Aya Matsuura
Rockfort Prison, "Battle Arena" (Lower Levels)
October 9, 2:17 PM

What Aya knew about guns she could sum up in
about five seconds, but she knew what she liked. And she
decided immediately upon pulling the trigger of her
newest find that
it was the sh**, hands down.She stepped out of the freight elevator
ready to kick
some rotten a**, and saw her opportunity less than ten
feet away. There were five of them in all—well, five and
a half, including the crawling mess on the floor over by
the shelves—and all she had to do was tap the trigger,
and then she was trying like heck to keep the weapon from
flying out of her hand.
Bam bam bam bam bam bam bam—
She swept the kicking gun left to right, releasing the
trigger as the last zombie's swiss-cheese brain parted
company with its swiss-cheese head. It was all over in
just a few seconds, so fast that it seemed unreal—like
she'd coughed and a building had blown up or something.
Eri had taken care of the floor pizza during Aya's
sweep, and when she turned around, triumphant, she was
a little surprised to see that Eri wasn't smiling ... until
Aya thought about it for a second, and then she felt a little
ashamed of herself. As far as Aya was concerned,
they
weren't really people anymore. She knew that if she were
ever infected she'd want someone to plug her, to keep
her from hurting anyone else—not to mention granting
her a fast death, rather than letting her rot on the hoof.
But they were human, once. What happened to them
was entirely sh***y and unfair, no question.True, and maybe she should be more respectful—but on
the other hand, the gun was extremely cool, and they were
zombies.It was a touchy subject, not one that she was prepared
to mess around with, but she decided she could at
least not laugh about it in front of Eri. She didn't want
her to think she
was some bloodthirsty a**hole.She pointed at the door ahead and to the right, fairly
sure that they were heading in the right direction, at
least roughly. The way she figured it, they'd come out at
least close to the front yard of the training facility.
Eri nodded, and Aya led the way once again, pushing
the door open and stepping through. They were standing
at the top of a half flight of open stairs, leading down
into the boiler room. A room full of big, battered-looking,
hissing machinery, anyway, Aya didn't actually know
what a boiler looked like. There were four zombies
milling around between them and the steps leading up
and out, on the other side of the cold, hissing room.
Aya raised the machine gun and was about to fire
when Eri tapped her arm, moving to stand beside her.
"Watch," she said, and pointed her 9mm at the zombie
group—not quite, she saw, Eri was aiming low at
something just past them—
—and pow,BOOM, three of the creatures went down,
blackened and smoking. Behind them, what was left of a
small, obviously combustible container, only jagged curls
of splayed metal surrounded by a smudge of toxic smoke.
The fourth zombie had been hit, but not as hard. Eri
took it out with a single head shot before speaking again.
"Saves ammo," she said simply, and brushed past her
to walk down the steps. Aya followed, slightly awed
by her but playing it detached, like she'd already thought
of that. If there was one thing she knew about idols, it
was that they didn't like people who mooned all over
them, acting all goofy.
Not that I give a sh** what she thinks about me, she
told herself firmly.
She's just... kind of cool, is all.Eri reached the next door first, and waited until Aya
caught up, nodded that she was ready. As soon as Eri
opened it they both relaxed, Aya could see Eri's shoulders
loosen and felt her own heart beating again. A dark stone
walkway, totally empty, open on one side. There was
water running somewhere below, and some kind of a
narrow gate straight ahead, like an old-fashioned elevator
door.
"This is starting to seem a little too easy," Eri said
softly.
"Yeah," Aya whispered back.
So much for Niita's
evil playground shtick.They were about halfway across when they heard it,
echoing up from somewhere in the black running waters
below—a strangely high, piercing trill, inhuman but not
like an animal, either. Whatever it was, it sounded extremely
pissed—and from the splashing noises, it was
coming closer.
Aya was ready to start shooting but Eri grabbed
her arm and took off running, practically jerking her off
her feet. They were at the lift in about two seconds, Eri
ripping the gate aside and shoving her into a tiny elevator
cab, jumping in after her and slamming the gate closed.
"Okay- sheesh, you don't have to push," Aya said, rubbing
her arm indignantly.
"Sorry," Eri said, pushing an errant strand of hair behind
one ear, looking as rattled as she'd seen her get.
"It's just—I'm not gonna take any chances. And whatever that
sound was, extremely bad news. Reminds me of metro Tokyo, 'yknow, at night."
Eri smiled shakily, which suddenly made Aya want
to put her arm around her, or hold her hand or something.
She didn't.
"Brings up some bad memories..." Eri said.
Tokyo ... Aya hadn't been to Japan in years. She kinda missed
the crowded stations, the stink-filled karaoke bars and
middle aged men gawking at her.
"So you're from Tokyo- which part exactly? And speaking of which-
why would a Tokyo thug like yourself want to be an 'idol'? ...Isn't your
bunch supposed to be delinquents?"
Eri seemed surprised, but then smiled a little easier,
turning her attention to the elevator controls.
"You should meet my friend Reina. I'll tell you about it when we get out of
here. So, first floor?"
"Yeah," Aya said, then changed her mind. "Actually,
maybe we should go up to the second. That way we can
look out over the yard, see what we'll be up against."
"You know, you're smarter than you look," Eri
said teasingly, punching the button. Aya was still trying
to think of a witty comeback when the elevator came
to a stop, and Eri opened the door.
"It's ok-" the Musume continued, "I've
changed tonights theme to let's annoy Aya!"
"...What a shame."
There was a shuttered lockdown door to their right, so
they went left, the short hallway empty. There was only
one door in that direction, too, but they were in luck, the
knob turned when Eri tried it.
Again, there were no surprises. The door opened up
to a cramped wooden balcony thick with dust, overlooking
a big room full of junk—a rusted military Jeep,
stacks of grungy old oil drums, broken boxes and the
like. It seemed more like a storage shed than anything
else, and though it was well lit, there were enough piles
of crap that it was impossible to see if anyone was down
there. There was, though, Aya could hear shuffling
noises.
She took a few steps to the left, trying to see the corner
beneath the balcony, and Eri followed. The boards
creaked and shifted beneath their steps.
"Doesn't seem too sturdy—" Eri started, and was
cut off by a giant, splinteringcraaack, pieces of the balcony
floor flying up as both of them went down.
Sh**-Aya didn't even have time to tense for the impact, it
was over so quick. She landed on her left side, jarring her
shoulder, her left knee cracking against a random bit of
wood.
Almost immediately, a pyramid of empty barrels fell
over behind her, clattering hollowly to the ground—
and Aya heard a zombie's hungry wail.
"Eri?" Aya called, crawling to her feet and turning,
looking for her and the zombie. There Eri was amid
the barrels, still down, rubbing one ankle. Her handgun
was about ten feet away.
Aya saw her eyes go wide and
followed her gaze, a lone zombie teetering toward her—
—and all Aya could do was stare at it, her own body suddenly
a million miles away.
Eri said something but she
couldn't hear her, too intent on the virus carrier. It had
been a big man, leaning toward fat, but someone had
blasted off part of his gut. The open, sticky, belly
wounds were seeping, the dark shirt made even darker
by the almost uniform layer of blood that had soaked the
cloth. It was gray-faced and hollow-eyed, like all of
them, and had either bitten through its tongue or had
been eating—his, its mouth was smeared with blood.
Eri said something else, but Aya was remembering
something, a sudden, vivid flash of memory so real
that it was almost like reliving the experience. She'd been
four or five years old when her parents had taken her to
her first parade, a coming-of-age parade. She was sitting on
her father's shoulder, watching the geishas go by, surrounded
by loud, shouting people, and she'd started to
cry. She couldn't remember why; what she remembered
was her father looking up at her, his eyes concerned and
full of love. When he'd asked what was wrong, his voice
was so familiar and well-loved that Aya had wrapped
her tiny arms around her father's neck and hidden her
face, still crying but knowing she was safe, that no harm
could come to her so long as her father held her—
"Aya!"
Eri, practically screaming her name—and Aya saw
that the zombie was almost on top of Eri, its gray fingers
closing around her torso, pulling her up to its drooling,
bloody mouth.
Aya screamed, too, opening fire, the thunder of bullets
ripping into her father's face and body, tearing him
away from Eri. She kept firing, kept screaming until
her father lay still and the thunder had stopped, only dry
clicks coming from the gun, and then Eri was touching
Aya's shoulder, turning her away as Aya called out for
her father, weeping.
They sat for a while. When Aya could speak, she told
Eri about it, parts of it, her arms around her knees and
head down. Told Eri about her father, who had worked
for the government as a researcher, who had been caught trying
to unveil a dangerous formula to the world from one of their labs. Aya told her
about her mother, who had been gunned down by a trio
of government soldiers in their own home, lay choking and
bloody and dying on the living room floor when Aya
came home from school. The men had taken them away,
taken Aya and her father to Rockfort, where he was forced to
work for Niita, while Aya was kept in the prison and used as a test subject.
Than Aya admitted to lying- lying about being a guard, taking on
the name 'Julia' because she didn't know if Risa and Eri were good or bad.
"I thought he was killed during the attack," Aya said,
wiping at her eyes. "I wanted to feel bad about it, I did,
but I just kept thinking about Mom, about how she
looked ... but I didn't want him to die, Ididn't, I... I
loved him, too."
Saying it out loud made her start crying again.
Eri's arm was around her but Aya barely felt it, so sad
that she thought she might die. Aya knew she had to get up,
she had to find the keys and go with Eri and fly the
plane, but none of that seemed important anymore.
Eri had been mostly quiet, only listening and holding
her, but she stood up now and told Aya to stay where
she was, that she'd be back soon and then they could
leave. That was okay, it was good, Aya wanted to be alone.
And she was more exhausted than she'd ever been in her
life, so tired and heavy that she didn't want to move.
Eri went away, and Aya decided that she should
go looking for the proof keys soon, very soon, as soon
as she stopped shaking.