After the End Trilogy Box Set

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After the End Trilogy Box Set Page 4

by Mark Gillespie


  “Where’s your beautiful queen?” he cried out. “Where’s Helen of Troy?”

  The man roared yet again and then clumsily stepped off the cart, landing on the damp road. He lifted his head towards the falling rain, opened his mouth and caught a few drops on his tongue. When he’d tasted enough, he smacked his lips together like a contented animal.

  “Where is she?” the fat man called out. He took a look at the empty streets and let out a long, exaggerated sigh. “There’s no need to hide from me ladies of the Complex. Your friends here told us all about your little community in the heart of NEW YORK, NEW YORK!”

  He sang the city’s name in a strange warbling melody.

  “You have food, women and purpose,” the fat man said. “But you’re incomplete. You need men. Well, your wish has been granted and it’s all thanks to the brave efforts of your dead messengers right here. They found us a long way away from New York. They told us about your Project and the matter of reconstruction. We’ve traveled a great distance to help you – won’t you come out and say hello?”

  He laughed and turned to face his wild-looking colleagues further down the street. They were still standing in the rain, watching everything happen with a chilling silence.

  “Some things don’t change,” the fat man said, gesturing to his comrades. “Civilization has crumbled, the human species is teetering on the verge of extinction but a woman will still – STILL – keep a man waiting.”

  Eda’s fingers gripped the wooden handle of the dagger. She crept closer still, keeping in the darkness at all times.

  There was a sudden flurry of movement.

  Somebody stepped out of the station’s main entrance.

  Shay, dressed in her bright red rain cloak, walked slowly towards the center of the road. She moved in a ghostly silence. Seconds later, a few other women followed her out of the station and approached the unexpected, late night visitors.

  Shay stood facing the fat man who greeted her with a cold, menacing grin. The other women quickly formed a tight semi-circle at their leader’s back.

  “What took you so long?” the fat man said.

  Shay pointed to the two corpses tied to the cart.

  “Why did you kill our ambassadors?” she asked. Her voice rang out loud and clear as if she wanted everyone in the vicinity to hear her. “They traveled this land in peace, seeking nothing more than to find volunteers for the Project. There was no need to harm them – no need to kill them.”

  “Wrong,” the fat man snapped. He pointed a finger at Shay’s face. “Your ambassadors tried to murder us in our sleep. Before that they tried to steal food and water from us. You know, you should be careful what sort of people you use to represent you. If you send out thieves and murderers, well, it might give the wrong impression.”

  “Whatever the initial act of wrongdoing was,” Shay said, “we both know that it wasn’t committed by my people.”

  The fat man smirked. “Are you calling me a liar?”

  There was a pause.

  “I’m calling you a cheap bandit,” Shay said. “You’re all bandits and you’ve come here to loot and destroy what I’ve worked so hard to build. To take what isn’t yours.”

  “That hurts my feelings,” the fat man said. He looked almost sincere.

  “Oh really?” Shay asked. “Well if you haven’t come to steal and murder, then why are you here?”

  “I want everything your messengers promised and more,” the bandit said. “You have food and gardens, am I right? You’ve got water. You’re organized and most importantly, you have women everywhere. Thank you God! Granted, most of them are a bit old and saggy around the edges but beggars can’t be choosers, not in the United States of Armageddon. I hope however, that Helen is a lot more attractive than what I’m seeing out here. Is she? Please say yes.”

  “You want to breed with Helen?” Shay said.

  “Breed?” the bandit said, roaring with laughter. “Of course I want to breed. It’s going to be glorious. We’re going to rebuild the world together, take the human race back to its former glories. And to do that we’re going to need people – lots of people and that means a lot of breeding.”

  “What about the curse?” Shay said.

  The bandit shrugged. “What curse?”

  Eda heard Shay laughing from afar.

  “Do you think I’m impressed?” Shay said. “Do you think anyone here is impressed when you play the fool?”

  The man smiled and tapped a finger off his forehead three times.

  “I remember now,” he said. “Your ambassadors did say something about the curse and how Mother Nature was pissed at us. They talked about a lot of things – a low sex drive, painful orgasms and a childless, barren world – blah-blah-blah. To be honest, I had no idea what they were talking about but they said if we came all the way here to New York and successfully bred with Helen that we’d be the heroes of our fledgling species. That we’d be treated like kings for the rest of our lives. Can you defy the curse? That’s what they said to me.”

  Eda could see the back of Shay’s head nodding slowly.

  “Have you had intercourse lately?” she asked.

  “Not lately,” the bandit said. “Had your messengers over there not insisted on fighting to the death I would have tested your curse out on them. Now I’ll be the first to admit that my sex drive isn’t what it used to be but that’s only because of all the chemical shit floating around in the air. And it’s also because I hardly ever see a woman these days. So trust me when I say that right now, looking at you all, I’m horny as hell. I’m going to ask you again – where’s Helen?”

  “Let me tell you something,” Shay said, taking a step towards the bandit. “If you have an orgasm you’ll die. And it’ll be a terrible, terrible death like nothing you could ever imagine. I’ve seen it so many times now.”

  The man roared with laughter. “You know something lady,” he said, “you remind me of a Sunday school teacher I had a long time ago. Good to see all that fire and brimstone shit survived the end of the world, you know?”

  Shay lifted the hood of the rain cloak over her head.

  The bandit’s hand moved to the hilt of a short sword hanging off his belt. His fingers tapped the handle in a slow, contemplative rhythm.

  “Maybe I’ll take you as one of my wives,” he said, examining Shay from head to toe. “Yeah, I like you. It could be Helen for sex and you for conversation afterwards. Because I get the feeling you’ve got a big set of balls swinging under that red coat of yours sweetheart. And I like that.”

  He looked at the huddle of women standing at Shay’s back.

  “C’mon,” he yelled. “Don’t look so worried ladies. Think about the positives here – you’ll be a lot safer if we stick around. I speak from experience – there are bad people wandering about out there nowadays. Not many it’s true, but the ones that are out there, they’re sick in the head. Almost everyone you’ll meet has been driven mad by hunger and loneliness. And they’re always on the move. It’s only a matter of time before they get here and find your little Complex. When they do, you’ll be glad you’ve got us to protect you.”

  The fat man raised a hand in the air.

  At this signal, the other bandits began to walk slowly towards the station. As they got closer to the old building, Eda noticed that they were all carrying the same type of short sword as their leader. At the head of the pack, a giant man swaggered with loose, simian limbs flapping in the breeze. He had to be at least seven foot tall and his extreme height combined with a sturdy build and straggly brown beard, made it look like a grizzly bear was running loose in New York.

  Someone else caught Eda’s eye.

  She saw a younger man hanging slightly apart from the others. He was probably about thirty or a little older. A mop of dark curly hair flopped over his forehead. In contrast to his heavily bearded comrades, there was only a thin coat of boyish stubble growing on the man’s face. He looked like a stranger in the crowd, like he did
n’t belong with the others. As he walked at the back, his eyes darted around with uncertainty. Several times, he glanced over his shoulder like somebody who knew they were being watched.

  “You don’t want to fight us,” the fat man said to Shay. “Look at my boys back there, right? They’re battle-hardened and as mean as a pack of rattlesnakes. And we don’t want to fight you either. All we want is to be part of one big happy family together. Is that so bad? We can do great things here in the name of reconstruction. Will you let us in nicely? Peacefully? Or do we have to force our way in? It’s entirely up to you.”

  Shay stood in silence for a moment. The horse made a fat snorting noise and tugged on the cart, as if it was eager to move along and start dragging those corpses up and down the street again.

  “You’re right,” Shay said, nodding slowly. She pointed a finger at the advancing bandit pack and her shoulders appeared to drop a little. “It would be foolish of us to try and fight you.”

  “No,” Eda whispered from the shadows.

  The fat man moved his hand away from the hilt of his sword. “Good girl,” he said, patting Shay on the shoulder. “Smart girl too. I’m definitely claiming you as one of mine.”

  “Take what you want and go,” Shay said. “Take the food. Take a woman – but just one if you please. Don’t kill us or damage our supplies – don’t destroy everything that we’ve worked so hard to build here.”

  “Destroy it?” the bandit said, looking genuinely surprised. “You have me all wrong sister. I don’t want to destroy anything – I want us to build a beautiful world together. Together. We’re staying, we’re not going anywhere.”

  He stepped forward and slid a chubby finger down Shay’s cheek. The finger kept going until it slipped inside the rain cloak and landed on Shay’s pale neck. The fat man then pulled at the cloak, opening up a small gap between the fabric and Shay’s skin. He leaned forward, staring down at Shay’s body, all the while licking his lips.

  “I’m going to like it here,” he said, his eyes lighting up.

  He let go of Shay and turned to his left. It looked like something had caught his attention over by the station.

  Whistling loudly, the bandit walked towards a row of flowerbeds lined up neatly outside Grand Central. He leaned closer to inspect the assortment of vegetables growing there and when he was done, the bandit turned around and nodded his approval.

  “You’ve been busy,” he called over to Shay. “Well done. I take it you gals know how to cook this stuff as well as you grow it? Oh boy, busy, hardworking women – just like my Angie back in Philly before she went batshit crazy.”

  Shay walked towards the bandit. It looked like she was gliding over the center of the road.

  Eda saw the bandit’s hand instinctively reach for the sword at his waist.

  “Gentlemen,” she said, coming to a sudden stop. “Yes, we’ve been busy. In fact, you’ve no idea how busy we’ve been here in our dear Eldorado. But it would give me great pleasure to show you.”

  Shay looked up towards the night sky.

  “Now,” she said.

  Eda heard something – a brief, high-pitched whoosh that cut through the sound of the pouring rain. It was followed by a loud, yet muffled shriek.

  She saw the fat man staggering backwards away from the flowerbeds. He was bent double, one hand reaching for something on his head.

  Then he dropped onto one knee.

  There was an arrow lodged in his neck.

  4

  More arrows rained down with lethal precision.

  The bandits were thrown into a sudden, desperate panic. Most of them ran for cover in the abandoned buildings opposite Grand Central. A few however, charged boldly towards their leader who by now had collapsed onto his back in the middle of the road. But it was too late to help him. The fat man’s saucer-like eyes stared blankly up at the dark sky, his mouth like that of a dying fish, opening and closing, gasping for breath.

  There were people shouting everywhere. Angry, frightened voices filled the night.

  Eda tried to stay small. She was still tucked in at the edge of the street, clinging to the old storefronts that were cloaked in darkness. After moving forward a little, she looked up and saw a shadowy line of figures standing on the Park Avenue Viaduct, which extended outwards like a ramp or a bridge above the street level entrance to Grand Central.

  The archers.

  “Yes,” she said, throwing a fist in the air.

  Most of the bandits realized that the sudden attack was coming from the viaduct. It was too late for many of them to get out of the way. Eda watched as an older man with a mop of straggly gray hair, stood in stunned silence, staring up at the long row of female assassins. He yelled something to the women, something that sounded spiteful, and then seconds later took an arrow in the heart.

  A woman’s voice bellowed out the command ‘FIRE’. This happened every five seconds and Eda, still looking up towards the viaduct, realized that there were two lines of about ten archers standing on the bridge. These two lines were taking it in turns to shoot at the bandits down on the street. After the front row had fired, they’d immediately duck down and pull another arrow from a quiver that was fastened onto their backs. During that brief interval, the second row of archers would stand up and fire into the crowd. This was repeated over and over again.

  It was a massacre.

  Eda felt a rush of blood surging through her veins. She squeezed the handle of the dagger and gently stabbed the sidewalk several times.

  If the fighting hit the ground, would she take her place alongside the other warriors in battle?

  Could she do it?

  Eda had killed a man, a long time ago. It happened when she was still very young, several years after the war ended and everything was turning upside down in a world gone mad. This was before the curse, back when some of the more vicious men, roaming the streets in either large packs or as lone wolves, were raping and plundering at will, taking full advantage of the swift decline of the police and military influence. Losers became winners. Outlaws became kings. For those people, the end of the world was the greatest party there ever was.

  She killed him in a city but she couldn’t remember the name of it. It didn’t matter.

  Eda had been with Libby, one of several young women who’d taken the orphaned girl under her wing at the time. The man was a predator, like so many others. He’d followed them for at least two blocks before Libby leaned down and whispered in Eda’s ear, telling her that she wasn’t to panic but that they were going to start running fast. And Libby also told Eda not to look back.

  They ran but they couldn’t shake the guy off. He obviously knew the city well and they didn’t. It was as if he knew every twist and turn his would-be victims were going to make before they’d made it.

  He’d done this before. Many times.

  They couldn’t shake him off.

  Eventually, he’d trapped Libby and Eda in a dark alley. The man had nasty facial burns running down one side of his face, probably from the war. He had long greasy hair and an ugly, jagged scar on the left side of his neck. He didn’t say anything. Instead, he just cackled and marched forward like the attack was nothing out of the ordinary.

  It was to be expected. Tolerated.

  He pinned Libby to the ground and started beating her on the face and upper body. He went at this vicious attack with such a hot fury that it was hard to believe it wasn’t personal, like somehow she’d wronged him in a past life. But Libby didn’t black out. Throughout the assault, in which time seemed to stand still, she screamed at Eda, yelling one single world over and over again.

  Run! Run! Run!

  But Eda couldn’t run away, even if she’d wanted to. She just stood there watching, her little legs paralyzed with fear.

  She didn’t cry.

  The man pressed a large, filthy hand over Libby’s mouth to shut her up. No doubt he wanted the kid to stick around for dessert.

  Eda watched as he forced himsel
f onto Libby. When he pulled down his pants, that’s when she’d noticed the black-handled knife strapped around his leg with Scotch tape.

  She didn’t hesitate.

  Eda ran over to where the man had Libby pinned to the ground. She grabbed the handle of the small knife and with all her strength, pulled it away, cutting through the tape in the process. That caught his attention. He turned around and in that moment, looked at Eda with the knife in her hand like she was the devil standing over him.

  She might as well have been.

  The man tried to get up but Eda was much faster than he was. As he moved, she stabbed him hard on the inside leg, one swift strike, and he yelped like wounded dog.

  Eda pulled the knife out and backed away. A moment later, Libby got up and stood beside her. Eda’s guardian was cut under the eye but it didn’t look like she’d sustained anything too serious in the attack. They stayed there, watching the man in the alley wriggle around on the ground like a wounded snake. The blood flowed fast; it looked jet-black in the darkness. His face turned pale and all the fight went out of him along with the blood. It was only later that Libby explained to Eda about the femoral artery that was located in the leg.

  The little kid had struck lucky.

  In the days and weeks that followed, Eda never lost a wink of sleep over what happened in that alley. Her first kill, yes, but it was just another day in the wild years. Back then, people were doing bad things to each other all the time and sometimes for good reasons.

  All that was a long time ago.

  Eda stared at the dagger in her hand as the rain continued to crash down onto 42nd Street. Did she still have it in her? The ability to kill a man as easily as blinking – was it still there? She’d been living in the Complex for a long time, safe, wrapped up in community and in an environment that was well prepared.

  That little girl – when Eda thought about her, it felt like she was thinking about someone else.

 

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