She summoned the same calm voice she used with kids at the beginning of a pediatric visit. “I’m not going to hurt you. I’m here to help.”
“Can you help our papa?” the girl asked.
“Your father is sleeping,” Martha lied. She pulled a piece of duct tape away from her waist and reached to retrieve the bottle of pills from her pocket.
“I’m Doctor Martha Kohler, and I’m going to help you both feel better, okay?”
They just stared back.
“What are your names?” Martha asked.
The girl started sobbing, tears streaking down her red skin. The boy scratched at a sore on his cheek.
Martha unscrewed the lid and placed two pills in the palm of her glove. She managed a smile with her cracked, dry lips. “I want you two to take these. Okay? It will make you feel better.”
“Papa said to never take candy from a stranger,” the boy said. He rubbed at his bloodshot eyes and then squinted at her like he was looking into the sun.
“I’m a doctor, and this isn’t candy,” Martha said. “Didn’t your parents teach you to listen to doctors?”
The girl sniffled and dragged her sleeve across her nose while the boy slowly nodded.
“It’s okay, I promise,” Martha said, holding out the pills. “These will make you feel better.”
“Do you have any water?” asked the girl. “I’m really thirsty.”
Martha shook her head and held out her palm. She could see these kids had already been exposed to the radiation for a period of time. The pills helped block radioactive iodine from being absorbed by the thyroid gland, but they wouldn’t reverse what had already been absorbed. They needed water, and they needed protection from the radiation. She might be able to cut the tarp down and tape it around them, but it wasn’t an ideal solution.
First, though, she needed to get the children to trust her. She leaned in and mustered up a warm smile.
“How about we play a game?” she suggested. “Do you want to play a game?”
The boy tilted his head, his blue eyes brightening slightly.
“I do,” the girl said.
“No, Emma. Papa said we have to stay here until help comes.”
“I’m the help your father was talking about. Now, I know your name is Emma. What’s your name?” Martha said, looking at the boy.
“Micah,” he said shyly. His eyes flitted to the front seat. “Papa isn’t sleeping, is he?”
“I need you to take these pills,” she said, “and then we can play a game.”
The boy and girl both reached out and plucked them from her glove. Doubtfully, they examined the pills and then swallowed them with difficulty.
“Can I see that tarp?” Martha asked. “I need it to make you suits like mine to protect your skin.”
Micah hesitated but then pulled the plastic away. A fetid stench rolled out, confirming her fears. The kids were already sick. The initial symptoms of radiation poisoning were vomiting and diarrhea. Dehydration wouldn’t help matters. She needed to get these children clean water and medical care immediately.
“Come here,” she said, holding out her hand.
Emma and Micah scooted across the back seat, and Martha helped them both onto the road. It took her several minutes to carve up the tarp with her multi-tool, but when she was done she had enough pieces to wrap the children in makeshift suits.
“Hold up your arms,” Martha said.
The kids did as ordered, and she taped the plastic around them. Emma shivered in the wind, gooseflesh prickling over her arms.
“You ready?” Martha asked the kids.
They both nodded. She grabbed them each by the hand and guided them toward the stalled vehicles.
“Bye, Papa,” Emma said.
Micah was silent, but he looked over his shoulder several times as they walked away. Martha had to gently tug his hand to keep him moving.
“I’m sorry about your father, but he would want you to be safe,” she said.
A sniffle sounded behind her. She wasn’t sure if it was Micah or Emma.
If they started crying, they’d become even more dehydrated. Water wasn’t the only thing on her mind. She still needed to find a way to cover the children’s faces. She turned her attention to a Toyota Prius ahead, hurrying over with the kids in tow. A few of her friends drove Priuses, and all of them were the prepared type.
“Stay right here,” she said.
Micah and Emma remained at the bumper while Martha checked the front of the car. She opened the door and did a quick sweep of the dash and glove compartment. An empty bottle of raspberry tea was stuffed in the cup holder on the door. She climbed into the backseat and moved a blanket aside to reveal a pair of tennis shoes and a sweatshirt. There was a gym bag on the floor. She rifled through the contents and pulled out a nearly full water bottle.
For a moment, she just stared at the bottle. Then a natural smile formed on her face for the first time in days. She opened the back door, anxious to show the children. Smoke drifted across the road to the west. She clutched the bottle against her chest. The forest fire was shifting, but it wasn’t the flames she was worried about—it was the smoke. She couldn’t see through the black cloud creeping up on them.
Emma and Micah reached up for the bottle.
“Don’t drink it all at once,” Martha said.
Emma greedily gulped down the water anyway, a trail bleeding down her chin.
“Not all at once,” Martha repeated.
“Sorry,” Emma said. She handed it to her brother. He took several gulps and then handed it to Martha. She took a slow slug, licked her lips, and sealed the container. Then she placed it inside her suit, tucking it into her waistband.
Martha guided them onward, clutching Emma and Micah’s hands in the shifting winds. There were more bodies crumpled on the other side of the bridge ahead. There was no way to shield the children from the corpses, but nothing could be worse than watching their father die of radiation poisoning.
A faint whistling sounded over the gusting wind. It seemed to come and go as they walked. She listened for the sound again, catching it a moment later. Martha craned her neck to search for the source, but everything was shrouded in smoke. She turned back to the vehicles ahead. There were only two more before the bridge—a black sports car and a passenger van.
Halfway to the car, the rusty rattle of a motor vehicle rang out, stopping her mid-stride. The noise grew louder, clinking and clanking, and the cough of an engine joined the din. She pivoted back to the cloud of smoke. To the northeast, an army of skeletal trees jutted out of the hills like candles on a chocolate birthday cake. The frontage road twisting through the area was clear, with no sign of movement down the dirt path.
Was she hearing things? Was this the beginning of delirium?
She glanced down at the children and asked, “Do you hear that sound?”
They both nodded. “Sounds like a car,” Micah said.
Martha turned around just as a pickup truck broke through the wall of smoke. Several men wearing green CBRN suits stood in the bed of the vehicle. They were the same type of suits the National Guard men had been wearing.
Her instincts told her something was off. These men weren’t in a Humvee like those other soldiers.
Martha pulled the kids toward the black sports car and ducked behind the bumper. The pickup truck weaved around stalled cars, the tires screeching. Whoever these guys were, they were in a hurry.
“Are they going to help us?” Micah asked. He stood and looked around the car.
Martha pulled gently on his arm. “Be quiet,” she whispered.
The truck slowed, and Martha strained to hear their conversation over the clatter of the engine.
“Where’d you see those people?” one of the men asked, his voice distorted by his mask.
“Over there.”
Martha peeked around the bumper. The truck had slowed to a crawl. She glanced back over at the kids and said, “Get under the c
ar and don’t come out until I tell you. Okay?”
The children stared back at her.
“Come on,” Martha said. “Doctor’s orders.”
She helped them crawl under the vehicle, and when they were safely hidden, she darted toward the van.
“There!” shouted a voice.
Martha halted and turned toward the pickup, praying her gut was wrong about these men. She held up her hands as the truck came to a stop. The passenger door opened and a soldier hopped out. The men in the bed angled assault rifles at Martha, forcing her throbbing heart into her throat. She squinted to see their features, but their faces were mostly obscured by their helmets.
“Stay where you are,” one of the riflemen said.
The passenger checked the surrounding area as he strode toward her with a hand on the grip of a holstered pistol. She could see his eyes behind his visor. They were crystal blue and focused on her.
“You’re the first person we’ve seen on the roads for a while,” he said calmly. “That means you’re either really stupid, or really smart for staying alive out here.”
Martha kept her hands in the air and didn’t reply.
“Not saying much, are you?” He took a few steps closer—so close she could see a snake-like scar on his forehead. It looked like someone had carved the squiggly design on purpose.
He glanced back at his men, motioning for them to lower their rifles. Coughing sounded from the back of the truck, and several small faces covered with gas masks peered around the side. The children were all wearing protective suits covered in ash.
Martha relaxed slightly, but she kept her hands up. The old pickup wasn’t a military vehicle, but maybe these men weren’t bad after all if they were trying to help those kids.
“Looks like you got a pretty fancy suit on,” the man said with a chuckle. He gave her the elevator eyes treatment, up and down, to look at the garbage bags covering her body. “I’m willing to guess that you know a thing or two about fallout. Am I right?”
Martha decided to risk answering him. “I’m a doctor, and this isn’t fallout per se. That only really happens when a nuclear warhead detonates on the ground. The radiation from an air detonation is actually more dangerous in the short term than fallout.”
The man turned to look at the other soldiers. “Well damn, she does speak—and she’s smart, too!”
“What unit are you with?” she asked.
The man cocked a bushy gray brow. “Unit?”
“I assumed you’re a soldier. That CBRN suit is military issue, isn’t it?”
“You are a very smart lady.” He turned back to the truck and shouted, “Boys, what unit are we with?”
The men in the back of the truck all yelled, “Sons of Liberty!”
Martha had never heard of that one, but she didn’t know much about the military. Maybe that was some sort of team call sign or something.
“You out here by yourself?” the man asked.
“Yes,” she replied a bit too quickly.
“Carson, didn’t you say you saw three people near the bridge?”
One of the men in the back of the truck nodded. “Her and what looked like a couple of kids.”
The man in front of Martha stepped closer. That’s when she noticed the holes patched with duct tape on the breast of his suit. The area was stained with something dark—something that looked a lot like blood. A chill spiked through her sweaty body.
“Now why would you want to lie to me? Do I strike you as someone that would hurt a kid?” he asked her.
Martha remained silent and took a step back. Were those bullet holes in the front of his suit?
His demeanor suddenly changed. “Now you’re just making me mad,” he growled. He closed the distance between them and stopped directly in front of her, hot breath hitting the inside of his visor.
“I was thinking about giving you a lift out of here, but you’re testing my patience, and we already have a doctor back at our base.”
“I’m sorry,” Martha said, her mind racing. “I’ve seen some bad people on the road. Never know who you can trust, right?”
The man grinned again. “Damn right.”
“So you’ll give us a ride somewhere safe?” she asked.
“Sure, you and those kids. Just tell me where they are.”
Martha moved to get a better look at the children in the back of the truck and the riflemen standing in the bed. She couldn’t see their faces clearly because of their masks and visors, but she did notice other details on the truck from this angle; the number 88 stenciled on the passenger door, the double lightning bolt of the SS symbol made from strips of duct tape, an armband with a crudely painted eagle clutching a Swastika. These men weren’t soldiers—they were some sort of white supremacist gang.
“Well? You going to get them kids or what?” the man in front of her asked.
“Okay,” she said. “I’ll go get them and come right back.”
“Not a chance, lady. I’ll send one of my men with you.” He turned to wave at the truck. “Carson, get your ass down here.”
As soon as the man turned, Martha took off running. If they had killed soldiers for those suits, then there was no telling what they would do to the kids. Martha couldn’t help the children already in the truck, but maybe she could lead the men away from Micah and Emma.
“Stop!” shouted the leader, anger rising in his voice.
She jumped into the ditch and made a run for the fort of blackened trees at the bottom of a nearby hill. A gunshot rang out, the crack shattering the quiet of the afternoon. Adolescent screams followed. Martha looked over her shoulder to see a boy in a wheelchair in the back of the pickup truck. He was shouting at the so-called Sons of Liberty to stop, but they were ignoring him.
Muzzles flashed, and rounds lanced into the ground next to her. The trees were still a hundred feet away. She wasn’t going to make it.
Martha began to raise her hands in surrender when a bullet slammed into her shoulder, forcing her to the ground so violently that it knocked the air from her lungs. She hit the dirt hard, red flashing across her vision.
The injury was bad; she knew it right away by the lack of pain. The helpless feeling of being hurt without knowing how badly filled her with dread. She gasped for air and slowly rolled to her left side. The air hissing out of her chest meant she might have a punctured lung.
She knew then the wound wasn’t survivable.
If the bullet had hit an artery, she’d be dead in minutes. Even if it hadn’t, she’d be dead long before any help arrived.
“Why’d you have to go and do that, lady?”
Martha blinked away the tears welling in her eyes and glared at the leader, who was towering over her.
“I told them not to shoot you, but I guess one of them missed. Confidentially, I’m starting to think my men are enjoying this whole end of the world thing.”
Micah and Emma started yelling, their thin, high voices carrying on the chill wind.
“What...” Martha wheezed. “What are you going to do with them?”
“Don’t worry, I’m not going to hurt them. They’re far too valuable. The government will pay a pretty penny to get those kids back. Some of ‘em are cripples, but even the defective ones are probably worth something.”
He stood and clucked his tongue like he was lecturing a child. “We got to get out of here before those fires catch up. You want a bullet in the head? It’s all I can do for you now.”
“No,” she moaned, shaking her head from side to side. “Please, no.”
He shrugged. “Your choice.”
She watched the man slowly walk back down the slope to the road, leaving her there to die alone as the flames to the west slowly crept toward her.
ESTES PARK POLICE Chief Marcus Colton stood in the chilly morning wind at the barricade blocking Highway 7. Several volunteers flanked him, all of them looking out over the highway in silence. They now knew why there weren’t any refugees a
nd stranded tourists staggering up the road.
They were all dead.
The radiation zone started about thirty miles to the south, and things were worse out there than anyone had predicted. Five days had passed since the North Korean attack. In that short time, several residents of Estes Park had lost their lives to the Tankala brothers. The police department, with the help of Major Nathan Sardetti and Sam ‘Raven’ Spears, had dealt with the serial killers, but justice had come at a high cost for the town of Estes Park, Colorado.
Colton had lost his best friend, Captain Jake Englewood, and Officer Rick Nelson was in the intensive care unit at the Estes Park Medical Center. He’d been trying to stop three junkies from robbing a grocery store pharmacy and gotten a brick to his skull for it. Detective Lindsey Plymouth and Raven Spears were tracking the assailants down while Colton waited at the roadblock for an update from Patrol Sergeant Don Aragon.
An hour earlier, Colton had sent Don south along Highway 7 in Raven’s Jeep wearing a CBRN suit to scope out the area. He hadn’t checked in, and Colton was growing impatient.
He pushed the radio to his lips and said, “Don, do you copy? Over.”
There was a long pause, followed by static, and finally Don’s Western drawl. “Lots of interference, but I can read you, Chief.”
“You got a SITREP?” Colton asked. “Any survivors?”
“Negative, Chief. Everyone out here is dead.”
Colton sucked on his cigarette, careful not to waste any of the precious tobacco. His hand was shaking when he pulled it away—a combination of PTSD, nerves, and early-onset arthritis. Colton cursed under his breath. He’d been looking forward to retiring in a few years, spending more time with his family. Instead, he was trying to hold the town together while the rest of the country fell apart.
“All right, head out just a bit farther and then report back,” Colton said. He clipped the walkie-talkie back on his duty belt and gave a nod to Rex Stone. Colton had found the Stones’ missing daughter, Melissa, murdered just before the EMP attack. Rex stood now in the bed of a pickup truck with a Springfield bolt-action rifle trained on the road.
Trackers 2: The Hunted (A Post-Apocalyptic EMP Thriller) Page 2