“Nope. Everything should be good.”
The guard nodded. “So what’s the deal? Why are we stopping here?”
“What do you mean?”
“We’re almost there. Why are we stopping ten minutes away? I mean, don’t get me wrong, thanks for the beer and all, but couldn’t we have done this afterward, once we get the reward?”
Dan’s head was spinning. He didn’t know what any of this was about, but he had the idea that it was important to what was happening to him. If he could only figure it out, maybe he could use it to his advantage.
What kind of reward were they talking about? Money? That didn’t make sense. Money meant nothing now.
Maybe food? Weapons?
And who would pay for two people to be delivered somewhere?
Dan thought about trying to use the metal to saw away at his zip ties. But the soldiers weren’t engrossed enough in their conversation. They were still looking this way and that, and they’d see what Dan was up to, that he’d shifted positions.
“Well,” said the soldier. “There’s something I had to do first.”
“And what’s that?”
“You finished your beer yet?”
“Just about.”
The guard drained the last of the beer, crumpled the can in his hand, and tossed it to the road.
“I’m sorry about this,” said the soldier. “I wanted to give you one last beer.”
“One last beer? What the hell are you talking about?”
“You know how it works. One less guy means more for everyone else.”
“One less?”
The soldier drew a handgun from a holster rapidly. He drew it. And fired.
The shot rang out.
The soldier remained standing there, arm straight, gun drawn.
The guard had a hole in his forehead and his body slumped over into the bed of the truck.
The woman prisoner let out a noise. Not quite a scream. More of a moan of fear.
Dan remained silent. He didn’t dare to move.
“Don’t worry, lady, no one’s going to shoot you,” said the soldier, finally reholstering his weapon.
“What do you want with us?” screamed the woman, the last shreds of composure that she’d carried suddenly breaking away into outright panic.
“Hey, don’t blame us. We’re just doing our job.”
“Since when does the Army kidnap people? Kill them?” She was yelling loudly, her face contorted in rage and desperation.
“The Army, miss?” said the soldier, laughing. “Who said anything about the Army?”
“You’re soldiers, aren’t you?” said Dan, piping up. He knew he needed to know who they were. He already knew they weren’t the US Army. But they had equipment like theirs, and they did dress like soldiers.
“Soldiers? You got the wrong idea, kid.”
“Who are you?”
“Me? I’m nobody. One minute, I’m in jail, and the next thing I know the doors are open and I’m free to go.”
Either the beer or the kill had made this soldier more talkative than the others. Or maybe that was just the way he was.
“Why are you doing this?”
“Let’s just say someone gave me an opportunity I couldn’t pass up.”
“Where are you taking us?” said Dan. “Why don’t you just kill us now?”
“Kill you? You’re too valuable. Someone’s paying us a lot of supplies for kids and women captured alive.”
“Kids and women? What do they want with us?”
Dan glanced at the woman, who was looking more scared by the minute.
“It’s got something to do with mining. Some crazy plan to send kids down into mines because you’re so small and don’t eat much food. Hell if I know what it’s all about, but I guess you’ve got to start rebuilding the energy infrastructure somehow. Coal’s a good place to start, as far as I’m concerned. But, yeah, the plan doesn’t make much sense.”
“So you’re selling me into mining slavery?”
“Basically, kid, yeah. But that’s the breaks. That’s how the world works these days.”
“And her? What about her?”
“Got to rebuild society somehow. I guess the guy wants a bunch of wives or something.”
“Who is this guy?”
“What the hell are you rambling on about back there?” shouted out the soldier who drove the pickup. “Let’s get a move on it. Stop chatting with the prisoners.”
“Whatever, man. We’re fine on time.”
“Just get in the bed and shut up.”
The soldier grumbled as he hoisted himself into the bed of the truck. He pushed against the dead body of the guard, shoving him until he fell with a dull thud onto the pavement.
“Don’t worry, miss,” said the soldier, looking at the woman. “I know you’re dirty now, but they’re going to get you all fixed up. I’ve seen this guy’s wives, and they’re, well, they’re living at a whole different level. Showers, baths, makeup, you name it.”
“I’m not worried about looking nice.”
The soldier laughed. “Well, then you don’t have anything to worry about.”
The woman said nothing, but Dan could see the fire and anger in her eyes.
The driver to the pickup flashed his lights at the military truck, and they started rumbling along again.
Dan remained silent, but his mind was racing. How was he going to get out of this?
He needed to do something before they got to wherever they were headed. He didn’t intend to spend the rest of what would certainly be a short life slaving away in some preposterous mining scheme.
He didn’t have much time. The guard had said ten minutes.
He had to act soon.
24
JAMES
They were in a tight circle, back to back, near the fire.
The mob had arrived.
And it was worse than everyone had expected.
Everyone except John. “I told you,” shouted John. “I told you all.”
There wasn’t anything to say back to that. It wasn’t going to do anyone any good, anyway.
Their situation was their situation. Reality was reality, no matter how strange it seemed.
James was sweating profusely despite the chill in the air. He’d already had to reload his rifle three times.
He’d lost track of how many of them he’d shot. They just kept coming, like some kind of pack of wild animals. The mob seemed to have lost everything, everything that had made them individuals. They were desperate and willing to rush those who seemed to have more than they had.
Some of them had guns. Others had axes, saws, crowbars. Others had sticks, and many had nothing at all.
James was trying his best just to act. Just to keep shooting. Keep fighting. He tried repeating the words in his head, despite the intensity of the sound of the gunshots around him, the sounds of the roars of pain as the mob fell.
Strange thoughts started popping up, no matter how hard he tried to control it. Thoughts beyond fear and pangs of regret each time he pulled the trigger.
Their lives were in danger. They needed to defend themselves.
But had his own thoughts become twisted up? Was he viewing these individuals that he was gunning down just as a mob because it made it easier for him to kill them?
“James!” shouted his mother. “What the hell are you doing?”
James looked down at his gun and realized he’d just been standing there. He didn’t know for how long.
James didn’t apologize. He just acted. He got a man in his sights, a young man, maybe five years older than James himself. He had an overgrown beard, overgrown hair, and filthy rags that substituted for clothing. He brandished an axe, swinging it high above his head. He wasn’t far from them. James squeezed the trigger, and watched as a splash of blood appeared on the man’s forehead and he crumpled to the ground.
James knew his thoughts were stopping him from fighting effectively. But he couldn’t st
op them.
He knew what Max would have said. There was no point in philosophizing about things when lives were on the line. Anyone would have said that. James would have said that himself.
Suddenly, ten people broke free from the ranks of the mob and started sprinting towards the small circle inside which James stood.
No one spoke. No commands were shouted.
But gunfire erupted.
Men and women fell.
Blood stained the ground.
Bodies piled onto bodies.
The death count was high.
It was more than James had ever seen.
Two of them hadn’t been shot. They were too close.
James drew his handgun, took aim, his arm straight, and pulled the trigger.
The break-off group had washed over them like a tidal wave. The bodies were at their feet.
James had barely been aware of what was happening around him. He’d just concentrated on his man and shot him dead.
The tidal wave was over, the bodies at their feet, the rest of the mob seeming to hang back for a moment.
“Make sure you’re reloading,” shouted Georgia, over the noise.
James’s ears were ringing terrible from the gunshots.
He looked at his mother, who grabbing another rifle. Her face was drenched in sweat and her expression fierce.
John and Cynthia were back to back. Cynthia looked startled, but determined. John looked angry. Angrier than anyone James had ever seen. The anger seemed to drip out of him, pouring from every pore.
Sadie?
Where was Sadie?
“Sadie?” shouted James, suddenly overcome with a frantic, sinking feeling of desperation.
He looked towards his mother, but she already had her scope to her eye, getting another threat into her sights.
“Has anyone seen Sadie?”
No one answered. No one seemed to hear him.
More men and women were rushing them. No one could respond. They were fighting for their lives, trying to defend against the horde.
James looked left and right, his thoughts growing more frantic by the minute.
James was facing the opposite direction from his mother.
Off in the distance, he spotted a flash of a yellow sweater.
There was no doubt in his mind. It was Sadie’s sweater.
His sister had been taken away.
Rage boiled through him. His blood felt hot and his hands felt ice cold.
He acted without thinking.
He sprinted forward, right through the middle of the mob.
Hopefully Sadie was still alive.
If not, there’d be hell to pay.
Either way, there’d be hell to pay.
“James!” Someone was shouting after him.
But his mind didn’t even register who it was.
“James!”
An older man, with a grey beard and a long ragged overcoat was swinging something right at James head.
James ducked just in time, avoiding what looked like a long metal pipe.
The old man lost his balance and went tumbling down into the dirt.
James sprinted forward through too many people to count or really take note of.
His mind was a blur of rage and revenge. Everything was a cloud.
Maybe it was the fog of war, where the events would soon dissipate from his memory, becoming nothing but the cloud vapor of the violence.
The ground was filled with the partially-uncovered roots of the barren trees. The roots laced together, intertwining in unanticipated patterns.
The toe of James’s sneaker snagged on a root, and he went down.
As he fell, time seemed to slow down. He saw his sister off in the distance. Her hair in the sun. Her yellow sweater. He saw her face twisted up in a cry for help as someone dragged her away, through the trees, disappearing from view.
She was alive.
For now.
James hit the ground hard. His nose smashed into the dirt. Blood gushed forth from it.
Someone was already upon him, some desperate person who had once had dignity and been part of a community, who was now reduced to nothing but an animal. An animal who would do anything to get ahead.
What did they even want?
What could they really gain by throwing themselves on James?
The man was heavy, his weight pressing onto James, taking the breath completely out of him.
Someone else was trying to pry James’s rifle from the one hand that still held it. James held on as tight as he could.
But he couldn’t hold on forever.
The metal of a knife blade flashed in the sun. Close to James’s face.
The heavy man had drawn it.
James had to make a decision. Either fight for the rifle or fight against the knife.
Meanwhile, gunshots rang out rapidly throughout the air. His mother and John and Cynthia were there, fighting for their lives. And James couldn’t help them.
He was about to die.
James let go of the rifle, knowing it’d be a problem he’d soon have to overcome.
But if he stopped the knife, at least he’d be alive to face it.
The knife was close to his face.
With his free hand, James gripped the man’s wrist and pulled hard, twisting it back with all his force.
The big man screamed out.
The knife fell to the ground.
James formed his hand into a fist and smashed it into the man’s nose, bringing his fist back with all the force he could.
James felt the hot blood from the man’s nose flowing freely over his hand.
It wasn’t enough. The man pressed down on him.
The only advantage of being trapped like that was that he was shielded from the rest of the mob.
More gunshots rang out. A body near him collapsed heavily. From his position on the ground, he saw the bare feet first, and then the torso falling into view, the neck going limp and the head collapsing on the ground. The woman’s lifeless eyes stared, wide open, right at James.
James needed to get out of there. Time was passing. Sadie was getting farther away from camp.
James’s hand reached for his knife. But he couldn’t get to it. It was in his pocket and the weight of the man was too much to get his hand in there.
James leaned forward, his mouth open wide. He tasted the blood from his nose. He ignored it. Soon he’d be tasting more blood.
He got his mouth around the man’s finger. Fast, before the guy knew what was happening.
James bit down hard. As hard as he could, right below the first knuckle.
His teeth hit something hard. The bone. More blood. Gushing. Hot.
The man screamed, shifting his weight, trying to get his fingers and hand out of the range of James’s mouth.
Meanwhile, the man’s other fist was pummeling into James. Hard. James hadn’t even noticed the blows. Had he been receiving them all along?
His mind was a dark cloud.
Hatred swarmed through him. Hatred for what these men and women had become.
How had they let themselves get this far?
But was he really any better?
Look what he was reduced to.
The man’s shifting weight gave James access to his knife, his hand sliding into his pocket, his fingers wrapping around the knife handle. It felt good in his palm, the synthetic scales of the fixed blade making him feel like he could get out of it.
It was his out. His solution.
James drew the knife from the sheath, using his fingers to keep the sheath steady against the pulling pressure.
It was a simple knife. Max had found it among the pot farmer’s possession and given it to him.
James also had a folding knife that his mother had given him, a Buck 110, in his back pocket. Even if he could have gotten to it, he’d have had to unfold it one handed, which was a tricky feat. His mother swore by those knives, though. Then again, they’d been for hunting. Not han
d to hand combat.
James could only move his arm from the elbow up. He drove the knife swiftly as hard as he could into the man’s side.
The knife was buried deep in his side, blood seeping up around the edges of the wound.
The man finally still, James started wiggling himself out from underneath him.
Something crashed into his head. There were people all around. He was completely at the mercy of pure luck as he got out from under there, with the mob swinging things all around.
Fortunately for James, they weren’t in the least bit coordinated in their efforts. They were completely haphazard, nothing but pure chaos.
James stood up, panting, completely exhausted. The corpse of the heavy man lay there. Maybe it wasn’t a corpse. Not yet. There might have still been some life left in those dead-looking eyes.
James was too exhausted, too confused, to take proper note of his surroundings.
He saw it too late.
A machete coming at him. Metal gleaming off the point of the two-foot long blade. A woman wielded it, only a couple years older than James himself.
Everything was happening slowly again. The adrenaline was coursing through him, trying to get his exhausted, depleted body to react.
But James was too slow.
He was moving out of the way, but his feet felt like they were made of lead. He stumbled.
The blade was closer and closer.
James didn’t hear the single shot ring out. There were so many of them. The air was nothing but the deafening ring of gunfire.
The shot struck the woman in the heart. Her body began to fall, the machete still swinging towards James.
The blade missed James’ side by mere inches.
He’d never forget the look of surprise and disappointment on that woman’s face. It was as if she knew she’d been shot, as if she was a child who’d been robbed of the delicious chocolate she’d been promised.
James didn’t look back to see who’d done him the favor.
There were people all around him.
He sprinted through them. They couldn’t necessarily tell him from themselves.
Not that they didn’t fight between themselves.
Fights amongst the mob individuals had broken out. It was complete chaos, complete pandemonium.
Defending Camp_A Post-Apocalyptic EMP Survival Thriller Page 14