In the hospital window the boys head shook no no no. Elaine stopped on her way up the front steps, fascinated.
The boys chest was rigid, his upper arms stiff. He seemed to be using something below the window to hold himself back, with all his strength, so that his upper body shook from the exertion.
She thought of television screens and their disembodied heads, ever so slightly out of focus, the individual dots of the transmitted heads moving apart with increasing randomness so that feature blended into feature and face into face until eventually the heads all looked the same: pinkish clouds of media flesh.
His head moved no no no. As if denying what was happening to him. He had been the first and was now the most advanced case of something they still had no name for. Given what had been going on in the rest of the country, the Denver Department of Health and Hospitals had naturally been quite concerned. An already Alert status had become a Crisis and doctors from all overincluding a few with vague, unspecified governmental connectionshad descended on the hospital.
Although it was officially discouraged, now and then in the hospitals corridors she had overheard the whispered word zombie.
Jesus, will you look at him!
Elaine turned. Mark planted a quick kiss on her lips. Mark
somebody will see
But she made no attempt to move away from him.
I think they already know. He nibbled down her jawline. Elaine thought to pull away, but could not. His touch on her body, his attention, had always made her feel beautiful. It was, in fact, the only time she ever felt beautiful.