LOGINAmari Dawson has spent her whole life figuring out how to disappear. Locked in her room by a stepfather who sees her as less than nothing, she's survived by staying small, quiet, and out of the way. Then the dead start walking, and disappearing is no longer a choice. Thrown into the chaos of a city overrun by the rising, Amari finds herself navigating broken friendships, buried secrets, and a world that keeps demanding more from her than she thinks she has to give. But something is changing-in the world, and in her. The scratch on her arm that should have killed her didn't. The wounds that should hurt don't. And the veins creeping beneath her skin aren't going away. Amari has always been told she's nothing. But she's starting to think they were wrong about her all along.
View MoreNews. Rumors. Gossip. For weeks, I’d been hearing the same scraps, the same impossible claims.
I never had the chance to watch television, but tonight, I eavesdropped from my room. I pressed my ear closer to the door, trying to catch snippets of the broadcast while my stepfather’s heavy snoring overlapped with it in random beats. It surprised me that the TV didn’t disturb him from his slumber. My mother must have already gone upstairs to sleep, abandoning me once again with this monster. She always had a headache. It was her nightly alibi.
My hand trembled as I turned the doorknob, only to find it stubbornly fixed in place. My stepfather must have locked it again on the other side.
A sharp discomfort twisted in my stomach, and I shifted anxiously from foot to foot. His instruction echoed in my mind: ‘Pee in the corner.’ I shivered at the thought. It was a last resort I resisted so hard. It made me feel dirty, yet the pressure in my bladder was relentless.
The TV made a whooshing sound before switching to a new broadcast, flashing urgent, red headlines that cut through the gloom of the room. I noticed something odd—a faint siren underneath the broadcast—but it never seemed to fade.
One report blamed drugs. Another called it an animal attack. A third mentioned neurological episodes—people turning violent, causing public disturbances. Some witnesses claimed they’d seen the attackers eating others nearby.
Another report flashed, saying a dead person was brought to the morgue for forensic examination. A man was interviewed not long after. They said he was a spokesperson for some hospital—the name was too long to remember. He said, “It’s not drugs; it’s not a mauling. This is just another criminal case. The person died from bullets. The police killed him, and now they’re blaming it on causes that make no sense.”
His statement was cut off by a female voice, most likely the news reporter. After a few moments, another male voice sounded, answering some of her questions. He said he was the city mayor of Rock Springs, where they were in lockdown, and the residents were in distress, wanting to leave the city.
“The US Army is doing what it can to protect the citizens.” The mayor’s voice returned, strained over the wail of sirens. “There were no signs of substance intake. We are not sure of the cause of death, but we’ve found bites on the body that led to heavy loss of blood. Forensics is calling it an animal attack.”
“But what about the other victims?” the female reporter asked.
“They are sent to the hospital immediately.”
“What’s the status at the hospital? Are there more deaths that were caused by the same bites? Are these bites the reason people have gone strangely aggressive—”
Her string of questions was cut by scrambling, screams, and loud bangs. Then, the TV emitted a static hum. I fell backwards. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
School bells rang.
I was in the lunchroom with Alia and Lenore sitting with me at the round table, their faces animated as they chattered. Their food lay untouched; they leaned in close, eyes wide with excitement. I shoveled spoonfuls of green peas and chopped carrots into my mouth, barely tasting them. My gaze remained fixed on the muted TV hanging on a column in front of me.
Alia and Lenore’s voices blurred into a dull hum, their chatter barely registering. But I caught fragments of their conversation in which Lenore was saying, “It’s a conspiracy. You shouldn’t believe it.”
The screen flickered, showing firemen battling infernos and police aiming weapons at silhouettes. Civilians were scrambling about, panicked, and frantic screams and cries filled the scene. I swallowed hard, unable to tear my eyes away from the TV. But as it ended, the screen switched back to the news studio, and the anchors proceeded to other news, smiling. A cooking segment replaced the story.
It must have just been some riot between the cops and civilians.
“Amari,” Alia called and leaned closer, making me flinch in my seat; my attention shifted toward her. She twisted her left arm and glanced at her watch. “Hey, so I gotta meet my client later in the afternoon for the art piece. Do you think Mr. Fritz would let me do my photoshoot tomorrow?”
I knitted my brows slightly, my eyes looking down at my food, intently looking away from her pleading eyes. I picked up some carrots with a fork, excluding the peas because I decided I didn’t like them anymore. “It’s best to ask him,” I said.
“I know. But he kinda scares me. Can you please ask him for me?” She frowned, pouting her lips.
Our scheduled pictorials were today, and I had already gone through the dread. While I was reluctant to get involved, I couldn’t ignore her plea. There had to be something in return.
“Fine,” I said. “What’s in it for me?”
Alia's frown turned into a wide smile, her gummy teeth showing. In haste, she stood from her seat, arms stretched sideways. She walked like a penguin toward me, her space buns bouncing, then exclaimed in a high-pitched tone. “A hug!”
My eyes widened, and I leaned away to avoid the hug, drawing my hands out to stop her. “Not so fast.”
She frowned for the second time, fists on her hips. “Fine! I’ll buy you McDonald’s.”
She retreated to her seat. Lenore grinned at us, obviously amused.
After lunch, I had Andrew tell Mr. Fritz about what Alia had asked me for. It was easier since Andrew was a charmer, and I was… just me. It didn’t take long before Alia's request was approved. Andrew texted Alia right away, and she responded with lots of kiss emojis—for Amari.
All of this for some fast food.
Walking through the locker hallway, I found another TV hung on a column in between the long rows of lockers. My eyebrows furrowed as I noticed something else. I froze. The anchors stared back at me with smiles that almost reached their eyes.
Was I imagining this?
There was more than just silence in the air. Some strange ambiance of being wrong about everything. Two weeks. We'd been living like it started yesterday because it did—for us. But somewhere out there, people had already been dying for two weeks before we even knew to be afraid.Two weeks.Two weeks, and nobody told us. Two weeks, and the news was still running cooking segments. Two weeks, and my stepfather was still locking me in my room like the world wasn't already ending outside my window. Two weeks, and I was at school worrying about graduation.And here I thought my issues with Mark and Nathalie were the worst to have ever happened.If it had been two weeks, how far had it gone? How many cities? How many states? Were there places it hadn't reached yet, or were we just the last ones to find out? And the people who knew—the government, the military, whoever made the call to keep it quiet—what were they thinking? That containing the information would contain the virus? That panic w
We took the back door.I brought a baseball bat while he had the pry bar I had found before.I thought the bat was a better weapon for me—longer reach, for one thing.We waited, watching through the gap until we found an opening, then charged at every sicko nearby. I struck their sides and legs to keep them from moving, while Mark struck their brains out. We already knew hitting them in the head kept them dead.When the path was free, we pressed on through the streets. There was a horde gathered four blocks away. When it seemed they hadn't noticed us, we took the opposite way. We were still deep in Kerns, where the school was only a few miles from here. My house, though, was farther, which was a relief. I didn't have to see that place anymore. I didn't have to suffer another night with a broken bladder. No screened windows, no cracked paint on the ceilings. The world had gotten wider for me. Yet more dangerous. At least the sickos didn't seem to keep victims locked in a room and beat
I took a deep breath through my nose, trying to get Mark’s confession off my mind. Then I stared into the orange sky for a long minute. Something peaceful above something rotten. What a beautiful mixture.The lawn below caught strays once again, stumbling into a curb and rising back to their feet. They were headed for the door. One started banging its head, as if it were knocking. They completely forgot they could do it with their fists.They had gotten dumb, but smart enough to become a threat. And we were still in their house.I walked away from the window and into the nearest room, not looking for anything in particular. The room had blue walls, and the playpen was left disorganized. Toys were scattered around the floor with a half-empty bottle of milk, and crayon scribbles painted the white tiles. Until it wasn’t crayon. It was something deep and flowing. Something that shone faintly under the sunrise glow through the window. My eyes traced where it was coming from—a slow drip fro
"You mentioned you dreamed of a memory," Mark said. His eyes were on me as I took a spoonful of pancake batter. I tasted its rough, liquid sweetness. I never expected uncooked pancakes to be delicious. "What's it about?"I glanced up at him and paused, setting the spoon down. "It's nothing."He damped a cotton with disinfectant. "What aren't you telling me, Amari?"I shook my head. "Not sure. I just like to keep things to myself. That's all.""Such as?"I sighed, getting annoyed. "What do you want to know, Mark?""Your parents...""They're gone." "Your childhood...""We grew up together.""Your friends, maybe...""I got no one else after you guys."Then silence. It took a while until it got awkward. He looked like he realized how I'd been all alone since Nathalie ended our friendship. I broke the quiet first. "Are you just gonna let the cotton dry?"He sighed and gestured for my arms. I gave him the one with the worst wounds. He found the veins and stared at them for a second before






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