They ran through the hallways of the complex to their first target—Chancellor Anderson. A good man with whom Thomas had never had much of a problem. A good man who was now utterly insane. They had to take care of him first before heading down to Sector D.
They’d been running for a good five minutes when Aris halted and held a hand up. Teresa almost ran him over before she stopped.
“Did you hear that?” Aris whispered.
Thomas listened, trying to pick out something unusual over the hum of the ventilation system and the sound of their heavy breaths from running.
“Nope,” Thomas said, even as the others shook their heads.
“Just keep listening,” Aris responded, his gaze shifting to the ceiling, as if what he’d heard had come from above. “There.”
A low wail, like a child crying. Now that he heard it, Thomas couldn’t believe he hadn’t noticed it before. High-pitched, sad, it echoed along the corridor, making it impossible to tell what direction it came from. Thomas imagined a child at the bottom of a well.
“Maybe it’s coming through the vents from Sector D,” Rachel suggested.
The pitiful noise ceased.
“Or it could be one of the kids,” Thomas said. “Dr. Paige has them all hiding somewhere.”
Teresa spoke up. “We need to get Anderson resolved before we can think about anything else. Let’s go.”
Aris had no objection. The four of them set off running again.
—
The door to Anderson’s office was closed, not locked. Teresa stepped forward and opened it. Thomas held his breath, half expecting the man to jump out at them like a zombie.
Nothing but quiet and dark. And a smell. A horrible smell.
Teresa nudged the door wider and stepped inside, Launcher held out in front of her, ready to fire. Aris went next, then Rachel, Thomas last. The blue glow of the workstation still shone—nothing had changed since they’d last been there. Except for the putrid stink of body odor and urine, even feces. The smell assaulted Thomas and he gagged, falling to one knee, as his throat closed. He tried to pull himself together.
You okay? Teresa asked in his mind.
Yeah. Is he in there? He nodded toward the back room.
Let’s go see.
But Aris had already moved to that door and lightly kicked it open. Another wave of wretched stink came wafting out of the darkness. Thomas got back to his feet and stood behind Aris and Teresa, staring inside, trying to make things out. Rachel was right next to him, holding her nose.
“Is he dead?” she asked.
“No,” came a rasp of a voice. Anderson. It barely sounded human. “No. Not dead. Not your lucky day.” He let out a series of wet, wracking coughs.
“Oh, man,” Thomas said. His stomach was not handling all this very well. “Get a light on in this place.”
“It might hurt his eyes.” This from Aris, who fingered the panel anyway. Lights blazed, as bright as noon.
Anderson screamed, clawing at his eyes. He writhed on the floor in front of the couch, which looked like he’d been lying on it for months. “Turn it off! Turn it off!”
Aris dimmed the lights, which Thomas silently thanked him for. The sight before them was almost too much for Thomas to bear. He stared at the man who’d once been their leader. Blood covered his face and his clothes, and his hair was matted and greasy. He’d lost weight, his skin pale and sweaty. He lay on his side, his mouth set in a permanent grimace, baring teeth that were rimmed in red. And then Thomas saw why.
The man only had two fingers left.
Bloody nubs remained where the others had once been.
“Oh my…,” Aris said when he noticed, covering his face with the crook of one arm. “He didn’t. He didn’t.”
“He did,” replied Rachel, her voice cold.
Thomas couldn’t look. He turned away from it all and went to the display screen on the former chancellor’s desk. It showed the communications system, and there on the screen was a memo that Anderson had been writing. Luckily, it appeared to have never been sent. Because the memo itself was harrowing.
“Guys,” he said. “Listen to what Anderson almost sent to everybody while we were gone.” And then Thomas read it to them.
WICKED Memorandum, Date 231.5.5
TO:
FROM:
RE:
I only have two fingers left.
I wrote the lies of my farewell with two fingers.
That is the truth.
We are evil.
They are kids.
We are evil.
We should stop, let the Munies have the world.
We are evil.
We can’t play God.
We can’t do this to kids.
You’re evil, I’m evil.
My two fingers tell me so.
How can we lie to our replacements?
We give them hope when there is none.
Everyone will die.
No matter what.
Let nature win.
“He’s so messed up,” Teresa said over Thomas’s shoulder as he read Anderson’s last words.
“I’d say it’s beyond that,” Thomas replied.
“My fingers,” Anderson moaned from the other room. “Why’d you eat my fingers?”
Thomas felt a crushing heartbreak as he followed Teresa to Anderson’s side again. The man had curled himself up into a ball and was rocking back and forth.
“Only two left,” the man said, his words floating with delirium. “I hope the other eight were tasty. I always thought it’d be me that ate them. But no. It had to be you, didn’t it?”
Thomas shared a glance with each of his friends. After all they’d seen, was this the saddest? To see a man who’d led this giant operation with such vigor turn into a sniveling lunatic?