by TW Brown
Vignettes LXX
“Sorry about all that,” Dee said with a shrug and a tone that made it clear that she was anything but sorry. “Can’t very well run background checks anymore. And if we went solely on appearance, we would be setting ourselves up for disaster. There was this one girl a few years ago…tiny little thing. We brought her in nearly dead. When she got healthy, she played sick a little bit longer. We think it was to get a better idea of our strengths and weaknesses. She killed five men before we stopped her.”
Juan was still a little bit confused. Apparently it showed on his face, because Dee laughed and clapped him on the shoulder.
“You can come back to our little camp. We got about a dozen people clustered in a spot near the river. We have enough surplus that we can help equip you and your girls for your trip to Anchorage.”
“But, I thought—” Juan stammered, still not understanding exactly what was happening.
“If you was a bad guy, then you probably wouldn’t have had a problem bartering off one of those little angels.” Dee tilted her head towards Della and Denita. “You acted exactly the way that a father is supposed to act.” With that, Dee raised a hand. A man emerged from the growth at the edge of the clearing.
“You really need to learn to do that sooner,” the man snarled, although his soft tone hinted that he was not actually angry. He stepped up beside Dee and extended a hand to Juan. “Name’s Kit.”
“Juan.” His daughters bounded up and took a spot at each side, tugging on his sleeves. “And these are my daughters, Della and Denita.”
“Pleased to meet you all.” Kit knelt so that he could be closer to eye level with the girls. He reached inside his fur vest and produced two chunks of something amber colored. He handed one to each of the girls. “Honey caramel,” Kit explained as the girls each accepted the proffered sweet.
“What do you say?” Juan stage-whispered.
“Thank you,” the girls replied in unison.
“So, we hear you are headed for Anchorage.” Kit rose back to his feet and Juan gave him a quick once over.
This man was not the type of person that he expected to encounter; especially if he was left behind as some sort of back-up in case Juan had turned out to be a bad guy. He was medium height and very skinny. He had dark brown hair and brown eyes. Basically, he was easily forgotten. He did not stand out in any way at all.
“Got separated from my friends.” Juan went on to explain about how Gerald had saved him and helped nurse him back to health.
“Gerald is a good guy,” Kit said with a nod. “He probably comes downriver to our camp once or twice a year to trade.”
“So, if you want to come with us back to our place, we can help get you geared up for your trip,” Dee offered. “Judging by your condition, I am not certain that you should be making that trip right now, but it isn’t my place to tell you your business.”
“We didn’t really have any other choices or options,” Juan groused. “And what little we did have was lost when that herd wiped out Gerald’s place.”
“You could stay on with us,” Kit suggested.
Juan had only taken a few steps, and stopping once his forward momentum had taken effect was not something he relished, but now it was his turn to be the suspicious one. These people were complete strangers, and he had two little girls to watch over.
“I appreciate the offer, but I hope you will understand when I say that I can’t give you an answer just yet. Hell, I am taking a risk just following you up to this point.”
Kit laughed, and it was a pleasant sound. He glanced down at the girls and winked. “Says the man who sent two little girls out into the wilderness to knock on some stranger’s door to ask for help.”
“Like the old saying goes…desperate times call for desperate measures.”
Despite holding on to a certain amount of his skepticism, Juan still felt himself warming to the idea of postponing the trip to Anchorage. His mind flashed back to the encounter with the wolves that had started this falling dominoes event. An encounter like that now would end badly; and not just for him, but more than likely for his daughters as well.
It took about twenty minutes, but at last the trail ended in a clearing. A half dozen cabins and another dozen or so smaller structures dotted the massive clearing that extended to both sides of the fast moving river that cut through the landscape. A rope bridge spanned the waterway and there was even a large raft that looked like it could be pulled across by the use of a rope and pulley system in case animals needed to be transported.
“Look, Papi!” Della pointed. “They have reindeers!”
A small herd of the animals grazed in a fenced off area on the far side of the river where a massive clearing had been set up and marked off with a split-rail fence. There was also a garden of sorts and a collection of five greenhouses.
“The three of you would be welcome to stay while you get your legs back under you. There is plenty of work, so no worries about being a charity case.” Kit pulled the group up short and turned to face Juan. “And who knows, you might like it here.”
“Can I ask why you were headed to Anchorage?” Dee blurted, earning a scowl from Kit.
“Ain’t none of our business, Dee,” the man hissed. “You’ll have to excuse her. She can be a bit of a busybody.” That last word was emphasized and spoken a bit louder.
Juan opened his mouth, and then he paused, leaving it open as thoughts careened around in his mind. This move had been for Mackenzie.
“My wife,” Juan blurted before he realized the words were coming out of his mouth. “She wanted to make the move. I think she felt it was good for the girls. Also, I think she was tired of playing Pioneer Woman. Being in a town had some sort of appeal to her.”
Kit gave a nod and Dee opened her mouth to speak again, but shut it just as quickly. Juan glanced down at the girls who had spied something that had them as transfixed as any child first spotting the old sign that announced that they were about to enter the “Happiest Place on Earth.”
The structure was larger than any of the cabins, and even though it was a good distance away and across a river that was creating plenty of noise in its own right, Juan could now hear the squeals and laughter of other children. It was still a bit too far away to actually make out much in the way of details, but there was definitely movement as children scrambled over the giant wooden play structure.
The rest of the walk was a chorus of the girls asking if they could go play and Juan telling them that there would be time later. After the tenth or so plea, Dee gave Juan a look with a raised eyebrow and made a nod indicating that she would take the girls if he wanted.
Juan consented and the words were no sooner out of his mouth when both girls let go of his hands and clutched onto Dee’s after they kissed and hugged their dad while professing their thanks as well as spewing promises of how well-behaved they would be for Dee.
Once they were gone, Kit turned to face Juan. His expression was serious, but there was compassion in his eyes that caught Juan a little off balance.
“Look, you have some time to figure out what you want to do, but I wanted to be the first person to formally extend an invitation to you and your daughters to stay if you like.” He paused and glanced over his shoulder at the diminishing trio of figures. “I may have mistaken something, but it seems to me that you might not have actually wanted to make the trip to Anchorage.”
Juan sighed. “Actually, I don’t much care where I live. All I want is for the girls to grow up in a safe place…as safe as a place can be these days anyway.”
“Well then, why don’t you take advantage of this little rehab period? Give things a while and make up your mind when the next thaw comes. Anchorage isn’t going anywhere, and I think we can safely say that you are not in any real condition to do any traveling at the moment.”
Juan considered the man’s words. He knew to his core that Kit was speaking the truth. He almost laughed when he considered everything as a
whole.
For the first few years, life had been one nightmare after another. He, Mackenzie, and the other people that they sort of picked up along the way had endured a hell that was unthinkable that night he fell asleep in the backseat of his car where he parked in the University Blocks to get a little bit of uninterrupted sleep. Everything had changed when that undead hand had slapped the window of his car and woke him to a world where the dead would swiftly knock the living from the ledge of their perch atop the food chain.
He had fought through things that he had not thought himself capable. But, for the last several years, they had built up a home along one of the many rivers that cut through the Alaskan Wilderness.
He and Mackenzie had brought three beautiful children into the world. They lost one to the zombies. Perhaps that should have been the wake-up call to remind Juan of the world they now lived; but, through the grief, he and Mackenzie had built up the idea that perhaps the world could eventually slip back to normal.
Juan had finally agreed to make the move to Anchorage. However, that journey seemed to be ill-fated from the start. First they lost the dog, only to have it turn. He lost Mackenzie. Then, in what he now saw as his own recklessness and false sense of invincibility that he’d built unknowingly over the years, he had almost died. The fact that he was ready to welcome such a fate and leave his two daughters as orphans had been a scalding reminder of his responsibility.
By the time they reached the trench and fence barricade so common in today’s world, Juan was almost certain of what he should…no, what he would do. If the soul-searching that he had done during the walk did not steel his resolve on a specific course, then what he saw as he drew near to the giant wooden play structure certainly did.
Della and Denita were running around in a game of tag with several other children. In fact, it took Juan a moment to actually process how many children he did see; well over two dozen between the ages of perhaps as young as five and as old as twelve. To add to the scene were another handful of teens who were watching the game with one eye and the surrounding woods with the other.
He stood there for an indeterminate length of time, unable to look away as he saw the expressions of joy etched on both his daughters’ faces. While he was certain that they would find even more in Anchorage, it was not necessarily quantity that mattered.
Anchorage had been Mackenzie’s dream. He would never feel any peace there without her. Perhaps this could be their new home.
***
The next several days had no shortage of tense moments. First, they had to actually scour London for any of the few stragglers amongst the undead that had not fallen in with that massive herd that Dolph and his people had amassed. While that was going on, those not out on the hunt were helping to convert the remains of what had once been known as the Shell Centre into a makeshift fortress.
Teams spent the first days tearing out anything that remained on the bottom floor and tossing it into the street. It took a while to get used to the idea of trying to hide noise since they would actually welcome the occasional wandering zombie that might stumble up. They converted a massive tank over in what had once been the London Aquarium into a holding cell for the zombies.
Paddy went to work with Seamus and a few of those who professed to have once been part of the tech community in a large room where everybody was kept away from so as to not disturb those busy trying to come up with Paddy’s own noisemaking device. Vix managed to stick her head in once, but the diminutive man spied her and hurried her out the door.
“No fair peeking,” the man had chuckled.
“Why the big secret?” Vix asked as he put a shoulder into her backside and nudged her out the door.
“Because, we are seeing much more failure than success. We don’t need anybody looking over our shoulders right now. Pressure is on if this is going to have any chance of working.”
“You do realize that you are helping me win my bet,” Vix reminded.
“Oh, lassie, you already lost.”
Vix spun on the man and folded her arms across her chest. “How do you figure that to be true?”
“We aren’t in Buckingham. That was part of your plan. So you already lost. Now I am just trying to be sure that we survive long enough for you to pay up properly.”
The door shut leaving Vix in the hallway with a scowl on her face. She fixed the door with a death stare that she hoped made it through enough to make the hairs on the back of Paddy’s neck stand up before she stomped off. Her mind was replaying the wager.
As she made her way downstairs to the operations room where the patrols and work details were being assigned, she began trying to remember the words to the anthem that she would now be forced to sing. She felt stupid for making her side of the bet include so many parts. Paddy had been lucky…he only needed one thing to happen for him to lose.
Of course, that one thing involved the lot of them dying, but still, it hardly seemed fair that so many conditions needed meeting for her to win. Oh well, no sense crying over it. What was done was done.
“Vix,” a voice whispered.
Vix turned to see Randi step out from the shadows. The woman had taken to wearing a head wrap that Chaaya had shown her how to apply. It hid a lot of her disfigurement. When it had just been their little band, nobody had minded at all. Yet, as they gathered more people, it was often clear that her scars made folks nervous. Also, more than one child had broken into tears at the sight of her.
“You gave me a fright,” Vix gasped.
She instantly regretted her choice of words and began to stammer and sputter an apology. The woman waved her off with a sniff. “Don’t be silly, I know what you meant.”
Vix breathed an audible sigh of relief, but still felt a bit foolish. She could feel her ears tingle and knew that her face was red from embarrassment.
“Now that we have gotten over this silliness, I need you to come with me right this instant,” Randi said with a scowl.
“But—” Vix began.
Randi spun and cut her off. “Just come with me. I have something that I want you to see.”
Since the woman was not exactly prone to over-exaggerating or anything else of the sort, Vix shut her mouth and followed as she was asked.
The two women left the busy and noisy Shell Centre and made their way to the old Waterloo complex. In its day, it had been a massive rail hub. Over the years, the roof of the complex had caved in in several spots. That was the only reason Vix would dare enter such a place now. These days, large facilities were nothing more than enormous tombs.
As they entered, both women instinctively lit torches. Vix spied several heaps and piles of bones. She imagined the animals had done a lot of it, but some of the piles appeared to have patterns. She could not precisely make them out, but the stacking was too…organized. That was the best word she could think of.
“You see it, don’t you?” Randi asked.
“You are talking about the bones?”
“What else would I drag you here for? We certainly won’t be stopping in for a pint at The Hole in the Wall, now will we?”
Vix took a few cautious steps toward one of the piles of bones. It wasn’t until she got to within a few yards that she noticed the smell. She froze and let her eyes drift around the area. She knew the smell of cats—more accurately, their acrid urine.
Almost instantly, she began to spy the green glow of feline eyes peering back at her from the dark pools of shadow. She knew from a few past experiences that, for whatever reason, cats did not turn like the dogs. However, they could actually carry the zombie contagion and pass it on through a bite or scratch.
“Cats!” Vix hissed as she started to take a few slow steps back and toward the door they had entered.
“That is only the half of it,” Randi replied, not even bothering to whisper.
Vix bumped into the woman and let out a little yelp. She regained her composure and calmed herself enough to follow where the woman was pointing. Her eyes fou
nd an archway on the unsteady looking upper level walkway. Most of the safety barricade had crumbled in that spot, allowing an unobstructed view. What Vix saw made the discovery of the cats seem like nothing.
“Children,” Vix breathed.
She had to look closely, because she had a hard time making herself believe that so many zombie children could be amassed in one place. They were huddled close, and none of them seemed to be making any moves towards their direction.
“How many you figure there to be?” Randi asked, taking a step forward that Vix had to simply assume was due out of curiosity over anything else. In her mind, there could be no other reason to approach what had to be a few hundred zombie children.
At first, Vix had thought the number to be much less. However, after a few moments, the children began to file out of the darkness of several of the upper level shops and line the rails. Still, they made no move to come down; they actually seemed to be curious.
“There are so many,” Vix said through a throat that had grown tight with fear.
“And every last one of them is a child,” Randi pointed out the obvious. “Not a single adult in the bunch. I would guess the oldest to be around ten or so. That wee one over there can’t be more than two or three. Poor bugger can barely walk.”
Vix looked over to where Randi was now pointing. She didn’t actually need to since she’d already seen more than a couple that had to be barely past the stage where they had learned to walk. She started when she realized that she had actually taken a few steps forward to join Randi.
“This is madness,” Vix finally said. “But can I ask what made you think to venture inside a place like this? I thought we were supposed to remain near the Centre and assist with the work on the defenses.”
“I was just looking for supplies. I thought that maybe I could find some stuff to help shore up the barrier in a place like this. Never know unless you look.”
“But, can I guess by the fact that you have brought me here, that you came alone and made this discovery?”