by Brown, TW
Juan scratched his face; the few days of growth were starting to itch. He wished he’d taken the time to shave, but he really just wanted to make this last trip and be done if that was at all possible.
“Look,” he said finally, “I appreciate all that you are doing. I am getting ready to make a run and see if I can find you some medical stuff. So maybe you could make me a list?”
April pursed her lips for a moment. She seemed to be ready to say something about a dozen times. Juan was almost ready to give up. He figured he could just go to a hospital. He could just break in to the pharmacy and load everything he saw into a cart until it was full. That should do just fine.
“I’m going with you.”
Juan took a step back and shook his head. “I don’t think that is a good idea.”
“Look, Jeannie will check in on Mackenzie—” she started, but Juan cut her off.
“It ain’t about that. You have that EMT training…right?” April nodded. “Well it does not seem like a very good idea to drag you out there and put you at risk.”
“You had me on that other run,” April pointed out. “So what is the big deal?”
“The big deal is that I didn’t know you had medical experience.”
“Well then, we will just have to be careful.” She didn’t bother to remind Juan that she had told him shortly after first arriving at the island when he had asked if any in her group had any medical or first aid knowledge.
“If only it were that easy,” Juan sighed.
“Listen, I understand what you are saying. However, if we get to the hospital and I see something that would be really helpful but didn’t think to put it on the list…I can grab it. If you go alone, you will only get the stuff on the list. And even then, you might not know what you are looking for.”
Juan thought it over. She made a good point. Still, he would feel awful if the closest thing that they had to a doctor ended up dead. He had not planned to take anybody with him on this one. He wanted to get in and out.
“I promise to do what you say,” April added. “But if I could make this run with you, it might make a huge difference in us not having to do this again.”
“Okay,” Juan relented. “But you do what I say when I say with absolutely no questions. We clear?”
“Crystal.”
April opened the door and allowed Juan inside. He helped her go through her things and select what she would need for the run. Before they left, she scribbled a note and tucked it under a door in the upstairs hallway.
“I just told Jeannie that I would be back soon and for her to keep an eye on Mackenzie,” April said to Juan’s questioning look.
Together, the pair headed down to the dock. Along the way, Juan filled April in about the situation regarding Frank and Donna. He was surprised by her response.
“You sure that what you left behind merits making a return trip? Sounds like that place might be crawling with zombies by now.”
“Mackenzie was pretty upset…” Juan started to explain, but he really didn’t have anything beyond that to say.
“Yeah?” April flashed a peculiar look at Juan. “Well she isn’t on this run. What she don’t know won’t hurt her.”
Juan stared at the woman’s back as she stepped past him and climbed aboard the boat. He wasn’t sure if he wanted to hug April or smack her. As they headed up the Willamette River, he suddenly felt like maybe he was making a big mistake.
***
Scott raised his hand bringing the group to a halt. He pointed to a shadowy figure moving along what could only be described as a razor wire fence on steroids. It was at least fifteen feet high and appeared to be made of multiple coils of the stuff stacked one on top of another.
“Where the heck do you think that they got all of that?” Chad whispered.
“No idea, but judging by the amount of cloth fluttering from it, the thing has seen plenty of action and is still standing,” Brett observed.
Chad used the binoculars to get a closer look at the person. “It’s a woman,” he reported. She is carrying what looks like a pretty hefty crossbow. Also, she has a pistol on her hip, big…must be pretty wicked if the size is any indicator.
“Also, the fence is even more impressive now that I get a better look. The razor wire is secured to what looks like a mesh grate. And it actually sits just across an irrigation ditch or something, so unless it is a pretty good herd, they probably can’t even make it up to the fence.”
“Well then I guess they have seen a pretty big herd. Those strips of cloth fluttering in the wind didn’t get their by themselves,” Brett said.
“So how do we approach these people?” Chad asked, ignoring what sounded like a bit of a defensive comment from Brett.
That seemed to be par for the course the past several days. Ever since they had agreed to come down out of the mountains and give this acquaintance a look, Brett had felt the need to question everything, and if a discussion was engaged about even the smallest thing, he would sulk and pout if his idea was not the one chosen. Twice, Chad had needed to step in between Brett and Scott when the “discussions” became too heated.
“Maybe I should go up alone and see what is up. I can tell Dustin about you guys and see if he is even open to us coming in,” Brett said.
“Why wouldn’t we go up as a group?” Scott asked.
“Because,” Brett took on an exasperated tone that almost seemed to be his norm lately, “if we come barging up, we might spook the person on watch. Somebody might get shot. If I go alone, I will seem less threatening and hopefully she will take me to see Dustin.”
“And what is to keep you from just blowing us off?” Scott challenged.
“Why would I do that?”
“Maybe you didn’t’ think that you could make it down here alone…maybe you decided to use us to get you here safe so that you can cut and run,” Scott shot back.
“Hold up,” Chad hissed. “I think we are all just tired and cold and hungry. Brett, go on up and see what the deal is, we will sit tight here and wait.”
“But not forever,” Ronni spoke up. “I am sick of being frozen and soggy.”
“Hey, at least we are out of the mountains,” Chad offered with a weak smile at his sullen daughter.
“I will be back as soon as I can,” Brett said.
Without waiting for any further response, he rose up from the brush and started across the open field towards the fence. To the credit of the person on watch, she appeared to have spotted him instantly. She stopped her patrol and unslung the crossbow from her back.
“How would she shoot through that fence?” Chad whispered.
It was not long before he got his answer. He watched her go to one of the two foot wide—for lack of a better term—fence posts. She vanished behind it and appeared at the top of it a moment later. They were set about ten feet apart and stretched on for quite a while. From their vantage point, they could not actually see where they made the turn, also, they could not see a house, but the wisp of smoke coming from a distant grove of trees would be a likely place.
“Each of those things probably has a little ladder up and a platform on the top,” Scott observed. “And this field is kept cut down so nobody and nothing can get close. I would guess the distance from this tree line to be at least two hundred yards.”
The trio continued to watch Brett as he crossed with his hands in the air. Still almost fifty yards away, the watch yelled something and Brett stopped. They were too far away to hear anything that was said and could simply observe.
At one point, it looked like Brett decided to try and get closer. The watch fired her crossbow, but it was apparently a warning shot as Brett jumped back and began frantically waving his arms. A few seconds later, he was getting down on his knees with his hands on top of his head. The watch drew the pistol from her hip and fired it skyward.
“Flare gun,” Chad and Scott said in unison.
About ten minutes passed. Finally, a group of ten riders on hors
eback came galloping up. The overall welcome did not seem to be a congenial one. At one point, one of the riders hopped down off his horse and threw Brett to the ground.
As a group, Chad, Scott, and Ronni slipped just a bit further back into the brush as they continued to observe, hoping for any sign that the reception would get any better. When three of the riders climbed down and trussed Brett up and threw him over the back of a horse, it was visibly apparent that a grand welcome was unlikely.
Once the riders headed off, the threesome slipped into the woods. Chad looked at Scott with a raised eyebrow in question. “So?”
“Guess he didn’t know this guy very well at all,” Scott said with a shrug.
“What do we do now?” Ronni asked.
“The sign that I saw last night said ‘La Grange three miles’ or something like that,” Scott offered.
“Ever been there?” Chad asked.
“Nope,” Scott replied.
“Well, that is as good of an idea as any.” Chad grabbed his pack from where they’d set them before sneaking through the brush to get a look at what they had hoped would be a bit of salvation.
Together, Chad, Ronni, and Scott began the trek across a muddy landscape. The ominous sounds of thunder could be heard from the south. More than once, each of them looked over his or her shoulder to get a look at the dark clouds barreling their way. Lightning bristled and the telltale veil of gray could be seen reaching the ground, indicating a solid line of rain headed their direction.
***
“How could you just leave me like that?” Gemma fumed.
She’d had about all she could take of being treated like a child. Adults were always doing that…pretending that she did not have an opinion, or if she did, that it was not important. The main reason that she had decided to leave their group behind and follow Vix on some crazy trip to London was because she thought that perhaps if it were just the two of them, that maybe they would develop a bond and even rely on each other.
She had sat on that fire escape for almost an hour and had just about given up. The crowd below was far too big for her to have any chance of making it through. Her only option was to go inside the building, and she’d already heard plenty of noise from that direction when she had gone to the first window and ducked her head inside.
There was a bedroom that obviously belonged to a little girl who was infatuated with princesses. The real ones, not the cartoons. Pictures of Diana, Kate, and even that hideous duchess Camilla (blech!) adorned the walls. The bed would have been lovely were it not for the mold growing all over it—that and the blood. The door leading out was shut, but as soon as Gemma snuck over to it and tried to open it just a crack, the scream of rusting hinges brought the sounds of multiple moans from somewhere down the hall. It had only been in the last few minutes that the scratching at the door had ceased.
Looking down at the sea of undead faces that stared at her, Gemma tried to guess what some of the people had been like in life. She was trying to keep her mind occupied and not let the feeling of being abandoned overwhelm her, but she was failing. Then, some of the zombies began to peel away from the rear of the group. Gemma watched as they disappeared around the corner.
As the third or fourth little group separated and wandered off, Gemma had seen Vix poke her head around the corner! She had actually waved. Well, Gemma huffed as she plopped back down and sulked, she was certainly not about to wave back!
Before long, there were about a dozen left. Gemma sat for a few minutes waiting for Vix to pop in and draw away more, but nothing happened. Getting up, she moved towards the ladder. She could actually climb down and stop about halfway, from there she could stab down to eliminate the remaining zombies.
“You waiting for an invitation?” Vix stuck her head out from around the corner of the building from which she had lured a good many of the crowd to their deaths. “Do I have to kill them all, or can you find some time in your day to get off your arse and help?”
“You took off and left me!” Gemma shouted back over the din of moans and groans from below. “And you lot zip it!” she snapped at the zombies.
“You mind not making such a fuss…we are in bloody London, might be that there are a few more zombies in these parts than Basingstoke.” Vix glanced over her shoulder and then looked back at Gemma with pursed lips. “Got twenty or so coming this way, so if you don’t have any other plans, maybe you can climb down and we can…” She looked back over her shoulder again and then turned back to Gemma. “Run!”
Gemma scrambled down as Vix took out the first couple that had already started her way during their little conversation. Each time she swung, she chanced a look over her shoulder. She breathed a sigh of relief as Gemma’s feet touched ground and the last of the zombies that had assembled around the ladder fell to her machete.
“Where did you—” Gemma started to ask, but Vix cut her off.
“I said run!” she growled, giving Gemma a shove.
Behind her, coming up the narrow road was certainly more than the twenty she had claimed. Some of the smaller cars were being pushed aside by the sheer force of so many bodies moving in one direction. However, it was the leading edge of the horde that Vix kept fixating on each time she had looked back. And now that they were done with the immediate threat, she took another look just to be sure.
Several of the Buckingham Palace guards were easy to pick out with their red coats. A couple still managed to be wearing their tall black Bearskins. That was upsetting. To see such an icon of her homeland in this condition reached in and touched her heart in a way that she had not anticipated. Yet, it was what was leading the hellish pack that really gave her heart a squeeze.
Leading the way were a pair of Corgis. One of them had most of one side of its face peeled away and the other looked as if its entire snout had been gnawed off. Vix turned and ran.
The pair ducked up one alley and down another. It seemed that this horde was oozing through the entire city. Every road was an undead end, forcing them to turn back and dash off in another direction.
After diving into a sprawling residential area that appeared much like Vix imagined the place looked like during the Blitz, they found a beautiful church. The walls surrounding it looked to be intact. Vix climbed over and then helped pull Gemma with her.
“What did that sign say?” Vix asked as she slumped down against the cold, damp stone.
“All Saints Fulham,” Gemma managed to get out between gasps for air.
“No…not that sign, I saw that one well enough. I mean the hand-painted one below it.”
“I didn’t see, I was too busy hoping that I was not going to be eaten.” The groans of the zombies that had been converging from both directions punctuated her statement.
“I thought it said something like—”
“Hands on your heads where I can see them!” a voice barked, cutting Vix off in mid-sentence.
Both women looked up to see a figure decked out in a hodge-podge of protective gear. The helmet had a tinted visor and what looked like some sort of protective gas mask. However, it was the space-age looking rifle that was pointed at her head that got most of the attention.
***
“Jody?” a voice whispered in his ear.
His head felt fuzzy and there was an unpleasant pounding behind his eyes, it almost felt like he was—
“Crap!” he exclaimed.
His arms were bound behind his back and his feet were tied together at the ankles and knees. He was at a peculiar angle…not lying down, but not fully upright either. Then he had a new realization…his eyes were open and he could not see a thing.
“Danny?” Jody whispered, hoping that he had properly identified the voice that called out to him in the darkness.
“Yeah,” came the reply. “Looks like we’ve been bamboozled.”
Bamboozled? Really? Jody thought. Here they were, coming out of some sort of drug-induced stupor, and he was dredging up words like bamboozled?
�
�Any idea how long we have been out of it?” Jody asked.
“Nope, I just came to a little while ago and I heard you starting to stir.”
“The girls!” Jody felt his throat tighten as a number of horrible possibilities raced through his mind.
“Last I remember, they were hanging out and gabbing with the locals…everything seemed fine,” Danny said.
That was what Jody recalled as well. He had been talking to George Rosamilia…and sipping a cup of coffee!
“That son of a bitch!” Jody growled. “If he touches a hair on their heads…I’ll…” Jody sighed. He’d what? At the moment he could not do a thing but hope that he didn’t lose his hands due to the lack of circulation.
A light came on blinding them both and causing the two men to let loose with some rather “un-macho” yelps. Jody tried his best to force his eyes open, but it took time. Once he did, he was not surprised to see George standing just a few feet away with a half-dozen men who looked like poster boys for the “Hell’s Angels”. He had a second to get a look at his surroundings. They were in what looked like a concrete bunker or storage facility. He and Danny were both secured to metal posts that were slanted at forty-five degree angles.
“I imagine there is a whole laundry list of things you’d like to do right about now,” George said with a shake of his head. “And you got every right to be angry. But I need you to hear me out before I come over there and cut you loose?”
“Oh…you’re just gonna cut us both loose?” Jody’s voice dripped an equal mix of venom and sarcasm.
“Actually…” George drew a wicked looking blade from his belt, “…yes, I am. And seeings as how you are probably not gonna be able to do much other than fall over, not much chance you being able to take a swing at me just yet. Still, I want to speak on things before I let you go.”
Jody tried to think of a retort, but he was growing more confused by the moment. He glanced at the group of men who accompanied George. They all seemed relaxed. None had sneers or dirty looks on their faces.