ANYONE ELSE?: (ANYONE Series Book 2) A post-apocalypic survival novel

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ANYONE ELSE?: (ANYONE Series Book 2) A post-apocalypic survival novel Page 1

by Angela Scott




  [email protected]

  ANYONE ELSE?

  Angela Scott

  Copyright © 2018 Angela Scott

  Cover Art Copyright © 2015 Mallory Rock of Rock Solid Book Design (www.RockSolidBookDesign.com)

  Edited by Juli Caldwell

  Proofread by Mallory Rock

  eBook License Notes:

  You may not use, reproduce or transmit in any manner, any part of this book without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations used in critical articles and reviews, or in accordance with federal Fair Use laws. All rights are reserved.

  This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only; it may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, please return to your eBook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Disclaimer:

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, or the author has used them fictitiously.

  Other Books by Angela Scott

  ANYONE?, Anyone Series (Book #1)

  ZIA, The Teenage Zombie & The Undead Diaries

  THE ZOMBIE WEST SERIES

  WANTED: Dead or Undead, The Zombie West Series (Book #1)

  Survivor Roundup, The Zombie West Series (Book #2)

  Dead Plains, The Zombie west Series (Book #3)

  ZOMBIE WEST Omnibus Edition

  THE DESERT SERIES

  Desert Rice, Desert Series (Book #1)

  Desert Flower, Desert Series (Book #2)

  www.AngelaScottAuthor.com

  What Others Are Saying about Angela Scott’s Books

  WANTED: DEAD OR UNDEAD

  “It was well written, well plotted and VERY entertaining (even the lovey dovey aspects of it!). If you like a good shoot out, and zombies trying to eat your brains for brunch, pick it up... you won’t be sorry.” – KindleObsessed Reviews

  “I gave this book five stars, because it was a total surprise. I thought - Zombies - Wild West - where can she go with this. And she took me on a ride through towns, prairies, hot and cold and everything you can think the Wild West would include. Except for the Zombies. A unique read and I am always happy to come across a book that surprises me and takes me off on a new and different adventure. This was a quick read. Gripping from the first pages. Once I started it, I couldn’t put it down.” – Sherri Fundin, Amazon Reviewer

  DESERT RICE

  “I seriously still have chills on my arms!! Angela Scott has some of the best first chapters and mid book twists that I have ever read.” – Booklover Blogger

  “To see the love of a big brother, Jacob, for his little sister, Sam, unfold as they try to survive after a horrible ordeal was mesmerizing. This is a mystery, a thriller, but above all, for me, a story of love and how far someone will go to protect that love. Scott’s characterization and pacing is sensational” – Michaelreviews, Amazon Reviewer

  “I’m a VERY difficult reader to please and this isn’t a book I would typically read, but I read it and boy was I blown away. This novel captivated me, not from the first page but from the very first sentence, where we are brought smack in the middle of the action.”—Moslimah

  Table of Contents

  COPYRIGHT

  OTHER BOOKS

  PRAISE

  DEDICATION

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  CHAPTER 30

  CHAPTER 31

  CHAPTER 32

  CHAPTER 33

  CHAPTER 34

  CHAPTER 35

  CHAPTER 36

  CHAPTER 37

  CHAPTER 38

  CHAPTER 39

  CHAPTER 40

  CHAPTER 41

  CHAPTER 42

  CHAPTER 43

  CHAPTER 44

  CHAPTER 45

  CHAPTER 46

  CHAPTER 47

  CHAPTER 48

  CHAPTER 49

  CHAPTER 50

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  WHAT'S NEXT?

  For my extremely patient fans.

  Your support and your encouragement have meant the world.

  Chapter 1

  Neither Dad nor Toby said a word. Not one word.

  I hugged my knees to my chest. “You both think I’m crazy, don’t you?”

  Toby cast a quick glance at Dad, but Dad didn’t acknowledge him.

  “No, sweetheart.” Dad kept his eyes on me. “We don’t think that at all.”

  “Speak for yourself,” Toby mumbled, but it was impossible for us not to hear him in our shared ten-by-ten-foot underground living space.

  Dad’s eyes locked on Toby, and he gave my older brother an almost—almost—imperceivable head shake.

  Toby put his hands up. “Come on. You don’t buy what she’s saying, do you? It’s complete nonsense.”

  I released my knees and scooted toward the edge of my cot. “Do you really think I managed to walk from our bunker to here, climbing a freakin’ mountain in the process all on my own? I was bleeding from most of my orifices and pretty much delusional by the time I got here. What do you think sounds crazier?”

  Toby shook his head. “You’re telling me that someone is out there right now? Someone who’d rather be on his own than be here where it’s safe, and he didn’t get sick the entire time you were with him? Just you? Just me? Everyone else to one extent or another, but not him?”

  “Yes!” I tossed my hands up and slapped the thin mattress at my side. “That’s exactly what I’m saying!” I startled Callie, my sometimes sweet but often wicked kitten, when I hit the mattress, disturbing her nap. She stretched her feet, turned in a circle, and fell asleep again. Oh, to be a cat.

  Toby scrunched his shoulders and folded his arms across his chest. “Tess, that doesn’t even make sense.”

  “Does anything nowadays make sense?” I swung my arm around, indicating our underground bunker and the fact that life as we knew it no longer existed. “Cole finds this whole apocalyptic nightmare a blessing. I would really love to say I’m the badass you think I am, but I’m not. I wouldn’t be alive right now if it weren’t for him.” There was no denying that. “You guys keep telling me there’s no way anyone could have gotten inside and left without someone seeing him, but you don’t know him like I do.” I stopped talking, catching myself in my own tangle of words. Did I really know Cole? I had no idea, but there was no way I would bring up the possibility of him being an angel or alien. The more I thought about Cole, the more that seemed like a real possibility, but Dad and Toby already thought I was messed up in the head. I refused to provide them with more ammunition to prove their case.

  Dad’s gaze fell to the
floor, and his arms balanced on his knees. He sat that way for an uncomfortable amount of time, wringing his hands. Toby and I looked at one another, unsure what to do.

  Finally, Dad looked up. Softness eased the wrinkles that lined his forehead but couldn’t hide the tiredness in his eyes. “Can you tell me again, from the beginning, how you got here? I need to hear it one more time.”

  “No.” I shook my head. “I’ve explained it a hundred times. Okay, maybe not a hundred, but what are you hoping for? That I’ll say something different? That I made it all up?” Did I? I was sick. I nearly died. The toxic air messed with not only my lungs and circulatory system, but it could’ve very well screwed up my brain.

  But to say Cole didn’t exist? I’d never do it.

  I couldn’t.

  I touched him. I kissed him. He annoyed the hell out of me. If I had to hallucinate another being, then why not Boris Kodjoe or Jason Momoa? Why hallucinate a grown man who acted like an immature child? How would that be helpful to me in an apocalyptic situation? Give me Norman Reedus, not a young Woody Harrelson.

  No one could make up Cole. No one would want to.

  My fingers found their way to my bracelet. I swirled it around on my wrist.

  This was definitely real.

  Dad didn’t say anything. His face was drawn, contemplative.

  Toby leaned against the metal frame of the bunk beds. “Yeah, you’re definitely not a badass, but I can’t believe someone would choose to stay out there if they knew there were other options.”

  Toby would never understand, but I found myself explaining myself for the umpteenth time. “You don’t think he knows there are other options? He does. He doesn’t want any part of them.” I picked up my kitten, plopped her in my lap, and stroked her fur whether she wanted me to or not. “He finds the solitude of an apocalypse refreshing.”

  “I wish you’d stop calling it that.” Dad’s shoulders slump forward, dispirited. “It’s a natural disaster, not an apocalypse.”

  “There’s nothing natural about what’s happened!” How do they not understand this? “I don’t know what you both saw before you disappeared inside this mountain, but I was out there a long time and saw some crazy stuff that was anything but natural.” Bowling ball-sized hail, tornados from hell, and sunrays that scorched my skin in a matter of seconds. Insane stuff. “This isn’t like Katrina or a California earthquake. This is way bigger than any of those things.”

  “Even so, we’ll get through this.” Dad bobbed his head several times, almost as if trying to convince himself. “We will. That’s what people do. We survive, we adapt, and we persevere.”

  “How?” Maybe I should have kept my mouth shut, but I honestly wanted to know. How were we going to get through any of this? We didn’t have a home anymore. Heck, we hardly even had a state. Our city and all of the surrounding ones had pretty much fallen into a crater. What remained had become nothing but a creepy, abandoned ghost town. Breathing the unfiltered air outside would kill us, or at least it had tried. We couldn’t drink the water—a whole lake encircled with mounds of dead animals proved that.

  Start over? Where were we supposed to do that, and with who—the jerks who crop dusted tens of thousands of people, killing them instead of finding a way to save them? Yeah, let’s find our government peeps and align with them. No, thank you.

  Living in a bunker in the side of a mountain for the rest of our lives, as tempting as that sounded, was a no-go, too. Supplies would run out. The overwhelming knowledge that we were pretty much screwed couldn’t be denied. We couldn’t live in here forever, but we couldn’t go outside, either.

  “I don’t know.” Dad’s shoulders slumped farther than I thought humanly possible. I should’ve confirmed his belief instead of challenging it, because looking at him did nothing to instill hope. Not. At. All. “As long as we’re together,” he said, “we’ll find a way.”

  I said no more. It was probably the best place to leave our conversation because pushing would only burden him and leave us all with a never-ending supply of questions no one could possibly answer. Crap happened and no one—well, those of us still alive—knew why. We had guesses, but that was all.

  A tap on the metal door caught our attention. We turned to see Richard standing at the threshold of our room. “Jon,” he addressed Dad, totally ignoring Toby and me. “Do you have a minute to talk?”

  Dad nodded and slowly stood. “Everything okay?”

  Only then did Richard glance our way. It didn’t take a genius to realize something serious was going on. “That’s what I need to discuss with you.”

  Dad patted my knee as he passed me. “I’ll be back. We’re not through here.”

  Fantastic.

  Toby waited until both men left before stepping closer to me. “That guy scares me a little.”

  Toby and I hardly agreed on anything, never had, but Richard was something we both could agree on.

  “At least he didn’t stab you in the chest.” I rubbed the healing incision mark and the bandage near my ribs from where Richard shoved a tube into me. “I thought Dad was insane to build a bunker in our backyard, but this guy has pushed the crazy button a few too many times.”

  “Maybe.” Toby plopped down on the thin mattress next to me and petted Callie’s head. “But his craziness did save our lives.”

  His brand of crazy scared me. Who lived their life preparing wholeheartedly for the end of the world? I mean wholeheartedly. After having met Richard, his son, and a few of their eccentric friends, Dad’s doomsdayer preparation looked like amateur play. “I knew Richard wasn’t a doctor the minute I saw him, but to know his medical knowledge came from watching large amounts of YouTube videos and reruns of Grey’s Anatomy is a bit freaky, don’t you think?”

  Toby glanced at the door, all serious. “Don’t let him hear you say that.”

  I shrugged. “Why? It’s the truth. Even Marco said so.” Marco—Richard’s weird son who followed me around a little too much for my liking. He had his own ideas as to how his dad should have spent his new-found lottery winnings—like paying for Marco to go on a yearlong road trip and buying him a “sweet Hummer” to do it in. Instead, he had to watch his dad spend millions of dollars on an old government hangar built in the side of a mountain. I felt for him a little—just a little—because it was hard not to say something when Dad spent most of Mom’s life insurance on our own underground bunker. The world had always been filled with crazy people. As we faced the biggest catastrophe ever, it would be those crazies who’d rule it. I didn’t know whether to be grateful or terrified.

  “Truth or not, our lives are still in his hands.” Toby slumped back against the wall and rested his hands behind his head. “We’re guests here. Don’t forget it.”

  Guests? I guess we were, but were people really guests when it came to an apocalypse? Weren’t we more like survivors hunkering down than anything else? Dad could call it a natural disaster all he wanted, but unlike most natural disasters, this couldn’t be fixed. This situation had the making of Mad Max written all over it.

  Someone was bound to be eaten.

  “Tess?” Marco’s bulbous body took up the entire doorframe. “I’ve got something to show you.”

  Great. He was relentless, always trying to get my attention in one way or another. “What is it?” If I didn’t at least acknowledge him, he’d never leave me alone.

  He shook his head and a grin spread over his lips, accentuating his double chin. “You’ll have to come with me to find out.”

  Toby sat up. “I’d like to see it. Whatever it is.”

  Marco shook his head. “You wouldn’t like it.”

  Toby stood and squared his shoulders. “How would you know?”

  “Because it’s a girl thing, something girls would like, and unless you’ve changed since this morning, I don’t think you’d be interested.”

  This could go on forever. I placed Callie on the bed and shook my head at Toby. “It’s okay. I’ll go check it out a
nd tell you all about it when I get back. Watch my cat, okay?”

  He leaned near me, his back to Marco, and whispered, “You sure?”

  “Yeah, I’m sure. He’s annoying, but he’s harmless.” I stood, brushed off my pants, and turned my attention to the big guy in the door. “Okay, I’m yours. Show me what’s got you all excited.”

  He smiled so big I could see down his throat. He reached out to take my hand, but that was a line I refused to cross.

  “I’m good.” I stepped next to him. “Show me the way.”

  His face fell a little, dejected, but I refused to hold that sweaty hand of his. I might be the only female in the place, but that didn’t mean I needed coddling or that I was anyone’s plaything. Either respect me, or respect my boot connecting with your groin.

  “I don’t know what it means, yet.” His steps echoed along the corridor as we walked. “But it has to mean something good.”

  Hmmm … that piqued my interest. Something good for a change would be welcomed.

  “I’m not supposed to show you this. Not yet anyway, because it’s too soon to know anything for sure, but when I saw it, I thought of you.”

  He was always doing that—thinking of me. It was more annoying than anything. When he found an extra chocolate pudding MRE—meals ready to eat—he thought of me. He had an extra pocketknife and thought of me. Fresh socks—me.

  It should be sweet, and maybe I was looking at it the wrong way, but the last thing I needed in an apocalypse was an unwanted admirer. Still, I tried to be kind to him which, when I thought about it, probably only encouraged him more. I couldn’t win.

  He stopped in front of a closed door. Before he opened it, he placed his hand on my shoulder. “This is big, but I don’t want to get your hopes up too soon, okay?”

  I shrugged. Unless he showed me a giant time machine that could go back and fix this mess, I doubted anything would get my hopes up.

  He turned the knob and waited for me to go first.

  Heck no. Richard had rules and entering rooms without permission happened to be one of them. “What’s in there?”

  “Just the surveillance room. We need to know what’s going on outside, right? We have to be prepared.”

 

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