“You stupid redneck motherfucker,” I spat, climbing to my feet. My legs were wobbly and I had to steady myself against the bulkhead. Then I realized that it wasn’t my balance at all. The ship was still leaning to starboard.
“I’m sorry, man.” He lowered his pistol and held up his hand in surrender. “1 thought you were a zombie. I heard shots and ran down here. Smelled all the gun smoke in the air and just assumed that—”
“Yeah” I interrupted. “Well you know what they say about assuming, Runkle. Makes an ass out of you and me. You nearly fucking blew my head off. If it hadn’t been for the ship rolling—”
“What was that, anyway? I felt it vibrate in my feet.”
“How the fuck should I know? I was too busy getting shot at, you stupid asshole.”
“Look”—he raised his voice—“I said I was sorry. Now we can stand here and argue about it or we can find out what the hell is going on. Do you want to fight?”
Shaking my head, I retrieved the shotgun. “No. I’m cool for now. You’re right. We need to focus. I’ll take this up with you later.”
“Well then, let’s just hope there is a later. What the hell happened here?”
I quickly filled him in on everything I knew, ending with Chuck’s suicide and me putting Tony out of his misery.
Runkle counted on his fingers. “So that leaves the two of us, the kids, Carol, Tran, Murphy, and Chief Maxey—and there’s been no sign of Professor Williams, correct?”
I nodded. “You see anybody other than the chief?”
“No. The passageways were all deserted. I figured everyone was asleep, until I heard the gunshots.”
The ship leaned farther to the starboard side, jolting us both again. There was a loud, metallic groan from beneath the hull. An alarm blared, and the chief’s voice came over the speakers.
“This is not a drill, this is not a drill. General quarters, general quarters. All hands be advised, we have a hull breach in the aft berthing section. Muster on the flight deck immediately. Again, this is not a drill. Prepare to abandon ship.”
Runkle found an emergency phone and called the bridge. I stood there wondering what the hell was happening while he talked to Chief Maxey. Runkle’s expression went slack. He stopped talking and just listened. He looked worried.
“Okay.” Runkle spoke in a monotone. “I understand. I’ll tell him.”
He hung up the phone and stared at the floor.
“What’s wrong?” I asked. “What the hell’s going on? He said to abandon ship?”
“We’ve got a hull breach.”
“What’s that mean?”
“It means that we’re taking on water. We’re sinking.”
“Oh, shit…”
“Yeah.” He wiped sweat from his forehead. “Listen, Lamar, that explosion we heard? The chief says that whatever it was, it blew a hole in the side of the ship. It was… well, it was near your berthing area.”
I started running before he was even done speaking.
“Lamar!” he shouted. “Wait a second. You can’t just go running down there.”
“Tasha, Malik, and Carol are down there.”
“The compartment is probably flooded—maybe the whole passageway. And what about the professor? We still have to find him before he kills someone else!”
“You find him,” I yelled. “I’ve got to take care of my own.”
“Lamar! Goddamn it, get back here. This won’t help us.”
Ignoring him, I ran on, feet pounding, shoving through hatches, darting down passageways. I held the shotgun at the ready, just in case the professor or anyone else he’d managed to infect jumped me, but I saw no one. I slid through Nick’s remains, rounded another corner, and saw Carol, Tasha, and Malik running toward me.
“Lamar!” Tasha screamed. “The ship’s flooding!”
“I know, I know.” I leaned the shotgun against the bulkhead and hugged the kids tightly. Then I gave Carol a hug, too. She trembled against me, frightened and hyperventilating.
“Is everyone okay?” I asked, checking them over.
“We’re all right,” Malik said. “But we’re in deep shit. Them grenades went off.”
I sighed. “I thought I told you to stay inside the compartment. Why were you messing with Mitch’s grenades? You could have gotten infected or—”
“I wasn’t fooling with them,” he interrupted. “Honest.”
“Well, then what set them off?”
“Tran did it.”
“Tran?”
Malik nodded. “Yeah, he was one of them things.”
“Lamar,” Carol said. “We need to keep moving. The water is coming.”
We ran back the way I’d come. I took the lead, heading for the nearest ladder so we could meet the other survivors topside.
“It wasn’t our fault,” Tasha explained as we fled. “We stayed in the room, just like you told us to. But then we heard someone out in the hall. Mrs. Beck thought it might be you coming back, so she peeked outside. But it wasn’t you. It was Tran. He was… all bloody. Some of his fingers were missing.”
“I tried to shut the hatch again,” Carol said. “But the children insisted on defending us. They ran out into the passageway before I could stop them.”
I frowned at the kids. “I told the two of you to listen to Mrs. Beck. You could have been killed.”
“On the contrary, Lamar,” Carol said. “If anything, it’s because of them that we’re still alive. If they hadn’t run out when they did, I hate to think what would have happened.”
“Tran was eating on Mitch,” Tasha said, her voice low. “He ignored us. I tried to shoot him, but I couldn’t get the rifle to work. Wasn’t until later that I remembered the safety was on.”
“You should have figured it out,” Malik teased.
“That’s why Mitch should have given the gun to me, instead of that big ass knife.”
“Shut up,” Tasha scolded him, before turning back to me. “Anyway, Tran picked up one of the grenades and started licking it. You know—Mitch’s blood was all over it. He was licking it like a lollipop and since I couldn’t get the rifle to work, we decided to come find you for help. We were scared. He had the grenade in his hand, and we didn’t know if he knew how to use it or not.”
Each time we entered a new passageway, Carol shut the hatch behind us and made sure they were sealed tight. I led us to a ladder and we started up to the next level. The air smelled charged, like the atmosphere after a lightning storm. Probably an electrical fire somewhere in the ship’s wiring. A thin line of smoke floated along the ceiling.
“We started backing away,” Malik said, continuing their story, “and got to the end of the hallway when he pulled the pin out. I don’t think he knew what he was doing. Just dumb luck.”
“So what did you guys do then?”
Malik laughed. “We got the hell out of there. Good thing we did, too.”
“It was horrible.” Carol shuddered. “Tran—that poor man—he just… exploded. It just smeared him all over the walls. And the blast set off the other grenades. The berthing area was destroyed. If we hadn’t already been through the hatch, we’d be dead. The entire passageway was just… gone. The last thing we saw before we closed the hatch was water gushing in. We couldn’t see anything else, because of all the smoke. The water came through the first hatch, and the second. It leaked right through the seals. We’ve been shutting them behind us, hoping to slow it down.”
I stopped at another emergency phone and tried calling the bridge. The phone wasn’t working. There was no tone or ring—just dead silence. The smoke in the passageway grew thicker.
“Did you guys hear the chief’s announcement?”
“No,” Carol said. “The speakers weren’t working in our section. The explosion must have damaged them.”