Josh lifted his chin out of the sand. “Josh Standing.”
“And what are you doing on our beach, Josh Standing?”
“We were wrecked here.”
“We?”
“My daughter, Tally, and our friend, Poppet. We were thrown off our ship into the lifeboat. The currents caught us and the boat was smashed to pieces. Have you seen my daughter?”
Josh was cuffed hard by the hand again, then grabbed by the material of his sodden shirt. “Just answer the questions until you’re given permission to do otherwise.”
The man yanked Josh up onto his knees. Josh looked sideways. The man was blond-haired, in a checkered shirt and jeans. He was perhaps in his late twenties, and a straggly beard made a fair attempt at covering his jaw. He held a snubby Colt Cobra—the same make and model Josh had bought for his wife, Maxine, to hide in a lockbox beside their bed for protection when he worked nights. Back when he’d been a cop. Back before Cody Zem. Back before he and Maxine had drifted apart. Back before his son, Storm—or Tic-tac as he was sometimes called—had gotten sick with cancer.
And back before he’d lost Tally.
“I need to find my daughter. I didn’t see her get out of the water. I was knocked unconscious. Please. I’m unarmed, I’m half drowned, and I have no idea where I am. Please. Let me find my daughter.”
Checkshirt slapped Josh’s cheek with his free hand and his eyes blazed. Josh couldn’t tell if it was with inherent badness or whether Checkshirt was another victim of Supernova Supercharge, but he was definitely on a hair trigger in his head, and Josh hoped that didn’t extend to the Cobra.
“Get up. Don’t give me any excuse to shoot you.”
Josh got up. He was a full head taller than Checkshirt, and even though the man was younger, Josh reckoned he could take him down in a one-on-one.
“Can I put my hands down? Please?”
Checkshirt leveled the Cobra, but nodded. “Steve!” he bellowed over his shoulder. “Got a live one!”
From over a grassy dune ahead, a figure came into view and then stomped down through the sand. Steve was African American, mid-thirties, and wearing a Dodgers T-Shirt that did nothing to conceal his physical size. A black Heckler & Koch swung barrel-down from his shoulder, and there was a thick-bladed Bowie in a sheath on his belt.
Josh could take down Checkshirt in a fair fight. Steve was a whole other ball game entirely.
“Graves and Stillson have taken the Vancouver 28 out. Should catch up with the ship in an hour or so. Whoever’s piloting, it looks like they don’t really know what they’re doing,” Steve finished, looking Josh up and down, seemingly appraising his threat level in much the same way Josh had done with him.
“You’re going after the Sea-Hawk? You saw it?”
“We see everything along this coastline,” Checkshirt offered uncharacteristically, and then addressed Steve. “He’s looking for his daughter and another woman. Anyone found them?”
Steve shrugged. “No one’s reported back that they have. Maybe they’ll wash up dead later.”
The words cut through Josh like razors. There was a nanosecond where he thought about making a break for it, but he was shoeless on a wide-open beach up against two armed men. He wouldn’t get ten feet.
“Please. Help me.”
Checkshirt laughed. “Help you? Dude, you’re the one who’s going to be helping us. Move out!”
Josh was handcuffed by Steve, and Checkshirt, who Steve called Harve, marched him away from the surf, the rocks, and any clue as to where Tally might be.
Harve as a name suggested a middle-aged character from a garbage sitcom Josh might have watched on cable when he was growing up. A paunchy racist guy with questionable hygiene and no girlfriend. No threat at all.
But this Harve was anything but. If you cut him in half, he’d have danger written all the way through—not a physical danger, but the danger that comes when morality is subtracted from intelligence. Josh got the impression Harve was as sharp as the knife he’d happily stab him with.
They trudged up the dunes, through the rough scrub, and came to a flat, windswept area of land that stretched to the horizon. There was a stony track, and four horses being watched over by a young man with raven-black hair tied back in a ponytail. Two of the horses were hitched to a rackety-looking market wagon, and the other two were saddled.
Harve pushed Josh on towards the wagon.
“Where are you taking me?”
“That depends on your level of cooperation, buddy,” Harve said without any tone in his voice that suggested he felt Josh was his buddy. “You do as you’re told, and we take you back to the camp to meet Trace. If not, we put you in a grave.”
Steve climbed up onto the wagon seat, and Ponytail sat himself in the saddle of the nearest horse. When Harve had secured Josh in leg irons in the back of the wagon and padlocked the chains to a riveted rail, he patted Josh’s cheek. “Now, you be a good boy and I promise not to kill you slowly.” Harve grinned at something he obviously thought was a hilarious line and then got up onto the saddle of the last horse.
“Do it!” he called to the others, and the horses headed off down the track.
“Anything from the others, Jackdaw?”
Ponytail shook his head. “Last I saw was them heading towards Maiden’s Point. Carly was bitchin’ about having to go down through the rocks. You know Carly. Always bitchin’ ‘bout something.”
Josh heard Harve sigh like he knew all too well what Carly was like.
“Can I ask a question?” Josh ventured when the party had settled down to a silence that was as stony as the track they were heading across.
“If you must,” Harve said, not looking back.
“I’ve been out at sea for a number of weeks. This is the first time I’ve seen land since the supernova. Catch me up?”
Barnard’s Star, light years away, had exploded—the effects of which had taken just a little over six years to hit the solar system, and the consequences of that extrasolar event had hit the Earth harder than a baseball bat in the teeth. All the electronics on the Sea-Hawk had gone down, and a number of the crew had turned into insane murderers.
As a probation officer and ex-cop who’d been taking a group of ten probationers on a team-building adventure, Josh had gotten a lot more adventure than expected.
His nineteen-year-old daughter, Tally, had reluctantly come along when she’d rather have been at home partying or up in the mountains climbing. To further complicate matters, his son, Storm, and near-estranged wife, Maxine, had been in Boston. Storm had just finished his last round of chemotherapy and had been on the satellite phone when the first wave of madness had hit. In the last few weeks, Josh had lost emotional contact with his wife, and then physical contact with his son and now his daughter.
It felt like his whole life had slipped through his grasp.
“World’s gone crazy,” Steve said, reining the horses forwards into the teeth of a stiffening breeze. The wind was bringing dark smudges of clouds which, promised a needling rain if they didn’t make it to shelter soon.
Harve didn’t look pleased that Steve had talked to Josh, but he didn’t say anything, just shook his head slightly. Steve faced forward and seemed to not be bothered that what he’d done had rankled Harve.
Josh could see these men were an uneasy band—if they’d been thrown together since the Barnard’s Star event in tumultuous circumstances that in any way mirrored what he’d lived through on the Sea-Hawk, then the tension between them was understandable. Being chained up in the back of the wagon meant there was very little Josh could do to take advantage of their non-cohesiveness, but his grasp of situational awareness told him to bank the information for now. He might be able to use it to better his lot sometime in the future.
“So, what’s the situation here?”
“You ask a lot of questions,” Jackdaw commented.
“I do. But please, the more I know, the more chance I have of finding my daughter.”
<
br /> Harve laughed then. “Where you’re going, your life expectancy will be what you’ll be concerned with more, not where your daughter is. If she’s dead already, she’s in a better place than you.”
Josh had no idea what Harve meant, but the laugh, all hollow and void of humor, chilled him sufficiently to still his tongue. There was no way out of the leg irons, and he was a passenger to wherever these men were taking him, so there was no point wasting energy on Harve and the others. Energies he would need, should opportunities to escape presented themselves.
Well, at least I hope they do…
The spit of sandy scrub where Josh and the others had washed up turned, after an hour or so, into open grassland. This landscape was cut by a single strip of blacktop looking like it came from and was going to nowhere.
No signage appeared along the route to give Josh any clue where he was. The rain stayed off, but the air had little warmth. The clouds scudded busily overhead, and the tussocked grass to either side of the road sighed and rustled in the wind.
Josh’s three captors said hardly a word to each other. Their faces remained set and stony. Perhaps they were concerned about what might happen when they got to wherever they were going, and the reaction of this person called ‘Trace’ who Harve had said he was taking Josh to see. There was certainly something more in the atmosphere surrounding the two men that suggested their silence wasn’t just about the personal tensions between them, not even in the apocalyptic situation they’d found themselves in.
This didn’t bode well, and as the horses clip-clopped on and rain began to fall, Josh felt even more disconnected from the beach, Tally, and Poppet. Since the supernova and its effects on those around him, Josh had found in his more reflective moments—which had been few and far between—that a sense of dread and anxiety had crept up on him. He would never have described himself as an anxious guy or susceptible to sad thoughts before the supernova, but where some of the crew and probationers on the Sea-Hawk had become murderous and overly aggressive, Josh knew he’d been changed, as well. As if there wasn’t enough going on for him to deal with on the outside; he didn’t look forward to having to battle any internal demons focused and enhanced by whatever had hit the Earth.
Josh shook his head and held his face up to the rain, trying to use its cleansing sting to wash away those black thoughts bubbling up from his mind. He needed to be at his best if he was going to get out of this, and letting that dreadful tide rise within him wouldn’t be helpful.
As the rain eased, Steve and Harve looked back sharply when they heard drumming hoofbeats on the road. Josh opened his eyes from where he’d been concentrating on squashing the negativity back down to see a horse and rider almost upon them.
The rider was burly, with wild black curls of hair framing a bearded face. As he approached, Josh saw the face was ruddy and the lips thin, with a chin that jutted with self-importance.
Harve turned his mount around to face the newcomer as he pulled his horse to a stop. “Where’s Leif, Carly? What’s the deal?”
Josh noted again that Carly—the one Jackdaw had described as always bitchin’—was indeed someone who oozed attitude.
Carly reported back with barely disguised contempt for Harve’s apparent position of authority. “Back at Maiden’s Point. I’m heading to camp to get some ropes. We found someone trapped in the rocks. Got themselves wedged in and can’t get out on their own. Need some ropes and tackle.”
Harve rolled his eyes. “Why are you bothering? We don’t have time for this.”
“Harve, you might enjoy casual sadism, but I ain’t leaving a woman to die in the rocks. That might be your way, but it ain’t mine.”
And with that, Carly kicked his horse forward and was off. Harve shouted after him to come back, but Carly was gone, clattering across the tarmac like someone’s life depended on it.
Josh’s heart was clattering like Carly’s horse.
A woman? Trapped in the rocks?
All he could think of was Tally, washed up, regaining consciousness, and trying to use her climbing skills to get herself out of the water over the savage black rocks. Tally was an excellent climber and free-runner, but if the fatigue and exhaustion Josh felt were in any way replicated in his daughter, then perhaps she’d slipped… made a mistake and gotten herself stuck.
Josh thanked whoever was looking over them right now that it had been Carly and not Harve who had found her, because it seemed Harve wouldn’t have bothered to rescue her. He’d have left her to die.
The party moved forward in silence, the tension still lingering, with Josh feeling that Steve and Jackdaw were trying not to exacerbate Harve’s anger by discussing Carly’s behavior with him.
But Josh couldn’t help clinging onto the first new leaf of hope in the forest of his dread. He looked back with unalloyed hunger at the route they had traveled, across the windswept landscape, back towards the sea through the pitter of rain, willing Tally to be okay—to be saved.
When Carly came back past them again at a near gallop, he didn’t even bother to stop and speak to Harve and the others. There were two other riders with him, both with their faces down in the rain, hats jammed onto their heads, ropes and gear slung over their shoulders. The Stetsons blackened with rain, their coats slick with it, and the sudden clatter of hooves all spoke of another time, and another place. As if Josh was looking back down through a tunnel of time to a past where America had been a lawless and dangerous place. The black silhouettes of the riders haring off into the distance like a posse in pursuit of a fugitive, or a gang fleeing from justice, brought home to Josh in one hard hit the uncompromising truth that, while he had been at sea, the country he had known had been upended, and its treasure scattered like garbage.
And his first encounter with this new world had seen him lose everything dear to him, and end up in irons in the grip of a fresh tyranny he could only guess the extent of.
He had no idea what he would find at the camp he was being transported to, or who this ‘Trace’ would turn out to be, or what awaited him after the cryptic ‘You’ll be the one helping us’ line from Harve, but the doom-laden hollow in his gut was nothing compared to what he felt when the party turned off the track, beginning a descent along a bumpy, unpaved track down into a deepening trough between grassy banks, and what he saw above him.
If the chill of the afternoon rain and the strained atmosphere of the men around him hadn’t been enough to extinguish the one spark of hope he had of Tally being rescued, then the ten, black and bloated bodies, hung from gibbets by the side of the road and swinging in the wind, snuffed it out of him forever.
2
Maxine’s mom, Maria, hadn’t stopped screaming or kicking the walls of her room all night.
The seething rage emanating from the upstairs of the ranch house came in stark contrast to the surreal attempt at normality below.
Maxine’s dad, Donald, had given them soup from cans and coffee brewed in the grate of the wood-burning stove. Storm’s eyes had kept flicking to the ranch house ceiling as they ate, the sounds from above shifting from screams to wails to chattering obscenities. Maxine wanted more than anything to go up to the room and comfort her mother, to see if there was anything she could do to help, but Donald had forbidden her with one stiffly raised hand.
“She’ll kill you when she’s like this. We just have to wait. I can’t even get near her right now. In the morning, she’ll have exhausted herself, and she’ll sleep for a few hours. After that, I can get in, clean her up, and give her some food.”
Her dad’s face was more lined and creased since the last time Maxine had seen him a little over a year ago. Back then, he’d been a well-appointed seventy-year-old rancher. Hair white but still bountiful, strong-armed and sure of foot. He’d had to be in order to work his two hundred head of cattle micro-ranch on the outskirts of Pickford, West Virginia, for nearly fifty years. Donald was what in the past would have been described as a “man’s man.” He liked to yarn with his buddi
es on the front porch, drink beer, work hard, and carry himself with proud and steely morality. He liked Johnny Cash and sour mash whiskey, and was himself tall and broad as an oak.
However, since the supernova had hit, and the effect it had had not only on the people of West Virginia, the population of the nearest town, and, specifically, on the woman he loved, Donald’s tree trunk frame had gotten the look of a hollowed-out canoe. He was still afloat, but he didn’t look like he’d survive a trip through many more rapids.
Maxine noticed a considerable slowdown in his movements, his mouth pursed with thin lips, his red-rimmed eyes downcast… and he was prone to deep, resonant sighs that either he didn’t realize he was emitting, or he didn’t care who heard them.
Maxine had never seen her dad appear so tired and worn… until now.
Looking at Donald and Storm side by side at the table made them seem like they were on the same point in their personal continuum, too—pale, exhausted, and seemingly tiny in their chairs.
“We can’t leave her like that,” Maxine said softly as Donald ate two mouthfuls of soup before pushing his can aside.
“I haven’t left her, Maxine. You think I haven’t tried to help her?”
“No, I’m not saying that—but she needs to take something to calm her down maybe…”
“She’ll bite off your fingers.”
Donald held up his hand, and she saw there was a ring of scabs over a healing bite wound in across the palm.
Maxine looked at the brown crusts with wide eyes. It would have been a shocking enough sight at the best of times, but to find out that her mother had done that to her father….
“She musta heard you arriving, and it got her riled up. Don’t worry, she can’t hurt herself up there; there’s nothing sharp or dangerous in the room. I have the situation under control, but you hafta trust me, Maxine. You have to let me deal with her in my own way.”
“She’s not one of your animals, Dad. You can’t just keep her locked up and feed and water her when necessary. She’s my mom,” Maxine choked out.
Supernova EMP- The Complete Series Page 26