Monday, March 17, 2014

The Death Cure - Chapter 49



“Maybe they’re not past the Gone yet?” Thomas answered, even though the statement sounded stupid even
to him. “Or not in the mood to get run over by a big van?”
“Well, gun it,” Brenda said. “Before they change their mind.”
To Thomas’s relief, Lawrence did just that; the van shot forward and he didn’t slow down. The Cranks
lining the walls stared at them as they sailed past. Seeing them close up—the scratches and blood and
bruises, those maddened eyes—made Thomas shiver again.
They were just approaching the end of the group when several loud pops sounded and the van jolted
and swerved to the right. Its front end slammed into the wall of the alley, pinning two Cranks against it.
Thomas stared in horror through the windshield as they screamed in agony and beat bloody fists against
the front of the vehicle.
“What the hell?” Lawrence bellowed as he put the van in reverse.
They screeched backward several feet, the vehicle shaking horribly. The two Cranks fell to the ground
and were immediately attacked by the ones closest to the front of the van. Thomas quickly looked away,
filled with a nauseating terror. On all sides, Cranks started thumping the van with their fists. At the same
time, the tires were spinning and squealing, unable to gain traction. The combination of noises was like
something from a nightmare.
“What’s wrong?” Brenda yelled.
“They did something to the tires! Or the axels. Something!”
Lawrence kept switching the van from reverse to drive, but each time it only went a few feet. A lady
with wild hair approached the window to Thomas’s right. She was holding a huge shovel in both hands,
and he watched as she raised it over her head, then swung it down against the window. The glass didn’t
give.
“We really need to get out of here!” Thomas shouted. Helpless, he didn’t know what else to say.
They’d been stupid to let themselves fall into such an obvious trap.
Lawrence kept shifting and gassing the van, but they merely jerked back and forth. A series of familiar
thumps sounded from the roof. Someone was up there. Cranks were attacking all the windows now, with
everything from wooden sticks to their own heads. The lady outside Thomas’s window didn’t give up,
smacking her shovel into the glass over and over again. Finally, the fifth or sixth time she did it, a hairline
crack shot across the window.
The growing panic made Thomas’s throat constrict. “She’s going to smash it!”
“Get us out of here!” Brenda said at the same time.
The van moved a few inches, just enough to make the woman miss with her next swing. But someone
slammed a sledgehammer into the windshield from above and a huge spiderweb blossomed like a white
flower in the glass.
Again the van jolted backward. The man holding the sledgehammer tumbled onto the front hood before
he could slam the glass again and landed in the street. A Crank with a long gash on top of his bald head
yanked the tool from the man’s grip and got two more whacks in before a group of other people started
fighting him for his weapon. The cracks in the windshield almost completely obscured the view from
inside the van. The sound of breaking glass came from the rear; Thomas spun around to see an arm
wriggling through a gash in the window, the jagged edges tearing its skin.
Thomas unbuckled his seat belt and squirmed into the back of the van. He grabbed the first thing he
found, a long plastic tool with a brush on one end and a sharp edge on the other—a snow pick—and
crawled over the middle row of seats; he slammed the thing into the Crank’s arm, then again, then a third
time. Screaming, whoever it was pulled their arm out, knocking pieces of glass onto the cement outside.
“You want the Launcher?” Brenda called back to him.
“No!” Thomas shouted. “It’s too big inside the van. Grab the gun!”
The van lurched forward, then stopped again; Thomas smacked his face on the back of the middle
bench, and pain shot through his cheek and jaw. He turned to see a man and woman tearing away at the
remaining glass in the broken window. Blood from their hands oozed down both sides of the hole as it got
bigger.
“Here!” Brenda yelled from behind him.
He turned and took the gun from her, then aimed and fired, once, then twice, and the Cranks fell to the
ground, any screams of agony drowned out by the awful noise of the squealing tires and overworked
engine, the pounding of the Cranks’ attack.
“I think we’re almost loose!” Lawrence shouted. “I don’t know what the hell they did!”
Thomas turned to look at him; he was covered in sweat. A hole had appeared at the middle of the
spiderweb on the windshield. Cracks completely lined the other windows—almost nothing outside was
visible anymore. Brenda held her Launcher, ready to use it if things got completely hopeless.
The van went backward, then forward, then backward again. It seemed to be under a little more
control, was shaking less than it had been. Two sets of arms came through the big hole in the back, and
Thomas let off two more shots. They heard screams, and a woman’s face—twisted into a hideous scowl,
her every tooth edged with grime—appeared at the window.
“Just let us in, boy,” she said, her words barely audible. “All we want is food. Just give us some food.
Let me in!”
She screamed the last few words and pushed her head through the opening as if she actually thought she
could fit. Thomas didn’t want to shoot her but held the gun up, readied himself in case she somehow
managed to get inside. But when the van bolted forward again, she fell out, leaving the edges of the
broken window covered in blood.
Thomas braced himself for the van to go backward again. But after a short, jolting stop, it went forward
several more feet, turning in the right direction. Then a few more.
“I think I’ve got it!” Lawrence yelled.
Again forward, this time maybe ten feet. The Cranks followed as best they could—the short moment of
silence as they were left behind didn’t last, though. Soon the screams and thumps and bangs began all over
again. A man reached through the hole in the back with a long knife, started slashing left and right at
anything and nothing. Thomas lifted his gun and fired. How many had he killed? Three? Four? Had he
killed them?
With one last long, terrible squeal, the van shot forward and then didn’t stop. It bounced a couple of
times as it ran over the Cranks who’d been in their path; then it smoothed out and picked up speed.
Thomas looked out the back, saw bodies falling off the roof and onto the street. The remaining Cranks
gave chase, but soon they were all left behind.
Thomas collapsed onto the seat, lying on his back, staring up at the dented roof. He sucked in huge,
heavy breaths, tried to regain control of his emotions. He was barely aware of Lawrence turning off the
one headlight that hadn’t been smashed, making two more turns, then slipping through an open garage door
that closed as soon as they cleared it.

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