by David Rogers
Retrieving rotting meat out of the barbecue joint had required filter masks like allergy suffers or painters wore, and a drawing of lots among the soldiers, but twenty slabs were suspended from the truck bodies; across the front of Crawford’s, and down both sides of each, using screws and cord as quick and dirty support to hold them in place. None were attached to the trailer by design.
Now the only thing left was to try the whole crazy scheme out.
Peter left the Humvee running and got out. The other soldiers followed suit, and he made a gathering motion with his hand as he walked up to the lead truck. Oliver, still wearing a mask, closed the door of the second and spun off the vehicle’s gas cap. While the Guardsman stuffed a long strip of cloth into the tank, Peter looked around at the others.
“Okay, we’re going to shoot to clear a path out once Crawford stops. Watch your damned fire so you don’t put any rounds into the school, and no one fires on the trucks at all except me. Clear?”
Assent came in murmured affirmatives and nods. Peter flopped down on his back between the trucks and hooked the tow chain already padlocked in place around the lead truck’s hitch to the frame of the second one. When he was satisfied he scooted out and opened the door to put it in neutral and pop the brake off before stepping away from the now linked vehicles. The smell coming from the meat covering both was quite ripe.
He could still hear gunshots coming from within the school, which he took as a good sign. The size of the horde hadn’t abated much in the time it had taken the soldiers to collect and rig everything for their plan. Closer gunshots sounded as Whitley and Roper started taking out a handful of nearby zombies who were closing on the Guardsmen standing on the street. Peter ignored them and moved up to the driver’s window of the lead truck.
“You ready?” he asked Crawford.
“Let’s do it. Should be fun.” she said with a malicious grin.
“Okay, we’ll cover you as best we can, but watch your ass. Remember, no closer than the middle of the parking lot. We’re trying to save people, not set the building on fire.”
“I got it. Come on, I’m dying for a cigarette.”
“Done here.” Oliver said. Peter glanced over and saw the first truck’s gas tank had been invaded by another strip of cloth that dangled low. He was looking for every possible advantage to get one hell of a bang, and the gas in the tanks would help to get the trucks burning all the better.
Peter stepped away from the truck and gave her a thumbs up. “Ok then, you’re on.”
She eased the truck forward until the jerk of the tow chain pulling taunt rocked her against the steering wheel, and the truck on its shocks, then applied more gas. The trio – truck, truck, and trailer – moved toward the curb at a slow pace, and Peter held his breath. There was a lot of weight being hauled by the one truck Crawford was in, but the trio cleared the curb without major difficulty as she worked the throttle.
Blessing the over-engineering American truck consumers forced on manufacturers with their willful ignorance of stated weight limits, Peter watched as Crawford drove across the grass toward the horror show at the school.
The truck curved gently around to the left, then back right as she picked a parking aisle to head up. Zombies in the way began falling before the truck’s bumper, a few being knocked to one side or the other, but most going down to be run over. He kept his fingers crossed, but even the trailer’s wheels didn’t get hung up on the bodies as Crawford kept the vehicles moving.
And there didn’t seem to be many zombies interested in her yet. The ones on the sides within reach were grabbing at the meat. Some were being dragged along as they clung to the flesh and started gnawing at it. Others were tumbling to the ground as the truck kept moving.
“Swanson, Roper, bring the hummers.” Peter said, bringing his AR up as he saw Crawford’s brake lights flash.
Walking forward along the street, Peter started shooting zombies that were on the pavement and either in the way or coming to meet them. He kept his attention purposefully unfocused except for the red dot centered in his scope, ignoring the gore as the bullets shattered skulls and sent people who were supposed to be dead finally to rest. Beside him Whitley and Oliver covered the sides, all three preceding the Humvees on foot as they cleared their way up the street to in front of the school. By the time they reached a spot where the trucks were easily seen without intervening obstacles, Crawford was already busy.
The rear window of the cab had been broken out, and she was atop the roof out of reach as she splashed gas from some standard two-gallon fuel cans around the truck. Zombies were pressing in on the vehicles, but they were still interested in the meat at hand, and didn’t seem to mind as gas fell on them either. Peter looked over his shoulder.
“Drivers, cover our asses. Yell loud if you need help.”
“On it.” Swanson said as he popped out of the top hatch and raised his M-16. Roper was following suit in the other Humvee; both dividing the area around the street by prearrangement. They were already shooting steadily to hold the zombie-free space in the street open.
“Let’s clear her lane out.” Peter said, dropping to one knee and pulling his weapon tight against his shoulder. Resting his elbow on his knee for a more stable firing position, he started taking out zombies between the curb and the trucks, focusing on the ones closest to the propane trailer first.
As hoped, a lot of the zombies were being drawn to the trap. Not all of them near the school were turning, but fewer than he’d feared were continuing to focus on the doors and the people beyond them inside the building. The horde’s density was much thinner out on the grass, but there were still too many to be sure of someone on foot making it through without becoming a snack.
With Whitley and Oliver firing as well, Peter and the other two shot a broad path that could be used to get out. As he changed magazines a second time, he saw Crawford had finished pouring off the cans and was picking her way through the big plastic tubs in the bed to get to the second truck. As she went, she stabbed each with a knife, starting more gas pouring out. By the time she got to the tailgate, Peter could see the fuel streaming from holes that had been punched in the sides of the truck bed earlier.
She stepped from the tailgate to the hood of the second truck without problem, but slipped as she tried to get up the windshield to the roof. He saw her catch herself on the edge of the hood between the windshield wipers, but other than a couple of kicks at grasping hands as she scrambled back to her feet, she seemed okay.
“Looking good.” Peter said loudly. “You two, hold the lane open as best you can.”
“Got it.” Oliver grunted. Whitley just continued firing.
Crawford climbed over the second truck, still out of reach, and made for the trailer, lancing the second load of fuel filled tubs along the way. She finished the last of them and sheathed the knife as she stood looking at the trailer and the zombies near it for a moment. This was the part Peter was most concerned about. The trailer was lower, and the propane tanks were round. That wasn’t conducive to good footing.
“How we looking?” Peter called loudly as he heard either Swanson or Roper shooting something behind him.
“Solid. What about her?” Swanson called back.
“So far so good.”
Peter’s aim went from careful to paranoid, as he started dropping zombies along the right side of the trailer. He saw the trailer rocking a little as Crawford moved to it, but kept his attention on the zombies on that side. When he had to reload again, he checked on her progress as he dropped the empty magazine out and pulled a full one from his pouch. She was near the back of the trailer, and had her M-16 up and clearing zombies that were at the back of the trailer. It took her two reloads, but she cleared the rest in her way and leapt down to the grass.
“Cover her. Watch your damned fire.” Peter ordered as he began shooting zombies on her right side. She was running flat out, holding the M-16 in one hand and sprinting in a mild zigzag as zombies alerted to
her. It didn’t take her long to clear the back edges of the mass, and she slowed as she reached the sidewalk next to the street.
“Piece of cake.” she said, breathing hard.
“Crawford, you crazy fucking bitch!” Swanson shouted.
“I’m still not sleeping with you.” she panted back.
“Take cover.” Peter yelled, rising and moving behind the hood of the right Humvee as he reloaded again. “Don’t let anything sneak up on us.”
He laid his AR across the hood and sighted on the tanks in the trailer. His first shot produced a plume of white smoke as the pressurized propane erupted through the hole his round punched in the tank. As quickly as he could aim and control the weapon, he emptied its magazine into the tanks, firing the last fifteen bullets nearly blind – going off where the tanks should be – as the cloud thickened and spread.
“I can’t fucking believe that didn’t set any of them off.” Oliver said.
“No, but this will.” Peter replied, leaving the AR on the hood and drawing a flare gun from one of his pouches.
“Fire in the hole!” Whitley echoed Peter’s yell. He gave it two seconds as he crouched lower behind the hood, feeling more than actually noticing the other soldiers dropping into cover inside or behind the vehicles. With the bright orange pistol canted up at a slight angle and aligned squarely with the trap trucks, he squeezed the trigger, then ducked.
He felt a wave of air slam into the Humvee, rocking it on its shocks, the whomp-woosh of its passage loud even through his earplugs. The front fender bumped his cheek and sent him sprawling back against the vehicle behind him. A huge fireball was roiling up into the sky as he struggled to his feet and peered cautiously over the hood. The smoke plume that followed the fireball up was smudgy black and rapidly engulfing the flames as the fire below got going.
A section of parking lot centered on the trap was ablaze, easily forty feet across. He didn’t see a single zombie still on its feet, all having been thrown to the ground by the ignition of the painstakingly dispersed flammables. A lot of the windows of nearby cars were broken, and already some of the tires were starting to catch.
“Hell fucking yeah!” he heard someone yelling. “Now that’s a barbecue!”
The explosion hadn’t killed the zombies. He saw a lot of movement in the flattened horde. Bodies, flaming like tiki torches, were staggering to their feet, rolling over and starting to crawl. And they were spreading the flames as they did, passing the fire to others who weren’t yet ablaze as clothing, hair, skin, caught and began burning. Other zombies just thrashed helplessly on the ground, not in pain, but because too many of their major bones had been broken by the shockwave to stand or crawl.
“Fuck me, I knew we should have stopped for marshmallows.” Swanson said from the top hatch of the Humvee.
“That’s disgusting.” Roper told him.
“Pay attention, don’t just watch the damned fire.” Peter ordered. “Let’s not screw up this late in the game.”
“Hey Gunny, I just shot like half of North Georgia, and they’re still coming.” Swanson laughed loudly. “Give a little credit, huh?”
“Swanson—” Crawford started, still panting, but Peter overrode her by speaking louder.
“Load up and watch the sides. Let’s go. Move it.”
“I’m driving.” Crawford said, opening the door to the Humvee Peter thought of as ‘his’. He opened his mouth to object, then nodded. She was in pretty good shape, but anyone would need a minute or two to let their pulse settle after a sprint like that before their aim would be reliable. He stuffed the flare gun back into the pouch and grabbed his AR off the hood.
The soldiers piled in as the roar of fire grew more audible. Peter grabbed for full magazines out of the box on the front floorboard to refill his pouch. Crawford took off rather faster than he expected, and he dropped a couple. Swanson yelled in pain as the acceleration bent him back against the edge of the roof hatch.
“Ow, take it fucking easy.”
“Fuck easy.” Crawford retorted as she dug her cigarettes out and lipped one from the pack as she steered one handed for the right side of the school grounds.
“There.” Peter pointed, indicating a spot that gave a good line of fire across the front of the school, parallel with the building. He could smell gas on Crawford’s boots, but he didn’t have time to yell at her to not smoke If she wanted to light her feet on fire, that was her lookout. He could kick her out of the vehicle to keep from damaging it if things got that far.
“Got it.”
She braked hard where he wanted, hard enough that Peter was sure she’d done it on purpose to jostle Swanson again, but the Guardsman in the back had apparently expected it. Peter heard the man’s weapon open up before the Marine could even get his door open.
“Swanson, Roper, you’re still on perimeter security. Don’t let anything sneak up close. Oliver, cover me.” Peter yelled as he shot several zombies within twenty feet on his side of the vehicle so he could step clear of the door. “If something takes a bite out of me while I’m busy I’m going to be beyond pissed.”
“Too old Gunny.” Swanson laughed, but he swiveled from his position above the Humvee to start directing his fire to that side. “Zombies like it fresh.”
“I’ll show you fresh.” Peter muttered as he went back to one knee and got his scope aligned on the remnants of the horde still menacing the front of the school. The fire in the parking lot was going strong, fueled by bodies and tires. He saw hundreds of corpses down amid the flames, and some were no longer moving. Others still thrashed, but few that were still on their feet weren’t burning.
Without the need to worry about putting bullets through the school – which would easily penetrate the walls and be dangerous to whoever was inside – the soldiers were able to sweep the pack at will. With three rifles working, then four at the end when Crawford caught her breath and joined in, it only took a minute or two to deal with everything still on its feet in immediate proximity to the front wall. Then they cleared the stragglers still wandering around in the parking lot.
“Okay, Whitley, you’re with me.” Peter said loudly. Even with the ear plugs, his hearing was starting to protest the aural abuse of the past few minutes. “The rest of you, stay mobile in the hummers and see if you can’t pull everything on the sides to the back. Don’t get stuck in, and listen up for the radio.”
Peter moved forward as Whitley ran to join him, the woman falling into step a few feet behind him. He left her to it, trusting her to keep an eye on their rear while they jogged toward the front entrance. The smell of crisped corpses was appalling and grew thicker with every step, but he ignored it as he did the heat coming from the blaze. He didn’t think the asphalt itself had caught, but there was enough meat and other flammables to probably keep the flames going for a while.
As he cleared the worst of the smoke and flames he dropped from jogging to a tactical quick-step so he could shoot another dozen or so zombies on the far side of the trap. He slowed almost to a crawl as he carefully studied the fallen zombies in his path, shooting any that he didn’t feel comfortable about getting near and picking his way forward among them cautiously. Finally he was nearing the two sets of double doors of the school’s front entrance. He saw a fairly impressive pile of desks and other furniture piled up behind them, but the barricade appeared unmanned.
“Hello the school!” he called loudly. “Georgia National Guard calling the school!”
There was a long pause, then he heard an angry and shaken male voice respond. “Jesus Christ, what the hell are you trying to do, kill us?”
“The building’s not on fire.” Peter called back, moving forward cautiously. “And we think we’ve got the zombies handled for the moment.”
“What’d you put in those fucking trucks, a bomb?”
“Something like that. It was the only way to take care of that many. Is everyone okay?”
He was close enough that he had a better angle, and could see
part of the hallway beyond the barricade. Several people were visible now, staring at him with wide eyes and expressions mixed between shock and relief. “A few scrapes and bruises from the explosion, but we’re holding out.”
“Thank God!” a woman yelled. “Are you here to help? Is it safe now?”
“Trick question.” Whitley murmured in a sotto voice. “Of course it’s not safe.”
“Don’t you start too.” Peter told her before raising his voice again. “The situation at the FEMA camp is being reevaluated. We’re taking everyone over there if you’re ready to move.”
“How, walk?” one of the men said, pointing a hand that trembled a little at the parking lot. “I don’t think we’ve got a lot of cars left to get us over there.”
“There’s an elementary school about two blocks south of here, a little way off the main road to the west. There are six buses there that can hold at least fifty each.”
“There’s got to be at least twice that many of us in here. I don’t know, we haven’t exactly had time to get any sort of count since the zombies found us last night.”
“We can make as many trips as necessary.” Peter said calmly in his command voice. “But I think you’ll agree it’d be better at the FEMA camp than staying here.”
“They turned us away.” another man said. “Told us to come here.” Others in the hall voiced agreement with him.
“That’s changed.” Peter said again. “The FEMA camp is open to all refugees now. There’s shelter, food and water, arrangements will be made for medical care as available, and no one is going to be turned away.”
“Great, so get the buses over here.”
“I’ve only got six soldiers. What we need from you are drivers for the buses so we can get started. We can’t drive and escort at the same time.”
“Only six? Are you serious?”