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Deadland Saga (Book 3): Deadland Rising

Page 10

by Aukes, Rachel


  Charlie’s breaths rasped in lungs filling with fluid.

  Zach and I stopped during each of our daily rounds. A line of people cycled through the house, giving their regards to Sarah and their final good-byes to Charlie, though both seemed oblivious to anyone in their home.

  As a coughing fit wracked Charlie and Sarah let out a sob, I swallowed the lump in my throat. Charlie was a good man. My lip quivered. “It’s not fair,” I said softly, turned on my heel, and walked from the room.

  Inside the hall, I took a deep breath. The cool air helped, but still a weight pressed upon my chest. Everyone died—that was a part of life—but the world had become nothing but death. Picking us off one by one. What hope was there if we were going to die, anyway?

  I leaned against the painted wall, and stared blankly at the picture at the end of the hall. It was a print of a famous painting—The Birth of Venus. It fit in with the tapestries and clay pots, all that remained of the house’s original occupants.

  A wail erupted from within the bedroom, and I clenched my eyes shut.

  Footsteps entered the hallway, and I heard the door quietly close. “It’s over,” Zach said softly.

  I opened my eyes and rested my head against the wall. Everyone who knew Charlie loved him. I couldn’t fathom him ever having an enemy. “Losing Charlie will be hard on New Eden.”

  The corner of his lip curled almost into a smile before dropping again. “It will be hardest on Sarah.”

  I remembered her swollen, red eyes, brimming with loss. “Yeah.”

  We stood there for a long minute before I pushed off from the wall. “We should continue our rounds.”

  Zach thought for a moment and then nodded. “I could use some fresh air, anyway. We’ll check on Sarah later. She’s got plenty of company right now.”

  We headed outside and continued our long, cold walk around the western half of New Eden. Even wearing my arctic coat, ski mask, stocking hat, and gloves, the cold bit at our fingers and noses, and we took indoor breaks every thirty minutes to prevent frostbite. As we did every day, we took a full hour to walk through the first floors of the silo. Our job was to make sure everything was secure, but truthfully, there was an inherent security to the silo, and the more stairs I descended, the safer I felt. Especially when Clutch was still away. He’d be home soon, probably even before I was off duty.

  Knowing Clutch would be safe within the New Eden fences tonight, the heavy weight on my chest began to lift. Justin was right—a Thanksgiving feast would be a perfect event for New Eden—symbolic of making new friends and a new life together. Everyone was excited to see what Clutch’s squadron would bring back from Omaha. Even though half of the town was still recovering from the flu, the impatient excitement in the air was palpable.

  By sunset, my muscles trembled with adrenaline. I had to force myself to slow down to keep with Zach’s casual pace.

  Zach fought back a smile. “The squadron will be back before too long. Why don’t you head home?”

  I glanced at my watch. “We still have twenty minutes left on our shift.”

  He shrugged. “I can handle the daily log. Go on, I’m sure Clutch, Griz, and Marco will be starving by the time they get back.”

  I eyed him for a moment before pulling him into a big hug. “Thanks. I owe you one.”

  “I’ll see you in the morning.”

  Zach headed toward the HQ, while I turned and headed the opposite direction. The nightly howls had begun, and I could see many pairs of eyes reflecting moonlight from the other side of the fence.

  My pace picked up with every block, pausing only when I passed Charlie and Sarah’s house. I stood there for a long moment before deciding to check in on Sarah to see if she needed anything. I bounded up the steps and didn’t bother knocking. Inside, the house was nearly empty. On the table sat a variety of food and gifts dropped off by various friends and neighbors throughout the day. I continued down the hallway and into the bedroom. The bed now lay empty, and I suspected Charlie’s body was now at the clinic, which also served as the town morgue.

  A lone woman sat in a chair reading a leather-bound book. She looked up when I entered. “Hello, Cash.”

  I couldn’t remember her name. I knew she worked with Vicki, but I’d never talked with her before. “Where’s Sarah?”

  She motioned to the bathroom. “Taking a bath. She wanted some alone time.”

  “Oh,” I said. “I guess I can stop back later.”

  “She should be out any time. She’s been in there ever since they took Charlie away.”

  “Okay,” I said. I stood there, twiddling my thumbs, and waited for Sarah. After a minute or two, I sensed a gaze on me, and I looked at the woman. “What?”

  “Is Marco your brother?” she asked.

  “What?”

  “Someone said he was your brother. I was wondering. I think it’s pretty cool he found you out there. What are the odds?”

  I rolled my eyes. “He’s not my brother. He’s Mexican. I’ve never even been to Mexico. Just because we’re both of Hispanic descent doesn’t mean we’re related.”

  She shrugged. “Sorry.”

  I glanced at my watch. “How long can Sarah stay in there?”

  She laid the open book down on her lap. “I don’t know, but she’s been in there for ages already. Two, maybe three hours? Everyone else left a long time ago. It seemed wrong to leave her alone, so I stayed.”

  “I’m glad you did.” As minutes passed, a sense of foreboding formed in my gut. “Any sounds?”

  She thought for a moment. “She ran a bath when she first went in, but after that…no, I can’t say I’ve heard anything.”

  I walked over to the bathroom door and knocked. “Sarah? It’s me, Cash.” No response. I knocked louder. “Sarah, open up.”

  When I heard nothing, I tried the handle, but it was locked. My heart pounded at the silence on the other side. I ran my fingers along the woodwork above the door and found a long, hexagonal-shaped key. I slid it into the keyhole, and the lock clicked. “Sarah, I’m coming in.”

  Still nothing.

  I glanced back at the other woman who was now standing, her eyes wide.

  I took a deep breath and opened the door. Sarah lay in the bathtub, staring at nothing. The water was murky with red. One arm was in the water, the other strewn over the side of the tub, a still river of blood puddled on the floor below it. It took several seconds for the scene to register in my brain, and my lips quivered. “Oh, Sarah, no.”

  A gasp behind me. “Sarah!”

  I turned in time to barely catch the woman as she collapsed.

  She pressed her face against my chest and cried. “I should’ve known,” she whimpered. “I sat out there while she…she…”

  “You couldn’t have known. No one could’ve known,” I said, stroking her hair while staring at Sarah’s lifeless body. I didn’t bother checking for a pulse. The amount of blood and her pallor told the entire story. Sarah had chosen not to live without her Charlie and taken matters into her own hands.

  “I don’t understand,” she said. “Sarah couldn’t hurt a fly. Why would she do that to herself?”

  I didn’t answer.

  “It’s not right,” she mumbled and continued crying.

  When her sobs slowed to a simmer, I helped her up, walked her down the hallway, and sat her on the couch.

  She shook her head. “I’ve lost two husbands. One to cancer, the other to those creatures outside the fence. It tore my heart out each time, but I survived. If only Sarah could’ve seen that things would get better.”

  The front door opened, and I turned to see Zach step inside. He grinned. “I figured you were heading home.” His smile dropped abruptly. “What happened?”

  “It’s Sarah,” I said. “She—she’s in the bathroom.”

  Zach headed down the hallway with intent and returned a minute later. Somber, he looked across our faces. “Cash, can you go get Justin and Doc Edmund? I’ll stay here with Izzie.�
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  I nodded and turned as though in a haze. “Yeah, sure. I’ll be right back.”

  I barely remembered running to Justin’s house or to the clinic. But, I ended up back at Charlie and Sarah’s house with both men a few minutes later. They quickly took control. Justin made calls on the portable radio he always carried, and the doctor went immediately to check on Sarah.

  I didn’t stick around. I numbly walked to my house. I could no longer find the quick walking pace I had before. All the excitement I’d been harboring had been muted.

  I shut the front door, and the shrill howls were muffled by the walls. I was glad to find the living room empty, with everyone else in bed still recuperating. I sat down in a recliner and leaned back.

  And waited for Clutch to come home.

  * * *

  The following morning

  “Still no word from the squadron?” I asked for the third time in an hour as I drummed my fingers on Justin’s desk.

  Justin didn’t look up from the papers he was working on. “Not yet.”

  Jase stepped from behind me and leaned on Justin’s desk. He had a tissue in one hand, and his nose was still red from being sick. He’d quickly recuperated, but the flu had left him in a rather cranky, groggy mood. “Don’t tell me there was no Plan B? You know, in case they got stuck somewhere?”

  Justin’s lips tightened before leaning back. “I’m sure they had some alternative plans worked up while they were on the road. But, we didn’t work on any additional plans in case they didn’t return. It seemed to be a straightforward plan. Low risk.”

  The front door opened, and cold wind hit my cheeks. Justin lunged forward to keep his papers from blowing away. A man walked in. He removed his scarf before I recognized him as one of New Eden’s handymen. He crossed his arms over his chest. “They’re not back, are they?”

  Justin sighed and dropped his pen. “Not yet.”

  The man stomped a couple steps closer. “I told you that they never should’ve left. We’ve lost our last remaining squadron, and it’s your fault. You were greedy to demand a Thanksgiving feast, and now look what’s happened.”

  “Calm down, Folsom,” Justin said. “The squadron is probably running late.”

  “Late? You mean like Smith’s squadron? Or Martin’s squadron? How many more men have to die before you learn that we shouldn’t send our squadrons out there?”

  I winced at the man’s biting words and flashed a glance at Jase, who seemed as uncomfortable as I was to be in the same room as this pair.

  Justin seemed oblivious to the remark and gave the man a calm gaze. “Those were extenuating circumstances. The zeds are no longer a serious issue, and the Black Sheep have been broken and disbanded. It’s safer now.”

  “Safer?” the man balked. “How about the wild dogs? How about all the bandits we don’t know about? You keep sending men out to die, when we already have everything we need to survive within these fences.”

  “You’re only thinking of the status quo. We don’t have enough if we grow our numbers,” Justin replied quickly.

  The man waved him off and headed back to the door. He opened it, letting the cold wind blow in. He faced Justin one more time. “I’m raising a vote of no confidence at the next council meeting. Your dictatorship has killed enough men.”

  With that, he left and slammed the door shut behind him.

  I watched the man walk outside the window and disappear down the sidewalk. Outside, the day was a dark gray, with the sun hidden by layers upon layers of clouds. It was almost as though something were casting a giant shadow over us. It was exactly as I felt.

  Justin sighed. “Sorry about the interruption.”

  “He’s not exactly one of your cheerleaders,” I said.

  Justin chuckled drily. “Folsom voted for the other guy.”

  “Ah,” I said. “And, I’m guessing the other guy is campaigning again.”

  Justin shook his head. “My opponent was Randy Smith.”

  Jase elbowed me, and I shrugged and gave him my I-didn’t-know look.

  “Smith’s squadron was overtaken by zeds near Lincoln last summer,” Justin continued.

  “Sorry,” I muttered.

  “It’s okay.” Justin smiled weakly. “I’m sure there are at least a dozen folks out there right now who want to be running this place. But enough about politics. Now, if you don’t mind, I have more papers to read and sign.”

  I took a step back but didn’t leave. I eyed Jase, and he returned a hard look. I nodded and then turned back to Justin. “Clutch always keeps his word. The squadron missed their deadline, which means something is up.”

  “We don’t leave our people out there,” Jase added.

  Justin closed his eyes for a moment. “And what exactly do you propose?”

  I began. “I—”

  “We,” Jase interrupted.

  I smiled. “We—Jase and I—will look for them.”

  Justin stood. “No way. Absolutely not. There’s no way I’ll let a teenager and a—”

  “Woman?” I finished for him, my brow raised. “Really, Justin, the times have changed. Jase and I are scouts. We know how to get around out there.”

  “Besides,” Jase said. “We’re new to New Eden. If something happened to us, it wouldn’t be as bad as if something happened to Zach or you.”

  Justin shot a hard look. “You’re wrong. You would be sorely missed.” He grabbed his radio and barked a command. “Send Tom to my house.” He set the radio down without waiting for the response. He eyed us. “If you go, I’m sending Tom with you.”

  I shook my head. “Jase and I can move quickly on our own. We’re used to being out there. And, we don’t want to put anyone at risk who doesn’t need to be.”

  “Tom is with the squadron. He had the flu the morning they headed out, but he’s doing much better now. If anyone went, I’d prefer it would be only Tom. The squadron may already be lost,” Justin said. “It doesn’t make sense to lose more people searching for them.”

  “Bullshit,” I snapped. “It makes a hell of a lot more sense than sitting on your ass and signing your name a hundred times.”

  “This is important—”

  “Oh, buy a rubber stamp already,” Jase added drily.

  “We’re going, and we don’t need your approval,” I said. “The last time I checked, all citizens had the right to pass through the gates at any time.”

  “You’re not prisoners here, but if you’re gone for more than a day, you’ll have to sit through quarantine again.”

  “Fine,” I said.

  “Fine,” Jase said.

  Tom strolled in at that moment, and the redhead with a full beard paused to take in the full scene before walking for Justin’s desk. He reminded me of an easygoing lumberjack, and I suspected he even wore a plaid flannel underneath his brown coat and coveralls. Hell, he could’ve been mistaken for a model on the front of a maple syrup bottle. “What’s up, boss?”

  “Thanks for coming, Tom. Are you up for a little trip?”

  He smiled like he already knew what Justin was thinking. “Sure. I could be ready to head out in thirty minutes.”

  “Cash and Jase have their minds made up to go and look for the rest of your squadron. You were involved in the planning. I want you with them.”

  Tom nodded. “I’m fine with that. We’ll just be driving, so it should be safe enough. To be honest, I was planning on heading out to look for them today, anyway.” He thought for a moment, then eyed Jase and me. “Are you sure you’re up for heading outside the fence? We could be gone until dark.”

  “We’re good,” we replied simultaneously.

  Tom shrugged. “If you’re good, I’m good.”

  Justin’s eyelids became heavy, as though he were physically drained. “What’s the plan?”

  “Easy,” I said before anyone else spoke. “We’ll take a single vehicle with enough fuel to get to Omaha and back. We’ll follow the same route the squadron took.”

 
; “We’ll need the map Clutch left with you,” Tom said to Justin.

  Justin ruffled through his papers.

  Clutch had talked me through his mission the night before he left. Whenever we planned a mission of some kind, we talked through it together. It helped us think of risks or gaps we hadn’t covered.

  Last night, when Clutch didn’t return home, I couldn’t sleep. I tossed and turned in bed and checked the front door every ten minutes. The night’s silence was broken only by the howling of the wild packs. I had tried to draw Clutch’s route from memory, but the truth was, I always had lousy navigation skills. Jase, on the other hand, had a gift for navigating. There was a reason I always took him when I flew over the Fox Park area. But, unfortunately, Jase had been down with the flu when Clutch went through the squadron’s plan and route. If Jase hadn’t gotten sick, we would’ve had a map drawn from scratch and been on the road already.

  When the night had given way to a cloudy morning and Clutch hadn’t yet returned, my heart had felt like someone had dropped a hundred-pound weight on it. I’d already made up my mind and was packed to go by the time Jase made an appearance in the kitchen. Though, he’d evidently had the same idea, since he met me in the kitchen fully geared up. “I’m ready,” was all he said, and it was all he needed to say.

  “Ah, here it is,” Justin said before flattening a map on the table. He pointed to a line drawn with blue marker. “This is the route they were taking both ways, and these dots are the general area of the big-box stores they were going to check out.” He tapped on two X’s on the map. “The interstate is blocked here and here.” He continued to speak as he drew lines along smaller highways. “If you run into trouble, I recommend you take these roads. We know they’re clear.”

  Jase took the map, folded it, and stuck it inside his coat.

  Justin looked at Tom. “Is your radio fully charged?”

  “I had it on the charger all night,” he replied.

  Justin nodded. “Okay, then. Report in every hour until you’re out of range, which is roughly twenty miles. And, as soon as you’re back in range, you better report in.”

 

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