A vein throbbed at his temple.
Guess that was a no. “I’ll enter and open the side door for you.”
“How are you going to see?” He propped the shotgun against the brick building, bent one knee and offered his hand.
“I worked for Burgers while attending college.” She didn’t mention that her father owned ten of them. A Silvestre didn’t flaunt her wealth when there was so many other subtle ways to show it off. “They’re all laid out identically.”
Wedging the flashlight on the corner of the window sill, she set her left foot on his thigh, placed one hand in his and grabbed hold of the opening with the other. “On three.”
He nodded.
She bent her knee, pictured herself going through the window, landing on the tiled floor on the other side. “ One. Two.”
“Wait.”
She blinked.
“You have one minute to get to the side door.” Eddie jerked his chin and his grip tightened. “If you’re not there in sixty seconds, I’m coming in after you.”
Wow! The man had given her nothing but grief since they’d met and now he was being heroic. Was there something different in the air? It certainly hadn’t affected her or her mother. Maybe their breeding made them immune. “I’ll be there in sixty seconds.”
“Count it down.”
Down? She counted up. Opening her mouth, she quickly snapped it closed. What did it really matter. “On three. One. Two. Three.”
Shoving with her foot on the ground, she straightened the leg on his knee and pitched to the side.
“Steady there.” With his free hand, Eddie hooked a finger through the belt loop of her trousers and gathered the fabric in a clump.
She ground the bones in his hand together before correcting her aim. Thigh muscles burned. She released his hand and grabbed at the window pane, pulling her torso inside.
A hand flattened against her left buttock.
“Oh!” She glanced over her shoulder. What had he done that for?
“Almost there.” He shoved.
“No.” Her fingers lost their grip and the floor rose up to meet her face. The sill scraped her belly then thighs. Fabric ripped. She raised her hands and held her breath. Flesh slapped tile. Her elbows absorbed the shock as they bent and her chin rested on her chest. Her legs cleared. Exhaling, she tucked and rolled. Years of falling in ballet had finally paid off. Mother would be proud.
She rolled onto her boot soles and stopped in a wobble on her toes.
“Sixty. Fifty-nine.”
He was actually counting. Pushing off the cold tiles, she stood. The world spun a little and she grabbed hold of the metal countertop to steady herself. The surface felt gritty to the touch. Shoddy cleaning. Her father would have fired the night manager over it.
But he was gone now.
She hoped Daddy was laughing at her from Heaven. Her neck popped as she straightened. Maybe that hadn’t been as graceful as she imagined. Then again, she was healthy and whole. She inventoried her body as she walked between the staging area and the counter.
The side door rattled. “Forty-two. Forty-one.”
She set both hands against the small of her back. Eddie might not speak English well, but at least he could count down from sixty with his shoes on. “I’m coming.”
Rounding the corner, she angled across the lobby. The faint scent of musk lingered in the air. Good gracious, whoever had worn it must have doused themselves with very liberal splash of cologne since it still lingered two days after the restaurant had closed.
Eddie cupped one hand to the window and peered inside. “Thirty-one. Thirty.”
“I can see you.” Which meant he should be able to see her. Which meant he should stop counting down. Her boots stuck to the floor by the soda machine. Lord a’ Mercy, why hadn’t the night crew cleaned better.
He shook his head and backed away from the glass door. “Twenty-five.”
She unlocked the door and shoved it open. “Patience is a virtue.”
He stepped back then sidled through the door beside her, the shotgun clutched in his hands. “So is having clean briefs.”
“Must you?” The world may be ending but really it was no reason to abandon civilized manners.
“It’s perfectly natural.” He stalked across the tile, heading for the bathrooms near the counters. “You have something against nature, Princess?”
“No, I—”
A cough interrupted.
Fear tracked down her spine. “Are you sick?”
Eddie stopped cold by the soda machine and raised his shotgun, aiming into the kitchen. “That wasn’t me.”
Chapter Seven
“Why do they always run, Big D?”
Sergeant-Major David Dawson clutched his M-4 as he humped his ass up the incline. A German shepherd crouched by the top of the incline. Ears flat against his head, he stared at the far side of the hill. His sides heaved and his tongue lolled out of his mouth, but David could swear the dog was laughing.
“The dog likes the chase.”
Private First Class Robertson snorted. “We should make him an honorary member of our squad. He’s already bagged one bad ‘un with your help.”
He shrugged. The dog had control of one hand, but the bad guy had a weapon in both and he’d planned to use it on the dog. A bullet had stopped him. The stitches from where his late commanding officer had tried to kill David pulled at his skin. Charred bushes and trees created gray smudges in his peripheral vision. When the hell had Phoenix gotten so many hills? His knees ached; pain radiated down his spine. Damn, but he loved the service.
“Just once I wish the assholes would trip. They always trip in the movies when they’re being hunted.”
And they’re always scantily clad women. David smiled. He liked nearly naked women just on principle. “Guess, they didn’t watch the movies.”
“Oh, they’ve watched them. They know we’re going to smoke their asses as soon as we get them in our sites.”
“They shot first.” Near the top of the hill, he dropped to his knees and scrambled forward. Rain drummed on his helmet. For a moment, the triple scents of damp earth, wet fur and asphalt overrode the stale barbecue smell.
Robertson belly flopped on his right. The kid wasn’t even winded from the two and a half mile sprint.
“Guess they didn’t expect us to fire back.” Near the top, he scooped up some of the gray ash and smeared it onto his tan and green helmet. Last thing he needed was to poke his head over the hill and have it blown off. Mavis wouldn’t like it, and he’d be damned if he allowed Lister to have her, even if he was a general.
“Fucking morons.” Robertson rolled to the side and removed his Close Combat Optic. “We’re in a damn military convoy. We’re armed and know how not to shoot ourselves in the foot.”
Yeah, but they hardly dressed the part. No combat shirt, kevlar vest or flak jacket. He and his men could be scavengers just like the scum they pursued. Removing his own scope, David dropped it into his pocket. Despite the weak sunlight, he wouldn’t have the glint of light reveal their position. For all he knew, they’d just run pell mell into a trap. He would not be responsible for getting the majority of the healthy servicemen killed.
Ray, a six-foot-seven Latino with enough muscles to make a body-builder drool, dropped his two large bags. “Candy. Get your candy here.” He snapped his fingers and the dog walked closer. He scratched the German shepherd’s ears. “Next time, I’ll bring biscuits for our latest recruit.”
The other six members of his squad fell to the ground, replenished their rounds of ammunition, then checked their weapons.
David fingered the throwing knives in each boot and the extra clips in his pockets. Good to go. In the span of a heartbeat, he belly-crawled across the cold asphalt to the top and peered over. The dog appeared on his right, his ears worked like a radar station.
A brick and stucco high school hunkered in the valley below. Their quarry hobbled across the weed-infested parkin
g lot aiming for the wrought iron gate. Two look outs crouched in the northwest and southwest corner of the auditorium’s flat roof and aimed their rifles in David’s direction.
Robertson’s sigh stirred the dusting of gravel on the road. “Two Smokies on the far building, might be a gymnasium, given its height.”
On the far east side, Robertson’s lookouts smoked. The red eye of their cigarettes glowed intermittently and their weapons dangled from their backs. Beyond the auditorium lay an elongated u-shaped dirty white stucco building, no doubt holding the classrooms. Four pasty men, stripped to the waist, batted a soccer ball across the yellow grass.
“Four kicking around in the quad.” That made eight near the buildings.
Their quarry shouted. The dog growled. The players in the quad stopped.
“Shh.” He pressed his finger to his lips and eyed the dog. The German shepherd quieted.
“Word about our arrival is spreading.” Robertson wet his thumb and held it up in the still air.
Three of them strolled to the side to pull their shirts over their flabby bellies. One laughed, kicked the ball into the air and caught it. He tossed it from side to side while the others stared at him.
“Not everyone seems concerned.” David continued his scan of the area. Fire had raced over the mountain, clearing the vegetation and leaving only a few black scarred trunks. Lice could find better cover on a bald man’s head. Fortunately, they’d experienced this kind of thing in the Sandbox.
In the football field north of the auditorium, humans were caged in chain link pens—half-naked women, bound men, and huddled, silent children. Nearly two handfuls of armed men strolled the perimeter. The dog’s lips peeled away from his fangs.
“Shit-fuck-damn, Sergeant-Major.” Robertson raised his M-4 and peered down his iron sight.
Only a string of three swear words from the private, did he not see the same thing? The scene below was worth twenty at least. David contained the fire of hate. To see such a thing in his own country; when had people become such animals? He sank his fingers in the dog’s fur, felt the quiver of muscle under his hand. “We’ll kill the bad guys. Free the people.”
Black and white; right and wrong.
The private’s finger settled on the trigger. “Give me a minute and I can treat all the fuckers to a dirt nap, easy-peasy.”
“We play this smart; I don’t want civilians used as flesh shields.” Fisting the back of Robertson’s jacket, David scooted back down, dragging the swearing private along. The dog followed; his tail swept the ground as if he waited for instructions.
“I can hit them, Big D.” Despite his ego, the kid was a first class soldier and an even better sniper.
“I’m counting on it.” David squat-walked to the dirt on the side of the road and etched out the layout of the buildings in the ashen powder.
His men crowded around him. The air practically hummed with purpose. Gut clenching in pre-mission jitters, he drew the oval of the stadium. They had to get the targets away from the civilians to minimize casualties. A deep groove marked the crescent-shaped mountain arcing around the school.
“Four up top. Four more here.” He marked x’s on the quad. “Over a dozen on the ground.”
And God knew how many more in the buildings. Too bad the Almighty wasn’t talking.
Ray, the munitions mule, dragged his bags closer. “Which is the high priority target?”
Hell if he knew. But their quarry hadn’t run inside any building to report the counter attack. Either the gunplay had rattled the guy or he wanted to shake the shit out of his shorts before reporting his failure. Then again, there was always option c—the guy with the soccer ball. His balls drew up tight. That settled it.
“Hit the black-haired dreadlocked caucasian wearing dirty jeans, black sneakers and no shirt.” Although he might have put it back on by now. “He has a serpent tat on his left chest and down his arm.”
Robertson gently attached his sight. “I’ll take him out first.”
He nodded. “I want you and Michaelson up on the ridge.” The motorpool PFC was the second best shot in the squad. Together they’d take out any target in the open. Too bad the targets in the quad were animal enough to dive for cover once their scum-sucking comrade’s skulls started flying. “Clean up the quad then the rooftops then go down to the gallery.”
He poked the guards near the prisoners. Lots of open space there, plenty of time to pick off the fleas. They would never reach safety.
Michaelson wiped dust from his goggles then grabbing another clip from the bag. “We taking prisoners?”
Hell no. They barely had enough room in the convoy for people worth saving. These targets didn’t even rate a bullet. But they did deserve to die. Fortunately, it was his job to give anyone who followed the evacuation route a chance to survive. Which meant taking out the trash and sweeping it away.
“We’re sending them to a new detention facility called Hell.”
“Oh, this is going to be fun.” Robertson grinned and leapt to his feet. He kept his weapon at the ready as he charged up the ridge, out of sight of those at the school.
The dog looked at the private before staring at David.
“We’ll radio you once we’re in position, Sergeant-Major.” Puffs of ash rose from Michaelson’s heels as he raced after his comrade.
“Come on boy.” With the dog loping at his side, David jogged across the cracked asphalt and down the hillside. Charcoal twigs and branches crunched underfoot. Arriving at the base, he scanned the area. A drainage ditch sucked at the retaining wall that ran to the school’s entrance. The pink stucco blistered and flaked off in patches. Where parts of it had collapsed, upside down triangles appeared along the length. Near the second and fourth one, the vegetation had been trampled.
If they ran behind the retaining wall, they could get close enough for a little shock and awe. But there was always the possibility they’d lose some hostages. Damn. He ran his hand down his face and crept out just far enough to get a clear view of the parking lot. Not even a stripped car to hide behind.
He’d have to split up his men. Again. From his pocket, he extracted a yellow and gold High Explosive Round and loaded it into the fat M203 slung under the barrel of his M-4. “Vegas and Singleton, wait here until Robertson clears the rooftop. Once we begin the flash/bang, you infiltrate the football field and recover the hostages.”
“Yes, Sergeant-Major.” They both nodded, loading their own grenades and rechecking their weapons.
“Robertson, which way are the targets facing?” David backtracked along the road, keeping out of the line of sight. He hoped, prayed, felt the other three members of his squad ghosting behind him and the dog hunting at his side. Damn, where was the smoke and fire when he needed it? And just why had it stopped raining after that piddling? God, if you’re listening, we could use a break about now.
“They’re still facing your position, Sergeant-Major.” Robertson’s huffs and puffs came through David’s earpiece and rasped inside his skull.
“How close are you to your position?” He trotted farther away from the school. Finally. The bricks folded back on themselves. Rainwater dribbled out of the neighborhood via a concrete channel and emptied into the ditch.
“Five minutes.”
“Anything stirring in the neighborhood in front of the school.”
Time ticked by in heartbeats. He glanced over his shoulder. Another five feet and the targets on the roof would be able to see them. It had been a miracle he and his men hadn’t been picked off running up the street like a bunch of green recruits.
“Nothing stirring, I…” Robertson cleared his throat. “I think it’s a dumping ground, Sergeant-Major.”
“Roger that.” David jumped into the ditch and ran for the opening. Mud squelched under his boots. He ran up the other side, ducked behind the retaining wall then followed it around the corner. He drew up short.
Naked bodies of every kind lay in neat rows along the street. Only an in
fant in a pink onesy still wore clothes. It stood next to a decomposing couple posed in a sixty-nine position and was held up by the fire hydrant that had no doubt caved in its skull. Here and there men and women rotted in obscene positions. Unattached limbs were strewn across dead lawns, like discarded props in a zombie movie. Soft bellies disappeared in the hunger of flies and predators. From one blackened doorway, two coyotes with blood beards stared back at him.
The dog whined. He held his breath to a count of four then released it to the same count. Maybe humanity didn’t deserve to survive. “Jesus Christ!”
PFC Folger slammed into his back. “Sorry, Sergeant—” The kids eyes widened and green tinted his pale complexion. His freckles stood out like liver-spots and his Adam’s apple bobbed in his skinny neck.
David stepped forward blocking the view. The kid hadn’t been with them in Iraq. Hell, he’d flown drones from Germany and shot the bad guys like a video game, then moved onto guarding the gate at their temporary base. He did not have the time for the kid to shut down, nor could he spare a man.
But a liability would endanger them all.
Ray hitched the spare munitions bags higher on his shoulder. His jaw thrust forward. He shook his head and stared fixedly at the openings in the wall. Janovich gagged, swallowed it down and filed by behind Ray.
He nodded to them as they passed. The dog sat down, but stared after his men. “Look at me, Private.”
Folgers’ brown eyes locked on his. He didn’t even blink. “Sir?”
David let the slip pass. “We’ve got targets to destroy, a mission to complete, do you understand?”
“Target. Mission.” Folgers swallowed again. Finally, he blinked then a shudder rippled through him. He tightened his grip on his weapon and his chin raised a notch. “I won’t let you down Sergeant-Major.”
“Let’s move out.”
Folgers stepped around David and jogged to where Janovich and Ray crawled passed the opening in the downed wall. Scanning the area, he followed. Too bad the targets would be taken out cleanly. For this, they should suffer; they needed to suffer.
Redaction: The Meltdown Part II Page 7