hiding for all this time punished me. Still, I couldn’t feel the slightest urge to get out of that cabin.One of the girls asked the other if they should go out. I heard a denial, and silence prevailed again. That summed up the hours that followed. Sometimes one of the two would cry and the other would give some kind of comfort. They would try to have a conversation, sketch plans to get out of there, but soon the subject would die on their lips. Like me, they feared the inevitable moment when they would be forced to leave that bathroom. At one point they tried to force open the door of the cabin I was hiding in, which almost led to a heart attack, but they soon gave up.When the monotony finally broke, it was only to start our nightmares.A new sound reached my ears, unlike all the others. A sort of deep, throaty grow
Under the door, I was able to see a pair of black Vans sneakers six feet away from me. The shins of those who wore them were white, stained by threads of blood that ran down until they were lost in the cotton of the white socks. Beside the Vans, a puddle of water was forming, thick white foam around the edges. What had once been a student appeared to be completely still. I didn’t know if I was looking at anything, or even if I was able to hold his attention on anything. Whatever that answer was, just the realization that I could only see the back of the shoes—which meant they weren’t facing me—was enough. In my field of vision, it was not possible to see anything else.I dared to wonder why I’d stopped her eating her friend, but just thinking about it almost drove me crazy.Still carefully, I got to my feet. The operation would have to be careful, but I figured I’d be able to make minimal noise. May God allow that to be enough.In slow motion, I started to climb into the tank, one leg
The emergency stairs swayed in the wind, creating an uncomfortable sway, followed by the clatter of the metal frame slamming against the building’s wall. Each beat was punctuated by a squeal from Melissa, who was trembling right in front of me. Helena, beside me, looked at her with disapproval, rolling her eyes and landing them on me, trying to identify my opinion on that. I silently agreed with her, chuckling to try to express my disapproval. “Melissa, can’t you shut up?” Ana asked, ahead of her, focused on the steps and squeezing hard on the safety rail. Melissa stay quiet, trying to hold back the next little squeak as the structure we were in shook. As she turned to the next flight of stairs, I could look at her face and saw that two paths of tears stood out on her tanned cheeks. I immediately regretted my mocking laugh, feeling sorry for the terrified girl. “We’re almost to the ground, Melissa,” said Guilherme, beside Carlos, at the head of the entire group. The two boys were t
I immediately cursed my stupid decision to scream.Not content with just ripping chunks of flesh from my friend sprawled on the stairs, three of them turned their grotesque heads to me and started running toward me.They weren’t fast, but that didn’t make them any less scary.“REBECA?” I heard Victoria’s voice boom above me. “LAURA?”“I am fine!” I yelled back, unsure how to report Laura’s condition.I turned to run back up to my group, but I tripped and fell to the ground. My shin bumped against the edge of the step and a grunt of pain leaked from my lips. Only then did I realize how I was shaking. The metal bar continually hit the floor, emitting a constant metallic sound due to the lack of instability with which I held it.With no time to waste, I supported myself on my arms and climbed some stairs on all fours until I was able to stand. I ran to the end of that flight of stairs and looked back.One of them was very close to me. How close did he come to grabbing me while I was down
“Are you going alone?” asked Carlos, slightly surprised, as he followed me out the door.“I don’t know what you guys are going to do, but I’m going home today.”When I said that, several looks came my way. Professor Rogério was already on his feet, arms crossed, and looking at me.“Do you think it’s safe to try to go home, Rebeca?” He asked, his voice worried. “Everyone is saying that public transport has stopped.”I looked at him and thanked him for his concern.“No problem, professor. I’ll walk, if I need to, I’d just have to cross the bridge,” I said calmly. “I need to meet my grandmother and Mei.” I justified myself, not realizing that maybe they didn’t know who I was talking about.“How do you plan to get out of the building?” The curly-haired black girl asked me. She seemed calm enough about the situation. “The courtyard is crazy, and to get to any exit you would have to go through it.”I was silent, not knowing exactly how to respond. Although a very strong impulse made me sure
“Melissa, what happened to your leg?” I asked, finally realizing that Professor Rogerio was tying a blood-stained gauze around his thigh.Melissa looked at me, intrigued by the sudden approach.“She wasn’t attacked.” Carlos who answered, behind me. “She cut her leg on a wire as we tried to get out of the yard. It was bleeding a lot, but it’s nothing serious. ““Sorry to be so rude, it’s just…” I began, looking into the girl’s moist honey-colored eyes.“It’s alright. She looked at her leg, shrugging. “I think it’s a valid concern.” Talking seemed to calm her down a bit.“So, did you make it?” asked Ana, looking in Guilherme’s direction and putting an end to our business.William, again, just shook the keys in his hand, the jingle reaching everyone’s ears.“Sorry, that room is only the keys to the third year rooms. I couldn’t look any further because things were going up.” He apologized, looking at no one in particular.Someone muttered “no problem”, Ana huffed, but there was no complai
No, I was not.I mean, he hadn’t dragged me into any kind of danger.It’s just that “safe” was simply something that had ceased to exist, although at the time I didn’t know it.The first person I saw was Carlos Dutra: another third year, more familiar to me because we studied in the same room. He had dark skin, black eyes and hair, and an expression of few friends. Unlike most of our peers, he had defined muscles and more adult features. I was idly by the wooden door that divided the hallway we were coming from from the rest of the high school classrooms, in a sharp curve. When he saw us, he assumed a nervous posture as he realized how fast we were running.I noticed that he was holding an iron bar in his hand. There was blood on him.William didn’t seem surprised, as he continued running towards the door. By then, I had managed to establish my balance and was running with him, a few steps back.“Close the door when we pass!” Guilherme said, as we approached. “There are others coming!
By instincts not yet trained by that world, it wasn’t until several seconds later that I had the urge to turn around to see if the hallway would be clear.I came across an almost empty hallway, but that wasn’t what made my stomach turn.Only after taking my attention away from the two zombies trying to punch a hole in the glass door did my ears adjust to distinguish a sound that sounded familiar: busy classrooms. I could hear sounds behind the wooden doors, but they weren’t common sounds of conversation between students, but intermittent groans, angry grunts, slamming on doors, and—very softly, deep down—anguished screams from people like me, a stunned reminder that not everyone was lucky enough to escape.Some rooms, however, had their doors open and were presumably empty. Still, I can only imagine how many people were unlucky enough to find themselves trapped, unable to reach the door that separated their lives from death. Locked doors like the one behind me, having been sealed in a
During the entire time I was trapped, I never imagined that I would get out of there and everything would be safe, with rescue teams entering the school. First because the intermittent screams didn’t allow me to have so much hope, second because I was too focused on my own misfortune. I don’t like to be a nonbeliever, but I’ve never trusted the efficiency of public safety. In addition, I also followed the news while they were allowed to reach us about the first infestations of the virus and everything was the same: although we did not know exactly its nature, none of the infected cities managed to contain it. The disease before we lost contact. I was foolish to think it wouldn’t make it to Latin America, but we all have been this whole time. For these reasons, the nagging thought that my suffering and fear were far from over kept pounding in my head.But now I felt strangely safe, as if the risks I’d taken all morning had finally come to an end here, outside the library’s second-floor
When I finished the crossing, facing with both legs towards the cabin in front of me, I noticed how tense my muscles were and I tried to relax, without much success. Now he was two cabins away from the door. The body of the last girl—the only one, in fact, dead—was just outside the door of the last cabin. I intended to get down and go out the door, but I soon understood that the idea would be flawed: the upper part of his body was leaning against the cabin door, which would make it difficult to open it without making noises. How much time would I have from the moment I attracted the attention of the creature Sarah? Seconds?It needed to be something faster.I risked slowly crawling closer to the edge in order to look at the floor. In front of the partition of the last cabins was the body drowned in a pool of blood, making it impossible to make a jump to the floor without the risk of losing balance. I looked again at the monster that until now seemed not to have noticed my presence, wi
Under the door, I was able to see a pair of black Vans sneakers six feet away from me. The shins of those who wore them were white, stained by threads of blood that ran down until they were lost in the cotton of the white socks. Beside the Vans, a puddle of water was forming, thick white foam around the edges. What had once been a student appeared to be completely still. I didn’t know if I was looking at anything, or even if I was able to hold his attention on anything. Whatever that answer was, just the realization that I could only see the back of the shoes—which meant they weren’t facing me—was enough. In my field of vision, it was not possible to see anything else.I dared to wonder why I’d stopped her eating her friend, but just thinking about it almost drove me crazy.Still carefully, I got to my feet. The operation would have to be careful, but I figured I’d be able to make minimal noise. May God allow that to be enough.In slow motion, I started to climb into the tank, one leg