by Brown, TW
The problem would be getting up on top of the rocks. To be more precise, he knew for a fact that he could not climb it while carrying his daughter. His only choice would be to tie the line around his daughter and then climb up. Once on top of the rock, he could haul Ronni up beside him.
He laid her down and went to work. By the time he had the loop made, in place under her arms, and snugged tight, it sounded as if the zombies were very close.
Chad went to climb the rock and discovered he could not use his right leg for any leverage at all. He would need to rely almost solely on upper body and hand strength. The problem he had was that a great deal of his strength had ebbed. Twice he almost lost his purchase. He knew that a fall would be the end of them both. It was that thought that forced him to dig deeper than ever before.
At last, he pulled himself onto the slightly slanted but mostly flat surface of the outcrop. Just as he did, the leading edge of the zombie mob crashed through some nearby brush. The first one paused, its head cocking to one side, but then snapping down to fix its gaze on the helpless body still on the ground; almost as if it did not even notice the person on top of the rocks.
Chad gave the line a few wraps around each hand and began to pull. He was stunned at how difficult it seemed all of a sudden. He had been carrying her all this distance and marveling at how light she had seemed. Now, as he drew on the line hand over hand, he struggled. He felt the line cutting into his hands, but he continued to pull with all his might.
He could see more zombies entering the little clearing and immediately stumbling his direction, no doubt to try and get ahold of his daughter. Twice, he felt a sudden pull on the line. Tears began to fill his eyes as he feared that one or more of the undead had reached Ronni and taken yet another bite.
At last, she came into view and he pulled her over the lip of the rock’s edge. Scrambling over to her, he searched her thoroughly for any new bites. The relief he felt was enough to cause him to lose his battle with holding back the tears. Hunching over the still figure, he reveled in the relief of the feel of her steady breathing causing her chest to rise and fall. Even sweeter, he could hear the steady pounding of her heart.
Eventually he pulled himself away and took in the scene below. Well over a hundred of the walking meat bags had them surrounded. Empty, expressionless faces gaped up at him and hands clutched at the air as if they could will him into their grasp. And that was when he realized his folly...
While he had indeed managed to get them up and to safety, his weapon had slipped free and was out of reach. They were trapped.
***
“Do you think we are in danger?” Selina asked as she and Jody took a walk just as the sun was beginning to set.
“Pitts was a dick, but I have a hard time seeing him as some sort of crazy marauder from a B-grade horror flick,” Jody answered. The problem was, Sergeant Pitts was exactly like some evil Army villain from one of those movies.
He hadn’t really been into that sort of thing, but he’d had friends who were. In fact, when he was in high school, he and his best friends had a monthly movie marathon. Each of them would show up with one DVD and they would eat obscene amounts of junk food and sprawl out in either his folks’ basement or his best friend’s parents’ garage that had been turned into his friend’s dad’s “man cave” which was really just a ratty couch, a seventy inch television, and a keg cooler.
One of his friends had been way too into the horror movie scene. Even worse, he had a thing for zombies. They had watched this one movie called Day of the Dead or something. The first time he had met Sergeant Pitts (about three months prior to this whole crazy thing kicking off) he had instantly thought of that dark haired military leader who was such a comically stereotypical bad guy.
“You haven’t heard a word I just said.” Selina elbowed Jody playfully.
“Sure I did,” Jody snapped back to reality. “You said that I was a damned handsome fella and you hoped that I was healed up enough to jump in the sack.”
“Absolutely…” Selina paused and turned to face Jody with her most sultry look. “Not!”
“Hey…a guy has to at least try.” He leaned over and kissed the tip of her nose. “Sorry, just drifting a bit is all.”
“Which leads me to believe that we do have something to worry about with this Pitts person.”
“I wouldn’t say we had to worry…just be alert. I think if Pitts was going to try and take us out, he would have done so already. If what Danny saw is even close to correct, he has the numbers. They could roll over us like one of those big herds.”
“So then what do you think his deal is?”
“That’s the problem…I don’t have the slightest clue.”
They walked in silence for a while. Selina was not fooled in the least. When Jody had suggested that they go for a walk, she had an idea as to his reason why. Sure enough, he led them to the perimeter of their little community. He was checking the defenses. To her, that was enough reason for concern. Twice so far, they had paused; each time, he had given a lame justification about enjoying the view or some other equally ridiculous excuse. Was he looking for a possible vulnerability?
The last sliver of the sun could be seen to the west. The few clouds in the sky were painted bright oranges and purples. It really was beautiful. She just wished that this was truly the reason they were out walking.
Jody stopped walking with a suddenness that almost caused Selina to trip. He brought one hand up to shield his eyes against the setting sun. Selina watched him as he almost looked to slip into some sort of trance. His steps were slow and practically seemed like an afterthought.
He spun around so quick that it actually startled Selina. “Get back and tell everybody to meet in the gymnasium. And I mean everybody!”
“Jody what—” she started, but he cut her off.
“Now…and hurry!”
Selina wanted to ask questions, but she turned and ran. She glanced over her shoulder once and saw Jody climbing up on one of the watch towers. Whatever it was, he was obviously the only person who saw anything, because the person on duty up in the tower was visibly shrugging and throwing up his arms in the universal “I don’t know” gesture.
The first person she ran into was George Rosamilia. “We need to get everybody gathered up, and I would suggest that we have them grab their gear. I didn’t see anything, but Jody was visibly concerned.”
“Where was he?” George asked with genuine worry.
“West perimeter…I think tower five.”
“That’s strange…” George muttered, his voice trailing off.
Selina waited patiently, but when it looked like the big man was going to stay lost in his thoughts, she gave him a nudge. “Why is that so strange?”
“Danny left with a team about two hours ago. He didn’t say why…but they headed west.”
“So maybe we should stop standing here talking and get everybody gathered up,” Selina prompted.
George snapped out of it. “I will take the houses, you get over to the apartments, and then whoever gets done first hit the dorms. Make sure you tell Joe to get his old butt over to the armory.”
Selina took off at a run. She was developing a really bad feeling in her gut. The last time she’d had one like this was just before the Army had shown up in Bald Knob.
Twenty minutes later, she was filing in with the last of the current residents of what was once known as Cash, Arkansas…but had recently been renamed “Hope” after a public vote.
The sounds of nervous conversation rippled through the room and echoed off the walls seeming much louder than it actually was in reality. Selina made her way to George who was standing on the small stage that they used every time there was a need to address the general public.
Looking out over the people who were gathered, she was reminded of a scene from the movie The Stand when all the citizens of Boulder had come together. She had never been much of a Molly Ringwald fan, but seeing her as Fran managed to chang
e her opinion. She briefly wondered who would play her if she were just a character in a book that got made into a movie. She had been told that she looked like a young Kirstie Alley from her days on Cheers.
“Folks, can I get everybody to have a seat,” George announced, bringing the impromptu meeting to order.
A hush fell over the room and Selina came up to be next to George after he motioned insistently for her to do so. She had never actually been up in front of the group. Usually it was George or one of the men like Joe who had been around for decades in this little one-stoplight town.
“Okay, I am going to make this short and sweet…earlier today, Danny and a few of the guys went to investigate what looked like a puff of smoke to our west…”
Selina gave a sideways glance. She had not heard of any such thing. At least she now had the mystery solved as to why Jody had taken her on that walk. He had tried to make it seem random, but she’d known the whole time that something was up. That made her wonder why he had felt the need to keep a secret from her; as far as she knew, they were a team. That meant no secrets.
“…and it seems that we may be in for a bit of a fight. The problem is, this is not just a zombie horde or something like that. This is a group of people that we believe mean us harm.”
That sent a new murmur though the room. To his credit, George wasted absolutely no time regaining the attention and focus of everybody.
“People, we don’t have time to talk this over. This is not some community meeting where we are going to take a vote. If you stay, you have to be willing to kill a living person. For those of you who doubt your ability to do such a thing, nobody will think less of you, and we hope that, provided we prevail, none of you who do opt to leave will think less of us who stay when you return.”
“Where the hell would we go?” a woman’s voice shouted from somewhere in the back of the room. This received more than just a little bit of voiced assent.
“Danny and a team have set up a bunker out at the old processor on Roy Weaver Road,” George announced. “There is a supply of food and water there. If nobody from here comes for you in a few days, I suggest setting out for someplace else.”
“Like where?” more than one voice quipped.
“That would be up to you, but like I said, we don’t have a lot of time to talk. If you are leaving, grab your stuff and get moving. Everybody else meet up at the armory. We need to be in place within the hour.” George stepped down and headed for the rear exit from the gym. He grabbed Selina by the hand as he did so leaving a room that was abuzz with a hundred conversations.
She followed him, but she was almost as lost as everybody else. Once they got outside, the big man turned to face her. “Jody knows you will stay, but he asked me to convince you otherwise.”
“Tell him you failed,” Selina snapped, jerking her hand away from his.
“Just hear me out.” George held up his hands like he expected her to take a swing at him. “He wants you to take Kat and go. He said that if it is bad, he promises to fall back and come for you. But he wants you to grab your packs—that includes his and Danny’s—and go.”
“So you guys have known about this for how long?”
“Last night, actually,” George said with a shrug. “Danny had the tower watch on the west side and thought he saw a glow. He left at first light to see what was going on. He promised to signal Jody if there was a problem. And before you ask, the reason we didn’t come out and just tell everybody is because both Jody and Danny wanted it that way. They said that if people spent all their time worrying about something that may or may not happen, it would have us so fatigued that we would be easy pickings.”
“What a bunch of crap!” Selina snapped.
“Really?” George asked with a raised eyebrow. “So the six other times we have sent somebody to investigate something in the past three weeks…are you saying we should have told everybody and got the community all worked up over what proved to be nothing?”
“Six?”
“See what I mean?” George pointed at her and her visible emotional outburst. “Now imagine everybody here in town waiting around all day while we sent teams to investigate. How much work do you imagine would have gotten done?”
Selina opened her mouth to argue, but she found that she could not think of a single rebuttal. With a sigh, she dropped her head and muttered that she would do as she had been asked.
George turned to walk away, but Selina grabbed his arm. “One thing before you go. When you see Jody? Tell him we will discuss this decision of his, so he better not die or I am really gonna be pissed.”
“I’ll be sure to pass that on,” George said with the straightest face he could muster.
5
Geek Warrior
“That can’t be good,” Catie hissed as she and Kevin moved through the front yards in a double back to the church.
As they came within about five or six houses from the conflagration, they saw a flurry of activity. The gang that had only moments before been engaged in all manner of carnal recreation were now scrambling for weapons. Kevin only took a moment to appreciate that each of the women were pulling an array of guns from backpacks and scrambling for cover.
“This is not going to end well,” Kevin sighed as he and Catie wriggled into a thick hedge.
They did so just in time as several of the gang members came their way on the run. Both of them unconsciously held their breath despite the fact that all of the yelling, not to mention the sounds of the raging blaze, easily drowned out any sound the two of them might make.
“…not sure exactly, but it came from this direction!” a voice huffed as they ran past.
Kevin looked over at Catie who shrugged. They had not seen any of their people, and surely if this was one of theirs, then it would be unlikely that they could have passed them and not been flagged down.
Kevin rolled onto his back so he could look behind them and follow the progress of the people who had just run past. They were about three houses down and almost out of the range of the glow put off by the burning church when a series of shots rang out. He saw three of the dark figures stumble and fall. Seconds later, a cluster of at least five dark forms scurried out behind the confused gang members; another quick round of shots were fired, dropping the last couple.
The new arrivals swooped in and, from what it looked like to Kevin, finished off their downed victims. Bodies were scooped up and carried away.
“What in the hell?” Catie breathed.
“You have seen no sign of any living people this entire time…nothing at all while you guys were scavenging?” Kevin asked.
“Nothing. And I have been on the lookout because I honestly was having a hard time believing that an area this vast could be so relatively untouched. I mean, we have gone into houses where it is clear that the residents just took off with whatever they could carry. People in a hurry leave a lot of very good things. It is weird what people try to save when the world is ending.”
“That was the problem…nobody was taking this seriously for what it was until it was too late. The denials were being pushed all the way up until everything went off the air.”
“We went into one house where the cabinets were full, most of the clothes in the dressers, but the walls had obviously been stripped of pictures.”
Kevin rolled back onto his belly to get a look at what was going on in the parking lot. He saw a couple of figures dash from one dark pool of shadows to another. For the most part, it looked like the first gang had bugged out. The problem with that was that now there were people everywhere. It would be hard to tell friend from foe.
“I wonder where the rest of our people are hiding,” Catie put Kevin’s concerns out loud.
The sounds of a woman screaming cut through the night. It sounded like it was close. Kevin started to pop up, but Catie grabbed his arm. She shook her head and pointed with her free hand. A dark figure was moving down along the side of the house that they were hiding in the fron
t yard of. Subconsciously, Kevin pulled his feet in a bit and curled up in a tight ball to make sure that he was all the way in the thick of the shrubbery.
“I know you are around here someplace,” a voice hissed in the darkness. “I saw you come this way. And if I catch you…you better just give your soul to God, because your ass is mine.”
How original, Kevin thought.
He and Catie watched the figure as it stepped out into the front yard. The light from the fire danced on the man’s face. He looked to be about average height, and were it not for the big Crocodile Dundee-sized knife in each hand, he could have been somebody you passed on the street and did not give a second thought.
“I know you’re here, you little freak,” the man sing-songed. “We have been following your little group of diseased fucks for days. When we find you…you will wish that you would have turned into one of those walking sacks of rot.”
Kevin was trying his best to make sense of what was being said. He knew there was something he was missing and it bothered him.
In a flash, another figure came flying off the roof and tackled the man. There was a meaty sound and something wet mixed in for good measure. Kevin had to tilt his head up to get a better look. The man was on the ground and the figure astride him was plunging a knife into his body again and again.
Catie moved, and this time it was Kevin’s turn to grab her arm and shake his head. There was something else here, and without knowing what it was, he felt it best if they just stay out of it if at all possible.
Not more than a few heartbeats later, three more figures jumped down and joined the first. All of them were savaging the now obviously dead body in a way that seemed very personal. A few of the hoods came back on the new arrivals and Kevin was only a little surprised to see all of the attackers were women.